The Marble Faun Volume 1 - Page 60/130

Hilda and the sculptor (by the contrivance of the latter, who loved best

to be alone with his young countrywoman) had wandered beyond the throng

of promenaders, whom they left in a dense cluster around the music. They

strayed, indeed, to the farthest point of the Pincian Hill, and leaned

over the parapet, looking down upon the Muro Torto, a massive fragment

of the oldest Roman wall, which juts over, as if ready to tumble down

by its own weight, yet seems still the most indestructible piece of work

that men's hands ever piled together. In the blue distance rose Soracte,

and other heights, which have gleamed afar, to our imaginations, but

look scarcely real to our bodily eyes, because, being dreamed about so

much, they have taken the aerial tints which belong only to a dream.

These, nevertheless, are the solid framework of hills that shut in Rome,

and its wide surrounding Campagna,--no land of dreams, but the broadest

page of history, crowded so full with memorable events that one

obliterates another; as if Time had crossed and recrossed his own

records till they grew illegible.

But, not to meddle with history,--with which our narrative is no

otherwise concerned, than that the very dust of Rome is historic, and

inevitably settles on our page and mingles with our ink,--we will return

to our two friends, who were still leaning over the wall. Beneath them

lay the broad sweep of the Borghese grounds, covered with trees, amid

which appeared the white gleam of pillars and statues, and the flash of

an upspringing fountain, all to be overshadowed at a later period of the

year by the thicker growth of foliage.

The advance of vegetation, in this softer climate, is less abrupt than

the inhabitant of the cold North is accustomed to observe. Beginning

earlier,--even in February,--Spring is not compelled to burst into

Summer with such headlong haste; there is time to dwell upon each

opening beauty, and to enjoy the budding leaf, the tender green, the

sweet youth and freshness of the year; it gives us its maiden charm,

before, settling into the married Summer, which, again, does not so soon

sober itself into matronly Autumn. In our own country, the virgin Spring

hastens to its bridal too abruptly. But here, after a month or two of

kindly growth, the leaves of the young trees, which cover that portion

of the Borghese grounds nearest the city wall, were still in their

tender half-development.

In the remoter depths, among the old groves of ilex-trees, Hilda and

Kenyon heard the faint sound of music, laughter, and mingling voices. It

was probably the uproar--spreading even so far as the walls of Rome,

and growing faded and melancholy in its passage--of that wild sylvan

merriment, which we have already attempted to describe. By and by it

ceased--although the two listeners still tried to distinguish it between

the bursts of nearer music from the military band. But there was no

renewal of that distant mirth. Soon afterwards they saw a solitary

figure advancing along one of the paths that lead from the obscurer part

of the ground towards the gateway.