Read Casanova's Women Online

Authors: Judith Summers

Casanova's Women (51 page)

BOOK: Casanova's Women
7.46Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Tonight Casanova is beyond caring. An opportunist to the very end, his last words are reputed to be ‘I have lived as a philosopher, but die as a Christian'. Will he be pulled down into the flames of Hell for his compulsive womanising like the anti-hero of Mozart's opera
Don Giovanni
, the premiere of which he almost certainly attended in Prague in October 1787 and the libretto of which he is rumoured to have collaborated on? Casanova thinks not. For despite his loneliness and his pain, his poverty and his bitter predicament, he is convinced that he has done good in the world, particularly to women, and he remains an optimist at heart. There are misfortunes in life, of course, as he is the first to know. But their very existence has proved to him over the last seventy-three years that the sum of good is greater. If pleasure exists, then life is a joy. And where there are women, there is always pleasure to be found.

‘I am infinitely happy when I am in a dark room and see the light coming through a window which opens on to a vast horizon,' Casanova has written. Now, with a final, terrible effort that takes every last shred of his energy, he suddenly raises his head and gazes through his bedroom window, beyond the reflection of the old, gaunt, hollow-eyed stranger staring back at him, and out into the blank, black horizon of the Bohemian night. There are no stars out
there but, instead, a galaxy of women. The women who nurtured him. The women who toyed with him. The women he flirted with and seduced. The women who adored him. The women whose fortunes he made, and those whose fortunes he plundered, and the women whose lives he all but ruined. The women who, for better or for worse, have made Casanova the man he is.

Leaving his aching limbs behind him, Casanova rises from his bed and walks towards them. Here is Marina Morosini, propositioning him from behind her convent grating. And Bettina, holding up those unforgettable knitted stockings that started it all. There are Nanetta and Marta, giggling at him from their big bed on the top floor of their aunt's palazzo. And Marcia, his loving grandmother, come to rescue him from yet another debacle.

Here is Lucia, dancing her way to an early death in a sordid Amsterdam brothel. And there Marianne de Charpillon, still turning her back on him after all these years. And his mother Zanetta, as beautiful as she is impossible to please. And the mad, lonely Marquise d'Urfé, weeping secret tears over his betrayal of her.

Here is Sophia Williams sleeping the peaceful sleep of the self-righteous whilst her mother Teresa, the one-time famous London celebrity, dies alone and in agony in gaol. And Donna Lucrezia, resigned to being supplanted in his affections by their daughter Leonilda. And Leonilda, the mother of her own half-brother.

And here, waiting for him, is Henriette - his wondrous, mysterious Henriette - standing in front of Casanova on the windswept path to the unknown just as she once stood before him on the road leading up to her château, her body obscured by her hooded cloak and her face turned away from him.

BRIEF CHRONOLOGY

 

1697: birth of Gaetano Giacomo Casanova, Casanova's father.

1707: 27 August: birth of Casanova's mother, Zuanna (Giovanna) Maria Farussi, known as Zanetta.

1709: marriage of Marcia Baldissera to Girolamo Farussi.

1724: 27 February: marriage of Zanetta Farussi to Gaetano Casanova. Death of Girolamo Farussi, Zanetta's father.

1725: 2 April: birth of Giacomo Girolamo Casanova in Venice. 5 May: Giacomo baptised in church of San Samuele.

1726/7: Zanetta and Gaetano go to London, leaving Casanova with his grandmother.

1727: 1 June: birth of Casanova's brother Francesco in London.

1728: Zanetta and Gaetano return to Venice.

1730: 4 November: birth of Casanova's brother Giovanni Battista.

1731: 28 December: birth of Casanova's sister Faustina Maddelena.

1732: 25 December: birth of Casanova's youngest sister Maria Maddelena Antonia Stella.

1733: 18 December: death of Gaetano Casanova, aged thirty-six.

1734: 16 February: birth of Casanova's youngest brother Gaetano Alviso. 2 April: Zanetta takes Casanova to Padua and leaves him with Signora Mida. She spends the summer in Verona with the San Samuele theatre company. 24 November Goldoni's play,
Belisario
, is premiered in Venice, followed by
La Pupilla
, a play inspired by Zanetta. During the summer Casanova moves to Dr Antonio Gozzi's house in Padua and meets Bettina.

1735: Easter: Zanetta leaves for St Petersburg, leaving her children with her mother.

1736: 20 August: death of Casanova's four-year-old sister Faustina.

1737: Zanetta returns from St Petersburg. 1737/1738: she leaves for Dresden. Casanova enrolled at Padua University.

1739: Marcia brings Casanova back to Venice.

1740: 14 February: Casanova takes the tonsure at the church of San Samuele. Meets Senator Malipiero and Teresa Imer.

