The dead monk was clad, as when alive,
in the brown woollen frock of the Capuchins, with
the hood drawn over his head, but so as to leave the
features and a portion of the beard uncovered.
His rosary and cross hung at his side; his hands were
folded over his breast; his feet (he was of a barefooted
order in his lifetime, and continued so in death) protruded
from beneath his habit, stiff and stark, with a more
waxen look than even his face. They were tied
together at the ankles with a black ribbon.
The countenance, as we have already
said, was fully displayed. It had a purplish
hue upon it, unlike the paleness of an ordinary corpse,
but as little resembling the flush of natural life.
The eyelids were but partially drawn down, and showed
the eyeballs beneath; as if the deceased friar were
stealing a glimpse at the bystanders, to watch whether
they were duly impressed with the solemnity of his
obsequies. The shaggy eyebrows gave sternness
to the look. Miriam passed between two of the
lighted candles, and stood close beside the bier.
“My God!” murmured she. “What
is this?”
She grasped Donatello’s hand,
and, at the same instant, felt him give a convulsive
shudder, which she knew to have been caused by a sudden
and terrible throb of the heart. His hand, by
an instantaneous change, became like ice within hers,
which likewise grew so icy that their insensible fingers
might have rattled, one against the other. No
wonder that their blood curdled; no wonder that their
hearts leaped and paused! The dead face of the
monk, gazing at them beneath its half-closed eyelids,
was the same visage that had glared upon their naked
souls, the past midnight, as Donatello flung him over
the precipice.
The sculptor was standing at the foot
of the bier, and had not yet seen the monk’s
features.
“Those naked feet!” said
he. “I know not why, but they affect me
strangely. They have walked to and fro over the
hard pavements of Rome, and through a hundred other
rough ways of this life, where the monk went begging
for his brotherhood; along the cloisters and dreary
corridors of his convent, too, from his youth upward!
It is a suggestive idea, to track those worn feet
backward through all the paths they have trodden,
ever since they were the tender and rosy little feet
of a baby, and (cold as they now are) were kept warm
in his mother’s hand.”
As his companions, whom the sculptor
supposed to be close by him, made no response to his
fanciful musing, he looked up, and saw them at the
head of the bier. He advanced thither himself.
“Ha!” exclaimed he.
He cast a horror-stricken and bewildered
glance at Miriam, but withdrew it immediately.
Not that he had any definite suspicion, or, it may
be, even a remote idea, that she could be held responsible
in the least degree for this man’s sudden death.
In truth, it seemed too wild a thought to connect,
in reality, Miriam’s persecutor of many past
months and the vagabond of the preceding night, with
the dead Capuchin of to-day. It resembled one
of those unaccountable changes and interminglings
of identity, which so often occur among the personages
of a dream. But Kenyon, as befitted the professor
of an imaginative art, was endowed with an exceedingly
quick sensibility, which was apt to give him intimations
of the true state of matters that lay beyond his actual
vision. There was a whisper in his ear; it said,
“Hush!” Without asking himself wherefore,
he resolved to be silent as regarded the mysterious
discovery which he had made, and to leave any remark
or exclamation to be voluntarily offered by Miriam.
If she never spoke, then let the riddle be unsolved.
And now occurred a circumstance that
would seem too fantastic to be told, if it had not
actually happened, precisely as we set it down.
As the three friends stood by the bier, they saw that
a little stream of blood had begun to ooze from the
dead monk’s nostrils; it crept slowly towards
the thicket of his beard, where, in the course of a
moment or two, it hid itself.
“How strange!” ejaculated
Kenyon. “The monk died of apoplexy, I suppose,
or by some sudden accident, and the blood has not yet
congealed.”
“Do you consider that a sufficient
explanation?” asked Miriam, with a smile from
which the sculptor involuntarily turned away his eyes.
“Does it satisfy you?”
“And why not?” he inquired.
“Of course, you know the old
superstition about this phenomenon of blood flowing
from a dead body,” she rejoined. “How
can we tell but that the murderer of this monk (or,
possibly, it may be only that privileged murderer,
his physician) may have just entered the church?”
“I cannot jest about it,”
said Kenyon. “It is an ugly sight!”
“True, true; horrible to see,
or dream of!” she replied, with one of those
long, tremulous sighs, which so often betray a sick
heart by escaping unexpectedly. “We will
not look at it any more. Come away, Donatello.
