He trembled either with anger or
terror, and glared at the sculptor with wild eyes, like a wolf that
meets you in the forest, and hesitates whether to flee or turn to
bay. But, as Kenyon still looked calmly at him, his aspect
gradually became less disturbed, though far from resuming its
former quietude.
"You have spoken her name," said he, at last, in an altered and
tremulous tone; "tell me, now, all that you know of her."
"I scarcely think that I have any later intelligence than
yourself," answered Kenyon; "Miriam left Rome at about the time of
your own departure. Within a day or two after our last meeting at
the Church of the Capuchins, I called at her studio and found it
vacant. Whither she has gone, I cannot tell."
Donatello asked no further questions.
They rose from table, and strolled together about the premises,
whiling away the afternoon with brief intervals of unsatisfactory
conversation, and many shadowy silences. The sculptor had a
perception of change in his companion,—possibly of growth and
development, but certainly of change,—which saddened him, because
it took away much of the simple grace that was the best of
Donatello's peculiarities.
Kenyon betook himself to repose that night in a grim, old,
vaulted apartment, which, in the lapse of five or six centuries,
had probably been the birth, bridal, and death chamber of a great
many generations of the Monte Beni family. He was aroused, soon
after daylight, by the clamor of a tribe of beggars who had taken
their stand in a little rustic lane that crept beside that portion
of the villa, and were addressing their petitions to the open
windows. By and by they appeared to have received alms, and took
their departure.
"Some charitable Christian has sent those vagabonds away,"
thought the sculptor, as he resumed his interrupted nap; "who could
it be? Donatello has his own rooms in the tower; Stella, Tomaso,
and the cook are a world's width off; and I fancied myself the only
inhabitant in this part of the house."
In the breadth and space which so delightfully characterize an
Italian villa, a dozen guests might have had each his suite of
apartments without infringing upon one another's ample precincts.
But, so far as Kenyon knew, he was the only visitor beneath
Donatello's widely extended roof.
CHAPTER XXVI
THE PEDIGREE OF MONTE BENI
From the old butler, whom he found to be a very gracious and
affable personage, Kenyon soon learned many curious particulars
about the family history and hereditary peculiarities of the Counts
of Monte Beni. There was a pedigree, the later portion of
which—that is to say, for a little more than a thousand years—a
genealogist would have found delight in tracing out, link by link,
and authenticating by records and documentary evidences. It would
have been as difficult, however, to follow up the stream of
Donatello's ancestry to its dim source, as travellers have found it
to reach the mysterious fountains of the Nile. And, far beyond the
region of definite and demonstrable fact, a romancer might have
strayed into a region of old poetry, where the rich soil, so long
uncultivated and untrodden, had lapsed into nearly its primeval
state of wilderness. Among those antique paths, now overgrown with
tangled and riotous vegetation, the wanderer must needs follow his
own guidance, and arrive nowhither at last.
The race of Monte Beni, beyond a doubt, was one of the oldest in
Italy, where families appear to survive at least, if not to
flourish, on their half-decayed roots, oftener than in England or
France. It came down in a broad track from the Middle Ages; but, at
epochs anterior to those, it was distinctly visible in the gloom of
the period before chivalry put forth its flower; and further still,
we are almost afraid to say, it was seen, though with a fainter and
wavering course, in the early morn of Christendom, when the Roman
Empire had hardly begun to show symptoms of decline. At that
venerable distance, the heralds gave up the lineage in despair.
But where written record left the genealogy of Monte Beni,
tradition took it up, and carried it without dread or shame beyond
the Imperial ages into the times of the Roman republic; beyond
those, again, into the epoch of kingly rule. Nor even so remotely
among the mossy centuries did it pause, but strayed onward into
that gray antiquity of which there is no token left, save its
cavernous tombs, and a few bronzes, and some quaintly wrought
ornaments of gold, and gems with mystic figures and inscriptions.
There, or thereabouts, the line was supposed to have had its origin
in the sylvan life of Etruria, while Italy was yet guiltless of
Rome.
Of course, as we regret to say, the earlier and very much the
larger portion of this respectable descent—and the same is true of
many briefer pedigrees—must be looked upon as altogether mythical.
