In Colomba, Mérimée's best known creation, it is united to a singularly wholesome type of personal beauty, a natural grace of manner which is irresistible, a cunning intellect patiently diverting every circumstance to its design; and presents itself as a kind of genius, allied to fatal disease of mind.
The interest of Mérimée's book is that it allows us to watch the action of this malignant power on Colomba's brother, Orso della Robbia, as it discovers, rouses, concentrates to the leaping-point, in the somewhat weakly diffused nature of the youth, the dormant elements of a dark humour akin to her own.
Two years after his father's murder, presumably at the instigation of his ancestral enemies, the young lieutenant is returning home in the company of two humorously conventional English people, himself now half Parisianised, with an immense natural cheerfulness, and willing to believe an account of the crime which relieves those hated Barricini of all complicity in its guilt.
But from the first, Colomba, with "voice soft and musical," is at his side, gathering every accident and echo and circumstance, the very lightest circumstance, into the chain of necessity which draws him to the action every one at home expects of him as the head of his race.
He is not unaware.
Her very silence on the matter speaks so plainly.
"You are forming me!" he admits.
"Well! 'Hot shot, or cold steel!'--you see I have not forgotten my Corsican."
More and more, as he goes on his way with her, he finds himself accessible to the damning thoughts he has so long combated.
In horror, he tries to disperse them by the memory of his comrades in the regiment, the drawing-rooms of Paris, the English lady who has promised to be his bride, and will shortly visit him in the humble manoir of his ancestors.
From his first step among them the villagers of Pietranera, divided already into two rival camps, are watching him in suspense--Pietranera, perched among those deep forests where the stifled sense of violent death is everywhere.
Colomba places in his hands the little chest which contains the father's shirt covered with great spots of blood.
"Behold the lead that struck him!" and she laid on the shirt two rusted bullets.
"Orso! you will avenge him!"
She embraces him with a kind of madness, kisses wildly the bullets and the shirt, leaves him with the terrible relics already exerting their mystic power upon him.
It is as if in the nineteenth century a girl, amid Christian habits, had gone back to that primitive old pagan version of the story of the Grail, which identifies it not with the Most Precious Blood, but only with the blood of a murdered relation crying for vengeance.
Awake at last in his old chamber at Pietranera, the house of the Barricini at the other end of the square, with its rival tower and rudely carved escutcheons, stares him in the face.
His ancestral enemy is there, an aged man now, but with two well-grown sons, like two stupid dumb animals, whose innocent blood will soon be on his so oddly lighted conscience.
At times, his better hope seemed to lie in picking a quarrel and killing at least in fair fight, one of these two stupid dumb animals; with rude ill-suppressed laughter one day, as they overhear Colomba's violent utterances at a funeral feast, for she is a renowned improvisatrice.
"Your father is an old man," he finds himself saying, "I could crush with my hands.
'Tis for you I am destined, for you and your brother!"
And if it is by course of nature that the old man dies not long after the murder of these sons (self-provoked after all), dies a fugitive at Pisa, as it happens, by an odd accident, in the presence of Colomba, no violent death by Orso's own hand could have been more to her mind.
In that last hard page of Mérimée's story, mere dramatic propriety itself for a moment seems to plead for the forgiveness, which from Joseph and his brethren to the present day, as we know, has been as winning in story as in actual life.
Such dramatic propriety, however, was by no means in Mérimée's way.
"What I must have is the hand that fired the shot," she had sung, "the eye that guided it; aye! and the mind moreover--the mind, which had conceived the deed!"
And now, it is in idiotic terror, a fugitive from Orso's vengeance, that the last of the Barricini is dying.
The interest of Mérimée's book is that it allows us to watch the action of this malignant power on Colomba's brother, Orso della Robbia, as it discovers, rouses, concentrates to the leaping-point, in the somewhat weakly diffused nature of the youth, the dormant elements of a dark humour akin to her own.
Two years after his father's murder, presumably at the instigation of his ancestral enemies, the young lieutenant is returning home in the company of two humorously conventional English people, himself now half Parisianised, with an immense natural cheerfulness, and willing to believe an account of the crime which relieves those hated Barricini of all complicity in its guilt.
But from the first, Colomba, with "voice soft and musical," is at his side, gathering every accident and echo and circumstance, the very lightest circumstance, into the chain of necessity which draws him to the action every one at home expects of him as the head of his race.
He is not unaware.
Her very silence on the matter speaks so plainly.
"You are forming me!" he admits.
"Well! 'Hot shot, or cold steel!'--you see I have not forgotten my Corsican."
More and more, as he goes on his way with her, he finds himself accessible to the damning thoughts he has so long combated.
In horror, he tries to disperse them by the memory of his comrades in the regiment, the drawing-rooms of Paris, the English lady who has promised to be his bride, and will shortly visit him in the humble manoir of his ancestors.
From his first step among them the villagers of Pietranera, divided already into two rival camps, are watching him in suspense--Pietranera, perched among those deep forests where the stifled sense of violent death is everywhere.
Colomba places in his hands the little chest which contains the father's shirt covered with great spots of blood.
"Behold the lead that struck him!" and she laid on the shirt two rusted bullets.
"Orso! you will avenge him!"
She embraces him with a kind of madness, kisses wildly the bullets and the shirt, leaves him with the terrible relics already exerting their mystic power upon him.
It is as if in the nineteenth century a girl, amid Christian habits, had gone back to that primitive old pagan version of the story of the Grail, which identifies it not with the Most Precious Blood, but only with the blood of a murdered relation crying for vengeance.
Awake at last in his old chamber at Pietranera, the house of the Barricini at the other end of the square, with its rival tower and rudely carved escutcheons, stares him in the face.
His ancestral enemy is there, an aged man now, but with two well-grown sons, like two stupid dumb animals, whose innocent blood will soon be on his so oddly lighted conscience.
At times, his better hope seemed to lie in picking a quarrel and killing at least in fair fight, one of these two stupid dumb animals; with rude ill-suppressed laughter one day, as they overhear Colomba's violent utterances at a funeral feast, for she is a renowned improvisatrice.
"Your father is an old man," he finds himself saying, "I could crush with my hands.
'Tis for you I am destined, for you and your brother!"
And if it is by course of nature that the old man dies not long after the murder of these sons (self-provoked after all), dies a fugitive at Pisa, as it happens, by an odd accident, in the presence of Colomba, no violent death by Orso's own hand could have been more to her mind.
In that last hard page of Mérimée's story, mere dramatic propriety itself for a moment seems to plead for the forgiveness, which from Joseph and his brethren to the present day, as we know, has been as winning in story as in actual life.
Such dramatic propriety, however, was by no means in Mérimée's way.
"What I must have is the hand that fired the shot," she had sung, "the eye that guided it; aye! and the mind moreover--the mind, which had conceived the deed!"
And now, it is in idiotic terror, a fugitive from Orso's vengeance, that the last of the Barricini is dying.