After the sculptor’s arrival,
however, the young Count sometimes came down from
his forlorn elevation, and rambled with him among the
neighboring woods and hills. He led his friend
to many enchanting nooks, with which he himself had
been familiar in his childhood. But of late,
as he remarked to Kenyon, a sort of strangeness had
overgrown them, like clusters of dark shrubbery, so
that he hardly recognized the places which he had
known and loved so well.
To the sculptor’s eye, nevertheless,
they were still rich with beauty. They were picturesque
in that sweetly impressive way where wildness, in
a long lapse of years, has crept over scenes that have
been once adorned with the careful art and toil of
man; and when man could do no more for them, time
and nature came, and wrought hand in hand to bring
them to a soft and venerable perfection. There
grew the fig-tree that had run wild and taken to wife
the vine, which likewise had gone rampant out of all
human control; so that the two wild things had tangled
and knotted themselves into a wild marriage bond,
and hung their various progeny the luscious
figs, the grapes, oozy with the Southern juice, and
both endowed with a wild flavor that added the final
charm on the same bough together.
In Kenyon’s opinion, never was
any other nook so lovely as a certain little dell
which he and Donatello visited. It was hollowed
in among the hills, and open to a glimpse of the broad,
fertile valley. A fountain had its birth here,
and fell into a marble basin, which was all covered
with moss and shaggy with water-weeds. Over the
gush of the small stream, with an urn in her arms,
stood a marble nymph, whose nakedness the moss had
kindly clothed as with a garment; and the long trails
and tresses of the maidenhair had done what they could
in the poor thing’s behalf, by hanging themselves
about her waist, In former days it might
be a remote antiquity this lady of the fountain
had first received the infant tide into her urn and
poured it thence into the marble basin. But now
the sculptured urn had a great crack from top to bottom;
and the discontented nymph was compelled to see the
basin fill itself through a channel which she could
not control, although with water long ago consecrated
to her.
For this reason, or some other, she
looked terribly forlorn; and you might have fancied
that the whole fountain was but the overflow of her
lonely tears.
“This was a place that I used
greatly to delight in,” remarked Donatello,
sighing. “As a child, and as a boy, I have
been very happy here.”
“And, as a man, I should ask
no fitter place to be happy in,” answered Kenyon.
“But you, my friend, are of such a social nature,
that I should hardly have thought these lonely haunts
would take your fancy. It is a place for a poet
to dream in, and people it with the beings of his
imagination.”
“I am no poet, that I know of,”
said Donatello, “but yet, as I tell you, I have
been very happy here, in the company of this fountain
and this nymph. It is said that a Faun, my oldest
forefather, brought home hither to this very spot
a human maiden, whom he loved and wedded. This
spring of delicious water was their household well.”
“It is a most enchanting fable!”
exclaimed Kenyon; “that is, if it be not a fact.”
“And why not a fact?”
said the simple Donatello. “There is, likewise,
another sweet old story connected with this spot.
But, now that I remember it, it seems to me more sad
than sweet, though formerly the sorrow, in which it
closes, did not so much impress me. If I had the
gift of tale-telling, this one would be sure to interest
you mightily.”
“Pray tell it,” said Kenyon;
“no matter whether well or ill. These wild
legends have often the most powerful charm when least
artfully told.”
So the young Count narrated a myth
of one of his Progenitors, he might have
lived a century ago, or a thousand years, or before
the Christian epoch, for anything that Donatello knew
to the contrary, who had made acquaintance
with a fair creature belonging to this fountain.
Whether woman or sprite was a mystery, as was all
else about her, except that her life and soul were
somehow interfused throughout the gushing water.
She was a fresh, cool, dewy thing, sunny and shadowy,
full of pleasant little mischiefs, fitful and changeable
with the whim of the moment, but yet as constant as
her native stream, which kept the same gush and flow
forever, while marble crumbled over and around it.
The fountain woman loved the youth, a knight,
as Donatello called him, for, according
to the legend, his race was akin to hers. At least,
whether kin or no, there had been friendship and sympathy
of old betwixt an ancestor of his, with furry ears,
and the long-lived lady of the fountain. And,
after all those ages, she was still as young as a May
morning, and as frolicsome as a bird upon a tree,
or a breeze that makes merry with the leaves.
She taught him how to call her from
her pebbly source, and they spent many a happy hour
together, more especially in the fervor of the summer
days. For often as he sat waiting for her by the
margin of the spring, she would suddenly fall down
around him in a shower of sunny raindrops, with a
rainbow glancing through them, and forthwith gather
herself up into the likeness of a beautiful girl,
laughing or was it the warble of the rill
over the pebbles? to see the youth’s
amazement.
Thus, kind maiden that she was, the
hot atmosphere became deliciously cool and fragrant
for this favored knight; and, furthermore, when he
knelt down to drink out of the spring, nothing was
more common than for a pair of rosy lips to come up
out of its little depths, and touch his mouth with
the thrill of a sweet, cool, dewy kiss!
“It is a delightful story for
the hot noon of your Tuscan summer,” observed
the sculptor, at this point. “But the deportment
of the watery lady must have had a most chilling influence
in midwinter. Her lover would find it, very literally,
a cold reception!”
“I suppose,” said Donatello
rather sulkily, “you are making fun of the story.
But I see nothing laughable in the thing itself, nor
in what you say about it.”
He went on to relate, that for a long
While the knight found infinite pleasure and comfort
in the friendship of the fountain nymph. In his
merriest hours, she gladdened him with her sportive
humor. If ever he was annoyed with earthly trouble,
she laid her moist hand upon his brow, and charmed
the fret and fever quite away.
But one day one fatal noontide the
young knight came rushing with hasty and irregular
steps to the accustomed fountain. He called the
nymph; but no doubt because there was something
unusual and frightful in his tone she did not appear,
nor answer him. He flung himself down, and washed
his hands and bathed his feverish brow in the cool,
pure water. And then there was a sound of woe;
it might have been a woman’s voice; it might
have been only the sighing of the brook over the pebbles.
The water shrank away from the youth’s hands,
and left his brow as dry and feverish as before.
Donatello here came to a dead pause.
“Why did the water shrink from
this unhappy knight?” inquired the sculptor.
“Because he had tried to wash
off a bloodstain!” said the young Count, in
a horror-stricken whisper. “The guilty man
had polluted the pure water. The nymph might
have comforted him in sorrow, but could not cleanse
his conscience of a crime.”
“And did he never behold her more?” asked
Kenyon.
“Never but once,” replied
his friend. “He never beheld her blessed
face but once again, and then there was a blood-stain
on the poor nymph’s brow; it was the stain his
guilt had left in the fountain where he tried to wash
it off. He mourned for her his whole life long,
and employed the best sculptor of the time to carve
this statue of the nymph from his description of her
aspect. But, though my ancestor would fain have
had the image wear her happiest look, the artist,
unlike yourself, was so impressed with the mournfulness
of the story, that, in spite of his best efforts,
he made her forlorn, and forever weeping, as you see!”
Kenyon found a certain charm in this
simple legend. Whether so intended or not, he
understood it as an apologue, typifying the soothing
and genial effects of an habitual intercourse with
nature in all ordinary cares and griefs; while, on
the other hand, her mild influences fall short in
their effect upon the ruder passions, and are altogether
powerless in the dread fever-fit or deadly chill of
guilt.
“Do you say,” he asked,
“that the nymph’s race has never since
been shown to any mortal? Methinks you, by your
native qualities, are as well entitled to her favor
as ever your progenitor could have been. Why have
you not summoned her?”
“I called her often when I was
a silly child,” answered Donatello; and he added,
in an inward voice, “Thank Heaven, she did not
come!”
“Then you never saw her?” said the sculptor.
“Never in my life!” rejoined
the Count. “No, my dear friend, I have
not seen the nymph; although here, by her fountain,
I used to make many strange acquaintances; for, from
my earliest childhood, I was familiar with whatever
creatures haunt the woods. You would have laughed
to see the friends I had among them; yes, among the
wild, nimble things, that reckon man their deadliest
enemy! How it was first taught me, I cannot tell;
but there was a charm a voice, a murmur,
a kind of chant by which I called the woodland
inhabitants, the furry people, and the feathered people,
in a language that they seemed to understand.”
“I have heard of such a gift,”
responded the sculptor gravely, “but never before
met with a person endowed with it. Pray try the
charm; and lest I should frighten your friends away,
I will withdraw into this thicket, and merely peep
at them.”
“I doubt,” said Donatello,
“whether they will remember my voice now.
It changes, you know, as the boy grows towards manhood.”
Nevertheless, as the young Count’s
good-nature and easy persuadability were among his
best characteristics, he set about complying with
Kenyon’s request. The latter, in his concealment
among the shrubberies, heard him send forth a sort
of modulated breath, wild, rude, yet harmonious.
It struck the auditor as at once the strangest and
the most natural utterance that had ever reached his
ears. Any idle boy, it should seem, singing to
himself and setting his wordless song to no other
or more definite tune than the play of his own pulses,
might produce a sound almost identical with this; and
yet, it was as individual as a murmur of the breeze.
Donatello tried it, over and over again, with many
breaks, at first, and pauses of uncertainty; then with
more confidence, and a fuller swell, like a wayfarer
groping out of obscurity into the light, and moving
with freer footsteps as it brightens around him.
Anon, his voice appeared to fill the
air, yet not with an obtrusive clangor. The sound
was of a murmurous character, soft, attractive, persuasive,
friendly. The sculptor fancied that such might
have been the original voice and utterance of the
natural man, before the sophistication of the human
intellect formed what we now call language. In
this broad dialect broad as the sympathies
of nature the human brother might have
spoken to his inarticulate brotherhood that prowl the
woods, or soar upon the wing, and have been intelligible
to such extent as to win their confidence.
The sound had its pathos too.
At some of its simple cadences, the tears came quietly
into Kenyon’s eyes. They welled up slowly
from his heart, which was thrilling with an emotion
more delightful than he had often felt before, but
which he forbore to analyze, lest, if he seized it,
it should at once perish in his grasp.
Donatello paused two or three times,
and seemed to listen, then, recommencing,
he poured his spirit and life more earnestly into the
strain. And finally, or else the sculptor’s
hope and imagination deceived him, soft
treads were audible upon the fallen leaves. There
was a rustling among the shrubbery; a whir of wings,
moreover, that hovered in the air. It may have
been all an illusion; but Kenyon fancied that he could
distinguish the stealthy, cat-like movement of some
small forest citizen, and that he could even see its
doubtful shadow, if not really its substance.
But, all at once, whatever might be the reason, there
ensued a hurried rush and scamper of little feet; and
then the sculptor heard a wild, sorrowful cry, and
through the crevices of the thicket beheld Donatello
fling himself on the ground.
Emerging from his hiding-place, he
saw no living thing, save a brown lizard (it was of
the tarantula species) rustling away through the sunshine.
To all present appearance, this venomous reptile was
the only creature that had responded to the young
Count’s efforts to renew his intercourse with
the lower orders of nature.
“What has happened to you?”
exclaimed Kenyon, stooping down over his friend, and
wondering at the anguish which he betrayed.
“Death, death!” sobbed Donatello.
“They know it!”
He grovelled beside the fountain,
in a fit of such passionate sobbing and weeping, that
it seemed as if his heart had broken, and spilt its
wild sorrows upon the ground. His unrestrained
grief and childish tears made Kenyon sensible in how
small a degree the customs and restraints of society
had really acted upon this young man, in spite of the
quietude of his ordinary deportment. In response
to his friend’s efforts to console him, he murmured
words hardly more articulate than the strange chant
which he had so recently been breathing into the air.
“They know it!” was all
that Kenyon could yet distinguish, “they
know it!”
“Who know it?” asked the
sculptor. “And what is it their know?”
“They know it!” repeated Donatello, trembling.
“They shun me! All nature shrinks from
me, and shudders at me! I live in the midst of
a curse, that hems me round with a circle of fire!
No innocent thing can come near me.”
“Be comforted, my dear friend,”
said Kenyon, kneeling beside him. “You
labor under some illusion, but no curse. As for
this strange, natural spell, which you have been exercising,
and of which I have heard before, though I never believed
in, nor expected to witness it, I am satisfied that
you still possess it. It was my own half-concealed
presence, no doubt, and some involuntary little movement
of mine, that scared away your forest friends.”
“They are friends of mine no longer,”
answered Donatello.
“We all of us, as we grow older,”
rejoined Kenyon, “lose somewhat of our proximity
to nature. It is the price we pay for experience.”
“A heavy price, then!”
said Donatello, rising from the ground. “But
we will speak no more of it. Forget this scene,
my dear friend. In your eyes, it must look very
absurd. It is a grief, I presume, to all men,
to find the pleasant privileges and properties of
early life departing from them. That grief has
now befallen me. Well; I shall waste no more tears
for such a cause!”
Nothing else made Kenyon so sensible
of a change in Donatello, as his newly acquired power
of dealing with his own emotions, and, after a struggle
more or less fierce, thrusting them down into the prison
cells where he usually kept them confined. The
restraint, which he now put upon himself, and the
mask of dull composure which he succeeded in clasping
over his still beautiful, and once faun-like face,
affected the sensitive sculptor more sadly than even
the unrestrained passion of the preceding scene.
It is a very miserable epoch, when the evil necessities
of life, in our tortuous world, first get the better
of us so far as to compel us to attempt throwing a
cloud over our transparency. Simplicity increases
in value the longer we can keep it, and the further
we carry it onward into life; the loss of a child’s
simplicity, in the inevitable lapse of years, causes
but a natural sigh or two, because even his mother
feared that he could not keep it always. But after
a young man has brought it through his childhood,
and has still worn it in his bosom, not as an early
dewdrop, but as a diamond of pure white lustre, it
is a pity to lose it, then. And thus, when Kenyon
saw how much his friend had now to hide, and how well
he hid it, he would have wept, although his tears
would have been even idler than those which Donatello
had just shed.
They parted on the lawn before the
house, the Count to climb his tower, and the sculptor
to read an antique edition of Dante, which he had found
among some old volumes of Catholic devotion, in a seldom-visited
room, Tomaso met him in the entrance hall, and showed
a desire to speak.
“Our poor signorino looks very sad to-day!”
he said.
“Even so, good Tomaso,”
replied the sculptor. “Would that we could
raise his spirits a little!”
“There might be means, Signore,”
answered the old butler, “if one might but be
sure that they were the right ones. We men are
but rough nurses for a sick body or a sick spirit.”
“Women, you would say, my good
friend, are better,” said the sculptor, struck
by an intelligence in the butler’s face.
“That is possible! But it depends.”
“Ah; we will wait a little longer,”
said Tomaso, with the customary shake of his head.