summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 17:52:11 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-07 17:52:11 -0800
commit2cabe8442b73d0443a7715b296b85d5e125b0e2f (patch)
treecec9b90d359e956abbe9c08ba3debd709aa62200
parentc434d78a84cd84a8e3f09e9568f8edf7dfc439f0 (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/55840-0.txt8651
-rw-r--r--old/55840-0.zipbin198029 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h.zipbin678105 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/55840-h.htm11109
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/cover.jpgbin66262 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_004.jpgbin33147 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_007.jpgbin11993 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_009.jpgbin12866 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_011.jpgbin8819 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_017.jpgbin11033 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_047.jpgbin7952 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_071.jpgbin39639 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_130.jpgbin10465 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_137.jpgbin50106 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_184.jpgbin9081 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_193.jpgbin41109 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_200.jpgbin8559 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_207.jpgbin30084 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_229.jpgbin60087 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_241.jpgbin8885 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_247.jpgbin29864 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/55840-h/images/illus_263.jpgbin29098 -> 0 bytes
25 files changed, 17 insertions, 19760 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2583773
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55840 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55840)
diff --git a/old/55840-0.txt b/old/55840-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index aeea8ea..0000000
--- a/old/55840-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8651 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Seekers in Sicily, by Elizabeth Bisland and
-Anne Hoyt
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Seekers in Sicily
- Being a Quest for Persephone by Jane and Peripatetica
-
-
-Author: Elizabeth Bisland and Anne Hoyt
-
-
-
-Release Date: October 28, 2017 [eBook #55840]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEEKERS IN SICILY***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Clarity, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 55840-h.htm or 55840-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/55840/55840-h/55840-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/55840/55840-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/seekersinsicily00wetmiala
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores
- (_italics_).
-
- Text that was in bold face is enclosed by equal signs
- (=bold=).
-
-
-
-
-
-SEEKERS IN SICILY
-
-
-[Illustration: “Demeter’s Well-Beloved Children”]
-
-
-SEEKERS IN SICILY
-
-Being a Quest for Persephone by Jane and Peripatetica
-
-Done into the Vernacular
-
-by
-
-ELIZABETH BISLAND AND ANNE HOYT
-
-
-
-
-
-
-New York: John Lane Company. MCMIX
-London: John Lane, The Bodley Head
-
-Copyright, 1909
-By John Lane Company
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: Decoration]
-
- To
-
- ANDERS AND FRAU ZORN
-
- FROM THE NORTH, IN MEMORY
- OF THE SUN AND THE SOUTH,
- THIS BOOK IS INSCRIBED
-
- BY
-
- A PAIR OF “WORD BRAIDERS”
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: Decoration]
-
- =NOTE=
-
-
-_THE designs upon the cover of this book, and at the heads of the
-chapters, are the tribe signs or totems of the original inhabitants of
-the island of Sicily, which have survived all conquests and races and
-are still considered as tokens of good luck and defenders from the
-Evil-eye._
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: Decoration]
-
- PREFACE
-
-WHEN this book was written—in the spring of the year—the Land of the
-Older Gods was unmarred by the terrible seismic convulsions which
-wrought such ruin in the last days of 1908.
-
-Very sad to each of us it is when time and the sorrows of “this
-unintelligible world” carve furrows upon our own countenances, but when
-the visage of the globe shrivels and wrinkles with the lapse of ages
-then the greatness of the disaster touches the whole race. Sicily, whose
-history is so full of blood and tears, has been the victim of the
-greatest natural tragedy that man’s chronicles record because of this
-line drawn by Time upon our planet’s face—yet it leaves her still so
-fair, so poignantly lovely, that pilgrims of beauty will—forgetting this
-slight blemish—still journey to see the sweetest remnant of the world’s
-youth. Happily Messina, the one city injured, was the one city where
-travellers rarely paused. All the others remain unmarred and are still
-exactly as they were when this chronicle of their ancient beauty and
-charm was set down.
-
- E. B. AND A. H.
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- PAGE
- PREFACE 9
- CHAPTER
- I ON THE ROAD TO THE LAND OF THE GODS 15
- II A NEST OF EAGLES 45
- III ONE DEAD IN THE FIELDS 126
- IV THE RETURN OF PERSEPHONE 178
- V A CITY OF TEMPLES 192
- VI THE GOLDEN SHELL 229
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- “Demeter’s Well-Beloved Children” _Frontispiece_
-
- PAGE
-
- “A Place Where the Past Reveals Itself” 68
-
- “Pan’s Goatherd” 132
-
- “Ætna, The Salient Fact of Sicily” 186
-
- “The Saffron Mass of Concordia” 198
-
- “Lifting Themselves Airily From a Sea of 218
- Flowers”
-
- “Sicily’s Picture-book, The Painted 234
- Cart”
-
- “The Last Resting Place of Queen 248
- Constance”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- [Illustration: Decoration]
-
-
- SEEKERS IN SICILY
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- ON THE ROAD TO THE LAND OF THE GODS
-
- “He ne’er is crown’d with immortality
- Who fears to follow where airy voices lead.”
-
-“OH, Persephone, Persephone!... Surely Koré is in Hell.”
-
-This is a discouraged voice from the window.
-
-“Peripatetica, that _sounds_ both insane and improper. Would it fatigue
-you too much to explain in the vernacular what you are trying, in your
-roundabout way, to suggest?”
-
-Thus Jane, a mere diaphanous mauve cloud, from which the glimmering fire
-picked out glittering points here and there. When Jane takes to teagowns
-she is really very dressy.
-
-Peripatetica strolled up and down the dusky drawing-room two or three
-times, without answering. Outside a raging wind drove furiously before
-it in the darkness the snow that flew upward in long spirals, like
-desperate hunted ghosts. Finally she took up a book from the table, and
-kneeling, to get the light from the logs on the page, began to read
-aloud.
-
-These two were on such kindly terms that either one could read aloud
-without arousing the other to open violence.
-
-“Persephone, sometimes called Koré—” read Peripatetica, “having been
-seized by Pluto, as she gathered narcissus, and wild thyme, and mint,
-and the violet into her green kirtle—was carried, weeping very bitterly,
-into his dark hell. And Demeter, her mother, missing her fair and
-sweet-curled daughter, sought her through all the world with tears and
-ravings; the bitter sound and moisture of her grief making a noise as of
-winter wind and rain. And her warm heart being so cold with pain the
-blossoms died on her bosom, and her vernal hair was shredded abroad into
-the air, and all growing things drooped and perished, and her brown
-benignant face became white as the face of the dead are white——”
-
-Peripatetica closed the book, put it back on the table, and drew a
-hassock under her for a seat.
-
-“I see,” said Jane. “Demeter is certainly passing this way to-night,
-poor dear! It’s a pity she can’t realize Persephone, that sweet soul of
-Spring, will come back. She always does come back.”
-
-“Yes; but Demeter, the mother-earth, always fears that this time she may
-not; that Pluto will keep her in hell always. And every time she makes
-the same outcry about it.”
-
-“I suppose she always finds her first in Enna,” Jane hazarded. “Isn’t
-Enna in Sicily?”
-
-“Yes, I think so; but I don’t know much about Sicily, though everybody
-goes there nowadays. Let’s go there, Jane, and help Demeter find
-Persephone.”
-
-“Let’s!” agreed Jane, with sympathetic enthusiasm, and they went.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now, being Americans, and therefore accustomed to the most obliging
-behaviour on the part of the male sex, it never occurred to them that
-Pluto might be ungallant enough to object to their taking a hand in. But
-he did—as they might have foreseen would be likely in a person so
-unmannerly as to snatch lovely daughters from devoted mothers.
-
-It began on the ocean. On quite a calm evening a wave, passing from
-under the side of the ship, threw its crest back—perhaps to look at the
-stars—and fell head over heels into their open port. Certainly as much
-as two tons of green and icy Atlantic entered impulsively, and by the
-time they were dried out and comforted by the tight-corseted, rosy,
-sympathetic Lemon every object they possessed was a mere bunch of
-depressed rumples. Throughout the rest of the voyage they presented the
-unfortunate appearance of having slept in their clothes, including their
-hats. These last, which they had believed refreshingly picturesque, or
-coquettish, at starting, had that defiantly wretched aspect displayed by
-the broody hen after she has been dipped in the rain-barrel to check her
-too exuberant aversion to race-suicide.
-
-That was how Pluto began, and it swiftly went from bad to worse.
-
-Three large tourist ships discharged bursting cargoes of humanity upon
-Naples on one and the same day, and the hotel-keepers rose to their
-opportunity and dealt guilefully with the horde clamouring as with one
-voice for food and shelter. That one’s hard-won shelter was numbered 12
-_bis_ (an artful concealment of the unlucky number 13) was apparently an
-unimportant detail. It was shelter, though even a sea-sodden mind should
-have seen something suspicious in those egregious frescoes of fat ladies
-sitting on the knife edge of crescent moons with which Room 13
-endeavoured to conceal its real banefulness. Even such a mind should
-have distrusted that flamingly splendid fire-screen in front of a
-walled-up fireplace; should have scented danger in that flamboyant black
-and gold and blue satin furniture of the vintage of 1870. There was
-plainly, to an observant eye, something sinister and meretricious in so
-much dressiness, but Jane and Peripatetica yielded themselves up to that
-serpent lodging without the smallest precaution, and lived to rue their
-impulsive confidence.
-
-To begin with, Naples, instead of showing herself all flowers and
-sunshine, tinkling mandolins, and moonlight and jasper seas, was as
-merry and pleasing as an iced sponge. Loud winds howled through the
-streets, driving before them cold deluges of rain, and in these chilling
-downpours the street troubadours stood one foot in the puddles snuffling
-songs of “Bella Napoli” to untuned guitars, with water dripping from the
-ends of their noses. Peripatetica—whose eyes even under her low-spirited
-hat had been all through the voyage full of dreamful memories of
-Neapolitan tea-roses and blue blandness—curled up like a disappointed
-worm and retired to a fit of neuralgia and a hot-water bottle. There was
-something almost uncanny in the scornful irony of her expression as she
-hugged her steaming comforter to her cheek, and paced the floor in time
-to those melancholy damp wails from the street. Instead of tea-roses she
-was prating all day of American comforts, as she clasped the three tepid
-coils of the chilly steam-heater to her homesick bosom, while Jane
-paddled about under an umbrella in search of the traditional ideal
-Italian maid, who would be willing to contribute to the party all the
-virtues and a cheerful disposition, for sixty francs a month.
-
-Minna, when she did appear, proved to be Swiss instead of Italian, but
-she carried an atmosphere of happy comfort about her, could spin the
-threads of three languages with her gifted tongue, while sixty francs
-seemed to satisfy her wildest dreams of avarice. So the two depressed
-pilgrims, soothed by Minna’s promise to assume their burdens the next
-day, fell asleep dreaming that the weather might moderate or even clear.
-
-Eight o’clock of the following morning came, but Minna didn’t. Jane
-interviewed the concierge, who had recommended her. The concierge
-interviewed the heavens and the earth, and the circumambient air, but
-spite of outflung fingers and polyglot cries, the elements had nothing
-to say about the matter, and for twenty-four hours they declined to let
-the secret leak out that other Americans in the same hotel had ravished
-their Minna from them with the glittering lure of twenty francs more.
-
-Finally it dawned upon two damp and depressed minds that some unknown
-enemy had put a _comether_ on them—though at that time they had no
-inkling of his identity. Large-eyed horror ensued. First aid to the
-hoodooed must be sought. Peripatetica tied a strip of red flannel around
-her left ankle.
-
-“In all these very old countries,” she said oracularly, “secret malign
-influences from the multitudes of wicked dead rise up like vapours from
-the soil where they have been buried.”
-
-Jane listened and, pale but resolute, went forth and purchased a coral
-_jettatura_.
-
-“Let us pass on at once from this moist Sodom,” she said.
-
-Visions of sun and Sicily dawned upon their mildewed imaginations.
-
-Now there is really but one way to approach Sicily satisfactorily. Of
-course a boat leaves Naples every evening for Palermo, but the
-Mediterranean is a treacherous element in February. It had broken night
-after night in thunderous shocks upon the sea wall, making the heavy
-stone-built hotel quiver beneath their beds, and in the darkness of each
-night they had seen the water squadron charge again and again, the
-foremost spinning up tall and white to fling itself in frenzied futile
-spray across the black street. So that the thought of trusting insides
-jaded by two weeks of the Atlantic to such a foe as this was far from
-their most reckless dreams. The none too solid earth was none too good
-for such as they, and a motor eats up dull miles by magic. Motors are to
-be had in Naples even when fair skies lack, and with a big Berliet
-packed with luggage, and with the concierge’s tender, rueful smile
-shedding blessings, at last they slid southward.
-
-—Pale clouds of almond blossoms were spread against grey terraces....
-Less pale smells rose in gusty whiffs.... Narrow yellow streets crooked
-before them, where they picked a cautious hooting way amid Italy’s
-rising population complicated with goats and asses.... Then flat, muddy
-roads, and Berliet bumping, splashing between fields of green
-artichokes.... The clouds held up; thinned, and parted, showing rifts of
-blue.... Vesuvius pushed the mists from her brow, and purple shadows
-dappled her shining, dripping flanks.... Orange groves rose along the
-way. Flocks of brown goats tinkled past. More almond boughs leaned over
-walls washed a faded rose. Church bells clanked sweetly through the
-moist air from far-away hills. Runnels chattered out from secret
-channels fringed with fern. Grey olive orchards hung like clouds along
-the steep.... The sun was fairly out, and Italy assuming her old
-traditional air of professional beauty among the nations of the
-earth....
-
-The Berliet climbed as nimbly as a goat toward Sorrento. The light
-deepened; the sea began to peacock. More and more the landscape assumed
-the appearance of the impossibly chromatic back drop of an opera, and as
-the turn was made under the orange avenue of the hotel at Sorrento
-everything was ready for the chorus of merry villagers, and for the
-prima donna to begin plucking song out of her bosom with stereotyped
-gestures.
-
-It was there they began to offer the light wines of the country, as
-sweetly perfumed and innocent as spring violets; no more like to the
-astringent red inks masquerading in straw bottles in America under the
-same names, than they to Hercules. The seekers of Persephone drank
-deeply—as much as a wine-glass full—and warmed by this sweet ichor of
-Bacchus they bid defiance to hoodoos and pushed on to Amalfi.
-
-Berliet swam along the Calabrian shore, lifting them lightly up the
-steeps, swooping purringly down the slopes,—swinging about the bold
-curves of the coast; rounding the tall spurs, where the sea shone, green
-and purple as a dove’s neck, five hundred feet below, and where orange,
-lemon, and olive groves climbed the narrow terraces five hundred feet
-above. They were following the old, old way, where the Greeks had gone,
-where the Romans went, where Normans rode, where Spaniards and Saracens
-marched; the line of the drums and tramplings of not three, but of three
-hundred conquests! They were following—in a motor car—the passageway of
-three thousand years of European history that was to lead them back
-beyond history itself to the old, old gods.
-
-The way was broad and smooth, looping itself like a white ribbon along
-the declivity, and even Peripatetica admitted it was lovely, though she
-has an ineradicable tendency to swagger about the unapproachable
-superiority of Venezuelan scenery; probably because so few are in a
-position to contradict her, or because she enjoys showing off her
-knowledge of out-of-the-way places which most of us don’t go to. She had
-always sniffed at the Mediterranean as overrated in the matter of
-colour, and declared it pale and dull beside the green and blue fire of
-Biscayne Bay in Florida, but it was a nice day, and a nice sight, and
-Peripatetica handsomely acknowledged that _after_ Venezuela this was the
-very best scenery she knew.
-
-At Amalfi
-
- “Where amid her mulberry trees
- Sits Amalfi in the heat,
- Bathing ever her white feet
- In the tideless summer seas,”
-
-they climbed 175 steps to the Cappucini convent which hangs like a
-swallow’s nest in a niche of the cliffs, flanked by that famous terrace
-the artists paint again and again, from every angle, at every season of
-the year, at every hour of the day. There they imbibed a very superior
-tea, while sea and sky did their handsomest, listening meanwhile to a
-fellow tourist brag of having climbed to Ravello in his motor car.
-
-If one cranes one’s neck from the Cappucini terrace, on a small peak
-will be seen what purports to be a town, but the conclusion will be
-irresistible that the only way to reach such a dizzy eminence is by
-goat’s feet, or hawk’s wings, and the natural inference is that the
-fellow tourist is fibbing. Nevertheless one hates to be outdone, and one
-abandons all desire to sleep in one of those coldly clean little
-monk-cells of the convent, and climbs resolutely down the 175 steps
-again and interviews Berliet. Berliet thinks his chassis is too long for
-the sharp turns. Thinks that the road is bad; that it is also unsafe;
-that the hotel in Ravello is not possible; that he suspects his off fore
-tire; that there’s not time to do it before dark; that his owner forbids
-his going to Ravello at all; that he has an appointment that evening
-with a good-looking lady in Amalfi; that he is tired with his long run,
-and doesn’t want to any way. All of which eleven reasons appeared so
-irrefutable, collectively and individually, that Jane and Peripatetica
-climbed into their seats and announced that they would go to Ravello,
-and go immediately.
-
-Berliet muttered unpleasant things in his native tongue as to signori
-being reckless, obstinate, and inconsiderate; wound them up sulkily and
-took them.
-
-Peripatetica admitted in a whisper that up to that very day she had
-never even heard of Ravello, which proved to be a really degrading piece
-of ignorance, for every human being they met for the next three months
-knew all about the place—or said they did. Further experience taught
-them to know that Italy is crowded with little crumbling towns one has
-never heard of before, which when examined prove to be the very
-particular spots in which took place about a half of all the history
-that ever happened. History being a thing one must be pretty skilful if
-one means to evade it in Italy, for the truth is that whenever history
-took a notion to _be_, it promptly went on a trip to Italy and _was_.
-
-They hooted slowly again through narrow streets, pushed more goats and
-children out their way, and then Berliet swung round on one wheel and
-began to mount. Began to climb like the foreseen goat, to soar like the
-imagined hawk, up sharp zigzags that lifted them by almost exact
-parallels. Everything that puts on power and speed, and makes noises
-like bomb explosions in a saw-factory, was pushed forward or pulled
-back. They rushed noisily round and round the peak at locomotive speed,
-and finally half way up into the very top of the sky they pulled up
-sharply in a cobble-paved square. Berliet leaped nimbly out, unscrewed a
-hot lid—with the tail of his linen duster—from which lid liquids and
-steam and smells boiled as from an angry geyser, and they found
-themselves in the wild eyrie of Ravello. That ubiquituosity—(with the
-name of a hotel on his cap)—who springs out from every stone in Italy
-like a spider upon the foolish swarming tourist fly, was waiting for
-them in the square as if by appointment, and before they could draw the
-first gasp of relief he had their possessions loaded upon the backs of
-the floating population, and they were climbing in the dusk a stone
-stairway that called itself a street—meekly and weakly unwitting of
-their possible destination. The destination proved to be a vaulted
-courtyard, opening behind a doorway which was built of a choice
-assortment of loot from four periods of architecture and sculpture;
-proved to be a reckless jumble of winding steps, of crooked passages, of
-terraces, balconies, and loggias, and the whole of this destination went
-by the name of the Hotel Bellevue. And once there, then suddenly, after
-all the noise and odours, the confusion and human clatter of the last
-three weeks, they stepped quietly out upon a revetment of Paradise.
-
-Below—a thousand feet below—in the blue darkness little sparks of light
-were Amalfi. In the blue darkness above, hardly farther away it seemed,
-were the larger sparks of the rolling planets. The cool, lonely darkness
-bathed their spirits as with a blessed chrism. The place was, for the
-night, theirs alone, and for one holy moment the swarming tourist failed
-to swarm.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “In the Highlands! In the country places!”—
-
-murmured Jane, gratefully declining upon a broad balustrade, and
-Peripatetica echoed softly—declining in her turn—
-
- ... “Oh, to dream; oh, to awake and wander
- There, and with delight to take and render
- Through the trance of silence
- Quiet breath.”...
-
-And Jane took it up again—
-
- ... “Where essential silence cheers and blesses,
- And forever in the hill recesses
- Her more lovely music broods and dies.”
-
-Just then essential silence was broken by the last protesting squawk of
-a virtuous hen, who seemed to be about to die that they might live.
-Peripatetica recognized that plaintive cry. Hens were kept handy in
-fattening-coops on the Plantation, against the sudden inroads of
-unexpected guests.
-
-“When the big-gate slams chickens begin to squawk,” was a
-well-remembered Plantation proverb.
-
-“How tough she will be, though,” Jane gently moaned, “and we shan’t be
-able to eat her, and she will have died in vain.”
-
-Little did she reck of Signor Pantaleone Caruso’s beautiful art, for
-when they had dressed by the dim, soothing flicker of candles in big
-clean bed-rooms that were warmed by smouldering olive-wood fires, they
-were sweetly fed on a dozen lovely dishes; dishes foamy and yellow, with
-hot brown crusts, made seemingly of varied combinings of meal and
-cheese, and called by strange Italian cognomens. And the late—so very
-late—pullet appeared in her due course amid maiden strewments of crisp
-salads; proving, by some Pantaleonic magic, to be all that a hen could
-or should be. And they drank gratefully to her manes in Signor Caruso’s
-own wine, as mellow and as golden as his famous cousin’s voice. After
-which they ate small, scented yellow apples which might well have grown
-in Hesperidian gardens, and drowsed contentedly by the musky olive-wood
-blaze, among bowls of freesias and violets, until the almost weird hour
-of half past eight, when inward blessedness and a day of mountain air
-would no longer be denied their toll.
-
-Yet all through the hours of sleep “old forgotten, far-off things, and
-battles long ago” stirred like an undertone of dreams within dreams. The
-clank of armed feet moved in the street. Ghostly bells rang whispered
-tocsins of alarm, and shadowy life swept back and forth in the broken,
-deserted town. The “Brass Hats” glimmered in the darkness. Goths set
-alight long extinguished fires. Curved Saracen swords glittered faintly,
-and Normans grasped the heights with mailed hands. The Rufolis, the
-d’Affliti, the Confalones, and della Maras married, feasted, and warred
-again in dumb show, and up and down the stairs of this very house
-rustled the silk robes and soft shod feet of sleek prelates.
-
-Even the sea below—where the new moon floated at the western rim like a
-golden canoe—was astir with the myriad sails of _revenants_. First the
-white wings of that—
-
- “Grave Syrian trader ...
- Who snatched his rudder and shook out his sail ...
- Between the Syrtes and soft Sicily.”
-
-After him followed hard the small ghostly sails of the Greeks.
-
-“They were very perfect men, and could do all and bear all that could be
-done and borne by human flesh and blood. Taking them all together they
-were the most faultlessly constructed human beings that ever lived, and
-they knew it, for they worshipped bodily health and strength, and spent
-the lives of generations in the cultivation of both. They were fighting
-men, trained to use every weapon they knew, they were boxers and
-wrestlers, athletes, runners and jumpers, and drivers of chariots; but
-above all they were seamen, skilled at the helm, quick at handling the
-sails, masters of the oar, and fearless navigators when half of all
-navigation led sooner or later to certain death. For though they loved
-life, as only the strong and the beautiful can love it, and though they
-looked forward to no condition of perpetual bliss beyond, but only to
-the shadowy place where regretful phantoms flitted in the gloom as in
-the twilight of the Hebrew Sheol, yet they faced dying as fighters
-always have and always will, with desperate hands and a quiet heart.”
-
-The golden canoe of the young moon filled and sank behind the sea’s rim,
-but through the darkness came the many-oared beat of ponderous Roman
-galleys carrying the dominion of the earth within their great sides, and
-as they vanished like a fog-wreath along the horizon, followed fast the
-hawk-winged craft of the keen-bladed, keen-faced Saracen, whose
-sickle-like crescent would never here on this coast round to the full.
-For, far away on the grey French coast of Coutance was a Norman
-gentleman named Tancred, very strong of heart, and very stout of his
-hands. There was no rumour of him here, as he rode to the hunt and
-spitted the wild boar upon his terrible length of steel. What should the
-Moslems know of a simple Norman gentleman, or care?—and yet in those
-lion loins lay the seeds of a dozen mighty whelps who were to rend their
-Christian prey from the Moslem and rule this warm coloured South as
-kings and dukes and counts, and whose blood was to be claimed by every
-crown in Europe for a thousand years. Very few among the shadowy sails
-were those of the de Hautevilles, but quality, not quantity, counts most
-among men, and those ships carried a strange, potent race. Anna Comnena
-thus describes one of them:
-
-“This Robert de Hauteville was of Norman origin—he united a marvellous
-astuteness with immense ambition, and his bodily strength was
-prodigious. His whole desire was to attain to the wealth and power of
-the greatest living men; he was extremely tenacious of his designs and
-most wise in finding means to attain his ends. In stature he was taller
-than the tallest; of a ruddy hue and fair-haired, he was
-broad-shouldered, and his eyes sparkled with fire; the perfect
-proportion of all his limbs made him a model of beauty from head to
-heel, as I have often heard people tell. Homer says of Achilles that
-those who heard his voice seemed to hear the thundering shout of a great
-multitude, but it used to be said of the de Hautevilles that their
-battle cry would turn back tens of thousands. Such a man, one in such a
-position, of such a nature, and of such spirit, naturally hated the idea
-of service, and would not be subject to any man; for such are those
-natures which are born too great for their surrounding.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-When morning dawned all spirits of the past had vanished, and only the
-noisy play of the young hopes of the Caruso family disturbed the peace
-of the echoing court. Jane insisted upon calling these innocent infants
-Knickerbockers, because, she said, they were only short
-Pantaleones—which is the sort of mild pleasantry Jane affects.
-Peripatetica doesn’t lend herself to these gentler forms of jest. It was
-she who put in all that history and poetry. (See above.)
-
-Ravello used to be famous for her dye stuffs, and for the complete
-thorough-goingness of her attacks of plague, but her principal
-industries to-day are pulpits, and fondness for the Prophet Jonah. Her
-population in the day of dyes and plague was 36,000, and is now, by
-generous computation, about thirty-six—which does not include the
-Knickers. Just opposite the Hotel Bellevue is one of these pulpits, in
-the church of St. John of the Bull; a church which about a thousand
-years ago was a very superior place indeed; but worse than Goths or
-Vandals, or Saracens, or plague, was the pernicious activity of the
-Eighteenth Century. Hardly a church in Italy has escaped unscathed from
-its busy rage. No sanctuary was too reverend or too beautiful to be
-ravaged in the name of Palladio, or of “the classic style.” Marbles were
-broken, mosaics torn out, dim aisles despoiled, brass and bronze melted,
-carvings chopped and burned, rich glass shattered, old tapestries flung
-on the dust heap. All the treasures of centuries—sweet with incense,
-softened and tinted by time, sanctified by a thousand prayers, and
-beautified by the tenderest emotions—were bundled out of the way of
-those benighted savages, and tons of lime were had into the poor gaunt
-and ruined fanes to transform them into whited sepulchres of beauty.
-Blank plaster walls hid the sweetest of frescoes; clustered grey columns
-were limed into ghastly imitations of the Doric; soaring arches—flowered
-like forest boughs—vanished in stodgy vaultings; Corinthian pilasters
-shoved lacelike rood-screens out of the way, and fat sprawling cherubs
-shouldered bleeding, shadowy Christs from the altars.
-
-The spirit which inspired this stupid ruthlessness was perfectly
-expressed by Addison, who, commenting upon the great Cathedral of Siena,
-said pragmatically:
-
-“When a man sees the prodigious pains that our forefathers have been at
-in these barbarous buildings, one cannot but fancy what miracles of
-architecture they would have left us had they only been instructed in
-the right way; for when the devotion of those ages was much warmer than
-it is at present, and the riches of the people much more at the disposal
-of the priests, there was so much money consumed on these Gothic
-churches as would have finished a greater variety of noble buildings
-than have been raised before or since that time. Than these Gothic
-churches nothing can make a prettier show to those who prefer false
-beauties and affected ornaments to a noble and majestic simplicity”—of
-dull plaster!
-
-Much has been said of the irreverence of the Nineteenth Century. The
-Eighteenth respected nothing their forefathers had wrought; not even in
-this little far-away mountain town, and St. John of the Bull is now—poor
-Saint!—housed drearily in a dull, dusty, echoing white cavern, with not
-one point of beauty to hold the protesting eye save the splendid marble
-pulpit—escaped by some miracle of ruth to stand out in that dull waste
-upon delicate twisted alabaster columns, which stand in their turn upon
-crawling marble lions. Its four sides, and its baldachino, show
-beautiful patterns of precious mosaics, wrought with lapis lazuli, with
-verd antique, and with sanguine Egyptian marbles. The carefullest and
-richest of these mosaics, of course—along the side of the pulpit’s
-stair—is devoted to picturing that extremely qualmish archaic whale who
-in all Ravello’s churches _unswallows_ the Prophet Jonah with every
-evidence of emotion and relief.
-
-Recently, in the process of removing some of the acres of Eighteenth
-Century plaster, there was brought to light in a little chapel in the
-crypt a life-sized relief of St. Catherine and her wheel.
-
-Such a lovely lady!—so fair, so pure, so saint-like; with faint memories
-of old tinting on her small lips, on her close-folded hair, and her
-downcast eyes—that even the most frivolous of tourists might be moved to
-tears by the thought that she alone is the one sweet ghost escaped from
-all that brutal destruction of mediæval beauty; resurrected by the
-merest chance from her plaster tomb.
-
-Jane at the thought of it became quite dangerously violent. She insisted
-upon digging up the Eighteenth Century and beating it to death again
-with its own dusty old wig, and was soothed and calmed only by being
-taken outside to look once more by daylight at the delicious marble
-mince of fragments which the Hotel Bellevue has built into its
-portals—Greek and Roman capitals upside down; marble lambs and crosses,
-gargoyles, and corbels adorning the sides and lintels in a charming
-confusion of styles, periods, and purposes.
-
-Ravello, as are all these arid ancient towns from which the tides of
-life have drained away, is as dry and empty as an old last year’s nut; a
-mere hollow shell, ridged and parched, out of which the kernel of
-existence has vanished.
-
-A tattered, rosy-cheeked child runs up the uncertain footway—the
-stair-streets—with feet as light and sure as a goat’s. An old, old man,
-with head and jaws bound in a dirty red kerchief, and with the keen
-hawk-like profile of some far-off Saracen ancestry, crouches in a
-doorway with an outstretched hand. He makes no appeal, but his apparent
-confidence that his age and helplessness will touch them, does touch
-them, and they search their pockets hastily for coppers, with a faint
-anguished sense of the thin shadow of a dial-finger which for them too
-creeps round and round, as for this old derelict man, for this old
-skeleton city....
-
-A donkey heaped with brushwood patters up the steep narrow way; so
-narrow that they must flatten themselves against the wall to admit of
-his stolidly sorrowful passage. They may come and go, as all the others
-have come and gone, but our brother, the ass, is always there, recking
-not of Greek or Roman, of American or Tedeschi; for all of them he bears
-burdens with the same sorrowful stolidity, and from none does he receive
-any gratitude....
-
-These are the only inhabitants of Ravello they see until they reach the
-Piazza and the Cathedral of Saint Pantaleone. They know beforehand that
-the Cathedral too has been spoiled and desecrated, but there still
-remain the fine bronze doors by the same Barisanus who made the famous
-ones in the church at Monreale in Sicily, and here they find the most
-beautiful of the pulpits, and the very biggest Jonah and the very
-biggest whale in all Ravello.
-
-Before that accursed Bishop Tafuri turned it into a white-washed cavern
-the old chroniclers exhausted their adjectives in describing the glories
-of Saint Pantaleone’s Cathedral. The richness of its sixteen enormous
-columns of verd antique; its raised choir with fifty-two stalls of
-walnut-wood, carved with incredible richness; its high altar of
-alabaster under a marble baldachino glowing with mosaics and supported
-upon huge red Egyptian Syenite columns—its purple and gold Episcopal
-throne; its frescoed walls, its silver lamps and rich tombs, its
-pictures and shrines and hangings—all pitched into the scrap heap by
-that abominable prelate, save only this fine pulpit, and the Ambo. The
-Ambo gives itself wholly to the chronicles of the prophet Jonah. On one
-stairside he leaps nimbly and eagerly down the wide throat which looks
-so reluctant to receive him, as if suspecting already the discomfort to
-be caused by the uneasy guest. But Jonah’s aspect is all of a careless
-gaiety; he is not taking this lodging for more than a day or two, and is
-aware that after his brief occultation his reappearance will be dramatic
-and a portent. On the opposite stair it happens as he had prophetically
-foreseen, the mosaic monster disgorging him with an air of mingled
-violence and exhausted relief.
-
-No one can tell us why Jonah is so favourite a topic in Ravello. “_Chi
-lo sara_” everyone says, with that air of weary patience Italy so
-persistently assumes before the eccentric curiosity of Forestieri.
-
-Rosina Vokes once travelled about with a funny little playlet called
-“The Pantomime Rehearsal,” which concerned itself with the sufferings of
-the author and stage manager of an English house-party’s efforts at
-amateur theatricals. The enthusiastic conductor used to say
-dramatically:
-
-“Now, Lord Arthur, you enter as the Chief of the fairies!”
-
-To which the blond guardsman replies with puzzled heaviness: “Yes; but
-_why_ fairies?”
-
-Producing in the wretched author a sort of paralysis of bafflement. The
-same look comes so often into these big Italian eyes. The thing just
-_is_. Why clamour for reasons? It is as if these curious wandering folk,
-always staring and chattering and rushing about, and paying good money
-that would buy bread and wine, merely to look at old stones, should ask
-_why_ the sun, or why the moon, or why anything at all?...
-
-So they abandon Jonah and take on the pulpit instead, the most famous of
-all the mosaic pulpits in a region celebrated for mosaic pulpits. It is
-done after the same pattern as that of St. John of the Bull, but the
-pattern raised to the _n_th power. More and bigger lions; more and
-taller columns; richer scrolls of mosaics; the bits of stone more deeply
-coloured; the marble warmed by time to a sweeter and creamier blond. The
-whole being crowned, moreover, by an adorable bust of Sigelgaita Rufolo,
-wife of the founder of the Cathedral and giver of the pulpit. A pompous
-Latin inscription under the bust records the virtues of this magnificent
-patron of religion. The inscription including the names of all the long
-string of stalwart sons Sigelgaita brought forth, and it calls in
-dignified Latinity the attention of the heavenly powers to the eminent
-deserts of this generous Rufolo, this mediæval Carnegie.
-
-Sigelgaita’s bust is an almost unique example of the marble portraiture
-of the Thirteenth Century—if indeed it truly be a work of that time, for
-so noble, so lifelike is this head with its rolled hair, its princely
-coronet and long earrings, so like is it to the head of the Capuan Juno,
-that one half suspects it of being from a Roman hand—those masters of
-marmoral records of character—and that it was seized upon by Sigelgaita
-to serve as a memorial of herself.
-
-Bernardo Battinelli, a notary of Ravello, writing in 1540 relates an
-anecdote which shows what esteem was inspired by this marble portrait
-long after its original was dust:
-
-“I remember in the aforesaid month and year, the Spanish Viceroy Don
-Pietro di Toledo sent for the marble bust, which is placed in the
-Cathedral and much honest resistance was made, so that the first time he
-that came returned empty-handed, but shortly after he came back, and it
-was necessary to send it to Naples in his keeping, and having sent the
-magnifico Giovanni Frezza, who was in Naples, and Ambrose Flomano from
-this place to his Excellency, after much ado, by the favour of the
-glorious Virgin Mary, and by virtue of these messengers from thence
-after a few days the head was returned.”
-
-In the year 1851 the palace of these splendid Rufoli, which in the time
-of Roger of Sicily had housed ninety knights with their men at arms, had
-fallen to tragical decay. A great landslide in the Fifteenth Century
-destroyed the harbour of Amalfi; hid its great quays and warehouses, its
-broad streets and roaring markets beneath the sea, and reduced it from a
-powerful Republic, the rival of Venice and Genoa, to a mere fishing
-village. A little later the plague followed, and decimated the now
-poverty-stricken inhabitants of Ravello, and then the great nobles began
-to drift away to Naples, came more and more rarely to visit their
-Calabrian seats, and these gradually sank in the course of time into
-ruin and decay. Fortunately in the year before mentioned a rich English
-traveller, making the still fashionable “grand tour,” happened into
-Ravello, saw the possibilities of this crumbling castle set upon one of
-the most beautiful sites in the world, and promptly purchased it from
-its indifferent Neapolitan owner. He, much absorbed in the opera dancers
-and the small intrigues of the city, was secretly and scornfully amused
-that a mad Englishman should be willing to part with so much good hard
-money in exchange for ivied towers and gaping arches in a remote country
-town.
-
-The Englishman mended the arches, strengthened the towers, gathered up
-from among the weeds the delicate sculptures and twisted columns,
-destroyed nothing, preserved and restored with a reverent hand, and made
-for himself one of the loveliest homes in all Italy. It was in that
-charming garden, swung high upon a spur of the glorious coast, that Jane
-and Peripatetica contracted that passion for Ravello which haunted them
-with a homesickness for it all through Sicily. For never again did they
-find anywhere such views, such shadowed green ways of ilex and cypress,
-such ivy-mantled towers, such roses, such sheets of daffodils and blue
-hyacinths. They dreamed there through the long day, regretting that
-their luggage had been sent on to Sicily by water, and—forgetting quite
-their quest of Persephone—that they were therefore unable to linger in
-the sweet precincts of the Pantaleone wines and cooking, devoting weeks
-to exploring the neighbouring hills, and to unearthing more pulpits and
-more Jonahs in the nearby churches.
-
-In the dusk they lingered by the Fountain of Strange Beasts, in the dusk
-they wandered afoot down the cork-screwed paths up which they had so
-furiously and smellily mounted. Berliet hooted contemptuously behind
-them as he crawled after, jeering as at “scare-cats,” who dared mount,
-but shrank from descending these abrupt curves and tiptilted inclines
-except in the safety of their own low-heeled shoes.
-
-At Amalfi they plunged once again into the noisy tourist belt—the _va et
-vient_, the chatter, the screaming flutter of the passenger pigeons of
-the Italian spring. And yet there was peace in the tiny white cells in
-which they hung over the sheer steep, while the light died nacreously
-along the West. There was quiet in certain tiny hidden courts and
-terraces under the icy moonlight, and Jane said in one of these—her
-utterance somewhat interrupted by the chattering of her teeth, for
-Italian spring nights are as cold as Italian spring days are warm—Jane
-said:
-
-“What idiotic assertions are made in our time about ancient Europe
-having no love for, no eye for, Nature’s beauty! Did you ever come
-across a mediæval monastery, a Greek or Roman temple that was not placed
-with an unerring perception of just the one point at which it would look
-best, just at the one point at which everything would look best from
-it?”
-
-“Of course I never did,” Peripatetica admitted with sympathetic
-conviction. “We get that absurd impression of their indifference from
-the fact that our forebears were not nearly so fond of talking about
-their emotions as we. They had a trust in their fellow man’s
-comprehension that we have lost. We always imagine that no one can know
-things unless we tell them, and tell them with all our t’s carefully
-crossed and our i’s elaborately dotted. The old literatures are always
-illustrating that same confidence in other people’s imaginations,
-stating facts with what to our modern diffuseness appears the baldest
-simplicity, and yet somehow conveying all their subtlest meanings. Our
-ancestors happily were not ‘inebriated with the exuberance of their own
-verbosity.’... And now, Jane, bring that congealed nose of yours in out
-of the open air. The moon isn’t going on a vacation. She will be doing
-her old romance and beauty business at the same old stand long after we
-are dead and buried, not to mention to-morrow night.”
-
-Berliet was all his old self the next day, and they swooped and soared,
-slid and climbed toward Pæstum, every turn around every spur showing
-some new beauty, some new effect. Gradually the coast sank and sank
-toward the sea; the snow-caps moved further back into the horizon; grew
-more and more mere white clouds above, more and more mere vapoury
-amethyst below, and at last they shot at a right angle into a wide level
-plain, and commenced to experience thrills. For the guide-books were
-full, one and all, of weird tales of Pæstum which lay, so they said, far
-back in a country as cursed and horrible as the dreadful land of the
-Dark Tower. About it, they declared, stretched leprous marshes of
-stagnant ooze choked with fat reeds, where fierce buffalo wallowed in
-the slime. The contadini passed through its deadly miasma in shuddering
-haste, gazing large-eyed upon a dare-devil Englishman who had once had
-the courage to pass a night there in order to gratify a bold, fantastic
-desire to see the temples by moonlight. It was such a strange,
-tremendous story, that of the Greek Poseidonia, later the Roman Pæstum.
-
-Long ago those adventuring mariners from Greece had seized the fertile
-plain which at that time was covered with forests of great oak and
-watered by two clear and shining rivers. They drove the Italian natives
-back into the distant hills, for the white man’s burden even then
-included the taking of all the desirable things that were being wasted
-by incompetent natives, and they brought over colonists—whom the
-philosophers and moralists at home maligned, no doubt, in the same
-pleasant fashion of our own day. And the colonists cut down the oaks,
-and ploughed the land, and built cities, and made harbours, and finally
-dusted their busy hands and busy souls of the grime of labour and
-wrought splendid temples in honour of the benign gods who had given them
-the possessions of the Italians and filled them with power and fatness.
-Every once in so often the natives looked lustfully down from the hills
-upon this fatness, made an armed snatch at it, were driven back with
-bloody contumely, and the heaping of riches upon riches went on. And
-more and more the oaks were cut down—mark that! for the stories of
-nations are so inextricably bound up with the stories of trees—until all
-the plain was cleared and tilled; and then the foothills were denuded,
-and the wave of destruction crept up the mountain sides and they too
-were left naked to the sun and the rains.
-
-At first these rains, sweeping down torrentially, unhindered by the lost
-forests, only enriched the plain with the long hoarded sweetness of the
-trees, but by and by the living rivers grew heavy and thick, vomiting
-mud into the ever-shallowing harbours, and the lands soured with the
-undrained stagnant water. Commerce turned more and more to deeper ports,
-and mosquitoes began to breed in the brackish soil that was making fast
-between the city and the sea. Who of all those powerful land-owners and
-rich merchants could ever have dreamed that little buzzing insects could
-sting a great city to death? But they did. Fevers grew more and more
-prevalent. The malaria-haunted population went more and more languidly
-about their business. The natives, hardy and vigorous in the hills, were
-but feebly repulsed. Carthage demanded tribute, and Rome took it, and
-changed the city’s name from Poseidonia to Pæstum. After Rome grew weak
-Saracen corsairs came in by sea and grasped the slackly defended riches,
-and the little winged poisoners of the night struck again and again,
-until grass grew in the streets, and the wharves crumbled where they
-stood. Finally the wretched remnant of a great people wandered away into
-the more wholesome hills, the marshes rotted in the heat and grew up in
-coarse reeds where corn and vine had flourished, and the city melted
-back into the wasted earth. So wicked a name had the miasmatic,
-fever-haunted plain that age after age rolled away and only birds and
-serpents and wild beasts dared dwell there, or some outlaw chose to face
-its sickly terrors rather than the revenge of the law.
-
-“Think,” said Jane, “of the sensations of the man who came first upon
-those huge temples standing lonely in the naked plain! So lonely that
-their very existence had been long forgotten. Imagine the awe and
-surprise of such a discovery——”
-
-They were spinning—had been spinning for half an hour—along a rather bad
-highway, and Peripatetica found it hard to call up the proper emotions
-in answer to Jane’s suggestion, so occupied was she in looking for the
-relishing grimness insisted upon by the guide-books. There were reeds;
-there were a very few innocuous-looking buffalo, but for the most part
-there were nice cultivated fields of grain and vines on either hand, and
-occasionally half a mile or so of neglected shrubby heath.
-
-“Why, half of Long Island is wilder than this!” grumbled Peripatetica.
-“Where’s the Dark Tower country? Childe Roland would think this a formal
-garden. I _insist_ upon Berliet taking us somewhere that will thick our
-blood with horror.”
-
-As it turned out, a wise government had drained the accursed land,
-planted eucalyptus trees, and was slowly reclaiming the plain to its old
-fertility, but the guide-books feel that the story is too good to be
-spoiled by modern facts, and cling to the old version of 1860.
-
-Just then—by way of compensation, Berliet having fortunately slowed down
-over a bad bit—an old altar-piece of a Holy Family stepped down out its
-frame and came wandering toward them in the broad light of day. On the
-large mild gray ass—a real altar-piece ass—sat St. Anna wrapped in a
-faded blue mantle, carrying on her arm a sleeping child. At her right
-walked the child’s mother, whose thin olive cheek and wide, timid eyes
-seemed half ghostly under the white linen held together with one hand
-under her chin. Young St. John led the ass. A wreath of golden-brown
-curls blew about his golden-red cheeks, and he wore goat-hide shoes, and
-had cross-gartered legs.
-
-Jane now says they never saw them at all. That it was just a mirage, or
-a bit of glamourie, and that there is nothing remaining in new Italy
-which could look so like the typical old Italy—but if Jane is right then
-how did the two happen to have exactly the same glamour at exactly the
-same moment? How could they both imagine the benign smile of that
-strayed altar picture? Is it likely that a motor car would lend itself
-to sacred visions? I ask you that!
-
-There was certainly some illusion—not sacred—about the dare-devilishness
-of that Englishman who once spent a moonlit night at the temples, for a
-little farming village lies close to the enclosure that shuts off the
-temples from the highway, the inhabitants of which village seemed as
-meek as sheep and anything but foolhardy, and there was reason to
-believe that they spend every night there, whether the moon shines or
-not.
-
-But the Temples were no illusion, standing in stately splendour in the
-midst of that wide shining green plain, by a sea of milky chalcedony,
-and in a semicircle behind them a garland of purple mountains crowned
-with snow. Great-pillared Neptune was all of dull, burned gold, its
-serried columns marching before the blue background with a curious
-effect of perfect vigour in repose, of power pausing in solid ease. No
-picture or replica gives the sense of this energy and power. Doric
-temples tend to look lumpish and heavy in reproductions, but the real
-thing at its very best (and this shrine of Neptune is the perfectest of
-Greek temples outside of Athens) has a mighty grace, a prodigious
-suggestion of latent force, of contained, available strength that wakes
-an awed delight, as by the visible, material expression of an ineffable,
-glorious, all-powerful god.
-
-“Well, certainly those Greeks——!” gasped Jane when the full meaning of
-it all began to dawn upon her, and Peripatetica, who usually suffers
-from chronic palpitation of the tongue, simply sat still staring with
-shining eyes. Greeks to her are as was King Charles’ head to Mr. Dick.
