Part 29 (2/2)

Roderick Hudson Henry James 30190K 2022-07-22

”What are they? which things have most beauty?”

”That is according to taste. I should say the statues.”

”How long will it take to see them all? to know, at least, something about them?”

”You can see them all, as far as mere seeing goes, in a fortnight. But to know them is a thing for one's leisure. The more time you spend among them, the more you care for them.” After a moment's hesitation he went on: ”Why should you grudge time? It 's all in your way, since you are to be an artist's wife.”

”I have thought of that,” she said. ”It may be that I shall always live here, among the most beautiful things in the world!”

”Very possibly! I should like to see you ten years hence.”

”I dare say I shall seem greatly altered. But I am sure of one thing.”

”Of what?”

”That for the most part I shall be quite the same. I ask nothing better than to believe the fine things you say about my understanding, but even if they are true, it won't matter. I shall be what I was made, what I am now--a young woman from the country! The fruit of a civilization not old and complex, but new and simple.”

”I am delighted to hear it: that 's an excellent foundation.”

”Perhaps, if you show me anything more, you will not always think so kindly of it. Therefore I warn you.”

”I am not frightened. I should like vastly to say something to you: Be what you are, be what you choose; but do, sometimes, as I tell you.”

If Rowland was not frightened, neither, perhaps, was Miss Garland; but she seemed at least slightly disturbed. She proposed that they should join their companions.

Mrs. Hudson spoke under her breath; she could not be accused of the want of reverence sometimes attributed to Protestants in the great Catholic temples. ”Mary, dear,” she whispered, ”suppose we had to kiss that dreadful bra.s.s toe. If I could only have kept our door-knocker, at Northampton, as bright as that! I think it's so heathenish; but Roderick says he thinks it 's sublime.”

Roderick had evidently grown a trifle perverse. ”It 's sublimer than anything that your religion asks you to do!” he exclaimed.

”Surely our religion sometimes gives us very difficult duties,” said Miss Garland.

”The duty of sitting in a whitewashed meeting-house and listening to a nasal Puritan! I admit that 's difficult. But it 's not sublime. I am speaking of ceremonies, of forms. It is in my line, you know, to make much of forms. I think this is a very beautiful one. Could n't you do it?” he demanded, looking at his cousin.

She looked back at him intently and then shook her head. ”I think not!”

”Why not?”

”I don't know; I could n't!”

During this little discussion our four friends were standing near the venerable image of Saint Peter, and a squalid, savage-looking peasant, a tattered ruffian of the most orthodox Italian aspect, had been performing his devotions before it. He turned away, crossing himself, and Mrs. Hudson gave a little shudder of horror.

”After that,” she murmured, ”I suppose he thinks he is as good as any one! And here is another. Oh, what a beautiful person!”

A young lady had approached the sacred effigy, after having wandered away from a group of companions. She kissed the brazen toe, touched it with her forehead, and turned round, facing our friends. Rowland then recognized Christina Light. He was stupefied: had she suddenly embraced the Catholic faith? It was but a few weeks before that she had treated him to a pa.s.sionate profession of indifference. Had she entered the church to put herself en regle with what was expected of a Princess Casama.s.sima? While Rowland was mentally asking these questions she was approaching him and his friends, on her way to the great altar. At first she did not perceive them.

Mary Garland had been gazing at her. ”You told me,” she said gently, to Rowland, ”that Rome contained some of the most beautiful things in the world. This surely is one of them!”

At this moment Christina's eye met Rowland's and before giving him any sign of recognition she glanced rapidly at his companions. She saw Roderick, but she gave him no bow; she looked at Mrs. Hudson, she looked at Mary Garland. At Mary Garland she looked fixedly, piercingly, from head to foot, as the slow pace at which she was advancing made possible.

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