A library can erase problems.
A library is a kind of stained glass.
Francesco and I enjoy the Cloux library. Handsome room. A fine Mantegna—in an old style frame—hangs on the far wall. Its mythological scene is pleasantly antique. The shelves hold parchments, vellums, velvet-bound books, illuminated manuscripts, scores. Francesco has turned up a score I wrote for the Medici, one I used to play.
There is a white marble table with alabaster legs where I spread out the manuscripts and books.
The librarian, keys at his waspish gut, is a defrocked Jesuit, ashen-headed, ashen-faced; he admits that he has never lifted down half of the books.
A lovely prie dieu holds a Latin volume, its pages ornamented with pastel watercolor and gold leaf. The carpet is a mouse-chewed Turkish weave, red on red on red, with colorless, limp fringes.
The unchained books are in Spanish, Latin, French, Greek, Dutch, and Hungarian—collected by King Francis’ father. He loved this room. He died there.
Sitting under the green pergola at Amboise, King Francis and I sipped apéritifs, the afternoon warm, a lazy hunting dog at his feet.
“I don’t understand how your army crossed the Alps in six or seven days.”