SWlfM . i U 1 f sw:W w KfTfi IV ,tfV ;i fe'4 vf v eye&puMie' .feHaaima' dressgAX august aa,' Mg V- - m -w ebm h. v -. hhm t i m r F, W r W 1 M V D'ANNUNZIO, ONCE WORLD'S CREATES I LUVtLK, NOW BALD AND ONE-EYED, IS SCORNED BY CUPID w " 1-s . ' .'SVM f I 1 1 tit w4 m ' ."u-rz-M s 3 S iffetw; Peet-Soldier Wen by Fiery JVoe- v - - w.w zffli w window and Broken Leg Keeps Him in Seclusion ' and Frem Limelight $fORMY PETREL OF FIUME f BESIEGED, AND WON HEARTS OF DUSE AND RUBENSTEIN I . : - prediction of"Glertous Passing" Failed te Matertaltze, but Bad Luck Fel- lowed Sensational Defiance of Allies X Peace Terms 1 . IfPHE little man of fuss and fury is at it again! r Haartbreakcr without peer, he takes the count for another little love ' nged)'. Once en a time, young and debonair, he wrecked the heart and life of 1'iie of the world's greatest tragediennes. ! Later a famous Russian dancer worshipped him at a Jove altar she is Lm in have built in her luxurious boudoir. r Six years age, with the amazing Are of his oratory, this maker of levels, poems and plays of the erotic, led, his country te war and victory, ind held a principality against 'the entire world. Today Gabricle d'Annunzie, fifty-eight years old, bald-headed, one ene tyed, lies en his couch at Gardene Riviera, Italy, with a fractured skull and a bruised leg. - It is rumored that his young wife, who left her parents and a musical career te live with him during his stormy dictatorship at Fiume and who married him after he performed a King Henry VIII with the divorce laws ;ef that State, pitched him out of the second-story window. The rumor may be a false one. Humors run te that sort of thing. But any rumor is interesting when ft'iencerns a man whose only answer te a reproach that he makes tee free 'with the conventions of the world is A sturdy "I am D'Annunzie!" 1 As inevitably as with war, there will be D'Annunzie and rumors of D'Annunzie. This strange man is fashioned that way. He believes he is immortal. He is new bald-headed, Who once was redheaded. Up in the Apennines, near the source of the Pescara River, he has already built i monumental tomb for himself. Net faany years age his pet was a sala mander. Fer three years he loved the salamander, and when it died he lied tears and placed it in a vault in his mantelpiece with the golden device. "Beatae 'Salarnandrae sa crum." Once his favorite pet was a goldfish, which he called Len-Pe-LrTc), and of which he declared "it possesses two qualities most rare in lifep-it is clean and silent." At Varcggie, it is said, he used te ride into the sea naked en a great white horse, Fiametta, and when he came out n beautiful woman met him and robed him in a purple mantle. "The only creatures for whom I have eternal affection are net women, but dogs," he has been heard te remark. Pqetic Personality Thrives Upen Rumqrs Is there any wonder there are ru bers about a man be .colorful aa he? Certainly net. And if his dramatic ttrsenallty is any indication of the fcin who Uvea underneath D'Annun D'Annun He'i . deadly pallor, underneath hit rp'arss satanlc whiskers, then he wel comes rumors; he thrives en them. IeuUa Baccara, a twenty-year-old pnlit, abandoned her home and parents te live with the poet-warrior ifn he lorke-1 himself hi Fium In W10 when he defied the treaty at Ver Mites nml the whnle world. D'Annun ! had been unable te Ret a divorce fc? the wife of his youth. Hut when k controlled the situation in Fiume he took advantage of the opportunity te ate a few mere lenient previsions, it It ported, te the Flumlan divorce laws, N get his divorce. Then, it was an Winced, he had niarrlcd Leulta. On tust 13 he fell out of the window t the heme te which the couple had r "d. On August 17 the Naples Mat "no. a dally newssheet hostile te the W. Informed Its readers that' in a fit 'anger, during a quarrel, Louisa i Pushed him headlong out of the tladew. .-Tie SE!.."'.?-. 