Let us escape from this dismal church. The sunshine
will do you good.”
When had ever a woman such a trial
to sustain as this! By no possible supposition
could Miriam explain the identity of the dead Capuchin,
quietly and decorously laid out in the nave of his
convent church, with that of her murdered persecutor,
flung heedlessly at the foot of the precipice.
The effect upon her imagination was as if a strange
and unknown corpse had miraculously, while she was
gazing at it, assumed the likeness of that face, so
terrible henceforth in her remembrance. It was
a symbol, perhaps, of the deadly iteration with which
she was doomed to behold the image of her crime reflected
back upon her in a thousand ways, and converting the
great, calm face of Nature, in the whole, and in its
innumerable details, into a manifold reminiscence of
that one dead visage.
No sooner had Miriam turned away from
the bier, and gone a few steps, than she fancied the
likeness altogether an illusion, which would vanish
at a closer and colder view. She must look at
it again, therefore, and at once; or else the grave
would close over the face, and leave the awful fantasy
that had connected itself therewith fixed ineffaceably
in her brain.
“Wait for me, one moment!”
she said to her companions. “Only a moment!”
So she went back, and gazed once more
at the corpse. Yes; these were the features that
Miriam had known so well; this was the visage that
she remembered from a far longer date than the most
intimate of her friends suspected; this form of clay
had held the evil spirit which blasted her sweet youth,
and compelled her, as it were, to stain her womanhood
with crime. But, whether it were the majesty of
death, or something originally noble and lofty in
the character of the dead, which the soul had stamped
upon the features, as it left them; so it was that
Miriam now quailed and shook, not for the vulgar horror
of the spectacle, but for the severe, reproachful
glance that seemed to come from between those half-closed
lids. True, there had been nothing, in his lifetime,
viler than this man. She knew it; there was no
other fact within her consciousness that she felt
to be so certain; and yet, because her persecutor
found himself safe and irrefutable in death, he frowned
upon his victim, and threw back the blame on her!
“Is it thou, indeed?”
she murmured, under her breath. “Then thou
hast no right to scowl upon me so! But art thou
real, or a vision?” She bent down over the dead
monk, till one of her rich curls brushed against his
forehead. She touched one of his folded hands
with her finger.
“It is he,” said Miriam.
“There is the scar, that I know so well, on his
brow. And it is no vision; he is palpable to my
touch! I will question the fact no longer, but
deal with it as I best can.”
It was wonderful to see how the crisis
developed in Miriam its own proper strength, and the
faculty of sustaining the demands which it made upon
her fortitude. She ceased to tremble; the beautiful
woman gazed sternly at her dead enemy, endeavoring
to meet and quell the look of accusation that he threw
from between his half-closed eyelids.
“No; thou shalt not scowl me
down!” said she. “Neither now, nor
when we stand together at the judgment-seat.
I fear not to meet thee there. Farewell, till
that next encounter!”
Haughtily waving her hand, Miriam
rejoined her friends, who were awaiting her at the
door of the church. As they went out, the sacristan
stopped them, and proposed to show the cemetery of
the convent, where the deceased members of the fraternity
are laid to rest in sacred earth, brought long ago
from Jerusalem.
“And will yonder monk be buried there?”
she asked.
“Brother Antonio?” exclaimed the sacristan.
“Surely, our good brother will
be put to bed there! His grave is already dug,
and the last occupant has made room for him. Will
you look at it, signorina?”
“I will!” said Miriam.
“Then excuse me,” observed
Kenyon; “for I shall leave you. One dead
monk has more than sufficed me; and I am not bold
enough to face the whole mortality of the convent.”
It was easy to see, by Donatello’s
looks, that he, as well as the sculptor, would gladly
have escaped a visit to the famous cemetery of the
Cappuccini. But Miriam’s nerves were strained
to such a pitch, that she anticipated a certain solace
and absolute relief in passing from one ghastly spectacle
to another of long-accumulated ugliness; and there
was, besides, a singular sense of duty which impelled
her to look at the final resting-place of the being
whose fate had been so disastrously involved with
her own. She therefore followed the sacristan’s
guidance, and drew her companion along with her, whispering
encouragement as they went.
The cemetery is beneath the church,
but entirely above ground, and lighted by a row of
iron-grated windows without glass. A corridor
runs along beside these windows, and gives access
to three or four vaulted recesses, or chapels, of
considerable breadth and height, the floor of which
consists of the consecrated earth of Jerusalem.