-She is convinced the Greeks knew everything worth knowing, and did
-everything worth doing, and any further proof of their ability only
-fills her with a gratified sense of “I-told-you-so-ness.” So she lent a
-benign ear to a young American architect there, who pointed out many
-constructive details, which, under an appearance of great simplicity,
-proved consummate grasp of the art, and of the subtlest secrets of
-architectural harmonics.
-
-Before the land made out into the harbour Poseidon’s temple stood almost
-on the sea’s edge. The old pavement of the street before its portals
-being disinterred shows the ruts made by the chariot wheels still
-deep-scored upon it, and it was here
-
- “The merry Grecian coaster came
- Freighted with amber grapes, and Chian wine,
- Green bursting figs, and tunnies steeped in brine—”
-
-anchoring almost under the shadow of the great fane of the Lord of the
-Waters; and here, when his cargo was discharged, he went up to offer
-sacrifices and thanks to the Sea-god of Poseidonia, and
-
- “Hung his sea-drenched garments on the wall,”
-
-and prayed for skill to outwit his fellows in trade; for fair winds to
-blow him once more to Greece.
-
-Besides the temple of Neptune there was, of course, the enormous
-Basilica, and a so-called temple of Ceres, and some Roman fragments, but
-these were so much less interesting than the golden-pillared shrine of
-the Trident God, that the rest of the time was spent in looking vainly
-and wistfully for Pæstum’s famous rose gardens, of which not even the
-smallest bud remained, and then Berliet gathered them up, and went in
-search of the Station of La Cava.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [Illustration: Decoration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- A NEST OF EAGLES
-
- “So underneath the surface of To-day
- Lies yesterday and what we call the Past,
- The only thing which never can decay.”
-
-TRUSTFULLY and sleepily Jane and Peripatetica, in the icy starlight of
-La Cava, boarded the express of European _de Luxe_. Drowsy with the long
-day’s rush through the wind, they believed that the train’s clatter
-would be a mere lullaby to dreams of golden temples and iris seas and
-“the glory that was Greece.” No robbers or barbarians nearer than
-defunct corsairs crossed their imaginings; the hoodoo had faded from
-mind, shaken off by the glorious swoop of Berliet, and they supposed it
-left behind at Naples, clinging bat-like under the gaudy frescoes of
-Room 13 to descend on other unwary travellers.
-
-Half of their substance had been paid to the Compagnie Internationale
-des Wagon Lits for this night’s rolling lodging, and they begrudged it
-not, remembering that it entitled their fatigue to the comforts of a
-room to themselves in all the vaunted superior civilization and
-decencies of a European compartment car. Presenting their tickets in
-trusting calm they prepared to follow the porter to a small but cosy
-room where two waiting white beds lay ready for their weary heads. But
-the Hoodoo had come on from Naples in that very train. Compartments and
-beds there were, but not for them. The porter led on, and in a toy
-imitation of an American Pullman, showed them to a Lilliputian blue
-plush seat and a ridiculous wooden shelf two feet above that pretended
-it could unfold itself into an upper berth. This baby section in the
-midst of a shrieking babble of tongues, a suffocation of unaired Latin
-and Teutonic humanity, was their compartment room, “à vous seules,
-Mesdames!” telegraphed for to Rome and made over to them with such
-flourish by the polite agent at Naples!
-
-If the car was Lilliputian its passengers were not. Mammoth French
-dowagers and barrel-like Germans overflowed all its tiny blue seats, and
-the few slim Americans more than made good by their generous excess of
-luggage. It was a very sardine box.
-
-In a fury too deep for words or tears Peripatetica and Jane sank into
-the few narrow inches the porter managed to clear for them, and resigned
-themselves to leaving their own dear bags in the corridor.
-
-“They will, of course, be stolen, but then we may never need them again.
-We can’t undress, and shall probably be suffocated long before morning,”
-remarked Peripatetica bitterly, with a hopeless glare at the imitation
-ventilators not made to open. Their fury deepened at the slow struggles
-of the porter to adjust the inadequate little partitions, at the grimy
-blankets and pillows on the little shelves, at the curtains which didn’t
-conceal them, the wash-room without water or towels and the
-cattle-train-like burden of grunts and groans and smells floating on the
-unbreathable atmosphere.
-
-Morning dawned golden on the flying hills at last, and then deepest fury
-of all was Peripatetica’s, that passionate lover of fresh air, to find
-that in spite of everything she _had_ slept, and was still breathing!
-
-Calabria, lovely as ever, melted down to her glowing seas; one last
-swooping turn of the rails, and another line of faint hills rose
-opposite—and that was Sicily!
-
-The train itself coiled like a weary serpent into a waiting steamer,
-which slipt smoothly by the ancient perils of Scylla and Charybdis; and
-nearer and nearer it rose, that gold and amethyst mountain-home of the
-Old Gods. The white curve of Messina, “the Sickle,” showed clear at the
-base of the cloud-flecked hills. Kronos, father of Demeter, enthroned on
-those very mountain peaks, had dropped his scythe at the sea’s edge,
-cutting space there for the little homes of men, and leaving them the
-name of his shining blade, “Zancle,” the sickle, through all Greek days.
-It was there, really there in actual vision, land of fire and myths; the
-place of the beginnings of gods and men.
-
-Peripatetica and Jane burst from the car and climbed to the narrow deck
-above to get clearer view. The sea wind swept the dust from their eyes
-and all fatigue and discomfort from their memories. Their spirits rose
-to meet that Spirit Land where Immortals had battled and labored; had
-breathed themselves into man,—the divine spirit stirring his little
-passing life with revelation of that which passeth not; that soul of
-beauty and wisdom, and of poetry which should move through the ages.
-Their eyes were wide to see the land where man’s imaginings had brought
-the divine into all surroundings of his life, until every tree and
-spring and rock and mountain grew into semblance of a god. Oh, was it
-all a “creed outworn”? Here might not one perchance still see
-
- “Proteus rising from the sea,
- Or hear old Triton blow his wreathèd horn”?
-
-In these very mountains before them had man himself been shaped;
-hammered out by Vulcan upon his forge in Ætna. Here, in this land he had
-been taught by Demeter to nourish himself from the friendly earth,
-taught how to shelter himself from the inclement elements by Orion,
-Hunter and Architect—a god before he was a star. There Zeus,
-all-conquering wisdom, had prevailed against his opponents and placed
-his high and fiery seat, this very Ætna, upon the bound body of the last
-rebellious Titan, making even the power of ignorance the pediment of his
-throne. There the fair maiden goddesses, Artemis and Minerva and
-Persephone, had played in flowery fields. There had Pluto stolen the
-fairest away from among the blossoms, the entrance to his dark
-underworld gaping suddenly among the sunny meadows. There had the
-desolate mother Demeter lit at Ætna the torch for her long and desperate
-search. There had demi-gods and heroes lived and loved and struggled.
-Its very rivers were transformed nymphs, its islands rocks tossed in
-Cyclop’s battles. There Ulysses had wandered and suffered; there
-Pythagoras had taught, Theocritus had sung. There—but man nor woman
-either is yet entirely spirit; and though it was in truth the actual
-land of their pilgrimage, of the birthplace of myth, of beauty and
-wonder, Persephone had not yet returned. The icy wind was turning all
-sentiment into shivers and they fled back to the Twentieth Century and
-its Pullman car.
-
-Messina looked still more enticing when close at hand; both prosperous
-and imposing with its lines of stone quays and palaces on the sea front.
-Beyond these there were famous fountains they knew, and colourful
-marketplaces, and baroque churches with spires like fluted seashells,
-and interiors gleaming like sea caverns with all the rich colour and
-glow of Sicilian mosaics. In one of the churches was the shrine of a
-miracle-working letter from the Madonna, said to have been written by
-her own hand. There was besides an old Norman Cathedral, built of Greek
-ruins and Roman remains; much surviving Spanish quaintness, but to two
-unbreakfasted _Wagon Lit_ passengers all this was but ashes in the
-mouth. They felt that the attractions of Messina could safely remain in
-the guide-books. They were impelled on to Taormina.... No prophetic
-vision warned them that in their haste they were losing the chance of
-ever seeing that doomed Sickle-City at all. In that placid, modern port,
-where travellers for pleasure rarely paused, there seemed nothing to
-stay them. No ominous shadow lay upon it to tell that it was marked for
-destruction by “the Earth-Shaker,” or that before the year had gone it
-would be echoing the bitter cry of lost Berytus:
-
-“Here am I, that unhappy city—no more a city—lying in ruins, my citizens
-dead men, alas! most ill-fated of all! The Fire-god destroyed me after
-the shock of the Earth-Shaker. Ah me! From so much loveliness I am
-become ashes. Yet do ye who pass me by bewail my fate, and shed a tear
-in my honour who am no more. A tomb of tombless men is the city, under
-whose ashes we lie.”
-
-Taormina, the little mountain town, crouched under Ætna’s southern side,
-not far from those meadows of Enna from which Persephone had been
-ravished away. There she would surely first return to the upper world,
-and Demeter’s joy burst into flowers and sunshine. So there they decided
-to seek her, and turned their grimy faces straight to the train. The
-only sight-seeing that appealed to them now was a vision of the San
-Domenico Hotel with quiet white monkish cells like to Amalfi’s to rest
-their weariness in, peaceful pergolas, large bathtubs, and a hearty
-table d’hôte luncheon.
-
-So they stayed not for sights, and stopped not for stone—nor breakfast,
-nor washing, nor even for their trunks, which had not materialized, but
-sat in a dusty railway carriage impatient for the train to start.
-
-“It was beautiful,” remarked Jane, thinking of the harbour approach to
-the city.
-
-“Yes,” said Peripatetica, jumping at her unexpressed meaning as usual.
-“Messina has always been a famous beauty, and always will be. But she
-is, and always has been, an incorrigible cocotte,—submitting without a
-struggle to every invader of Sicily in turn. And she certainly doesn’t
-in the least look her enormous age in spite of having led a _vie
-orageuse_. Whenever the traces of her past become too obvious she goes
-and takes an earthquake shock, they say, and rises fresh and rejuvenated
-from the ruins, ready to coquette again with a new master and be
-enticing and treacherous all over again.”[1]
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Messina suffered a terrific earthquake shock in 1783 and has had in
- her history serious damage from seismic convulsions no less than nine
- times.
-
-It was hard to imagine on her modern boulevards the armies of the
-past—all those many conquerors that Messina had herself called in,
-causing half the wars and troubles of Sicily by her invitations to new
-powers to come and take possession, and to do the fighting for her that
-she never would do for herself; betraying in turn every master, good or
-bad, for the excitement of getting a new one....
-
-Greeks, Carthagenians, Mamertines, Romans, Arabs, Normans,
-Spaniards—where were the ways of their tramplings now? On that modern
-light-house point there was not even a trace of the Golden Temple in
-which Neptune sat on a crystal altar “begirt with smooth-necked shells,
-sea-weeds, and coral, looking out eastward to the morning sun?”
-
-“If it were near the 15th of August I would stay here in spite of
-everything,” ventured Peripatetica, looking up from her book. “The
-Procession of the Virgin is the only thing really worth seeing left in
-Messina.” And in answer to Jane’s enquiring eyebrows Peripatetica began
-to read aloud of that extraordinary pageant of the Madonna della Lettera
-and her car, that immense float, dragged through Messina’s streets by
-hundreds of men and women; of its tower fifty feet high, on which are
-ranged tiers over tiers of symbolically dressed children standing upon
-all its different stories; poor babies with painted wings made to fly
-around on iron orbits up to the very top of the erection; of the great
-blue globe upon which stands a girl dressed in spangled gauze,
-representing the Saviour, holding upon her right hand—luckily supported
-by iron machinery—another child representing the Soul of the Blessed
-Virgin.
-
-“Not real children—not live babies!” protested Jane.
-
-“Yes, indeed, just listen to Hughes’ account of it.” Peripatetica read:
-“At an appointed signal this well-freighted car begins to move, when it
-is welcomed with reiterated shouts and vivas by the infatuated populace;
-drums and trumpets play; the Dutch concert in the machine commences, and
-thousands of _pateraroes_ fired off by a train of gunpowder make the
-shores of Calabria re-echo with the sound; then angels, cherubim,
-seraphim, and ‘animated intelligences,’ all begin to revolve in such
-implicated orbits as to make even the spectators giddy with the sight;
-but alas for the unfortunate little actors in the pantomime; they in
-spite of their heavenly characters are soon doomed to experience the
-infirmities of mortality; angels droop, cherubim are scared out of their
-wits, seraphim set up outrageous cries, ‘souls of the universe’ faint
-away, and ‘moving intelligences’ are moved by the most terrible
-inversion of the peristaltic nerves; then thrice happy are those to whom
-an upper station has been allotted. Some of the young brats, in spite of
-the fracas, seem highly delighted with their ride, and eat their
-ginger-bread with the utmost composure as they perform their evolutions;
-but it not unfrequently happens that one or more of these poor innocents
-fall victims to this revolutionary system and earn the crown of
-martyrdom.”
-
-Jane seized the book to make sure it was actually so written and not
-just one of Peripatetica’s flights of fancy, and plunged into an account
-of another part of the pageant—the giant figures of Saturn and Cybele
-fraternizing amiably with the Madonna; Cybele “seated on a large horse
-clothed like a warrior. Her hair is tied back with a crown of leaves and
-flowers with a star in front, and the three towers of Messina. She wears
-a collar and a large blue mantle covered with stars, which lies on the
-back of the horse. A mace of flowers in her right hand and a lance in
-her left. The horse is barded, and covered with rich trappings of red,
-with arabesques of flowers and ribbons.”...[2]
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- All this, along with every treasure of her past, has now disappeared.
-
-“What curious folk the Sicilians are! They accept new creeds and
-ceremonies, but the old never quite lose their place. Where else would
-the Madonna allow a Pagan goddess to figure in her train? And did you
-notice in this very procession they still carry the identical skin of
-the camel on which Roger entered the city when he began his conquest of
-Sicily? I wish it were near the 15th of August!”
-
-“I wish it were near the time this train starts, if it ever does,”
-replied Peripatetica crossly.
-
-And, as if but waiting the expression of her wish, the train did begin
-to stream swiftly along the deeply indented coast beside whose margin
-came that wild Norman raid upon Messina of the dauntless young hawks of
-de Hauteville. Roger, the youngest and greatest of the twelve sons,
-accompanied by but sixty knights and their squires, two hundred men in
-all, pouncing daringly upon a kingdom. A half dozen galleys slipped over
-from Reggio by night, and the morning sun flashed upon the dew-wet
-armour as they galloped through the dawn to Messina’s walls. The great
-fortified city was in front of them, a hostile country around them, and
-a navy on the watch to cut them off from reinforcements or return by
-sea. That they should succeed was visibly impossible. But determined
-faces were under the steel visors, the spirit of conquering adventure
-shining in their grey eyes. Every man of the host was confessed and
-absolved for this fight of the Cross against the Crescent and their
-young Commander was dedicated to a life pure and exemplary, if to him
-was entrusted the great task of winning Sicily to Christian dominion.
-
-They did it because they thought they could do it; as in the old Greek
-games success was to the man who believed in his success. The Saracens
-fell into a panic at the sight of that intrepid handful at their gates,
-thinking from the very smallness of the band that it must be the advance
-pickets of a great army already past their guarding navy and advancing
-upon the city.
-
-“So the Saracens gave up in panic, and Roger and his two hundred took
-all the town with much gold and many slaves, as was a conquering
-warrior’s due.”
-
-The key of Messina was sent to Brother Robert in Calabria with the proud
-message that the city was his to come and take possession of. And the
-Normans went on with the same bold confidence; and always their belief
-was as a magic buckler to them as over all the island they extended
-their conquest. Seven hundred Normans routed an army of 15,000 Saracens,
-killing 10,000. And young Serbo, nephew of Roger, conquered 30,000
-Arabs, attacking them with only one hundred knights.
-
-It was one of Jane’s pet romances, the career of this landless youngest
-son of a small French noble carving out with sword and brain “the most
-brilliant of European Kingdoms,” leaving a dominion to his successors
-with power stretching far beyond Sicily as long as they governed upon
-his principles. The young conqueror, unspoiled by his dazzling success,
-ruled with justice, mercy, and genius, making Sicily united and
-prosperous; the freest country in the world at that time; the only one
-where all religions were tolerated, where men of different creeds and
-tongues could live side by side, each in his own way; each governed
-justly and liberally according to his own laws—French statutes for
-Normans, the Koran for Mussulmen, the Lombard laws for Italians, and the
-old Roman Code for the natives.
-
-“Peripatetica,” Jane burst out. “Roger must have been a delightful
-person—‘so good, _so dear_, so great a king!’ Don’t you think there is
-something very appealing in a king’s being called ‘so dear’? It is much
-easier for them to be ‘great.’”
-
-“Normans are too modern for me now,” said Peripatetica, whose own
-enthusiasm was commencing to catch fire. “We are coming to the spot of
-all the Greek beginnings, where their very first settlement began—do you
-realize that?”
-
-And Jane, who had been hard at work with her histories, could see it
-clearly. The little narrow viking-like boats of Theocles, the Greek
-merchant, driven before the sudden northeast storm they could not beat
-up against nor lie to, straight upon the coast of this dread land. It
-had always been a land awesome and mysterious to the Greeks. They had
-imagined half the dramas of their mythology as happening there. It was
-sacred ground, too sacred to be explored by profane foot; and was
-besides the home of fierce cannibals, as they believed the Sikilians to
-be, and of all manner of monstrous and half divine beings. But,
-desperately choosing before certain destruction at sea the unknown
-perils of the shore, Theocles had rounded the point and beached his
-boats safely on that strip of yellow sand that still fringes the cove
-below Taormina.
-
-He and his companions, who feared to adventure no perils of the
-treacherous Mediterranean in their tiny crafts, but feared very much the
-monsters of their imagination in this haunted country, built to Apollo
-an altar of the sea-worn rocks, and sacrificed on it their last meal and
-wine, praying him for protection and help to save them from the
-Læstrygones, from Polyphemus, and Hephæstos at his nearby smoking forge.
-And Apollo must have found it good, the savour of that his first
-sacrifice on Sicilian land, for straightway succour came. The natives,
-drawn down from the hillsides in curiosity at that strange fire on the
-shore, were not raging cannibals but peaceful and friendly farmer folk,
-who looked kindly on the shipwrecked merchants, and gladly bartered food
-and rich dark wine for Greek goods. And through the days of the storm
-the Greeks lived unmolested on the shore, impressed by all that met
-their eyes; the goodness of that “fairest place in the world.” When at
-last came favourable winds and the Greeks could set sail again, Theocles
-vowed to return to that fertile shore, and if Apollo, protector of
-colonists and giver of victory, should favour his enterprise, to build
-there a shrine in his honour.
-
-But in Athens none would believe his accounts of the rich land and the
-mild natives. They said that even so it would be unwise to disturb
-Polyphemus, or to run the risk of angering Hephæstos, and that it was no
-proper site for a colony any way! Theocles did not falter at
-discouragement; he took his tale to other cities and over in Eubœa the
-Chalcydians were won to him. After the oracle of Apollo had promised
-them his protection and all good fortune, more Ionians and some Dorians
-joined them; and in the spring they set forth, a great fleet of vessels
-laden with all necessary things to found a colony. Theocles piloted them
-to the spot of his first sheltering; and there on the red rock horns of
-the point above the beach they founded Naxos, and built the great shrine
-of Apollo Archagates, founder and beginner, with that wonderful statue
-which is spoken of as still existing in the time of Augustus, 36 B.C.
-
-Naxos itself had no such length of life. It knew prosperous centuries of
-growth and importance, of busy commerce and smiling wealth. Then came
-Dionysius, Tyrant of Syracuse, subdued the mother city to his jealous
-power and absolutely exterminated it, killing or carrying off into
-slavery all its population. “The buildings were swept away, and the site
-of Naxos given back to the native Sikilians. They never returned, and
-for twenty-two centuries no man has dwelt there.” Of all the shrines and
-palaces of Naxos not one stone remains upon another, not one surviving
-trace to identify now the exact site even of the Mother of all Greek
-cities in Sicily. But from her sprang Taormina.
-
-Such of her population as managed to escape from Dionysius, climbed up
-to those steep rocks above and there, sheltering with the Sikilians, out
-of tyrants’ reach in that inaccessible mountain nest, Greek and Sikilian
-mingling produced a breed of eagles that with fierce strugglings has
-held fast its own on those peaks through all the centuries.
-
-But these shipwrecks and temples and sieges grew dim behind the gritty
-cloud of railroad cinders. Jane felt the past melt away from her and
-fade entirely into the cold discomfort of the present. She subsided into
-limp weariness in a corner of the carriage, incapable of interest in
-anything, while Peripatetica’s spirits revived, approaching the tracks
-of her adored Greeks, and her imagination took fire and burst into
-words.
-
-“Oh those wonderful days!” she cried. “If one could only have seen that
-civilization, that beauty, with actual eyes. Jane, wouldn’t you give
-anything to get back into the Past even for a moment?”
-
-“No, I’d rather get somewhere in the now—and to breakfast,” grumbled
-Jane with hopeless materialism as she vainly tried to stay her hunger on
-stale chocolate. So Peripatetica saw visions alone, Jane only knowing
-dimly that miles and miles of orange groves, and of a sea a little paled
-and faded from its Calabrian blue, were slipping by.
-
-A box of a station announced itself as Giardini-Taormina. A red-cheeked
-porter bore the legend “Hotel San Domenico” on his cap; and much luggage
-and two travellers fell upon him. But, ah, that hoodoo!
-
-“Desolated, but the hotel was full. Yes, their letter had been received,
-but it had been impossible to reserve rooms,” said the cheerful porter
-heartlessly; “no doubt other hotels could accommodate them.” He didn’t
-seem to feel his cheerfulness in the least diminished by the dismay
-pictured in the dusty faces before him.
-
-“Oh, well,” said Jane bravely, “picturesque monasteries are all very
-well, but modern comfort does count in the end. We will probably like
-the Castel-a-Mare, and if we don’t, there is the Timeo.”
-
-A small man buzzing “Metropole, Metropole! Come with me,
-Ladies—beautiful rooms—my omnibus is just going!” hung upon their
-skirts, but they brushed him sternly aside, and permitted the
-rosy-cheeked porter to pile them and the mountains of their
-motoring-luggage into a dusty cab, and sing “Castel-a-Mare” cheerily to
-its driver.
-
-“We will go there first as it’s nearest,” they agreed, “but if the rooms
-aren’t very nice, then the Timeo—the royalties all prefer the Timeo.”
-
-The road was twisting up and up a bare hillside. They roused themselves
-to think that they were approaching Taormina, the crown of Sicily’s
-beauty, the climax of all earthly loveliness, the spot apostrophised
-alike with dying breath by German poets and English statesmen, as being
-the fairest of all that their eyes had beheld on earth, place of
-“glories far worthier seraph’s eyes” than anything sinful man ought to
-expect in this blighted world according to Cardinal Newman.
-
-But where was it, that glamour of beauty? Underneath was a leaden
-stretch of sea, overhead a cold, clouded sky, jagged into by forbidding
-peaks. The grey road wound up and folded back upon itself, and slowly—oh
-dear departed Berliet, how slowly!—up they crawled. It was all grey,
-receding sea and rocky hillside, grey dust thick on parched bushes and
-plants, greyer still on grey olives and cactus, and what—those other
-dingy trees—could they be _almonds_!—those shrivelled and pallid ghosts
-of rosy bloom shivering in the icy wind? Was it all but a chill shadow,
-that for which they had left home and roaring fires and good steam heat?
-
-A furry grey head surmounted a dust wave, a donkey and a small square
-cart emerged behind him, following a line of others even greyer and
-dustier. Jane looked listlessly at the forlorn procession until her eyes
-discerned colour and figures dim beneath the dirt on the cart’s sides,
-and underneath fantastic mud gobs what appeared to be carvings. Could
-these be the famous Painted Carts, the “walking picture books” of a
-romance and colour loving people, the pride of a Sicilian peasant,
-frescoed and wrought, though the owner lived in a cave—the asses hung
-with velvet and glittering bits of mirrors though he himself walked in
-rags? Was everything hoped for in Sicily to prove a delusion?
-
-Up whirled the San Domenico porter in a cloud of dust, his empty
-carriage passing their laden one.
-
-“You might try the ‘Pension Bellevue,’ ladies—beautiful outlook—opposite
-the Castel-a-Mare, if you are not suited there,” he called out as he
-rolled by.
-
-They thanked him coldly, with spines stiffening in spite of fatigue.
-
-A pension? Never! If they could not have ascetic cells at San Domenico
-or the flowery loggias of the Castel-a-Mare, then at least the chambers
-that had sheltered a German Empress!
-
-Gardens and flowers began to appear behind the dust; a wave-fretted
-promontory ran into the sea below, a towering peak crowned with a brown
-rim loomed overhead. In a few more dusty twists of road the
-Castel-a-Mare was reached, and two large rooms with the best view
-carelessly demanded.
-
-The Concierge looked troubled and sent for a bland proprietor. Rooms? He
-had none! wouldn’t have for a month—could give one room just for that
-very night—that was all!
-
-To the Timeo then.
-
-More dusty road, a quaint gateway, a narrow street with all the town’s
-population walking in the middle of it, a stop in front of a delightful
-bit of garden. A stern and decided concierge this time—_No rooms!_
-
-In the mile and a half from the Castel-a-Mare at the end of one
-promontory, to the Internationale at the extreme end of the other, that
-dusty cab stopped at every hotel and, oh lost pride! at every pension in
-the town and out. The same stern refusal everywhere; no one wanted the
-weary freight. They felt their faces taking on the meek wistfulness of
-lost puppies vainly trying to ingratiate themselves into homes with
-bones.
-
-“Does no one in the world want us?” wailed Peripatetica. “Can’t any one
-see how nice we really are and give us a mat and a crust?”
-
-“The Metropole man did want us,” reminded Jane hopefully. “He even
-begged for us. Let’s go there!”
-
-That had been the one and only place passed by, the Domenico porter had
-seemed so scornful of its claim at the station, but now they would
-condescend to any roof, and thought gratefully of that only welcome
-offered them in all Taormina.
-
-How pleased the little porter would be to have them coming to his
-beautiful rooms after all! Their meek faces became proud again. They
-looked with approving proprietorship on the waving palm in front of the
-Metropole, and the old bell tower rising above it.
-
-Peripatetica’s foot was on the carriage step ready to alight and Jane
-was gathering up wraps and beloved Kodak when out came a languid
-concierge and the usual words knelled in their ears—“_No rooms!_”
-
-They refused to believe. “But your porter said you had.”
-
-“Yes, an hour ago, but now they are taken.”
-
-A merciful daze fell upon Peripatetica and Jane....
-
-How they returned to the “Castel-a-Mare” and got themselves and their
-mountain of luggage into the one room in all Taormina they might call
-theirs for as much as a night, they never knew; when consciousness came
-back they were sitting in front of food in a bright dining-room, and
-knew by each other’s faces that hot water and soap must have happened in
-the interval.
-
-Speech came back to Peripatetica, and she announced that she was never
-going to travel more, except to reach some place where she might stay on
-and on forever. Jane might tour through Sicily if she liked, but as for
-her, Syracuse and Girgenti and all could remain mere words on the map,
-and Cook keep her tickets—if she had to move on again on the morrow, she
-would go straight to Palermo and there stay!
-
-Jane admitted to congenial feelings, and resigned all intervening Sicily
-without a pang. There would be no place in inhospitable Taormina for
-Persephone to squeeze into any way!
-
-They went to question the Concierge of trains to Palermo. He took it as
-a personal grief that they must leave Taormina so soon. “The air of
-Palermo is not like ours.” They hoped it was not, as they shivered in a
-cold blast from the open door, and put it to him that they could hardly
-live on air alone, and that Taormina offered them nothing more. But he
-had something to suggest—furnished rooms that he had heard that a German
-shop-keeper wished to let. Peripatetica did not take to the suggestion
-kindly, in fact her aristocratic nose quite curled up at it. But she
-assented dejectedly that they might as well walk there as anywhere, and
-give the place a look.
-
-Through the dust and shrivelled almond blossoms they trailed back into
-town. The sun was still behind grey clouds and an icy wind whipped up
-the dust.
-
-“Too late for the almond bloom, too early for warmth. What _is_ the
-right moment for Sicily?” murmured Peripatetica.
-
-The mountains with their sweeping curves into the sea were undeniably
-beautiful; the narrow town street they entered through the battlemented
-gate was full of gay colour, but it left them cold and homesick for
-Calabria. A little old Saracen palace, with some delicate Moorish
-windows and mouldings still undefaced, held the antiquity shop of the
-Frau Schuler. Brisk and rosy she seemed indeed the “trustable person” of
-the Concierge’s description.
-
-Yes, indeed, she had rooms and hoped they might please the ladies. Her
-niece would show them. A white-haired loafer was beckoned from the
-Square, and Peripatetica and Jane turned over to his guidance. Behind
-his faded blue linen back they threaded their way between the swarming
-tourists, children, panniered donkeys, and painted carts.
-
-Suddenly the old man vanished into a crack between two houses, which
-turned out to be an alley, half stair, half gutter, dropping down to
-lower levels. Everything no longer needed in the kitchen economy of the
-houses on either side had been cast into the alley—the bones of
-yesterday’s dinners, vegetable parings of to-day’s, the baby’s bath, the
-father’s old shoes lay in a rich ooze through which chickens clucked and
-squabbled. At the bottom of the crack a high wall and a pink gateway ...
-they were in a delicious garden, descending a pergola of roses and
-grapes. Violets and freesias, geraniums and heliotrope spread in a
-dazzle of colour and sweetness under gnarled olives and almonds and
-blossoming plums; stone benches, bits of old marbles, a violet-fringed
-pool and a terrace leading down to a square white house, a smiling young
-German girl inviting them in, and then a view—dazzling to even their
-fatigued, dulled eyes.
-
-In front a terrace, and then nothing but the sea, 700 feet below, the
-surf-rimmed coast line melting on and off indefinitely to the right in
-great soft curves of up-springing mountains, a deep ravine, then the San
-Domenico point with the old convent and church rising out of its
-gardens. On the left the ruins of the Greek theatre hanging over their
-heads; and on the very edge of the terrace an old almond-tree with
-chairs and a table under it, all waiting for tea.
-
-Fortunately the villa’s interior showed comfortable rooms, clean, airy,
-and spacious. But the terrace settled it. They would have slept anywhere
-to belong to that. No longer outcast tramps but semi-proprietors of a
-villa, a terrace, a garden, and a balcony, they returned beaming to the
-friendly Concierge.
-
-And all Taormina looked different now. The brocades and laces waved
-enticingly at the “antichita’s” doors, old jewels and enamels gleamed
-temptingly; mountains rose more majestic, the sea seemed less
-disappointingly lacking in Calabrian colour.... And as for the tourists,
-so disgustingly superior in the morning with their clean faces and
-unrumpled clothes, assured beds and table d’hôtes; now, how the balance
-had changed! They were mere tourists. What a superior thing to be an
-inhabitant, with a terrace all one’s own!
-
-Life at the Villa Schuler was inaugurated in a pouring rain. But even
-that did not dim its charm; though to descend the Scesa Morgana—as the
-gutter-alley called itself—was like shooting a polluted Niagara, and the
-stone floors of the villa itself were damply chill, and American bones
-ached for once despised steam heat. Yet smiling little Sicilian maids,
-serving with an ardour of willingness that never American maid knew,
-with radiant smiles staggered through the rain bearing big pieces of
-luggage, carried in huge pitchers of that acqua calda the forestieri had
-such a strange passion for, and then, as if it were the merriest play in
-the world, pulled about heavy pieces of furniture to rearrange the rooms
-according to American ideas, which demanded that dressing-tables should
-have light on their mirrors, and sofas not be barriered behind the
-immemorial German tables.
-
-Maria of the beaming smile, and Carola of the gentle eyes, what genius
-was yours? Two dumb forestieri, who had never learned your beautiful
-tongue, found that they had no more need of words to express their wants
-than a baby has to tell his to knowing mother and nurses. Did they have
-a wish, all they had to do was to call “Maria!”—smile and stutter, look
-into her sympathetic face, and somehow from the depths of their eyes she
-drew out their desire....
-
-“Si, si, Signora!”
-
-She was off and back again with a smile still more beaming.
-
-“Questo?”
-
-Yes, “questo” was always the desired article!
-
-At first they did make efforts at articulate speech, and with many
-turnings over of dictionary and phrase-book attempted to translate their
-meaning. But that was fatal. Compilers of phrase-books may be able to
-converse with each other, but theirs is a language apart—of their own,
-apparently—known to no other living Italians. They soar in cloudy
-regions of politeness, those phrase-books, all flourishes and
-unnecessary compliments; but when it comes to the solid substantials of
-existence they are nowhere! Towels are not towels to them, nor butter,
-butter.
-
-At first two trusting forestieri loyally believed in them, and book in
-hand read out confidently to Maria their yearnings for a clean table
-cloth, or a spoon. But a dictionary spoon never was a spoon to
-Maria—dazed for once she would look at them blankly until meaning dawned
-on her from their eyes; then “ah!” and she would exclaim an entirely
-different word from the dictionary’s, and produce the article at last.
-
-But then according to Maria’s vocabulary “_questo?_” “_qui!_” were the
-only really vital and necessary words in all the Italian language. It
-merely depended upon how you inflected these to make them express any
-human need or emotion. “Questo” meant everything from mosquito-bars to
-vegetables; and the combination of the two words with a sprinkling of
-“si’s” and “non’s” were all one needed to define any shade of
-feeling—pride, surprise, delight, regret, apology, sadness. From the
-time Maria brought in the breakfast trays in the mornings to the
-hot-water bottles at night it rang through the villa all day long; for
-the intricacies of her duties, the demands of the lodgers, scoldings
-from the Fraulein, chatter with other maids, “questo! qui!” sounded near
-and echoed from the distance like a repeated birdnote.
-
-No nurse ever showed more pride in a precocious infant’s lispings than
-did Maria when they caught up her phrases and repeated them to her—when
-the right words to express the arrangement of tub and dinner table were
-remembered and stammered out. She seemed to feel that there might be
-hope of her charges eventually developing into rational articulate
-beings, and “questo-ed” every article about to them, with all the
-enthusiasm of a kindergartner.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Next morning the sun had come out, and so had Ætna. There it suddenly
-was, towering over the terrace, a great looming presence dominating
-everything; incredibly high and white, its glittering cone clear cut as
-steel against the blue morning sky, rising far above the clouds which
-still clung in tatters of drapery about the immense purple flanks.
-Enceladus for once lay quiet upon his fiery bed; no tortured breathings
-of steam floated about the icy clearness of the summit. It was a vision
-all of frozen majestic peace, yet awesomely full of menace, of the times
-when the prisoned Titan turned and groaned and shook the earth with his
-struggles, and poured out tears of blood in floods of burning
-destruction over all the smiling orchards and vineyards and soft green
-valleys.
-
-Suddenly, Germans armed with easels and palettes sprang up fully
-equipped at every vantage viewpoint. The terrace produced a fertile crop
-of them, solemnly reducing the wonderful vision to mathematical dabs of
-purple and mauve and grey upon yellow canvas. One felt it comforting to
-know that even if Ætna never pierced the clouds again all Germany might
-feast its eyes on the colored snap shots then being made of that
-morning’s aspect of the Great Presence amid a patronising chorus of
-“Kolossals” and “achs reizends.” But once seen, it remained impressed on
-sense and spirit, that vision—whether visible or not. It was always with
-one, dominating all imaginings as it did every actual circumstance of
-life at Taormina, the weather, the temperature, the colour of every
-prospect. Though the sky behind San Domenico might be a blank and empty
-grey, _one knew it was there_, that mysterious and wonderful presence.
-And when it stood out, a Pillar of Heaven indeed, all clear and fair in
-white garment of fresh-fallen snow, it was still a menace to the
-blossoming land below, whether from its summit were sent down icy winds
-and grey mists or shrivelling fire and black pall of lava.
-
-[Illustration: “A PLACE WHERE THE PAST REVEALS ITSELF”]
-
-Equal in importance with this vision of Ætna was the appearance of
-Domenica—both events happening in the same day. Domenica too began as a
-bland outline. Small, middle-aged, and primly shawled; a smooth black
-head, gold earrings, and a bearing and nose of such Roman dignity and
-ability that two weary forestieri yearned at once to put themselves and
-their undarned stockings into the charge of her capable little hands.
-She respectfully asserted her willingness to serve them; they could make
-that out—but how tell her their requirements and the routine of the
-service they wished? It was seen to be beyond the powers of any
-phrase-book or even of Maria, presiding over the interview with beaming
-interest, and carefully repeating with louder tone and hopeful smile all
-Domenica’s words. No mutual understanding could be reached. They gave it
-up, and regretfully saw the shining black head bow itself out. But
-Domenica had to be. Their fancy clamoured for her, and all their poor
-clothes, full of the dust of travel and the rents of ruthless
-washerwoman, demanded her insistently. A more competent interpreter was
-found, and their needs explained at length. Domenica’s eyes sparkled
-with willing intelligence; she professed herself capable of doing
-anything and everything they asked of her; and mutual delight gilded the
-scene until the question of terms came up. What would the ladies pay?
-They mentioned a little more than the Frau Schuler had told them would
-be expected, and waited for the pleased response to their generosity—but
-what was happening? The grey shawl was tossed from shoulders that
-suddenly shrugged, and arms that flew about wildly; fierce lightnings
-flashed from the black eyes, a torrent of ever faster and shriller words
-rose almost into shrieks.
-
-Peripatetica and Jane shrank aghast, expecting to see a stiletto plunged
-into the stolid form of their interpreter, bravely breasting the fury.
-
-“What _is_ the matter?” they cried.
-
-“Oh nothing,” smiled the interpreter, “she is saying it isn’t enough;
-that the ladies at the hotels pay their maids more, and her husband
-wouldn’t permit her to take so little.”
-
-Dear me, she need not! they certainly would not want such a fury.
-
-The fury had subsided into tragic melancholy, and subdued
-after-mutterings of the storm rumbled up from the reshawled bosom.
-
-“She says she will talk it over with her husband to-night,” said the
-gentle interpreter with a meaning wink. “She is really good and able;
-the ladies will find her a brave woman.”
-
-They didn’t exactly feel that bravery was needed on her side as much as
-on theirs after that storm, but they had liked no other applicant, and
-again the imposing nose and capable appearance asserted their charm, and
-they remembered their stockings. Their offer still stood, they said, but
-it must be accepted or declined at once; they wanted a maid that very
-evening. Renewed flashes—she dared not accept such a pittance without
-consulting her husband.... Very well, other maids had applied, expecting
-less. A change of aspect dawned—she would like to serve the ladies,
-would they not give half of what she asked for? Consultation with the
-interpreter—ten cents more a day offered only—instant breaking out of
-smiles and such delighted bobbings and bowings as she departed that it
-seemed impossible to believe that furious transformation had ever really
-happened.
-
-They felt a little uneasy. Had they caught a Tartar? Remembering all the
-tales of Sicilian temper it seemed scarcely comfortable to have a maid
-who might draw a stiletto should one give her an unpleasing order. They
-awaited the beginning of her service a bit doubtfully. But when that
-grey shawl was hung inside the villa door, the only fierceness its owner
-showed was in her energy for work. The black eyes never flashed again,
-until ... but that comes later. They beamed almost as happy and instant
-a comprehension of all needs as Maria’s. And her capacity for work was
-appalling. At first they watched its effects with mutual
-congratulations; such an accumulation of the dilapidations of travel as
-was theirs had seemed to them quite hopeless ever to catch up with, but
-now the great heaps of tattered stockings turned into neat-folded pairs
-in their drawers, under-linen coquetted into ribbons again, and all
-their abused belongings straightened into freshness and neatness once
-more. Domenica’s energy was as fiery as Ætna’s during an eruption, only
-unlike the mountains it never seemed to know a surcease. Dust departed
-from skirts instantly at the fierce onslaught of her brushings; things
-flew into their places; sewing seemed to get itself done as if at the
-wave of a magician’s wand. Accustomed to the dilatoriness of Irish
-Abigails at home, Peripatetica and Jane were quite dazzled with delight
-at first—but then incredibly soon came the time when there was nothing
-left undone; when the little personal waiting on they needed could not
-possibly fill Domenica’s days, and it became a menace, the sight of that
-little grey-clad figure asking with empty hands, “what next, Signora?”
-
-“The Demon,” they began calling her instead of Domenica, and felt that
-like Michael Scott and his demon servant, they would be obliged to set
-her to weaving ropes of sand, the keeping her supplied with normal tasks
-seemed so impossible. It became almost a pleasure to find a gown too
-loose or too tight, that she might alter it, or to spot or tear one, and
-as for ripped skirt bindings or torn petticoat ruffles, they looked at
-each other in delight and cried exultantly, “a job for the Demon!”
-Tea-basket kettles to scour they gave her, silver to clean, errands to
-do, fine things to wash, their entire wardrobes to press out; yet still
-the little figure sat in her corner reproachfully idle, looking at them
-questioningly, and sighing like a furnace until some new task was
-procured her. Desperately they took to giving her afternoons off, and
-invariably dismissed her before the bargained time in the evening. But
-still to find grist for the mill of her industry kept them racking their
-brains unsuccessfully through all their Taormina days.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Home comforts and maid once secured they could turn to Taormina itself
-with open minds, and plunge into a flood of beauty and queernesses and
-history. Of the guide-books some say that Taormina was the acropolis of
-Naxos, an off-shoot of that first Greek town, others that it, like Mola,
-was a Sikilian stronghold long before the days of the Greeks. Jane’s
-private theory was that neither Greeks nor Sikilians had been its
-founders, that eagles alone would ever first have built on that dizzy
-windy perch!
-
-On the very ridge of a mountain spine with higher peaks overhanging,
-Taormina twists its one real street, houses climbing up or slipping down
-hill as best they may, all clinging tight, and holding hands fast along
-the street to balance themselves there at all. Dark stairway cracks
-between lead up or down, and overhead flying arches or linked stories
-keep the clasp unbroken. Here and there a little street manages to twist
-off and find a few curves for itself on another level, or the street
-widens into a wee square, or a terrace beside an old church is edged
-with a stone-benched balustrade where ancient loafers may sun themselves
-and look down at the tiny busy specks of fishing boats in the sea far
-below.
-
-Every hour of the day the Street is a variety show with the mixed life
-passing through it, and acting its dramas there. Flocks of goats
-squeezing through on their way to pasture; donkeys carrying distorted
-wine skins or gay glazed pottery protruding from their panniers; women
-going to the fountain, balancing slender Greekish water jars on their
-heads; the painted carts carrying up the tourists’ luggage; the tourists
-themselves in veils and goggles bargaining at enticing shop doorways, or
-peering into the windowless room of Taormina’s kindergarten, where a
-dozen or more infants are primly ranged, every mother’s daughter with
-knitting pins in hand and silky brown curls knotted on top of head like
-little old women, sitting solemnly in the scant light of the open door,
-acquiring from a gentle old crone the art of creating their own
-stockings. There the barber strums his guitar on a stool outside the
-“Salone” door while he waits for custom; the Polichinello man obstructs
-traffic with the delighted crowds of boys collected by Punch’s nasal
-chantings and the shrill squeaks of “Il Diavolo.” There come the golden
-loads of oranges and lemons; green glistening lettuces and feathery
-finochi; bread hot from the bakers in queer twists and rings; live
-chickens borne squawking from market, and poor little kids going to the
-butchers. The busy tide of every-day life never ebbed its colourful flow
-from the beginning of the street at the arch of one old gateway until
-its end at the arch of the other. Buying and selling, learning, working,
-and idling, the Present surged there, but a step aside into any of the
-backways, and one was instantly in the Past. Old women spinning in
-doorways with the very same twirling spindles as those of two thousand
-years ago. The very same old women, one had almost said, their hawk-like
-dried faces were so unimaginably far removed from youth, from all
-modernness.
-
-The very names of the streets spell history and drama. History rises up
-and becomes alive.
-
-In the Street of Timoleon one hears the clank of armour—the Great Leader
-and his Corinthians swing down the road. Only a few days ago they had
-landed at the beach of ruined Naxos in answer to the call of
-Andromachus, Taormenium’s ruler. They have been warmly entertained at
-his palace, have there rested, learning from him of the lay of the land
-and state of affairs; now they set out to begin the campaign. The
-staring people stand watching the march of these strong new friends,
-murmuring among themselves in awestruck whispers of the portents
-attending the setting forth of these allies. How great Demeter and
-Persephone herself had appeared to the servitors of their temple,
-promising divine assistance and protection to this expedition for the
-succour of their island—a rumour too that Apollo had dropped the laurel
-wreath of victory from his statue at Delphi upon Timoleon’s head; a
-marvel, not a rumour, for it was beheld with very eyes by some amongst
-themselves. How the ships bringing these deliverers had come in through
-the night to the harbour below with mysterious unearthly fires hovering
-in front of them and hanging in balls at the masthead, to light them on
-the way!
-
-In the midst of the soldiers is a taller figure—or one that seems so—a
-face like Jupiter’s own, of such majesty and sternness and calm. The
-crowd surges and thrills and shouts with all its heart and soul and
-stout Sicilian lungs.
-
-“Who is that?” ask the children.
-
-“Timoleon! Timoleon, the Freer!” they are answered when the shouting is
-over. “Remember all your life long that you have seen him.”
-
-And when years later those boys, grown to manhood in a free prosperous
-Sicily, hear of the almost divine honours that grateful Syracuse is
-paying to her adored deliverer, of the impassioned crowds thronging the
-theatre, mad with excitement at every appearance of the great old blind
-man, they too thrill to know that their eyes too have seen “The
-Liberator,” greatest and simplest of men.
-
-It is the Street of the Pro-Consulo Romano. Here comes Verres, cruelest
-of tyrants, most rapacious of robbers. The people shrink out of the way,
-out of sight as fast as may be, at the first gleam of the helmets of the
-Pro-Consul’s guard, when “carried by eight stalwart slaves in a litter,
-lying upon cushions stuffed with rose leaves, clad in transparent gauze
-and Maltese lace, with garlands of roses on his head and round his neck,
-and delicately sniffing at a little net filled with roses lest any other
-odour should offend his nostrils,” the sybarite tyrant is borne along,
-passing the statue of himself he has just had erected in the Forum, on
-his way to the theatre.
