WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Memoirs of Jacques Casanova de Seingalt, 1725-1798. Complete cover

The Memoirs of Jacques Casanova de Seingalt, 1725-1798. Complete

Chapter 196: VI — LAST DAYS AT VENICE
Open in WeRead

About This Book

An expansive, episodic autobiography traces a vividly indulgent life across many European cities, narrating travels, amorous encounters, social intrigues, gambling and theatrical scenes, episodes of arrest and a dramatic prison escape, and long periods of exile and employment in service of patrons. The narrator offers lively portraits of salons, courts, and provincial life, interweaving personal reflection, wit, practical observation, and moral ambivalence. Organized as sequential episodes and chapters, the account blends anecdote, travelogue, and philosophical asides to portray a restless quest for pleasure, recognition, and self-understanding.

VI — LAST DAYS AT VENICE

Toward the end of 1782, doubtless convinced that he could expect nothing more from the Tribunal, Casanova entered the service of the Marquis Spinola as a secretary. Some years before, a certain Carletti, an officer in the service of the court of Turin, had won from the Marquis a wager of two hundred and fifty sequins. The existence of this debt seemed to have completely disappeared from the memory of the loser. By means of the firm promise of a pecuniary recompense, Casanova intervened to obtain from his patron a written acknowledgment of the debt owing to Carletti. His effort was successful; but instead of clinking cash, Carletti contented himself with remitting to the negotiator an assignment on the amount of the credit. Casanova’s anger caused a violent dispute, in the course of which Carlo Grimani, at whose house the scene took place, placed him in the wrong and imposed silence.

The irascible Giacomo conceived a quick resentment. To discharge his bile, he found nothing less than to publish in the course of the month of August, under the title of: ‘Ne amori ne donne ovvero la Stalla d’Angia repulita’, a libel in which Jean Carlo Grimani, Carletti, and other notable persons were outraged under transparent mythological pseudonyms.

This writing embroiled the author with the entire body of the Venetian nobility.

To allow the indignation against him to quiet down, Casanova went to pass some days at Trieste, then returned to Venice to put his affairs in order. The idea of recommencing his wandering life alarmed him. “I have lived fifty-eight years,” he wrote, “I could not go on foot with winter at hand, and when I think of starting on the road to resume my adventurous life, I laugh at myself in the mirror.”