Read The Master of Verona Online
Authors: David Blixt
The Master
of Verona
by David Blixt
Copyright © 2012, David Blixt
For Jan —
"I shall live in thy heart,
die in thy lap,
and be buried in thy eyes…"
Table of Contents
Dramatis Personae
Maps
Prologue
Act I
The Arena
Act II
The Horse Palio
Act III
The Duel
Act IV
The Exiles
Act V
The Feud
Epilogue
Post Script
Dramatis Personae
* denotes a character recorded by history
† denotes a character from Shakespeare
Francesco '
Cangrande
' della Scala*
–
Ruler of Verona
Giovanna of Svevia *
–
Cangrande's wife, great-grand-daughter of Frederick II
Franceschino
'Cecchino'
della Scala
*
—
nephew to Cangrande
Federigo della Scala * —
Cangrande's cousin
Alberto II della Scala *
—
Cangrande's nephew, brother of Mastino, b. 1306
Mastino II della Scala
†
*
—
Cangrande's nephew, brother of Alberto, b. 1308
Francesco
'Cesco'
della Scala
†
*
–
a bastard, b. 1314
Antonio Nogarola II *
–
Vicentine nobleman, elder brother to Bailardino
Bailardino Nogarola *
–
Lord of Vicenza, husband to Cangrande's sister, Katerina
Katerina della Scala
*–
sister to Cangrande, wife of Bailardino
Bailardetto '
Detto
' Nogarola
—
son of Bailardino and Katerina. b. 1315
Durante 'Dante' Alaghieri *
—
Florentine poet exiled in 1302
Gemma Donati *
—
wife of Dante, living in Florence
Pietro Alaghieri *
—
Dante's heir
Jacopo '
Poco'
Alaghieri *
—
Dante's youngest son
Antonia Alaghieri *
—
Dante's daughter
Giacomo
'Il Grande'
da Carrara
*
–
Paduan Lord, uncle to Marsilio
Marsilio da Carrara *
—
nephew of Il Grande
Gianozza della Bella
† —
great-niece to Il Grande,
cousin to Marsilio
Gargano Montecchio
— Lord of Montecchio, father of Mariotto and Aurelia
Romeo Mariotto Montecchio
† —
son of Gargano
Aurelia Montecchio
—
daughter of Gargano
Ludovico Capecelatro
— head of a merchant family from Capua, father of Luigi and Antonio
Luigi Capecelatro
— eldest son on of Ludovico
Antonio Capecelatro
† — second son of Ludovico
Arnaldo Capecelatro
† —
brother to Ludovico
Albertino Mussato
* —
Paduan historian-poet
Aventino Fracastoro —
Personal physician to Cangrande
Benvenito Lemoti —
Fiancée to Aurelia Montecchio
Bishop Francis
* —
Franciscan Bishop, leader of Veronese spiritual growth
Bishop Guelco —
Bishop of Verona
Ferdinando da Bonaventura
†
—
Cousin to the Bonaventura heir, Petruchio
Fra Lorenzo
† —
Franciscan monk with family in France
Francesco Dandolo
* —
Venetian nobleman, ambassador to Verona
Guglielmo da Castelbarco *
—
Veronese noble, Cangrande's Armourer
Giuseppe Morsicato
—
Knight, Nogarola family doctor
Ignazzio da Palermo —
Personal astrologer to the Scaligeri
Katerina da Bonaventura
† —
Paduan born heiress, daughter of Baptista Minola
Manoello
Giudeo *
—
Cangrande's Master of Revels
Massimiliano da Villafranca —
Constable of Cangrande's palace
Nicolo da Lozzo *
—
Paduan-born knight, changed sides to join Cangrande
Passerino Bonaccolsi *
—
Podestà
of Mantua, ally to Cangrande
Petruchio da Bonaventura
† —
Veronese noble, married to Katerina
Ponzino de' Ponzoni
* —
Cremona-born knight, elected Podestà of Padua in 1314
Theodoro of Cadiz
—
Moorish servant of the astrologer Ignazzio da Palermo
Tullio d'Isola
—
aged steward, Grand Butler to Cangrande
Uguccione della Faggiuola *
—
ruler of Lucca, former patron of Dante, friend of Cangrande
Vanni 'Asdente' Scorigiani
—
Paduan knight
Vinciguerra, Count of San Bonifacio
* —
last of an exiled Veronese family
Ziliberto dell' Angelo —
Cangrande's Master of the Hunt
'
A te convien tenere altro viaggio,'
rispuose, poi che lagrimar mi vide,
'se vuo' campar d'esto loco selvaggio:
che questa bestia, per la qual tu gride,
non lascia altrui passar la sua via,
ma tanto lo 'mpedisce che l'uccide;
e ha natura si malvagia e ria,
che mai non empie la bramosa voglia,
e dopo 'l pasto ha liu fame che pria.
Molti son li animali c cui s'ammoglia,
e piu saranno ancora, infin che 'l veltro
verra, che la fara morir con doglia.'
'It is another path you must follow,'
he answered, when he saw me weeping,
'If you would flee this wild and savage place:
For that beast that moves you to cry out
Lets no man pass her way,
But so besets him that she slays him.
Her nature is so vicious and malign
Her greedy appitite is never sated –
After feeding she is hungrier than ever.
Many are the creatures she mates with,
and there will yet be more, until the Greyhound
shall come who'll make her die in pain.'
Dante
L'Inferno
Canto I, 91-102
Ciolo's nerves jangled in time with his spurs. During the whole ride they hadn't seen a soul. Not on the road, not in the fields. No one at all.
"What does it mean?" asked Girolamo.
"I don't know," said Ciolo.
"Is Padua under siege?"
"I don't know. Let's keep going."
"How will we get in?"
"Keep riding."
"But…"
"Think of golden florins."
"I've never been to Florence!"
"Shut up!" hissed Ciolo.
Empty fields gave way to empty suburbs. Some hovels and shacks were burnt out, but more were intact, even new — Ciolo saw fresh-cut timber struts and new bricks. Marks of an old siege, not a new one. If there were a present siege, by now he would have heard the sounds of hundreds of men muttering, cheering, singing, impatient horses stamping, the crack and whine of siege machines, the smell of fire and filth.