-
-The Street of Cicero; it is only necessary to close one’s eyes to see
-that lean, long-nosed Roman lawyer. A fixed, silent sleuth-hound on this
-same Verres’ track; following, following close, nose fixed to the trail,
-for all the cunning doublings and roundings of the fox, questing all
-over Sicily, gathering everywhere evidence, building up his case,
-silently, inexorably; until at last his quarry is cornered, no squirming
-tricks of further avail. Verres is caught by the throat, exposed,
-denounced; so passionately, that as long as man’s appreciation of logic
-and eloquence endures the great lawyer’s pleading of that case is
-remembered and quoted.
-
-Children are playing in the Via Sextus Pompeius, but one sees instead a
-gleam of golden armour, of white kilts swinging from polished limbs—the
-proud figure of Pompey; splendid perfumed young dandy who, the fair
-naughty ladies say, is the “sweetest-smelling man in Rome.”
-
-Here, with instinctive climb to the heights, he is desperately watching
-the surge of that great new power flooding, foaming, submerging all the
-world; rising up to him even here, the bubbling wave started by that
-other Roman dandy, the young man Julius Cæsar, who knotted his girdle so
-exquisitely....
-
-The street from which the Villa Schuler’s pink door opened was that of
-the Bastiones, where the town’s fortified wall had once been.
-Corkscrewing dizzily down the sheer hillside among the cacti and rocks
-ran a narrow little trail. Jane had settled it to her own satisfaction
-that this was the scene of Roger’s adventure when besieging Taormina,
-then Saracen Muezza—last stronghold on the East coast to hold out
-against him; as it had two hundred years ago been one of the last in
-succumbing to the Moslems.
-
-Roger had completely surrounded the strong place with works outside its
-walls, and was slowly reducing it by starvation. Going the rounds one
-day, with his usual reckless courage almost unaccompanied, he is caught
-in a narrow way by a strong party of the enemy. The odds are
-overwhelming, even to Normans, on that steep hillside. Roger must
-retreat or be cut down. For attackers and pursued the only foothold is
-the one narrow path. Evisand, devoted follower of Roger, is quick to see
-the advantage of that—one man alone may delay a whole host for a few
-important minutes there, and he offers up his life to cover his master’s
-escape. Alone, on the narrow way he makes a stand against all the Moslem
-swarm, with such mighty wielding of sword that it is five minutes before
-the crooked Moslem blades can clear that impediment from their way.
-Roger, who has had time to reach safety before the brave heart succumbs
-to innumerable wounds, dashes back with reinforcements, wins the day,
-recovers his loyal servitor’s body, buries it with royal honours, and
-afterwards builds a church in memory of this preservation, and for the
-soul of his preserver. And Taormina, yielding to Roger and starvation,
-regains her name and the Cross....
-
-Picking their way one morning up through the puddles and hens of their
-own alleyway, Peripatetica, raising her eyes an instant from the slime
-to look at the label on the house corner, said:
-
-“Who could have been the Morgana this scandal of a street ever stole its
-name from? ... you don’t suppose....”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Why, that it could have been the Fata Morgana? Her island first
-appeared somewhere off the Sicilian coast.”
-
-“Oh, Peripatetica! how could a fairy, lovely and enchanting, ever have
-become associated with this!”
-
-Peripatetica had a fine newborn theory on her tongue’s tip, but ere she
-could voice it, a nervous hen above them suddenly decided there was no
-room on that road for two to pass on foot, and took to her wings with
-wild squawk and a lunge straight at Peripatetica’s face in an attempt to
-pass overhead. Peripatetica ducked and safely dodged all the succeeding
-hens whom the first dame’s hysteria instantly infected to like
-behaviour. By the time she caught her breath again in safety at the
-street’s level, the theory was lost, but another more interesting one
-was born to her as they proceeded.
-
-“‘Street of Apollo Archagates,’—Jane, do you see meaning in that? The
-Greeks always put their greatest temples _on the heights_—Athens,
-Girgenti, Eryx, wherever there were hills the Great Shrine was on the
-Acropolis. Taormina must have been the Acropolis of those Naxos
-people—they certainly never stayed on the unprotected shore below
-without mounting to these heights. I believe Apollo’s temple stood up
-here, not below. Here they built it, dominating the city, shining far
-out to sea, a mark for miles to all their ships and to the sailormen
-worshipping Apollo, Protector of Commerce.”
-
-“No one has ever suggested that,” said Jane.
-
-“What if they haven’t? It’s just as apt to be true, though even
-tradition has left no trace of it now but the name of this dirty little
-street. I for one am going to believe it, and that was why the statue
-survived until the time of the Romans.”
-
-And so it was that every step they took stirred up wraiths of myth and
-history. Even on the Street in the midst of all its humming bustle,
-rotund German tourists and donkeys, all the modern life would suddenly
-melt away, and they would resurrect old St. Elio, attired only in chains
-and his drawers, kneeling in front of the Catania gate, exhorting the
-Byzantine soldiers to cleanse themselves from their sins before
-destruction came from the Saracens then raging like mad wolves outside
-the devoted town’s walls, in a fury that it alone—save Rometta—of all
-Christian Sicily should still hold out against them. Then the air would
-fill with the screaming and strugglings of those old fierce eagle
-fights, and the donkey boys’ cries of “A-ah-ee!” would change to the
-fierce triumphant shouts of “Allah Akbar!” with which Ibrahim’s cruel
-soldiery finally broke in to massacre garrison and townsfolk.
-
-Although Taormina sat apart on her mountain eyrie with no epoch-making
-events finding room on her perch to happen, the stream of all Sicily’s
-history, from first Greek settlement to the revolts of modern days
-against King Bomba’s tyranny, have surged around and through her. An
-American living in Taormina did a kindness to her native cook, for which
-in grateful return the cook insisted on presenting her a quantity of old
-coins, which her husband had turned up through the years in their little
-garden. Showing them to the Curator of a Museum, “Madame,” he said to
-the fortunate recipient of the gift, “you have a complete epitome of all
-Sicilian history in these coins.”
-
-All the different races and dynasties dominating Sicily from her
-beginning, all the great cities that rose into local power were
-represented in these treasure troves from the silt of the centuries, dug
-by a peasant from the soil of one little garden.
-
-It was the Greek theatre which first revealed the Sicily of their dreams
-to Peripatetica and Jane; consoling for the vague disappointment of
-those first days of dust and rain by the glamour of its presentment of
-the loveliness of nature and the majesty of the past.
-
-Greek that wonderful ruin still essentially is, for all its Roman
-remodelling and incrusting of brick. Only the Greeks could have so
-lovingly and instinctively combined with nature and seized so
-harmoniously all nature’s fairest to enhance their own creation. The
-place, the setting, the spirit of it is Greek; what matter if the actual
-material shape now is Roman, with the Greek form only glimmering through
-like a body of the old statuesque beauty cramped and hidden under
-distorting modern dress? Not that the theatre’s Roman clothing is
-ugly—the warm red brick, contrasting with the creamy marble fragments,
-has an undeniable charm, Greek and Roman together. It is an exquisite
-ruin of human conceivings, contrived to have blue sea and curving shore
-and Ætna’s snowy cone as the background of the open stage arches, and in
-the foyer, the arcaded walk back and behind the top tiers of the
-auditorium, all the differing panorama of beauty of the northern coast
-line.
-
-Nature from the beginning did more than man for the building, and now
-she has taken it back to herself again, blending Greek and Roman in
-binding of vine and flower and moss; twining all the stone-seated tiers
-into an herb and flower garden, and putting the song of birds into the
-vaulted halls of the Greek Chorus.
-
-An enchanting place, where the Past seems to reveal itself in all that
-it had most of beauty and splendour. Peripatetica and Jane thought
-themselves fortunate to live under its wings; actually in its shadow,
-and so be on intimate calling terms at any hour of the day, learning its
-beauty familiarly through every changing transformation of light, cool
-morning’s grey and glowing noon’s gold, fiery sunsets, blue twilights,
-and early moonrise—mountains and sea and wide-flung sky dissolving
-magically and mysteriously into ever different pictures.
-
-They wandered through chorus halls and dressing-rooms, the obscure
-regions under the stage and the dizzy ones on top of it; strolled in the
-outside arcade on top of the auditorium, where the loveliness of the
-view was a fresh wonder every time it burst on them, sat in the top rows
-and the bottom ones on the flowery sod now covering all the seats,
-looking from every angle at that most charming of marble stage settings
-and most wonderful of all backgrounds, trying to imagine the times when
-the surrounding tiers had been filled with 4,000 eager spectators, and
-the walls had echoed to the tragedies of Æschylus, Sophocles, and
-Euripides.
-
-Looking wonderingly at the curious drains and holes and underground
-passages below the stage, they wondered if Æschylus, that eminent stage
-manager as well as poet, had not himself perhaps contrived some of them
-on his visit to Sicily, to introduce new thrills of stage effects into
-the performances of his tragedies here. Æschylus, who was inventor of
-stage realism, first to introduce rich costuming, accessories, and stage
-machinery, the mutter of stage thunder, shrieks, and sounds from behind
-the scenes suggestive of the deeds considered too shocking to happen in
-the audience’s sight—inventor of the “Deus ex Machina,” that obliging
-god popping from out his trap-door to divinely straighten out a
-situation snarled past natural conclusion.
-
-As one sat there in the calm splendour of the setting of earth and sky,
-sun, and great winds streaming overhead, it became easier to understand
-the spirit of the old Greek plays; how the drama had been to them not
-mere amusement but almost a form of religion, and an expounding of their
-beliefs, an attempt to “justify the ways of God to man.” If perhaps such
-settings had not instinctively formed the differing tendencies of their
-great play-writers; Æschylus to represent suffering as the punishment of
-sin; Sophocles to justify the law of God against the presumption of man;
-and in these spacious open-air settings if the great rugged elementary
-simplicity of their plays had not been necessary and inevitable.
-
-“In the Greek tragedy the general point of view predominates over
-particular persons. It is human nature that is represented in the broad,
-not this or that highly specialized variation.... To the realization of
-this general aim the whole form of the Greek drama was admirably
-adapted. It consisted very largely of conversations between two persons
-representing two opposed points of view, and giving occasion for an
-almost scientific discussion of every problem of action raised in the
-play; and between these conversations were inserted lyric odes in which
-the chorus commented on the situation, bestowed advice or warning,
-praise or blame, and finally summed up the moral of the whole.”
-
-More akin to an opera than to a play in our modern sense, the Greek
-drama had as its basis music. The song and stately dance of its mimetic
-chorus being the binding cord of the whole, “bringing home in music to
-the passion of the heart the idea embodied in lyric verse, the verse
-transfigured by song, and song and verse reflecting as in a mirror to
-the eye by the swing and beat of the limbs they stirred to consonance of
-motion.”
-
-Sitting in the thyme-scented breeze Peripatetica and Jane read Euripides
-until they seemed to become a part of a breathless audience waiting for
-his tragedies to be performed before their eyes, waiting for the first
-gleam of the purple and saffron robes of the chorus, sweeping out from
-their halls in chanting procession. And it would all seem to take place
-once more on the stage in front of them, that feast for the eye and ear
-and intelligence at once. It became clear that across such great
-unroofed space the actors could not rely on “acting,” in our sense, for
-their results. It must be something bigger and simpler than any exact
-realism of petty actions; play of facial expression, subtle changes of
-voice and gesture would be ineffectually lost there. So, though at first
-the stage conventions of a different age seemed strange to these modern
-spectators, the actors raised above their natural height on stilted
-boots, their faces covered by masks, their voices mechanically
-magnified; yet in wonderful effects of statuesque posings the meaning
-came clear to the eye, and the chanting intonation brought out every
-beautiful measure of the rolling majestic verse which a realistic
-conversational delivery would have obscured. So the representation
-became “moving sculpture to the eye, and to the ear, as it were, a sleep
-of music between the intenser intervals of the chorus,” and the
-spectators found themselves “without being drawn away by an imitative
-realism from the calm of impassioned contemplation into the fever and
-fret of a veritable actor on the scene,” receiving all the beautiful
-lucid thought and sentiment of the text, heightened by the accompanying
-appeal to the senses of perfect groupings of forms and colours, of
-swaying dance, and song and recitative, until it all blended into one
-perfect satisfying whole—perhaps the most wonderful form of art
-production that has ever existed.
-
-And then some German tourist would scream, “Ach Minna, komm mal her! ’s
-doch famos hier oben!” and they would be waked from their day dream of
-old harmonies into the shrill bustling present again.
-
-“It is like all really great fresco painting,” said Peripatetica on one
-of these comings back, “kept in the flat. Anything huge has to be
-treated so as to make its meaning tell; it has to be done in flat
-outline to stay in the picture, to make the whole effective. All the
-great imposing frescoes are like that; when the seventeenth century
-tried to heighten its effects by moulding out arms and legs in the
-round, its pictures dropped to pieces; any idea it was trying to express
-became lost. One is conscious of nothing but the nearest sprawling
-realistic limb thrusting out at one. Oh, those delicious marvellous
-Greeks! everything that is beautiful and perfect they did first, and
-anything good that has ever been done since is only copying them.”
-
-Jane had a deep respect for the Greeks herself, but she sometimes turned
-against too much laudation of them.
-
-“Do you suppose the æsthetic effect of their tragedies was really
-greater than that of a Wagner opera, well given? That the lament for
-Iphigenia could be more deeply thrilling than Siegfried’s funeral
-march?”
-
-Peripatetica almost bounded from her seat.
-
-“But that’s just it!” she cried. “Wagner operas are a revival of the
-Greek ideal! the only modern analogy of their drama! He had the same
-idea of painting on a huge canvas great heroic figures in the flat,
-keeping them in the picture without rounding out into petty realism. And
-he has attempted exactly what they did, to present his dramatic theme in
-a mingling of music, poetry, picture, and dance, every branch of art
-combined!”
-
-“That’s interesting, and perhaps true, my dear, but if you discourse on
-about King Charles’ head, we shall get caught by that shower racing down
-the coast. There is just time to beat it to home and Vesuvius!”
-
-Vesuvius was, after Domenica, their greatest acquisition, and the one
-that most soothingly spread about an atmosphere of home comfort. Until
-he came life had been a thing of shivers and sneezes, of days spent in
-ceaseless trampings to keep their chilled blood in circulation, and of
-evenings sitting swathed in fur coats and steamer rugs, with feet raised
-high above the cold drafts of the floor.
-
-Fireplaces, or any means of artificial heating were unknown to the
-villa. They had waited patiently for the Southern sun to come and do his
-duty, but he didn’t; and a day came when Jane took to bed as the only
-hope of warmth, when even Domenica sneezed and said it was “_molto
-freddo_,” and then Peripatetica sallied forth determined to find some
-warmth nearer than Ætna. “Vesuvius” was the result of her quest. Not
-much was he to look at outwardly. Small was his round black form; oh,
-pitifully small he seemed at first view to those whose only hope he was.
-A mere rusty tin lantern on three little feet, he looked—but when his
-warm heart began to glow and to send delicious hot rays percolating
-through the holes of his sides and pointed lid, the charms of his fiery
-nature won respect at once. He made his small presence felt incredibly,
-from stone floor to high ceiling. Shawls and coats could be shed, feet
-lowered and at once frozen spines relaxed into long-forgotten comfort.
-
-His breath was not pleasant to be sure, his charcoal fumes troubled at
-first, but when a Sicilian oracle had recommended the laying of sliced
-lemons on his head, all fumes were absorbed, he breathed only refreshing
-incense and became altogether a joy. Every day, except on rainy ones,
-when his company was called for earlier, he made his appearance at six
-of the evening—and how eagerly the sight of Maria bearing him in used to
-be waited for! Then with feet toasting and backs relaxing in delightful
-warmth, Peripatetica and Jane sat over his little glowing holes with
-quite the thrill and comfort of a real hearthstone.
-
-Ardent fire worshippers they found themselves becoming in this
-supposedly Southern land. If Persephone had ever been as cold as they,
-they doubted if that _enlèvement_ to Pluto’s warm, furnace-heated realm
-could have been so distasteful after all!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Paddling out in the rain to hotels for meals was at first a drawback to
-life in the Villa Schuler. To sit with damp ankles through the endless
-procession of table d’hôte meals, and afterwards have the odoriferous
-bespatterings of the Scesa Morgana as dessert, was not an enjoyable
-feature of local colour. Frau Schuler was implored to feed her lodgers.
-
-“But we are simple people; our plain cooking would not satisfy the
-ladies,” she protested, distressed. But the ladies felt that a crust and
-an egg in their own sitting-room would be more satisfying than all the
-triumphs of hotel chefs out in the wet. And to bread and eggs they
-resigned themselves. Instead came a five-course banquet, served by
-beaming Butler Maria in a dazzling new grass-green bodice—soup and
-macaroni, meat and vegetables, perfect in seasoning and succulence,
-crisp salad from the garden, and with it the demanded poached eggs which
-were to have constituted the whole dinner, almond pudding with a
-wondrous sauce; dates, oranges, sugary figs beaded on slivers of bamboo,
-mellow red wine. It seemed a very elastic two lire which could cover all
-that, as Frau Schuler said it did! Truly the Fraulein Niece was an
-artist. Peripatetica and Jane thereafter dined at home in tea gowns and
-luxury—and the pudding sauces grew more bland and wonderful every night.
-Also eggs continued to give originality by the vagaries of their
-appearance. As Peripatetica said, “they just ran along anyhow, and
-jumped on at any course they took a fancy to!” And to see where they
-were going to land—in the soup, the vegetables, the salad, the stewed
-fruit of dessert—or what still other and stranger companionships they
-might form, lent a sort of prize-packet excitement to each succeeding
-course. Dinner at the Villa Schuler, with little Vesuvius glowing
-warmingly through all his fiery eyes and steaming out spicy incense of
-lemon and mandarin peel, the soft low lamplight, the gleam of Maria’s
-smile and green bodice, the blessed remoteness from all tourist gabble,
-was truly a cosy function. They took to making elaborate toilets in
-honour of it, adding their Taormina acquisitions of old lace and jewels
-to Maria’s round-eyed amazement. When Jane burst out in an Empire
-diadem, and Peripatetica not to be outdone donned a ravishing lace cap,
-their status as good republicans was forever lost in the villa. Maria
-spread the tale of this splendour abroad, firmly convinced that these
-lodgers were incognito members of the most exalted nobility of distant
-“Nuova Yorka.” The tongues which could not pronounce their harsh foreign
-names insisted on labelling them the “Big and Little Princess”—and no
-protests could bring their rank down lower than “the most gentle
-Countesses,” upon their washing-bills.
-
-It amused them in fine weather to try the various hotels for lunch. In
-mid-town was the Hotel Victoria, the haunt of artists and gourmets,
-famous for its food and for its garden, which climbed the hillside in
-blooming terraces and loggias, all stairways, springing bridges, and
-queer little passages leading to buildings and courts on different
-levels. Peripatetica and Jane wandered into it almost by accident. They
-noticed the name over a dingy door as they were strolling aimlessly one
-day, and Peripatetica remembered having heard of a picturesque garden
-within. Penetrating through empty hall and up various winding stairways
-they came to a charming garden court. There appeared the proprietor, and
-in Parisian French treated their curiosity as a boon and a pleasure. A
-little man, the Padrone, with nothing large about him but the checks of
-his trousers and the soft black eyes which turned upon the gay colour
-about him with gentle melancholy. He did the honours of the place with
-all the courtesy and dignity of Louis XIV showing Versailles. When they
-admired the aviary of Sicilian and tropical birds, the budding roses
-clambering everywhere, the strange feathery-fringed irises like gaudy
-little cockatoos, the delicate bits of Moorish carving and arches built
-into the hotel walls, he accepted all their enthusiasm for the charms of
-his property with no sign of pride, but rather with the pensive
-melancholy of one whose soul was above such things, as of one who knew
-the hollowness of earthly delights. Courteously he exhibited everything,
-taking them to still higher and more glowing terraces where his laden
-orange trees were burnished green and gold, and his violets sheets of
-deepest, royalest purple underneath.
-
-A pair of monkeys lived in cage up there, and while the Signor deftly
-fed them for the amusement of his visitors he warmed up into caustic
-philosophic comment upon human and monkey nature, comment not unspiced
-with wit. Peripatetica, always ready for philosophy, immediately plunged
-into the depths of her French vocabulary and responded in kind. The
-discussion grew warm and fluent, and the little Padrone became a new
-man. With kindling eye and a pathetic eagerness he kept the ball rolling
-in polished Voltairian periods, intoxicated apparently with the joy of
-mental intercourse. He snatched and clung to it, inventing new pretexts
-to detain them, new things to exhibit, while the talk rolled on.
-
-But Peripatetica, whose next passion to Philosophy is Floriculture,
-broke off to exclaim at the violets as they passed a bed of purple
-marvels. Emperors they were among violets. The Padrone immediately
-proffered some, setting two contadini to picking more. Peripatetica
-contemplating gluttonously the wonderful spread of the deep purple
-calyx, the long firm stems of those in her hand, and at the profusion of
-others sweetening the air, cried from her heart, “Oh, Monsieur, what
-luxury to have such a garden! You should be one of the happiest
-creatures in the world to be able to grow such flowers as these!”
-
-The Padrone, from his knees, picking more violets, glanced up, and gloom
-fell over him again.
-
-“Madame,” he inquired bitterly, “does happiness ever consist in what one
-possesses of material things? Contentment, perhaps—but happiness? Not
-the most beautiful garden in the world can grow that,” and with dark
-Byronic mystery, “Ah, one can live amid brightness and yet be very
-miserable.”
-
-They parted with much friendliness, the Padrone hoping the ladies would
-do his hotel the honour of visiting it again. Surely, yes, they said;
-they would give themselves the pleasure of lunching there some day....
-Upon that it seemed as if his gloom grew darker, but he implied
-courteously that that would do him too much honour, but if they did
-venture as much he would do his best to content them. His was but a
-rough little place, but it had been wont to be the haunt of artists and
-“they, you know, are always ‘_un peu gourmet!_’”
-
-“What do you suppose is the story of that man?” they asked each other;
-and amused themselves inventing romantic pretexts to explain his air of
-blighted hopes and poetic pain.
-
-Before long their curiosity impelled them to try the Victoria’s cuisine.
-They were a half hour before the time. No guests had yet gathered. They
-stood again in front of the aviary, but no polite philosopher made his
-appearance. A little yellow-haired maid in a frock as brightly purple as
-the violets, carrying decanters into the empty dining-room, was the only
-creature about. The sitting room offered them shelter from the wind, and
-for entertainment heaps of German novels and innumerable sketches of
-Sicilian scenery and types, which they hoped the Victoria’s artist
-patrons had not given in settlement of their hotel bills. A bell rang,
-and people streamed in until every seat in the clean, bare dining-room
-had its occupant. Not the artists Peripatetica and Jane were looking
-for, but types fixed and amusing, such as they had never before
-encountered in such numbers and contrasts. Rosy, bland English curates
-and their meek little wives; flashy fat Austrians, with powdered ladies
-of unappetizing look; limp English spinsters of the primmest propriety;
-seedy old men with dyed moustaches and loud clothes, diffusing an aroma
-of shady gambling-rooms. Scholarly old English professors; and Germans,
-Germans, Germans of all varying degrees of fatness, shininess, and
-loud-voicedness, but all united in double-action feeding power of knife
-and fork.
-
-An expectant hush held them all for a while before empty plates. Then
-the little purple-gowned maid, and a sister one in ultramarine blue,
-with the same brilliant yellow hair knotted on top of her head, appeared
-with omelettes. Omelettes of such melting perfection as to explain the
-solemn expectancy of the waiting faces.
-
-Followed a meal in which every course—fish, vegetables, meat, and salad,
-in a land where the tourist expects to subsist alone on oranges and
-scenery—was of a deliciousness to have made a Parisian epicure
-compliment the chef of his pet restaurant.
-
-The Germans were explained; lovers of feeding and of thrift, of course,
-they had come in their hordes to this modest Inn. And how they made the
-most of it! Back they called the little maids for two and three helpings
-of each delicious platter. Food was piled upon plates in mountains, but
-before Peripatetica and Jane could more than nibble at their own share,
-the German plates would be polished clean, and the little maids called
-for another supply. The caraffes of strong new Sicilian claret were
-emptied too, until Tedeschi faces grew very red, and tongues more than
-ever loud.
-
-Peripatetica and Jane dared not meet each other’s eyes. Next to them sat
-an elderly maiden lady from Hamburg “doing” Sicily without luggage,
-prepared for any and every occasion in black silk bodice and cloth
-skirt, which could be made short or long by one of the mysterious
-arrangements of loops and strings the female German mind adores. With
-maiden shyness but German persistence she firmly insisted on human
-intercourse with the French commercial traveller across the table. He
-clung manfully to the traditional gallantry of his race, though the
-Hamburgian’s accent in his mother tongue threw him into wildest
-confusion as to the lady’s meaning. When he confided his wife’s
-confinement to bed with a cold, and his ineffectual struggles to get the
-proper drugs for her in Taormina, the German lady announced the theory
-that violent exercise followed by a bath was better cure for a cold than
-any drugs, “the bath the main point,” she said. “The exercise and the
-_transpiration_ without that being of no use.”
-
-“A _bath_! with a _cold_! Not a complete wash all over?” protested the
-startled Frenchman.
-
-“Yes, indeed, one must wash one’s self entirely—though it might be done
-a bit at a time—but completely, all over, with water and soap,” insisted
-the German, which daring hygienic theory so convinced the Frenchman that
-its propounder’s reason must be unhinged that stammering and trembling
-he gulped down his wine and fled from the table without waiting for the
-sweets.
-
-All this time Peripatetica and Jane had caught no glimpse of their
-friend, the Padrone. They wondered, but decided that his poetic nature
-soared above the materialities of hotel keeping.
-
-The meal had reached the sweet course—a pudding of delectableness no
-words can describe. It inspired even the gorged Germans with emotion.
-Thoroughly stuffed as they already were they still demanded more of its
-ambrosia and the purple-frocked one flew back to the kitchen, leaving
-the door open.... Alas! their philosopher of the garden, in cook’s
-apron, was pouring sauce on more pudding for the waiting maid!
-
-Ah, poor Philosopher! This the secret of his blighted being. The poet
-driven to cooking-pots, the artistic temperament expending itself in
-omelettes and puddings for hungry tourists. How wonder at the irony with
-which he had watched the monkeys feed!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Maria and Vesuvius were not the only possessors of ardent temperaments
-in the Villa. Another existed in a round soft ball of tan and white
-fuzz.
-
-The Puppy!
-
-He of the innocent grey eyes, black nose with pink tongue-trimming, and
-the most open and trusting heart in the world. On friends and strangers
-alike his smiles and warm licks fell. He bounded into every room all
-a-quiver of joy to be with such delightful people in such an altogether
-charming world. And never could it enter his generous thoughts that
-others might not equally yearn for his society; that Jane might object
-to having a liberal donation of fleas and mud left on the tail of her
-gown; that at 6 A.M. Peripatetica might not be enchanted to have a
-friendly call and a boisterous worry of her slippers all over the stone
-floor; or Fraulein might prefer the front of the stove entirely to
-herself during sacredest rites of cooking. He could not be brought to
-understand. He was cheerfully confident that every one loved him as much
-as he loved them, and that nothing could possibly be accomplished in
-that family without his valuable assistance. Many times a day loud wails
-rose to heaven, announcing that he had come to grief in the course of
-his labours; had encountered some one’s foot or hand, or had some door
-shut in his face; but in the midst of grief he would see in the distance
-something being accomplished without him—charcoal being carried in, the
-hall swept, or the garden watered—and he would rise from his tears and
-offer his enthusiastic assistance once more, all undaunted, and continue
-to give encouraging chews to the worker’s ankles, and stimulating barks
-of advice entirely undeterred by being called “an _injurienza_ puppy!”
-
-Peripatetica claimed that his grey eyes showed that he was Norman
-descent, as Jane insisted they did in all the grey-eyed children of
-Taormina. But Fraulein, appealed to on that question, said he was of the
-colley race, and she revealed the dark and dreadful destiny laid upon
-him—that he was to grow up into a fierce and suspicious watch-dog; to
-live chained on the upper terrace, a menace to all intruders, a terror
-to frighten thieves from the garden plums!
-
-And alas for natural bent of temperament when it must yield to contrary
-training. The grey-eyed one’s fate soon overtook him. Wild and indignant
-wails and shrieks woke Jane one sunny morning, and continued steadily in
-mounting crescendo all the while she clothed herself in haste to go to
-the rescue. Following the wails to the top of the garden she found the
-Puppy, a red ribbon around his soft neck, and from that a string
-attaching him to a pole. Nearby stood the Fraulein admonishing him that
-it was time his duties in life should begin, and he must commence to
-learn the routine of his profession without so much repining. In spite
-of Jane’s protests she insisted on leaving him there; and in vain all
-that quarter of Taormina rang with the wails of protesting indignation
-that welled from the confined one’s heart in the bewilderment of being
-left in loneliness, separated from all his friends and their doings.
-Every day after that he had to undergo his hour or two of schooling in
-the stern training of his grim profession. Soft-hearted Jane released
-him whenever she could, but Fraulein inexorably put him back, and even
-his playfellow Maria sternly held him to his duties. Between times he
-mixed with the family again on the old footing, but it was pathetic to
-see how soon nature was affected by the mould into which it was pressed,
-how soon he acquired the mannerisms and habits of his profession—curbing
-his exuberance of sociability, imposing on himself a post on the door
-mat, when strangers appeared, confining all welcome to his tail end,
-which would still wag friendlily though head did its duty in theatrical
-staccato growls.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In Taormina everything happens in the street. Houses are merely dark
-damp holes in which to take shelter at night, but life is lived outside
-them. Food is prepared in the street, clothes are mended there, hair is
-combed and arranged, neighbours gossiped with, lace and drawn-work made.
-The cobbler soles his shoes in the street, the tinsmith does his
-hammering and soldering there. It is the poultry run of hens and
-turkeys, the pasture grounds for goats and kids, the dance hall for
-light-footed children to tarantelle in, the old men’s club, the general
-living-room of all Taormina. Peripatetica and Jane found endless
-amusement there, though they seldom tarried in town. Like Demeter they
-wandered all day in meadow and mountain seeking Persephone, and found
-her not. Preparation for her beloved coming Mother Demeter seemed to be
-making everywhere; grass springing green when once the cold rain ceased,
-and carpets of opening blossoms spreading in orchards and fields for the
-little white feet to press. Every night they said, “She will come
-to-morrow,”—but still Demeter’s loneliness dissolved into cold tears
-hiding the face of the sun, and the chill winds told of nothing but
-Ætna’s snow, and the Lost One did not return.
-
-But though they searched for her in vain in the setting of sunshine and
-blossom their fancy had pictured, Peripatetica and Jane found much else
-on their rambles—idyls of Theocritus still being lived, quaint little
-adventures, bits of local colour, new friends and old acquaintances
-among contadini, animals and flowers, and always and all about, the
-Bones of the Past. Everywhere obscured under the work-a-day uses of the
-Present, or rising out of them in beauty; half hidden among flowers in
-lonely fields or a part of squalid modern huts, they stumbled upon those
-remains of antiquity, debased and crumbled and inexplicable often, but
-beautiful with a lost strange charm, sad and haunting.
-
-Taormina prides herself more on scenery than antiquities, but they found
-many of the latter in their scrambles on rough little mountain trails,
-learning all sorts of charms and secrets undreamed of by luxurious
-tourists rolling dustily in landaus along the one high road. Theirs was
-an unhurried leisure to take each day as it came. Without plans or
-guides they merely wandered wherever interest beckoned, until gradually
-they learned all the town and its setting of mountain and shore by
-heart.
-
-They sallied forth untrammelled of fixed destination, ready to take up
-with the first adventure that offered—and one always did offer to
-adventurers of such receptive natures. They made plans only to break
-them; for inevitably they were distracted by something of interest more
-vital than the thing they had set out to see.
-
-They might start, staff in hand, on a pilgrimage to the Madonna of Rocca
-Bella, whose brown shrine nestled dizzily on one of the strange peaks
-shooting their distorted summits threateningly above their own Villa,
-those peaks so vividly described by another Idle Woman in Sicily:
-“Behind, wildly flinging themselves upwards, rise three tall peaks, as
-of mountains altogether gone mad and raving.... The nearest peak of a
-yellow-grey, splintered and cleft like a lump of spar, and so upright
-that it becomes a question how it supports itself, is divided into two
-heads—one thrusting itself forward headlong over the town and crowned
-with the battlements of a ruined Saracenic-Norman castle; the other in
-the rear carrying the outline of a little church, and the vague vestige
-of a house or two; Saracenic-Norman castle and church (Madonna della
-Rocca) both so precisely the tint of the rock that it requires time and
-patience to disentangle each, and not to put the whole down as a further
-evidence of mountain insanity.”...
-
-When Jane sat herself, muffled in furs and rugs, to read or sew in one
-of the quaint tile-encrusted arbours of the garden, those jagged peaks
-fell out of the sky overhead so menacingly, coming ever nearer and
-nearer to her shrinking head, that for all the sweetness of the flowers
-and birds she never could stay there long, but always, panic-struck,
-fled to the bare sea-terrace, and the prospect of calm and distant Ætna.
-
-But to go back to Our Lady of Rocca Bella, which Peripatetica and Jane
-never managed to see, there were so many distractions on that path! Did
-they start with the firmest of pilgrim intentions, a new garden opened
-unexplored paths of sweetness, or a brown old sea-dog, Phrygian-capped,
-smiled a “buon giorno” on his bare-footed way up from the shore, showed
-them the strange sea creatures gleaming under the seaweed in his basket,
-and enticed them down to the shore. There on the golden beach of
-Theocles’ landing place, they embarked in a heavy boat pulled by their
-friend, and another old gold-earringed mariner, to the “_grotte molto
-interessante_” in the Isola Bella. They poked their heads between waves
-into coral caves where the light filtering through the bright water was
-dyed almost as intense an azure as in the famous Capri Blue Grotto, and
-the whole coast line of mountains came to them in a new revelation of
-beauty from the level of wide-stretching sea. And beside the queer bits
-of coral presented by the sea-dogs as souvenirs, they carried away
-salt-water whetted appetites of wonderful keenness, and pictures,
-bestowed safely behind their eyes, of deliciously moulded mountain sides
-rising straight from clear green seas, of wave-carved fantasies in
-sun-bathed coral rocks, of red nets being stretched on yellow sands by
-bare-legged, graceful fisher folk; memories they would not have
-exchanged for any wide map-like vista the Madonna could have given them
-from her high-perched eyrie.
-
-It was the same story with the Fontana Vecchia. If they had persisted in
-reaching its clear spring they might have heard the nightingales singing
-in the wooded dell, but they would never have known Carmela and her
-sunny mountain meadow.
-
-It was a day of shifting clouds and cold winds. Peripatetica was
-depressed. Her energies wilted in the cold, and she had only gone forth
-to walk because the salon was too icily vaultlike for habitation. Jane
-tried to cheer her with prospect of hot tea at the Fontana, but her
-spirit refused to respond to any material comforting. She complained of
-what had been troubling her for some time, a sense of feeling a mere
-ghost herself in these Past-pervaded spots; a cold and shivering ghost
-aimlessly blown about in the wind, pressed upon by all the thronging
-crowds of other ghosts haunting these places where through the centuries
-each succeeding throng of beings had struggled and laboured, laughed and
-suffered. Living among ghosts in these days of idleness, her own
-existence cut off from the real living and doing of the world, from the
-duties and responsibilities of her own place in life, from the warm
-clutching hands of the people dependent on her, she had come to seem to
-herself entirely vague and ineffectual. She felt a mere errant,
-disembodied spirit, she said, and it was a bleak and dreary feeling.
-
-Jane said she thought a disembodied spirit, able to soar over the sharp
-cobbles of that road, an exceedingly enviable thing to be at that
-moment; but she quite understood, and was herself affected by the same
-sense of chill aloofness from actual, vital human living.
-
-And then they saw Carmela—a little old Sibyl twirling her distaff at an
-open gate that looked out on the quiet road. Sitting in the sun with
-cotton kerchief, bodice, and apron all faded into soft harmonies of
-colour, she made such a picture through the arch of the gate’s break in
-the dull stone wall, with the green of the garden behind her, that they
-stopped a moment to look.
-
-“Buon giorno”—the picture smiled, her little round face breaking into
-friendly wrinkles. She rose to her bare feet, and with graceful gesture
-invited them in—wouldn’t they like to see the farm? she asked. There was
-a _molto bella vista_ beyond. Always welcoming the unexpected they at
-once accepted, and found themselves passing through olive and orange
-groves. The property was not hers, their hostess explained; she was
-merely a servant; it all belonged to a _molto vecchia_ lady, Donna
-Teresa by name. Though owning no part of it, Carmela pointed out the old
-vines, the thriving newly planted young vineyard, the grafts on the
-almond trees, with proud proprietorship.
-
-Donna Teresa made her appearance; a tiny bent crone, bare-footed like
-her maid and dressed in cottons as faded if not as patched, but showing
-traces of a refined type of beauty in the delicate features of her old
-face and the soft fine white hair curling still like grape tendrils
-about her well-shaped head. She accepted her maid’s explanation of the
-strangers’ presence, and proceeded to outdo her in hospitality. They
-must do more than see the vista—must pick some flowers too. With cordial
-toothless chatter, of which the friendly meaning was the only thing they
-could entirely understand, she led through the farmyard court where blue
-and white doves cooed on the carved stone well-head, and a solemn white
-goat, his shaggy neck hung about with charms and amulets, attached
-himself to the party and followed down the stone stairs to a lower
-terrace. There was a view entrancing indeed, also a strange little old
-round building resembling a Roman tomb. Carmela could tell no more than
-that it was _cosa di molto antichita_ and very useful to store roots in.
-Under a sheltering wall was a purple bank of violets to which the old
-Donna led them with much pride, inviting them to pick for themselves.
-When they did so too modestly to suit her, she fell on her knees and
-gathered great handfuls, thrusting on them besides all the oranges and
-mandarins they could carry, until her lavishments became an
-embarrassment. For all her bare feet and poor rags there was that in the
-grace of her hospitality they felt they could not offer money to. All
-they could do was to press francs into the maid’s hand, offer the Donna,
-as curiosities from distant America, the maple sugar drops Jane had
-filled her pocket with before starting, and try to make smiles fill the
-gaps in thanks of their halting Italian.
-
-Carmela showed redoubled friendliness from the moment America was
-mentioned. She still clung to them after her mistress bade them goodby
-at the gate, and offered to show them another vista still more
-beautiful. They would rather have continued their interrupted way, but
-the little round face falling sadly changed their protestations into
-thanks, and she trotted happily beside them, smiling at their
-compliments on the even thread she spun as she walked, confiding how
-much it brought her a hank, what she could spin in a day, and that Donna
-Teresa was a good mistress, but a little weakened in her head by age.
-
-She pattered along, her bare feet skimming carelessly over the
-sharp-cobbled road, spindle steadily whirling, past the Campo Santo,
-where at the top of a sudden ravine the road forked and strings of
-panniered donkeys and straight, graceful girls with piles of linen on
-their heads were going down to a hidden stream tinkling below. They
-longed to follow, but Carmela took them on around a curve, through a
-door in a high wall, past a deserted barn, along a grassy path under
-almond trees, and they found themselves in a spot that made them catch
-breath with delight.
-
-The crown of a mountain spur dropped in terraced orchards and gardens to
-the sea below. Taormina was hidden behind intervening heights. Below, an
-opal sea divided Sicily from wraiths of the Calabrian mountains drifting
-along the horizon, and curves of yellow sand and white, surf-frothed
-rocks outlined the far indentations of the Island’s mountainous coast
-spreading blue and rosy-purple on their left. Fringed with blossoming
-plum and yellow gorse, the spur on which they stood dropped sheer to the
-river ravine, and above still towered Mola and Monte Venere.
-
-It was a world of sun and colour and sweet silence. The cold, moaning
-wind was shut off by the heights behind them, and turned full to the
-glowing South, a real warmth of sun bathed the sheltered spot and had
-spread a carpet of flowers of more brilliant and harmonious arabesques
-than any of Oriental weaving. Of purple and puce and gold, coral and
-white and orange, of blues faint and deep, of rose and sharp crimson, it
-was woven exquisitely through the warp of young spring green. Even
-without the view, nothing so sweet and really springlike as that bit of
-mountain meadow had Peripatetica and Jane yet seen. They cried out in
-joy and sat them down among all the unknown bewitching flowers.
-
-Carmela’s face lit up at their appreciation. She too sat down, let her
-spindle fall, and gazed about as if her eyes loved what they rested
-upon; then looking from one strange face to the other:
-
-“You are really from America?” she asked, and let her pathetic little
-story pour out. Nine children she had borne, and all but one dead. She
-told how that one, a splendid youth, had gone to America three years ago
-to make a fortune for himself and her, and at first had written to her
-that he was doing well; but for two years she had spent her hard
-earnings to have letters written to him, and had prayed with tears at
-the Madonna’s shrine, but for two long years now—no answer.
-
-Her round little old, yet childlike, face fell into tragic lines. With
-work-scarred hands clasping her knees across her patched apron she sat,
-a creature of simple and dignified pathos, opening her heart in brief
-and poignant words to the response in Peripatetica’s eyes. Among the
-blossoms and the bees the three women of such different lives and
-experiences, with the barrier of a strange tongue between them, came
-into close touch for a moment in the elementary humanity of that pain
-known to all women—Goddess Demeter and ragged peasant alike—when their
-dearest has gone forth from the longing shelter of their arms and theirs
-is the part of passive loneliness and waiting.
-
-“Yes, life was _brutta_,” said Carmela simply, “but one had always one’s
-work.”
-
-Picking up the spindle, winding again her even thread, smilingly she
-bade these strange friends “_a rivedercela_,” and departed, a certain
-tragic dignity clinging to the square little figure going sturdily, yet
-with head drooping, back to her life of hard and lonely labour. Whether
-that moment of sympathetic intercourse had meant anything to her or not,
-to the two idle ones that trusting touch of the life about them meant
-much. It pulled them out of the world of ghosts, from the empty sense of
-being outside of any connection with other lives, and by that contact of
-living, pitiful drama they came back into realities.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For all the tiny extent of Taormina’s boundaries, the discoveries of its
-antiquities seemed never ending; the cella of a Greek temple hidden in
-San Pancrazio’s church; the tiny Roman theatre, a section of its pit and
-auditorium with seats still in perfect rows sticking out from another
-old church whose greediness had only succeeded in half swallowing it;
-the enormous Roman baths whose old pools and conduits a thriving lemon
-orchard is now enjoying; the Roman pavement next to the Hotel Victoria;
-that bit of Greek inscription hospitably let into church walls, exciting
-imagination with its record that the “people of Tauromenium accord these
-honours to Olympis, son of Olympis” for having gained the prize in horse
-racing at the Pythian games.
-
-The wall of the loveliest garden in Taormina is honeycombed with ancient
-tombs. The slender cypresses, like exclamation points emphasizing its
-rhythms of colour, have their roots among the very bones of antiquity.
-In this garden Protestant worship has succeeded Catholic in the old
-Chapel of the delicious little Twelfth Century Convent whose cloisters
-are now an English lady’s villa—and who knows in how many earlier
-shrines man’s groping faith has prayed in this very spot?
-
-All over Taormina fragments of old marbles and carvings and columns
-appear in the most unlikely places; a marble mask from the theatre over
-the door of a modest little “Sarta” in a back alleyway, bits of porphyry
-columns supporting the steps of a peasant’s hovel. The traces of Norman
-and Saracen embellishment are, of course, even more numerous, almost
-every house on the street breaking out into some odd and delicate bit.
-The façade of the palace in which dwelt the Frau Schuler’s antiquity
-shop is freaked with charming old lava inlays and queer forked
-“merluzzi” battlements. Forcing one’s way through the chickens into its
-courtyard, one finds a vivid Fourteenth Century relief of the story of
-Eve’s creation, temptation, and punishment climbing up the stone
-stairway, and an inscription “_Est mihi i locu refugii_,” which
-tradition says was placed by John of Aragon taking refuge here once in
-the days when it was a Palace of the Aragonese Kings. Beyond that
-inscription with its legend, and some few Spanish-looking iron
-balconies, the Spaniard has left no trace of his dominion in Taormina.
-The Norman printed himself on churches and convents, but it is the
-Greeks and Romans, and above all the Saracens, who have stamped
-themselves indelibly upon Taormina. Moorish workmen must have been
-employed by their conquerors for centuries to build them palaces and
-convents, baths and even churches. And the Arab blood still shows
-strongly in hawk-like, keen-eyed faces passing through Taormina’s
-streets as haughtily as in the days when their progenitors ruled there
-with hand of iron upon the dogs of Christians.
-
-In those Moslem days much liberty in the practice of religion was
-allowed to such of the Christians as did not show the cross in public,
-read the gospel loud enough to penetrate to Moslem ears, or ring their
-church bells “furiously.” How often in Sicily one wishes that last
-regulation were still in force! They might go on worshipping freely in
-all existing churches and convents, though to build new ones was not
-allowed. In matters of religion the Arab was strangely liberal, but in
-civil matters he reduced the conquered people to a sort of serfdom.
-Christians were not allowed to carry arms, to ride on horseback, or even
-donkeyback, to build houses as high as the Mussulman’s, to drink wine in
-public, to accompany their dead to burial with any pomp or mourning.
-Christian women might not enter the public baths when Moslem women were
-there, nor remain if they came in. Christians must give way to Moslems
-on the street; indoors they must rise whenever a man of the conquering
-race came in or went out. “And that they might never forget their
-inferiority, they had to have a mark on the doors of their houses and
-one on their clothes.” They were bid wear turbans of different fashion
-and colour from Moslems, and particular girdles of leather.
-
-Yet many good gifts these Eastern conquerors brought—introduction of
-silkworms and the mulberry, of sugar-cane and new kinds of olives and
-vines; new ways of preserving and salting fish; new processes of
-agriculture and commerce; their wonderful methods of irrigation; the
-clear Arabic numeration; advance in medicine, astronomy, mathematics,
-all sciences; and even “the slaves in Sicily under the Moslem rule were
-better off than the Italian populations of the mainland under the
-Lombards and Franks.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Jane and Peripatetica were taking tea in the San Domenico gardens—a
-flowery terrace dizzily flung out to sea, and almost as high as their
-own. There is nothing prettier in Taormina than that garden; tile-paved,
-mossy stone pergolas of dense shade still breathing of quiet monkish
-meditations; open, yet sheltered, nooks to bask in the sun, and the
-loveliness of the outlook on Ætna and his sweeping foothills, and the
-milky-streaked green sea; mats of fragrant sweetness, purple and ivory,
-of violets and freesias; royal splash of bougainvilla against the buff
-stucco of old convent walls; coast steamers, white yachts, and tiny
-black fishing boats far, far below, the only hint of the world’s bustle;
-here in the garden was only slumberous quiet and fragrant peace.
