Memoirs of Casanova — Volume 02: a Cleric in Naples by Giacomo Casanova
page 124 of 193 (64%)
page 124 of 193 (64%)
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not encouraged; you are the author of my impromptu."
"I admire you. As for myself, were I encouraged by Apollo himself, I could not compose four lines without paper and ink." "Only give way boldly to your genius, madam, and you will produce poetry worthy of heaven." "That--is my opinion, too," said the cardinal. "I entreat you to give me permission to skew your ten stanzas to the abbe." "They are not very good, but I have no objection provided it remains between us." The cardinal gave me, then, the stanzas composed by the marchioness, and I read them aloud with all the expression, all the feeling necessary to such reading. "How well you have read those stanzas!" said the marchioness; "I can hardly believe them to be my own composition; I thank you very much. But have the goodness to give the benefit of your reading to the stanzas which his eminence has written in answer to mine. They surpass them much." "Do not believe it, my dear abbe," said the cardinal, handing them to me. "Yet try not to let them lose anything through your reading." There was certainly no need of his eminence enforcing upon me such a recommendation; it was my own poetry. I could not have read it otherwise than in my best style, especially when I had before me the beautiful |
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