1" " meantime Ice of Siberia for G0.000 years, , was served, lle'had his own privnte labor atory, 'where he distilled rare perfumes. It was In Italy during this period of his life that he met glorious La Duse Eleanors, JDuse, Italy's greatest trage dienne, and perhaps 'the world's. She was six years elder than D'Annunzie, but she fell, deeply in ieve with him ,Hcr life had nel been an easy ene, her-read te success -was beset with trials and temptations. Married, when very young, she had a daughter, but was, separated from her husband. Thl neble woman with the tragic race ueveteu ncrseir te the -younger and -jauntier D'Annunzie." He called her "the lady of the beautiful hands." He was Inspired by her, in 1804, te write his best novel, "The Triumph of Death." In order te push his career further she refused te play In any, dramas save these written by the poet-' lever. Behind the life of the strangely beau tiful Duse, one feels always the inti mation of disaster. Because the would act only In D'AmiunzIe's ploys, he'r audtences fell off. .Audiences which used te pack theatres te see her di minished te deplorable numbers. It is said that en her tour te America in the nineties she played ene night before an audience' that contained net one tlckat-pald-fbr spectator. And the cause of It all lay net In any Inability te act, but In the sort of plays the poet wrote for her. Wrete Several Dramas for Great Tragedienne He had written "The Glocenda" te Duse's slim white hands. He had writ- V tttith nlj1, w.Uh merc or l btd mZ I"11 ,vLai,s te learn what that D'ian ,n,r i i u'' lP tbe waant ma WSh k Mr,ou' n iisiftat'Vti.re.CLn,t. pert, weu'' have it Mmr Tii0".1 ,6re t,?8u.11 wbc'' h Kit itJ1.8 RurI'?n declared the pest mIIXXi jncIm no' tea and literaturi Si&,,J,.i.U IntelleetSSl S a!l i?fftU,iri'0drr"CK1j'"i't'' Wimlc Italian0' ,0(i t 1ft la .in ',? 8oen or nt he will , lli?i8nd delD- little, earthauaie U?Nf. M r 4fe"5h"?: "s it was stated b.fer.. W by W8 ,inrn1 t l" en,y fePe'ng .fiJas rt. """f' " has wa ted mere SW this etrang. ,., vtrnl tikSatnnl e. j .T . ""c'icag LZW0 Manifested Vr " w! .n?.r'l' d'An IH a h,:Z V"rn!. iraditten atatea. lftt nam. ,.",. .Artrlaile. HI nier."' "n7 ,",': Btea . "the .ti. i"" PPera -ertala Nr tuUi'v; fa iliI.J At JftiM'ha w u pau ne Degas iwi iwg arr- ward small but quite handsome, ea thetlcally pale, with eyes that burned llke points of blue fire his satanle sweetness toward women became mani fest. He weed the elderly Duchesse of Galeae. At twenty, or thereabouts, he appeared ready te n.arry her, and then suddenly, with an abruptness which seemed of Itself a peculiar mark of ge nius, he eloped with the Ducheese's daughter, Maria, and married her. But Maria did net held him long. The Church prevented divorce, and D'An D'An nunzeo la said te have launched imme diately upon his private leve beat, des tined for many and uncertain seas. All this while he was writing tremen dous things. He had a command of words that brought new life te Italian literature. He hurled words about as Ther hurled thunderbolts, smd his read ers gasped In amazement and applause, succumbing utterly te his genius. His affairs of the heart ceurited up like the sands of the everlasting aea. He wooed ballet dancers, poetesses and humble beauties this languishing poet of love. There is said te be In Italy an old and broken woman Countess HLw7' J ,vJ gP&u&lv TgggggggggggflgsjHgl kaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaSOiiaHalaaaVaalaHBra , ggggggggggggggggggggggHasaalaaBBHH BBBBBBBBHBsW80i-J H BBBBHsHBHeraaMiyit",' ?HiSl BaaaaaaWissaaaaHHaaHla!tsSaaBHWi'j 'vaaaaaaaHaaaSHPitiiBsisi KBKjHc9EJvlra H BBi-i Bnl HJHaaaaaaaaaaaaVaaaHaaBsBij? aaaaaaaBBalaaHaKi?9 gHHKii "gggkssasBnHI giHP)kHHI IBf I'liiBB HP b ' iflHssV aBBBBBBBBaHHgflHBi aaaaaaMWaasaMaswTTTrr iitiffiBPPr? 