He had known mighty poets, he said, in his earlier
life; and the most illustrious of them would have rejoiced to
preserve such a legend in immortal rhyme,—especially if he could
have had some of our wine of Sunshine to help out his
inspiration!"
"Any man might be a poet, as well as Byron, with such wine and
such a theme," rejoined the sculptor. "But shall we climb your
tower The thunder-storm gathering yonder among the hills will be a
spectacle worth witnessing."
"Come, then," said the Count, adding, with a sigh, "it has a
weary staircase, and dismal chambers, and it is very lonesome at
the summit!"
"Like a man's life, when he has climbed to eminence," remarked
the sculptor; "or, let us rather say, with its difficult steps, and
the dark prison cells you speak of, your tower resembles the
spiritual experience of many a sinful soul, which, nevertheless,
may struggle upward into the pure air and light of Heaven at
last!"
Donatello sighed again, and led the way up into the tower.
Mounting the broad staircase that ascended from the entrance
hall, they traversed the great wilderness of a house, through some
obscure passages, and came to a low, ancient doorway. It admitted
them to a narrow turret stair which zigzagged upward, lighted in
its progress by loopholes and iron-barred windows. Reaching the top
of the first flight, the Count threw open a door of worm-eaten oak,
and disclosed a chamber that occupied the whole area of the tower.
It was most pitiably forlorn of aspect, with a brick-paved floor,
bare holes through the massive walls, grated with iron, instead of
windows, and for furniture an old stool, which increased the
dreariness of the place tenfold, by suggesting an idea of its
having once been tenanted.
"This was a prisoner's cell in the old days," said Donatello;
"the white-bearded necromancer, of whom I told you, found out that
a certain famous monk was confined here, about five hundred years
ago. He was a very holy man, and was afterwards burned at the stake
in the Grand-ducal Square at Firenze. There have always been
stories, Tomaso says, of a hooded monk creeping up and down these
stairs, or standing in the doorway of this chamber. It must needs
be the ghost of the ancient prisoner. Do you believe in
ghosts?"
"I can hardly tell," replied Kenyon; "on the whole, I think
not."
"Neither do I," responded the Count; "for, if spirits ever come
back, I should surely have met one within these two months past.
Ghosts never rise! So much I know, and am glad to know it!"
Following the narrow staircase still higher, they came to
another room of similar size and equally forlorn, but inhabited by
two personages of a race which from time immemorial have held
proprietorship and occupancy in ruined towers. These were a pair of
owls, who, being doubtless acquainted with Donatello, showed little
sign of alarm at the entrance of visitors. They gave a dismal croak
or two, and hopped aside into the darkest corner, since it was not
yet their hour to flap duskily abroad.
"They do not desert me, like my other feathered acquaintances,"
observed the young Count, with a sad smile, alluding to the scene
which Kenyon had witnessed at the fountain-side. "When I was a
wild, playful boy, the owls did not love me half so well."
He made no further pause here, but led his friend up another
flight of steps—while, at every stage, the windows and narrow
loopholes afforded Kenyon more extensive eye-shots over hill and
valley, and allowed him to taste the cool purity of mid-atmosphere.
At length they reached the topmost chamber, directly beneath the
roof of the tower.
"This is my own abode," said Donatello; "my own owl's nest."
In fact, the room was fitted up as a bedchamber, though in a
style of the utmost simplicity. It likewise served as an oratory;
there being a crucifix in one corner, and a multitude of holy
emblems, such as Catholics judge it necessary to help their
devotion withal. Several ugly little prints, representing the
sufferings of the Saviour, and the martyrdoms of saints, hung on
the wall; and behind the crucifix there was a good copy of Titian's
Magdalen of the Pitti Palace, clad only in the flow of her golden
ringlets. She had a confident look (but it was Titian's fault, not
the penitent woman's), as if expecting to win heaven by the free
display of her earthly charms. Inside of a glass case appeared an
image of the sacred Bambino, in the guise of a little waxen boy,
very prettily made, reclining among flowers, like a Cupid, and
holding up a heart that resembled a bit of red sealing-wax. A small
vase of precious marble was full of holy water.
Beneath the crucifix, on a table, lay a human skull, which
looked as if it might have been dug up out of some old grave. But,
examining it more closely, Kenyon saw that it was carved in gray
alabaster; most skillfully done to the death, with accurate
imitation of the teeth, the sutures, the empty eye-caverns, and the
fragile little bones of the nose. This hideous emblem rested on a
cushion of white marble, so nicely wrought that you seemed to see
the impression of the heavy skull in a silken and downy
substance.
Donatello dipped his fingers into the holy-water vase, and
crossed himself. After doing so he trembled.
"I have no right to make the sacred symbol on a sinful breast!"
he said.
"On what mortal breast can it be made, then?" asked the
sculptor. "Is there one that hides no sin?"
"But these blessed emblems make you smile, I fear," resumed the
Count, looking askance at his friend. "You heretics, I know,
attempt to pray without even a crucifix to kneel at."
"I, at least, whom you call a heretic, reverence that holy
symbol," answered Kenyon. "What I am most inclined to murmur at is
this death's head. I could laugh, moreover, in its ugly face! It is
absurdly monstrous, my dear friend, thus to fling the dead weight
of our mortality upon our immortal hopes. While we live on earth,
't is true, we must needs carry our skeletons about with us; but,
for Heaven's sake, do not let us burden our spirits with them, in
our feeble efforts to soar upward! Believe me, it will change the
whole aspect of death, if you can once disconnect it, in your idea,
with that corruption from which it disengages our higher part."
"I do not well understand you," said Donatello; and he took up
the alabaster skull, shuddering, and evidently feeling it a kind of
penance to touch it. "I only know that this skull has been in my
family for centuries. Old Tomaso has a story that it was copied by
a famous sculptor from the skull of that same unhappy knight who
loved the fountain lady, and lost her by a blood-stain. He lived
and died with a deep sense of sin upon him, and on his death-bed he
ordained that this token of him should go down to his posterity.
And my forefathers, being a cheerful race of men in their natural
disposition, found it needful to have the skull often before their
eyes, because they dearly loved life and its enjoyments, and hated
the very thought of death."
"I am afraid," said Kenyon, "they liked it none the better, for
seeing its face under this abominable mask."
Without further discussion, the Count led the way up one more
flight of stairs, at the end of which they emerged upon the summit
of the tower. The sculptor felt as if his being were suddenly
magnified a hundredfold; so wide was the Umbrian valley that
suddenly opened before him, set in its grand framework of nearer
and more distant hills. It seemed as if all Italy lay under his
eyes in that one picture. For there was the broad, sunny smile of
God, which we fancy to be spread over that favored land more
abundantly than on other regions, and beneath it glowed a most rich
and varied fertility.
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