-
- “On his terrace high in air
- Nothing doth the good monk care
- For such worldly themes as these.
- From the garden just below
- Little puffs of perfume blow,
- And a sound is in his ears
- Of the murmur of the bees
- In the shimmering chestnut trees.
- Nothing else he heeds or hears.
- All the landscape seems to swoon
- In the happy afternoon.”
-
-Little has been changed since the good monk really dozed there. The
-charm of his peaceful days still lingers in cloister and garden, and the
-conventual atmosphere still asserts itself in spite of the frivolous
-swarm of tourists, who leave innovation trunks in the stone-flagged
-corridors. But that same tourist sits in the monk’s painted wooden
-stalls, has a beflowered little shrine and altar perhaps opposite his
-own bedroom door; walks under saintly frescoes, hangs his hat on the
-Father’s carved towel-frame outside the Refectory door, and eats his
-dinner under pictures of martyrdoms. The chapel in the midst of the
-modern caravanserai is still the parish church, the vaulted stone
-corridors echo to the solemn boom of its organ many times a day—a wrong
-turn on the way to the dining-room and the tourist finds himself not in
-gas-lit, soup-redolent, salle-à-manger, but among the dim, carved
-stalls, taper-lit altars, and incense-sweet air of the chapel.
-
-It was the one place which ever caused Peripatetica and Jane to think
-ungratefully of their villa. Whenever they wandered through either of
-the vine-draped old cloisters; looked up the delightfully twisted stone
-stairways, and along mysterious Gothic passages, they wished that they
-too might have had a “belonging” door in one of the arches of that quiet
-incense-perfumed corridor, such sense of unhurried calm reigned there;
-the frescoed saints over each cell door looked so peacefully benignant.
-
-“Jane,” queried Peripatetica, “do you notice that these Saints are all
-women?—a gentle lady saint over every Brother’s door! even where no
-living woman was allowed to penetrate they still clung to some memory of
-the Eternal Feminine!”
-
-Tea was seeming unusually good that afternoon after hours passed amid
-the excitements and wonderful finds and bargains of the beguiling
-antiquity shops of Taormina’s main street. Now, the pot drained to the
-last drop, the last crumb of bread and honey eaten, they sat tranquilly
-watching the shadows lengthen in the garden.
-
-“This is the only really peaceful spot in Taormina,” said Jane. “What a
-relief to escape from all that old overwhelming Past for once and just
-be soothingly lulled in this placid monkish calm. I know nothing ever
-happened here more exciting than the scandal of some fat Brother’s
-unduly prolonging his siesta in a sheltered nook, and so missing
-Vespers.”
-
-A boy appeared at her elbow; one of the little shy fauns of Von
-Gloëden’s photographs. He pulled a cactus leaf out of one pocket, a
-penknife out of another, and trimming off the cactus prickles tossed the
-leaf out into space in such deft way that in graceful curves and
-birdlike swoops it whirled slowly down to the far bottom of the cliff.
-Jane leaned over the gratefully substantial stone parapet and watched,
-fascinated, as he proceeded to send yet another and another after it in
-more elaborate curves each time. The boy’s shyness melted under her
-admiration of his trick and the coppers it was expressed in; he showed
-white teeth in much merriment when she too attempted to toss the green
-discs only to have them drop persistently without any whirling. He began
-to chatter.
-
-“Yes, it was very high that cliff, and of much interest to pitch things
-over and watch them fall. In the old days they had pitched men over
-it—yes indeed, prigionieri; many hundreds of them.”
-
-“Oh Peripatetica! black dramas even here! what can he mean?”
-
-“The insurgent slaves of the Servile War, perhaps. Their whole garrison
-was hurled alive over some cliff here—native tradition may have it this
-one.”
-
-Jane remembered. Eight hundred men thus treated by Publius Rupilius,
-Roman Consul in 132 B.C.
-
-The dark flood of old cruelty surged back to her. Sicily was a country
-of great landowners holding estates of eighty miles round and more;
-working them by slave labour; owning slaves in thousands. Twenty
-thousand slaves was not an exaggerated number for a great noble to own,
-two hundred a fair allowance for an ordinary citizen. Two-thirds of
-Sicily’s population were then slaves.
-
-Of course the human live-stock possessed in such indistinguishable
-hordes, like cattle, had to be branded with the owner’s mark. They did
-their work in irons, to be safely under their overseer’s power; were
-lodged in holes under ground; their daily rations but one pound of
-barley or wheat, and a little salt and oil. Against atrocious cruelties
-they revolt at last. All over Sicily they rise, two hundred thousand men
-soon finding arms and power to mete to masters the same cruelties that
-had been shown them. For six years all the might of Rome cannot crush
-them, but eventually her iron claw closes in upon them—only impregnable
-Enna and Taormina still remain in the hands of the slave army. It is a
-struggle to test all Rome’s mettle. These slaves too are of the eagle’s
-blood. Men free-born and bred, most of them; Greeks and Franks from the
-mainland, prisoners of war or of debt. Fiercely, indomitably, they cling
-to their rocky eyries. But in Taormina starvation fights direfully
-against them. There was not one grain, one blade of grass even, left.
-Still the garrison clings and strikes back at the Romans. They devour
-their own children, next the women, then at last eat one another—but
-still hold out.
-
-Commanus, the slave commander, weakens and tries to escape from the
-horrors. He creeps alone from the city, but is captured and brought
-before the Consul. He knows what methods will be tried to make him give
-information of the town’s condition—can his weakness hold out against
-torture? With apparent acquiescence he appears willing to answer all
-Roman questions, but bends his head and draws his cloak over it as if
-shielding his eyes to better collect his thoughts.... Under the cloak he
-grips his throat between his fingers and with the last remnant of once
-phenomenal physical strength crushes his own windpipe, and falls safely
-silent at the Consul’s feet.
-
-But the horrors of Taormina in that siege are too much for another
-slave—a Syrian. He betrays the town to the Romans ... and Publius
-disposes of all the remaining garrison over the edge of the cliff.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Shopping is an important part of a stay in Taormina. Surely no other
-street of its length anywhere in the world has so many beguilements to
-part the tourist from his coin. The dark little shops spilling their
-goods out upon the pavement; things so bizarre, so good, so cheap, the
-lire of the forestieri flow away in torrents. Beautiful inlaid
-furniture; lovely old jewelry of flawed rubies and emeralds set amid the
-famous antique Sicilian pearl-work and enamelling. Old Spanish paste in
-delightful designs; red Catanian amber, little Roman intaglios, delicate
-old cameos, enamelled orders; necklaces, rings, pendants; earrings in
-odd and charming settings; delightful old trinkets in richer assortment
-of variety and quality here than any other place in Italy. Old Sicilian
-thread lace, coarse but effective, in shawls and scarfs of many charming
-old designs; old altar lace too in great abundance; better laces, as one
-may have luck to find them, or to be on the spot when gleanings from
-churches and convents in the interior are brought in—bundles containing
-varied treasures, from brocades and embroideries and splendid lace of
-priestly vestments, to drawn-work altar cloths and the lace cottas
-little choirboys’ restless arms have worn sad holes in. Churchly silver
-too, reliquaries and ornaments and old medals, abound in Taormina for
-scarcely more than the value of the silver’s weight. Old coins dug up in
-its gardens, the old porcelains bought from its impoverished nobles; old
-drawn-work, on heavy hand-woven linen, still firmly carrying its
-processions of marvellous beasts and birds and personages in wide
-lace-like bands. Beasts conceived by the same imagination that evolved
-the gargoyles of Gothic cathedrals, such wonderful mixtures of animal
-and bird and human as Adam never named in Garden of Eden. These horned
-birds and winged animals processioning around churchly altar cloths are
-old, old pagan Siculian luck charms—protectors against the evil eye.
-Peripatetica and Jane instantly proceeded to combat their Hoodoo with
-valiant processions of fat little many-horned stags romping around
-throat and wrist—and of all the many exorcisms they had tried this truly
-seemed the most effective!
-
-Taormina’s naïve native pottery, too, drapes the outside walls of shops
-and doorways in bright garlands of strange shapes of fishes and fruits
-and beasts, is stacked in shining heaps of colour, jugs and pots and
-platters of every possible form and design. Some of it reminiscent of
-Sevillian pottery in elaborate Renaissance decoration, but for the most
-part rough little shapes of clay, covered with hard bright glaze and no
-two ever exactly alike in either shape or tint. The favourite model
-being a gay Sicilian Lady Godiva, riding either a stag or a cock,
-attired proudly in a crown and a floating blue ribbon!
-
-Day after day, all through March, the sun moped behind clouds, the wind
-lashed the sea against the rocks, and milky foam bands streaked the
-turbid green. Rain beat on the Villa windows, and even through them, to
-the great amusement of Maria, who appeared to consider mopping up the
-streaming floors a merry contest with the elements.
-
-But when the rare sun burst out and revealed a fresh-washed sky, a land
-shimmering through thinnest gauze of mist, or the moon could escape from
-the clouds and rise behind the theatre ruins to hang, hugely bright over
-the gleaming sea floor so far, far below, it seemed a fair world all
-prepared to greet its radiant returning goddess.
-
-On such days no shop could beguile. Even the old dames weaving towels on
-hand looms by their open doors, always so ready for friendly chat with
-these forestieri, would be passed with only a smile, for the breath of
-the fields called loudly to hillside and orchard, “where all fair herbs
-bloom, red goat-wort and endive, and fragrant bees-wort”; the only sound
-breaking the sunny calm being the notes of a shepherd boy on a
-neighbouring hill, piping as if his reed flute held the very spirit of
-youth, the bubbling notes sparkling like a little fountain of joy
-flinging its spray on the spring breeze. Or on a day like this to wander
-far afield; or else in the high hillside orchards where the birds sang
-“Sicily! Sicily! Sicily!” or called mockingly “Who are you? Who are
-you?”
-
-On such a day they adventured to Mola and the heights of Monte Venere’s
-peak in the company of those brave _asinelli_ Giovanino and Francesco,
-and in the charge of Domenico, Sheik of guides, whose particular
-exploitation they had long ago become.
-
-Loafing in the fountain square, watching the women filling jars at the
-fountain, and speculating as usual over the history of its presiding
-deity (who as St. Taypotem is the local genius and emblem of the town, a
-saint utterly unknown to churchly calendar)—a lady centaur, and a
-two-legged one at that, uprearing her plump person on two neat little
-hoofed heels raised high above the four archaic beasts spouting
-water—Peripatetica and Jane fell a prey to a genial Arab, a beguiling
-smile wrinkling his dark hawk-like face. Wouldn’t they like a donkey
-ride? The best donkeys in all Sicily were his—Domenico’s—guide No. 5,
-beloved of all tourists, as they could see by reading his book. A dingy
-little worn note-book was fluttered under their noses, an eager brown
-finger pointed to this and that page of English writing, all singing the
-praises of Domenico and his beasts on many an expedition. More
-influenced by the smile than the testimonials they promised that he
-should conduct them to Mola. From that instant Domenico’s wing was
-spread over them in brooding solicitude. Yes, the weather was too
-threatening to ride out anywhere that afternoon, but did they know all
-the sights of the town? he inquired. Had they seen the Bagni Saraceni?
-No, they admitted. Oh, that was _molto interessante_ and close at hand;
-he would show them! Hypnotized by the smile they followed meekly, though
-the Bagni turned out to be the Norman Moorish ruins of the San Stefano
-Palace with which they were already familiar. But not as it was shown by
-Domenico. The surly old contadina in charge, bullied into offering the
-choicest of the oranges and flowers growing among the ruins, the smile
-gilding all the dark corners of antiquity and lighting up the vaulted
-cellar in which by graphic pantomime of jumps into its biggest holes
-they were shown exactly how the Saracens had once bathed, much as more
-modern folk did, it seemed.
-
-After that days came and went of such greyness and cold wind or rain,
-that Domenico and his donkeys attended in vain at the pink gateway to
-take Peripatetica and Jane excursioning. But not for that did they lose
-the sunniness of the smile. Like a benevolent spider, Domenico was to be
-always lying in wait to pounce around any corner with friendly greeting,
-to give them the news of the town in his patois of mixed Italian,
-English, and pantomime; to suggest carrying home their bundles for them
-if they were on a shopping tour, to point out an antiquity or garden to
-inspect if they seemed planless, or a lift home on the painted cart
-whose driver he had been enlivening with merry quips, when met on the
-high road outside town. And once, oh blessed time, when he encountered
-Jane at the Catania gate, her tongue hanging out with thirst and fatigue
-after a long mountain climb, he haled her straightway into a friend’s
-garden to refresh herself with juicy oranges from the trees.
-
-Finally the long waited-for day came, when not a cloud threatened and
-the mountains beckoned through crystalline, sunny air. So Francesco and
-Giovanino laden with Peripatetica and Jane, Domenico and a brown young
-hawkling of the Domenican brood laden with lunch, they climbed upwards.
-Ætna stood out in glistening, freshly renewed snow mantle, icy sharp
-against the most perfect of blue skies. Taormina dropped far below, a
-tiny huddled human nest of brown among the green, green hilltops. Mola,
-which for so long had loomed far over their heads on its beetling crags,
-now too sank below. The pink mountain villa where Hichens had written
-“The Call of the Blood,” the vineyards and the orchards, all dropped
-away. Only Ætna, high and white, soared against the sky, remote and
-inaccessible. The trail grew steeper and steeper, but Francesco and
-Giovanino, noble pair, with unbroken wind and gloomy energy picked their
-way unfalteringly among the rolling stones, and both Domenicos, like
-two-legged flies, seemed to take to the perpendicular as easily as the
-horizontal.
-
-Francesco, tall and grey and of a loquacious turn of mind, made all the
-mountains echo to his voice whenever a fellow _asinello_ was encountered
-on the trail. Giovanino, small and brown, attended strictly to the
-business of finding secure places for his tiny hoofs among the stones,
-but developed two idiosyncrasies rather dismaying to his rider. Whenever
-the path led along a precipice’s edge, on the very outside edge of it
-would his four obstinate little feet go, with Jane’s feet dangling
-horribly over empty space; whenever it skirted a stone wall his furry
-sides insisted upon rubbing it clingingly, sternly regardless of his
-rider’s toes. The path ceased being a path. It became a stairway
-climbing up the mountains’ bare marble side in rough stone steps a foot
-or more in height.
-
-“But we can’t ride up _that_!” cries the appalled Peripatetica in the
-lead. In vain Domenico assures her that she can, that people do it every
-day. She looks at its dizzy turns and insists on taking to her own feet.
-Jane, having acquired a reverential confidence in Giovanino’s powers
-after their mutual tussles, puts more faith in his head and knees than
-in her own, and goes on, clutchingly. Young Domenico, hanging like a
-balance weight to Giovanino’s tail, keeps up a chorus of “Ah-ees” and
-assurances that the Signorina need have no fear, he is there to guide
-her! In reality he knows that his small person could no more interfere
-with the orbit of Giovanino’s movements than with those of the planets,
-but also that there is no more need that he should—Giovanino’s grey head
-holds a perfect chart of the way, with the safest hoof-placings plainly
-marked out on it, and he follows it imperturbably.
-
-Travellers to Monte Venere do not know much of what they are passing the
-last forty minutes. They are too busy wondering whether each minute will
-not be their last—on those daunting stairs of living rock and rolling
-stones. Breathless, dizzy, speechless, they at last realize a firm level
-terrace is under foot, and reel against the comforting solid walls of
-the little _tratoria_. The donkeys are quite unruffled and unheated,
-less dejected than when they started. The young Domenico, who has pulled
-himself on shuffling small bare feet thrust in his father’s heavy boots
-all up that mountain wall, is as unflushed of face, unshortened of
-breath, as if he had come on wings! Old Domenico, escorting an exhausted
-Peripatetica, is bubbling faster than ever with vehement chatter. He
-cannot understand why his charges insist on rest, on holding fast to the
-solid house. It fills him with surprised distress that they will not go
-on to the top. “The view over all Sicily awaits them there, and it is
-such a clear day. Corragio! only one-half hour more!”...
-
-But Peripatetica and Jane plant their feet on that little level platform
-with more than donkey obstinacy—with reeling heads they look out into
-the great blue gulfs of air and over the green ripples of mountain tops.
-This is high enough for them, they pant, feeling like quivering
-earth-worms clinging to the top of a telegraph pole and invited to go
-out along the wires. Shivering in the wind which, in spite of sun, is
-icy keen at this height, they proceed to eat their cold lunch; the
-tratoria offering only tables and crockery, wine, goat’s milk, and
-coffee to its patrons. Between two infants of the house begging for
-tidbits, three skeleton dogs so long unacquainted with food they
-snatched greedily even at egg shells, a starved cat, and the two
-Domenicos, who, it seems, also expect to lunch on their leavings,
-Peripatetica and Jane have themselves no heart to eat. Wishing they had
-brought another _asinello_ laden only with food, that all the
-inhabitants of this hungry height might for once be filled, they divide
-their own meal as evenly as possible among all its aspirants and try to
-sustain themselves on the view. Peripatetica looked on the far expanse
-of hills and sea below, sourly asserting her fixed lowlander’s
-conviction that mountains are only beautiful looked up to, and that a
-bird’s-eye-view is no view. But when a comforting concoction of hot
-goat’s milk and something called coffee had been swallowed, and numbed
-fingers thawed out over the tiny fire of grapevine prunings in the
-tratoria kitchen, they succumbed to Domenico’s insistence about the view
-it is their duty to see, and climbed higher.
-
-The crest of Monte Venere is a green knoll rising above rock walls.
-Around and below it enough mountains to fill a whole world roll
-confusedly on every side. They felt more than ever like earth-worms too
-far removed from friendly earth, and stayed only to listen to the
-pipings of a curly-headed goatherd flinging trills out into space; while
-Domenico, pained at their indifference to his vaunted coup d’état of
-“bella vistas,” but benevolent still, clambered about like a goat
-himself, gathering for them the “mountain violets” as he called the
-delicate mauve flowers starring the sod.
-
-So soon they were back at the tratoria that Francesco and Giovanino had
-not half chewed their little handfuls of hay, and young Domenico’s red
-tongue was still delightedly polishing off the interior of their tin of
-potted chicken, while the lean dogs watched enviously, waiting for their
-chance at this queer bone. Another personage was lunching luxuriously,
-stretched at his ease on the steep hillside, a large sleek white goat,
-munching solemnly at grass and blossom, wagging his beard and rolling
-watery pink-rimmed eyes with such evangelical air of pious complacence
-Peripatetica and Jane instantly recognized him as an incarnation of a
-New England country deacon, and sat down respectfully to pass the time
-of day with him.
-
-Going down even Jane takes to her own feet. Slipping, sliding, jumping,
-the worst is somehow past with bones still unbroken. The mountainside is
-yet like the wall of a house, but Domenico, with more cries of
-“corragio,” and proverbs as to those who “Va piano, va sano,” urges them
-to mount, and Jane, quite confident that four legs have more clinging
-power than two, is glad to lie back along Giovanino’s tail while he
-balances himself on his nose, with young Domenico serving as a brake on
-his tail, and so slides and hitches calmly down hill.
-
-Mola is a climb again, the narrow path twisting up the one accessible
-ledge to its sharp peak. One wonders why human beings ever first climbed
-there to build, and even more why they still live in its cramped
-buildings, and with what toil they can find ways to squeeze daily bread
-out of the bleak rocks. Yet before the first Greek colonists landed at
-Naxos, Mola was already a town. It looked down on infant Taormina when
-the Naxos refugees fled to its heights. It loomed above, still Siculian
-and intact, on its bare unassailable crags, through all the squabbles
-and screamings below of the different eagle broods taking possession of
-Taormina’s nest. The conqueror who tried to take Mola had usually only
-his trouble for his pains. Even Dionysius, with all Sicily clutched in
-his cruel hand, failed in his snatch at Mola. His attempt to steal into
-it by surprise one dark winter’s night ended in an ignominious,
-breakneck, hurling repulse of tyrant and all his victory-wonted
-veterans. And Mola still lives to-day. All its huddled houses seem to be
-inhabited, though only bent old men, palsied crones, black pigs, and
-babies are to be met with in its steep narrow alleys. Domenico said
-scornfully that there was nothing to be seen in it, but led the way to
-the tiny town-square terrace beside the church, and had a brown finger
-ready to emphasize all points of interest in the spread of country and
-sea stretching below its parapet. Once Mola had a sister town, he told,
-on another crag across the valley; but Ætna opened a sudden mouth and
-lava rivers pouring down to the sea flowed over it and swallowed it
-completely. Whether this is actual history or Domenican invention
-remains in doubt. No other historian mentions the lost town. But then,
-as Domenico said, there is Ætna, and there the lava mound still black
-and ugly, as proof!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Again it rained, and Ætna sulked behind a cloudy mantle. Vesuvius worked
-all day long, yet fur coats were a necessary house dress. The poor Demon
-took the influenza and coughed, and shivered in spite of her hot
-energies; turned livid yellow and feverish, and had to be sent to a
-doctor. Scarcely able to hold her head up, but protesting to the end,
-she gave in to going home to bed and staying there. But first she
-reappeared, pale but proud, with a fashionably dressed young lady of
-fourteen, her _figlia_ Adalina, to whom she had shown and told
-everything, and who could do all the ladies’ service quite as well as
-herself.
-
-Adalina was very high as to pompadour and equally high as to the French
-heels on the tight boots which finished off the plump legs emerging from
-her smart kilted skirt—but height of intelligence was not in her; none
-of her mother’s quickness and energy seemed to have passed into the head
-under the high rolling thatch of hair. Feet were Adalina’s strong point,
-and she knew it. There was probably not another such grand pair of real
-French boots as hers in all Taormina! So her life consisted in showing
-them off. She arranged Peripatetica’s and Jane’s belongings, and brushed
-their clothes, as Mother had shown her, but with pirouettings and side
-steps—one, two, three, all the best dancing positions—between every
-touch of brush or laying out of garment. It absorbed so much time to
-keep her feet arranged in the most perfect placings to exhibit pointed
-toes that very little else could be expected of her in the course of the
-day. She opened her mouth wide at Peripatetica’s and Jane’s broken
-babblings, but no sense from them ever penetrated her intelligence.
-Maria had to be called to interpret everything, and usually to do it
-too. A charm seemed to have departed from the villa with no Demon to
-keep them comfortable and uncomfortable at once.
-
-“Why should we wait and shiver here any longer?” asked Peripatetica.
-“Persephone is surely coming first on the other side of Ætna.”
-
-“Why should we? Let us start on,” said Jane.
-
-Domenica returned to them, a pale yellow Demon, but bustling as ever,
-too late to affect their decision. Trunks were packed, towering
-packing-cases stuffed with their Taormina acquisitions. Fraulein’s last
-wonderful pudding eaten, Ætna seen looming vapory white above the
-terrace for the last time, Old Nina had carried down through the garden
-from the well, in a Greek jar on her grey head, the water for their last
-tub, Maria had peeped her last “Questo,” Frau Schuler and her polite
-son, the Fraulein, Maria, and Carola, had all presented fragrant
-nosegays, Adalina, too, with pompadour more aggressive than ever,
-appeared to offer them violets and hint a receptivity to a parting
-douceur herself. Every one was bidding them regretful farewells.
-Touched, and themselves regretful to leave so much kindness and charm,
-with melting heart the last goodby of all was said to Domenica, and her
-wages for the last two weeks pressed into her palm.
-
-“You have served us so well, we have made no deduction for the days you
-were first ill, and we had no one; nor for the days when we had your
-little girl instead,” said Jane.
-
-Oh! had Ætna burst into eruption? The whole smiling morning landscape
-was darkened by the wild black figure pouring down shrill volleys of
-wrathful Italian on their devoted heads. This Fury threatening with
-flashing eyes and wild gesture was their gentle Domenica—now a demon
-indeed!
-
-They shrank aghast unable to catch a word in the rapid torrent.
-
-“What _is_ the matter?” they cried to Frau Schuler.
-
-With Teuton phlegm she dropped a word into the flood.
-
-“You have not paid her for the hour she has been here this morning.”
-
-“No, because we have paid her just the same for the days on which we had
-no one and the ten days on which we had only that stupid child—and have
-given the precious Adalina a _mancia_ too. But good gracious, we will
-pay her more if she feels that way!”
-
-“Indeed, you must not!” said the Frau briskly. “It is an abominable
-imposition. She has been much overpaid now, that is the trouble, she
-thinks you easy game. Listen, my woman, and shame yourself,” she turned
-to Domenica, “you disgrace your town to these good Signorine, who have
-acted so generously to you!”
-
-The raging demon looked into her calm face and at the two astounded
-American ones, and the storm quieted as quickly as it had come ... in an
-instant’s metamorphosis she was again the amiable little person of all
-the weeks of service, saying:
-
-“Many, many thanks to the ladies, and a pleasant journey, and might they
-come back again soon to Taormina!”
-
-She snatched Peripatetica’s coat away from Maria, and Jane’s kodak from
-out her hand, and bore them off to the carriage with all her usual
-assiduous energy.
-
-One last pat to the puppy, graduated this very morning to real collar
-and chain attaching him to new huge kennel, the warring friendliness of
-his heart and the conscientious effort to live up to his
-responsibilities struggling more pathetically than ever in his grey
-eyes, and they passed up the pergola for the last time, and out of the
-pink gate to continue their quest.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [Illustration: Decoration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- ONE DEAD IN THE FIELDS
-
-
- “Where he fell there he lay down and died.”
-
-SIR JOHN LUBBOCK tells a story—and this story teaches an obvious
-lesson—of certain red warrior ants, who capture black fellow pismires,
-and hold them as slaves; an outrage which must certainly shock all true
-pismitarian ants. The captors become in time so dependent upon their
-negro servants that, when deprived of their attendants, they are unable
-to feed or clean themselves, and lie helplessly upon their backs, feebly
-waving their paws in the air!...
-
-Peripatetica, having but recently suffered the loss of a maiden slave of
-a dozen years’ standing, had suffered a like moral disintegration, and
-she violently lost her taste for travel whenever it became necessary to
-move from one place to another, attempting to deal with her packing by a
-mere series of helpless paw-wavings, most picturesque to observe, but
-which for all practical purposes were highly inefficient. So when she
-and Jane dropped down and down the zigzags to Giardini—each of those
-famous views self-consciously presenting itself in turn for the last
-time—the light figure which hurled itself boldly down the steeps by a
-short cut, springing along the daring descent with the sure-footed
-confidence of a goat, proved to be not a wing-heeled Mercury conveying
-an affectionate message from the gods, but merely a boy from the villa
-fetching Peripatetica’s left-behind nail brush, hot-water bottle, and
-umbrella....
-
-From Giardini a spacious plain curves all the way to Syracuse. This
-broken level is built upon a foundation of inky lava cast out from
-Hephæstos’ forge in Ætna, in whose wrinkled crevices of black and broken
-stone has been caught and held all the stored richness of the denuded
-mountains so long ago stripped of trees; and in this plain grain and
-flowers and trees innumerable find food and footing. Peripatetica, bred
-in deep-soiled, fertile fields with wide horizons, drew, as they passed
-into the open vistas, deep breaths of refreshment and joy. The fierce,
-soaring aridity of Taormina had oppressed her with a restless sense of
-imprisonment. Her elbows were as passionate lovers of liberty as the
-Spartans, and she demanded proper space in which to move them. What she
-called a view was a _view_, not merely more mountains climbing, blind
-and obstinate, between the eye and the landscape. Being, too, of a race
-always worshippers of Demeter—a race which had spent generations in her
-service, which considered the cultivation of the soil the only possible
-occupation of a gentleman, and all other businesses the mere wretched
-astonishing fate of the unfortunate—she rejoiced loudly and fatiguingly
-over the blessedness of a return to a sweet land of farms.
-
-“I don’t call that Taormina window-box-gardening on tiny stone ledges a
-thousand feet up in the air _farming_,” she scoffed.
-
-“If your tongue was a spade what crops you would raise!” sniffed Jane.
-
-“Well, I raise big harvests of diversion in my own spirit,” retorted the
-unsuppressed chatterer. “Besides, it’s now my turn to talk. You have
-done a lot of elaborate speechifying about Taormina. I made you a
-present of the whole jaggèd, attitudinizing old place, and for the
-moment I mean to flow unchecked! You needn’t listen if you don’t like. I
-enjoy hearing myself speak, whether anyone pays the smallest attention
-or not.”
-
-Which was why, while Jane settled down comfortably to a copy of
-Theocritus, Peripatetica continued to entertain her own soul with spoken
-and unspoken comments as to a certain restful letting down of tension
-which resulted from sliding away from the dazzling, lofty Olympianism of
-Taormina into a region Cyclopean, perhaps, but with a dawning suggestion
-of coming humanity. For here, in this plain, succeeding those bright
-presences that were the elementary forces of nature—forces of the earth
-and sea and sun, of fire and dew, of thunder, wind, and rain, of the
-shining day, and the night with its changing moon—first came the
-primitive earth-spirits, rude and rugged, or delicate and vapourous.
-Creatures not gods—no longer immutable and immortal, but stronger,
-older, greater than man, who was yet to come. Creatures partaking
-somewhat of the nature of both gods and men, but subject to
-transformation into stream and fountain, into tree and flower; very near
-to the earth, yet swayed by human passions, by human sorrows and joys.
-
-This plain was the home of nymph and oread, of dryad and faun. Here had
-the Cyclops and the Titans wrought—first of the great race of Armourers
-and Smiths—under the tutelage of Vulcan, shaping the beams of the
-heavens, and the ribs of the earth; arming the gods and forging the
-lightning.
-
-Ulysses, the earliest of impassioned tourists, had had dealings on this
-very spot with the last of the Cyclops. A degenerate scion of the great
-old race, as the last of a great race is apt to be, Polyphemus had sunk
-to the mere keeping of sheep, and according to Ulysses’ own story he got
-the better of Polyphemus, and related, upon returning home, the triumph
-of his superior cunning, with the same naïve relish with which the
-modern Cookie retails his supposed outwitting of the native curio
-dealer. Very near to the train, as it ran by the sea’s edge, lay the
-huge fragments of lava which the blinded Cyclop had cast in futile rage
-after the escaping Greeks. He was a great stone-thrower, was Polyphemus,
-for further along the coast lay the boulders he had flung at Acis, the
-beautiful young shepherd. Polyphemus having still an eye in those days,
-his aim was truer, and the shepherd was killed, but who may baffle true
-love? The dead boy melted away beneath the stones and was transformed to
-the bright and racing river Acis (which they crossed just then), and the
-river, flowing round the stones, runs still across the plain to fling
-itself into the arms of the sea-nymph Galatea. So the two still meet as
-of old, and play laughingly together in and out among the huge rocks,
-which certainly might have been flung there by Ætna in one of her
-volcanic furies, but which, if one may believe the Greek story, were
-really the gigantic weapons of a cruel jealousy.
-
-Jane and Peripatetica could put their heads out of the windows and study
-history and legend at their ease, the train ambling amiably and not too
-rapidly through the lovely land, where the near return of Persephone was
-foreshadowed in the delicate rosy clouds of the Judas trees drifting
-across the black green of dense carobs. It was foretold, too, by the
-broad yellow mustard fields blooming under the shadow of silver-grey
-olive orchards; Fields-of-the-Cloth-of-Gold they were, about which
-Spring was pitching white tents of plum flowers in which to sign royal
-alliance with Summer. They saw old Sicilian farm-steadings here and
-there crowning the rising ground on either hand, freaked and lichened
-with years, and showing among their spiring cypresses the square towers
-to which the inhabitants had fled for safety in the old days of
-Levantine piracy. Many of these houses were very old, six or eight
-hundred years old, it was said. Orange and lemon groves on either side
-the way still hung heavy with fruit, plainly feeling it a duty laid upon
-them to look like the trees in Benozzo Gozzoli’s frescoes; like the
-trees of all the Old Masters’ backgrounds. Invariably being round, close
-clumps of green set thick with golden balls, quite unlike the orange
-trees in America, which have never had proper decorative and artistic
-models set for their copying, and therefore grow carelessly and less
-beautifully.
-
-As far as the eye could reach the whole land was furred with the tender
-green of sprouting corn. For this was once Europe’s granary, and the
-place of Rome’s bread; here Demeter first taught man to sow and reap,
-and despite Ætna’s fires, despite the destruction and ravaging of a
-thousand wars, and thousands of years of careless unrestorative use of
-the soil, corn still grows on this plain, so hard, so perfect, and so
-nourishing of grain that no Sicilian can afford to eat it, selling his
-own crop to macaroni manufacturers, and contenting himself with a poorer
-imported wheat for his dark daily bread.
-
-In these rich meadows, too, replacing the frigid little
-Evangelical-looking goat of Taormina, browsed fat flocks in snowy silken
-fleeces, and with long wavy horns. Flocks that were tended by shepherds
-draped in faded blue or brown hooded cloaks, wearing sheep’s wool bound
-about their cross-gartered legs, their feet shod with hairy goat-skin
-shoes. They leaned in contemplative attitudes on long staves—as every
-right-minded shepherd should—so old a picture, so unchanged from
-far-off, pastoral days! Just so had they shown themselves to Theocritus,
-when that sweet young singer of the early time had wandered here among
-the herdsmen, the fishers, and the delvers in the good brown earth, in
-the days when the Greeks still lived and ruled here, so long and long
-ago.
-
-“I wish they would pipe,” said Peripatetica. “It only needs to complete
-the picture that innocent sweet trilling of the shepherd’s reed that is
-like the voices of the birds and of the cicalas.”
-
-“Oh, they daren’t do it here in high noon,” remonstrated Jane. “For fear
-of Pan, you know.” And she turned back the pages of her little book to
-read aloud the sweetest and perfectest of the Idyls....
-
-THYRSIS. Sweet, meseems, is the whispering sound of yonder pine tree,
-goatherd, that murmureth by the wells of water; and sweet are thy
-pipings. After Pan the second prize shalt thou bear away, and if he take
-the horned goat, the she-goat shalt thou win; but if he choose the
-she-goat for his meed, the kid falls to thee, and dainty is the flesh of
-kids ere the age when thou milkest them.
-
-THE GOATHERD. Sweeter, O shepherd, is thy song than the music of yonder
-water that is poured from the high face of the rock! Yea, if the Muses
-take the young ewe for their gift, a stall-fed lamb shalt thou receive
-for thy meed; but if it please them to take the lamb, thou shalt lead
-away the ewe for the second prize.
-
-THYRSIS. Wilt thou, goatherd, in the nymphs’ name, wilt thou sit thee
-down here, among the tamarisks, on this sloping knoll, and pipe while in
-this place I watch thy flocks?
-
-[Illustration: “PAN’S GOAT HERD”]
-
-GOATHERD. Nay, shepherd, it may not be; we may not pipe in the noontide.
-’Tis Pan we dread, who truly at this hour rests weary from the chase;
-and bitter of mood is he, the keen wrath sitting ever at his nostrils.
-But, Thyrsis, for that thou surely wert wont to sing _The Affliction of
-Daphnis_, and hast most deeply meditated the pastoral muse, come hither,
-and beneath yonder elm let us sit down, in face of Priapus and the
-fountain fairies, where is that resting-place of the shepherds, and
-where the oak trees are. Ah! if thou wilt but sing as on that day thou
-sangest in thy match with Chromis out of Libya, I will let thee milk,
-ay, three times, a goat that is the mother of twins, and even when she
-has suckled her kids her milk doth fill two pails. A deep bowl of
-ivy-wood, too, I will give thee, rubbed with sweet bees’-wax, a
-two-eared bowl newly wrought, smacking still of the knife of the graver.
-Round its upper edges goes the ivy winding, ivy besprent with golden
-flowers; and about it is a tendril twisted that joys in its saffron
-fruit. Within is designed a maiden, as fair a thing as the gods could
-fashion, arrayed in a sweeping robe, and a snood on her head. Beside her
-two youths with fair love-locks are contending from either side, with
-alternate speech, but her heart thereby is all untouched. And now on one
-she glances, smiling, and anon she lightly flings the other a thought,
-while by reason of the long vigils of love their eyes are heavy, but
-their labour is all in vain.
-
-Beyond these an ancient fisherman and a rock are fashioned, a rugged
-rock, whereon with might and main the old man drags a great net for his
-cast, as one that labours stoutly. Thou wouldst say that he is fishing
-with all the might of his limbs, so big the sinews swell all about his
-neck, grey-haired though he be, but his strength is as the strength of
-youth. Now divided but a little space from the sea-worn old man is a
-vineyard laden well with fire-red clusters, and on the rough wall a
-little lad watches the vineyard, sitting there. Round him two she-foxes
-are skulking, and one goes along the vine-rows to devour the ripe
-grapes, and the other brings all her cunning to bear against the scrip,
-and vows she will never leave the lad, till she strand him bare and
-breakfastless. But the boy is plaiting a pretty locust-cage with stalks
-of asphodel, and fitting it with reeds, and less care of his scrip has
-he, and of the vines, than delight in his plaiting.
-
-All about the cup is spread the soft acanthus, a miracle of varied work,
-a thing for thee to marvel on. For this bowl I paid to a Calydonian
-ferryman a goat and a great white cream cheese. Never has its lip
-touched mine, but it still lies maiden for me. Gladly with this cup
-would I gain thee to my desire, if thou, my friend, wilt sing me that
-delightful song. Nay, I grudge it thee not at all. Begin, my friend, for
-be sure thou canst in no wise carry thy song with thee to Hades, that
-puts all things out of mind!
-
- _The Song of Thyrsis._
-
-_Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_ Thyrsis of Ætna am I,
-and this is the voice of Thyrsis. Where, ah! where were ye when Daphnis
-was languishing; ye Nymphs, where were ye? By Peneus’ beautiful dells,
-or by dells of Pindus? for surely ye dwelt not by the great stream of
-the river Anapus, nor on the watch-tower of Ætna, nor by the sacred
-water of Acis.
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-For him the jackals, for him the wolves did cry; for him did even the
-lion out of the forest lament. Kine and bulls by his feet right many,
-and heifers plenty, with the young calves bewailed him.
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-Came Hermes first from the hill, and said, “Daphnis, who is it that
-torments thee; child, whom dost thou love with so great desire?” The
-neatherds came, and the shepherds; the goatherds came; all they asked
-what ailed him. Came also Priapus,—
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-And said: “Unhappy Daphnis, wherefore dost thou languish, while for thee
-the maiden by all the fountains, through all the glades is fleeting, in
-search of thee? Ah! thou art too laggard a lover, and thou nothing
-availest! A neatherd wert thou named, and now thou art like the
-goatherd.”
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-“For the goatherd, when he marks the young goats at their pastime, looks
-on with yearning eyes, and fain would be even as they; and thou, when
-thou beholdest the laughter of maidens, dost gaze with yearning eyes,
-for that thou dost not join their dances.”
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-Yet these the herdsman answered not again, but he bare his bitter love
-to the end, yea, to the fated end he bare it.
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-Ay, but she too came, the sweetly smiling Cypris, craftily smiling she
-came, yet keeping her heavy anger; and she spake, saying: “Daphnis,
-methinks thou didst boast that thou wouldst throw Love a fall, nay, is
-it not thyself that hast been thrown by grievous Love?”
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-But to her Daphnis answered again: “Implacable Cypris, Cypris terrible,
-Cypris of mortals detested, already dost thou deem that my latest sun
-has set; nay, Daphnis even in Hades shall prove great sorrow to Love.
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-“Get thee to Ida, get thee to Anchises! There are oak trees—here only
-galingale blows, here sweetly hum the bees about the hives!
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-“Thine Adonis, too, is in his bloom, for he heards the sheep and slays
-the hares, and he chases all the wild beasts. Nay, go and confront
-Diomedes again, and say, ‘The herdsman Daphnis I conquered, do thou join
-battle with me.’”
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-“Ye wolves, ye jackals, and ye bears in the mountain caves, farewell!
-The herdsman Daphnis ye never shall see again, no more in the dells, no
-more in the groves, no more in the woodlands. Farewell Arethusa, ye
-rivers good-night, that pour down Thymbris your beautiful waters.
-
- _Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!_
-
-“That Daphnis am I who here do herd the kine, Daphnis who water here the
-bulls and calves.
-
-“O Pan, Pan! whether thou art on the high hills of Lycæus, or rangest
-mighty Mænalus, haste hither to the Sicilian isle! Leave the tomb of
-Helice, leave that high cairn of the son of Lycæon, which seems wondrous
-fair, even in the eyes of the blessed.
-
- _Give o’er, ye Muses, come, give o’er the pastoral song!_
-
-“Come hither, my prince, and take this fair pipe, honey-breathed with
-wax-stopped joints; and well it fits thy lip; for verily I, even I, by
-Love am now haled to Hades.
-
- _Give o’er, ye Muses, come, give o’er the pastoral song!_
-
-“Now violets bear, ye brambles, ye thorns bear violets and let fair
-narcissus bloom on the boughs of juniper! Let all things with all be
-confounded—from pines let men gather pears, for Daphnis is dying! Let
-the stag drag down the hounds, let owls from the hills contend in song
-with the nightingales.”
-
- _Give o’er, ye Muses, come, give o’er the pastoral song!_
-
-So Daphnis spake, and ended; but fain would Aphrodite have given him
-back to life. Nay, spun was all the thread that the Fates assigned, and
-Daphnis went down the stream. The whirling wave closed over the man the
-Muses loved, the man not hated of the nymphs.
-
- _Give o’er, ye Muses, come, give o’er the pastoral song!_
-
-And thou, give me the bowl, and the she-goat, that I may milk her and
-pour forth a libation to the Muses. Farewell, oh, farewells manifold, ye
-Muses, and I, some future day, will sing you yet a sweeter song.
-
-_The Goatherd._ Filled may thy fair mouth be with honey, Thyrsis, and
-filled with the honeycomb; and the sweet dried fig mayest thou eat of
-Ægilus, for thou vanquishest the cicala in song! Lo, here is thy cup,
-see, my friend, of how pleasant a savour! Thou wilt think it has been
-dipped in the well-spring of the Hours. Hither, hither, Cissætha: do
-thou milk her, Thyrsis. And you young she-goats, wanton not so wildly
-lest you bring up the he-goat against you.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“What a crowded place Sicily is!” cried Jane, heaving an oppressed
-breath.
-
-“Isn’t it?” sympathized Peripatetica. “Here we are on our way to the
-very fountain, as it seems, of history—Syracuse, where nearly everything
-happened that ever did happen, and yet one has to mentally push one’s
-way through a swarming crowd of events to get there, because almost
-everything that didn’t happen in Syracuse occurred in these Sicilian
-plains. When you think of the layer on layer of human life, like
-geologic strata, that lies all over this place, you realize that it
-would take half a lifetime to come to some understanding of the
-significance of it all, and that it’s foolish to go on until one can get
-some hold upon the meaning of what lies right here.”
-
-This “simple but first-class conversation” took place in the
-eating-station at Catania which the two had all to themselves, most of
-the Tedeschi tourists frugally remaining in the train and staying their
-pangs from bottles, and with odds and ends out of paper parcels, from
-which feasts they emerged later replete but crumby.
-
-Poor Catania! sunk to a mere feeding-trough for passing tourists. She,
-the great city sitting blandly among her temples and towers, wooed for
-her money bags by all the warlike neighbours. For whenever her
-neighbours squabbled with one another, which was pretty nearly all the
-time—or whenever an outsider intervened—each strove to engage the aid of
-this rich landholder, sending embassies and emissaries to bully or
-cajole Catania. As rich folk will, she always tried to protect herself
-by taking neither side completely, speaking fair to each, and, like all
-Laodiceans, she made thereby two enemies instead of one, and was
-considered fair prey by both.
-
-That splendid, dangerous dandy, Alcibiades, was one of these
-ambassadors. Almost under the feet of Jane and Peripatetica, as they sat
-with their mouths full of crisp delectable little tarts, had the wily
-Athenian spoken in the Catanian theatre. The older men enjoyed his
-eloquent, graceful Greek, but they were quite determined not to be
-persuaded by it to let his fleet enter their harbour, his army enter
-their city, or to be used as a base from which to strike the
-Syracusians. The Catanians didn’t like Syracuse, but they didn’t mean to
-embroil themselves with her. They secretly hoped the Athenians would
-reduce that dangerous neighbour to despair, but if either destroyed the
-other—why, then it would be well to be able to show the victor their
-clean hands.
-
-Alcibiades was quite aware he was not convincing them, but he enjoyed
-turning brilliant periods in public, and was meanwhile pleasantly
-conscious of the young men in the audience admiring the chasing of his
-buckles, the artful folds of his gold-embroidered chalmyde, the
-exquisite angle at which he knotted his fillet, privately resolving to
-readjust their own provincial toilets by the model of this famous glass
-of fashion. And when they all poured out of the theatre after his
-brilliantly preferred request had been politely refused, he could afford
-to smile calmly, for, behold! there was the Athenian fleet in the
-harbour, the Athenian army in the city. He had not been using those
-well-turned phrases for mere idleness. They had availed to keep the
-authorities occupied while his subordinates had executed his commands.
-
-And their caution was of no avail whatever, for in due time, when
-Alcibiades was in exile and the Athenians rotting in the Latomiæ,
-Syracuse duly turned and “took it out of” Catania. Took it out good and
-hard too.
-
-There was no use stopping over a train to see the old theatre and
-realize for themselves this curious bit of history; it only meant
-crawling through black passages by the light of a smoky candle, for Ætna
-in 1669—in a fit of ennui with poor Catania—had pitched down thousands
-of tons of lava upon her and hid all the rich city’s ancient glories
-from the sun.
-
-It was from Catania that another interesting Greek had set out upon his
-last journey. A journey to the crest of that volcano which has been
-constantly taking a hand in the destinies of Sicily, with what—in its
-careless malice, its malignant furies—seems almost like the personal
-wickedness of some demon; that incalculable mountain whose soaring
-outlines had been coming out at Jane and Peripatetica all day whenever
-the train turned a corner, as if to reassure them that they couldn’t
-lose her if they tried. Ætna was from the very beginning the pre-eminent
-fact in this part of Sicily.
-
-First Zeus—who always had a cheerful disregard of any rules of chivalry
-in dealing with his enemies—tied down the unlucky Titan Enceladus upon
-this very spot, and, gathering up enough of Sicily to make a mountain
-the size of Ætna, heaped it on top of him, probably congratulating
-himself the while that he had put a complete end to that particular
-annoyance. But quite a number of rulers since Zeus have discovered that
-in a rebellious temperament there reside resources of annoyingness which
-even a god cannot entirely foresee or provide against, and the Titan
-still heaves restlessly at his load from time to time, rocking the whole
-island with his struggles, toppling towers, engulfing cities, tearing
-the earth apart in his furies.
