友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
热门书库 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

anner.vittoriothevampire-第54章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



nd five hundred years is not so long for a love as strong as ours。
 We are demons。 We are damned。 But have we not seen and understood things; have I not written things here that are of value to you? Have I not rendered a conflict so full of torment that something looms here which is full of brilliance and color; not unlike Filippo's work? Have I not embroidered; interwoven and gilded; have I not bled?
 Look at my story and tell me that it gives you nothing。 I don't believe you if you say that。
 And when I think back on Filippo; and his rape of Lucrezia; and all his other tempestuous sins; how can I separate them from the magnificence of his paintings? How can I separate the violation of his vows; and his deceits and his quarrels; from the splendor which Filippo gave to the world?
 I am not saying I am a great painter。 I am not such a fool。 But I say that out of my pain; out of my folly; out of my passion there es a vision … a vision which I carry with me eternally and which I offer to you。
 It is a vision of every human being; bursting with fire and with mystery; a vision I cannot deny; nor blot out; nor ever turn away from; nor ever belittle nor ever escape。 Others write of doubt and darkness。 Others write of meaninglessness and quiet。
 I write of indefinable and celestial gold that will forever burn bright。
 I write of blood thirst that is never satisfied。 I write of knowledge and its price。
 Behold; I tell you; the light is there in you。 I see it。 I see it in each and every one of us; and will always。 I see it when I hunger; when I struggle; when I slaughter。 I see it sputter and die in my arms when I drink。
 Can you imagine what it would be like for me to kill you?
 Pray it never takes a slaughter or a rape for you to see this light in those around you。 God forbid it that it should demand such a price。 Let me pay the price for you instead。
 
 THE END
 
 
 SELECTED AND ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

 I went to Florence to receive this manuscript directly from Vittorio di Raniari。 It was my fourth visit to the city; and it was with Vittorio that I decided to list here a few books for those of you who might want to know more about the Age of Gold in Florence and about Florence itself。
 Let me remend first and foremost; and above all others; the brilliant Public Life in Renaissance Florence by Richard C。 Trexler; published today by Cornell University Press。
 Professor Trexler has also written other wonderful books on Italy; but this book is a particularly rich and inspiring one; especially for me; because Professor Trexler's analyses and insights regarding Florence have helped me to understand my own city of New Orleans; Louisiana; better than anything directly written by anyone about New Orleans itself。
 New Orleans; like Florence; is a city of public spectacles; rituals and feast days; of demonstrations of munal celebration and belief。 It is almost impossible to realistically explain New Orleans; and its Mardi Gras; its St。 Patrick's Day and its annual Jazz Fest; to those who have not been here。 Professor Trexler's brilliant scholarship gave me tools to gather thoughts about and observations pertaining to those things I most love。 Other works by Professor Trexler include his Journey of the Magi: Meanings in History of a Christian Story; a work only recently discovered by me。 Readers familiar with my previous novels might remember the intense and blasphemously fervent relationship between my character the vampire Armand and the Florentine painting The Procession of the Magi; created for Piero de' Medici by Benozzo Gozzoli; which can be seen in all its glory in Florence today。
 On the subject of the great painter Fra Filippo Lippi; let me first remend his biography by the painter Vasari for its rich though unauthenticated details。
 Also; there is the bright and shiny book Filippo Lippi; published by Scala; text by Gloria Fossi; which is for sale in numerous translations in Florence and other places in Italy as well。 The only other book of which I know that is exclusively devoted to Filippo is the immense Fra Filippo Lippi by Jeffrey Ruda; subtitled Life and Work; with a plete Catalogue。 It is published by Phaidon Press in England and distributed in America by Harry N。 Abrams。
 The most enjoyable books for the general reader that I have read on Florence and on the Medici have been by Christopher Hibbert; including his Florence: The Biography of a City; published by Norton; and The House of Medici: Its Rise and Fall; published by Morrow。
 There is also The Medici of Florence: A Family Portrait; by Emma Micheletti; published by Becocci Editore。 The Medici by James Cleugh; published originally in 1975; is available now through Barnes & Noble。
 Popular books on Florence and Tuscany … travelers' observations; loving memoirs and tributes … abound。 Primary sources in translation … that is; letters and diaries and histories written during the Renaissance in Florence … are everywhere on library and bookstore shelves。
 In trying to render correctly Vittorio's quotations from Aquinas; I used the translation of the Summa Theologica by Fathers of the English Dominican Province。 In dealing with St。 Augustine; I have used Henry Bettenson's translation of The City of God; published by Penguin Books。
 I caution readers to avoid abridged versions of Augustine's works。 Augustine lived in a pagan world where the most theologically scrupulous Christians still believed in the demonic existence of fallen pagan gods。 To understand Florence and her fifteenth…century romance with the joys and freedoms of a classical heritage; one must read Augustine and Aquinas in their full context。
 For those who would read more about the marvelous museum of San Marco; there are countless works on Fra Angelico; the monastery's most famous painter; which include descriptions and details regarding the building; and there are many books available on the architecture of Florence entire。 I owe a debt of gratitude not only to the museum of San Marco for having so beautifully preserved the architectural work of Michelozzo; so praised in this novel; but for the publications readily available in the shop there on monastery's architecture and art。
 In closing; let me add this: if Vittorio were asked to name a recording of Renaissance music which best captures the mood of the High Mass and munion which he witnessed at the Court of the Ruby Grail; it would inevitably be the All Souls' Vespers; requiem music from Cordoba Cathedral; performed by the Orchestra of the Renaissance led by Richard Cheetham … though I must confess; this music is described as circa 1570 … some years after Vittorio's fearful ordeal。 The recording is available on the Veritas label; through Virgin Classics London and New York。
 In closing these notes; allow me one final quote from St。 Augustine's The City of God:
 For God would never have created a man; let alone an angel; in the foreknowledge of his future evil state; if he had not known at the same time how he would put such creatures to good use; and thus enrich the course of the world history by the kind of antithesis which gives beauty to a poem。
 I personally do not know whether or not Augustine is ri
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!