The Marble Faun Volume 2 - Page 65/157

In truth, Donatello's countenance indicated a healthier spirit than

while he was brooding in his melancholy tower. The change of scene, the

breaking up of custom, the fresh flow of incidents, the sense of being

homeless, and therefore free, had done something for our poor Faun;

these circumstances had at least promoted a reaction, which might else

have been slower in its progress. Then, no doubt, the bright day, the

gay spectacle of the market place, and the sympathetic exhilaration

of so many people's cheerfulness, had each their suitable effect on a

temper naturally prone to be glad. Perhaps, too, he was magnetically

conscious of a presence that formerly sufficed to make him happy. Be the

cause what it might, Donatello's eyes shone with a serene and hopeful

expression while looking upward at the bronze pope, to whose widely

diffused blessing, it may be, he attributed all this good influence.

"Yes, my dear friend," said he, in reply to the sculptor's remark, "I

feel the blessing upon my spirit."

"It is wonderful," said Kenyon, with a smile, "wonderful and delightful

to think how long a good man's beneficence may be potent, even after his

death. How great, then, must have been the efficacy of this excellent

pontiff's blessing while he was alive!"

"I have heard," remarked the Count, "that there was a brazen image set

up in the wilderness, the sight of which healed the Israelites of their

poisonous and rankling wounds. If it be the Blessed Virgin's pleasure,

why should not this holy image before us do me equal good? A wound has

long been rankling in my soul, and filling it with poison."

"I did wrong to smile," answered Kenyon. "It is not for me to limit

Providence in its operations on man's spirit."

While they stood talking, the clock in the neighboring cathedral told

the hour, with twelve reverberating strokes, which it flung down upon

the crowded market place, as if warning one and all to take advantage

of the bronze pontiff's benediction, or of Heaven's blessing, however

proffered, before the opportunity were lost.

"High noon," said the sculptor. "It is Miriam's hour!"