-
-Some of the myths accuse Demeter herself of having set Ætna alight in
-her frenzy, that all Sicily might thus be illumined to aid her in the
-search for Persephone, and that never since that reckless day has she
-been able to extinguish it, but must fight, with rain and dews and snows
-to save her people’s bread from the flames forever threatening to
-destroy it. The fire pours forth from time to time, spreading cruel
-ruin, but ever, aided by her, man creeps up and up once more. Up to
-Randazzo; up to Brontë, the “thunder town,” given to Lord Nelson by
-Marie Antoinette’s sister, then Queen of the Two Sicilies, where the
-Dukes of Brontë, Nelson’s descendants, still live part of each year in
-their wild eyrie.
-
-The vine and the olive climb and climb after each catastrophe. They
-cover the old scars of the eruptions, perch in crevices where a goat can
-scarce stand, and wring from the rich crumbs of soil “wine that maketh
-glad the heart of man, and oil that causeth his countenance to shine.”
-
-Up to the top of this Ætna—ten thousand feet up—on the last journey from
-Catania climbed Empedocles, that strange figure who passes with ringing
-brazen sandals through the history of Sicily. Empedocles, clothed in
-purple, crowned with a wreath of golden leaves, followed by thousands to
-whom he taught some strange, half Pythagorean worship, the form and
-meaning of which have vanished with time, save for some hints of a sort
-of mental healing practised upon his followers. Empedocles, composing
-vast poems of thousands of lines, and vaunting himself as a Super-man,
-saying:
-
-“An immortal god, and no longer a mortal man, I wander among you;
-honoured by all, adorned with priestly diadems and blooming wreaths.
-Into whatever illustrious towns I enter men and women pay me reverence,
-and I am accompanied by thousands who thirst for their advantage; some
-being desirous to know the future, and others, tormented by long and
-terrible disease, waiting to hear the spells that soothe suffering.”
-
-Whether his following fell away; whether he became the victim of some
-wild melancholy, some corroding _welt-schmerz_—unable to cure the ills
-of his own soul with his own doctrines—no one knows, but the dramatic
-manner of his exit printed his name indelibly upon the memory of the
-world from which he fled.
-
-Deserting late at night a feast in Catania, he mounted a mule, climbed
-the rough steeps, threaded the dusky oak woods, dismissed his last
-follower, and—after lingering a moment to listen to the boy-harper
-Callicles singing in the dawn at the edge of the forest—he passed on
-upward through the snows, and was seen no more by human eye. Only the
-brazen sandal was found beside the crater, into whose unutterable
-furnace—urged by some divine despair—he had flung himself: all that had
-been that aspiring, passionate life vanishing in an instant in a hiss of
-steam, a puff of gas, upon the most stupendous funeral pyre ever chosen
-by man.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There was endless history waiting to be looked into at Catania;
-frightful passagings and scufflings, massacres and exilings, murders,
-conspiracies and poisonings, and every other uncomfortable exhibition of
-“man’s inhumanity to man”—accompanied, of course, by heroisms, patriotic
-self-sacrifice, and a thousand humble, unremembered kindnesses and
-virtues, such as forever form warp and woof of the web of life and time.
-But railway schedules, even in Sicily, are almost heartlessly
-indifferent to tradition, and when the last tartlet was consumed the two
-seekers for Persephone were dragged Syracuse-ward, along with the crumby
-Tedeschi, divided during the long afternoon between increasing
-drowsiness and reproachful Baedekers. At last came sea marshes, where
-salt-pans evaporated in the sun, and toward sunset the train dumped them
-all promiscuously into station omnibuses at the capital of history; too
-grubby and fatigued to care whether the first class in historical
-research was called or not.
-
-The Tedeschi, after their frugal fashion, went in search of cheap
-pensions in the city, and only Jane and Peripatetica entered the wheeled
-tender of the Villa Politi, along with a young Italian pair, obviously
-engaged upon a honeymoon. A pair who never ceased to look unutterable
-things at each other out of fine eyes bistred with railway grime, nor
-ceased to murmur soft nothings from lips surrounded with the shadows of
-railway soot, undaunted by the frank interest of the hotel portier
-hanging on to the step, nor by the joltings of the dusty white road that
-led, through the noisy building of many ugly new villas, up to bare,
-wind-swept heights.
-
-Strong in the possession of a note from the proprietor promising
-accommodation, with which, this time, the wayfarers had had the prudence
-to arm themselves, Jane and Peripatetica swept languidly up the steps,
-ordering that their luggage be placed in their rooms and tea served
-immediately upon the terrace.
-
-But there were no rooms. No rooms of any kind, single or double!
-
-The note was produced. There it was, down in black and white!
-
-The young Signor Antonio drew a similar weapon—more black and white
-promises!
-
-The Padrone raised eyes and hands in a gesture almost consoling in its
-histrionic effectiveness.
-
-Could he _make_ guests depart at the time they said they would depart?
-
-Could he cast them out neck and crop when they found Syracuse so
-attractive that they changed their minds about going away and vacating
-rooms promised to others?
-
-He left it to Jane. He left it to Peripatetica. He left it to Signor
-Antonio. He left it to Signor Antonio’s beautiful bride, his “bellissima
-sposa.” _Could_ he? He asked that!...
-
-The two seekers were sternly sarcastic. Signor Antonio imitated the
-histrionic attitude. The Bellissima Sposa simply smiled fatuously.
-Beloved Antonio now held her destinies in his strong hand. Was it a
-royal suite? Well and good. Was it a corner of a stone wall under an
-umbrella? It was still well and good, for would she not still be with
-her Antonio?
-
-The honeyed submissiveness of this was too much for even the wicked
-obduracy of the Padrone.
-
-There _was_ a billiard room—for the night. To-morrow some one must keep
-his promise and go. They could choose among themselves.
-
-The bride was led away to the billiard room, still gazing upon her
-Antonio with intoxicated content, and two cross females, shaking the
-dust of the Villa Politi’s glowing garden and vine-wreathed terraces
-from their feet, jolted back again indignantly along the bare, windy
-heights fretted by the clamour of a sirocco-tortured sea. Past the
-gritty precincts of the ugly building villas, to the gaunt precincts of
-an hotel within the shrunken town. There to climb early into beds of the
-sloping pitch and rugged surface of a couple of tiled roofs; to lay
-their heads upon pillows undoubtedly stuffed with the obdurate skulls of
-all Syracuse’s myriad dead, and to listen in the wakefulness thereby
-induced to the dull sickening thuds about the floor which they knew, for
-good and sufficient reasons, to be the nocturnal hopping of the mighty
-Syracusan flea....
-
-“Fancy anyone being tempted to remain over _here_!” sneered
-Peripatetica.
-
-This was in the morning. They had compared the bleatings of the goats;
-the raucous early cries of the population; the effects of sirocco; the
-devices by which, clinging with teeth and nails, they had succeeded in
-maintaining their perch on the tile roofs; had boasted of their shikarry
-among the hopping, devouring monsters of the dark.
-
-“Talk of history!” mourned Jane. “Who could be the adequate Herodotus of
-last night?”
-
-They were on their way to the Temple of Minerva. The route led by a wide
-sea-street, half of whose length gave upon that famous Inner Harbour so
-often filled with hostile fleets, so often barred by great chains, so
-often echoing with clanging battles, with the bubbling shrieks of the
-drowning. Now the sparkling waters rolled untinged with blood, the clean
-salt air swept unhindered across their path, for half of the huge
-sea-wall had been recently demolished to let in wind and sun, though
-part still towered grimly, darkening the way, shutting out the light
-from the opposite dwellings.
-
-The path turned at right angles and wound through narrow foot-pathless
-cracks, between houses; cracks that served the older Syracuse in lieu of
-streets, where swarmed in the dingy narrownesses the everlasting goat,
-the ever pervasive child. Very different children these from those
-cherub heads, with busy little legs growing out of them, who formed the
-rising population of Taormina. Taormina, who has solved that whole
-question of educating children; a question which still so puzzles the
-unintelligent rest of mankind. For weeks they had walked the ancient
-ways of that high-perched town, picking careful steps amid its infant
-hordes, and never once had they heard a cry, or seen a discontented
-child.
-
-“Occupation was the secret of all that cherubic goodness, I think,” said
-Peripatetica reflectively. “Don’t you remember that every single one of
-them had a job?”
-
-“Of course, I remember,” said Jane crossly. “You needn’t remind _me_. It
-was only twenty-four hours ago we were there—though it seems ages since
-we fell out of the tender protecting care of dear ‘Questo-qui.’ You can
-put it all in the book if you feel you must talk about it.”
-
-“Jane, your usually charming temper has been spoiled by a night on a
-roof. It has made a cat of you,” persisted Peripatetica as she calmly
-circled round a goat. When the fount of her eloquence was unsealed it
-was not to be choked by the mere casting of a stony snub into it.
-
-“I devoted some of the dark hours on my tiles to profound philosophic
-reflection upon the Taorminian methods with children,” she continued. “I
-have often thought the ennui suffered by children and pet animals was
-the cause of much of their restless fretfulness. Even the most
-undeveloped nature feels the difference between a real occupation and an
-imitation one; feels the importance of being an economic factor. Now
-those Taormina children from the age of two years are made to feel they
-are really important and necessary members of the family. They knit as
-soon as they can walk; they sew, they do drawn-work, at five. They sit
-in the streets at little tables and help cobble shoes or mend
-teakettles. They shop for busy parents; they fetch and carry. They pull
-out of the gardens and orchards weeds as tall as themselves, and
-everywhere are calm and self-respecting, and receive from their parents
-and their grown-up neighbours that serious courtesy and consideration
-due to useful and well-behaved citizens. One does not slap or jerk or
-scold valuable and important members of the community, and no youthful
-Taorminian would permit such an unjustifiable liberty from a parent.”
-
-Borne on this flood of words they suddenly flowed out into a big
-irregular square where stood one of the most curious buildings in the
-world; the great temple of Pallas of the Syracusans. The enormous fluted
-Doric columns were sunk into the walls of a Cathedral, for Zosimus,
-bishop of Syracuse in the Seventh Century, had seized the columned frame
-and had plastered his church upon it—but so great was the diameter of
-the pillars that their sides and capitals protruded through the walls
-inside and out like the prodigious stone ribs of some huge skeleton. The
-Saracens had come later, and, after slaughtering the priests and women
-who clung shrieking to the altars, had added battlements to the roof,
-and the Eighteenth Century, being unable, of course, to keep its finger
-out of even the most reverend pie, had gummed upon the portal a flaring
-baroque façade of yellow stone. But through all disfigurements and
-defacements the temple still showed its soaring majesty, and
-Peripatetica, at sight of it, cried:
-
-“One dead in the fields!”...
-
-For suddenly was revealed to the two the meaning of what they had been
-journeying to see—it was the dead body of a great civilization.
-
-Here, nearly three thousand years since, had come Archias, the rich
-Heraclid of Corinth. He had gathered sullenly into little ships his
-wealth, his family, and his servants, and had fled far down the horizon,
-an execrated fugitive because of the slaying of beautiful Actæon. And,
-finding on the coast of the distant God’s-land a reproduction of the
-bays and straits of the Corinth which had cast him out, he founded there
-a city. A city that was to have a life like the life of some gifted,
-powerful man, growing from timid infancy to a lusty youth full of dreams
-and passions and vague towering ambitions; struggling with and
-conquering his fellows; grasping at power and glory, heaping up riches
-unbelievable, decking himself in purple and gold, living long and
-gloriously and tumultuously; and who was to know rise and fall, defeats
-and triumphs, and finally was to die on the battlefield, and be left
-there by the victor to rot. So that all the flesh would drop from the
-long frame, the muscles dry and fall apart, the eyes be sightless, and
-the brain dark; and the little busy insects of the earth would carry
-away the fragments bit by bit, and on the field where he lay would be
-found at last only the hollow skull once so full of proud purpose; only
-the slack white bones of the arm that had wielded the strong sword, the
-vast arch of the gaunt ribs that once had sheltered the brave heart of
-Syracuse. And among these dry bones little curious creatures would come
-to peep and peer and build their homes; spiders spinning webs over the
-empty eye sockets, mice weaving their nests among the wide-flung
-knuckles....
-
-One little spider, about ten minutes old, lay in wait for these two
-tourist flies at the side door of the Cathedral with an offer to guide
-them, and though they sternly endeavoured to brush the insect aside,
-doubting his infantile capacity to direct their older intelligences, the
-Spider was not of the to-be-brushed-aside variety and knew better than
-they what they really needed. While they wandered through the vulgar
-uglinesses of Zosimus’ shrine, trying to recall Cicero’s glowing picture
-of the temple in its glory, he never took his claws off of them. While
-they talked of the great doors inlaid with gold and ivory, of the brazen
-spears, of the cella walls frescoed with the portraits and the battles
-of the Sikel Kings, of the pedestals between each column bearing images
-of the gods in ivory, silver, and bronze, the Spider was patient and
-merely murmured “Greco” or “molto antico” by way of encouraging chorus.
-He let them babble unchecked of the tall image of armed Pallas standing
-behind the altar, with plumed helmet and robe of Tyrian purple, grasping
-her great spear in her right hand and resting the left hand upon the
-golden shield that bore a sculptured Medusa head. Upon her pedestal was
-carved the cock, the dragon, and the serpent, and the altar before her
-was heaped with fresh olive boughs about the smouldering spices sending
-up wavering clouds of scented smoke that coiled among the ceiling’s
-gilded plates. Without, upon the roof, stood another great shield of
-gilded bronze, a beacon for sailors who, setting out upon long voyages,
-carried a cup of burning ashes from her altar to sprinkle on the waves
-as the glittering landmark faded down the sky.
-
-But when these reminiscences of the “molto antico” finally exhausted
-themselves, the Spider rose to his occasion. He was vague about Minerva,
-but Santa Lucia was his trump card. He was eminently capable of guiding
-any number of travellers to the chapel of that big swarthy idol adorned
-with wire-and-cotton wreaths, and hung about with votive silver hands
-and hearts, arms and legs, in grateful testimony of the limbs and organs
-cured by her mercy and power. He could pour out in burning Sicilian,
-illustrated by superb spidery gestures, a thrilling description of the
-yearly _villegiatura_ of Syracuse’s patron saint. How twice in a
-twelvemonth she feels the need of change of air, and all the town
-attends her visit of a few days to the church beyond the bridge, she
-being escorted by priests and censors, and blaring bands, and wearing
-her finest jewels and toilet, as befits a lady on ceremonial travels. It
-is a festa for all Syracuse, Spider explains, with much good eating and
-“molto buono vino.”
-
-Jane, always a molten mass of useful information, interjects sotto voce
-into the flood of his narrative that precisely the same ceremony was
-used for the image of Diana when she was the patron goddess of the
-Syracusans, and the very same molto buono vino so overcame the populace
-at one of Diana’s festas that Marcellus, the Roman, after a siege of
-three years, captured the long and fiercely defended city that very
-night.
-
-The Spider took them later to see the handful of fragments alone
-remaining of Diana’s fane—broken columns sunk in a fosse between two
-houses—though once a temple as splendid as Minerva’s. A temple served by
-many priestesses, and surrounded by a great grove sloping down to the
-fountain of Arethusa. Among these trees the Oceanides herded the
-sacrificial deer, and troops of just such silken-coated, wavy-horned
-goats as feed to-day upon the Catanian plain. And to this grove came
-young girls, offering up, to please the great Huntress, their abandoned
-childish toys of baked clay. For oddly enough the wild, arrowy goddess
-who loved to shed the blood of beasts, adored children, and was a
-special patron of theirs, and would even listen favourably to the
-petitions of barren wives.
-
-There seemed some strange vagueness, some shadowy inexplicableness in
-the worship of Diana. All the other gods typified some force of nature,
-some resultant struggle and passion of man caught in nature’s web, but
-of the moon they knew only that it influenced tides and the growing of
-plants. What is one to make then of this fierce ivory-skinned Maid who
-sweeps, crescent-crowned, through the moonlit glades of the deep
-primitive forests, with bayings of lean questing hounds and echoing call
-of silver horns, hard on the track of crashing boar, of leaping deer?
-There is something as glimmeringly elusive, as magically haunting in the
-personality and the worship of Diana as in the moon itself.
-
-They offered the web of this conundrum to the Spider, but he wisely
-refused to allow himself to be entangled in it. This, however, is
-anticipating the real course of events.
-
-Already, before leaving the Cathedral, another conundrum had been asked
-and not answered.
-
-High on opposite sides of the walls of the nave Jane and Peripatetica
-had observed two ornate glass and gilt coffins. The one on the left
-contained the half-mummy, half-skeleton of a man. A young, beardless
-face it was, the still fair skin drawn tight over the features; the
-still blond hair clustering about it in curls of dusty gold. The
-fleshless visage was handsome, and though strange and ghostly, not
-repulsive. The skeleton body was clothed in velvet and gold, and the
-bony, gloved fingers clasped a splendid silver-scabbarded sword; an
-empty dagger case was hanging from an embroidered baldrick across the
-dead man’s breast. He lay on his side in an uneasy attitude, looking
-through the transparent pane of his last home toward the opposite
-crystal sarcophagus. This opposite coffin contained a half-mummied,
-half-skeleton woman—a woman also young and fair-haired; artfully
-coiffed, her tresses wrapped with pearls. Neither was _her_ face
-repulsive; some strange process had preserved a dry whiteness in the
-skin stretched smooth and unwrinkled upon the bones and integuments,
-though all the flesh was gone. She too was clothed in gold and silk in a
-fashion centuries old. Through the lace of the sleeves showed the white
-polished bones of what must once have been warm rounded arms. She too
-was gloved; she too crouched upon her side uneasily, but she did not
-face her companion. Her head was thrown back as if in pain; and plunged
-through the pointed silk corselet—just where there must once have beat a
-young heart—was the gold-handled dagger from the empty dagger case hung
-to the embroidered baldrick.
-
-Who were they?
-
-What tragedy was this? why did they lie here in their crystal
-sepulchres—was it the record of some strange crime, preserved with
-meticulous care for all the world to see?
-
-The Spider could not tell. They had always been there. He did not know
-their names or their story. He could not refer to anyone who did.
-Baedeker was equally indifferent and uncommunicative; he made no mention
-of them. Hare was silent. Sladen ignored them. No questioning of
-guide-books or guides ever unravelled that mystery.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From the temple of Diana the Spider led Jane and Peripatetica through
-more narrow, crooked streets thronged with rough, fierce Syracusan
-children, to see the Sixteenth Century palace of the Montaltos, now
-fallen on grimy days. The windows with their ogives and delicate twisted
-columns were crumbling, and the noble court—through which silken guests
-and mailed retainers had passed to mount the great stairs and throng the
-long balconies—was now full of squalid, squalling populace, and flocks
-of evil-savoured brown goats being milked for the evening meal.
-
-For some unexplained reason the mere presence of the Spider was an
-offence to the lowering boys who laired in this court. His grown-up air
-of being capably in charge of two female forestieri stank in their
-resentful nostrils, but Spider was an insect of his hands, landing those
-hands resoundingly upon the cheeks of his buffeters and hustlers until
-an enraged mother took the part of one of her discomfited offspring, and
-under her fierce cuffings the Spider melted into outraged tears.
-
-Peripatetica had already discovered that angry English had a
-demoralizing effect upon the natives. Its crisp consonants seemed as
-daunting as blows to the vowelled Sicilian; armed with which, and a
-parasol, the Spider was rescued and borne half way to the fountain of
-Arethusa before he could control his sniffles and his protesting
-fingers, upon which he offered passionate illustration that even
-Hercules could not overcome the odds of ten to one, and that tears under
-the circumstances left no smirch upon nascent manhood.
-
-Jane, with her usual large grasp of financial questions, applied a lire
-to the wounded heart with the happiest results, and it was a once more
-united and cheerful trio which leaned over Arethusa’s inadequate little
-fount with its green scum and its frowzy papyrus plants. Poor Nymph! She
-of the rainbow, and the “couch of snows”—she whose “footsteps were paved
-with green.” Flying from the gross wooing of Alpheus she comes all the
-way from Elis under the sea to take refuge with moon-crowned
-Artemis—Artemis “the protectress”—and for safety is turned into a
-sparkling pool which feeds all Syracuse with its sweet waters. Now
-Artemis is dead. Her cool groves have given way to acres of arid stone
-convents; earthquakes have cracked Arethusa’s basin, letting the sea in
-and the sweet water out; modern bad taste has walled her vulgarly about,
-and the poor old nymph can only gurgle reiterantly, “I was once a
-beauty; long ago, long ago!” with not the smallest hope that any tourist
-will believe it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Spider has retired to his web. _Pranzo_ has been discussed, and Jane
-and Peripatetica, refreshed, are taking another nibble at the vast
-mouthful of Syracuse’s past.
-
-It was a thrilling _pranzo_. Not because of the food, nor of its
-partakers. The food was the same old stereotyped menu. Gnocchi with
-cheese. Vegetables, divorced from the meats—they cannot apparently
-occupy the same course in any part of Italy. More cheese—a _jardinière_
-of pomegranates, oranges, dates, and almonds. Wine under a new name, but
-with the same delicate perfumed savour of all the other wines they have
-drunk.
-
-No more did the guests offer any startling variety. The same tall
-condescending English woman; elderly, manacled with bracelets, clanking
-with chains; domineering a plain, red cheek-boned, flat-chested daughter
-obviously needing a lot of marrying off on Mamma’s part; dominating also
-a nervous, impetuous husband—the travelling Englishman being much given
-to nervous impetuosity. A few fat, greasy Italians with napkin corners
-planted deeply into their collars, and scintillating the gross joys of
-gluttony. Two dark-faced melancholy-eyed _foreigners_, not easily placed
-as to nationality. All types of feminine Americans. If it were possible
-to see only their eyes they would be recognizable as Americans from
-their glance of bold, alert self-confidence and cheerfulness, very
-noticeable by contrast with the European eye. Also if one could see only
-that inevitable ready-made silk bodice the wearers would be recognizable
-as fellow countrywomen. The man who manufactures that type of bodice at
-home must be rich beyond the dreams of avarice.
-
-No; the thrill of the _pranzo_ was due to invisible causes.
-
-Behind the door from which the hopelessly estranged meat and vegetables
-emerged there arose a clash and murmur as of some domestic storm, and
-the waiters passed the spinach course with an air so tense and distrait
-that the crunching horde felt their forks strain with curiosity in their
-hands. Even the fat Italians paused in their gorging to stare. Even the
-foreigners’ melancholy dark eyes grew interested.
-
-After the spinach course ensued a long interval; the waiters lingering
-about with empty platters and furtive pretences of occupation, plainly
-not daring to enter that door, behind which ever waxed the loud rumour
-of domestic war.
-
-The interval increased in length. The clamour rose and rose, and someone
-went in search of the Padrone.
-
-Ours was a splendid Padrone; clothed upon with a _redingote_ and an
-historic and romantic dignity. For had not Guy de Maupassant mentioned
-him with respectful affection in “La Vie Errante”? The memory of which
-artistic appreciation still surrounded him with an aura. The Padrone
-entered that fateful door with calm, stern purpose, while the guests
-crumbled their bread in patient hope.
-
-The domestic storm drew breath for one terrible moment, then suddenly
-rose to the fury of a cyclone, and the Padrone was shot convulsively
-forth into our midst, the romantic aura hanging in tragic tatters about
-him. Holding to the wall he swallowed hard several times, seeking
-composure, then passed, with knees wabbling nervously beneath the
-stately redingote, to the office, where could be witnessed his
-passionately protesting gestures and whispers poured into the
-sympathetic bosom of the concierge.
-
-The cyclone had expended itself; the courses resumed their course, but
-what had taken place behind that closed door was never known. It
-remained another Syracusan mystery.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Museo at Syracuse, though small, is the best in Europe, for here, as
-on an open page, is written the whole history of the island of
-Sicily—not a gap or a break in the story of more than three thousand
-years; of perhaps five thousand years, for it antedates all the certain
-dates of history. Here are cases full of the stone and obsidian tools
-and weapons of the autochthonous Sikels; their crude pottery, their
-rough burial urns, their bone ornaments, and feathery wisps of their
-woven stuffs. These are all curiously like the relics of the
-Mound-builders of America, now in the Smithsonian Institution.
-Apparently the Stone Age was as deadeningly similar everywhere as is our
-own Age of Steel.
-
-Follows the rude metal working of the Siculians, who, having some
-knowledge of the use of iron, can build boats, and come across the
-narrow strait at Messina and drive out the Sikels. So long ago as that
-the old process of “assimilation” begins. The Siculians begin to work in
-colour, to ornament their pottery, to dye their stuffs, to mark their
-silver and iron with rough chisel patterns—patterns and colours again
-astonishingly like those of our own Pueblo Indians.
-
-There are fragments of Phœnician work here and there—the traders from
-Tyre and Sidon are beginning to cruise along the coast and barter their
-superior wares with the inhabitants.
-
-All at once the arts make a great spring upward. The Greeks have
-appeared. Rude, archaic, Dorian, these arts at first, but strong, and
-showing a new spirit. The potteries have a glaze, the patterns grow more
-intricate, the reliefs show a plastic striving for grace and life, the
-ornaments are of gold as well as silver and bronze, and steel has
-appeared. Follows a splendid flowering; an apogee of beauty is reached.
-Vases of exquisite contours covered with spirited paintings, pictures of
-life and death, of war and love. Coins that are unrivaled in numismatic
-beauty; struck frequently with the quadriga to celebrate the winning of
-the chariot race at the Olympic games; a triumph valued as greatly by
-the Greeks of Sicily as is the winning of the Derby by English horsemen.
-Tools, jewels, arms, all adorned with infinite taste and skill. Statues
-of such subtle grace and loveliness as this famous “Nymph,” the
-long-buried marble now grown to tints of blond pearl. Figurines of baked
-clay, reproducing the costumes, the ornaments, the physiology of the
-passing generations—faces arch, lovely, full of gay humour. Splendid
-sarcophagi, and burial urns still holding ashes and calcined bones, and
-tiny clay reproductions of the death masks of the departed, full of
-tender human individuality, or else heads of the gods, such as that
-enchanting tinted and crowned Artemis, that still lies in one of the
-great sarcophagi amid a handful of burned bones.
-
-Punic and Roman remains begin to show themselves, recording that
-tremendous struggle between Europe and Africa for dominion in the
-midland sea, under the impact of which the Greek civilization is to be
-crushed. Byzantine ornament appears. Africa makes another struggle and
-is for a while triumphant, leaving record of the Moorish domination in
-damascened arms, in deep-tinted tiles.
-
-The Goths and Normans fuse with the Saracen arts at first, but soon
-dominate the Eastern influence and shake it off, developing an art
-inferior only to the Greek. The Spanish follow, baroque, sumptuous,
-pseudo-classical. All the story of all the conquerors is here.
-
-“Oh!” sighs Peripatetica. “What an illustrated history; I could go on
-turning its pages for days.”
-
-“Well, you’ll turn them alone!” snapped Jane, clutching frantically at
-her side, and adding in a dreadful whisper: “There are _fleas_ hopping
-all over these historical pages. Come away this instant.”
-
-But they linger a moment on the way out to look again at the famous
-headless Venus Landolina.
-
-“There is only one real Venus,” commented Peripatetica contemptuously.
-“The Melian. All the rest are only plump ladies about to step into their
-baths. I detest these fat women with insufficient clothing who sprawl
-all over Europe calling themselves the goddesses of love. Goddesses
-indeed! They look more like soft white chestnut worms. That great
-dominating, irresistible lady of the Louvre is a deity, if you like—Our
-Lady of Beauty—besides, this little person’s calf is flat on the inner
-side.”
-
-“Iss it not righd dat her calve should be vlat on de inside?” queried an
-elderly Swiss, also looking, and showing all her handsome porcelain
-teeth in a smile of anxious uncertainty. “I dink dat must be righd,
-because Baedeker marks her wid a ztar.”
-
-“Don’t allow your opinions to be unsettled by this lady’s,” consoled
-Jane sweetly. “She isn’t really an authority. It would be wiser perhaps
-and more comfortable to be guided by Baedeker.”
-
-“Bud she has no head,” grieved the Swiss. “How can Baedeker mark her wid
-a ztar w’en she has no head?”
-
-How indeed? But then, there is such a lot of body!...
-
-It is some days later. They have “done” the river Amapus; have been
-rowed among the towering feathery papyrus plants, the original roots of
-which were sent to Heiro I. by Ptolemy, and which still flourish in
-Sicily though all the parent plants have vanished out of Egypt.
-
-They have looked down into the clear depths of La Pisma’s spring. Jane
-says it is less beautiful than the Silver Spring in Florida out which
-the Ocklawaha river rises, but that fountain of a tropical
-forest—transparent as air, and held in a great argent bowl—has no
-history, while La Pisma was the playmate of fair Persephone, and on
-seeing her ravished away by fiery Pluto melted quite away into a flood
-of bright tears. And it was she who, having caught up Persephone’s
-dropped veil, floated it to the feet of Demeter, and told her where to
-look for the lost daughter. La Pisma and Anapus her lover were, too, the
-real guardians of Syracuse, for as one after another of the armies of
-invading enemies camped on their oozy plain they sapped the invaders’
-strength, and blighted their courage with fevers from the miasmatic
-breaths exhaled upon the foes as they slept.
-
-Jane and Peripatetica have found another mystery. Syracuse, it appears,
-is full of mysteries. This last is known as the Castle of Euryalus, and
-they must take horse and drive to it, six miles from the hotel, though
-still within the walls of the original city, once twenty-two miles
-about; shrunk in these later days to less than three. This six miles of
-pilgrimage gives ample time to search the guide-books for information as
-to this thing they have come out for to see. But the guide-books palter,
-and shuffle and evade, as they are prone to do about anything really
-interesting. Euryalus, solid enough to their eyes and to their sense of
-touch, seems as illusive in history as the cloudy towers of the Fata
-Morgana—now you see it, and now you don’t. It seems to come from
-nowhere. No one can tell when or by whom it was built, but it always
-turns up in the history of Syracuse in moments of stress—much like those
-Christian patron-saints who used suddenly to descend in shining armour
-to turn the tide of battle. One hears of Dionysius strengthening it when
-news comes that the dread Himilcon is on his way from Carthage with two
-hundred triremes accompanied by rafts, galleys, and transports
-innumerable. Dionysius makes Euryalus the key of a surprise he prepares
-for the Carthagenians, for when the latter come sailing into the
-harbour—“A forest of black masts and dark sails, with transports filled
-with elephants trumpeting at the smell of land,” and from the West
-“comes trampling across the plain by the Helorian road and the banks of
-the Anapus, the Punic army 300,000 strong, with 3,000 horse led by
-Himilcon in person,”—there stands waiting for them one of the most
-amazing works ever wrought by the will of a single man.
-
-Dionysius in twenty days has built a wall three miles long barring
-Himilcon’s ingress at the only weak point. Seventy thousand of the
-inhabitants of Syracuse had worked at this building. Forty thousand
-slaves had been in the Latomiæ cutting the blocks of easily hewn
-sandstone, which six thousand oxen carried to the wall, while other
-armies of men had been upon the slopes of Ætna ravaging the oak woods
-for huge beams. When Himilcon comes the wall is complete.
-
-Then there are more appearings and disappearings through the years, and
-suddenly Euryalus fills the foreground again. Archimedes is helping
-Hieronymus to fortify it against Marcellus—is designing veiled sally
-ports, and oblique apertures from which his “scorpions” and other
-curious war engines may hurl stones, is placing there the burning
-glasses with which he will set the Roman galleys on fire by means of the
-sun’s heat. But though the Carthagenians were terrible the Roman is more
-terrible still, and in spite of Archimedes they get into Syracuse after
-a three years’ siege. While the furies of final capture are raging
-Archimedes sits calmly drawing figures upon the sand. A Roman soldier
-rushing by carelessly smears them with his foot. Archimedes is angry,
-and “uses language.” The soldier, angry in his turn—no doubt “language”
-in Greek sounded especially insulting—shortens his sword and stabs “the
-greatest man then living in the world.”
-
-Marcellus sheds tears when he hears it, and buries the father of
-mathematics with splendid honours, marking the tombstone—as Archimedes
-had wished—with no name, with only a sphere and a cylinder. He spared
-Syracuse too; left her temples and splendours intact, and forbid the
-usual plundering and massacres. Marcellus was, it seems, in every way a
-very decent person, and Peripatetica grieved that those frigid Romans
-wouldn’t let him have a triumph when he went home, and Jane breathed a
-hope that he used more language to that murderous soldier....
-
-Later comes Cicero to Syracuse, hunting evidence against Verres, who
-had, as pro-consul, robbed the city of all the treasures Marcellus had
-spared, and the great lawyer takes time from his examination of
-witnesses to look out Archimedes’ resting place. He finds it overgrown
-with thistles and brambles, but recognizes it by the sphere and
-cylinder, and sets it once more in order.
-
- “So Tully paused, amid the wrecks of time,
- On the rude stone to trace the truth sublime,
- Where at his feet in honoured dust disclosed
- The immortal Sage of Syracuse reposed.”
-
-“You cribbed that from one of the guide-books,” jeered Jane.
-
-“Of course I did,” admitted Peripatetica with calm unblushingness. “Do
-you imagine I go around with samples of formal Eighteenth Century
-Pope-ry concealed about my person?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-They are on their way to the theatre, passing by the ancient site of the
-Forum, which site is now a mere dusty, down-at-heels field where goats
-browse and donkeys graze, and where squads of awkward recruits are being
-trained to take cover behind a couple of grass blades, to fire their
-empty rifles with some pretence at unanimity.
-
-The road winds between walled orange and lemon groves, in which
-contadini are drying and packing miles of pungent golden peel for
-transportation to French and English confectioners. The air is redolent
-with it.
-
-Themistocles—Jane doubts his sponsors in baptism having had any hand in
-this, but the grubby card he presented with so pleasant a glance, so
-fine a gesture at the time of striking a bargain for the day, bore it
-printed as plain as plain—Themistocles, then, dismounts before a small
-drinking shop lying at the foot of an elevation. With one broad sweep of
-his hand he signifies that he is making them free of history, and yields
-them to the care of a nobleman in gold and blue; a nobleman possessing a
-pleasing manner and one of those plangent, golden-strung voices which
-the lucky possessors always so enjoy using.
-
-The two demand the Latomia Paradiso; the name having seduced their
-sentimental imaginations. The peer intimates that the name is
-misleading, but with gentle firmness they drop down the path which
-descends into the quarries from which Dionysius hurriedly snatched the
-material for his wall; material (almost as easy to cut as cheese, but
-hardening in the air) which has been dug, scooped, and riven away as
-fantastically as if sculptured by the capricious flow of water, leaving
-caverns, towers, massy columns, arches, a thousand freaked shapes. Now
-all this is draped with swaying curtains of ivy, with climbing roses
-heavy with unblown buds, with trailing geraniums hanging from crannies,
-with wild flowers innumerable. Lemon and fig trees grow upon the
-quarries’ floor, mosses and ferns carpet the shady places, black-green
-caroba trees huddle in neglected corners.
-
-The nobleman, however, is impatient to show other wonders. He leads the
-way into caverns through whose openings shafts of sunlight steal,
-turning the dusk within to a blond gloom, caverns where rope-makers walk
-to and fro twisting long strands, twirling wheels, with a cheerful
-chatter that booms hollowly back to them from the vaulted darkness over
-their heads; where the birds who flit in and out hear their twitterings
-reflected enormously, with a curious effect; where even the sound of
-dripping moisture is magnified into a large solemnity.
-
-He has saved the best for the last. Here an arch soars a hundred feet,
-giving entrance to a lofty narrow cave. Where the sides of the arch meet
-is a small channel of chiselled smoothness, ending in an orifice through
-which a glimpse of the sky shows like a tiny blue gem. It is the Ear of
-Dionysius. In this cave, so the story runs, the Tyrant confined
-suspected conspirators, for this is a natural whispering gallery, and
-the lowest of confidential talk within it would mount the walls, each
-lightest word would run along that smooth channel, as through the tube
-of an ear, and reach the listener at the orifice. For the uneasy
-Dictator knows that his turbulent Greek subjects, who cannot rule
-themselves, are equally unable to bear placidly the rule of another, and
-it would have been interesting, and at times exciting, to have been
-permitted to watch that stern, bent face as the rebellious protests
-climbed in whispers to the greedy ear a hundred feet above.
-
-A wonderful echo lives in this cave. Now it is plain why the guide has
-such large and vibrant tones—he was chosen because of that natural gift.
-
-“Addio!” he cries gaily. “_Addio_,” calls the darkness, a little sadly
-and wistfully. The guide sings a stave, and all the dusk is full of
-melodious chorus. He intones a sonorous verse, and golden words roll
-down to them through the gloom.
-
-“Speak! speak!” the nobleman urges, and Jane and Peripatetica meekly
-breathe a few banalities in level American tones. Not a sound returns;
-their syllables are swallowed by the silence.
-
-“Staccato! staccato!” remonstrates the guide, and when they comply,
-light laughing voices vouchsafe answers.
-
-“I think,” says Peripatetica reflectively, as they leave the Latomia,
-“that one has to address life like that if one is to get a clear
-reply—to address it crisply, definitely, with quick inflections. Level,
-flat indefiniteness will awake no echoes.”
-
-“‘How true’! as the ladies write on the margins of circulating library
-books,” comments Jane with unveiled sarcasm.
-
-The guide has lots more up his gold-braided sleeve. He opens a gate and
-displays to them with a flourish the largest altar in the world. Six
-hundred feet one way, sixty feet the other; cut partly from solid rock,
-made in part of masonry. Hiero II. thought he knew a trick of governing
-worth any amount of listening at doors. Those who are fed and amused are
-slack conspirators. So this huge altar to Zeus is built, and here every
-year he sacrifices 450 oxen to the ruler of heaven.
-
-“It must have rather run into money for him,” says Jane thoughtfully,
-“but he probably considered it cheaper to sacrifice oxen than be
-sacrificed himself.”
-
-“Yes,” says Peripatetica, who has just been consulting the guide-book.
-“It must have been rather like the barbecues the American politicians
-used to give to their constituents half a century ago, for only the
-choicest bits were burnt before the gods, sprinkled with oil and wine
-and sweet-smelling spices, and the populace, I suppose, carried home the
-rest. No doubt Hiero found it a paying investment.”
-
-The theatre, when reached, is found, of course, to have a beautiful
-situation. All Greek theatres have. They were a people who liked to open
-all the doors of enjoyment at once, and when they filled this enormous
-semicircle (24,000 could sit there) cut from the living rock upon the
-hillside, they could not only listen to the rolling, organ-like Greek of
-the great poets, and have their souls shaken with the “pity and terror”
-of tragedy, or laugh at the gay mockery of comedy, but by merely lifting
-their eyes they could look out upon the blue Ionian sea, the smiling
-flowered land, and in the distance the purple hills dappled with flying
-shadows. In their time all the surrounding eminences were crowned with
-great temples, and behind them—this was a contrast very Greek—lay the
-Street of Tombs. For they had not a shuddering horror of death,
-hastening their departed into remote isolation from their own daily
-life. They liked to pass to their occupations and amusements among the
-beautiful receptacles made for the ashes of those they had loved.
-
-In this theatre Syracuse saw not only the great dramas, but the great
-dramatists and poets. Æschylus, sitting beside Hiero I., saw all his
-plays produced here; “The Ætnaiai” and “The Persians” were written for
-this stage. Pindar was often here; so were Bacchylides and Simonides,
-and a host of lesser playwrights. Indeed, no theatre has ever known such
-famous auditors. Theocritus, Pythagoras, Sappho, Empedocles, Archimedes,
-Plato, Cicero, have all sat here.
-
-Plato was long in Syracuse; called by Dionysius to train his son Dion,
-he labours with such poor success that Dion is driven from the power
-inherited from his father, by the citizens outraged at the grossness of
-his vices. Before this fall Plato has left him in disgust, Dion
-remarking with careless insolence:
-
-“I fear you will not speak kindly of me in Athens.”
-
-To which the philosopher, with still more insolent sarcasm, replies:
-
-“We are little likely to be so in want of a topic in Athens as to speak
-of you at all.”
-
-Yet it would seem as if no good effort was ever wholly lost, for when
-Dion, earning his bread in exile as an obscure schoolmaster, is
-sneeringly asked what he ever learned from Plato, his dignified answer
-is, “He taught me to bear misfortune with resignation.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Themistocles has conducted them, with much cracking of his whip, much
-irrelevant conversation, quite to the other side of what once was
-Syracuse, and has deposited them before a little low gate that pierces a
-high wall. Inside this gate is a tiny garden cultivated by two monks who
-do the work by means of short-handled double-ended hoes; a
-laborious-looking Sicilian implement. The garden is full of pansies
-growing between low hedges of sweet-smelling thyme and rosemary. At the
-same moment there debarks a carriage load of touring Germans. Typical
-touring Germans; solid, rosy, set four-square to the winds; all clinging
-to Baedekers encased in covers of red and yellow cross stitch of Berlin
-wool, all breathing a fixed intention of seeing everything worth seeing
-in the thorough-going German fashion. The monks openly squabble as to
-the division of the parties who have come to see the church and the
-catacombs, and eventually the big, shaggy, red-haired one, who might be
-some ancient savage Gaul come to life, sullenly carries off the Teutons.
-It is somewhat of a shock to Jane and Peripatetica when their slim,
-supple, handsome Sicilian explains to them that this contest has its
-reason not in their personal charm, but is owing to a reluctance to
-guide the hated Tedeschi.
-
-There is something inexplicable in this universal unpopularity of the
-Teuton in Italy. Germany has been dotingly sentimental about Italy for
-generations.
-
- “Kennst du das Land”
-
-has hovered immanent on every lip from beyond the Rhine ever since the
-days of Goethe. They passionately study her language, her literature,
-her monuments, and her history. They make pilgrimages to worship at all
-her shrines, pouring in reverent Pan-Germanic hordes across the Alps to
-do it, and despite their extreme and skilful frugality they must
-necessarily leave in the Peninsula hundreds of thousands of their
-hard-earned, laboriously hoarded marks, which they have not grudged to
-spend in the service of beauty. Yet Italy seems possessed of a sullen
-repugnance to the entire race.
-
-“Tedeschi!” hisses the monk. “Tutto ‘_Ja! Ja! Wunderschön!_’” with a
-deliriously funny imitation of their accent and gestures, as he steers
-swiftly around a corner to prevent the two parties fusing into one.
-
-The church of San Giovanni is, of course, founded upon a Greek
-temple—most Sicilian churches are, and—of all places!—this one stands
-upon a ruin of a temple of Bacchus—the fragments of which poke up all
-through the tiny garden. The church, equally, of course, has been
-Eighteenth Centuried, but happily not wholly; remaining a great wheel
-window, and beautiful bits here and there of Twelfth Century Gothic in
-the outer walls, though the interior is in the usual dusty and neglected
-gaunt desuetude. The whole place is in decay, even the attendant
-monastery is crumbling, the number of monks shrunk to a mere handful,
-despite the fact that this is a spot of special sanctity, for when they
-descend into the massive chapel of the crypt there is pointed out to
-them the little altar before which Saint Paul preached when he was in
-Syracuse.
-
-“Of course, St. Paul was here,” said Jane. “Everybody who was anybody
-came to Syracuse sooner or later—including ourselves.”
-
-The guide is firm as to the altar having stood in this very chapel when
-that remarkable Hebrew poured out to the Syracusans his strange new
-message of democracy, but this is clearly the usual fine monkish
-superiority to cramping probabilities, for such rib-vaultings as these
-were as yet undreamed of by the architects of Paul’s day.
-
-The altar is Greek, and no doubt was standing in the fane of Bacchus
-when the Jew spoke by it. The Greeks were interested and tolerant about
-new religions, and the life and death which Paul described would hardly
-have seemed strange to them, spoken in that place. That birth and death,
-the blood turned to wine, the sacred flesh eaten in hope of
-regeneration, having so many and such curious resemblances to the
-legends, and to the worship of the Vine God celebrated on that very
-spot. “At Thebes alone,” had said Sophocles, speaking of the birth of
-Bacchus, “mortal women bear immortal gods.” The violent death, the
-descent into hell, the resurrection, were all familiar to them, and what
-a natural echo would be found in their hearts to the saying, “I am the
-true Vine.”...
-
-The monk only smiles bitterly when it is demanded of him to explain why
-a spot of so reverent an association should be abandoned to dust and
-decay, and to the interest of curious tourists, when the mere apocryphal
-vision of an hysterical peasant girl should draw hordes of
-miracle-seeking pilgrims to Lourdes.
-
-Perhaps there was something typical in that anguished Christ painted
-upon the great flat wooden crucifix that hung over the altar in the
-crypt; a Christ fading slowly into a mere grey shadow; the dim, hardly
-visible ghost of a once living agony....
-
-The monk goes before, the flickering candle which he shades with his
-fingers throwing a fan of yellow rays around his tonsured head. These
-are the Catacombs of Syracuse.
-
- “On every hand the roads begin.”
-
-Roads underground, these, leading away endlessly into darkness. At long
-intervals they widen into lofty domed chapels rudely hewn, as is all
-this place, directly from the rock. Here and there a narrow shaft is cut
-upward through the earth, letting in faint gleams of sunshine through a
-fringe of grass and ferns, showing sometimes an oxalis drooping its pale
-little golden face to peer over the shaft’s edge into the gloom below.
-And in all these roads—miles and miles of roads, extending as far as
-Catania it is said; roads under roads three tiers deep—and in all these
-roads and chapels are only open graves. Graves in the floor beneath
-one’s feet; graves in every inch of the walls; graves over graves,
-graves behind graves. Great family graves cut ten feet back into the
-rock, containing narrow niches for half a dozen bodies—graves where four
-generations have slept side by side. Graves that are mere shallow
-scoopings hardly more than three spans in length, where newborn babies
-must have slept alone. Tombs innumerable beyond reckoning, all hewn from
-the solid rock, and each and all vacant. An incredibly vast city of the
-dead from which all the dead inhabitants have departed.
-
-This is the crowning mystery of mysterious Syracuse. Who were this vast
-army of the buried? And where have their dead bodies gone?...
-Christians, everyone says.
-
-“But why,” clamours Peripatetica, “should Christians have had these
-peculiar mole-like habits?”
-
-The monk merely shrugs.
-
-“Oh, I know,” she goes on quickly before Jane can get her mouth open.
