The Marble Faun Volume 2 - Page 62/157

Perugia, on its lofty hilltop, was reached by the two travellers before

the sun had quite kissed away the early freshness of the morning. Since

midnight, there had been a heavy, rain, bringing infinite refreshment to

the scene of verdure and fertility amid which this ancient civilization

stands; insomuch that Kenyon loitered, when they came to the gray city

wall, and was loath to give up the prospect of the sunny wilderness that

lay below. It was as green as England, and bright as Italy alone. There

was all the wide valley, sweeping down and spreading away on all sides

from the weed grown ramparts, and bounded afar by mountains, which lay

asleep in the sun, with thin mists and silvery clouds floating about

their heads by way of morning dreams.

"It lacks still two hours of noon," said the sculptor to his friend, as

they stood under the arch of the gateway, waiting for their passports

to be examined; "will you come with me to see some admirable frescos by

Perugino? There is a hall in the Exchange, of no great magnitude, but

covered with what must have been--at the time it was painted--such

magnificence and beauty as the world had not elsewhere to show."

"It depresses me to look at old frescos," responded the Count; "it is a

pain, yet not enough of a pain to answer as a penance."

"Will you look at some pictures by Fra Angelico in the Church of San

Domenico?" asked Kenyon; "they are full of religious sincerity, When

one studies them faithfully, it is like holding a conversation about

heavenly things with a tender and devout-minded man."

"You have shown me some of Fra Angelico's pictures, I remember,"

answered Donatello; "his angels look as if they had never taken a flight

out of heaven; and his saints seem to have been born saints, and always

to have lived so. Young maidens, and all innocent persons, I doubt not,

may find great delight and profit in looking at such holy pictures. But

they are not for me."

"Your criticism, I fancy, has great moral depth," replied Kenyon; "and

I see in it the reason why Hilda so highly appreciates Fra Angelico's

pictures. Well; we will let all such matters pass for to-day, and stroll

about this fine old city till noon."

They wandered to and fro, accordingly, and lost themselves among the

strange, precipitate passages, which, in Perugia, are called streets,

Some of them are like caverns, being arched all over, and plunging down

abruptly towards an unknown darkness; which, when you have fathomed

its depths, admits you to a daylight that you scarcely hoped to behold

again. Here they met shabby men, and the careworn wives and mothers

of the people, some of whom guided children in leading strings through

those dim and antique thoroughfares, where a hundred generations had

passed before the little feet of to-day began to tread them. Thence they

climbed upward again, and came to the level plateau, on the summit of

the hill, where are situated the grand piazza and the principal public

edifices.