Part 39 (1/2)
They had visited the place before, but not for some months, for they had been forced away from Florence by the fierce summer heat, and had spent some time in Siena and Pistoja, finally taking up their residence in a cool and secluded nook of the Pistojese Apennines. But when autumn came, and the colder, mountain breezes began to blow, Mrs. Hartley hastened her friends back to her comfortable little Florentine villa, proposing to sojourn there for the autumn, and then to go with Lettice and perhaps with the Daltons also, on to Rome.
”We have seen nothing so beautiful as this in all our wanderings,”
Lettice said at last in softened tones.
She was looking at the cl.u.s.tering towers of the city, at Brunelleschi's magnificent dome, and the slender grace of Giotto's Campanile, and thence, from those storied trophies of transcendant art, her gaze wandered to the rich valley of the Arno, with its slopes of green and grey, and its distant line of purple peaks against an opalescent sky.
”It is more beautiful in spring. I miss the glow and scent of the flowers--the scarlet tulips, the sweet violets,” said Mrs. Hartley.
”I cannot imagine anything more beautiful,” Edith Dalton rejoined. ”One feels oppressed with so much loveliness. It is beyond expression.”
”Silence is most eloquent, perhaps, in a place like this,” said Lettice.
”What can one say that is worth saying, or that has not been said before?”
She was sitting on a fragment of fallen stone, her hands loosely clasped round her knees, her eyes fixed wistfully and dreamily upon the faint amethystine tints of the distant hills. Brooke Dalton looked down at her with an anxious eye. He did not altogether like this pensive mood of hers; there was something melancholy in the drooping curves of her lips, in the pathos of her wide gaze, which he did not understand. He tried to speak lightly, in hopes of recalling her to the festive mood in which they had all begun the day.
”You remind me of two friends of mine who are just home from Egypt. They say that when they first saw the Sphinx they sat down and looked at it for two hours without uttering a word.”
”You would not have done that, Brooke,” said Mrs. Hartley, a little maliciously.
”But why not? I think it was the right spirit,” said Lettice, and again lapsed into silence.
”Look at the Duomo, how well it stands out in the evening light!”
exclaimed Edith. ”Do you remember what Michael Angelo said when he turned and looked at it before riding away to Rome to build St. Peter's?
'Come te non voglio: meglio di te non posso.'”
”I am always struck by his generosity of feeling towards other artists,”
remarked Mrs. Hartley. ”Except towards Raffaelle, perhaps. But think of what he said of Santa Maria Novella, that it was beautiful as a bride, and that the Baptistery gates were worthy of Paradise. It is only the great who can afford to praise so magnificently.”
Again there was a silence. Then Mrs. Hartley and Edith professed to be attracted by a group of peasant children who were offering flowers and fruit for sale; and they strolled to some little distance, talking to them and to a black-eyed _cantadina_, whose costume struck them as unusually gay. They even walked a little in the shade of the cypresses, with which the palazzo seemed to be guarded, as with black and ancient sentinels; but all this was more for the sake of leaving Brooke alone with Lettice than because they had any very great interest in the Italian woman and her children, or the terraced gardens of the Villa Mozzi. For the time of separation was at hand. The Daltons were returning very shortly to England, and Brooke had not yet carried out his intention of asking Lettice Campion to be his wife. He had asked Mrs. Hartley that day to give him a chance, if possible, of half an hour's conversation with Lettice alone; but their excursion had not hitherto afforded him the coveted opportunity. Now, however, it had come; but while Lettice sat looking towards the towers of Florence with that pensive and abstracted air, Brooke Dalton shrank from breaking in upon her reverie.
In truth, Lettice was in no talkative mood. She had been troubled in her mind all day, and for some days previously, and it was easier for her to keep silence than for any of the rest. If she had noticed the absence of Mrs. Hartley and Edith, she would probably have risen from her seat and insisted on joining them; but strong in the faith that they were but a few steps away from her, she had thrown the reins of restraint upon the necks of her wild horses of imagination, and had been borne away by them to fields where Brooke's fancy was hardly likely to carry him--fields of purely imaginative joy and ideal beauty, in which he had no mental share. It was rest and refreshment to her to do this, after the growing perplexity of the last few days. Absorbed in her enjoyment of the lucent air, the golden and violet and emerald tints of the landscape; conscious also of the pa.s.sionate joy which often thrills the nerves of Italy's lovers when they find them selves, after long years of waiting, upon that cla.s.sic ground, she had for the time put away the thoughts that caused her perplexity, and abandoned herself to the sweet influences of the time and place.
The Daltons had been in Italy since May, and she had seen a great deal of Edith. Brooke Dalton had sometimes gone off on an expedition by himself, but more frequently he danced attendance on the women; and Lettice had found out that when he was absent she had a great deal more of him than when he was present. So much had Edith and Mrs. Hartley to say about him, so warmly did they praise his manners, his appearance, his manly and domestic virtues, and his enviable position in the world, that in course of time she knew all his good points by heart. She had actually found herself the day before, more as a humorous exercise of memory than for any other reason, jotting them down in her diary.
”B. D.--_testibus_ E. D. et M. H.
”He is handsome, has a manly figure, a n.o.ble head, blue eyes, chestnut hair (it is turning grey--L. C.), a dignified presence, a look that shows he respects others as much as himself.
”He is truthful, simple in tastes, easily contented, lavishly generous (that I know--L. C.), knows his own mind (that I doubt--L. C.), is fond of reading (?), a scholar (??), with a keen appreciation of literature (???).
”He has one of the most delightful mansions in England (as I know--L.
C.), with gardens, conservatories, a park, eight thousand a year.
”He is altogether an enviable man, and the woman who marries him will be an enviable woman (a matter of opinion--L. C.), and he is on the look-out for a wife (how would he like to have that said of him?--L.
C.).”
Lettice had sportively written this in her diary, and had scribbled it out again; but it represented fairly enough the kind of ideas which Brooke Dalton's sister and cousin had busily instilled into her mind.