From the old butler, whom he found
to be a very gracious and affable personage, Kenyon
soon learned many curious particulars about the family
history and hereditary peculiarities of the Counts
of Monte Beni. There was a pedigree, the later
portion of which that is to say, for a little
more than a thousand years a genealogist
would have found delight in tracing out, link by link,
and authenticating by records and documentary evidences.
It would have been as difficult, however, to follow
up the stream of Donatello’s ancestry to its
dim source, as travellers have found it to reach the
mysterious fountains of the Nile. And, far beyond
the region of definite and demonstrable fact, a romancer
might have strayed into a region of old poetry, where
the rich soil, so long uncultivated and untrodden,
had lapsed into nearly its primeval state of wilderness.
Among those antique paths, now overgrown with tangled
and riotous vegetation, the wanderer must needs follow
his own guidance, and arrive nowhither at last.
The race of Monte Beni, beyond a doubt,
was one of the oldest in Italy, where families appear
to survive at least, if not to flourish, on their
half-decayed roots, oftener than in England or France.
It came down in a broad track from the Middle Ages;
but, at epochs anterior to those, it was distinctly
visible in the gloom of the period before chivalry
put forth its flower; and further still, we are almost
afraid to say, it was seen, though with a fainter
and wavering course, in the early morn of Christendom,
when the Roman Empire had hardly begun to show symptoms
of decline. At that venerable distance, the heralds
gave up the lineage in despair.
But where written record left the
genealogy of Monte Beni, tradition took it up, and
carried it without dread or shame beyond the Imperial
ages into the times of the Roman republic; beyond those,
again, into the epoch of kingly rule. Nor even
so remotely among the mossy centuries did it pause,
but strayed onward into that gray antiquity of which
there is no token left, save its cavernous tombs,
and a few bronzes, and some quaintly wrought ornaments
of gold, and gems with mystic figures and inscriptions.
There, or thereabouts, the line was supposed to have
had its origin in the sylvan life of Etruria, while
Italy was yet guiltless of Rome.
Of course, as we regret to say, the
earlier and very much the larger portion of this respectable
descent and the same is true of many briefer
pedigrees must be looked upon
as altogether mythical. Still, it threw a romantic
interest around the unquestionable antiquity of the
Monte Beni family, and over that tract of their own
vines and fig-trees beneath the shade of which they
had unquestionably dwelt for immemorial ages.
And there they had laid the foundations of their tower,
so long ago that one half of its height was said to
be sunken under the surface and to hide subterranean
chambers which once were cheerful with the olden sunshine.
One story, or myth, that had mixed
itself up with their mouldy genealogy, interested
the sculptor by its wild, and perhaps grotesque, yet
not unfascinating peculiarity. He caught at it
the more eagerly, as it afforded a shadowy and whimsical
semblance of explanation for the likeness which he,
with Miriam and Hilda, had seen or fancied between
Donatello and the Faun of Praxiteles.
The Monte Beni family, as this legend
averred, drew their origin from the Pelasgic race,
who peopled Italy in times that may be called prehistoric.
It was the same noble breed of men, of Asiatic birth,
that settled in Greece; the same happy and poetic kindred
who dwelt in Arcadia, and whether they
ever lived such life or not enriched the
world with dreams, at least, and fables, lovely, if
unsubstantial, of a Golden Age. In those delicious
times, when deities and demigods appeared familiarly
on earth, mingling with its inhabitants as friend with
friend, when nymphs, satyrs, and the whole
train of classic faith or fable hardly took pains
to hide themselves in the primeval woods, at
that auspicious period the lineage of Monte Beni had
its rise. Its progenitor was a being not altogether
human, yet partaking so largely of the gentlest human
qualities, as to be neither awful nor shocking to
the imagination. A sylvan creature, native among
the woods, had loved a mortal maiden, and perhaps
by kindness, and the subtile courtesies which love
might teach to his simplicity, or possibly by a ruder
wooing had won her to his haunts. In
due time he gained her womanly affection; and, making
their bridal bower, for aught we know, in the hollow
of a great tree, the pair spent a happy wedded life
in that ancient neighborhood where now stood Donatello’s
tower.
From this union sprang a vigorous
progeny that took its place unquestioned among human
families. In that age, however, and long afterwards,
it showed the ineffaceable linéaments of its wild
paternity: it was a pleasant and kindly race
of men, but capable of savage fierceness, and never
quite restrainable within the trammels of social law.
