[The Bravo by J. Fenimore Cooper]@TWC D-Link book
The Bravo

CHAPTER XII
14/17

But I know too well my duty to the senate to speak so plainly.

But, Signori, they say, saving the bluntness of their language, that St.Mark should have ears for the meanest of his people as well as for the richest noble; and that not a hair should fall from the head of a fisherman, without its being counted as if it were a lock from beneath the horned bonnet; and that where God hath not made marks of his displeasure, man should not." "Do they dare to reason thus ?" "I know not if it be reason, illustrious Signore, but it is what they say, and, eccellenza, it is holy truth.

We are poor workmen of the Lagunes, who rise with the day to cast our nets, and return at night to hard beds and harder fare; but with this we might be content, did the senate count us as Christians and men.

That God hath not given to all the same chances in life, I well know, for it often happens that I draw an empty net, when my comrades are groaning with the weight of their draughts; but this is done to punish my sins, or to humble my heart, whereas it exceeds the power of man to look into the secrets of the soul, or to foretell the evil of the still innocent child.

Blessed St.
Anthony knows how many years of suffering this visit to the galleys may cause to the child in the end.


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