Beautiful, strong, brave, kindly, sincere,
of honest impulses, and endowed with simple tastes and the love of
homely pleasures, he was believed to possess gifts by which he
could associate himself with the wild things of the forests, and
with the fowls of the air, and could feel a sympathy even with the
trees; among which it was his joy to dwell. On the other hand,
there were deficiencies both of intellect and heart, and
especially, as it seemed, in the development of the higher portion
of man's nature. These defects were less perceptible in early
youth, but showed themselves more strongly with advancing age,
when, as the animal spirits settled down upon a lower level, the
representative of the Monte Benis was apt to become sensual,
addicted to gross pleasures, heavy, unsympathizing, and insulated
within the narrow limits of a surly selfishness.
A similar change, indeed, is no more than what we constantly
observe to take place in persons who are not careful to substitute
other graces for those which they inevitably lose along with the
quick sensibility and joyous vivacity of youth. At worst, the
reigning Count of Monte Beni, as his hair grew white, was still a
jolly old fellow over his flask of wine, the wine that Bacchus
himself was fabled to have taught his sylvan ancestor how to
express, and from what choicest grapes, which would ripen only in a
certain divinely favored portion of the Monte Beni vineyard.
The family, be it observed, were both proud and ashamed of these
legends; but whatever part of them they might consent to
incorporate into their ancestral history, they steadily repudiated
all that referred to their one distinctive feature, the pointed and
furry ears. In a great many years past, no sober credence had been
yielded to the mythical portion of the pedigree. It might, however,
be considered as typifying some such assemblage of qualities—in
this case, chiefly remarkable for their simplicity and
naturalness—as, when they reappear in successive generations,
constitute what we call family character. The sculptor found,
moreover, on the evidence of some old portraits, that the physical
features of the race had long been similar to what he now saw them
in Donatello. With accumulating years, it is true, the Monte Beni
face had a tendency to look grim and savage; and, in two or three
instances, the family pictures glared at the spectator in the eyes
like some surly animal, that had lost its good humor when it
outlived its playfulness.
The young Count accorded his guest full liberty to investigate
the personal annals of these pictured worthies, as well as all the
rest of his progenitors; and ample materials were at hand in many
chests of worm-eaten papers and yellow parchments, that had been
gathering into larger and dustier piles ever since the dark ages.
But, to confess the truth, the information afforded by these musty
documents was so much more prosaic than what Kenyon acquired from
Tomaso's legends, that even the superior authenticity of the former
could not reconcile him to its dullness. What especially delighted
the sculptor was the analogy between Donatello's character, as he
himself knew it, and those peculiar traits which the old butler's
narrative assumed to have been long hereditary in the race. He was
amused at finding, too, that not only Tomaso but the peasantry of
the estate and neighboring village recognized his friend as a
genuine Monte Beni, of the original type. They seemed to cherish a
great affection for the young Count, and were full of stories about
his sportive childhood; how he had played among the little rustics,
and been at once the wildest and the sweetest of them all; and how,
in his very infancy, he had plunged into the deep pools of the
streamlets and never been drowned, and had clambered to the topmost
branches of tall trees without ever breaking his neck. No such
mischance could happen to the sylvan child because, handling all
the elements of nature so fearlessly and freely, nothing had either
the power or the will to do him harm.
He grew up, said these humble friends, the playmate not only of
all mortal kind, but of creatures of the woods; although, when
Kenyon pressed them for some particulars of this latter mode of
companionship, they could remember little more than a few anecdotes
of a pet fox, which used to growl and snap at everybody save
Donatello himself.
But they enlarged—and never were weary of the theme—upon the
blithesome effects of Donatello's presence in his rosy childhood
and budding youth. Their hovels had always glowed like sunshine
when he entered them; so that, as the peasants expressed it, their
young master had never darkened a doorway in his life. He was the
soul of vintage festivals. While he was a mere infant, scarcely
able to run alone, it had been the custom to make him tread the
winepress with his tender little feet, if it were only to crush one
cluster of the grapes. And the grape-juice that gushed beneath his
childish tread, be it ever so small in quantity, sufficed to impart
a pleasant flavor to a whole cask of wine. The race of Monte
Beni—so these rustic chroniclers assured the sculptor—had possessed
the gift from the oldest of old times of expressing good wine from
ordinary grapes, and a ravishing liquor from the choice growth of
their vineyard.
In a word, as he listened to such tales as these, Kenyon could
have imagined that the valleys and hillsides about him were a
veritable Arcadia; and that Donatello was not merely a sylvan faun,
but the genial wine god in his very person. Making many allowances
for the poetic fancies of Italian peasants, he set it down for fact
that his friend, in a simple way and among rustic folks, had been
an exceedingly delightful fellow in his younger days.
But the contadini sometimes added, shaking their heads and
sighing, that the young Count was sadly changed since he went to
Rome. The village girls now missed the merry smile with which he
used to greet them.
The sculptor inquired of his good friend Tomaso, whether he,
too, had noticed the shadow which was said to have recently fallen
over Donatello's life.
"Ah, yes, Signore!" answered the old butler, "it is even so,
since he came back from that wicked and miserable city. The world
has grown either too evil, or else too wise and sad, for such men
as the old Counts of Monte Beni used to be. His very first taste of
it, as you see, has changed and spoilt my poor young lord. There
had not been a single count in the family these hundred years or
more, who was so true a Monte Beni, of the antique stamp, as this
poor signorino; and now it brings the tears into my eyes to hear
him sighing over a cup of Sunshine! Ah, it is a sad world now!"
"Then you think there was a merrier world once?" asked
Kenyon.
"Surely, Signore," said Tomaso; "a merrier world, and merrier
Counts of Monte Beni to live in it! Such tales of them as I have
heard, when I was a child on my grandfather's knee! The good old
man remembered a lord of Monte Beni—at least, he had heard of such
a one, though I will not make oath upon the holy crucifix that my
grandsire lived in his time who used to go into the woods and call
pretty damsels out of the fountains, and out of the trunks of the
old trees. That merry lord was known to dance with them a whole
long summer afternoon! When shall we see such frolics in our
days?"
"Not soon, I am afraid," acquiesced the sculptor. "You are
right, excellent Tomaso; the world is sadder now!"
And, in truth, while our friend smiled at these wild fables, he
sighed in the same breath to think how the once genial earth
produces, in every successive generation, fewer flowers than used
to gladden the preceding ones. Not that the modes and seeming
possibilities of human enjoyment are rarer in our refined and
softened era,—on the contrary, they never before were nearly so
abundant,—but that mankind are getting so far beyond the childhood
of their race that they scorn to be happy any longer. A simple and
joyous character can find no place for itself among the sage and
sombre figures that would put his unsophisticated cheerfulness to
shame. The entire system of man's affairs, as at present
established, is built up purposely to exclude the careless and
happy soul. The very children would upbraid the wretched individual
who should endeavor to take life and the world as w what we might
naturally suppose them meant for—a place and opportunity for
enjoyment.
It is the iron rule in our day to require an object and a
purpose in life. It makes us all parts of a complicated scheme of
progress, which can only result in our arrival at a colder and
drearier region than we were born in. It insists upon everybody's
adding somewhat—a mite, perhaps, but earned by incessant effort—to
an accumulated pile of usefulness, of which the only use will be,
to burden our posterity with even heavier thoughts and more
inordinate labor than our own.
1 comment