They were strong, active, genial, cheerful as the sunshine,
passionate as the tornado. Their lives were rendered
blissful by art unsought harmony with nature.
But, as centuries passed away, the
Faun’s wild blood had necessarily been attempered
with constant intermixtures from the more ordinary
streams of human life. It lost many of its original
qualities, and served for the most part only to bestow
an unconquerable vigor, which kept the family from
extinction, and enabled them to make their own part
good throughout the perils and rude emergencies of
their interminable descent. In the constant wars
with which Italy was plagued, by the dissensions of
her petty states and republics, there was a demand
for native hardihood.
The successive members of the Monte
Beni family showed valor and policy enough’
at all events, to keep their hereditary possessions
out of the clutch of grasping neighbors, and probably
differed very little from the other feudal barons
with whom they fought and feasted. Such a degree
of conformity with the manners of the generations through
which it survived, must have been essential to the
prolonged continuance of the race.
It is well known, however, that any
hereditary peculiarity as a supernumerary
finger, or an anomalous shape of feature, like the
Austrian lip is wont to show itself in a
family after a very wayward fashion. It skips
at its own pleasure along the line, and, latent for
half a century or so, crops out again in a great-grandson.
And thus, it was said, from a period beyond memory
or record, there had ever and anon been a descendant
of the Monte Bénis bearing nearly all the
characteristics that were attributed to the original
founder of the race. Some traditions even went
so far as to enumerate the ears, covered with a delicate
fur, and shaped like a pointed leaf, among the proofs
of authentic descent which were seen in these favored
individuals. We appreciate the beauty of such
tokens of a nearer kindred to the great family of
nature than other mortals bear; but it would be idle
to ask credit for a statement which might be deemed
to partake so largely of the grotesque.
But it was indisputable that, once
in a century or oftener, a son of Monte Beni gathered
into himself the scattered qualities of his race,
and reproduced the character that had been assigned
to it from immemorial times. Beautiful, strong,
brave, kindly, sincere, of honest impulses, and endowed
with simple tastes and the love of homely pleasures,
he was believed to possess gifts by which he could
associate himself with the wild things of the forests,
and with the fowls of the air, and could feel a sympathy
even with the trees; among which it was his joy to
dwell. On the other hand, there were deficiencies
both of intellect and heart, and especially, as it
seemed, in the development of the higher portion of
man’s nature. These defects were less perceptible
in early youth, but showed themselves more strongly
with advancing age, when, as the animal spirits settled
down upon a lower level, the representative of the
Monte Bénis was apt to become sensual, addicted
to gross pleasures, heavy, unsympathizing, and insulated
within the narrow limits of a surly selfishness.
A similar change, indeed, is no more
than what we constantly observe to take place in persons
who are not careful to substitute other graces for
those which they inevitably lose along with the quick
sensibility and joyous vivacity of youth. At
worst, the reigning Count of Monte Beni, as his hair
grew white, was still a jolly old fellow over his flask
of wine, the wine that Bacchus himself was fabled
to have taught his sylvan ancestor how to express,
and from what choicest grapes, which would ripen only
in a certain divinely favored portion of the Monte
Beni vineyard.
The family, be it observed, were both
proud and ashamed of these legends; but whatever part
of them they might consent to incorporate into their
ancestral history, they steadily repudiated all that
referred to their one distinctive feature, the pointed
and furry ears. In a great many years past, no
sober credence had been yielded to the mythical portion
of the pedigree. It might, however, be considered
as typifying some such assemblage of qualities in
this case, chiefly remarkable for their simplicity
and naturalness as, when they reappear in
successive generations, constitute what we call family
character. The sculptor found, moreover, on the
evidence of some old portraits, that the physical
features of the race had long been similar to what
he now saw them in Donatello. With accumulating
years, it is true, the Monte Beni face had a tendency
to look grim and savage; and, in two or three instances,
the family pictures glared at the spectator in the
eyes like some surly animal, that had lost its good
humor when it outlived its playfulness.