1741: 22 January: Patriarch of Venice confers four minor orders on Casanova. He meets Angela Tosello, and Marta and Nanetta Savorgnan. Possible first trip to Corfu.

1742: Casanova returns to Venice by 2 April. May: he meets Lucia on visit to Friuli.

1743: 18 March: death of Marcia Farussi. Casanova stays at the seminary on Murano for two weeks.

1744: Casanova goes to Martirano, Naples and Rome where he enters service of Cardinal Acquaviva. Affairs with Donna Lucrezia and Bellino/Teresa Lanti.

1745: 17 January: marriage of Lucrezia d'Antoni, the sister of Casanova's ‘Donna Lucrezia'. End January-beginning February: Casanova leaves Rome and returns to Venice. Teresa Imer leaves Venice for Vienna where she marries Angelo Pompeati. Marriage of Nanetta Savorgnan. Marta Savorgnan enters convent. Birth of Cesarino, Casanova's son by Teresa Lanti; and of Leonilda, his daughter by Donna Lucrezia. Casanova leaves for Corfu, travelling on to Constantinople in July and returning to Corfu in October. Leaves for Venice on the twenty-fifth where he is employed as a lawyer in the office of Manzoni.

1746: Casanova employed as a violinist at San Samuele theatre during the carnival. April: meets Senator Matteo Bragadin.

1748: 6 November: premiere in Dresden of Zanetta Casanova's play
Le Contese di Mestre e Malghera per il Trono
.

1749: early in year, Casanova compelled to leave Venice. Financed by Bragadin, he travels to Milan where he meets Marina (Teresa Lanti's sister) and Antonio Balletti. In the autumn he meets Henriette in Cesena and travels with her to Parma and Milan.

1750: February: Henriette returns to France via Geneva. April/May: Casanova is in Venice. June leaves for Paris, meeting up with Antonio Balletti en route. He is initiated into freemasonry in Lyon. July/August: Casanova arrives in Paris. His first meeting with Silvia and Mario Balletti and their young daughter Manon.

1751: Casanova translates
Zoroastre
for the Dresden court.

1752: October: Casanova and his brother Francesco leave Paris for Dresden to visit Zanetta.

1753: April: Casanova leaves Dresden and returns to Venice via Prague and Vienna. Love affairs with Teresa Imer, Caterina Capretta, and the nun M.M. (Marina Morosini). December meets the French ambassador, the Abbé Joachim de Bernis.

1754: birth in Bayreuth of Teresa Imer's daughter Sophia.

1755: April/May: De Bernis leaves Venice. 25/26: July Casanova arrested and imprisoned under The Leads in the Doge's Palace.

1756: 31 October/1 November: Casanova escapes from The Leads and heads for Paris via Munich, Augsburg and Strasbourg.

1757: 5 January: Casanova arrives in Paris, talks his way into a job with the finance ministry and organises a state lottery in conjunctionwith Cazalbigi. His flirtation with Manon Balletti begins. August-September Casanova sent on secret mission for French Government.

1757-1758: Casanova meets the Marquise d'Urfé.

1758: 18 April: the first lottery draw. 16 September: death of Silvia Balletti. October: Casanova sent to Holland where he runs into Teresa Imer and their daughter, Sophia.

1758/1759: Casanova opens a wallpaper factory.

1759: January: Casanova returns to Paris with Giuseppe Pompeati. He adopts the name the Chevalier de Seingault, and rents a country house on the outskirts of Paris. First meeting with Marianne de Charpillon in the Palais Marchand. August brief imprisonment for debt in the Fors L'Evêque. Late September Casanova leaves Paris
for Holland. October: Teresa Imer and Sophia leave Holland for England.

1760: 5 February: last love letter from Manon Balletti. Casanova travels to Cologne, Stuttgart and, by April, Zurich. 6-8 July: meets Voltaire in Geneva. 20 July: marriage of Manon Balletti to Blondel. November: Casanova meets Teresa Lanti/Bellino and their son Cesarino in Florence.

1761: January: Meeting with Donna Lucrezia and their daughter Leonilda in Naples. Later he travels via Rome, Florence, Bologna, Modena, and Parma to Turin, returning briefly to Paris in July before leaving for Strasbourg, Augsburg and Munich.

1762: early January: Casanova arrives in Paris. Mid-January: He leaves Paris to prepare for the Marquise d'Urfé's regeneration operation. February: he meets Marianna Corticelli in Metz. April: the Marquise d'Urfé's first regeneration operation in Pontcarré. By May Casanova is in Aix-la-Chapelle. From there he travels to Liège, Metz, Basle, Geneva and Turin. November: Casanova expelled from Turin.

