<h2><SPAN name="Ch20">Chapter 20</SPAN>: The Triumph Of Venice.</h2>
<p>Francis rowed off to the ship, got the flags in readiness for
hoisting, and stood with the lines in his hand.</p>
<p>"Can you make them out, yet?" he hailed the men at the
mastheads.</p>
<p>"They are mere specks yet, signor," the man at the foremast
said.</p>
<p>The other did not reply at once, but presently he shouted
down:</p>
<p>"Far as they are away, signor, I am almost sure that one or two
of them, at least, have something white flying."</p>
<p>There was a murmur of joy from the men on the deck, for Jacopo
Zippo was famous for his keenness of sight.</p>
<p>"Silence, men!" Francis said. "Do not let a man shout, or wave
his cap, till we are absolutely certain. Remember the agony with
which those on shore are watching us, and the awful disappointment
it would be, were their hopes raised only to be crushed,
afterwards."</p>
<p>Another ten minutes, and Jacopo slid rapidly down by the stays,
and stood on the deck with bared head.</p>
<p>"God be praised, signor! I have no longer a doubt. I can tell
you, for certain, that white flags are flying from these
boats."</p>
<p>"God be praised!" Francis replied.</p>
<p>"Now, up with the Lion!"</p>
<p>The flag was bent to the halyards and Francis hoisted it. As it
rose above the bulwark, Pisani, who was standing on a hillock of
sand, shouted out at the top of his voice:</p>
<p>"It is Zeno's fleet!"</p>
<p>A shout of joy broke from the troops. Cheer after cheer rent the
air, from ship and shore, and then the wildest excitement reigned.
Some fell on their knees, to thank God for the rescue thus sent
when all seemed lost. Others stood with clasped hands, and
streaming eyes, looking towards heaven. Some danced and shouted.
Some wept with joy. Men fell on to each other's necks, and
embraced. Some threw up their caps. All were wild with joy, and
pent-up excitement.</p>
<p>Zeno, who, in ignorance of the terrible straits to which his
countrymen were reduced, was making with his fleet direct to
Venice, was intercepted by one of the galleys, and at once bore up
for Brondolo, and presently dropped anchor near the shore. As he
did so, a boat was lowered, and he rowed to the strand, where the
Venetians crowded down to greet him. With difficulty, he made his
way through the shouting multitude to the spot, a little distance
away, where the doge was awaiting him.</p>
<p>Zeno was of medium height, square shouldered and broad chested.
His head was manly and handsome, his nose aquiline, his eyes large,
dark, and piercingly bright, and shaded by strongly-marked
eyebrows. His air was grave and thoughtful, and in strong contrast
to that of the merry and buoyant Pisani. His temper was more
equable, but his character was as impulsive as that of the admiral.
He was now forty-five years of age--ten years the junior of Pisani.
Zeno was intended for the church, and was presented by the pope
with the reversion of a rich prebendal stall at Patras. On his way
to Padua, to complete his studies at the university, he was
attacked by robbers, who left him for dead. He recovered, however,
and went to Padua. He became an accomplished scholar; but was so
fond of gambling that he lost every penny, and was obliged to
escape from his creditors by flight. For five years he wandered
over Italy, taking part in all sorts of adventures, and then
suddenly returned to Venice, and was persuaded by his friends to
proceed to Patras, where his stall was now vacant.</p>
<p>When he arrived there, he found the city besieged by the Turks.