The young Count accorded his guest
full liberty to investigate the personal annals of
these pictured worthies, as well as all the rest of
his progenitors; and ample materials were at hand in
many chests of worm-eaten papers and yellow parchments,
that had been gathering into larger and dustier piles
ever since the dark ages. But, to confess the
truth, the information afforded by these musty documents
was so much more prosaic than what Kenyon acquired
from Tomaso’s legends, that even the superior
authenticity of the former could not reconcile him
to its dullness. What especially delighted the
sculptor was the analogy between Donatello’s
character, as he himself knew it, and those peculiar
traits which the old butler’s narrative assumed
to have been long hereditary in the race. He
was amused at finding, too, that not only Tomaso but
the peasantry of the estate and neighboring village
recognized his friend as a genuine Monte Beni, of
the original type. They seemed to cherish a great
affection for the young Count, and were full of stories
about his sportive childhood; how he had played among
the little rustics, and been at once the wildest and
the sweetest of them all; and how, in his very infancy,
he had plunged into the deep pools of the streamlets
and never been drowned, and had clambered to the topmost
branches of tall trees without ever breaking his neck.
No such mischance could happen to the sylvan child
because, handling all the elements of nature so fearlessly
and freely, nothing had either the power or the will
to do him harm.
He grew up, said these humble friends,
the playmate not only of all mortal kind, but of creatures
of the woods; although, when Kenyon pressed them for
some particulars of this latter mode of companionship,
they could remember little more than a few anecdotes
of a pet fox, which used to growl and snap at everybody
save Donatello himself.
But they enlarged and never
were weary of the theme upon the blithesome
effects of Donatello’s presence in his rosy childhood
and budding youth. Their hovels had always glowed
like sunshine when he entered them; so that, as the
peasants expressed it, their young master had never
darkened a doorway in his life. He was the soul
of vintage festivals. While he was a mere infant,
scarcely able to run alone, it had been the custom
to make him tread the winepress with his tender little
feet, if it were only to crush one cluster of the grapes.
And the grape-juice that gushed beneath his childish
tread, be it ever so small in quantity, sufficed to
impart a pleasant flavor to a whole cask of wine.
The race of Monte Beni so these rustic chroniclers
assured the sculptor had possessed the
gift from the oldest of old times of expressing good
wine from ordinary grapes, and a ravishing liquor from
the choice growth of their vineyard.
In a word, as he listened to such
tales as these, Kenyon could have imagined that the
valleys and hillsides about him were a veritable Arcadia;
and that Donatello was not merely a sylvan faun, but
the genial wine god in his very person. Making
many allowances for the poetic fancies of Italian
peasants, he set it down for fact that his friend,
in a simple way and among rustic folks, had been an
exceedingly delightful fellow in his younger days.
But the contadini sometimes added,
shaking their heads and sighing, that the young Count
was sadly changed since he went to Rome. The village
girls now missed the merry smile with which he used
to greet them.
The sculptor inquired of his good
friend Tomaso, whether he, too, had noticed the shadow
which was said to have recently fallen over Donatello’s
life.
“Ah, yes, Signore!” answered
the old butler, “it is even so, since he came
back from that wicked and miserable city. The
world has grown either too evil, or else too wise
and sad, for such men as the old Counts of Monte Beni
used to be. His very first taste of it, as you
see, has changed and spoilt my poor young lord.
There had not been a single count in the family these
hundred years or more, who was so true a Monte Beni,
of the antique stamp, as this poor signorino; and now
it brings the tears into my eyes to hear him sighing
over a cup of Sunshine! Ah, it is a sad world
now!”
“Then you think there was a
merrier world once?” asked Kenyon.
“Surely, Signore,” said
Tomaso; “a merrier world, and merrier Counts
of Monte Beni to live in it! Such tales of them
as I have heard, when I was a child on my grandfather’s
knee! The good old man remembered a lord of Monte
Beni at least, he had heard of such a one,
though I will not make oath upon the holy crucifix
that my grandsire lived in his time who used to go
into the woods and call pretty damsels out of the fountains,
and out of the trunks of the old trees. That
merry lord was known to dance with them a whole long
summer afternoon! When shall we see such frolics
in our days?”
“Not soon, I am afraid,”
acquiesced the sculptor. “You are right,
excellent Tomaso; the world is sadder now!”
And, in truth, while our friend smiled
at these wild fables, he sighed in the same breath
to think how the once genial earth produces, in every
successive generation, fewer flowers than used to gladden
the preceding ones. Not that the modes and seeming
possibilities of human enjoyment are rarer in our
refined and softened era, on the contrary,
they never before were nearly so abundant, but
that mankind are getting so far beyond the childhood
of their race that they scorn to be happy any longer.
A simple and joyous character can find no place for
itself among the sage and sombre figures that would
put his unsophisticated cheerfulness to shame.
The entire system of man’s affairs, as at present
established, is built up purposely to exclude the careless
and happy soul. The very children would upbraid
the wretched individual who should endeavor to take
life and the world as w what we might naturally suppose
them meant for a place and opportunity for
enjoyment.
