THE LATE MATTIA PASCAL - 1904
Chapter 1
"MY NAME IS MATTIA PASCAL"
One of the few things, in fact about
the only thing I was sure of was my
name: Mattia Pascal. Of this I took
full advantage also. Whenever one of
my friends or acquaintances so far
lost his head as to come and ask me
for a bit of advice on some matter
of importance, I would shrug my
shoulders, squint my eyes, and
answer:
"My name is Mattia Pascal!"
"That's very enlightening, old man!
I knew that much already!"
"And you don't feel lucky to know
that much?"
There was no reason why he should
that I could see. But at the time I
had not realized what it meant not
to be sure of even that much--not to
be able to answer on occasion, as I
had formerly answered:
"My name is Mattia Pascal!"
Some people surely will sympathize
with me (sympathy comes cheap) when
they try to imagine the immense
anguish a poor man must feel on
suddenly discovering ... well,
yes... just a blank; that he knows
neither who his father was, nor who
his mother was, nor how, nor when,
nor where, he was born--if ever he
was born at all.... Just as others
will be ready to criticize (criticism
comes cheaper still) the immorality
and viciousness of a society where
an innocent child can be treated
that way.
Very well! Thanks for the sympathy
and the holy horror! But it is my
duty to give notice in advance that
it's not quite that way. Indeed, if
need should arise, I could give my
family tree with the origin and
descent of all my house. I could
prove that I know my father and my
mother, and their fathers and
mothers unto several generations,
and the doings, through the years,
of all those forebears of mine (doings
not always to their untarnished
credit, I must confess).
Well then?
Well then! It's this way. My case,
not the ordinary one, by any means,
is so far out of the ordinary in
fact, that I have decided to recount
it.
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For some two years I held a
position--mouse-catcher and
custodian in one--in the so-called
Boccamazza library. Away back in
the year 1803, a certain Monsignor
Boccamazza, on departing from this
life, left his books as a legacy to
our village. It was always clear to
me that this venerable man of the
cloth knew nothing whatever about
the dispositions of his
fellow-citizens. I suppose he hoped
that his benefaction, as time and
opportunity favored, would kindle a
passion for study in their souls. So
far not a spark has ever glowed
therein, as I may state with some
authority, and with the idea of
paying a compliment, rather thannot,
to my fellow-townsmen. Indeed, our
village so little appreciated the
gift of the reverend Boccamazza that
it has, to this day, refused money
even for putting his head, neck, and
shoulders into marble; and for years
and years the books he left were
never removed from the damp and
musty store house where they had
been piled after his funeral.
Eventually, however, they were
transported (and imagine in what
condition!) to the unused Church of
Santa Maria Liberale, a building
which, for some reason or other, had
been secularized. There the town
government entrusted them to any one
of its favorites who was looking for
a sinecure and who, for two lire a
day, was willing to care for them
(or to neglect them if he chose),
and to stand the noxious odor of all
that mildewed paper.
This plum, in the course of human
events, fell to me, and I must add
that the first day of my incumbency
gave me such a distaste for books
and manuscripts in general (some of
those under my charge were very
precious, I am told) that I should
never, never, of my own accord, have
thought of increasing the number of
them in the world by one.But, as I
said, my case is a very strange one;
and I now agree that it may prove of
interest to some chance reader, who,
in fulfillment of Monsignor
Boccamazza's pious hope, shall some
day wander into the library and
stumble upon this manuscript of
mine. For I am leaving it to the
foundation, with the understanding
that no one shall open it till fifty
years after my _third, last, and
final death.
There you have it, exactly! So far I
have died twice (and the Lord knows
the extent of my regret, I can
assure you): the first time I died
by mistake; and the second time I
died... but that's-my story, as you
will see....
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