The Marble Faun Volume 2 - Page 24/157

"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."