In spite of his clerical dignity, he placed himself in the front
rank of its defenders, and distinguished himself by extreme
bravery. He was desperately wounded, and was again believed to be
dead. He was even placed in his coffin; but just as it was being
nailed down, he showed signs of returning life. He did not stay
long at Patras, but travelled in Germany, France, and England.</p>
<p>Soon after he returned to Patras he fought a duel, and thereby
forfeited his stall. He now renounced the clerical profession, and
married a wealthy heiress. She died shortly afterwards, and he
married the daughter of the Admiral Marco Giustiniani.</p>
<p>He now entered upon political life, and soon showed brilliant
talents. He was then appointed to the military command of the
district of Treviso, which the Paduans were then invading. Here he
very greatly distinguished himself, and in numberless engagements
was always successful, so that he became known as Zeno the
Unconquered.</p>
<p>When Pisani was appointed captain general, in April, 1378, he
was appointed governor of Negropont, and soon afterwards received a
separate naval command. He had been lost sight of for many months,
prior to his appearance so opportunely before Brondolo, and he now
confirmed to the doge the news that had been received shortly
before. He had captured nearly seventy Genoese vessels, of various
sizes, had cruised for some time in sight of Genoa, struck a heavy
blow at her commerce, and prevented the despatch of the
reinforcements promised to Doria. Among the vessels taken was one
which was carrying three hundred thousand ducats from Genoa.</p>
<p>He reported himself ready with his men to take up the brunt of
the siege forthwith, and selecting Brondolo as the most dangerous
position, at once landed his crews. The stores on board ship were
also brought ashore, and proved ample for the present necessities
of the army.</p>
<p>In a few days, he sailed with his galleys and recaptured Loredo,
driving out the Paduan garrison there. This conquest was all
important to Venice, for it opened their communication with
Ferrara, and vast stores of provisions were at once sent by their
ally to Venice, and the pressure of starvation immediately
ceased.</p>
<p>The siege of Brondolo was now pushed on, and on the 22nd of
January the great bombard, the Victory, so battered the wall
opposite to it that it fell suddenly, crushing beneath its ruins
the Genoese commander, Doria.</p>
<p>The change which three weeks had made in the appearance of the
Venetian forces was marvellous. Ample food, firing, and shelter had
restored their wasted frames, and assurance of victory had taken
the place of the courage of despair. A month of toil, hardship, and
fighting had converted a mob of recruits into disciplined soldiers,
and Zeno and Pisani seemed to have filled all with their own energy
and courage. Zeno, indeed, was so rash and fearless that he had
innumerable escapes from death.</p>
<p>One evening after dusk his own vessel, having been accidentally
torn from its anchorage near the Lova Fort by the force of the wind
and currents, was driven across the passage against the enemy's
forts, whence showers of missiles were poured into it. One arrow
pierced his throat. Dragging it out, he continued to issue his
orders for getting the galley off the shore--bade a seaman swim
with a line to the moorings, and angrily rebuked those who,
believing destruction to be inevitable, entreated him to strike his
flag. The sailor reached the moorings, and, with a line he had
taken, made fast a strong rope to it, and the vessel was then
hauled off into a place of safety. As Zeno hurried along the deck,
superintending the operation, he tumbled down an open hatchway, and
fell on his back, almost unconscious. In a few moments he would
have been suffocated by the blood from the wound in his throat, but
with a final effort he managed to roll over on to his face, the
wound was thus permitted to bleed freely, and he soon
recovered.</p>
<p>On the 28th of February, he was appointed general in chief of
the land forces, and the next day drove the Genoese from all their
positions on the islands of Brondolo and Little Chioggia, and on
the following morning established his headquarters under the
ramparts of Chioggia, and directed a destructive fire upon the
citadel. As the Genoese fell back across the bridge over the Canal
of Santa Caterina, the structure gave way under their weight, and
great numbers were drowned. The retreat of the Genoese was indeed
so hurried and confused, and they left behind them an immense
quantity of arms, accoutrements, and war material, so much so that
suits of mail were selling for a few shillings in the Venetian
camp.</p>
<p>So completely were the Genoese disheartened, by the change in
their position, that many thought that the Venetians could at once
have taken Chioggia by assault; but the leaders were determined to
risk no failure, and knew that the enemy must yield to hunger. They