It is the iron rule in our day to
require an object and a purpose in life. It makes
us all parts of a complicated scheme of progress, which
can only result in our arrival at a colder and drearier
region than we were born in. It insists upon
everybody’s adding somewhat a mite,
perhaps, but earned by incessant effort to
an accumulated pile of usefulness, of which the only
use will be, to burden our posterity with even heavier
thoughts and more inordinate labor than our own.
No life now wanders like an unfettered stream; there
is a mill-wheel for the tiniest rivulet to turn.
We go all wrong, by too strenuous a resolution to
go all right.
Therefore it was so, at
least, the sculptor thought, although partly suspicious
of Donatello’s darker misfortune that
the young Count found it impossible nowadays to be
what his forefathers had been. He could not live
their healthy life of animal spirits, in their sympathy
with nature, and brotherhood with all that breathed
around them. Nature, in beast, fowl, and tree,
and earth, flood, and sky, is what it was of old;
but sin, care, and self-consciousness have set the
human portion of the world askew; and thus the simplest
character is ever the soonest to go astray.
“At any rate, Tomaso,”
said Kenyon, doing his best to comfort the old man,
“let us hope that your young lord will still
enjoy himself at vintage time. By the aspect
of the vineyard, I judge that this will be a famous
year for the golden wine of Monte Beni. As long
as your grapes produce that admirable liquor, sad
as you think the world, neither the Count nor his
guests will quite forget to smile.”
“Ah, Signore,” rejoined
the butler with a sigh, “but he scarcely wets
his lips with the sunny juice.”
“There is yet another hope,”
observed Kenyon; “the young Count may fall in
love, and bring home a fair and laughing wife to chase
the gloom out of yonder old frescoed saloon.
Do you think he could do a better thing, my good Tomaso?”
“Maybe not, Signore,”
said the sage butler, looking earnestly at him; “and,
maybe, not a worse!”
The sculptor fancied that the good
old man had it partly in his mind to make some remark,
or communicate some fact, which, on second thoughts,
he resolved to keep concealed in his own breast.
He now took his departure cellarward, shaking his
white head and muttering to himself, and did not reappear
till dinner-time, when he favored Kenyon, whom he
had taken far into his good graces, with a choicer
flask of Sunshine than had yet blessed his palate.
To say the truth, this golden wine
was no unnecessary ingredient towards making the life
of Monte Beni palatable. It seemed a pity that
Donatello did not drink a little more of it, and go
jollily to bed at least, even if he should awake with
an accession of darker melancholy the next morning.
Nevertheless, there was no lack of
outward means for leading an agreeable life in the
old villa. Wandering musicians haunted the precincts
of Monte Beni, where they seemed to claim a prescriptive
right; they made the lawn and shrubbery tuneful with
the sound of fiddle, harp, and flute, and now and
then with the tangled squeaking of a bagpipe.
Improvisatori likewise came and told tales or recited
verses to the contadini among whom Kenyon
was often an auditor after their day’s
work in the vineyard. Jugglers, too, obtained
permission to do feats of magic in the hall, where
they set even the sage Tomaso, and Stella, Girolamo,
and the peasant girls from the farmhouse, all of a
broad grin, between merriment and wonder. These
good people got food and lodging for their pleasant
pains, and some of the small wine of Tuscany, and
a reasonable handful of the Grand Duke’s copper
coin, to keep up the hospitable renown of Monte Beni.
But very seldom had they the young Count as a listener
or a spectator.
There were sometimes dances by moonlight
on the lawn, but never since he came from Rome did
Donatello’s presence deepen the blushes of the
pretty contadinas, or his footstep weary out the most
agile partner or competitor, as once it was sure to
do.
Paupers for this kind of
vermin infested the house of Monte Beni worse than
any other spot in beggar-haunted Italy stood
beneath all the windows, making loud supplication,
or even establishing themselves on the marble steps
of the grand entrance. They ate and drank, and
filled their bags, and pocketed the little money that
was given them, and went forth on their devious ways,
showering blessings innumerable on the mansion and
its lord, and on the souls of his deceased forefathers,
who had always been just such simpletons as to be
compassionate to beggary. But, in spite of their
favorable prayers, by which Italian philanthropists
set great store, a cloud seemed to hang over these
once Arcadian precincts, and to be darkest around
the summit of the tower where Donatello was wont to
sit and brood.