The Marble Faun Volume 2 - Page 153/157

"I will not accept your moral!" replied the hopeful and happy-natured

Hilda.

"Then here is another; take your choice!" said the sculptor, remembering

what Miriam had recently suggested, in reference to the same point. "He

perpetrated a great crime; and his remorse, gnawing into his soul,

has awakened it; developing a thousand high capabilities, moral and

intellectual, which we never should have dreamed of asking for, within

the scanty compass of the Donatello whom we knew."

"I know not whether this is so," said Hilda. "But what then?"

"Here comes my perplexity," continued Kenyon. "Sin has educated

Donatello, and elevated him. Is sin, then,--which we deem such a

dreadful blackness in the universe,--is it, like sorrow, merely an

element of human education, through which we struggle to a higher and

purer state than we could otherwise have attained? Did Adam fall, that

we might ultimately rise to a far loftier paradise than his?" "O hush!"

cried Hilda, shrinking from him with an expression of horror which

wounded the poor, speculative sculptor to the soul. "This is terrible;

and I could weep for you, if you indeed believe it. Do not you perceive

what a mockery your creed makes, not only of all religious sentiments,

but of moral law? And how it annuls and obliterates whatever precepts of

Heaven are written deepest within us? You have shocked me beyond words!"

"Forgive me, Hilda!" exclaimed the sculptor, startled by her agitation;

"I never did believe it! But the mind wanders wild and wide; and, so

lonely as I live and work, I have neither pole-star above nor light

of cottage windows here below, to bring me home. Were you my guide, my

counsellor, my inmost friend, with that white wisdom which clothes you

as a celestial garment, all would go well. O Hilda, guide me home!"

"We are both lonely; both far from home!" said Hilda, her eyes filling

with tears. "I am a poor, weak girl, and have no such wisdom as you

fancy in me."

What further may have passed between these lovers, while standing before

the pillared shrine, and the marble Madonna that marks Raphael's tomb;

whither they had now wandered, we are unable to record. But when the

kneeling figure beneath the open eye of the Pantheon arose, she looked

towards the pair and extended her hands with a gesture of benediction.

Then they knew that it was Miriam. They suffered her to glide out of

the portal, however, without a greeting; for those extended hands, even

while they blessed, seemed to repel, as if Miriam stood on the other

side of a fathomless abyss, and warned them from its verge.

So Kenyon won the gentle Hilda's shy affection, and her consent to

be his bride. Another hand must henceforth trim the lamp before the

Virgin's shrine; for Hilda was coming down from her old tower, to be

herself enshrined and worshipped as a household saint, in the light of

her husband's fireside. And, now that life had so much human promise in

it, they resolved to go back to their own land; because the years,

after all, have a kind of emptiness, when we spend too many of them on

a foreign shore. We defer the reality of life, in such cases, until a

future moment, when we shall again breathe our native air; but, by and

by, there are no future moments; or, if we do return, we find that the

native air has lost its invigorating quality, and that life has shifted

its reality to the spot where we have deemed ourselves only temporary

residents. Thus, between two countries, we have none at all, or

only that little space of either in which we finally lay down our

discontented bones. It is wise, therefore, to come back betimes, or

never.