therefore contented themselves with a rigorous blockade, cutting
off all the supplies which the Lord of Padua endeavoured to throw
into the city. The Venetians, however, allowed the besieged to send
away their women and children, who were taken to Venice and kindly
treated there.</p>
<p>The army of Venice had now been vastly increased, by the arrival
of the Star Company of Milan, and the Condottieri commanded by Sir
John Hawkwood. The dikes, erected across the channels with so much
labour, were removed, and the fleet took their part in the
siege.</p>
<p>On the 14th of May there was joy in Chioggia, similar to that
which the Venetians had felt at the sight of Zeno's fleet, for on
that morning the squadron, which Genoa had sent to their assistance
under the command of Matteo Maruffo, appeared in sight. This
admiral had wasted much valuable time on the way, but had fallen in
with and captured, after a most gallant resistance, five Venetian
galleys under Giustiniani, who had been despatched to Apulia to
fetch grain.</p>
<p>The Genoese fleet drew up in order of battle, and challenged
Pisani to come out to engage them. But, impetuous as was the
disposition of the admiral, and greatly as he longed to avenge his
defeat at Pola, he refused to stir. He knew that Chioggia must, ere
long, fall, and he would not risk all the advantages gained, by so
many months of toil and effort, upon the hazard of a battle. Day
after day Maruffo repeated his challenge, accompanied by such
insolent taunts that the blood of the Venetian sailors was so
stirred that Pisani could no longer restrain them. After obtaining
leave from the doge to go out and give battle, he sailed into the
roadstead on the 25th. The two fleets drew up in line of battle,
facing each other. Just as the combat was about to commence a
strange panic seized the Genoese, and, without exchanging a blow or
firing a shot, they fled hastily. Pisani pursued them for some
miles, and then returned to his old station.</p>
<p>The grief and despair of the garrison of Chioggia, at the sight
of the retreat of their fleet, was in proportion to the joy with
which they had hailed its approach. Their supply of fresh water was
all but exhausted. Their rations had become so scanty that, from
sheer weakness, they were unable, after the first week in June, to
work their guns.</p>
<p>Genoa, in despair at the position of her troops, laboured
unceasingly to relieve them. Emissaries were sent to tamper with
the free companies, and succeeded so far that these would have
marched away, had they not been appeased by the promise of a three
days' sack of Chioggia, and a month's extra pay at the end of the
war. Attempts were made to assassinate Zeno, but these also failed.
The Genoese then induced the pope to intercede on their behalf; but
the council remembered that when Venice was at the edge of
destruction, on the 31st of December, no power had come forward to
save her, and refused now to be robbed of the well-earned
triumph.</p>
<p>On the 15th of July, Maruffo, who had received reinforcements
again made his appearance; but Pisani this time refused to be
tempted out. On the 21st a deputation was sent out from Chioggia to
ask for terms, and though, on being told that an unconditional
surrender alone would be accepted, they returned to the city, yet
the following day the Genoese flag was hauled down from the
battlements.</p>
<p>On the 24th the doge, accompanied by Pisani and Zeno, made his
formal entry into Chioggia. The booty was enormous; and the
companies received the promised bounty, and were allowed to pillage
for three days. So large was the plunder collected, in this time,
by the adventurers, that the share of one of them amounted to five
hundred ducats. The republic, however, did not come off altogether
without spoil--they obtained nineteen seaworthy galleys, four
thousand four hundred and forty prisoners, and a vast amount of
valuable stores, the salt alone being computed as worth ninety
thousand crowns.</p>
<p>Not even when the triumphant fleet returned, after the conquest
of Constantinople, was Venice so wild with delight, as when the
doge, accompanied by Pisani and Zeno, entered the city in triumph
after the capture of Chioggia. From the danger, more imminent than
any that had threatened Venice from her first foundation, they had
emerged with a success which would cripple the strength, and lower
the pride of Genoa for years. Each citizen felt that he had some
share in the triumph, for each had taken his share in the
sufferings, the sacrifices, and the efforts of the struggle. There
had been no unmanly giving way to despair, no pitiful entreaty for
aid in their peril. Venice had relied upon herself, and had come
out triumphant.</p>
<p>From every house hung flags and banners, every balcony was hung
with tapestry and drapery. The Grand Canal was closely packed with
gondolas, which, for once, disregarded the sumptuary law that
enforced black as their only hue, and shone in a mass of colour.
