FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2619   2620   2621   2622   2623   2624   2625   2626   2627   2628   2629   2630   2631   2632   2633   2634   2635   2636   2637   2638   2639   2640   2641   2642   2643  
2644   2645   2646   2647   2648   2649   2650   2651   2652   2653   2654   2655   2656   2657   2658   2659   2660   2661   2662   2663   2664   2665   2666   2667   2668   >>   >|  
rn child." "I see it all." Next day the story was all over the town. A poor woman had come before the archbishop, and had complained bitterly that the midwife Teresa had seduced her, promising to give her twenty sequins if she would give her a fine boy to whom she had given birth a fortnight ago. She was not given the sum agreed upon, and in her despair at hearing of the death of her child she begged for justice, declaring herself able to prove that the dead child said to be Nina's was in reality her own. The archbishop ordered his chancellor to enquire into the affair with the utmost secrecy, and then proceed to instant and summary execution. A week after this scandal Don Martino returned to Barcelona; but Nina remained as impudent as ever, doubled the size of the red cockades which she made her servants wear, and swore that Spain would avenge her on the insolent archbishop. She remained at Bologna six weeks longer, pretending to be still suffering from the effects of her confinement. The cardinal legate, who was ashamed of having had anything to do with such an abandoned prostitute, did his best to have her ordered to leave. Count Ricla, a dupe to the last, gave her a considerable yearly income on the condition that she should never come to Barcelona again; but in a year the count died. Nina did not survive him for more than a year, and died miserably from her fearful debauchery. I met her mother and sister at Venice, and she told me the story of the last two years of her daughter's life; but it is so sad and so disgusting a tale that I feel obliged to omit it. As for the infamous midwife, she found powerful friends. A pamphlet appeared in which the anonymous author declared that the archbishop had committed a great wrong in punishing a citizen in so shameful a manner without any of the proper formalities of justice. The writer maintained that even if she were guilty she had been unjustly punished, and should appeal to Rome. The prelate, feeling the force of these animadversions, circulated a pamphlet in which it appeared that the midwife had made three prior appearances before the judge, and that she would have been sent to the gallows long ago if the archbishop had not hesitated to shame three of the noblest families in Bologna, whose names appeared in documents in the custody of his chancellor. Her crimes were procuring abortion and killing erring mothers, substituting the living for the dea
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2619   2620   2621   2622   2623   2624   2625   2626   2627   2628   2629   2630   2631   2632   2633   2634   2635   2636   2637   2638   2639   2640   2641   2642   2643  
2644   2645   2646   2647   2648   2649   2650   2651   2652   2653   2654   2655   2656   2657   2658   2659   2660   2661   2662   2663   2664   2665   2666   2667   2668   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
archbishop
 

midwife

 

appeared

 

ordered

 
justice
 

pamphlet

 

remained

 

Barcelona

 

Bologna

 
chancellor

infamous

 
punishing
 

obliged

 

citizen

 

powerful

 

anonymous

 
declared
 
disgusting
 

friends

 
committed

author

 

miserably

 

fearful

 

debauchery

 
survive
 

mother

 

daughter

 

shameful

 

sister

 

Venice


proper

 

families

 

documents

 

noblest

 

gallows

 

hesitated

 
custody
 

mothers

 

substituting

 

living


erring

 

killing

 

crimes

 

procuring

 

abortion

 
appearances
 

guilty

 
unjustly
 

maintained

 

writer