"Give them thirty," begged Ganganelli, "do you hear, thirty, brother

Lorenzo. Thirty scudi is yet a very small sum!"

"Ah, what do you know about money?" answered Lorenzo, laughing; "these

geese here understand the matter better than you, brother Clement."

"Well, it is for that reason I have made you my cashier," laughed

Ganganelli. "A prince will always be well advised when he chooses

a sensible and well-instructed servant for that which he does not

understand himself. To acknowledge his ignorance on the proper occasion

does honor to a prince, and procures him more respect than if he sought

to give himself the appearance of knowing and understanding everything.

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Come, Lorenzo, let us go into the garden; you see that these fowls care

nothing for us now; as they are satiated, they despise our provender.

Come, let us go farther!"

"Yes, into the garden!" exclaimed Lorenzo, with a mysterious smile.

"Come, brother Clement, I have prepared a little surprise for you there!

Come and see it!"

And the two old men turned their steps toward the garden.

"Follow me," said Lorenzo, preceding the pope, and leading him to a more

solitary and better screened part of the garden. "Now stoop a little and

creep through here, and then we are at the place."

The pope carefully followed the directions of his leader, and worked his

way through the obstruction of the myrtle-bushes until he arrived at

a small circular place, in the centre of which, shaded by tall

olive-trees, was a turf-seat surrounded by tendrils of ivy, and before

which was a small table of wood, yet retaining its natural covering of

bark.

"See, this is my surprise!" said Lorenzo.

Ganganelli stood silent and motionless, with folded hands. A deep

emotion was visible in his gentle mien, and tears rolled slowly down

over his cheeks.

"Well, is it not well copied, and true to nature?" asked Lorenzo, whose

eyes beamed with satisfaction.

"My favorite spot in the garden of the Franciscan convent!" said

Ganganelli in a tone trembling with emotion. "Yes, yes, Lorenzo,

you have represented it exactly, you know well enough what gives me

pleasure! Accept my thanks, my dear good brother."

And, while giving his hand to the monk, his eye wandered with gentle

delight over the place, with its beautiful trees and green reposing

bank, and thoughtfully rested upon each individual object.

"So was it," he murmured low, "precisely so; yes, yes, in this place

have I passed my fairest and most precious hours; what have I not

thought and dreamed as a youth and as a man, how many wishes, how

many hopes have there thrilled my bosom, and how few of them have been

realized!"

"But one thing has been realized," said Lorenzo, "greater than all you

could have dreamed or hoped! Who would ever have thought it possible

that the poor, unknown Franciscan monk would become the greatest and

most sublime prince in the whole world, the father of all Christendom?

That is, indeed, a happiness that brother Clement, upon his grass-bank

in the Franciscan convent, could never have expected!"




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