-“Persecution is the explanation always given, but will you tell me how
-you can successfully persecute a population of this size? There must be
-half a million of graves, at least, in this place, and there would have
-to be a good many living to bury the dead, and Syracuse in its best days
-hadn’t a million inhabitants. Now, you can’t successfully martyrize
-nine-tenths of the population, even if it is as meek and sheep-like as
-the early Christians pretended to be.”
-
-“They didn’t all die at once,” suggests Jane helpfully. “This took
-years.”
-
-“I should think it did! Years? It took generations, or else the
-Christians died like flies, and proved that piety was dreadfully
-undermining to the health. No wonder the pagans wouldn’t accept anything
-so fatal. But populations as large as this one must have been to furnish
-so many dead, don’t go on burrowing underground for generations. They
-come out and impose their beliefs upon the rest. And, besides, how can
-the stories of their worshipping and burying in secret be true when the
-mass of material taken out of these excavations would have to be put
-somewhere? And how could the presence or the removal of all that refuse
-stone escape attention? The persecuted Christian theory doesn’t explain
-the mystery.”
-
-Even Peripatetica had to pause sometimes for breath, and then Jane got
-her innings.
-
-“Equally mysterious, in my opinion,” she said, “is the rifling of all
-these graves. The monk tells me ‘the Saracens did it,’ but the Saracens
-were in Syracuse less than two hundred years, and of all these myriad
-graves only two or three have been found intact, and these two or three
-were graves beneath graves. Every other one for sixty miles, from the
-largest to the smallest, has been opened and entirely emptied. The
-Saracen population in Syracuse was never very large. It consisted in
-greater part of the ruling classes. The bulk of the people were natives
-and Christians, who would regard this grave-rifling as the horridest
-sacrilege, and if the Saracens undertook alone this enormous task they
-would have had, even in two hundred years, time for nothing else. The
-opening of the graves is as strange a puzzle as the making of them.”
-
-“Perhaps some last trump was blown over Syracuse alone,” hazarded
-Peripatetica, “and all the dead here rose and left their graves behind
-them empty.”
-
-“Come up into the air and sunlight,” said Jane. “Your mind shows the
-need of it.”
-
-At the little gate sat one of the monastery dependents, whose perquisite
-was a permission to sell post-cards, and such coins and bits of pottery
-as he could retrieve by grubbing in the rubbish of the empty graves. He
-had a few tiny earthenware lamps, marked with a cross and still
-smoke-blackened, some so-called tear jugs, and one or two small clay
-masks which, from the closed eyelids and smooth sunken contours, must
-have been modelled in miniature from real death masks. Among these they
-found Arsinoë—or so they named her—whose face was touched with that
-strange, secret archness, that sweet smiling scorn so often seen on
-faces one day dead. The broad brow with its drooping hair, the full
-tender lips so instinct with vivid personality, went with them, and
-became to them like the record of some one seen long ago and dimly
-remembered, though the lovely benignant original must have been mere
-dust of dust for more than a thousand years.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A nun in a faded blue gown has been showing them the relics of Santa
-Lucia. She has also been telling them how the Saint, when a young man
-admired her eyes, snatched them out of her head with her own hands and
-handed them to the young man on a plate.
-
-“What a very rude and unpleasant thing to do!” comments Jane in English.
-“But invariably saints seem so lamentably deficient in amiability and
-social charm.”
-
-The nun unlocks the gate of the Cappucini Latomia, and Jane and
-Peripatetica descend the long stair cut in the rocks. They are seeking
-the place where the remnant of that army Alcibiades so skilfully
-introduced into Catania, finally perished.
-
-They have been reading tales of the Athenians’ long siege of Syracuse,
-of their final frightful despairing struggle, so full of anguish,
-terror, and fierce courage—“when Greek met Greek”—and they have come to
-look at the spot where those seven thousand unhappy prisoners finally
-found an end. When they were driven into this quarry they were all that
-remained of the tremendous expedition which Athens had drained her best
-blood to send. Alcibiades had fled long ago, and was in exile. Nicias
-and Demosthenes, who had surrendered them, were now dead; fallen on
-their own swords. The harbour of Syracuse was strewn with the charred
-wrecks of their fleet. The marshes of Anapus were rotting with their
-comrades, the fountain of Cyane choked with them. They themselves were
-wounded to a man, shuddering with fevers, starving, demoralised with
-long fighting and the horrible final _débâcle_ when they were thrust all
-together into this Latomia; not as now a glorious garden with thyme and
-mint and rosemary beneath their feet, ivy-hung, full of groves and
-orchards, but raw, glaring, shaled with chipped stone, the staring
-yellow sides towering smoothly up for a hundred feet to the burning blue
-of the Sicilian sky. There in that waterless furnace for seventy days
-they died and died. Died of wounds, of thirst, of starvation; died of
-the poisonings of those already dead.
-
-And the populace of Syracuse came day by day, holding lemons to their
-noses, to look down at them curiously, until there was not one movement,
-not one sound from any one of the seven thousand.
-
-There is but one human gleam in the whole demoniacal story—a touch
-characteristically Greek. Some of the prisoners had beguiled the tedium
-of dying by chanting the noble choruses of Euripides’ newest play, which
-Syracuse had not yet heard, and these had been at once drawn up from
-among their fellows and treated with every kindness. They were entreated
-to repeat as much as they could remember of the poet’s lines again and
-again, and were finally sent back to Athens with presents and much
-honour.
-
-Not a trace of the tragedy remains. The only record of death now in
-those lovely wild, deep-sunken gardens is a banal monument to Mazzini,
-and a tomb hollowed out of the wall in one of the caves. A tomb closed
-with a marble slab, upon which was cut an epitaph telling, in the
-pompous formal language of that day, of the young American naval
-lieutenant who died here suddenly on his ship in the first decade of the
-Nineteenth Century, and because he was a Protestant, and therefore could
-not occupy any Catholic graveyard, was laid to rest alone in this place
-of hideous memories.
-
-Poor lad! Sleeping so far from his own people, and thrust away here by
-himself, since he must, of course, not expect to lie near those who had
-been baptised with a different motion of the fingers. Seeing which
-isolation Peripatetica quoted that amused saying of an ironic old Pagan
-world, “Behold, how these Christians love one another!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is the terrace of the Villa Politi. They have finally forgiven the
-villa, and have climbed up here from the Latomia to sit on its lovely
-terrace, to drink tea and eat the honey of Hybla, to look down on one
-side into the blossom-hung depths of the Athenians’ prison, on the other
-out to the mauve and silver of the twilight sea.
-
-“Peripatetica,” says Jane with great firmness, “I am suffering from an
-indigestion of history. I am going away somewhere. All these spirits of
-the past block up the place so that I’ve no freedom of movement. It’s an
-oppression to feel that every time one puts a foot down it’s in the
-track of thousands and thousands of dead feet, and that one’s stirring
-up the dust of bones with every step we take. Everything we look at is
-covered so thick with layer on layer of passion and pain that I’ve got
-an historic heartache. _I_ leave to-morrow.”
-
-Peripatetica didn’t answer at first. She was looking out over the dusky
-sea, from which breathed a soft slow wind.
-
-The change had come while they were in the Latomia; had come suddenly.
-That bleak unkindness in the atmosphere—of which they were always
-conscious even in the sun—had all at once disappeared. Even though the
-sun was gone a mild sweetness seemed to exhale from the earth, as from a
-heart at last content.
-
-“Jane,” said Peripatetica, turning shining eyes upon her, “Persephone
-has returned. Let us go to Enna and meet her!”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [Illustration: Decoration]
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- THE RETURN OF PERSEPHONE
-
- “God’s three chief gifts, Man’s bread and oil and wine.”
-
-No doubt the usual things that happen to travellers happened to Jane and
-Peripatetica at Enna-Castrogiovanni, and on their way to it. Things
-annoying and amusing, tiresome or delightful, but they have no memory of
-these things, all lesser matters having been swallowed up in the final
-satisfaction of their quest.
-
-Memory is an artist who works in mosaic, and all the fantastic jumble
-and contrast of the experiences of travel she heaps pell-mell together
-in her bag. Bits of sights but half seen, but half understood; vague
-memories of other things seen before and seemingly but slightly related
-to these new impressions, mere faint associations but partly realised,
-along with keen emotions and strong pleasures; all tumbled in together
-and rubbing corners with petty vexations, small inconveniences,
-practical details. Memory gathers them all without discrimination and
-carries them along with her, a most unsatisfactory-looking mess at first
-sight, out of which it would seem nothing much could be made. But give
-her time. While one’s attention is occupied with other matters she is
-busy—sorting, arranging, rejecting here, adding there. Recollections
-that bulked large at first she often files down to a mere point; much
-that appeared but dull rubbish with no colour she finds valuable when
-pushed into the background, because its neutral tones serve to bring out
-more clearly the outlines of the design. Dark bits are skilfully
-employed for the sake of the contrast, and to intensify the warm tones
-of richer fragments. The shadowy associations give body and modelling to
-impressions otherwise flat and ineffective. All at once the picture is
-seen; a complete delineation of an episode, taking form and warmth, and
-vivid life; and over the whole she spreads the magic bloom of distance,
-which transforms the crude materials, hides the joinings of the mosaic,
-and makes of it a treasure of the soul.
-
-Something of this sort she did for Castrogiovanni. ’Tis but an
-impressionist picture. They only see, looking back to it, two great,
-divine shadows breathing such passion and pain, such essential,
-heart-stirring loveliness that the eye hardly observes the wreathed
-border about the picture, a border which serves merely as a frame for
-those two significant figures revived from the dreams of primitive man.
-
-Here is an incident taken from the unimportant frame of the picture....
-
-Jane and Peripatetica are in the train. It seems quaint to be finding
-one’s way to the “Plutonian Shore” in a little puffing, racketting
-Sicilian train. To be properly in the picture they should have been
-included in a band of pilgrim shepherds piping in the hills as they
-wander upward to the great shrine of Demeter, to give thanks for the
-increase of their flocks, to offer her white curds, and goat cheeses,
-and the snowy wool of washed fleeces. Pilgrims who are weeks upon the
-road; climbing higher and higher each day through the steady sunshine,
-and sleeping at night under the large stars, with the little olive-wood
-fire, that cooked the evening meal, winking and smouldering beside them
-in the dewy darkness. Resting here and there at the Greek farms, where
-new pilgrims are waiting to add themselves to the pious band.
-
-Jane, who consults her Theocritus oftener in Sicily than her
-Baedeker—for she says she finds that Theocritus has on the whole a
-better literary style—is the one who suggests this idyllic alternative.
-
-“Just listen to him!” she cries. “This would be travel really worth
-while recording. He is telling of just such a journey, and of the pause
-at one of the hill farms:
-
-“‘So I, and Eucritus, and the fair Amyntichus, turned aside into the
-house of Phrasidamus, and lay down with delight in beds of sweet
-tamarisk and fresh cuttings from the vines, strewed on the ground. Many
-poplars and elm trees were waving over our heads, and not far off the
-running of the sacred water from the cave of the nymphs warbled to us;
-in the shimmering grass the sunburnt grasshoppers were busy with their
-talk, and from afar the owl cried softly out of the tangled thorns of
-the blackberry. The larks were singing and the hedge birds, and the
-turtle dove moaned; the bees flew round and round the fountains,
-murmuring softly. The scent of late summer and the fall of the year was
-everywhere; the pears fell from the trees at our feet, and apples in
-number rolled down at our sides, and the young plum trees bent to the
-earth with the weight of their fruit.
-
-“‘The wax, four years old, was loosed from the heads of the wine jars.
-O! nymphs of Castalia, who dwell on the steeps of Parnassus, tell me, I
-pray you, was it a draught like this that the aged Chiron placed before
-Hercules, in the stony cave of Phulus? Was it nectar like this that made
-that mighty shepherd on Anapus’ shore, Polyphemus, who flung the rocks
-upon Ulysses’ ships, dance among his sheep-folds? A cup like this ye
-poured out now upon the altar of Demeter, who presides over the
-threshing floor. May it be mine once more to dig my big winnowing-fan
-through her heaps of corn; and may I see her smile upon me, holding
-poppies and handfuls of corn in her two hands!’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Instead of being accompanied on their arcadian journey by Eucritus and
-the fair Amyntichus, they have as companions in the little carriage of
-the Regie Ferrovia the two dark foreigners from Syracuse, upon whose
-nationality they have speculated at idle moments. They prove to be
-Poles. Two gentlemen from Cracow, escaped for a moment from its snows to
-make a little “giro” in the Sicilian sunshine.
-
-Conversation develops around Ætna—of all places! Peripatetica catches
-sight of it, as the train rounds a curve, sees it suddenly looming
-against the sky, a glittering cone of silver swimming upon a base of
-misty hyacinth-blue. By a gesture she calls everyone’s attention to this
-new and charming pose of that ever spectacular mountain.
-
-Jane glances up from her book and signifies a condescending approval,
-but the sight has a most startling and electrifying effect upon the
-Poles. They miss, in their enthusiasm, flinging themselves from the
-carriage window merely by a hair’s breadth, and crying, “Ætna! Ætna!”
-with passionate satisfaction, not only solemnly clasp hands with one
-another, but also grasp and shake the limply astonished hands of Jane
-and Peripatetica. Transpires that the foreigners have been three weeks
-in Sicily without once having caught a glimpse of the ever present, ever
-dominant mountain, since, with sulky coquetry, whenever they were within
-sight it promptly hid in veils of mist, and now they are bound for
-Cracow, via Palermo, facing uneasily the confession at home of having
-been to the play and missed seeing the star.
-
-They hang from the window in eager endeavour to cram all lost
-opportunities into one, and rend the heavens with lamentations when the
-carriage comes to rest immediately opposite a tiny station whose solid
-minuteness is sufficient to blot from sight all that distant majesty.
-
-“It is like life,” the taller foreigner wails, sinking back baffled from
-an attempt to pierce the obdurate masonry with a yearning eye. “One
-little ugly emotion close by can shut out from one’s sight all the
-loftiest beauties of existence!”
-
-This fine generalization gathers acuity from the fact that a sharp turn
-soon after leaving the station piles up elevations that quickly rob them
-of their long-sought opportunity, but for the rest of the time that the
-paths of the four lie together the Poles insist upon attributing to the
-direct intervention of Jane and Peripatetica the wiping of this blot
-from their travelling ’scutcheon—an attitude which Jane and Peripatetica
-find both soothing and refreshing, and they affect a large familiarity
-and possessiveness with the Volcano, which the Poles bear with polite
-and grateful respect; the more so, no doubt, as the two seekers
-possess—as Americans—a novelty almost more startling and intense than
-Ætna. The gentlemen from Cracow have never met Americans until now, and
-make no attempt to disguise the exhilaration of so unwonted a
-spectacle—confessing that in their turn they too have been speculating
-upon the racial identity of “the foreign ladies,” whose nationality they
-were unable to guess. They are consumed with an inexhaustible curiosity
-to get the “natives’” point of view, and exchange secret glances of
-surprise and pleasure at the exhibition of human intelligence in a
-people so remote from Cracow. When the necessary change of train
-detaches them from their eager investigations Peripatetica is still
-futilely engaged in her persistent endeavour to combat in the European
-mind its strange delusion as to the real relations of the sexes in her
-own land.
-
-... “No; the American man in no respect resembles the Sicilian donkey
-... no; he does not ordinarily spend his life toiling humbly under the
-intolerable loads laid upon him by his imperious mate.... No; he is not
-a dull unintelligent drudge wholly unworthy of the radiant beings who
-permit him to surround them with an incredible luxury.... No; the
-American woman is not his intellectual superior. In everything of real
-practical importance _he_ is immensely the superior.... No; he isn’t
-this.... No; he isn’t that.... He isn’t any one of the things the
-European thinks he is and—good bye!”
-
-The mountains all this while have been peaking up; mounting, climbing,
-rolling more wildly, and at last two of them soar splendidly, sweep up
-close on to three thousand feet into the sky ... Castrogiovanni and
-Calascibetta, and the train drops Jane and Peripatetica at their feet.
-
-Memory has cast out, or has pushed into the background, the long weary
-jolting up to the wild little wind-swept town; makes no record of the
-hotel or the fellow tourists; has jotted down a certain straight wild
-beauty in the inhabitants, who have eagle-like Saracen profiles, but
-grey Norman eyes. Has left well in the foreground a dark castle, and a
-cluster of half-ruined towers. All else of modern details she has
-rejected, except a great wash of blue, a vast vista of tumbling broken
-landscape, huge and stern, for she has been busy with a picture of the
-past; building up an imagination of vanished gods moving about their
-mighty affairs, playing out Olympian dramas in this lofty land. Here is
-the very centre of the God’s-land, the “umbilicus Siciliæ,” the Key of
-Sicily, Enna “the inexpugnable,” the strongest natural fortress in the
-world, which no one ever took except by treachery; which the Saracens
-besieged in vain for thirty-one years, and when they finally got it,
-through a treason, the Normans in their turn could not dislodge them
-until all Sicily had been theirs for a quarter of a century, and then
-only through another betrayal. In the great slave war Eunus, the serf,
-held it against the whole power of Rome for two years until he too was
-betrayed.
-
-Broken and wild as is the land it is still cultivated; the olive still
-climbs up to where the clouds come down, but where are the magnificent
-forests, the wonder and joy of antiquity? Where the brooks and streams
-and lakes, whose dropping waters sang all through the records of the
-elder world? Where are those fields so blessed by Demeter that they
-offered to the hands of men illimitable floods of golden grain? Where
-are the vines that wreathed the mountains’ brows with green and purple
-grapes, as if it had been the brow of Dionysius the wine god? Where,
-too, are the meadows so thick with flowers that for the richness of the
-perfume the hounds could not hold the scent of the game? Meadows where
-the bees wantoned in such honeyed delight that the air vibrated with
-their murmuring as with the vibrating of multitudinous harp strings?...
-
-Listen to the story, which, when it was told was only a prophecy and a
-warning, but a warning never heeded.
-
-Erysicthon cuts down the grove sacred to Demeter. A grove so thick “that
-an arrow could hardly pass through; its pines and fruit trees and tall
-poplars within, and the water like pale gold running through the
-conduits.” One of the poplars receives the first stroke, and Demeter,
-hearing the ringing of the axe, appears, stern and awful, hooded and
-veiled, and carrying poppies in her hand. To the ravager of her groves
-she threatens a divine curse of an everlasting thirst, of an insatiable,
-unsatisfied hunger, and the workmen, awed, depart, leaving the axes
-sticking in the trees, but Erysicthon drives them to their task again
-with blows, and soon the grove is levelled, and the heat of the day
-enters where once all was sweet shade. Erysicthon laughs at the futile
-curse of the goddess; he has had his will and nothing has happened. The
-water still runs and he can slake his drought, but the water escapes as
-he stoops for it, sinking into the earth before his eyes, leaving upon
-his lips only choking dust. No one can safely ignore the warnings of the
-gods, and he wanders, whipped by intolerable longings, and dies
-dreadfully, raving of his own folly.
-
-Neither Greeks, Romans, Saracens, nor Norman heed this parable, told
-ages and ages before the meaning of the loss of forests was understood.
-All over the land the clothing of oaks, chestnuts, and pines was
-stripped from the hills, and slowly but surely the curse of Demeter has
-turned it into a place of thirst. To-day less than five per cent of the
-whole island contains timber, and these high lands, these “fields which
-in the days of the Greeks returned one hundred times the amount of seed
-sowed, now yield but seven-fold, and only one-ninth of all the land is
-productive.” This is the story of the ravaging of Enna, once the true
-garden of Paradise, and now a rocky waste burned to the bone.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: “ÆTNA, THE SALIENT FACT OF SICILY”]
-
-Always from the very earliest records the goddess of the harvest was
-worshipped in this place. Long before the coming of the Greeks the
-Siculians had here a shrine to Gaia, the Earth Mother, from whose brown
-breast man sucked his life and food. And the Siculians had traditions of
-the Sikels making pilgrimages to Enna to give thanks to a goddess
-representing some principle of fertility, by whose power the earth was
-made blessed to its children. Very vague and shadowy are the traditions
-of the worship of this Bread-giver. There are hints of a great cave with
-a rude dark figure within, this idol having, curiously, a head roughly
-resembling the head of a horse, where the people timidly laid their
-offerings of the first fruits of their primitive culture. This figure is
-heard of later at Eleusis, to which the Greeks transpose the image and
-the worship, but the myth, so sympathetic to the Greek nature, becomes
-refined and spiritualized; takes on many new plays of thought and
-colour, and when the great temple of Demeter is built here the story has
-cleared and defined itself, and is hung about with the garlands of a
-thousand gracious imaginings.
-
-Our Lady of Bread—daughter herself of Zeus, the overarching sky—has one
-child, Persephone, the spirit of Spring, that dear vernal impulse which
-rejuvenates all the world and “puts a spirit of life in everything”;
-that is forever sweetly renewing hope of happiness. Persephone’s
-playmates are the maiden goddesses, Pallas and Artemis, and also those
-light spirits of the fields, the water and the air—the nymphs, the
-oreads, and the oceanides—but she is not without duties and labours too,
-for “Proserpina, filling the house soothingly with her low song, was
-working a gift against the return of her mother, with labour all to be
-in vain. In it she marked out with her needle the houses of the gods and
-the series of the elements, showing by what law nature, the parent of
-all, settled the strife of ancient times.... The lighter elements are
-borne aloft; the air grows bright with heat; the sea flows; the earth
-hangs in its place. And there were divers colours in it; she illuminated
-the stars with gold, infused a purple shade into the water, and
-heightened the shore with gems of flowers; and under her skilful hand
-the threads with their inwrought lustre swell up in counterfeit of the
-waves; you might think the sea wind caused them to creep over the rocks
-and sands. She put in the fire zones, marking with a red ground the
-midmost zone possessed by burning heat; on either side lay the two zones
-proper for human life, and at the extremes she drew the twin zones of
-numbing cold, making her work dun and sad with the lines of perpetual
-frost. She works in, too, the sacred places of Dis and the Manes so
-fatal to her. And an omen of her doom was not wanting, for as she
-worked, as if with foreknowledge of the future, her face became wet with
-a sudden burst of tears. And now in the utmost border of the tissue she
-had begun to wind in the wavy line of the Ocean that goes round about
-all, but the door sounds on its hinges, and she perceives the goddesses
-coming; the unfinished work drops from her hands and a ruddy blush
-lights her clear and snow-white face.”...
-
-Leaving her needle in the many-coloured web, she wanders down the
-mountain side to Lake Pergusa, then lying like a blue jewel in enamelled
-meads, but ever since that tragic day dark and sulphurous, as with fumes
-of hell.
-
-This is the story of the ravishment, as told in the great Homeric Hymn
-that was sung in honour of the Mother of Corn.
-
-“I begin the song of Demeter. The song of Demeter and her daughter
-Persephone, whom Aidoneus carried away as she played apart from her
-mother with the deep-bosomed daughters of the Ocean, gathering flowers
-in a meadow of soft grass—roses and the crocus and the fair violets and
-flags and hyacinths, and above all the strange flower of the narcissus,
-which the Earth, favouring the desire of Aidoneus, brought forth for the
-first time to snare the footsteps of the flower-like girl. A hundred
-heads of blossom grew up from the roots of it, and the sky and the earth
-and the salt wave of the sea were glad at the scent thereof. She
-stretched forth her hands to take the flower; thereupon the earth opened
-and the King of the great nation of the Dead sprang out with his
-immortal horses. He seized the unwilling girl, and bore her away weeping
-on his golden chariot. She uttered a shrill cry, calling upon Zeus; but
-neither man nor god heard her voice, nor even the nymphs of the meadow
-where she played; except Hecate only, sitting as ever in her cave, half
-veiled with a shining veil, and thinking delicate thoughts, she, and the
-Sun also, heard her.
-
-“So long as Persephone could still see the earth and the sky and the sea
-with the great waves moving, and the beams of the sun, and still thought
-to see again her mother, and the race of the ever-living gods, so long
-hope soothed her in the midst of her grief. The peaks of the hills and
-the depths of the sea echoed her cry. And the Mother heard it. A sharp
-pain seized her at the heart; she plucked the veil from her hair, and
-cast down the blue hood from her shoulders, and fled forth like a bird,
-seeking her daughter over dry land and sea.
-
-“Nine days she wandered up and down upon the earth, having blazing
-torches in her hands, and in her great sorrow she refused to taste of
-ambrosia, or of the cup of the sweet nectar, nor washed her face. But
-when the tenth morning came Hecate met her, having a light in her hands.
-But Hecate had heard the voice only, and had seen no one, and could not
-tell Demeter who had borne the girl away. And Demeter said not a word,
-but fled away swiftly with Hecate, having the blazing torches in her
-hands, till they came to the Sun, the watchman of Gods and men; and the
-goddess questioned him, and the Sun told her the whole story.”...
-
-What a picture the Greek singer makes of the melancholy earth calling
-for comfort to the moon! for Hecate was not Artemis, but a vaguer,
-vaster principle of the night; an impersonalized shadow of the Huntress,
-as Hertha was the shadow, formless and tremendous, of Demeter. Hecate
-was a pale luminous force, “half veiled with a shining veil, and
-thinking delicate thoughts,” and ten days later, having rounded to the
-full, the bereaved mother meets her “bearing a light in her hands,”
-though the night is nearing morning, and moon and earth turn together
-toward the coming sun.
-
-The Homeric Hymn tells much of the wandering and grieving mother; of her
-disguises; of her nursing of the sick child Demophoon, whose own mother
-snatched him back from the immortality which the goddess was ensuring by
-passing him through the fire—as many a loving and timid mother since has
-held her son back from the fires that confer immortality. The Hymn tells
-of her teaching of Triptolemus of the winged feet, instructing him in
-Eleusinian mysteries—“those mysteries which no tongue may speak. Only
-blessed is he whose eyes have seen them; his lot after death is not as
-the lot of other men!”
-
-But Jane and Peripatetica loved more the story of the ending of her
-vigil, when Hermes descended into Hell in his chariot.
-
-“And Persephone ascended into it, and Hermes took the reins in his hands
-and drove out through the infernal halls; and they two passed quickly
-over the ways of that long journey, neither the waters of the sea, nor
-of the rivers, and the deep ravines of the hills, nor the cliffs of the
-shore resisting them; till at last Hermes placed Persephone before the
-door of the temple where her mother was, who, seeing her, ran out
-quickly to meet her, like a Mænad coming down a mountain side dusky with
-woods.”
-
-So these two saw Persephone come home; saw the spring return to the
-earth in the high places of the gods. Saw the land, even though no
-longer a paradise, yet—despite Erysicthon’s foolish waste of the sacred
-trees—saw it “laden with leaves and flowers and the waving corn,” and,
-having seen it, they passed on through Sicily satisfied.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [Illustration: Decoration]
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- A CITY OF TEMPLES
-
- “’Tis right for him
- To touch the threshold of the gods.”
-
-THEY were running swiftly through the dark. On either hand was a dim and
-gloomy land of bare, shrivelled peaks, grey cinder heaps, and sulphurous
-smells. Intermittently visible by the strange subterranean glowings rose
-black, glowering mountains in the background, and nearer at hand were
-shadowy shapes of men and asses bringing sulphur from the mines. Within,
-the garlic-reeking tongue of a flickering gas-lamp vaguely illumined the
-dusk of the railway carriage.
-
-“This is Pluto’s own realm,” declared Jane, removing her nose from the
-window-pane, through which she had been endeavouring to peer into the
-outer gloom. “If it’s not the very threshold of the infernal regions it
-ought to be. Peripatetica, you might spare me a glimmer or two from your
-Baedeker. Were there no temples to Pluto here? These are surely the very
-surroundings in which he should have been worshipped.”
-
-“A temple to Pluto?” replied Peripatetica sleepily. “Where?... I never
-heard of one that I can remember; have you?”
-
-Jane suddenly realized that her recollections held no account of any
-spot where that dark King of the Under World had been honoured under the
-sun; it was another mystery of the past, to which there was no answer,
-though Peripatetica gave up her nap in the effort to solve it—why had
-Pluto, supreme in the Under World as Zeus in the Upper one, beneath
-whose sway all men born must come, remained so unhonoured among living
-men?
-
-The Greeks did believe in a future life; the spirit expiating or
-rewarded for deeds done in the flesh. Those were facts which men thought
-they knew, which were an integral axis of their faith—how so believing,
-did they treat it thus unconcernedly, seeing things in such different
-proportions from ourselves? So much concern for the fulness of life in
-the present, so little for the shadowy hereafter—shrines and temples and
-sacrifices on every hillside to the Deities of Life, of Birth, and
-Fertility; nothing for the God of Death.
-
-Death and Life—they touched as closely in ancient days as now, perhaps
-more closely. The Greeks did not push away their dead to a dim, silent
-oblivion. Near to the warm heart of life they were held in bright,
-oft-invoked memory. In the busiest centres of life were placed the tombs
-of their dead; close to the theatre—to the Forum—wherever the living
-most thronged the Road of Tombs was; one where all the busiest tide of
-life flowed. Invocations and offerings and sweet ceremonies of
-remembrance were given to their dead more often than tears. And
-constantly the living turned to the dear and honoured dead—“much
-frequented” was the Greek adjective which went oftenest with the tomb.
-But the grim God of Death was apparently not for living man to make his
-spirit “sick and sorry” by worshipping. It was Life—glorious, glowing
-fulness of life to the uttermost—that was important to the Greek; Life
-that governed Death and made it either honoured and reposeful, or a
-state of shadowy wanderings and endless regret.
-
-To the modern mind, still tinged with mediæval morbidity, groping back
-into the clear serenity of those golden days, it seemed to be life,
-life, only life that preoccupied the Greeks, and yet, they too had
-hearts to feel Death’s sting even as we—to be aware of the underlying
-sadness of all the joy upon this rolling world. They too could deeply
-feel the inexorable mingling of delight and pain, of life and loss....
-
-Their great Earth Mother, blond and sunny as her golden grain, the deity
-of all fruitfulness and beneficent increase, is also _Ceres Deserta_—the
-Mater Dolorosa—shrouded in the dark blue robe of all earth’s shadows,
-haggard with tears of wasting desolation—“the type of divine sorrow,” as
-well as of joyous fruition ... her emblem the blood-red poppy, symbol in
-its drowsy juices, of sleep and death, as in its multitudinous seeds the
-symbol of life and resurrection.
-
-And her daughter, like herself the most specially and intimately beloved
-by the Greeks among all their deities, had even more the dual
-quality—Goddess of Spring, of resurrection, and rejuvenescence, and yet
-too, Queen of the dark Under World. She was the impulse of all spring’s
-teeming life, and yet herself “compact of sleep and death and narcotic
-flowers bearing always in the swallowed pomegranate seeds the secret of
-ultimate decay, of return to the grave.”
-
-Korè, the maiden, the incarnation of all fresh and sweet and innocent
-joyousness, was also symbol of its evanescence—“a helpless plucked
-flower in the arms of Aidoneus,” so that upon the sarcophagi of women
-who had died in early youth the Greeks were wont to carve Pluto’s
-stealing of Persephone, picturing the Divine Maiden with the likeness of
-the dear dead one’s face.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Dark, blurred shapes in Greek-like drapery of many-folded cape and
-shawl, appeared now and then in shifting crowds upon station platforms,
-like the uneasy shades of Pluto’s kingdom seeking escape.
-
-To Peripatetica and Jane it began to seem as if their quest for the Lost
-Spring had taken them into the Under World of her imprisonment to behold
-with thrills of half pity, half awe, in “that dim land where all things
-are forgotten” her transformation into the mate of gloomy Dis, no longer
-bright, golden-haired girl-flower, but veiled _Proserpina Despœna_, the
-Queen of the Dead, where now:
-
- “Pale, beyond porch and portal,
- Crowned with calm leaves, she stands,
- Who gathers all things mortal
- With cold immortal hands;
-
- She waits for each and other,
- She waits for all men born,
- Forgets the Earth, her mother,
- The life of fruits and corn.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Escaping at last from the sulphur fumes, the strange glares and the
-Hades visions, they found themselves standing under a clear star-strewn
-sky with a gentle air blowing in their faces. In an open carriage they
-were whirled off, they knew not where, into the night, stars bright
-overhead and lights like fallen stars on a high hill to the right, the
-soft wind of the darkness breathing of spring and green growing things.
-
-Suddenly there was the welcoming door of the Hotel des Temples, and then
-little white bedrooms and quick oblivion.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a pounding on Jane’s door.
-
-“Hurry, you sluggard!” says Peripatetica’s voice. “Come out and see what
-a delicious place this is!” and she enters radiant. “There’s no mistake
-about spring this time; everything is riotous with it—and it’s real
-country. Not mere theatrical scenery like Taormina, nor mere bones and
-stones like Syracuse, but real dear Arcadian country, with trees,
-actually _trees_! and there are great golden temples rising out of the
-trees, with the sea and the hills behind, and nothing but sweet peaceful
-meadows and orchards all around us—I want to stay here forever.”
-
-When Jane too stood upon the hotel terrace drinking in all the fairness
-of the outlook which Peripatetica silently but proudly displayed, in the
-proprietorship of earlier rising, she was quite ready to echo the wish.
-Billowy orchards of almonds in tenderest leafage, hoary groves of
-olives, the silver and white of wind-stirred bean-fields in blossom,
-vivid emerald of young wheat, crimson meadows of lupine rolling down to
-a peacock sea glittering to a wide horizon.
-
-Soft mountains, not too high; old stone pines black against the azure
-sky; brown walls of convents, and bell towers emerging from the dark
-green of oranges and pines; and rising out of all this Arcadian
-sweetness of meadow and grove the tawny columns of the Temples.
-
-“Oh, let’s get to them at once!” cried Jane, and guideless and impatient
-they went, as the bird flies, straight across the intervening country,
-towards those beckoning golden pillars. Plunging down the hillside in
-front, garden-orchard, ploughed field, dusty highroad—all were merely a
-road between them and those temples of Lost Gods still rising
-unsubmerged above the tree tops. Little boys digging in the fields shyly
-offered them fossil shells and the bits of pottery their shovels had
-turned up, old women at garden gates called invitations to come in and
-pick oranges or inspect the ruins of “Casa Greco’s,” but they held
-straight on through olive groves seemingly old as the temples
-themselves, through velvety young wheat and flowery meadows. The
-distance was greater than had appeared from above. Sometimes the gleam
-of columns through the green beckoned illusively to impossible short
-cuts, as when a tempting grass path seemed to run straight to the feet
-of the nearest temple and instead led into a farmyard inhabited by
-fiercely barking dogs. A noise that called out the farm people to
-explain as politely as if these were the first strangers who had ever
-made the intrusive mistake, that an impassable wall made it impossible
-to reach the Temples through their property, and to detail a wee,
-starry-eyed bronze faun in tattered blue rags to put them upon the
-correct but roundabout road.
-
-In the glowing sun of the spring morning—the old world renewing itself
-in blooming freshness all about—songs of birds and petals of
-fruit-blossoms in the air, against the shimmering blue of sky and sea
-and the new green of the earth’s breast, was upreared the saffron mass
-of Concordia—shrine of a Peace twenty centuries old.
-
-It looked its name, did Concord, standing with all its amber columns
-worn but perfect, in unbroken accord, still upholding architrave and
-tympanum.
-
-Intact in all but roof, on its platform of steep, worn steps it
-stands—in the midst of fields and groves that were once a clanging stone
-city, close beside the dusty highroad along which come the landau loads
-of hurried tourists—with its calm still unbroken. It embodies the
-permanence of peace through all the evanescent life of the flowing
-years. Unaltered through all the changes of time, its Doric columns
-rise, tranquil and fair, and hospitably it offers welcome to all who
-come.
-
-[Illustration: “THE SAFFRON MASS OF CONCORDIA”]
-
-As of old one may climb its steps to worship and admire. The road winds
-to its very base, and it stands as free to all comers as to the sun and
-wind. It alone of all the glories of once magnificent Akragas remains in
-its original shape. Other shrines were greater, larger, more splendid in
-their day. The high house of Zeus, with its mammoth columns, was nearly
-three times the height of Concord; it had an enclosure of three hundred
-and seventy-two feet to Concord’s one hundred and thirty-eight, and must
-once have looked scornfully on its little neighbour. Hercules, with his
-marvels of sculpture and painting; Juno, with her statue-enriched
-“thymele” terrace extending her precincts around its out-door altar and
-her renowned picture by Zeuxis, for whose composite beauty the five
-loveliest girls of the city had been models, probably outranked simple
-Concord. No record of its holding venerated treasures of beauty has come
-down from the days of its prime. Yet it alone has survived whole;
-emerging intact from the storms of war and nature, as if its own
-distilled atmosphere of serenity has acted as a preservative against
-Time. Even the Middle Ages treated it gently. St. Gregory of the Turnips
-took it for a shrine, and a gentle, serene saint he must have been; one
-able to dwell in the abode of Peace without feeling any desire to alter
-and rebuild, glad to look out of its open peristyle and watch his
-turnips in the sunny fields, wisely refraining from choking the pillars
-into walls and plaster like poor Minerva’s at Syracuse. Concordia’s
-cella seemed to have been just a cosy fit for St. Gregory and he a
-careful tenant, leaving only the two arched openings in its walls to
-mark his occupancy. And so the Temple is to-day the best preserved in
-existence—shorn of all its statues, stucco, and decoration, a little
-blurred and worn in outline, as if Time’s maw, while refraining from
-crushing, has yet mumbled it over gently.
-
-It was apparently this completeness of preservation which had so
-enamoured Goethe that he dared to speak lightly of the stern majesty of
-the temple of Pæstum by comparison. Poseidon’s great fane he thought as
-inferior to Concord’s as a hero is inferior to a god.
-
-“A god to a hero,” quoted Jane with a resentful sniff. “It was just like
-that pompous, stodgy old German to be carried away by mere preservation,
-and to prefer this sugary-slightly-melted-vanilla-caramel temple to that
-solemn splendour of Pæstum.”
-
-“What an abominable simile you’ve used for this lovely thing,” scolded
-Peripatetica. “You’re even worse than Goethe—if possible.”
-
-“It isn’t an abominable simile,” protested Jane flippantly. “It _is_
-exactly the colour of a good vanilla caramel, and moreover it looks like
-one licked all over by some giant tongue.”
-
-Having said an outrageous thing she pretended to defend it and believe
-it, but her heart smote her for irreverence as she and Peripatetica
-strolled about the peristyle, gazing through the columns at the pictures
-their tawny flutings framed, and she grudgingly admitted that the
-situation at least was divine.
-
-Perched on the crest of a sheer-dropping rocky cliff, Concordia faces
-the west. To the south dark blue sea, and to the north billowy woods and
-fields in all the gamut of spring greens surge up to the apricot-tinted
-town, which is the last shrunken remnant of old Akragas. Beneath the
-cliff green meadows stretch smooth to the African Sea. Eastwards, on a
-neighbouring knoll, Juno lifts her exquisite columns against the blue,
-and softly moulded hills melt into the distant ruggedness of
-Castrogiovanni’s mountains. To the north lie fields and groves and
-orchards, with dottings of farmhouse and church, up to the top of the
-Rupe Athena, where, with her usual passion for conspicuousness, high
-Athena had once kept watch in her Temple, that now, according to the so
-frequent fate of the mighty, is fallen into nothingness.
-
-How worshipful his blithe gods of Sun and Abundance must have here
-appeared to the Greek; how good the world spread out for him in all its
-fairness; the citadel-crowned hill protecting his rich city, the shining
-sea carrying his commerce; the mountains of the bounteous Earth Mother’s
-home encircling the rolling groves and meadowland she blessed so
-fruitfully, and the triumphs of his own handiwork in the marvellous
-temples and buildings of this splendid Akragas, “fairest of mortal
-cities,” as even the poets of Greece admitted.
-
-The Plutonian shore of the previous night seemed very far away, now that
-Persephone was back in her own “belonging” country again; the dark
-terrors of Hades had grown dim. Naturally the gods of Light and Day were
-the only ones worshipped; they were supreme for life—and after—ah well!
-“the dark Fate which lay behind gods and men could not be propitiated by
-any rites, and must be encountered manfully as one meets the
-inevitable.”...
-
-“Of course there were no temples to Pluto, they wouldn’t have known how
-to build one,” said Peripatetica, looking from the enclosed cella to the
-sunlit peristyle outside. “I never quite realized before the cheerful,
-self-possessed publicity of Greek worship; their temples standing always
-in these open elevated sites; open themselves to the light and
-air—majestically simple. There is just the little enclosure to shelter
-the statue of the god, and all the rest is clear openness, where the
-worshippers stood under glowing sun and sky, or looking out into it.
-It’s essentially an out-of-door building, the Greek Temple, spreading
-its beauty to light and air like a flower. Pluto would have had to
-evolve a type of his own, he never could have fitted into this calm
-cheerfulness.”
-
-“No,” pondered Jane, “there is no room for superstitious terrors in the
-sunshine. I wonder does superstition turn naturally to caves and gloom,
-or do dark holes in the ground breed it? There is all the space of light
-and darkness between the sermon preached on the Mount, all beatitudes
-and tenderness, and the theology of the monks in the Middle Ages after
-the Christians had made their churches in such catacombs as those of
-Syracuse.”...
-
-All Girgenti’s temples are wrought from this native chrome-yellow tufa;
-a sort of solidified sea-beach—compacted sand, pebbles, and fossil
-shells. The original snow-white stucco, made of marble dust, has flaked
-away, save here and there in some protected niche. The dry sirocco gnaws
-into the soft sandstone, and on the seaside of the columns show the long
-deep scorings of its viewless teeth, sunk in places nearly half through
-the huge diameter of the pillars.
-
-Peripatetica was in two minds as to whether the temples had not been
-even more lovely in their original virgin whiteness. “After all,” she
-mourned, “they are but a frame without the pictures; for the Greek
-temple existed primarily to be a setting for its sculpture. Sculpture
-was an essential part of its planning, not a mere decoration, and
-without it pediment, metopes, frieze, and pedestals are meaningless
-forms. That sculpture that stood and walked on the pediments and gave
-life to the frieze; that animated the exterior, or sat calm and strong
-in the central shrine. To a Greek even this wonderfully preserved
-Concordia, bare of sculpture, would seem but a melancholy skeleton of a
-once fair shrine.”
-
-But Jane was obstinately sure that nothing could be better than the
-natural harmonies of the naked stone.
-
-“Nothing,” she insisted with bland firmness, “not even your blind
-conviction that everything the Greeks did was exactly right—just because
-they did it—will persuade me that they improved these temples by any
-marble plaster. Come over here and look at the warm red gold of those
-soaring fluted stems against the vivid blue! It is as if the splendour
-of sunset glowed upon them all day long. As if they had soaked in so
-much sun through all the bright centuries that now even the very stones
-gave it out again.”
-
-Peripatetica had been half inclined to believe this herself at first,
-but of course Jane’s opposition clinched her wavering suffrages for the
-stucco.
-
-“You lack in imagination,” she announced loftily. “You see only what you
-see. Try to realize what the marble background meant to the
-saffron-robed, flower-garlanded priests, and to the worshippers massed
-on the steps and in the peristyles in delicate-tinted chiton and
-chamyle—crocus, daffodil, violet-rose, ivory—like a living flower wreath
-from out the spring meadows encircling the white temple’s base—”
-
-“Oh, do stop trying to be Pater-esque!” scoffed Jane, “and let’s go to
-luncheon. That sounds too much like sublimated guide-book, and the hotel
-looks miles away to my unimaginative eye.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“We won’t, will we?” said Jane half an hour later, with her irreverent
-mouth full.
-
-Peripatetica knew what she meant.
-
-“Go on to-morrow? No, indeed. We’ll telegraph Cook to send our mail here
-until further notice—the idea of being told there was nothing to linger
-for at Girgenti! It’s the nicest place we’ve yet found in Sicily.”
-
-The room was full of the munching of tourists. From the talk in German,
-English, and French, could be gathered they had one and all “done” the
-five temples, the tombs, and San Niccola that morning—would “take in”
-the town sights that afternoon and pass on that evening or the next
-morning. The two Seekers, to whom the morning had not been long enough
-in which to dream and dispute over one temple, felt their heads growing
-dizzy at the rush with which the tourist stream flowed along its
-Cook-dug channels, and they gladly resolved to leave the current and
-climb up high and dry on the bank of this inviting little backwater.
-
-The announcement of their intention to stay on seemed to give the polite
-young proprietor of the hotel a strange shock. He offered better rooms
-looking on the terrace, and _pension_ rates if they stayed more than
-three days, instead of the usual week for which that reduction is
-commonly made. A flutter of excitement at their behaviour passed at once
-through all the personnel of the hotel.
-
-First came the concierge. “You are really not leaving to-morrow morning,
-ladies? For what day do you wish me to get your tickets stamped?” He was
-startledly incredulous when told that the day was still too far in the
-future for a date to be fixed. The porter came to ask at what time he
-was to carry out their luggage in the morning—the head waiter to know
-for which train they wished to be called. The stolid chambermaid’s mouth
-fell open in surprise when asked to move their things to other rooms.
-The two-foot-high Buttons shifted about chairs four times his own size
-in the lobby to get a chance to gaze satisfactorily at such peculiar
-ladies, and by tea-time the German waiters were staring as they carried
-about tea-trays, and pointing out to one another the strangely behaving
-two who were not leaving the next day!
-
-The pretty little hotel was like a railway restaurant. Successive sets
-of hurried tourists appeared, made a one-meal or a one-night stop, and
-rushed on, leaving their places to others. In a week’s time so many sets
-had come and gone that Peripatetica and Jane began to take on the air of
-pre-historic aborigines; as if they had been sitting on their sunny bank
-watching all the invading hordes of nations since the Carthagenians made
-their first raid.
-
-By way of emphasizing the superior intelligence of their own methods
-they savoured slowly and lingeringly Girgenti’s endless charms. Loafing
-placidly on the flowery terrace for an hour after breakfast to enjoy the
-distant view of the golden temples, or to watch the patient labours of
-ancient brown Orlando and his ancient grey ass Carlo, who spent all
-their waking hours in climbing down, down the precipitous road to the
-Fonte dei Greci with empty water-barrels, and toilsomely bringing them
-up full and dripping to be emptied into the terrace well with its lovely
-carved well head. Or they retired to the niche below the terrace stairs
-under the feathery pepper tree, and sat amid a blaze of poppies and
-mauve to write letters, punctuated by frequent pauses to look across the
-olive orchards and young wheat fields to the wide blue fields of the
-sea. And every day they strolled away through the orchard footpaths
-towards the temples, which were ever their goal, though they might be
-hours in reaching that goal because of being led away by adventures on
-the road.
-
-It was by way of this footpath that they first fell into the hands of
-Fortunato. They were forever falling into some one’s hands and finding
-the results agreeable, for they kept their minds open to suggestion and
-abjured all hard and fast lines of intention, being wise enough to
-realize that what is known as “a good traveller” usually misses all the
-good of travel by the cut-and-driedness of his aims.