Still, it threw a romantic interest around the unquestionable
antiquity of the Monte Beni family, and over that tract of their
own vines and fig-trees beneath the shade of which they had
unquestionably dwelt for immemorial ages. And there they had laid
the foundations of their tower, so long ago that one half of its
height was said to be sunken under the surface and to hide
subterranean chambers which once were cheerful with the olden
sunshine.
One story, or myth, that had mixed itself up with their mouldy
genealogy, interested the sculptor by its wild, and perhaps
grotesque, yet not unfascinating peculiarity. He caught at it the
more eagerly, as it afforded a shadowy and whimsical semblance of
explanation for the likeness which he, with Miriam and Hilda, had
seen or fancied between Donatello and the Faun of Praxiteles.
The Monte Beni family, as this legend averred, drew their origin
from the Pelasgic race, who peopled Italy in times that may be
called prehistoric. It was the same noble breed of men, of Asiatic
birth, that settled in Greece; the same happy and poetic kindred
who dwelt in Arcadia, and—whether they ever lived such life or
not—enriched the world with dreams, at least, and fables, lovely,
if unsubstantial, of a Golden Age. In those delicious times, when
deities and demigods appeared familiarly on earth, mingling with
its inhabitants as friend with friend,—when nymphs, satyrs, and the
whole train of classic faith or fable hardly took pains to hide
themselves in the primeval woods,—at that auspicious period the
lineage of Monte Beni had its rise. Its progenitor was a being not
altogether human, yet partaking so largely of the gentlest human
qualities, as to be neither awful nor shocking to the imagination.
A sylvan creature, native among the woods, had loved a mortal
maiden, and—perhaps by kindness, and the subtile courtesies which
love might teach to his simplicity, or possibly by a ruder
wooing—had won her to his haunts. In due time he gained her womanly
affection; and, making their bridal bower, for aught we know, in
the hollow of a great tree, the pair spent a happy wedded life in
that ancient neighborhood where now stood Donatello's tower.
From this union sprang a vigorous progeny that took its place
unquestioned among human families. In that age, however, and long
afterwards, it showed the ineffaceable lineaments of its wild
paternity: it was a pleasant and kindly race of men, but capable of
savage fierceness, and never quite restrainable within the trammels
of social law. They were strong, active, genial, cheerful as the
sunshine, passionate as the tornado. Their lives were rendered
blissful by art unsought harmony with nature.
But, as centuries passed away, the Faun's wild blood had
necessarily been attempered with constant intermixtures from the
more ordinary streams of human life. It lost many of its original
qualities, and served for the most part only to bestow an
unconquerable vigor, which kept the family from extinction, and
enabled them to make their own part good throughout the perils and
rude emergencies of their interminable descent. In the constant
wars with which Italy was plagued, by the dissensions of her petty
states and republics, there was a demand for native hardihood.
The successive members of the Monte Beni family showed valor and
policy enough' at all events, to keep their hereditary possessions
out of the clutch of grasping neighbors, and probably differed very
little from the other feudal barons with whom they fought and
feasted. Such a degree of conformity with the manners of the
generations through which it survived, must have been essential to
the prolonged continuance of the race.
It is well known, however, that any hereditary peculiarity—as a
supernumerary finger, or an anomalous shape of feature, like the
Austrian lip—is wont to show itself in a family after a very
wayward fashion. It skips at its own pleasure along the line, and,
latent for half a century or so, crops out again in a
great-grandson. And thus, it was said, from a period beyond memory
or record, there had ever and anon been a descendant of the Monte
Benis bearing nearly all the characteristics that were attributed
to the original founder of the race. Some traditions even went so
far as to enumerate the ears, covered with a delicate fur, and
shaped like a pointed leaf, among the proofs of authentic descent
which were seen in these favored individuals. We appreciate the
beauty of such tokens of a nearer kindred to the great family of
nature than other mortals bear; but it would be idle to ask credit
for a statement which might be deemed to partake so largely of the
grotesque.
But it was indisputable that, once in a century or oftener, a
son of Monte Beni gathered into himself the scattered qualities of
his race, and reproduced the character that had been assigned to it
from immemorial times.
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