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He dwelt llke a prlnce of old, whehe purple burn ing bleed he believe; flews deep In his vein. He, purchased the Villa Capon Capen tin end many, valuable horses and dots. la said that his extravagance Inspired him te give a banquet at which iitat ef a MttaftM, yreanrai in the ffl ten "Frnncesca da Blmlni," In which the trogedlcnne scored wonderfully. But then he dovelepcd the conviction that all great things must be monotonous, as the sea Is monotonous and the moun tains. And ha wrote his plays Inspired by that conviction. And his plays failed te attract the public. But Duse's leve for him and loyalty held her te ber determination. She would only play his pieces. And then he gradually tired of her. She was forty-two years old, and he beenme meru than nver conscious of her age. He even told her no, It Is snld. And sndncsH Riinwcd nt her henrr; thorn were moments when, turreunded by gny company, the het, scalding tears streamed down her lovely checks, And one day, D'Annunzie hinted te her that sha was net the Ideal type for his newest play, which he was just complet ing. This tore her heart. But apparently ber peer life was net nnnarentlr nat i of herself and the blue paradise of their love Duse had made many confidences te the poet. She had told him most intimate details of. her early life, meant only for a lever's ears, te be kept sacred within the heart. And D'Annunzie published "II Fuoco," which might be translated "Flre" or "The Flame." It revealed all these secrets of Ln Duse's youth, it revealed her leve for the poet, and it revealed his increasing coldness. Twe main characters in the book, a poet and a great actress, were terned nftnr the lives D'Annunzie The humiliation of this revelation broke her heart. "lie lias sold the secrets et our love !" she cried. "He has put our pas pas sieh in his book ! I shall kill him.' But she didn't. Perhaps liar love for him was tee lefty. Perhaps her enthu siasm was entirely snuffed out by this last bitterness of her own life, se that she hadn't even enough interest left te try te kill him. D Annunzle apolo gized, said that the book was intended te dlficleBa no secrets of their liv that It was entirely fiction. Duse. It Is believed, never survived this crisis, She fell desperately 111. Her acting became listless, her Inspira tion seemed te be gene. She bud be come the symbol of his decadent's dic tum, "Be beautiful, but be sad." Hhe la still alive, at the age of slxty-lhree. She retired from the stage shortly after her break with tbe poet, and save for an uninspired revival once or twice, has never returned. With n charm of character that Is poetry Itself, this mnKnltlcent woman of grief and disillusionment, forguve her lever. Though stunned irrevocably by the blew, she has been moved te say : "We must bow before the poet even when It Bccms te us he docs wrong. He is a peet: he has seen something; he has seen It in that way. One must ac cept his vision because it is a vision." Duse Nurses Old Lever Struck by Flying Shell In 1018, when the poet, then a colo nel In Italian aviation, was wounded by a piece of flying shell, losing his right eye, Ln Duse rushed te his slde nnd nursed him until he was well enough te return te the front. And It bespeaks the Inexpressible fascination of the man, that he can held the affection of women m and of men tee. Like the character she vrcutcd In "The Olocendn," who crushes her beautiful handn for the sake of her lever, La Duse crushed her very llfe. And 'then D'Annunzie, the electric, turned te. another, and another. In the meantime, he get himself up te hla wretched enough. During the days tttxu la debt, His'pjays feu, his ex" penscs burled him under, he sold hits Splendid Villa, anil finnllv hnrl in (lin Ills creditors in Italy. He went te Fraucc, an exiie. Matters went wrong wJth him there. This poet, whose best loved colors were "the red nt llmul ntwl ill., vnllnu- nf geld," could nt this tlme. make llttl' geld. Ills thoughts turned