It is smoothed decorously over the deceased brethren
of the convent, and is kept quite free from grass
or weeds, such as would grow even in these gloomy
recesses, if pains were not bestowed to root them up.
But, as the cemetery is small, and it is a precious
privilege to sleep in holy ground, the brotherhood
are immemorially accustomed, when one of their number
dies, to take the longest buried skeleton out of the
oldest grave, and lay the new slumberer there instead.
Thus, each of the good friars, in his turn, enjoys
the luxury of a consecrated bed, attended with the
slight drawback of being forced to get up long before
daybreak, as it were, and make room for another lodger.
The arrangement of the unearthed skeletons
is what makes the special interest of the cemetery.
The arched and vaulted walls of the burial recesses
are supported by massive pillars and pilasters made
of thigh-bones and skulls; the whole material of the
structure appears to be of a similar kind; and the
knobs and embossed ornaments of this strange architecture
are represented by the joints of the spine, and the
more delicate tracery by the Smaller bones of the human
frame. The summits of the arches are adorned
with entire skeletons, looking as if they were wrought
most skilfully in bas-relief. There is no possibility
of describing how ugly and grotesque is the effect,
combined with a certain artistic merit, nor how much
perverted ingenuity has been shown in this queer way,
nor what a multitude of dead monks, through how many
hundred years, must have contributed their bony framework
to build up these great arches of mortality.
On some of the skulls there are inscriptions, purporting
that such a monk, who formerly made use of that particular
headpiece, died on such a day and year; but vastly
the greater number are piled up indistinguishably
into the architectural design, like the many deaths
that make up the one glory of a victory.
In the side walls of the vaults are
niches where skeleton monks sit or stand, clad in
the brown habits that they wore in life, and labelled
with their names and the dates of their decease.
Their skulls (some quite bare, and others still covered
with yellow skin, and hair that has known the earth-damps)
look out from beneath their hoods, grinning hideously
repulsive. One reverend father has his mouth wide
open, as if he had died in the midst of a howl of
terror and remorse, which perhaps is even now screeching
through eternity. As a general thing, however,
these frocked and hooded skeletons seem to take a more
cheerful view of their position, and try with ghastly
smiles to turn it into a jest. But the cemetery
of the Capuchins is no place to nourish celestial hopes:
the soul sinks forlorn and wretched under all this
burden of dusty death; the holy earth from Jerusalem,
so imbued is it with mortality, has grown as barren
of the flowers of Paradise as it is of earthly weeds
and grass. Thank Heaven for its blue sky; it needs
a long, upward gaze to give us back our faith.
Not here can we feel ourselves immortal, where the
very altars in these chapels of horrible consecration
are heaps of human bones.
Yet let us give the cemetery the praise
that it deserves. There is no disagreeable scent,
such as might have been expected from the decay of
so many holy persons, in whatever odor of sanctity
they may have taken their departure. The same
number of living monks would not smell half so unexceptionably.
Miriam went gloomily along the corridor,
from one vaulted Golgotha to another, until in the
farthest recess she beheld an open grave.
“Is that for him who lies yonder in the nave?”
she asked.
“Yes, signorina, this is to
be the resting-place of Brother Antonio, who came
to his death last night,” answered the sacristan;
“and in yonder niche, you see, sits a brother
who was buried thirty years ago, and has risen to
give him place.”
“It is not a satisfactory idea,”
observed Miriam, “that you poor friars cannot
call even your graves permanently your own. You
must lie down in them, methinks, with a nervous anticipation
of being disturbed, like weary men who know that they
shall be summoned out of bed at midnight. Is
it not possible (if money were to be paid for the privilege)
to leave Brother Antonio if that be his
name in the occupancy of that narrow grave
till the last trumpet sounds?”
“By no means, signorina; neither
is it needful or desirable,” answered the sacristan.
“A quarter of a century’s sleep in the
sweet earth of Jerusalem is better than a thousand
years in any other soil. Our brethren find good
rest there. No ghost was ever known to steal out
of this blessed cemetery.”
“That is well,” responded
Miriam; “may he whom you now lay to sleep prove
no exception to the rule!”
As they left the cemetery she put
money into the sacristan’s hand to an amount
that made his eyes open wide and glisten, and requested
that it might be expended in masses for the repose
of Father Antonio’s soul.