Authors: Andrea Di Robilant
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Historical, #History, #Europe, #Italy, #Fiction
Giustiniana was greatly mourned. Her virtues were praised in every form available, from the elaborate Latin inscription on the memorial’s marble plaque to a long panegyric printed by her friends. But to my mind the simple words of an obscure Paduan chronicler by the name of Abbé Gennari evoke her best. “She was very beautiful in her youth,” he wrote in his diary on the day of her death. “And always lively and full of spirit.”
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I like to think this is how Andrea remembered Giustiniana in the darkening rooms at Ca’ Memmo, where his own death was now casting its shadow. As he grew older, he revisited more frequently those hopeful days of his youth, when his heart had been filled with love and the end of the Republic had not loomed so near. No doubt he sometimes traveled as far back as the day he had first seen Giustiniana, so starkly beautiful, in the house of Consul Smith. Were those memories ever tinged with regret? Andrea was never one to dwell morosely on the past, but surely the irony was not lost on him that he had sacrificed the great love of his life for the sake of a dying Republic. He had served with great distinction. He had traveled widely. He had become a statesman, respected at home and admired abroad. He had accomplished what had been expected of him—and more. Yet each year he had grown more disgusted with the lethargic ruling class to which he belonged and more disillusioned about the future of Venice. Like so many patricians of his generation, he had become a deeply cynical man. And he had tempered the bitterness in his soul by giving himself over to the earthly pleasures life still had to offer a man with appetite and, as he put it, “good teeth.”
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Andrea’s political beginnings had coincided with the end of the Seven Years’ War in 1763. Europe was at peace again, and he still believed that the strength and prestige of the Republic could be restored to a degree with the right mix of policies. He also felt that any radical approach to change would be counterproductive; in this he was far more pragmatic than his friend Querini, who spent two years in jail for openly challenging the status quo. Instead, Andrea focused his considerable intellectual energies on learning the inner workings of Venice’s venerable but outdated machinery of government. He learned fast and got himself elected to a succession of important administrative posts, blending into the bureaucracy as he waited for the most propitious moment to step forward and effect some real change.
On the personal side, his dalliance with M. failed to produce the stable relationship he had been looking for. But in 1763, at the age of thirty-four, he met a stunning girl some fifteen years younger than he with whom he began an affair that was to last, on and off, for more than two decades. Contarina Barbarigo was the beautiful daughter of her famously beautiful mother, Caterina Sagredo Barbarigo.
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She had wit, flair, and glamour. Eighteenth-century miniatures depict her with sharp, striking features, her hair piled up in a very tall beehive. Like her mother, she grew up to become the most celebrated Venetian beauty of her generation.
Did Giustiniana unwittingly plant the idea of seducing Contarina in Andrea’s head? In a letter she wrote to him during her depressing stay in Padua, back in the fall of 1760, Giustiniana mentioned paying a courtesy visit to Contarina’s famous mother, Caterina: “Mon cher frère . . . I can assure you that I was impressed by how cultivated and pleasant a lady she was. Her daughters are absolute wonders, and the one called Contarina is so gracious and well mannered—as well as being a real beauty and therefore very similar to her mother—that she is seen as a true marvel here. . . . In fact, she would be considered a sheer delight anywhere.”
Contarina, however, was destined for another member of the patriciate. In 1765 she married Marino Zorzi, but the marriage was soon dissolved because he was impotent. Her affair with Andrea resumed—if it had ever stopped. But the politics of marriage among the ruling class were inexorable. In 1769, the year before Giustiniana’s return to Venice from Austria, it was Andrea’s turn to marry. His bride was Elisabetta Piovene, a pretty girl of twenty who came from a good family in Vicenza. He does not appear to have been deeply in love with her, but there was no reason to believe they could not have a decent marriage and raise a good family. They had two daughters, Lucietta and Paolina, upon whom Andrea doted.
Andrea’s career, meanwhile, had reached an important cross-roads. In 1771, after a decade-long apprenticeship, he made his first important political move: a bold attempt to free Venetian industry and commerce from the suffocating control of the guilds. The reforms he advocated were intelligent and well thought out, but he found himself face to face with the “obtuse indolence”
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of the Senate. Ultimately defeated by the conservatives, he was nevertheless rewarded with the powerful post of governor of Padua.