-
-Fortunato was sure that he could “spika da Englishy,” though what led
-him to suppose so, other than a large command of illuminative gesture,
-never became clear. Some half-dozen words—adorned with superfluous
-vowels to a point of unrecognizability—he did possess; the rest was
-Sicilian, sympathy, and vivid intelligence, which sufficed to make him
-the perfectly delightful guide he explained himself to be. His age he
-declared to be fourteen, he looked all of ten, but his knowledge of the
-world, of life, of history, and of the graces of conversation could
-hardly have been acquired by any one less than forty. Within twenty
-minutes he had made them free of such short and simple annals of his
-career as he judged to be suited to their limited forestieri minds,
-having first firmly assumed the burden of all their small
-impedimenta—jackets, kodaks, and parasols. He was one of fifteen, he
-explained, and also the main staff of his parents’ declining years; the
-six staffs younger than himself being somewhat too short for that filial
-office. The other eight had been removed from this service by the
-combined ravages of marriage, the army, and emigration. When time and
-the growth of his juniors enabled him to lay down his absorbing duties
-he had the intention of joining in Nuova Yorka a distinguished barber,
-who enjoyed the privilege of being his elder brother. Nuova Yorka, he
-had been given to understand by this brother, boasted no such mountains
-as these of Girgenti, but its streets were filled for months with hills
-of ice and snow, and this information Peripatetica and Jane were
-regretfully obliged to confirm.
-
-No matter! even such rigours could not check his ambition to “barb,” and
-as his brother had explained how necessary it was that he should be
-complete master of Englishy before landing in Nuova Yorka if he hoped to
-escape being “plucked” (great business of illuminating gestures of
-rapacity) he employed in guiding Americans such brief hours as he could
-snatch from school.
-
-They discovered later that Fortunato snatched from school just seven
-entire days every week.
-
-It had been the intention of the two to spend the morning among the
-gigantic ruins of the temple of Zeus, and yet when Fortunato put
-pressure upon their ever flexible impulses at the gate of the strange
-old Panitteri garden, they found themselves instead under the walls of
-the church of San Niccola, where the gillyflowers and wild mignonette
-rioted from every crevice. Meekly they climbed a great stone terrace
-adorned with crumbling statues and Corinthian entablatures. Meekly they
-examined the great baths, and delighted in the shining panorama of sea
-and plain and hill, with golden Concordia seen in its most lovely aspect
-between two gigantic stone pines.
-
-Still sternly shepherded by the small guide they climbed down again to
-make a closer acquaintance with the Oratory of Phalaris. Phalaris of the
-infamous legend of the brazen bull, into whose heated body were cast the
-enemies of the ancient Tyrant of Akragas, because that humorous
-gentleman’s fancy was highly diverted by the similarity of their
-moanings, as they slowly roasted, to the lowing of kine. It is said that
-he fretted a good deal because nobody else appeared to think the thing
-as good a joke as it seemed to him, but then taste in jests _will_
-differ, unfortunately. The Carthagenians when they came over and
-conquered Sicily were quite delighted with the ingenious toy, and
-carried it off triumphantly to Africa. They were finished artists in
-torture themselves, and appreciated a valuable new idea. Scipio found
-the bull in Carthage, when he made a final end of that city, and he
-returned it to Akragas, but appetite for really poignant fun appears to
-have died out by that time, and Fortunato, whom they consulted, seemed
-to think it was probably eventually broken up for the purpose of
-manufacturing braziers, or possibly warming-pans.
-
-Memory of the Bull almost obscured the fact that the Oratory was a
-beautiful Greek chapel, such as was used to hold some statue of a god,
-and the memorials of ancestors, and served for private daily devotions
-without need of a priest. The Normans had the same habit of private
-family chapels, so the Oratory had served them in turn, being pierced by
-a Norman window and the square-headed entrance door fitted with an arch.
-
-Half a dozen races and centuries had each had a hand in the Church and
-Convent of San Niccola too, apparently. It was built from stones filched
-from that vast ruin of the Temple of Zeus they were on their roundabout
-way to see, and which has always been an exhaustless quarry for
-Girgenti. So late as in the last century the huge stones that formed the
-Porto Empedocle, a long mole from which the sulphur is shipped, were
-stolen from poor Zeus. Doors, windows, roofs, arches, had been added or
-changed in San Niccola, just as each generation needed, and each in the
-taste of the period. The holy-water stoup at the entrance, for example,
-was an enormous marble hand, taken from one of the temples. For the
-Greeks too had fonts of holy water, consecrated by plunging into it a
-burning torch from the altar, and as the worshippers entered they were
-asperged with a branch of laurel.
-
-The poor Saint was not in flourishing circumstances in these later days,
-it would seem, judging by the bareness of his sanctuary, and the torn
-cotton lace upon the altars, and yet he was an industrious healer, if
-one might reason from the votives that hung about his picture. A few
-were wrought in silver, but more in wax, or carved and painted wood,
-reproducing with hideous fidelity the swollen limbs, the cancerous
-breasts, the goitered throats, the injured eyes, the carbuncles and
-abcesses he had healed through his miraculous intervention. Indeed, he
-was a general jobber in miracles, for the naïve, rude little paintings
-on the wall showed a spirited donkey running away with a painted cart,
-the terrified occupant frantically making signals of distress to San
-Niccola in heaven, who was preparing promptly to check the raging ass.
-Or he was drawing a chrome-yellow petitioner from a cobalt sea, or
-turning a Mafia dagger aside, or finding a lost child in the mountains.
-He certainly “studied to please,” and it did seem a pity he should be
-housed in so bare and poverty-stricken a shrine. Many less active saints
-lived amid welters of gilding and luxury.
-
-In spite of Fortunato dragging them aside later to see a little “Casa
-Greco,” where they could trace delicate tesselated pavements and the
-bases of the columns of the atrium amid the grass, they still succeeded
-in arriving that same afternoon at their original goal.
-
-Only the temple of Diana at Ephesus was larger than this great shrine to
-the spirit of the overarching sky, and even yet, though moles and
-churches and villas have been wrought from its remains, the gigantic
-ruin daunts the imagination with its colossal fragments, its huge tumble
-of stone, its fallen mountains of masonry. Each triglyph alone weighed
-twelve tons, and the enormous columns around the whole length of its
-three hundred and seventy-two feet were more than sixty feet high.
-Theron, the benevolent despot of Akragas, built it with the labours of
-his Carthagenian captives, and no doubt a memory of their frightful
-toilings in the Sicilian noons inspired the Carthagenians, when they
-captured the city, to their fury of destruction against the fane they
-themselves had wrought. It would seem as if only some convulsion of
-nature could have brought down that prodigious construction, but still
-visible upon the bases of the fallen pillars are the cuts made by the
-Punic conquerors, sufficient to disturb the equilibrium of even these
-monster columns. When their rage had at last expended itself nothing of
-all that incredible mass of masonry remained standing save three of the
-enormous Telamone—the male caryatids—that had supported the entablature.
-And so firmly were these built that they stood there for fifteen
-centuries more before time and a quaking of the earth at last brought
-them down.
-
-Now the last of these lies in the centre of the ruin, perhaps the most
-impressive figure wrought by man’s hands, so like does it seem—blurred,
-vague, tremendous—to some effort to symbolize in stone the whole human
-race—the very frame of the world itself. Shoulder and breast an upheaved
-mountain range, down which the mighty muscles pour like leaping rivers
-to the plain of the enormous loins and thighs. Rough-hewn locks cluster
-about the frowning brows, as a gnarled forest grips a cliff’s edge, from
-beneath which stare darkly the caverned eyes. Primeval, prehistoric in
-form, overrun by gnawing lichens, smeared by lapse of time to a mere
-vast adumbration of the human form.
-
-This temple had been the supreme effort of Akragas, the richest and most
-beautiful city the Greeks ever built. The stories of its wealth, of its
-luxury, of its gardens, palaces, theatres, baths, its gaieties, and its
-pomps, sound like a description of Rome under the Empire, and would be
-incredible if such ruins as this did not exist to attest to the facts.
-
-Far more characteristic of the Greek were those twin temples of Castor
-and Pollux
-
- —“These be the great Twin Brethren
- To whom the Dorians pray”—
-
-to which Fortunato turned their steps as a refreshing counteraction of
-the stern immensities of Zeus. Light, delicate, gracious fragments they
-were, lifting themselves airily from a sea of flowers on the edge of the
-ravine-like Piscina, once the reservoir for the city’s water, but now
-full of lemon orchards, and fringed by immense dark carouba trees....
-
-Another day, conducted by Fortunato always, they pilgrimed to the temple
-of Hercules, oldest and most archaic of them all, containing still in
-the cella remains of the pedestal on which stood that famous bronze
-statue of the muscular hero and demigod. The statue which that
-unscrupulous collector, Verres, tried to remove and thereby provoked a
-riot in the city. In this temple too had hung Zeuxis’ renowned painting
-of Hercules’ mother, Alcmena.
-
-It was on still another day that Fortunato led through olive groves and
-bowery lanes to the temple of Juno Lacina, beguiling the way with light
-songs—some of them distinctly light—and scintillating conversation upon
-all matters in the heavens above, the earth beneath, and the waters
-under the earth. He mimicked deliciously the characteristics of English,
-French, German, and American tourists, differentiating their national
-peculiarities with delicate acuity. He made no effort to disguise that
-he had pondered much upon the sexes, and opined, with a shrug, that
-there was a hopeless and lifelong irreconcilability in their two points
-of view. Marriage, he frankly conceded to be a necessity, but considered
-it a lamentable one. Of course one must come to it soon or late, but,
-for a man, how sad a fate! Then he broke off to sing of undying passion,
-and interrupted himself to ask if the donkeys in Nuova Yorka were as
-quick and strong as those of Sicily; he supposed the streets must be
-crowded with them, where the needs of commerce were so great.
-
-Eventually he brought them out upon the lovely eminence of the temple of
-the Mother of Heaven—Juno Lacina, special deity of mothers, which crowns
-the edge of a sheer cliff of orange-yellow tufa four hundred feet above
-the sea. The sea had washed close under the cliff when the temple was
-first built, but now at its foot the alluvial plains stretch level and
-rich, bearing orchards and meadows and vineyards more fertile than any
-old Akragas knew, though this very shrine was built from the proceeds of
-exportation of oil to Carthage.
-
-Earthquakes had shaken down more than half the tall, slim columns.
-Sirocco has bitten deep into those still standing, and into the fallen
-fragments which strew the landward slope; fragments lying among gnarled
-olives, seemingly as wind-eaten and ancient as themselves. Among these
-fluted fragments grew wild pansies and crimson lupins, from which little
-Fortunato gathered nosegays, as he shrilled, in his boyish falsetto,
-songs of love and sorrow—or sat and kicked his heels upon the margin of
-an old bottle-shaped cistern. Tourists whirled up dustily for a cursory
-inspection—Baedeker in hand—and whirled as quickly away, bent on getting
-through the sights and passing on; but still Peripatetica and Jane
-lingered and dreamed among the ruins until Fortunato, visibly bored,
-suggested a short cut back to the hotel. It led them by fields of lupin,
-spread like crimson velvet mantles on the hillside, where the contadini
-cut the glowing crop, heaping it upon asses until they seemed but a
-moving mass of blossom trotting home on brown legs. Goats, Fortunato
-volunteered, detested—for some curious goatish reason he could not
-explain—this picturesque food, but donkeys! ah, to donkeys it was—in a
-burst of superlative explanation—“the donkey macaroni.”
-
-This short cut led, too—apparently to Fortunato’s surprise and
-dismay—directly through a walled farmyard surrounding a frowning,
-half-ruined casa, nail-studded of door and barred of window, and with an
-air of ancient and secretive menace. It was the sort of place travellers
-in such books as “The Mysteries of Udolpho” used to come upon at
-nightfall, far from any other habitation, with a thunderstorm about to
-break among the mountains, and the leader of their four-horsed
-travelling carriage hopelessly lame, so that the delicate and shrinking
-heroine must, willy nilly, beg for a night’s accommodation and the surly
-inhabitant’s sinister hospitality. Curiously enough the dwellers in this
-casa were, it seemed, of the exact Udolpho variety. Ringing the
-correctly rusty bell, and battering upon the massive gate with their
-parasol handles aroused a storm of deep-mouthed baying of dogs within,
-and a fierce brown face finally appeared at a small wooden shutter to
-demand the cause of the intrusion. Fortunato’s heart and legs plainly
-turned to water at the sight of this person, but realizing that he had
-got Jane and Peripatetica into a hole and must get them out, he wheedled
-in such honeyed and persuasive Sicilian, that at last, and reluctantly,
-the heavy portal
-
- “Ground its teeth to let them pass,”
-
-the furious dogs having first been chained. Very arid and ruined and
-poor this jealously guarded dwelling seemed. Nothing was visible the
-protection of which required those four big wolf-like dogs that shrieked
-and bounded and tore at their chains as the intruders passed; nor that
-the lean fierce man and his leaner and fiercer wife and children should
-accompany them like a jailer’s guard to the exit. Fortunately this
-nether door was unbarred before the lean man demanded money for having
-permitted them to cross his land, and having a sense of Fortunato’s
-imploring eyes upon them they made the gift a lire instead of a copper,
-and pushing through the door fled as for their lives.
-
-“So there really was an Italy like the Italy of the romantic Georgian
-novel!” said Jane wonderingly, as soon as she could catch breath.
-
-“It’s only another proof,” gasped Peripatetica, “that travellers really
-do tell the truth. It’s the ignorant stay-at-homes who can’t believe
-anything they haven’t seen themselves. Fortunato,” she demanded sternly,
-“who are those people, and why do they behave so absurdly? What are they
-concealing?”
-
-But no explanation was to be had from that erstwhile fluent and
-expansive _homme du monde_. He was frightened, he was vague, and simply
-darkened counsel.
-
-“I strongly suspect there is some Mafia business behind all this—you
-naughty boy!” said Jane reprovingly, but Fortunato only pulled his cap
-over his eyes and slunk away without claiming his day’s wage.
-
-Because of this episode Fortunato found his offered services frigidly
-dispensed with the next day when he presented himself, Jane and
-Peripatetica setting out alone to explore the town of Girgenti. They
-were quite sure they could themselves discover a short cut to the small
-city which would be much more amusing than the dusty highway. It seemed
-but a stone’s throw distant, and surely by striking down this footpath,
-and rounding that rise....
-
-An hour later, panting, dripping, and disgusted, they climbed into the
-rear of the town, having stumbled through the boulders of dry
-water-courses, struggled over the huge old rugged pavements of ancient
-Akragas—washed out of their concealment by winter torrents—skirted
-outlying villas, and laboured up steps. The short cut had proved the
-longest way round they could possibly have taken to the inadequate,
-shabby little museum they had set out to see in this modern successor of
-the great Greek city. Girgenti, though one of the most thriving of
-Sicilian towns, thanks to its sulphur mines, only manages to fill one
-small corner of the hill acropolis of that ancient city, which once
-covered all the miles stretching between this and the temple-crowned
-ridge of the southern boundary of cliffs. Akragas found space for nearly
-a million of inhabitants where Girgenti nourishes but twenty thousand or
-so.
-
-It was not till 580 B.C. that this Rhodian colony was founded, so
-Akragas was a century and a half younger than her great rival,
-Syracuse—the offspring of Corinth. But that site on the steep river-girt
-hill, rising from such fertile country, proved so favourable to life and
-commerce; trade with the opposite coast of Africa developed so richly,
-that Akragas’ rise to wealth and power was rapid, and she was soon
-pressing Syracuse hard for the place of first city. Her temples were the
-greatest of all Sicily, almost of all Greece. The city’s magnificence
-became a bye-word, and accounts of the wealth and prodigality of its
-private citizens read like Arabian Nights imaginings. In the public
-gymnasium the people used golden strigils and gold vessels for oil. One
-rich Akragantine kept slaves in waiting all day at the door of his great
-mansion to invite every passing stranger in to feast and repose in his
-spacious courts, where there were baths and fresh garments always
-waiting and slaves to entertain with dance and music; flower garlands
-and food and wine unlimited at his call. There was wine in the cellars
-by the reservoir full—three hundred reservoirs of nine hundred gallons
-each—hewn in the solid rock! This same genial Gelleas, when five hundred
-riders came at once from Gela, took them all in, and, it being the dead
-of winter, presented each man with new warm garments.
-
-They delighted in pageants and splendid public festivals, these
-splendour-loving Akragantines, of whom their philosopher Empedocles said
-that they “built as if they were to live forever and feasted as if they
-were to die on the morrow!” We know they went out to welcome young
-Exainetos, victor at the Olympian Games, with three hundred glittering
-chariots drawn all by milk-white horses; we know of the wonderful
-illuminations that lit all the city, from the monuments of the high
-Acropolis to the temple-crowned sea-rampart, when a noble bride passed
-at night to her new home, with flutings and chorus, and an escort of
-eight hundred carriages and riders innumerable.
-
-Now the town seemed to be mostly a winding tangle of steep stairs—with
-houses for walls—and these stairs were bestrewn with ancient remnants of
-vegetables that had outlived their usefulness, and a swarming population
-of children. Fazelli mentions an Agrigentian woman of his time who
-brought forth seventy-three children at thirty-three births, and judging
-from the appearance of the streets that rabbit-like practice still
-maintains. Way could hardly be made through the swarm of juvenile pests,
-clamouring for pennies and offering themselves as guides, until a boy in
-slightly cleaner rags was chosen to show the way to the Cathedral. Once
-given an official position he furiously put his competitors to flight,
-and with goat-footed lightness flitted before up the ladder-like alleys,
-while the two panted after until it seemed as if they should be able
-easily to step off into the sky.
-
-A queer old Fourteenth Century campanile, with Norman ogives and Moorish
-balconies, still gives character to the exterior of this
-thousand-foot-long Cathedral of San Gerlando perched aloft in the windy
-blue, but inside the Eighteenth Century had done its worst. Baroque
-rampant; colossal stucco mermaids and cupids, interspersed with gilded
-whorls and scrolls as thick as shells upon the “shell-work” boxes of the
-seaside booths. A giant finger could flick out a dozen cupids anywhere
-without their ever being missed. Yet it stands upon the ruins of a
-temple to Jove, and here for more than two thousand years have prayers
-and praise and incense gone up to the gods of the overarching blue that
-looks so near, so that even stucco and gilding cannot render it
-irreverent or lessen its power to brood the children of earth beneath
-its wings.
-
-[Illustration: TEMPLES OF CASTOR AND POLLUX, GIRGENTI “LIFTING
-THEMSELVES AIRILY FROM A SEA OF FLOWERS”] Even so it seemed to-day, for
-merrily and thickly as the throngs of naked little stucco cupids chased
-each other on the walls, infants of flesh and blood in gay rags and
-heavy hob-nailed shoes swarmed over the marble floor. As if it were a
-kindergarten small boys played games of tag around the columns, small
-girls trotted about more demurely, or flocked like rows of perching
-sparrows around the numerous altars. The church resounded with the hum
-of their voices and the patter of their feet; yet the old women at
-prayer continued their devotions, quite undisturbed, and no passing
-priest or sacristan did more than shake a gentle finger at some
-especially boisterous youngster.
-
-The sacristy holds the jewel of the Cathedral, a ravished jewel which
-does not belong at all in this ecclesiastical setting—the lovely Greek
-sarcophagus portraying the passionate story of Hippolytus and Phædra.
-This is the one remnant now left to Akragas out of all her treasures of
-Greek art. Found in the temple of Concord, where the gentle St. Gregory
-had probably cherished it, the Girgentians offered it to their
-Cathedral, and in that most tolerant of churches it served for long as
-the High Altar until influx of the outer world made some sense of its
-incongruity felt even here. At one end of the tomb Phædra swoons
-amourously among her maidens, their delicate little round child-like
-faces and soft-draped forms melting into the background in exquisite low
-relief. Two of a more stately beauty hold up the Queen’s limp arms and
-support her as she confesses to her old nurse the secret passion
-consuming her for that god-like boy, son of her own husband, whom with
-all her fiery blood she had once hated as illegitimate rival to her own
-children, but now had come to find so dear that she “loved the very
-touch of his fleecy coat”—that simple grey-and-white homespun his Amazon
-mother’s loving fingers had woven. In high bold relief of interlacing
-trees Hippolytus on the other side hunts as joyously as his patroness
-Artemis herself. Opposite, arrested among his dogs and companions, he
-stands in the clear purity of his young beauty, like “the water from the
-brook or the wild flowers of the morning, or the beams of the morning
-star turned to human flesh,” turning away his head from the bent
-shrunken form of the old nurse pleading her shameful embassy. And on the
-other end is carved the tragedy of his death, the revenge of Aphrodite
-in anger at his obduracy against herself and her votary Phædra. “Through
-all the perils of darkness he had guided the chariot safely along the
-curved shore; the dawn was come, and a little breeze astir as the grey
-level spaces parted delicately into white and blue, when angry Aphrodite
-awoke from the deep betimes, rent the tranquil surface; a great wave
-leapt suddenly into the placid distance of the little shore, and was
-surging here to the very necks of the plunging horses, a moment since
-enjoying so pleasantly with him the caress of the morning air, but now,
-wholly forgetful of their old affectionate habit of obedience, dragging
-their leader headlong over the rough pavements.”
-
-Life seemed to breathe from the ivory-coloured marble. So vividly had
-its creator’s hand carried out the conception of his brain that all the
-elapsed centuries since the vision of beauty had come to him were but as
-drifting mists. Races, dynasties, powers, the very form of the earth
-itself, had altered, in the changing ages, but the grace of this little
-dream was still a living force.
-
- “Oh Attic shape! Fair Attitude! with brede
- Of marble men and maidens, over wrought
- With forest branches and the trodden weed;
- Thou, silent form, dost tease us out of thought
- As doth eternity; Cold Pastoral!
- When old age shall this generation waile
- Thou shalt remain, in midst of other woe
- Than ours, a friend to man, to whom thou say’st,
- ‘Beauty is truth, truth beauty,’—that is all
- Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the steps of the Cathedral they witnessed a pretty sight.
-
-“Peripatetica,” announced Jane, “I will not walk back to the hotel! It
-may be only one mile from town, by the high road, but it was certainly
-four by that short cut, and all this hill-climbing on slippery cobbles
-has turned my knees to tissue paper. The boy must get us a cab—how does
-one say it? You tell him.”
-
-The boy hesitated at first at Peripatetica’s request, but went off in
-obedience to the firm command of her tone.
-
-Accustomed to the ubiquitous, ever present and ever-pestering cab of
-Taormina and Syracuse, they expected his instant return. But the minutes
-passed and passed, and sitting on the parapet of the Cathedral steps
-they had long opportunity to watch the world wag on. Apparently it was
-“Children’s Day” at the Cathedral, to which they were being mustered for
-catechism. The swarms inside were now explained. Though it had seemed as
-if every child in town must already be there, they were still flocking
-in.
-
-Mites of every size and sort between the ages of two and ten, small
-things with no accompanying elders, came toiling up the steep streets
-Cathedralwards, climbing the long flights of steps and boldly shoving
-into the great doorway.
-
-But the different manner of their coming! The unfaltering steady advance
-of the devout—heads brushed, shirts and frocks clean, faces set and
-solemn, no words or smiles for their companions, minds fixed on duty.
-Little girls came in bands, tongues going like mill-hoppers even as they
-plunged within the sacred portal. Little boys enlivened their pilgrimage
-with chasings and scuffles. Wee tots, timidly attached to the hand of
-some patriarch of eight or nine; receiving therefrom protecting
-encouragement, or being ruthlessly dragged along at the top speed of
-chubby legs, regardless of their streaming tears. Loiterers arriving
-with panting pink tongues, stockings half off and dragging, clothes all
-in disarray from some too delightful game on the way, plodding
-breathless up the steps with worried rubbings on clothes of dirty little
-paws; still casting reluctant looks at the sunshine before they made the
-plunge behind the dark leather curtain. Reprobates, at the very last
-refusing to enter at all; refusing to exchange the outer darkness of
-play and sunshine for the inner light of wax tapers and the Catechism;
-giving themselves boldly over to sin on the very Cathedral steps in
-merry games of tag and loud jeerings and floutings of the old beggar men
-who had given up their sunny posts at the doors in attempts to drive
-these backsliders in. And the Reluctant, coming with slow and dragging
-feet; heads turned back to all the mundane charms of the streets,
-lingering as long as possible before final hesitating entrance. For
-these last it was very hard that, straight in their way, just in front
-of the Cathedral, a brother Girgentian, whose very tender age still
-rendered him immune from religious duties, was thrillingly disporting
-himself with an iron barrel-hoop tied to a string, the leg of a chicken,
-and two most delightful mud-puddles. The care-free sportings and
-delicious condition of dirt of this Blessed Being made their own soaped
-and brushed virtue most cruelly unsatisfying to many of the Pilgrims.
-But there was the Infant Example, who, with crisp short skirts rustling
-complacency, and Mother’s large Prayer-book clasped firmly to her bosom,
-climbed the steps with eyes rolled raptly heavenwards and little black
-pig-tails vibrating piety. And some little boys with both stockings
-firmly gartered, jackets irreproachably buttoned, and a consciousness of
-all the answers to the Catechism safely bestowed in their sleek little
-heads, made their way in eagerly, wrapped in the “showing off”
-excitement. These little Lambs passed coldly and disapprovingly through
-those who had chosen to be goats in the outer sunshine. But many small
-ewes sent glances of fearful admiration from soft dark eyes at those
-bold flouters of authority, and many proper youths looked sidewise at
-them so longingly it was plain that only the fear of evil report taken
-home by sisters in tow, kept them from joining the Abandoned Ones.
-
-Peripatetica, amused and interested, forgot the flight of time. Jane,
-suddenly realizing it, cried:
-
-“That boy has been gone a half hour—do you suppose you really told him
-to get a cab? I believe you must have said something wild and strange
-which the poor thing will spend the rest of his life questing while we
-turn into lichens on this parapet.”
-
-Peripatetica, indignantly denying this slur on her Italian, insisted she
-had clearly and correctly demanded a cab, and a cab only.
-
-“I remember,” she reflected, “the boy looked very troubled as he went
-off—and now that I come to think of it, we haven’t met a horse in this
-town to-day. The Romans must have looted all the conveyances in their
-last sack of the city; the only one left is now kept in the Museum in a
-glass case, and allowed out for no less a person than the German
-Emperor—but I _won’t_ walk back. I should suppose the boy had deserted
-us, except that he hasn’t been paid.”
-
-“Poor little wretch! That was why he looked so troubled,” exclaimed
-Jane. “He knew the long and difficult search he was being sent upon, and
-perhaps thought it was a mere Barbarian ruse to shake him off, so that
-we could get away without paying him.”
-
-As she spoke the sound of thudding hoofs echoed from the walls of the
-Cathedral, and the white anxious face of their guide appeared on flying
-legs. The reassurance that changed his expression into a beaming smile
-at sight of the two still there, made it clear that Jane’s supposition
-had been correct. He had evidently feared to find both his clients and
-the silver rewards of his labours vanished. The relief with which he
-gasped out his explanation of having had to go all the way down into the
-valley to the railway station to get a carriage which was now on its way
-while he had dashed ahead on foot up a short cut, was so pathetic they
-gave him double pay to console him for his worry.
-
-And then with a noise between the rumble of a thunderstorm and the
-clatter of a tinman’s wagon came their “carrozza.” Its cushions were in
-rags, the harness almost all rope, one door was off a hinge and swung
-merrily useless—but two lean steeds drew this noble barouche and two men
-in rags sat solemnly on its ricketty box with such an air of importance
-its passengers felt as if they were being conducted homeward in a
-chariot of state.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Fortunato, restored to favour, was leading them up the Rupe Athena, that
-rose steeply immediately behind their hotel; he was leading them not
-straight up, but by a series of long “biases”—as Jane expressed it. The
-end of the first bias reached the little lonely church of San Biago,
-dreary and uninteresting enough in its solitary perch, save for the fact
-that it stood upon the site of a temple to Demeter and Persephone:
-
- “Our Lady of the Sheaves,
- And the Lily of Hades, the Sweet
- Of Enna”
-
-placed here no doubt because this high spur was the only point in
-Girgenti from which one could catch a glimpse of the lofty steeps of
-Enna-Castrogiovanni.
-
-Turning at a sharp angle again they went slanting up across the bare
-hillside, the wild thyme sending up a keen sweet incense beneath their
-climbing feet, until they came to the verge of the great yellow broken
-cliff that shot up more than a thousand feet from the valley below. Some
-crumpling of the earth’s crust, ages ago, had forced up this sheer mass
-of sandstone, hung now with cactus, thyme, and vines, which served as
-one of the natural defences of Akragas, behind whose unscalable heights
-the unwarlike city had been enabled peacefully to pursue its gathering
-of wealth and luxury.
-
-Fortunato, leaning over the marge, clapped his hands suddenly, and a
-cloud of rock pigeons flew forth from the crevices, to wheel and flutter
-and settle again among the vines. Probably descendants of those pigeons
-who lived in these same crevices in the days of the monster Phalaris,
-and helped to compass his death.
-
-Pythagoras—that strange wanderer and mystic, whose outlines loom so
-beautiful and so incomprehensible through the vagueness of legend, was
-first flattered and then threatened by the Tyrant, who feared the
-philosopher’s teachings of freedom and justice. At one of those public
-discussions, so impossible in any other country ruled despotically, and
-yet so characteristically Greek—Pythagoras rounded a burst of eloquence
-by pointing to a flock of these pigeons fleeing before a hawk.
-
-“See what a vile fear is capable of,” he cried. “If but one of these
-pigeons dared to resist he would save his companions, who would have
-time to flee.”
-
-Fired by the suggestion the old Telemachus threw a stone at the Tyrant
-and despite the efforts of his guards, Phalaris was ground to a bloody
-paste by the stones and fury of the suddenly enfranchised Akragantines.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“It is our last day,” Jane had said; “we will go and bid the temples
-good-bye.”
-
-Which was why she and Peripatetica were scaling in the sunset the golden
-cliffs which Concordia crowned, having come to it by a détour to
-Theron’s tomb.
-
-They drew themselves laboriously up to the crest, and sank breathlessly
-upon the verge among the crumbled grave pits, where the Greeks buried
-their dead along the great Temple road. Not only their beloved human
-companions they interred here, but the horses who had been Olympian
-victors, their faithful dogs, and their pet birds. It was in rifling
-these graves, in search of jewels and treasure, that the greedy
-Carthagenians had reaped a hideous pestilence as a price of their
-impiety. Now the graves were but empty grass-grown troughs, and one
-might sit among them safely to watch the skyey glories flush across the
-sapphire sea, and redden the hill where the little shrunken Girgenti
-sent down the soft pealing of Cathedral chimes from her airy distance.
-Beside them Concordia’s columns deepened to tints of beaten gold in the
-last rays, and across the level plain far below—already dusk—the people
-streamed home from their long day’s labour. Flocks of silky, antlered
-goats strayed and cropped as they moved byre-wards, urged by brown
-goatherds who piped the old country tunes as they went. The same tunes
-Theocritus listened to in the dusk thousands of summers since, or that
-Empedocles, purple-clad, and golden-crowned, might have heard vaguely
-fluting through his dreams of life and destiny as he meditated beneath
-these temple shadows as night came down.
-
-Asses pattered and tinkled towards the farms, laden with crimson burdens
-of sweet-smelling lupin. Painted carts rattled by with oil or wine; and
-cries and laughter and song came faintly up to them as the evening grew
-grey.
-
-“How little it changes,” said Peripatetica wistfully. “We will pass and
-vanish as all these did on whose tombs we rest, and hundreds of years
-from now there will be the same colours and the same songs to widen the
-new eyes with delight.”
-
-“Let us be grateful for the joys of Theocritus, and for our joys and for
-the same joy in the same old beauties of those to come,” said Jane,
-sententiously. “And let us go home, for the moon is rising.”
-
-Large and golden it came out of the rosy east, the west still
-smouldering with the dying fires of the ended day.
-
-Their way led through the olive orchards, grown argent in the faint
-light, and taking on fresh fantasies of gnarling, and of ghostly
-resemblances to twisted, convoluted human forms. Among the misty olives
-the blooming pear-trees showed like delicate silvery-veiled brides in
-the paling dark, and with the falling dew arose the poignant incense of
-ripening lemons, of blossoming weeds, and of earth freshly tilled.
-
-Wandering a little from the faintly traced path, grown invisible in the
-vagueness of the diffused moon-radiance, they called for help to a young
-shepherd going lightly homeward, with his cloak draped in long classic
-folds from one shoulder, and singing under his breath. A shepherd who
-may have been merely a commonplace, handsome young Sicilian by day, but
-who in this magic shining dusk was the shepherd of all pastoral verse,
-strayed for a moment from Arcady. Following his swift light feet they
-were set at last into the broad road among the herds and the asses and
-the homing labourers—Demeter’s well-beloved children.
-
- “E’en now the distant farms send up their smoke,
- And shadows lengthen from the lofty hills.
-
- * * * * *
-
- —Now the gloaming star
- Bids fold the flock and duly tell their tale,
- And moves unwelcome up the wistful sky.
- . . . . . . Go home, my full-fed goats,
- Cometh the Evening Star, my goats, go home.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [Illustration: Decoration]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- THE GOLDEN SHELL
-
-
- “_Kennst du das Land, wo die Citronen blüh’n?_”
-
-WHEN Ulysses Grant had ended the Civil War in America and was made
-President, he turned from uttering his solemn oath of office before the
-cheering multitudes and said under his breath to his wife who stood
-beside him, in that tone of half-resentful, half-weary patience the
-American husband usually adopts in speaking to his mate, “Well, now,
-Julia, I hope you’re satisfied!”
-
-There was the same exasperated patience in Jane’s voice as she climbed
-into the railway carriage for Palermo and, throwing herself back upon
-the cushions, exclaimed:
-
-“Well, now, Peripatetica, I hope you’ve had enough of the Greeks! For my
-part I go on to the next course; something a little more modern. Tombs
-and goddesses and columns and myths cloy as a steady diet for months,
-and even the ridiculous pompous old Eighteenth Century would seem rather
-home-like and comfy as a change. I could find it in my heart to relish a
-bit of the odious decadence of _l’art nouveau_ simply by way of
-contrast.”
-
-Peripatetica treated this shameful outburst with all the stern contempt
-it so truly merited, as she was engaged in making the acquaintance of a
-descendant of that great race of Northmen who had made history all over
-Sicily and the rest of Europe. He too was a conqueror, though his weapon
-was a paint-brush and a modelling tool instead of a sword, and kings
-received him with all the honours due an acknowledged ruler of a realm.
-He dwelt by a great lake far to the north in that “nursery of kings” in
-a home built five hundred years ago of huge fir-trees; logs so sound and
-clean-fibred that the centuries had left the wood still as firm as
-stone. Making his play of resurrection of the old wild melodies of the
-North, of the old costumes and industries of the people from whose loins
-had sprung half the rulers of the continent. The Sea Rover’s blood was
-strong in him too, driving him to wander in a boat no bigger than those
-of his Viking ancestors along the stormy fjords and fierce coasts to the
-still more distant north.
-
-For the adornment of the log-built home Sicily had yielded to his wise
-searching various relics of antiquity, Greek, Norman, Saracen, and
-Spanish, and in the ensuing days in which Jane and Peripatetica were
-permitted to tread the same path with the Northman and his beautiful
-wife, these treasures came out of pockets to be fitted with dates and
-history, and even, in the delightful instance of one small ghostly
-grotesque, to change owners.
-
-While the two seekers of Persephone were gathering and savouring this
-refreshing tang of the cold salt of the northern seas, this large vista
-of the gay, poised strength of a mighty race—their train was looping and
-coiling through summer hills to the seat of summer—cherry and apple,
-peach and pear trees tossed wreaths of rose and white from amid the grey
-of olives and the green of citron, for this was the land of Mignon’s
-homesick dream—“das Land, wo die Citronen blüh’n.”
-
-Miles and miles and miles of orange and lemon groves ran beside their
-path; climbing the hills and creeping down to the edge of the tideless
-sea. Trees that were nurtured like babies; each orchard gathered about
-old grey or rose-washed tanks holding the precious water which is the
-life-blood of all this golden culture during the rainless summer. Tanks
-moist and dripping and fringed with ferns, mirroring the overhanging
-yellow fruit, or the pink geraniums that peeped over the shoulders of
-the broad-bladed cacti to blush happily at their own reflections in the
-water.
-
-An exquisite form of orcharding, this, as delicate and perfect as a
-hot-house, with every inch of the soil utilized for the vegetables set
-about the trees’ roots, and the trees themselves growing in unbelievable
-numbers to the acre. For not one superfluous leaf or branch was
-there—just the requisite number to carry and nourish the greatest
-possible quantity of fruit. In consequence of which the whole land was
-as if touched by some vegetable Midas and turned all to gold. Millions
-and millions of the yellow globes hung still unpicked, though already
-the trees were swelling the buds which within ten days were to break
-forth into a far-flung bridal wreath, and intoxicate all the land with
-honeyed perfumes.
-
-And, mark you, how nations are influenced by their trees! In the bad old
-days of constant war and turmoil the isolated family was never secure,
-and the people clung to the towns, but modern careful culture of the
-orange has forced orchardists to live close by their charges, and the
-population is being slowly pushed back into rural life, with the result
-of better health, better morals, and a great decrease of homicides. One
-has really no convenient time for sticking knives into one’s friends
-when one is showing lemon-trees how to earn $400 an acre and
-orange-trees half as much....
-
-“It is the most beautiful town in the whole world,” said Peripatetica in
-that tiresomely dogmatic way she has of expressing the most obvious
-fact.
-
-They had wandered out of their hotel, and through a pair of stately iron
-gates crowned with armorial beasts. Beyond the gates lay a garden. But a
-garden! Acres of garden, laced by sweeping avenues, shadowed by cypress
-and stone pines, by ilex and laurel. From the avenues dipped paths which
-wound through _boscoes_, looped under bridges veiled with curtains of
-wisteria and yellow banksias, climbed again to pass through pleached
-walks; paths that tied themselves about shadowy pools where swans
-floated in the gloom of palm groves, or debouched across emerald lawns
-where clumps of forget-me-nots and cinerarias made splashes of bold
-colour in the grass.
-
-“They do these things so well in Europe,” remarked Peripatetica
-approvingly, as a splendid functionary, in a long blue coat and carrying
-a silver-headed staff, lifted his cockaded hat to them as they entered
-the gates. “Now where at home would one find one of our park guardians
-with such a manner, and looking so like a nobleman’s servant? This,” she
-went on, in an instructive tone, being newly arisen from a guide-book,
-“is the Giardino Inglese; one of the public parks, and it has exactly
-the air of loved and carefully tended private possession.”
-
-They lounged over the parapets of the carved bridges, with their elbows
-set among roses, to look down into the little ravines where small
-runnels flowed among the soft pink-purple clouds of Judas-trees. They
-were tempted into allées bordered their whole length with the white
-fountains of blossoming spireas, or hedged on both sides by pink
-hermosas. They strolled past clumps of feathery bamboos to gaze along
-the shadowy vistas of four broad avenues meeting at a bright circle
-where a sculptured fountain tossed its waters in the sun. They lingered
-in paths where tea-roses were garlanded from tree to tree, or by walls
-curtained by Maréchale Niels. They inspected the nurseries and admired
-the greenhouse. They came with delight upon a double ring of giant
-cypresses lifting dark spires into the dazzling blue of the sky, and sat
-to rest happily upon a great curved marble seat whose back had lettered
-upon it a reminder to the “Shadowed Soul” that wisdom comes only in
-shade and peace.
-
- “E La Sagezza Vieni Solo
- Nel’ Ombra E Pace.”
-
-And finally they mounted the little tiled and columned belvedere hanging
-at the corner of the garden’s lofty wall to gaze upon a view unrivalled
-of this most beautifully placed city.
-
-Palermo lay stretched before them in its plain of the Conca d’Oro—the
-golden shell. Round it as a garland rose a semicircle of vapoury
-mountains like rosy-purple clouds, bending on beyond the plain on either
-side to clasp a bay of dazzling violet whose waters glowed at the city’s
-feet; the city itself warmly cream-tinted and roofed with dull red
-tiles. A city towered, columned, arched; with here the ruddy bubbles of
-San Giovanni degli Eremiti’s domes, there the tall spires and fretted
-crest of the Cathedral; and flowing through it all, or resting here and
-there in pools, the green of orange groves, the flushing mist of
-Judas-trees, the long stream of verdant parks and gardens.
-
-“Not only is this the loveliest city in the whole world,” said Jane,
-“but this is also the sweetest of all gardens, and a curious thing is
-that we seem to have it quite to ourselves. You’d suppose all Palermo
-would want to come here for at least half of every day, but not a soul
-have we met except those two dear, queer old gardeners sitting on the
-tank’s edge playing a game with orange seeds.”
-
-“Well, if the Palermians haven’t intelligence enough to use such a
-garden, we have,” announced Peripatetica. “And we will come here every
-day.”
-
-Which they did for a while; bringing their fountain pens to write
-letters in the bosco, or resting after sight-seeing in the cool shade of
-the cypress ring. And it might have served them to the end as their
-intimate joy had it not been for Peripatetica’s insane passion for
-gardening.
-
-[Illustration: “SICILY’S PICTURE-BOOK, THE PAINTED CART”]
-
-All about the edge of the long _tapis vert_ which lay before the
-handsome building at the end of the garden—a building which they
-supposed housed some lucky park official—stood at intervals fine
-standard roses. Now one unlucky day Peripatetica descried aphides upon
-the delicate shoots and young buds of these standards. That was
-sufficient. An aphis, to her rose-growing mind, is a noxious wild beast,
-and promptly stripping off her gloves she ravened among them.
-
-“Perhaps you’d better leave them alone,” warned Jane in a whisper. “The
-gardeners look so surprised.”
-
-“By no means!” objected Peripatetica in lofty obstinacy, with a backward
-glance of contempt at the visibly astonished attendants. “The city no
-doubt pays them well to grow roses, and I mean to shame them for this
-indecent neglect of their duties. Besides, I am enjoying it immensely;
-I’ve been hungering and thirsting for a little gardening.”
-
-That very day it was conveyed to their intelligence—or their lack of
-it—that they had not been enjoying the Giardino Inglese, a dull park
-which lay almost opposite, but had been calmly annexing the private
-grounds of Prince Travia. He, however, being a model of princely
-courtesy, was glad to have the foreign ladies amuse themselves there as
-much as they liked. Only once more did they see it; on the day of
-departure, when they blushingly left a tip in the hands of the handsome
-old silver-staffed portiere, who had truly looked like a nobleman’s
-servant, and behaved like one as he saluted them with unprotesting
-dignity each time they had passed in and out of that beauteous spot in
-which they had no right to be.
-
-There were many other gardens in Palermo, but none so fair. The green
-world was so enchanting in this glowing spring that a day of
-_villegiatura_ was necessary between every two days of sight-seeing, and
-having been banished from the Travia garden by their own innate sense of
-decency, they took lunch in their pockets and set out for the famous
-Villa Giulia which had aroused such enthusiasm in Goethe.
-
-The Villa Giulia, as they might have foreseen, was just the sort of
-thing Goethe would have liked—and they had been violently disagreeing
-with Goethe all over Sicily. An untouched example of the most tiresome
-form of Eighteenth Century gardening—a cross between a wedding cake and
-a German Noah’s Ark. All rigid, glaring, gravelly little allées, with
-trees as denuded of natural luxuriance as a picked chicken; sugar-icing
-grottoes; baroque fountains; gaudy music kiosks; cages of frowzy birds
-and mangy monkeys; and posé busts in self-conscious bowers. Not here
-could these Eden-exiled Eves lunch, nor yet in the untidy, uninteresting
-Botanic Gardens next door—a wilderness of potted specimens and obtrusive
-labels—but wandering melancholily around a vast egregious gas tank, they
-came upon a long, neglected avenue of great trees; all that was left of
-some once lovely villa swept out of existence by the gas works. And here
-upon a stone bench in the glimmering shade they fed at the feet of a
-feeble little knock-kneed marble King. One of the Spanish monarchs of
-Sicily it was, thus commemorated in marble Roman armour and a curled
-marble wig, and his rickety, anæmic majesty moved them to smiling pity,
-so feeble and miserable he looked, forgotten and overshadowed by modern
-gas tanks, his boneless legs ready to give under him, and his peevish
-face smeared with creeping lichens. The green tunnel of the trees framed
-a blazing sapphire at the other end—a glimpse of the bay—and ragged pink
-roses, and neglected purple iris bloomed together along the path. Ere
-another year the blight of the gas works will have swept away the airy
-avenue, the wilding flowers, the poor spineless little King, and the two
-bid it all a wistfully smiling farewell, knowing they should never again
-eat an April day’s bread and cheese under those sweet auspices.
-
-... Will travellers from the roaring cities of Central Africa come a
-couple of centuries hence and mark with regret the last bit of some now
-flourishing boscage being eaten away by Twenty-Second Century progress,
-and smile indulgently at one of our foolishly feeble statues, in granite
-frock coats, tottering to lichened oblivion? No doubt. Palermo has seen
-so many changes since the Phœnicians used to trade and build along this
-coast. For this was the Carthagenian “sphere of influence” from the
-first, and the Greeks were here but little, and have left no traces in
-Palermo, though in the long wars between Carthagenian and Greek it was
-captured by the latter from time to time, and held for a space. The
-Greeks called it Panormous—meaning all harbour, for in their day deep
-water curved well up into the town, where are now streets and palaces
-and hotels. Of course Rome held it for a while, as she held pretty
-nearly everything. Held it for close upon a thousand years—with the
-Goths for its masters at one interval—but there are few traces of Rome
-either, and then the Arabs took it and set their seal so deep, in less
-than two centuries, that after the lapse of nearly another thousand
-years their occupation is still visible at every turn. For under the
-Saracens it was a capital, and after their destruction of Syracuse,
-which ended Greek domination in the Island, it gained a pre-eminence
-among Sicilian cities never afterwards lost.
-
-That garrulous old traveller from Bagdad, Ibn Haukal, writing in 943,
-says that Palermo then had a most formidable nine-gated wall, a
-population of close upon half a million, and many mosques. He also says
-that near where the Cathedral now stands was a great swamp full of
-papyrus plants, serving not only for paper but for the manufacture of
-rope.
