He had placed himself at the head of a party of banditti, and, pleased

with the liberty which till then he had never tasted, and with the

power which his new situation afforded him, he became so much attached

to this wild and lawless mode of life, that he determined never to

quit it till death should dissolve those ties which now made his rank

only oppressive. This event seemed at so great a distance, that he

seldom allowed himself to think of it. Whenever it should happen, he

had no doubt that he might either resume his rank without danger of

discovery, or might justify his present conduct as a frolic which a

few acts of generosity would easily excuse. He knew his power would

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then place him beyond the reach of censure, in a country where the

people are accustomed to implicit subordination, and seldom dare to

scrutinize the actions of the nobility.

His sensations, however, on discovering his father, were not very

pleasing; but proclaiming the duke, he protected him from farther

outrage. With the duke, whose heart was a stranger to the softer affections,

indignation usurped the place of parental feeling. His pride was the

only passion affected by the discovery; and he had the rashness to

express the indignation, which the conduct of his son had excited, in

terms of unrestrained invective. The banditti, inflamed by the

opprobium with which he loaded their order, threatened instant

punishment to his temerity; and the authority of Riccardo could hardly

restrain them within the limits of forbearance.

The menaces, and at length entreaties of the duke, to prevail with his

son to abandon his present way of life, were equally ineffectual.

Secure in his own power, Riccardo laughed at the first, and was

insensible to the latter; and his father was compelled to relinquish

the attempt. The duke, however, boldly and passionately accused him of

having plundered and secreted a lady and cavalier, his friends, at the

same time describing Julia, for whose liberation he offered large

rewards. Riccardo denied the fact, which so much exasperated the duke,

that he drew his sword with an intention of plunging it in the breast

of his son. His arm was arrested by the surrounding banditti, who

half unsheathed their swords, and stood suspended in an attitude of

menace. The fate of the father now hung upon the voice of the son.

Riccardo raised his arm, but instantly dropped it, and turned away.

The banditti sheathed their weapons, and stepped back.

Riccardo solemnly swearing that he knew nothing of the persons

described, the duke at length became convinced of the truth of the

assertion, and departing from the cave, rejoined his people. All the

impetuous passions of his nature were roused and inflamed by the

discovery of his son in a situation so wretchedly disgraceful. Yet it

was his pride rather than his virtue that was hurt; and when he wished

him dead, it was rather to save himself from disgrace, than his son

from the real indignity of vice. He had no means of reclaiming him; to

have attempted it by force, would have been at this time the excess of

temerity, for his attendants, though numerous, were undisciplined, and

would have fallen certain victims to the power of a savage and

dexterous banditti.




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