Image for The Adventures of Gerard

The Adventures of Gerard

See all formats and editions

the things of the mind and the soul. It is true that I was very young when I joined the army, and that the quarter-master was my only teacher, but if you go about the world with your eyes open you cannot help learning a great deal.Thus I was able to admire the pictures in Venice, and to know the names of the great men, Michael Titiens, and Angelus, and the others, who had painted them.

No one can say that Napoleon did not admire them also, for the very first thing which he did when he captured the town was to send the best of them to Paris.

We all took what we could get, and I had two pictures for my share.One of them, called "Nymphs Surprised," I kept for myself, and the other, "Saint Barbara," I sent as a present for my mother.It must be confessed, however, that some of our men behaved very badly in this matter of the statues and the pictures.

The people at Venice were very much attached to them, and as to the four bronze horses which stood over the gate of their great church, they loved them as dearly as if they had been their children.

I have always been a judge of a horse, and I had a good look at these ones, but I could not see that there was much to be said for them.

They were too coarse-limbed for light cavalry charges and they had not the weight for the gun-teams.However, they were the only four horses, alive or dead, in the whole town, so it was not to be expected that the people would know any better.

They wept bitterly when they were sent away, and ten French soldiers were found floating in the canals that night.

As a punishment for these murders a great many more of their pictures were sent away, and the soldiers took to breaking the statues and firing their muskets at the stained-glass windows.This made the people furious, and there was very bad feeling in the town.

Many officers and men disappeared during that winter, and even their bodies were never found.For myself I had plenty to do, and I never found the time heavy on my hands.

In every country it has been my custom to try to learn the language.

For this reason I always look round for some lady who will be kind enough to teach it to me, and then we practise it together.

This is the most interesting way of picking it up, and before I was thirty I could speak nearly every tongue in Europe; but it must be confessed that what you learn is not of much use for the ordinary purposes of life.

My business, for example, has usually been with soldiers and peasants, and what advantage is it to be able to say to them that I love only them, and that I will come back when the wars are over?Never have I had so sweet a teacher as in Venice.

Lucia was her first name, and her second-but a gentleman forgets second names.

I can say this with all discretion, that she was of one of the senatorial families of Venice and that her grandfather had been Doge of the town.

Read More
Title Unavailable: Out of Print
Product Details
Independently Published
873780527Y / 9798737805272
Paperback / softback
16/04/2021
132 pages
203 x 254 mm, 277 grams
General (US: Trade) Learn More