He ran the city during much of the 1770s and became a popular governor. He devoted a great deal of his energies to an ambitious and somewhat extravagant architectural project—the creation of a vast oval plaza on the southern rim of the city, known as Prato della Valle—in which he tried to put into practice some of the principles of rational architecture advocated by his teacher Father Lodoli. His stewardship of one of the largest cities in the Venetian State was deemed a success. In 1777 he was appointed ambassador to Constantinople, a prestigious post and, for Andrea, a highly symbolic one: his uncle Andrea Memmo, his role model and mentor, had been ambassador there half a century earlier.
From the point of view of his career, the 1770s were productive and rewarding. “Four men like Senator Memmo would be enough to govern Europe without difficulty,”
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Emperor Joseph II of Austria is said to have declared after meeting Andrea. The statement might be apocryphal, but the currency it gained over the years reflected Andrea’s growing reputation as a wise and effective statesman.
His marriage to Elisabetta, on the other hand, was not a success despite a fairly hopeful start. Andrea’s continuous affair with Contarina cannot have helped. But family and friends mostly blamed Elisabetta’s “bilious” character and poor health—not to mention her habit of drinking vinegar in the morning to stay thin. With time she grew weaker and became more withdrawn. When she died of “gastro-rheumatic fever”
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in Venice in 1780, Andrea was not by her side but away in Constantinople, still serving as ambassador to the Porte.
During his five-year stint there—his first real time abroad—he began to see Venice’s decline in sharper, more dramatic terms. Still, he did not give up looking for new opportunities that might give the Republic another lease on life. Like Giustiniana, he was an admirer of Empress Catherine the Great of Russia, and he worked tirelessly while in Constantinople to establish official relations with Moscow and build a powerful new commercial alliance with the emerging European power.
Upon his return to Venice in 1782, however, Andrea’s confidence collapsed. The passivity and resignation of his peers depressed him profoundly. He accepted the ambassadorship to Rome, once an important post but by then little more than a sinecure. “I decided not to stay in Venice for a while,” he explained to a friend, “because I knew it would have saddened me. I needed to distract myself for the sake of my health.”
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He was fifty-four and a single parent with two daughters in tow when he arrived in the lazy and decadent Rome of Pope Pius VI. He had come to “distract” himself, as he had put it, and that is what he did. He cultivated the pleasures of a good table and threw himself into a whirlwind of sexual intrigue, becoming a favorite with Roman women—aging princesses as well as their shapely young maids. “Anything pleases these lovable sluts,” he confided to a Florentine friend, “as long as they can possess a man who was never possessed by any woman for more than a few minutes.” Tenderly, he added, “apart from la Rosenberg.”
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Andrea took his job as a father very seriously—possibly more so than his position as ambassador. Despite his numerous gallant affairs, he made a point of spending time every day with Lucietta and Paolina, “my only true loves.” He planned their education with the help of an able tutor and a French governess. “My girls will be beautiful and well educated. They’re still a little rough around the edges, but far less than they would be if they had stayed in Venice.”
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During his Roman days Andrea decided to rescue the memory of Father Lodoli from oblivion. The inquisitors had seized Lodoli’s papers after his death in 1761, leaving them to rot in a damp cell in the prisons at the Ducal Palace. Two decades later, during one of his regular trips up to Venice, Andrea went rummaging there. All he found were piles of sodden and illegible paper. The discovery filled him with sadness. It also encouraged him to press on. He plumbed his own memory and used every scrap of information he could find—notes, letters, and above all the recollections of the monk’s many devoted former students— to put together an extraordinary tribute to his teacher.
The first book of his two-volume work was published in 1786; the complete edition came out posthumously some fifty years later.
Elementi dell’architettura Lodoliana
was more than a book on Lodoli. The spirit of the 1740s and 1750s, when so many of the most promising sons of the Republic had “shaped their minds and improved their souls” at the school of the Franciscan monk, came to life again in its pages. In Andrea’s eyes, Giustiniana had been an important part of that bygone world, so that the memories of the period became entwined with memories of “the one to whom I was entirely dedicated.” In a whimsical, affectionate digression, he praised “her original mind” and those “rare qualities that made her soul sublime.”