1763: January: Casanova is back in Turin. March/April: meeting with Marcolina. The Marquise d'Urfé's second regeneration operation. May: second encounter with Henriette. Early June: brief visit to Paris. 11 June: Casanova crosses the Channel to England with his servant Clairmont and Giuseppe Pompeati. 14 June: He arrives in London. Teresa Imer, Sophia, Pauline and Marianne de Charpillon. 27 November: Casanova is arrested on the orders of Charpillon.

1764: mid-March: Casanova flees London, and travels to Wesel via Calais, Dunkirk and Brussels. By July he is in Berlin where he meets Frederick the Great. September/October: leaves for St Petersburg via Riga.

1765: May excursion from St Petersburg to Moscow. September: leaves St Petersburg for Poland, arriving in Warsaw in October.

1766: 5 March: Casanova loses Polish king's favour over duel with Branicki. 8 July: He is forced to leave Warsaw. Travels to Vienna via Breslau, Dresden and Prague.

1767: January 23: Casanova banished from Vienna. He travels to Augsburg, Cologne, Aix-la-Chapelle, Spa (August-September), Paris (by October). 14 October: Death of Senator Bragadin in Venice. November: Casanova expelled from France by Louis XV. Leaves for Madrid via Bordeaux and Pamplona.

1768: Casanova accused of illegal possession of weapons in Madrid. September: leaves for Barcelona. 16 November: imprisoned in Barcelona after a love affair. 28 December: released from prison, he leaves for France.

1769: February-May: in Aix-en-Provence, where he falls ill. Third encounter with Henriette. To Marseille via the Croix d'Or, then on to Antibes, Nice, Turin, Lugano and Turin.

1770: 15 March: Casanova leaves Turin for Parma, Bologna, Florence (by April), Sienna, Rome, Naples (June to mid-August). In Salerno in late August, with Leonilda and Donna Lucrezia. Naples. Rome.

1771: July: Casanova leaves Rome for Florence. Late December: banished from Florence, he goes to Bologna.

1772: early October: Casanova leaves Bologna. 15 November: settles in Trieste. Bankruptcy of Teresa Imer in London.

1773: 14 December: death of Marianna Corticelli in Turin.

1774: 3 September: Casanova pardoned by the Venetian government. 14 September: he returns to Venice after an absence of eighteen years.

1775: publication of the first volume of his translation of Homer's
Iliad
. 13 November: death of the Marquise d'Urfe in Paris.

1776: November: Casanova undertakes occasional work for the Venetian Inquisitors. Death of Zanetta Casanova (29 November) and of Manon Balletti (December).

1779: Casanova starts a three-year affair with seamstress Francesca Buschini.

1780: January-July: Casanova publishes a monthly magazine. 7 October: he begins to file regular reports for the Inquisitors.

1782: August publication of Casanova's pamphlet
Ne' Amore, Ne' donne
leads to his disgrace. September: flees to Trieste.

1783: 13 January: Casanova returns to Venice for a few hours, then leaves for Vienna. 16 June: revisits Venice briefly before going into permanent exile. Travels to Augsburg, Aix-la-Chapelle, Spa, Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam, Vienna, Frankfurt and Vienna in search of employment, then on to Dresden, Berlin, Brno.

1784: in mid-February he returns to Vienna, where he meets Mozart's librettist Lorenzo da Ponte. Accepts post as a secretary in the service of the Venetian ambassador, Sebastiano Foscarini. First meeting with Count Waldstein, who offers him a post as his librarian at Dux. Casanova declines.

1785: 23 April: death of Foscarini. Casanova travels to Brno, Carlsbad and Teplitz where, in September, he meets Waldstein again. This time he accepts Waldstein's offer of employment and travels to Dux.

1786: publication of Casanova's
Soliloque d'un penseur
.

1787: voyage to Prague. Publication of
Histoire de Ma Fuite
.

1788: voyage to Dresden and Leipzig. Publication of
Icosameron
.

1788/1789: possibly starts writing
Histoire de Ma Vie
.

1792: July: finishes first draft of
Histoire de Ma Vie
and begins revising it.

1797: 19 August: death of Teresa Imer in London.

1798: April: Casanova falls ill. 4 June: he dies. His nephew Carlo Angiolini takes the manuscript of
Histore de Ma Vie
to Dresden.

1820: 24 June: Casanova's daughter Sophia Williams opens the Adult Orphan Institution in London.

1821: January: manuscript of
Histoire de Ma Vie
is sold to the Leipzig publisher Brockhaus. 1822-1828: Publication of first edition of
Histoire de Ma Vie
, in an edited German translation.

BOOK: Casanova's Women
7.46Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Clandestine by Nichole van
James Patterson by Season of the Machete
Monahan 02 Artificial Intentions by Rosemarie A D'Amico
Broadchurch by Erin Kelly, Chris Chibnall
Boys Beware by Jean Ure
Manhattan Master by Jesse Joren
Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami