“Will you not show me your tower?”
said the sculptor one day to his friend.
“It is plainly enough to be
seen, methinks,” answered the Count, with a
kind of sulkiness that often appeared in him, as one
of the little symptoms of inward trouble.
“Yes; its exterior is visible
far and wide,” said Kenyon. “But such
a gray, moss-grown tower as this, however valuable
as an object of scenery, will certainly be quite as
interesting inside as out. It cannot be less
than six hundred years old; the foundations and lower
story are much older than that, I should judge; and
traditions probably cling to the walls within quite
as plentifully as the gray and yellow lichens cluster
on its face without.”
“No doubt,” replied Donatello, “but
I know little of such things, and never could comprehend
the interest which some of you Forestieri take in
them. A year or two ago an English signore, with
a venerable white beard they say he was
a magician, too came hither from as far
off as Florence, just to see my tower.”
“Ah, I have seen him at Florence,”
observed Kenyon. “He is a necromancer,
as you say, and dwells in an old mansion of the Knights
Templars, close by the Ponte Vecchio, with a great
many ghostly books, pictures, and antiquities, to
make the house gloomy, and one bright-eyed little
girl, to keep it cheerful!”
“I know him only by his white
beard,” said Donatello; “but he could
have told you a great deal about the tower, and the
sieges which it has stood, and the prisoners who have
been confined in it. And he gathered up all the
traditions of the Monte Beni family, and, among the
rest, the sad one which I told you at the fountain
the other day. He had known mighty poets, he
said, in his earlier life; and the most illustrious
of them would have rejoiced to preserve such a legend
in immortal rhyme, especially if he could
have had some of our wine of Sunshine to help out
his inspiration!”
“Any man might be a poet, as
well as Byron, with such wine and such a theme,”
rejoined the sculptor. “But shall we climb
your tower The thunder-storm gathering yonder among
the hills will be a spectacle worth witnessing.”
“Come, then,” said the
Count, adding, with a sigh, “it has a weary
staircase, and dismal chambers, and it is very lonesome
at the summit!”
“Like a man’s life, when
he has climbed to eminence,” remarked the sculptor;
“or, let us rather say, with its difficult steps,
and the dark prison cells you speak of, your tower
resembles the spiritual experience of many a sinful
soul, which, nevertheless, may struggle upward into
the pure air and light of Heaven at last!”
Donatello sighed again, and led the
way up into the tower.
Mounting the broad staircase that
ascended from the entrance hall, they traversed the
great wilderness of a house, through some obscure
passages, and came to a low, ancient doorway.
It admitted them to a narrow turret stair which zigzagged
upward, lighted in its progress by loopholes and iron-barred
windows. Reaching the top of the first flight,
the Count threw open a door of worm-eaten oak, and
disclosed a chamber that occupied the whole area of
the tower. It was most pitiably forlorn of aspect,
with a brick-paved floor, bare holes through the massive
walls, grated with iron, instead of windows, and for
furniture an old stool, which increased the dreariness
of the place tenfold, by suggesting an idea of its
having once been tenanted.
“This was a prisoner’s
cell in the old days,” said Donatello; “the
white-bearded necromancer, of whom I told you, found
out that a certain famous monk was confined here,
about five hundred years ago. He was a very holy
man, and was afterwards burned at the stake in the
Grand-ducal Square at Firenze. There have always
been stories, Tomaso says, of a hooded monk creeping
up and down these stairs, or standing in the doorway
of this chamber. It must needs be the ghost of
the ancient prisoner. Do you believe in ghosts?”
“I can hardly tell,” replied
Kenyon; “on the whole, I think not.”
“Neither do I,” responded
the Count; “for, if spirits ever come back,
I should surely have met one within these two months
past. Ghosts never rise! So much I know,
and am glad to know it!”
Following the narrow staircase still
higher, they came to another room of similar size
and equally forlorn, but inhabited by two personages
of a race which from time immemorial have held proprietorship
and occupancy in ruined towers. These were a
pair of owls, who, being doubtless acquainted with
Donatello, showed little sign of alarm at the entrance
of visitors. They gave a dismal croak or two,
and hopped aside into the darkest corner, since it
was not yet their hour to flap duskily abroad.
“They do not desert me, like
my other feathered acquaintances,” observed
the young Count, with a sad smile, alluding to the
scene which Kenyon had witnessed at the fountain-side.
“When I was a wild, playful boy, the owls did
not love me half so well.”
He made no further pause here, but
led his friend up another flight of steps while,
at every stage, the windows and narrow loopholes afforded
Kenyon more extensive eye-shots over hill and valley,
and allowed him to taste the cool purity of mid-atmosphere.
At length they reached the topmost chamber, directly
beneath the roof of the tower.
“This is my own abode,”
said Donatello; “my own owl’s nest.”
In fact, the room was fitted up as
a bedchamber, though in a style of the utmost simplicity.
It likewise served as an oratory; there being a crucifix
in one corner, and a multitude of holy emblems, such
as Catholics judge it necessary to help their devotion
withal. Several ugly little prints, representing
the sufferings of the Saviour, and the martyrdoms
of saints, hung on the wall; and behind the crucifix
there was a good copy of Titian’s Magdalen of
the Pitti Palace, clad only in the flow of her golden
ringlets. She had a confident look (but it was
Titian’s fault, not the penitent woman’s),
as if expecting to win heaven by the free display
of her earthly charms. Inside of a glass case
appeared an image of the sacred Bambino, in the guise
of a little waxen boy, very prettily made, reclining
among flowers, like a Cupid, and holding up a heart
that resembled a bit of red sealing-wax. A small
vase of precious marble was full of holy water.
Beneath the crucifix, on a table,
lay a human skull, which looked as if it might have
been dug up out of some old grave. But, examining
it more closely, Kenyon saw that it was carved in
gray alabaster; most skillfully done to the death,
with accurate imitation of the teeth, the sutures,
the empty eye-caverns, and the fragile little bones
of the nose. This hideous emblem rested on a
cushion of white marble, so nicely wrought that you
seemed to see the impression of the heavy skull in
a silken and downy substance.
Donatello dipped his fingers into
the holy-water vase, and crossed himself. After
doing so he trembled.
“I have no right to make the
sacred symbol on a sinful breast!” he said.
“On what mortal breast can it
be made, then?” asked the sculptor. “Is
there one that hides no sin?”
“But these blessed emblems make
you smile, I fear,” resumed the Count, looking
askance at his friend. “You heretics, I
know, attempt to pray without even a crucifix to kneel
at.”
“I, at least, whom you call
a heretic, reverence that holy symbol,” answered
Kenyon. “What I am most inclined to murmur
at is this death’s head. I could laugh,
moreover, in its ugly face! It is absurdly monstrous,
my dear friend, thus to fling the dead weight of our
mortality upon our immortal hopes. While we live
on earth, ’t is true, we must needs carry our
skeletons about with us; but, for Heaven’s sake,
do not let us burden our spirits with them, in our
feeble efforts to soar upward! Believe me, it
will change the whole aspect of death, if you can
once disconnect it, in your idea, with that corruption
from which it disengages our higher part.”
“I do not well understand you,”
said Donatello; and he took up the alabaster skull,
shuddering, and evidently feeling it a kind of penance
to touch it. “I only know that this skull
has been in my family for centuries. Old Tomaso
has a story that it was copied by a famous sculptor
from the skull of that same unhappy knight who loved
the fountain lady, and lost her by a blood-stain.
He lived and died with a deep sense of sin upon him,
and on his death-bed he ordained that this token of
him should go down to his posterity. And my forefathers,
being a cheerful race of men in their natural disposition,
found it needful to have the skull often before their
eyes, because they dearly loved life and its enjoyments,
and hated the very thought of death.”
“I am afraid,” said Kenyon,
“they liked it none the better, for seeing its
face under this abominable mask.”
Without further discussion, the Count
led the way up one more flight of stairs, at the end
of which they emerged upon the summit of the tower.
The sculptor felt as if his being were suddenly magnified
a hundredfold; so wide was the Umbrian valley that
suddenly opened before him, set in its grand framework
of nearer and more distant hills. It seemed as
if all Italy lay under his eyes in that one picture.
For there was the broad, sunny smile of God, which
we fancy to be spread over that favored land more
abundantly than on other regions, and beneath it glowed
a most rich and varied fertility. The trim vineyards
were there, and the fig-trees, and the mulberries,
and the smoky-hued tracts of the olive orchards; there,
too, were fields of every kind of grain, among which,
waved the Indian corn, putting Kenyon in mind of the
fondly remembered acres of his father’s homestead.
White villas, gray convents, church spires, villages,
towns, each with its battlemented walls and towered
gateway, were scattered upon this spacious map; a river
gleamed across it; and lakes opened their blue eyes
in its face, reflecting heaven, lest mortals should
forget that better land when they beheld the earth
so beautiful.
What made the valley look still wider
was the two or three varieties of weather that were
visible on its surface, all at the same instant of
time. Here lay the quiet sunshine; there fell
the great black patches of ominous shadow from the
clouds; and behind them, like a giant of league-long
strides, came hurrying the thunderstorm, which had
already swept midway across the plain. In the
rear of the approaching tempest, brightened forth
again the sunny splendor, which its progress had darkened
with so terrible a frown.
All round this majestic landscape,
the bald-peaked or forest-crowned mountains descended
boldly upon the plain. On many of their spurs
and midway declivities, and even on their summits,
stood cities, some of them famous of old; for these
had been the seats and nurseries of early art, where
the flower of beauty sprang out of a rocky soil, and
in a high, keen atmosphere, when the richest and most
sheltered gardens failed to nourish it.
“Thank God for letting me again
behold this scene!” Said the sculptor, a devout
man in his way, reverently taking off his hat.
“I have viewed it from many points, and never
without as full a sensation of gratitude as my heart
seems capable of feeling. How it strengthens the
poor human spirit in its reliance on His providence,
to ascend but this little way above the common level,
and so attain a somewhat wider glimpse of His dealings
with mankind! He doeth all things right!
His will be done!”
“You discern something that
is hidden from me,” observed Donatello gloomily,
yet striving with unwonted grasp to catch the analogies
which so cheered his friend. “I see sunshine
on one spot, and cloud in another, and no reason for
it in either ease. The sun on you; the cloud
on me! What comfort can I draw from this?”
“Nay; I cannot preach,”
said Kenyon, “with a page of heaven and a page
of earth spread wide open before us! Only begin
to read it, and you will find it interpreting itself
without the aid of words. It is a great mistake
to try to put our best thoughts into human language.
When we ascend into the higher regions of emotion
and spiritual enjoyment, they are only expressible
by such grand hieroglyphics as these around us.”
They stood awhile, contemplating the
scene; but, as inevitably happens after a spiritual
flight, it was not long before the sculptor felt his
wings flagging in the rarity of the upper atmosphere.
He was glad to let himself quietly downward out of
the mid-sky, as it were, and alight on the solid platform
of the battlemented tower. He looked about him,
and beheld growing out of the stone pavement, which
formed the roof, a little shrub, with green and glossy
leaves. It was the only green thing there; and
Heaven knows how its seeds had ever been planted, at
that airy height, or how it had found nourishment
for its small life in the chinks of the stones; for
it had no earth, and nothing more like soil than the
crumbling mortar, which had been crammed into the crevices
in a long-past age.
Yet the plant seemed fond of its native
site; and Donatello said it had always grown there
from his earliest remembrance, and never, he believed,
any smaller or any larger than they saw it now.
“I wonder if the shrub teaches
you any good lesson,” said he, observing the
interest with which Kenyon examined it. “If
the wide valley has a great meaning, the plant ought
to have at least a little one; and it has been growing
on our tower long enough to have learned how to speak
it.”
“O, certainly!” answered
the sculptor; “the shrub has its moral, or it
would have perished long ago. And, no doubt, it
is for your use and edification, since you have had
it before your eyes all your lifetime, and now are
moved to ask what may be its lesson.”
“It teaches me nothing,”
said the simple Donatello, stooping over the plant,
and perplexing himself with a minute scrutiny.
“But here was a worm that would have killed
it; an ugly creature, which I will fling over the
battlements.”