Gaily dressed ladies sat beneath canopies of silk and velvet; flags
floated from every boat, and the rowers were dressed in the bright
liveries of their employers. The church bells rang out with a
deafening clang, and from roof and balcony, from wharf and river,
rang out a mighty shout of welcome and triumph from the crowded
mass, as the great state gondola, bearing the doge and the two
commanders, made its way, slowly and with difficulty, along the
centre of the canal.</p>
<p>Francis was on board one of the gondolas that followed in the
wake of that of the doge, and as soon as the grand service in Saint
Mark's was over, he slipped off and made his way back to the
Palazzo Polani. The merchant and Giulia had both been present at
the ceremony, and had just returned when he arrived.</p>
<p>"I guessed you would be off at once, Francisco, directly the
ceremony was over. I own that I, myself, would have stayed for a
time to see the grand doings in the Piazza, but this child would
not hear of our doing so. She said it would be a shame, indeed, if
you should arrive home and find no one to greet you."</p>
<p>"So it would have been," Giulia said. "I am sure I should not
have liked, when I have been away, even on a visit of pleasure to
Corfu, to return and find the house empty; and after the terrible
dangers and hardships you have gone through, Francisco, it would
have been unkind, indeed, had we not been here. You still look thin
and worn."</p>
<p>"I think that is fancy on your part, Giulia. To my eyes he looks
as stout as ever I saw him. But certainly he looked as lean and
famished as a wolf, when I paid that visit to the camp the day
before Zeno's arrival. His clothes hung loose about him, his cheeks
were hollow, and his eyes sunken. He would have been a sight for
men to stare at, had not every one else been in an equally bad
case.</p>
<p>"Well, I thank God there is an end of it, now! Genoa will be
glad to make peace on any terms, and the sea will once more be open
to our ships. So now, Francisco, you have done with fighting, and
will be able to turn your attention to the humbler occupation of a
merchant."</p>
<p>"That will I right gladly," Francis said. "I used to think,
once, I should like to be a man-at-arms; but I have seen enough of
it, and hope I never will draw my sword again, unless it be in
conflict with some Moorish rover. I have had many letters from my
father, chiding me for mingling in frays in which I have no
concern, and shall be able to gladden his heart, by writing to
assure him that I have done with fighting."</p>
<p>"It has done you no harm, Francisco, or rather it has done you
much good. It has given you the citizenship of Venice, in itself no
slight advantage to you as a trader here. It has given you three
hundred ducats a year, which, as a mark of honour, is not to be
despised. It has won for you a name throughout the republic, and
has given you a fame and popularity such as few, if any, citizens
of Venice ever attained at your age. Lastly, it has made a man of
you. It has given you confidence and self possession. You have
acquired the habit of commanding men. You have been placed in
positions which have called for the exercise of rare judgment,
prudence, and courage; and you have come well through it all. It is
but four years since your father left you a lad in my keeping. Now
you are a man, whom the highest noble in Venice might be proud of
calling his son. You have no reason to regret, therefore, that you
have, for a year, taken up soldiering instead of trading,
especially as our business was all stopped by the war, and you must
have passed your time in inactivity."</p>
<p>In the evening, when the merchant and Francis were alone
together, the former said:</p>
<p>"I told you last autumn, Francis, when I informed you that,
henceforth, you would enter into my house as a partner in the
business, when we again recommenced trade, that I had something
else in my mind, but the time to speak of it had not then arrived.
I think it has now come. Tell me, my boy, frankly, if there is
anything that you would wish to ask of me."</p>
<p>Francis was silent for a moment; then he said:</p>
<p>"You have done so much, Signor Polani. You have heaped kindness
upon me, altogether beyond anything I could have hoped for, that,
even did I wish for more, I could not ask it."</p>
<p>"Then there is something more you would like, Francisco.