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Andrea’s book was so rich in autobiographical references to his own youth that one has to wonder if the daily exercise of writing it, during those otherwise dissolute Roman days, was not also an attempt to redeem himself from the failure to live up to his own expectations.
His career, however, was not yet over. Just as he was distancing himself from the depressing political scene in Venice, the Maggior Consiglio, the supreme assembly of the Republic, elected him to succeed Andrea Tron, his political mentor, in the prestigious office of procuratore di San Marco. All at once he was catapulted back into the fray. His initial displeasure at having to leave behind his leisurely if somewhat futile Roman life quickly vanished. This unexpected tribute on the part of his peers renewed his vigor. He returned to Venice in 1787 and took up his new position amid great pomp, decking out the palace on the Grand Canal with banners and family crests and hosting the customary balls and receptions.
That same year, at the end of a long and difficult negotiation, Andrea married off his daughter Lucietta to Alvise Mocenigo, a member of one of the richest and most powerful Venetian families. (It was thanks to this marriage that Andrea’s letters ended up at Palazzo Mocenigo, where my father found them two centuries later.) Andrea was doubly pleased: the match made sense from a practical point of view, and he was overjoyed because Lucietta and Alvise were genuinely in love with each other: “My Lucietta makes her husband happy, and he makes her happy. They are in love for their essential qualities, and they respect each other as much as they adore each other. They have become the paradigm of the enviable marriage. There are no displays of jealousy on either part nor the slightest appearance of infidelity.”
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As was the custom, a stream of celebratory poems and miscellanies was printed at the time of the wedding. One slim publication, beautifully bound and illustrated, stood out among them. Giustiniana, by then living mostly in Padua, had come into town for the occasion and presented the bride and groom with a sweet allegorical composition in which Curiosity and Love conspired to join two lovers and then left the field to Perseverance—the only one who could make their happiness endure. She had written it in honor of Alvise and Lucietta, but it was, in fact, dedicated, in large, bold letters, to her own first great love—the father of the bride. She added these few lines, adapted from Lucretius, in which she invoked the aid of “nurturing Venus”:
Thee I crave as partner in writing these verses
I essay to fashion for my good Memmo,
whom thou, goddess, hast willed at all times
to excel, endowed with all gifts.
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Andrea entered new negotiations to marry his second daughter, Paolina, to Luigi Martinengo, heir to another big fortune. The talks proceeded laboriously and then stalled altogether when the inquisitors put the future groom under house arrest for his licentious behavior (Andrea complained that Luigi had “taken on a Roman slut” while declaring his love for Paolina). They eventually resumed, and the wedding took place in 1789. The price, however, was high: Andrea’s financial resources were so depleted that he was forced to cede Ca’ Memmo to the Martinengos as part of Paolina’s dowry.
Now that he faced the prospect of living out his old age in solitude, Andrea seriously considered marrying again. He broached the idea with his old flame, Contarina, who was not against it. But the conversation apparently soured over practical arrangements and led, unexpectedly, to the end of their long affair. “After twenty-five years of gallantry, love, and friendship,” he wrote to Casanova bitterly, “. . . my relationship with Signora Contarina has suddenly ended on account of a trifling matter—and will not resume ever again.”
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He did not say what the trifling matter was.
Casanova frowned at the lost opportunity. He reminded his old friend that Contarina was rich and could have helped finance Andrea’s renascent political career. Andrea was piqued: “You are wrong if you think she could have assisted me. . . . She is not as rich as she was. . . . I was going to marry her out of friendship, not out of material interest. . . . Naturally she would not have been a burden on me in any way, not even in bed—she would have had a separate apartment. I was not very keen on all that flabby flesh. . . . Good company, mutual assistance in our approaching old age, and nothing more. With time, the assurance of a comfortable life and good . . . food on the table—since you ask, I will tell you I am still a glutton, and though I eat less I still eat a lot since all my teeth are still healthy.”
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