Her fellow professors of
the brush, it is true, showered abundant criticisms upon her
pictures, allowing them to be well enough for the idle half-efforts
of an amateur, but lacking both the trained skill and the practice
that distinguish the works of a true artist.
Nevertheless, be their faults what they might, Miriam's pictures
met with good acceptance among the patrons of modern art. Whatever
technical merit they lacked, its absence was more than supplied by
a warmth and passionateness, which she had the faculty of putting
into her productions, and which all the world could feel. Her
nature had a great deal of color, and, in accordance with it, so
likewise had her pictures.
Miriam had great apparent freedom of intercourse; her manners
were so far from evincing shyness, that it seemed easy to become
acquainted with her, and not difficult to develop a casual
acquaintance into intimacy. Such, at least, was the impression
which she made, upon brief contact, but not such the ultimate
conclusion of those who really sought to know her. So airy, free,
and affable was Miriam's deportment towards all who came within her
sphere, that possibly they might never be conscious of the fact,
but so it was, that they did not get on, and were seldom any
further advanced into her good graces to-day than yesterday. By
some subtile quality, she kept people at a distance, without so
much as letting them know that they were excluded from her inner
circle. She resembled one of those images of light, which conjurers
evoke and cause to shine before us, in apparent tangibility, only
an arm's length beyond our grasp: we make a step in advance,
expecting to seize the illusion, but find it still precisely so far
out of our reach. Finally, society began to recognize the
impossibility of getting nearer to Miriam, and gruffly
acquiesced.
There were two persons, however, whom she appeared to
acknowledge as friends in the closer and truer sense of the word;
and both of these more favored individuals did credit to Miriam's
selection. One was a young American sculptor, of high promise and
rapidly increasing celebrity; the other, a girl of the same
country, a painter like Miriam herself, but in a widely different
sphere of art. Her heart flowed out towards these two; she requited
herself by their society and friendship (and especially by Hilda's)
for all the loneliness with which, as regarded the rest of the
world, she chose to be surrounded. Her two friends were conscious
of the strong, yearning grasp which Miriam laid upon them, and gave
her their affection in full measure; Hilda, indeed, responding with
the fervency of a girl's first friendship, and Kenyon with a manly
regard, in which there was nothing akin to what is distinctively
called love.
A sort of intimacy subsequently grew up between these three
friends and a fourth individual; it was a young Italian, who,
casually visiting Rome, had been attracted by the beauty which
Miriam possessed in a remarkable degree. He had sought her,
followed her, and insisted, with simple perseverance, upon being
admitted at least to her acquaintance; a boon which had been
granted, when a more artful character, seeking it by a more subtle
mode of pursuit, would probably have failed to obtain it. This
young man, though anything but intellectually brilliant, had many
agreeable characteristics which won him the kindly and
half-contemptuous regard of Miriam and her two friends. It was he
whom they called Donatello, and whose wonderful resemblance to the
Faun of Praxiteles forms the keynote of our narrative.
Such was the position in which we find Miriam some few months
after her establishment at Rome. It must be added, however, that
the world did not permit her to hide her antecedents without making
her the subject of a good deal of conjecture; as was natural
enough, considering the abundance of her personal charms, and the
degree of notice that she attracted as an artist. There were many
stories about Miriam's origin and previous life, some of which had
a very probable air, while others were evidently wild and romantic
fables. We cite a few, leaving the reader to designate them either
under the probable or the romantic head.
It was said, for example, that Miriam was the daughter and
heiress of a great Jewish banker (an idea perhaps suggested by a
certain rich Oriental character in her face), and had fled from her
paternal home to escape a union with a cousin, the heir of another
of that golden brotherhood; the object being to retain their vast
accumulation of wealth within the family. Another story hinted that
she was a German princess, whom, for reasons of state, it was
proposed to give in marriage either to a decrepit sovereign, or a
prince still in his cradle. According to a third statement, she was
the off-spring of a Southern American planter, who had given her an
elaborate education and endowed her with his wealth; but the one
burning drop of African blood in her veins so affected her with a
sense of ignominy, that she relinquished all and fled her country.
By still another account she was the lady of an English nobleman;
and, out of mere love and honor of art, had thrown aside the
splendor of her rank, and come to seek a subsistence by her pencil
in a Roman studio.
In all the above cases, the fable seemed to be instigated by the
large and bounteous impression which Miriam invariably made, as if
necessity and she could have nothing to do with one another.
Whatever deprivations she underwent must needs be voluntary. But
there were other surmises, taking such a commonplace view as that
Miriam was the daughter of a merchant or financier, who had been
ruined in a great commercial crisis; and, possessing a taste for
art, she had attempted to support herself by the pencil, in
preference to the alternative of going out as governess.
Be these things how they might, Miriam, fair as she looked, was
plucked up out of a mystery, and had its roots still clinging to
her. She was a beautiful and attractive woman, but based, as it
were, upon a cloud, and all surrounded with misty substance; so
that the result was to render her sprite-like in her most ordinary
manifestations. This was the case even in respect to Kenyon and
Hilda, her especial friends. But such was the effect of Miriam's
natural language, her generosity, kindliness, and native truth of
character, that these two received her as a dear friend into their
hearts, taking her good qualities as evident and genuine, and never
imagining that what was hidden must be therefore evil.
We now proceed with our narrative.
The same party of friends, whom we have seen at the
sculpture-gallery of the Capitol, chanced to have gone together,
some months before, to the catacomb of St. Calixtus. They went
joyously down into that vast tomb, and wandered by torchlight
through a sort of dream, in which reminiscences of church aisles
and grimy cellars—and chiefly the latter—seemed to be broken into
fragments, and hopelessly intermingled. The intricate passages
along which they followed their guide had been hewn, in some
forgotten age, out of a dark-red, crumbly stone. On either side
were horizontal niches, where, if they held their torches closely,
the shape of a human body was discernible in white ashes, into
which the entire mortality of a man or woman had resolved itself.
Among all this extinct dust, there might perchance be a thigh-bone,
which crumbled at a touch; or possibly a skull, grinning at its own
wretched plight, as is the ugly and empty habit of the thing.
Sometimes their gloomy pathway tended upward, so that, through a
crevice, a little daylight glimmered down upon them, or even a
streak of sunshine peeped into a burial niche; then again, they
went downward by gradual descent, or by abrupt, rudely hewn steps,
into deeper and deeper recesses of the earth. Here and there the
narrow and tortuous passages widened somewhat, developing
themselves into small chapels;—which once, no doubt, had been
adorned with marble-work and lighted with ever-burning lamps and
tapers. All such illumination and ornament, however, had long since
been extinguished and stript away; except, indeed, that the low
roofs of a few of these ancient sites of worship were covered with
dingy stucco, and frescoed with scriptural scenes and subjects, in
the dreariest stage of ruin.
In one such chapel, the guide showed them a low arch, beneath
which the body of St. Cecilia had been buried after her martyrdom,
and where it lay till a sculptor saw it, and rendered it forever
beautiful in marble.
In a similar spot they found two sarcophagi, one containing a
skeleton, and the other a shrivelled body, which still wore the
garments of its former lifetime.
"How dismal all this is!" said Hilda, shuddering.
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