te blend. He consulted a hcercba. who told him thai within two yeurs he would he stabbed by a woman. Nothing daunted, the poet, with his sense for the dramatic, mnde his famous prontinclamcnte : I shnl live two mere eers, then I shall perish. I hIihII die ln a way that will make the whole world wonder. I shall be D'Annunxe the superb. Tn the full strength of my mind and body up iu uiin mat instant of mv earthly ex istence, I shall change into n sweet vapor and mlngle with the whole uni verse. I shall be velntillznl Inte in in flnlte molecules without leaving n trace of myself behind. I slinll never ret in a common grave." Determined In that manner, he built his tmnb In the Anpenlnes, Hut the poet did net dle within two venrt. Instead, he met Ida IlubenMcln. a former member of the Imperial KusMnn ballet nt St. Petersburg. In 1000. In Ilussln, this darkly beautiful RusMan married Victer Gorewltz, a millionaire. Fer a tlme she web content, but when Gorewltz demanded that she glve up her career, she decamped and went u Paris alene. D'Annunzie met ber for the first time, when she played a Chris- tlnn martyr in a tableau vlvant. The j poet of temperament nnd infinite vn- I rlety fell in love with her. As she was net then renowned, he determined te malte her w. He wrote a play about her she wen te shine as a martyr. He wrote "Tlie Martyrdom of St. Se bastian," Ida Kubensteln te portray the role of St. Sebubtlan. It was Idu's opportunity. She Fnw that. But she went further, she fell ln leve with the author, as the author had already with her. It Is reported that she erected a leve Mirlne In her boudoir, nt which she made dally offer ings of love te Cnbrlele. They were mad about each ether. The play Itself was put under a papal ban. Interdicted by the Archbishop of Paris. It was u role te bring out the muiI, uld Ida. Paris, Recalling Duse, Unfriendly te D'Annunzie Paris, nt the time, remembering Duse, wns unfriendly te D'Annunzie. It whispered that seen enough Ida Ku bensteln would be thoroughly fed up with the poet's exactions, his tyrnnnle But Ida fooled and delighted the Pa risians. And D'Annunzie. ln spite of his grnnde patnlen, was jilted. Ida met Geerge Baklanoff, the Mission bari tone, nnd an old leve for him revived. some pertens said. Others denied this, and declared sue gnu- up the poet for Lee Biikst, who did settings for the St. Sebastian play. Anyway, d Annunzle was abandoned and Paris chortled. Miss Itubenstcln is reported te hnm explained her position after this fash- ten: 'We Russians nre nt one. nnd the same time the most sensual and the meat spiritual of people. W riot In sense pleasures, dress und feasting and love, and we wallow In soul depths after the things of sense have grown tame. "I care no longer for the things of the sense, nnd long only for the eternal things of the spirit. I would retire te some remote convent and think only of the soul. I have expressed nil this te d'Annunzie, and he, tee, is new feci lng the call of the tplrlt. I have taught him these thing.. I hne preached te him nnd he feels tiie Influence, und Saint Sebastian is doing its work for him ns well as for me." Se, jeu see n poet defeated by his own play, and soul gnvu llesli the up percut for ten full counts. Kven then d'Annunzie was scnreely satisfied. Purls laughed again in 1014 at another of his escapades. At a gorgeous innsqued ball one night he spied a beautiful masked woman In n Venetian costume. Somebody told him she was a real princess, nnd the poet pursued her. Se much that the princess wus heard te remark that "that horrid little Italian" annoyed her. D'An D'An nunzeo wus astounded and disgusted in the end te learn that his princess was none ether than an humble, popular music hall bter. Thlugs went from bnd te worse for him mentally and physically. His life was created for thrills, for wnsatlens. And eue day he announced that If life flflA rfBBBP '' fiBB. MMgmilJ).luiwlMs4lMMal!yJMLsf SKBHaBHEflMaHsMtfF llw JssaWWJVSBBT RpSflHB idBmPtOUl MJS!ZJbbB bbbmI "" BiJKKmJKmjfKllmf'Jm D'Annunrie sK-MlsWiBBiliBBiBKvwH BIBtVBilBIKtf BBBBBBBBBBVBBBBsfelwBB -BIBIBII HaBH?niHBBBHMLHHK?H arMFTv (, vBBBRJBJBHBJHHSH Biv '- ;:--- LaBsHHHmBUBsBsH bH'V ' L:A. laBaHlkBBnSSiKKflHiBH i NjMpJfflaaMMiBlllBOBBJI8MBBaPBlilMBllllM QLbibiBbW& IiibibbibibibibibibhbbbibibibiBbibbbW HsvOaVlaBIBIBIBIBIBIH ,f'. JfflfcalHlaaBBTw'BBMwT V. t,'V ,.rPat.SelcUr at Fiusaa ?udM,t80en, PrCR(,nt him with another thrill he planned te kill himself net In nny ordinary wny, but lit n way the world would marvel at. But Ufa did offer him another thrill. The War broke out. Cermnnu tnm n.....u. Belgium. Knglund and France tried te "" i ime. u was the nervous Hi tie man's opportunity. Although lift .. jvuin tiin, iiicu, niyepic, I headed, sparsely whiskered, small um, no riibiicu wick te Italy. Thrilled at Chance te Plunge Inte Strife life found the f!nvirmnt nmitti.ti about etcrlDf th wr. He wB ftthast F at their attitude. He saw the possi bility of getting back at Italy's ancient enemy, Aurtrla. The leve he se easily gave te women concentrated ln an almost greater love for his country. And the inspiration save wings te his words, nnd tire te his conviction. He made speeches everywhere, advo cating immediate war. Over the heads of the Government he pictured te hla countrymen what 6cemed te hira te be their only duty. And in May, 1015, he delivered his blazing speech te the students of the University of Genea la front of the stntue of Garibaldi. D'An D'An nunzeo was hailed ns the second Gari baldi. Maddened students bore him en their shoulders nnd paraded blm about the streets. On the 23d of May, 1015, Italy de fSS3 inWri.:D'AnDU"ai0 W,rcd harri' evS JrewT , world's most beautiful sky. I am drank S8t.tTveJn?).W Klne t0 8 buxtdbrirhirch3Veffl; tlen And within a few months Vll .riri18 T1!'0 Vith hi'Scncuar trichs. He bombarded Austria's i ennitnl he ltnlinn people Internrd there. He uas wounded a number of times Air. trm set a price of $4000 upon b"; head be Intended te devote himself t0 lha ?"incs? of Jeaw again-whfch doubt! Inf. T15!1"? H.P we'a be once , mew hive-but he heard that the treaty, makers were net going te clveltalr Flume, which he believed ought te come war Uh ",hrJ; M !eitin.ate speluTf war. ylth theusnm s of fe lowers who loved him ns perhaps no ether lPmler and hi' r;d' h, matcM " n Fluml 2? i ZS1 th" co""fl"s reprcaeutfd at Paris. He even declared war "n Ms I M''fe"," ' c Prove'" VersSfllei0 "il:idbj' 'he deeialeua at Versailles, in the end he wes ner- sTatc? t0 1WTa the tregb,e1 n,i?r ,l Mt' 5ew"r. he was deter -S ifli0 Turr? LeulM- he had com te lighten tbe burdens of military gor ger gor ernment at Fiume. And. according te reperU. he was able te secure his di vorce from Maria bride, of his youth, SFarch'ldS" fBlr pUn't ' But'enly the ether day she It mM te have thrown him out of the window! Hint may he true or h may net -as many reported Incidents In thla spit fire s llfe may or may net be. Felks bavn even gene se for as te say he i Mark, staring med. Perhaps he Is, we nre all morn or lens mad, many phil osophers have told us. ' ' All of us, however, de net have that ntrigulng madness which forces us te live dangerously. And that's the sort this prancing Italian midget has thi sort that even the safest and sanest of us human cr ters furtively admire. t"."1, P. Annunzle " heut the poet. It Is his explanation and his ex cuse for hlinhelf Ami t.u .. "i" ,"! D'Annunzie Ther of word. warrleTT II) mil. Ml elley n'Atmii.i.l.. ...i .' I und n,1"T rrnM,l,,!'. he rips and rend con 1 un" vrntien as he might a pie.e of Hnet" : wVateTcr" iB.llihS'ZffffiWL fr llliteratef h. own Va-SVft'OTS' vVs h'fre ever a aaan llke HmM V j I WK1 i .1 .f i.'LJJM 4ikjSl M -V-aa, M w.fivU.l.lii; A-l'H.''l ? j ihhs. . rf$x2&&V 4. .r.itiV .-.JtLn.- iTt ,.y. W I--IY.. h iM,.S&. A