Remember that I have told you that I regard you as a son, and
therefore I wish you to speak to me, as frankly as if I was really
your father."</p>
<p>"I fear, signor, that you will think me audacious, but since you
thus urge upon me to speak all that is in my mind, I cannot but
tell you the truth. I love your daughter, Giulia, and have done so
ever since the first day that my eyes fell on her. It has seemed to
me too much, even to hope, that she can ever be mine, and I have
been careful in letting no word expressive of my feelings pass my
lips. It still seems, to me, beyond the bounds of possibility that
I could successfully aspire to the hand of the daughter of one of
the noblest families in Venice."</p>
<p>"I am glad you have spoken frankly, dear lad," the merchant
said. "Ever since you rescued my daughters from the hands of
Mocenigo, it has been on my mind that someday, perhaps, you would
be my son-in-law, as well as my son by adoption. I have watched
with approval that, as Giulia grew from a child into a young woman,
her liking for you seemed to ripen into affection. This afternoon I
have spoken to her, and she has acknowledged that she would obey my
commands, to regard you as her future husband, with gladness.</p>
<p>"I could not, however, offer my daughter's hand to one who might
reject it, or who, if he accepted it, would only do so because he
considered the match to be a desirable one, from a business point
of view. Now that you have told me you love her, all difficulties
are at an end. I am not one of those fathers who would force a
marriage upon their daughters, regardless of their feelings. I gave
to Maria free choice among her various suitors, and so I would give
it to Giulia. Her choice is in accordance with my own secret hopes,
and I therefore, freely and gladly, bestow her upon you. You must
promise only that you do not carry her away altogether to England,
so long as I live. You can, if you like, pay long visits with her
from time to time to your native country, but make Venice your
headquarters.</p>
<p>"I need say nothing to you about her dowry. I intended that, as
my partner, you should take a fourth share of the profits of the
business; but as Giulia's husband, I shall now propose that you
have a third. This will give you an income equal to that of all but
the wealthiest of the nobles of Venice. At my death, my fortune
will be divided between my girls."</p>
<p>Francis expressed, in a few words, his joy and gratitude at the
merchant's offer. Giulia had inspired him, four years before, with
a boyish love, and it had steadily increased until he felt that,
however great his success in life as Messer Polani's partner, his
happiness would be incomplete unless shared by Giulia. Polani cut
short his words by saying:</p>
<p>"My dear boy, I am as pleased that this should be so as you are.
I now feel that I have, indeed, gained a son and secured the
happiness of my daughter. Go in to her now. You will find her in
the embroidery room. I told her that I should speak to you this
evening, and she is doubtless in a tremble as to the result, for
she told me frankly that, although she loved you, she feared you
only regarded her with the affection of a brother, and she implored
me, above all, not to give you a hint of her feelings towards you,
until I was convinced that you really loved her."</p>
<p>Two months later, the marriage of Francis Hammond and Giulia
Polani took place. There were great festivities, and the merchant
spent a considerable sum in giving a feast, on the occasion, to all
the poor of Venice. Maria told Francis, in confidence, that she had
always made up her mind that he would marry Giulia.</p>
<p>"The child was silly enough to fall in love with you from the
first, Francisco, and I was sure that you, in your dull English
fashion, cared for her. My father confided to me, long since, that
he hoped it would come about."</p>
<p>Francis Hammond lived for many years with his wife in Venice,
paying occasional visits to England. He was joined, soon after his
marriage, by his brother, who, after serving for some years in the
business, entered it as a partner, when Messer Polani's increasing
years rendered it necessary for him to retire from an active
participation in it.</p>
<p>Some months after his marriage, Francis was saddened by the
death of Admiral Pisani, who never recovered from the fatigue and
hardships he suffered during the siege of Chioggia. He had, with
the fleet, recovered most of the places that the Genoese had
captured, and after chasing a Genoese fleet to Zara, had a partial
engagement with them there. In this, Corbaro, now holding the
commission of admiral of the squadron, was killed, and Pisani
himself wounded. He was already suffering from fever; and the loss
of Corbaro, and the check that the fleet had suffered, increased
his malady, and he expired three days later.</p>
<p>Venice made peace with Genoa, but the grudge which she bore to
Padua was not wiped out until some years later, when, in 1404, that
city was besieged by the Venetians, and forced by famine to
surrender in the autumn of the following year; after which Zeno,
having been proved to have kept up secret communications with the
Lord of Padua, was deprived of his honours and sentenced to a
year's imprisonment. Thus, in turn, the two great Venetian
commanders suffered disgrace and imprisonment.</p>
<p>As she had been patient and steadfast in her time of distress,
Venice was clement in her hour of triumph, and granted far more
favourable terms to Padua than that city deserved.</p>
<p>At the death of Messer Polani, Francis returned with his wife
and family to England, and established himself in London, where he
at once took rank as one of the leading merchants. His fortune,
however, was so large, that he had no occasion to continue in
commerce, and he did so only to afford him a certain amount of
occupation. His brother carried on the business in Venice, and
became one of the leading citizens there, in partnership with
Matteo Giustiniani. Every two or three years Francis made a voyage
with his wife to Venice and spent some months there, and to the end
of his life never broke off his close connection with the City of
the Waters.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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