The infernal work had therefore proved successful, the vengeance was

complete--Ganganelli was no more, and upon the papal throne sat Braschi,

the friend of the Jesuits and of Cardinal Albani, to whom he had

promised the crowning of the improvisatrice Corilla.

And as this cost nothing to the miserly Pope Pius, he this time found no

inconvenience in keeping his sacred promise, though not so promptly as

Corilla and the passionate cardinal desired.

Not until 1776, almost two years after Braschi had mounted the papal

throne, took place the crowning of the improvisatrice in the capitol at

Rome.

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She had therefore attained the object of her wishes. She had finally

reached it by bribery and intrigue, by hypocritical tenderness, by the

resignation of her maiden modesty and womanly honor, and by all the arts

of coquetry.

But this triumph of hers was not to be untroubled. The nobili shouted

for her, and the cardinals and princes of the Church, but the people

accompanied her to the capitol with hissing and howling. Poems came

fluttering down on all sides; the first that fell upon Corilla's head,

Cardinal Albani eagerly seized and unfolded for the purpose of reading

it aloud. But after the first few lines his voice was silenced--it was

an abusive poem, full of mockery and scorn.

But nevertheless she was crowned. She still stood upon the capitol, with

the laurel-crown upon her brow, cheered by her respectable protectors

and friends. But the people joined not in those cheers, and, as the

exulting shouts ceased, there swelled up to the laurel-crowned poetess,

from thousands of voices, a thundering laugh of scorn, and this scornful

laugh, this hissing and howling of the people, accompanied her upon her

return from the capitol, following her through the streets to her own

door. The people had judged her!

Corilla was no poetess by the grace of God, and only by the grace of man

had she been crowned as queen of poesy!

Mortified, crushed, and enraged, she fled from Rome to Florence.

She knew how to flatter the great and win princes. She was a

princess-poetess, and the people rejected her!

But the laurel was hers. She was sought and esteemed, the princes

admired her, and Catharine of Russia fulfilled the promise Orloff had

made the improvisatrice in the name of the empress. Corilla received a

pension from Russia. Russia has always promptly and liberally paid those

who have sold themselves and rendered services to her. Russia is very

rich, and can always send so many thousands of her best and noblest to

work in the mines of Siberia, that she can never lack means for paying

her spies and agents.




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