-
-Already Sicily was beginning to suffer from the scarcity of water, and
-the merchant from Bagdad, accustomed to the abundant pools and conduits
-of his own city, makes severe comments upon the lack of these in
-Palermo. It could only have been by contrast, however, that the
-Palermians could have seemed to Haukal dirty, because Jane and
-Peripatetica, going to see a part of the old Moorish quarter, in process
-of demolition, found multitudinous water-pipes in the houses, entering
-almost every chamber. Haukal says that the Greek philosopher Aristotle
-was buried in one of the mosques of Palermo, and he opines that the most
-serious defect of the citizens was their universal consumption of
-onions. Peripatetica—to whom that repulsive vegetable is a hissing and
-an astonishment—read aloud in clamant sympathy this outburst of
-Haukal’s:
-
-“There is not a person among them, high or low, who does not eat them in
-his house daily, both in the morning and at evening. This is what has
-ruined their intelligence and affected their brains and degraded their
-senses and distracted their faculties and crushed their spirits and
-spoiled their complexions, and so altogether changed their temperaments
-that everything, or almost everything, appears to them quite different
-from what it is.”
-
-“That gentleman from Bagdad is a man after my own heart,” she declared
-triumphantly. “I have always been sure that people who eat onions must
-be those to whom ‘almost everything appears quite different from what it
-is,’ for if they had the slightest idea of ‘what it is’ for other people
-to be near them after they have indulged that meretricious appetite they
-would certainly never do it!”
-
-This Arab impress, though visible everywhere, is more a general
-atmosphere than definite remains; for with but few exceptions their
-creations are so overlaid and modified by subsequent Occidental work
-that it glows through this overlay rather than defines itself. It was
-while searching for Moorish fragments that Jane and Peripatetica came
-upon La Ziza. The guide-books unanimously asserted that Al Aziz—La
-Ziza—was the work of the Norman King, William I., but the guide-books,
-they had long since discerned, were as prone to jump to unwarranted
-conclusions, and, having jumped, to be as aggravatingly cocksure in
-sticking to their mistakes as was Peripatetica herself. So they took
-leave to doubt this assertion, and concluded that William probably
-seized the lovely country-house of some Moorish magnate, adding to it
-sufficiently to make of it a “lordly pleasure dome” for himself in the
-wide orange gardens, but the core of the place was wholly Moorish in
-character; well worth the annexing, well worth its name Al Aziz—The
-Beloved.
-
-They came through the hot, white sunshine up wide, low steps, through a
-huge grille in an enormous archway, to find a windowless room where the
-glaring day paled to glaucous shadow against the green tiles of a lofty
-chamber, as cool and glistening as a sea cave. And the sound of rippling
-water echoed from the lucent sides and honeycomb vaultings, for a
-shining fountain gushed from the wall into a tiled channel of irregular
-levels, artfully planned to chafe the sliding water into music before it
-slept for awhile in a pool, and then slipped again through another
-channel to another pool, and so passed from the chamber—having glinted
-over its shining path of gold and green and blue, and having filled the
-place with cool moisture and clear song.
-
- “With fierce noons beaming,
- Moons of glory gleaming,
- Full conduits streaming
- Where fair bathers lie—”
-
-Quoted Peripatetica—who might be safely counted on to have a tag of
-verse concealed about her person for every possible occasion.
-
-“Did you ever see anything that so adequately embodied the Arab
-conception of pleasure? Coolness, moisture, the singing of water, noble
-proportions, and clean colour wrought into grave and continent devices?
-Was there ever anything,” she went on, “so curious as the contradictions
-of racial instincts? Who could suppose that this would be the home-ideal
-of those wild desert dwellers who always loved and fought like demons;
-who were the most voluptuous, the most cruel, the most poetic and the
-‘so fightingest’ race the world has probably ever seen!”
-
-“Oh, contradictions!” laughed Jane. “Here’s a flat contradiction, if you
-like. Please contemplate the delicious, the exquisite absurdities of
-these frescoes.”
-
-For, needless to say, the Eighteenth Century had not allowed to escape
-so exquisite an opportunity to make an ass of itself, and had spread
-over the clean, composed patterns of the tiled walls a layer of
-lime-wash on which it had proceeded to paint in coarse, bright colours
-indecently unclad goddesses, all flushed blowzy and beribboned; all
-lolloping amourously about on clouds or in chariots, or falling into the
-arms of be-wigged deities of war or of love. Fortunately the greater
-part of these gross conceptions had been diligently scrubbed away, but
-enough remained to make Peripatetica splutter indignantly:
-
-“Well, of all the hideous barbarians! The Eighteenth Century was really
-the darkest of dark ages.”
-
-“My dear,” Jane explained contemptuously, “the Eighteenth Century wasn’t
-a period of time. It was merely a deplorable state of mind. And the mind
-seems to have been slightly tipsy, it was so fantastic and ridiculous,
-and yet so gravely self-satisfied.”
-
-La Cuba, another Saracenic relic, was so obliterated into the mere
-military barrack to which it had been transformed that there was nothing
-for it but to pass on to the Normans, and to great Roger de Hauteville,
-a fit companion of the Paladins, so heavy a “Hammer of the Moors” was
-he—so knightly, so romantic, so beautiful.
-
-Not until twelve years after that bold attempt at Messina to conquer a
-kingdom with only sixty companions was Roger able to enter Palermo, and
-he and his nephews chose for themselves “delectable gardens abounding
-with fruit and water, and the knights were royally lodged in an earthly
-paradise.”
-
-No hideous massacre or sack followed the taking of Palermo, for though
-Roger had conquered the island for himself he was a true mirror of
-chivalry, and was never cruel. He was chivalrous not only to the
-defeated, but to those other helpless creatures, women, who in his day
-were mere pawns in the great military and political games played by the
-men; married whether they would or no, and unmarried without heed of any
-protest from them; thrust into convents against their wishes, and haled
-out of convents if they were needed. And swept ruthlessly from the board
-when they had served their purpose, or when they got in the way of those
-fierce pieces passaging back and forth across the chequered squares of
-the field of life. Roger loved the Norman maid Eremberga from his early
-boyhood, it appears, and as soon as his hazardous fortunes would permit
-she was had out from Normandy, and the history of the great soldier is
-full of his devotion, and of her fidelity and courage. As at the siege
-of Troina, when the two were reduced by hunger and cold to the greatest
-extremities, sharing one cloak between them, so that finally Roger,
-rendered desperate by his wife’s sufferings, burst through the ring of
-Saracens, leaving her to defend the fortress with unshaken valour until
-he returned with a force adequate to save her, and raise the siege.
-
-There is an amusing story of Roger and his eldest brother, that ruthless
-old fox, Robert Guiscard. They were fighting one another at the time,
-and Roger’s soldiers captured Robert, who was disguised and spying. He
-with difficulty rescued Robert from the angry captors, took him to a
-private room, kissed him, helped him to escape, and promptly next day
-fell upon his forces with such fury that Robert was glad to make peace
-and fulfil the broken promises which had caused the dispute....
-
-It was not Roger, the great Count—he had little time in his busy life
-for building—but his son Roger the King, who raised the great pile at
-Monreale which Jane and Peripatetica were on their way to see. Not by
-way of the winding rocky road which for centuries the pious pilgrims had
-climbed, but whisked up the heights by an electric tram which pretended
-it was a moving-picture machine, displaying from its windows an ever
-widening panorama of burning blue sea, of pink and purple mountains, of
-valleys down which flowed rivers of orange groves, of a domed and spired
-city in the plain, and a foreground freaked with an astonishing carpet
-of flowers.
-
-“If you were to see that in a picture you wouldn’t believe it,” quoted
-Jane from the famous Book of Bromides, writhing her neck like an uneasy
-serpent in an endeavour to see it all at once.
-
-“No, of course, you wouldn’t,” said Peripatetica resentfully. “And when
-we try to tell it to people at home they’ll simply say our style is
-‘plushy.’ There’s nothing so resented as an attempt to carry back in
-words to a pale-coloured country the incredible splendours of the south.
-The critics always call it ‘orchid and cockatoo writing,’ and sulkily
-declare, whenever they do have a fairly nice colourful day, that they
-are sure the tropics have nothing finer, whereas, if they only knew, it
-is but an echo of an echo of the real thing, and—” but words failed even
-Peripatetica.
-
-On the breezy height, dominating all the deep-toned landscape, stood the
-Abbey church of Monreale—truly a royal mount, crowned by one of the
-finest shrines in Europe. The famous bronze doors of the main entrance
-had been oxidised by time and weather with a patine of greens and blues
-that lent subtle values to the bold delicate modelling of the metal,
-framed in a toothed doorway of warm, cream-tinted stone, whose magic
-harmony of colour was a fitting preliminary to the lofty glories of the
-interior. An unbelievable interior! faced throughout its three hundred
-and thirty-three feet of length with millions upon millions of tiny
-stones, gold and red and blue—stones of every colour. For all the
-interior they found, up to the very roof, was of this dim, glowing,
-gold-mosaic set with pictures of the Christian faith—the creation of
-Adam and Eve, the temptation by the Serpent, the casting out from Eden,
-the wrestling of Jacob, the whole Bible history, culminating above the
-altar in a gigantic Christ. More than 700,000 square feet of pictures
-made of bits of stone; and around and about pulpit, ambo, and altar,
-across steps and pavement, and enclosing every window and door, lovely
-mosaic patterns and devices, no two alike....
-
-Brown-faced old peasants pushed aside the leathern curtain at the
-entrance and knelt, crossing themselves, in the shadow of enormous
-pillars, as their forebears had knelt and crossed themselves there for a
-thousand years. A mass droned from a side altar. Groups of young
-priests-in-the-making sauntered gossipping in whispers, or coming and
-going on ecclesiastic errands. Knots of tourists stared and wandered
-about the great spaces, and from behind the high altar rose boys’ voices
-at choir practice, echoing thin and pure from the painted roof.
-
-Of all the Norman print upon Sicily nothing gave like this great church
-a sense of the potency of Tancred de Hauteville and his mighty brood.
-For no defacing hand has been laid upon this monument to their piety and
-power. It stands as they wrought, tremendous, glorious; commemorating
-the winning of the kingship of the Land of the Gods. A story as strange
-as any of the myths of the mythic world. And perhaps thousands of years
-hence the historians will relegate the Norman story, too, to the
-catalogue of the incredible—to the list of the sun-myths; and Tancred
-will be thought of as a principle of life and fecundity—his twelve
-strong sons be held to be merely signs of months and seasons.
-
-Of the great Benedictine Abbey founded by William in connection with the
-Cathedral almost nothing remains unaltered except the delicious
-cloistered court with its fountain, and its two hundred and sixteen
-delicate, paired columns, no two alike, and with endless variations of
-freakish capitals.
-
-All this freshness and richness of invention resulted from the mingling
-of the Saracen with the Norman, all this early work being wrought by
-Moslem hands under Norman direction, since King Roger and King William
-were no bigots, and, giving respect and security to their Saracen
-subjects, could command in return their skilled service and fine taste.
-So that this bold, springing, early Norman architecture, Gothic in
-outward form, is adorned by the chaste, delicate minuteness of the grave
-Arab ornament.
-
-... It is Palm Sunday, and Jane and Peripatetica are at a
-reception—otherwise a Sicilian high mass. They have come, still on the
-trail of their beloved Normans, who have almost ousted the Greeks in
-their affections, to the Cappella Palatina in the Royal Palace. The
-chapel is less than a third as large as Monreale but is even more
-golden, more dimly splendid, more richly beautiful than the Abbey
-Church. It is crowded to the doors. Everywhere candles wink and drip in
-the blue clouds of incense. The voices of boys soar in a poignant
-treble, and the organ tones of men answer antiphonally. The priests
-mutter and drone, and occasionally take snuff. Mass goes on at a dozen
-side altars, oblivious of the more stately ceremonies conducted in the
-chancel. The congregation comes and goes. A family with all the
-children, including baby and _nounou_, enter and pray and later go out.
-Aristocrats and their servants kneel side by side. The crowd thickens
-and melts again, and companions separate to choose different altars and
-different masses, according to taste. All are familiar, friendly, at
-ease. The divine powers are holding a reception, and worshippers, having
-paid their respects, feel free to leave when they like. Long palm
-branches are carried to the altar from time to time by arriving
-visitors, each branch more splendid than the last. Palms braided and
-knotted, fluttering with ribbons, tied with rosettes of scarlet and
-blue, wrought with elaborate intricacies—hundreds of branches, which are
-solemnly sanctified, asperged, censed, with many genuflections. Priests
-in gold, in white, in scarlet, accompanied by candles, swinging censors
-and chanting, take up the palms and make a circuit of all the altars
-among the kneeling worshippers, and finally distribute the branches to
-their owners who bear their treasures away proudly.
-
-With them go Jane and Peripatetica, joining a group, who, having paid
-their respects to heaven, are now ambitious to inspect the state
-chambers in the palace of their earthly sovereign. These prove to be the
-usual dull, uninviting apartments—flaring with gilt, and with the satins
-of _criard_ colours which modern royalty always affect. There are the
-usual waxed floors, the usual uncomfortable _fauteuils_ ranged stiffly
-against walls hung with inferior pictures, that are so tediously
-characteristic of palaces, and it is with relief and delight that Jane
-and Peripatetica find sandwiched amid these vulgar rooms two small
-chambers that by some miracle have escaped the ravages of the
-upholsterer. Two chambers, left intact from Norman days, that are like
-jewel caskets. Walls panelled with long smooth slabs of marble, grown
-straw-coloured with age, the delicate graining of the stone being
-matched like the graining of fine wood; panels set about with rich
-mosaics of fantastic birds and imaginary beasts framed in graceful
-arabesques. These are the Stanza Ruggiero; the rooms occupied by King
-Roger, the furnishings, such scant bits as there are, being also of his
-time.
-
-“In Roger’s day,” commented Jane, “kings were not content with housings
-and plenishings of the ‘Early Pullman, or Late Hamburg-American School’;
-they knew how to be kingly in their surroundings.”
-
-“It’s a curious fact,” agreed Peripatetica, “that there isn’t a modern
-palace in Europe that a self-respecting American millionaire wouldn’t
-blush to live in. No one ever hears of great artists being called upon
-to design or beautify a modern royal residence. Bad taste in furnishing
-seems universal among latter-day kings, who appear to form their ideas
-of domestic decoration from second-rate German hotels. Fancy any one
-seeing the high purity and beauty of Roger’s chambers and then ordering
-such ruthless splashings of gilt and cotton satin! Why, even ‘the best
-families’ of Podunk or Kalamazoo would gibe at the contrast, and as for
-the Wheat and Pork Kings of Denver or Chicago—they would have the whole
-place made _époque_ in a week, if they had to corner the lard market, or
-form a breakfast-food trust to be able to afford it!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“God made the day to be followed by the night. The moon and stars are at
-His command. Has He not created all things? Is He not Lord of all?
-Blessed be the Everlasting God!”
-
-Jane was reading aloud from her guide-book.
-
-They had been to Cefalu, looking for Count Roger in the great Cathedral
-built by his son, but found that he had vanished long ago, and his
-sarcophagus was in Naples. They had found instead traces of Sikel,
-Greek, and Roman; had lingered long before the splendid church, so noble
-even in decay, and now they were back again in Palermo, still on the
-track of their Normans. What Jane read from her book was also inscribed
-over the portal of Palermo’s Cathedral before which they stood, but
-being carved in Cufic script, and Jane’s Cufic being—to put it
-politely—not fluent enough to be idiomatic, she preferred to use the
-guide-book’s translation rather than deal with the original.
-
-[Illustration: THE CATHEDRAL AT PALERMO—“THE LAST RESTING PLACE OF QUEEN
-CONSTANCE”] They had been skirting about the Duomo for days, for it
-dominated all Palermo with its bigness. Seated in a wide Piazza that was
-dotted about with mussy-looking marble saints and bishops, and a great
-statue of Santa Rosalia, the city’s patron, the Cathedral was flanked by
-the huge Archepiscopal Palace, by enormous convents and public
-buildings, so that one couldn’t hope to ignore or escape it. Yet they
-had deferred the Duomo from day to day because they knew their pet
-abomination, the Eighteenth Century, had been there before them, and
-that they would find it but an extremely mitigated joy in consequence.
-
-They knew that the swamp full of pxapyrus plants of Haukal’s time had
-given way to the “Friday Mosque” which the two Rogers and William the
-Bad had left undisturbed, but which had been pulled down by William the
-Good—being somewhat ruinous, and also seeing that William was “the Good”
-in the eyes of his ecclesiastic historians because he reversed the old
-Norman liberality to his Moslem subjects. Then Walter of the Mill, an
-Englishman, built the Cathedral, making it glorious within and without,
-and time and additions only made it more lovely until the modern
-tinkering began. A foolish, unsuitable dome was thrust among its
-delicate towers, and the whole interior ravaged and vulgarised.
-
-Still, if one were hunting Normans, the Cathedral must be seen, and most
-of all they wished to find the last resting-place of Constance, around
-whose memory hung a drama and a mystery, and drama and mystery were as
-the very breath of their nostrils to Jane and Peripatetica.
-
-The interior was impressive for size despite all the scrolled and
-writhed and gilded mud pies with which Ferdinand Fuga, the Neapolitan,
-had plastered it by way of decoration, and here and there still lingered
-things worth seeing. Such as the delicious bas reliefs of Gagini,
-Sicily’s greatest native sculptor; his statues of the Apostles and the
-fine old choir stalls, only making clearer by their ancient beauty how
-much that was beautiful had been swept away. Also there was the splendid
-silver sarcophagus of Santa Rosalia, weighing more than a thousand
-pounds, and other such matters, but the real attraction of the Cathedral
-was the great porphyry tombs of the Kings—huge coffers of ensanguined
-stone, as massive and tremendous as the mummy cases of the Pharaohs.
-Here lay Roger the King in the sternest and plainest of them, under a
-fretted Gothic canopy. In one more ornate, his daughter Constance, and
-near at hand her husband Henry VI. of Germany, and their son, the
-Emperor Frederick the Second.
-
-Jane and Peripatetica longed that Constance, like Hamlet’s Father might
-
- “ope those ponderous and marble jaws”
-
-and come forth to tell them the real story of her strange life. For she
-too had been one of those hapless feminine pawns used so recklessly in
-the game of kingdoms played by the men about her; yet a whisper still
-lingered that this pawn had not been always passive, but had reached out
-her white hand and lifted the king from the board, and thus altered the
-whole course of the game!
-
-Constance, King Roger’s daughter, had early made her choice for peace
-and safety by retiring into the veiled seclusion of the convent. But
-even the coif of the religieuse was no sure guard if the woman who wore
-it was an heiress, or of royal blood, and, the German alliance being
-needed after her father’s death, she was plucked forth by her brother,
-and in spite of her vows wedded to Henry of Hohenstaufen, son of
-Frederick Barbarossa, a man of such nature she must have hated him from
-the first. She bore him one son, and when her brother and her
-nephew—William the Bad and William the Good—were both dead without
-heirs, Henry Hohenstaufen immediately laid claim to the Sicilian crown
-in the name of his son. The Sicilians, however, had no mind to be ruled
-by the Germans, and chose instead Tancred, son of the House of de
-Hauteville, though with a bar sinister upon his shield. Tancred—a good
-and able sovereign—fought off Henry for five years, but then he too was
-dead, and only his widow and infant son stood between Henry, now Emperor
-of Germany, and the much-lusted-after throne of Sicily. Against the wish
-of Constance, who would have gladly abjured her rights, the German
-invaded the island and after incredible cruelties and ravagings reduced
-the widow and baby King to such straits that they negotiated an
-honourable surrender. But no sooner were they in Henry’s hands than the
-child was murdered, and there ensued a reign of abominable oppressions
-and furious revolts, stamped out each time with blood and fire, and
-followed by still bitterer injustice and plunderings. When matters had
-reached a stage of desperation Henry died suddenly while besieging a
-rebellious town.
-
-Now in the Middle Ages no charge was so frequently and lightly made as
-that of poisoning. Nearly all sudden deaths not wrought by cold steel
-were attributed to some secret malfeasance by drugs. The fear of it
-fairly obsessed the mediæval mind, and gave rise to legends of poisoned
-gloves and rings, deadly smelling-balls and pounce boxes, and fatal
-chalices. A whole series of myths grew around it. Modern bacteriological
-discoveries, and a knowledge of ptomaines, incline the modern mind to
-believe that many a poor wretch brutally done to death for the crime of
-poisoning really died an innocent martyr to medical ignorance. Yet
-Henry’s taking off was so welcome and so opportune, and that Constance
-had struggled to protect her fellow countrymen and kinspeople from his
-cruelties was so well known, it began to be breathed about that she was
-a second Judith who had reached out in agony to protect her people, even
-though the blow fell upon the father of her child. At all events,
-whatever the truth may have been, she, when she buried Henry with
-imperial pomp, cut off her magnificent hair and laid it in his tomb.
-Then, sending away the Germans, she ruled “in peace with great honour”
-until the son she had trained to mercy and virtue was ready to take her
-place.
-
-Now they all lie here together under their pompous canopies, and
-whatever may be the real dramas of those fierce and turbulent lives, the
-great porphyry sarcophagi combine to turn a face of cynical and haughty
-silence to the importunate questioning of peeping tourists.
-
-In 1781 the tombs were opened by the Spanish King Ferdinand I., who
-found Constance’s son Frederick robed and crowned, with sword and orb
-beside his pillow, and almost lifelike in preservation. Henry too was
-almost unchanged by the six hundred years that had passed in such change
-and turmoil beyond the walls of his silent tomb, and he lay wrapped from
-head to heel in yellow silk with the heavy blond tresses of his wife
-laid upon his breast, still golden despite the lapse of long centuries,
-but “nulle ne peut dire si c’est le dernier sacrifice d’une femme
-dévouée, ou l’homage ironique d’une reine contrainte à choisir entre
-deux devoirs; placée entre son époux et son peuple, entre sa famille et
-sa patrie.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gaspero was a gift—a priceless parting gift from the Northman, who had
-gone farther south to the Punic shores from whence had come the first
-settlers of the Palermian Coast. And to console Jane and Peripatetica
-for the loss of his charming boyish gaiety he had made over to them that
-treasure. For Gaspero not only drove the smartest and most comfortable
-of all the victorias on hire to the public, but he was an artist in the
-matter of sight-seeing. A true gastronome, mingling flavours with
-delicate wisdom; keeping delicious surprises up his sleeve lest one’s
-spirit might pall, and mingling tombs and sunshine, crypts and “molto
-bella vistas,” history and the colourful daily life of the people, with
-a masterhand. And all so fused in the warm atmosphere of his own
-sympathetic and indulgent spirit that “touristing” became a feast of the
-soul unknown to those not guided by his discreet and skilful judgment.
-He knew where one might purchase honey which bees had brewed from orange
-flowers into a sublimated perfume; and he introduced them to certain
-patisseries at Cafleisch’s that gave afternoon tea a new meaning.
-
-It was Gaspero who took them to the lofty shrine of Santa Rosalia on
-Monte Pellegrino; that grotto where lived the royal maiden hermit, and
-where lie her bones within the tomb on which Gregorio Tedeschi has made
-an image of her in marble with a golden robe, glowing dimly in the light
-of a hundred lamps. On that rosy height, dominating the beautiful
-landscape, Gaspero told them the story of the niece of William the Good,
-whose asceticism and devotion set so deep a seal of reverence upon the
-people of Palermo that they enshrined her as the city’s patron saint,
-and still celebrate her memory every year with a great festival. All the
-population climb the hill in July to say a prayer in her windy eyrie,
-and the enormous car bearing her image is dragged through the city’s
-streets, so towering in its gilded glories that one of the city gates
-has been unroofed to permit of its entrance. At that time the Marina—the
-wide sea-front street—instead of being merely a solemn Corso for the
-staid afternoon drive of the upper classes, becomes the scene of a sort
-of Pagan Saturnalia. The Galoppo takes place then—races of unmounted
-free horses—delicious races, Gaspero says, in which there can be no
-jockeying, and in which the generous-blooded animals strive madly to
-distance each other from sheer love of the sport and the rivalry. A gay
-people’s revel, this, of flying hoofs and tossing manes; of dancing
-feet; of cries and songs; mandolins, pipes, and guitars fluting and
-twittering. The water-sellers with their glittering carts and delicate
-bubble-like bottles crying _acqua fredda_, offering golden orange juice,
-and the beloved pink anisette. The Polichinello booths, the open-air
-puppet shows, the toy-sellers with their tall poles hung with sparkling
-trifles, the tables spread with dainties of rosy sugar, with melting
-pastries, with straw-covered flasks of wine. All perspiring, talking,
-laughing, guzzling, gormandising in honour of the anæmic, ascetic girl
-who passed long, lonely, silent days and nights in passionate ecstasies
-and visions in those high, voiceless solitudes. Gaspero made it all very
-vivid, with hands, lips, eyes. He was possessed with the drama and
-strange irony of it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Have the Signorine ever seen a Sicilian puppet show?” Gaspero demanded,
-à propos of nothing in particular, turning from a brown study on the box
-to inquire.
-
-He plainly intended that this should be a memorable day.
-
-No; the Signorine had not seen a puppet show. If they properly should
-see one then they would see one. It was for Gaspero to judge. Very well,
-then. He would come for them at half past eight that evening—at least,
-he added with proud modesty, if the Signorine would not object to his
-wearing his best clothes. His festa garments, and not the uniform of his
-calling.
-
-Object! On the contrary, they would be flattered. Gaspero settled back
-to his duties with the triumphant expression of the artist who by sudden
-inspiration has added the crowning touch to his picture. He composed the
-days for them on his mental palette, and this one he plainly considered
-one of his masterpieces.
-
-Yesterday had been a failure. Jane and Peripatetica had waked full of
-plans, but before the breakfast trays had departed they were aware of a
-heavy sense of languor and ennui which made the pleasantest plans a
-prospect of weariness and disgust.
-
-“If you sit around in a dressing-gown all day we’ll never get anything
-done,” suggested Peripatetica crossly, as Jane lounged in unsympathetic
-silence at the window.
-
-“Considering that you’ve been half an hour dawdling over your hair and
-have got it up crooked at last, I wouldn’t talk about others,” snapped
-Jane over her shoulder without changing her attitude.
-
-A strained silence ensued. Peripatetica slammed down a hand mirror and
-spilled a whole paper of hairpins, which she contemplated stonily, with
-no movement to recover them.
-
-A hot wind whirled up a spiral of dust in the street.
-
-“My arms are so tired I can’t make a coiffure,” wailed Peripatetica.
-
-Jane merely laid her head on the window sill and rolled a feeble,
-melancholy eye at the disregarded hairpins.
-
-The wind sent up another curtain of hot dust.
-
-“I don’t know what’s the matter,” complained Jane, “but I don’t feel as
-if I wanted to see another sight—ever—as long as I live.”
-
-“Perhaps this is the sirocco one hears of,” piped Peripatetica weakly.
-“The guide-book says ‘the effect of it is to occasion a difficulty in
-breathing, and a lassitude which unfits one for work, especially of a
-mental nature.’”
-
-By this time there could be no doubt of the sirocco. A hot, dry tempest
-raged, whipping the rattling palms, driving clouds of dust before it, so
-that Jane could only dimly discern an occasional scurrying cab, or an
-overtaken pedestrian pursuing an invisible hat through the roaring fog
-of flying sand. The day had turned to a brown and tempestuous dusk, and
-the voice of a hoarse Saharan wind shouted around the corners.
-
-But that was yesterday. To-day was golden and gracious. Rain in the
-night had cooled and effaced all memory of the sirocco, and Gaspero was
-outdoing himself in astonishing and piquant contrasts.
-
-He drove them to the Cappucini Convent by the devious route of the
-Street of the Washerwomen. This roundabout way of reaching the Convent
-was one of Gaspero’s artful devices.
-
-Down each side of the broad tree-shadowed way, bordered on either hand
-by the little stone-built cubicles washed pink or white or blue, in
-which lived the multitudinous laundresses, ran a clear rushing brook.
-These brooks flowed through a sort of shallow tunnel with a wide orifice
-before each dwelling, and in every one of these openings was standing a
-bare-legged blanchisseuse, dealing strenuously with Palermian linen,
-with skirts tucked up above sturdy knees that were pink and fresh from
-the rush of the bright water. Vigorous girls trotted back and forth with
-large baskets heaped with wet garments, and bent, but still energetic,
-granddams spread the garments to dry. Hung them from the tree branches,
-swung them from the low eaves of the little dwellings, threaded them on
-lines that laced and crossed like spiderwebs, so that the whole vista
-was a flutter of fabrics—rose and white and green—dancing in the breeze.
-A human and homely scene, with play of brown arms and bright eyes amid
-the flying linen and laces; with sounds of rippling leaves, of calls and
-laughter, and the gurgling of quick water—drudgery that was half a
-frolic in the cheerful sunshine.
-
-Now behold Gaspero’s sense of dramatic contrast!
-
-A plain, frigid façade, guarded by a bearded and rather grubby monk in a
-brown robe. The eye does not linger upon the grubby monk, being led away
-instantly by the vista through the arched doorway behind him of a
-cloistered court; a court solemn with the dark spires of towering
-cypresses, and brilliant with roses—roses wine-coloured, golden, pink.
-Behind this screen of flowers and trees lies the bit of ground
-possessing the peculiar property of quickly desiccating and mummifying
-the human bodies buried in it. Many hundreds have been laid in this
-earth for awhile, and then removed to the convent crypts to make room
-for others. It is to these crypts another monk leads the way. A
-saturnine person this, handing his charges over to another, still more
-gloomy, who sits at the foot of the stairs and watches at the crypt’s
-entrance. A perfectly comprehensible depression, his, when one reflects
-that all the sunshiny hours of these golden Sicilian days he sits at the
-shadowed door of a great tomb, mounting guard over surely the most
-grisly charge the mind can conceive; over Death’s bitterest jest at
-Life.
-
-The walls of the high, clean corridors are lined with glass cases like a
-library, but instead of printed books the shelves are crammed with
-ghastly phantoms of humanity, all grinning in horrible, silent amusement
-as at a mordant, unutterable joke.
-
-Jane and Peripatetica gasp and clutch one another’s hand at the grey
-disorder of this soundless merriment—breathless, fixed, perpetual.
-
-Here and there a monk, crowded for lack of space from the shelves, hangs
-from a hook in limp, dishevelled leanness, his head drooped mockingly
-sidewise, his shrunken lips twisted in a dusty fatuous leer, a lid
-drooped over a withered eye in a hideous wink. Others huddle in
-fantastic postures within their contracted receptacles, as if convulsed
-by some obscenely wicked jest which forces them to throw back their
-heads, to fling out their hands, to writhe their limbs into unseemly
-attitudes of amusement. One lies flat, with rigid patience in every line
-of the meagre body, a rictus of speechless agony pinching back the
-mouldy cheeks.
-
-Coffins are heaped about the floor everywhere. Through the glass tops
-the occupants grin in weary scorn from amid the brown and crumbling
-flowers that have dried around their faces.
-
-The ghastliest section of this ghastly place is that where the women
-crouch in their cases, clad in the fripperies of old fashions. Earrings
-swing from dusty ears; necklaces clasp lean grey throats; faded hair is
-tortured into elaborate coiffures; laces, silks, and ribbons swathe the
-tragic ruins of beauty. And these women, too, all simper horribly,
-voicelessly, remembering perhaps how dear these faded gauds once were
-before they passed beyond thought of “tires and crisping pins.”
-
-“Why do they do it?” demanded Peripatetica in whispered disgust. “What
-strange passion for publicity prompts them thus to flout and outrage the
-decent privacies of death”—for they noted that each case bore a name and
-the date of decease, and that some of these dates were but of a few
-years back. “Didn’t they _know_, from having seen others, how they
-themselves would look in their turn? Why would any woman be willing to
-come here in laces and jewels to be a disgusting nightmare of femininity
-for other women to stare at?”
-
-“Vanity of vanities—all is vanity!” murmured Jane. “Now they all lie
-here laughing at the strange vanity that brought them to this place—at
-the vanity that will bring others in their turn to this incredible
-hypogeum.”
-
-Then they turned a corner and came suddenly upon the little horribly
-smiling babies, and instantly fled in simultaneous nausea and
-disgust—flinging themselves at Gaspero, who with a tenderly sympathetic
-manner suggested an expedition to La Favorita as a corrective of
-gruesome impressions. Carrying them swiftly to it by way of the long
-double boulevards of the newer Palermo, between the smiling villas of
-creamy stone that were wreathed with yellow banksias and purple
-wisteria, their feet set among gay beds of blossoms and facing the
-cheerful street life of the town.
-
-“How odd these Sicilians are!” reflected Jane, as they drove. “An
-incomprehensible mixture to an Anglo-Saxon. For example one finds almost
-universal open-hearted gentleness and courtesy, and yet the Mafia holds
-the whole land in a grip of iron—a dangerous, murderous, secret society
-as widespread as the population, yet never betrayed, and uncontrollable
-by any power, even so popular and so democratic a one as the present
-government.”
-
-“Yes; their attitude to life is as puzzling as the face they turn toward
-death,” agreed Peripatetica, remembering that almost every other
-building in Taormina and many in Palermo wore nailed to the door a broad
-strip of mourning—often old and tattered—on which was printed “Per mio
-Frate,” or “Per mia Madre”—that even a newspaper kiosk had worn
-weeds—“Per mio Padre.”
-
-At that very moment there passed a cheerful hearse, all glass and
-gilding, wreathed with fresh flowers into a gay dancing nosegay, and
-hung with fluttering mauve streamers which announced in golden letters
-that the white coffin within enclosed all that was mortal of some one’s
-beloved sister Giuseppina. It might have been a catafalque of some
-Spirit of Spring, so many, so sweet, so daintily gracious were the
-blooming boughs that accompanied Giuseppina to her last
-resting-place.... And yet they had but just come from the grim horrors
-of that crypt of the Cappuccini!...
-
-La Favorita, curiously, is one of the few monuments of beauty or charm
-left by that long reign of the Spanish monarchs of Sicily, which, with
-some mutations, lasted for about six hundred years. They loaded the land
-with a weight of many churches and convents, yet what one goes to see is
-what was done by the Greeks, the Moslems, and the Normans. La Favorita
-is not old, as one counts age in that immemorial land of the High Gods.
-A slight century or so of age it has, being built for the villegiatura
-of Ferdinando IV. at the period when the Eighteenth Century affected a
-taste in Chinoiseries, bought blue hawthorn jars, ate from old Pekin
-plates, set up lacquered cabinets, and built Pagoda-esque pleasure
-houses. The Château is but a flimsy and rather vulgar example of the
-taste of the day, but the Eighteenth Century often planted delicious
-gardens, and the pleached allées, the ilex avenues, the fountains and
-plaisances of La Favorita, make an adorable park for modern Palermo,
-having by time and the years grown into a majestic richness of
-triumphant verdure.
-
-But Gaspero is not content with La Favorita. He has things even better
-in store for Jane and Peripatetica—explaining that by giving the most
-minute gratuity to the guardian of the park’s nether portal they may be
-allowed to slip through into a private path that leads to the sea. They
-do give the gratuity, and do slip through, winding along a rough country
-road leading under the beetling red cliffs of Pellegrino; by way of
-olive orchards, mistily grey as smoke, through which burn the rosy
-spring fires of the Judas-trees, whose drifting pink clouds are so much
-more beautiful than the over-praised almond blossoms. They skirt flowery
-meadows all broad washes of gold and mauve, past a landscape as fair as
-a dream of Paradise, and Gaspero draws up at last upon a beach of
-shining silver upon which a sea of heaving sapphire lips softly and
-without speech. A sea that strews those argent sands with shells like
-rose petals, like flakes of gold, like little, curled, green leaves. And
-dismounting they rest there in the sunset, forgetting “dusty death,” and
-glad to be alive; glad of Gaspero’s tender indulgent joy in their
-pleasure as he gathers for them the strewn sea-flowers, tells them
-little Sicilian stories of the people, and makes them entirely forget
-they haven’t had their tea.
-
-It was in returning from this place of peace that he had that crowning
-inspiration about the puppet show, which is why in the darkness of that
-very evening they are threading a black and greasy alleyway which smells
-of garlic and raw fish. But they go cheerfully and confidently in the
-dimly seen wake of Gaspero’s festa richness of attire.
-
-An oil torch flares and reeks before a calico curtain. This curtain,
-brushed aside, shows a pigeon-hole room, nine feet high, very narrow,
-and not long. On either wall hangs a frail balcony, into one of which
-the three wriggle carefully and deposit themselves on a board hardly a
-palm’s breadth wide. From the vantage point of these choice and
-expensive seats—for which they have magnificently squandered six cents
-apiece—they are enabled to look down about four inches on the heads of
-the commonality standing closely packed into the narrow alley leading to
-the stage. A strictly masculine commonality, for Gaspero explains in a
-whisper that the gentler sex of Palermo are not expected to frequent
-puppet shows, lest their delicate sensibilities may suffer shock from
-the broad behaviour of the wooden dolls. Of course, he hurries to add,
-handsomely, all things are permitted to forestieri, whose bold
-fantasticalities are taken for granted.
-
-The groundlings appear to be such folk as fishpeddlers, longshoremen,
-ragpickers—what you will—who smoke persistent tiny cigarettes, and
-refresh themselves frequently with orange juice, or anisette and water.
-These have plunged to the extent of two cents for their evening’s
-amusement, and have an air of really not considering expense. The
-gallery folk are of a higher class. On Peripatetica’s right hand sits
-one who has the air of an unsuccessful author or artist; immediately
-upon the entrance of the forestieri he carefully assumes an attitude of
-sarcastic detachment, as of one who lends himself to the pleasures of
-the people merely in search of material. Opposite is an unmistakable
-valet who also, after a quick glance at the newcomers, buttons his
-waistcoat and takes on an appearance of indulgent condescension to the
-situation.
-
-A gay drop curtain, the size of a dinner napkin, rolls up after a
-preliminary twitter from concealed mandolins. The little scene is set in
-a wood. From the left enters a splendid miniature figure glittering in
-armour, crowned, plumed, and robed, stepping with a high melodramatic
-stride. It is King Charlemagne, the inevitable _deus ex machina_ of
-every Sicilian puppet play. Taking the centre of the stage and the
-spotlight, he strikes his tin-clad bosom a resounding blow with his good
-right wooden hand, and bursts into passionate recitative.
-
-“The cursèd Moslem dogs have seized his subjects upon the high seas, and
-cast them into cruellest slavery. Baptised Christians bend their backs
-above the galley oars of Saracen pirate ships, and worse—oh, worst of
-all!”—both hands here play an enraged tattoo upon his resounding
-bosom-pan—“they have seized noble Christian maidens and haled them to
-their infernal harems.
-
-“S’death! shall such things be? No! by his halidome, _no_! Rinaldo shall
-wipe this stain from his ‘scutcheon. What ho—without there!”
-
-Enter hastily from right Orlando.
-
-“His Majesty called?”
-
-“Called? well rather! Go find me that good Knight Rinaldo, the great
-Paladin, and get the very swiftest of moves on, or something will happen
-which is likely to be distinctly unpleasant.”
-
-Orlando vanishes, and in a twinkling appears Rinaldo, more shining, more
-resplendent, more befeathered even than the King; with an appalling
-stride (varied by a robin-like hop), calculated to daunt the boldest
-worm of a Moslem.
-
-He awaits his sovereign’s commands with ligneous dignity, but as the
-King pours out the tale his legs rattle with strained attention, and
-when the Christian maids come into the story his falchion flashes
-uncontrollably from its sheath.
-
-“_Will_ he go? Will a bird fly? Will a fish swim?”
-
-Charlemagne retires, leaving Rinaldo to plan the campaign with Orlando.
-
-Enter now another person in armour, but wearing half an inch more of
-length of blue petticoat, and with luxuriant locks streaming from
-beneath the plumed helmet. ’Tis Bramante, the warrior maiden, who in
-shrill soprano declines to be left out of any chivalric ruction. Three
-six-inch swords flash in the candlelight; three vows to conquer or die
-bring down the dinner napkin to tumultuous applause.
-
-The pit has been absorbed to the point of letting its cigarettes go out,
-and the author and the valet hastily resume their forgotten
-condescension.
-
-Every one cracks and eats melon seeds until the second act reveals the
-court of a Saracen palace.
-
-The thumps of the three adventurers’ striding feet bring out hasty
-swarms of black slaves, who fall like grain before the Christian swords.
-Better metal than this must meet a Paladin!
-
-Turbaned warriors fling themselves into the fray, and the clash of steel
-on steel rings through the palace. Orlando is down, Rinaldo and Bramante
-fight side by side, though Rinaldo staggers with wounds. The crescented
-turbans one by one roll in the dust, and as the two panting conquerors
-lean exhausted upon their bloody swords—enter the Soldan himself!
-
-Now Turk meets Paladin, and comes the tug of war.
-
-Bramante squeaks like a mouse; hops like a sparrow.
-
-_Ding, dong!_ Rinaldo is beaten to his knee and the Soldan shortens his
-blade for a final thrust, but—Bramante rushes in, and with one terrific
-sweep of her sword shears his head so clean from his shoulders that it
-rolls to the footlights and puts out one of the candles.
-
-_Ha! ha!_ He trusted in his false god, Mahound!
-
-Bramante hops violently.
-
-Enter suddenly, rescued Christian Maid. Also in armour; also possessing
-piercing falsetto.
-
-Saved! saved! She falls clattering upon Rinaldo’s breast, and Bramante,
-after an instant’s hesitation, falls there on top of her, with
-peculiarly vicious intensity.
-
-More dinner napkin. More frenzied applause. Gaspero draws a long breath.
-His eyes are full of tears of feeling.
-
-Scene in the wood again. Charlemagne has thanked Rinaldo. Has thanked
-Bramante. Has blessed the Christian Maid, and has retired exhausted to
-his afternoon nap!
-
-Christian Maid insists upon expressing _her_ gratitude to the Paladin
-with her arms round his neck.
-
-Bramante drags her off by her back hair, a dialogue ensuing which bears
-striking likeness to the interview of cats on a back fence.
-
-Christian Maid opines that Bramante is _no lady_, and swords are out
-instantly.
-
-_One, two, three!—clash, slash, bang!_
-
-Rinaldo hops passionately and futilely around the two contestants.
-
-Ladies! Ladies! he protests in agony, but blood is beginning to flow,
-when, suddenly, a clap of thunder—a glitter of lightning!
-
-The cover of an ancient tomb in the wood rolls away, and from the black
-pit rises a grisly skeleton. Six legs clatter and rattle like pie-pans;
-swords fall. It is the ghost of Rinaldo’s father. Christian Maid is
-really Rinaldo’s sister, he explains, carried off by Saracens in her
-childhood.
-
-Skeleton pulls down the cover of the tomb and retires to innocuous
-desuetude.
-
-Opportune entry of Orlando miraculously cured of his wounds. Rinaldo has
-an inspiration, and bestows upon Orlando the hand of the Christian Maid.
-
-All the tins of the kitchen tumble at once—everybody has fallen on every
-one else’s mail-clad bosom!...
-
-Dear Gaspero! It has been a _wonderful_ day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A slow, fine rain falls. Vapours roll among the vapoury hills.
-
-It is just the day for the museum, and such a museum! Not one of those
-cold and formal mausoleums built by the modern world for the beauties of
-the dead past, but a fine old monastery of the Philippines with two
-cloistered cortile; with a long, closed gallery for the hanging of the
-pictures; with big refectories, ambulatories, and chapels for housing
-the sculpture, and with its little cells crammed with gold and silver
-work, with enamels, with embroideries, with jewels. A gracious casket
-for the treasures of old time.
-
-The rain is dripping softly into the open cloister, where the wet
-garlands of wisteria and heavy-clustered gold of the banksias are
-distilling their mingled fragrance in the damp air. The rain makes sweet
-tinklings in the old fountains and in the sculptured wellheads gathered
-in the court; on the cloister walls are grouped bas-reliefs—tinted
-Madonnas by Gagini; Greek fragments, stone vases standing on the floor,
-twisted columns, broken but lovely torsos.
-
-Indeed, it is not like a museum at all. No ticketed rigidity, no
-historical sequence—just treasures set about where the setting will best
-accord with and display their beauties. There is not even a catalogue to
-be had, which gives a delightful sense of freedom at first, but this has
-its drawbacks when Jane and Peripatetica come to the tomb of Aprilis in
-a side chamber, and wish to know something more of this sad little maid
-sculptured into the marble of the tomb’s sunken lid—wrapped in a
-straitly folded wimple, with slim crossed feet, and small head turned
-half aside; smiling innocently in the sleep which has lasted so long.
-Aprilis, whose April had never blossomed into May, and whose epitaph has
-for five hundred years called Sicily to witness the grief of those who
-lost her:
-
- “Sicilia, Hic Jacet Aprilis. Miseranda Puella
- Unicce Quælugens Occultipa Diem 18 Otobre
- XIII 1495.”
-
-Of course, the guide-books ignore her. Trust the guide-books to preserve
-a stony silence about anything of real human interest!...
-
-Another court; a great basin where papyrus grows, where bananas wave
-silken banners amid the delicate plumes of tall bamboo, where are more
-purple wreaths of wistaria and snow-drifts of roses, and where the
-treasures are mostly Greek. Very notable among these a marble tripod
-draped with the supple folds of a python; the lax power of the great
-snake subtly contrasted with, and emphasized by, the rigid lines of the
-seat of the soothsayer. More notable still, in the Sala del Fauna, is an
-archaic statue of Athene from Selinunto—like some splendid sharded
-insect in her helmet and lion skin—rescued from that vast wreck of a
-city. They had travelled from Palermo a few days before to see that
-city, drawn by Crawford’s fine passages of description, and there they,
-too, had wondered at the astonishing remains of those astonishing
-Greeks.
-
-... “There is nothing in Europe like the ruins of Selinunto. Side by
-side, not one stone upon another, as they fell at the earthquake shock,
-the remains of four temples lie in the dust within the city, and still
-more gigantic fragments of three others lie without the ruined walls. At
-first sight the confusion looks so terrific that the whole seems as if
-it might have fallen from the sky, from a destruction of the home of the
-gods—as if Zeus might have hurled a city at mankind, to fall upon Sicily
-in a wild wreck of senseless stone. Blocks that are Cyclopean lie like
-jackstraws one upon another; sections of columns twenty-eight feet round
-are tossed together upon the ground like leaves from a basket, and
-fragments of cornice fifteen feet long lie across them, or stand half
-upright, or lean against the enormous steps. No words can explain to the
-mind the involuntary shock which the senses feel at first sight of it
-all. One touches the stones in wonder, comparing one’s small human
-stature with their mass, and the intellect strains hopelessly to recall
-their original position; one climbs in and out among them, sometimes
-mounting, sometimes descending, as one might pick one’s way through an
-enormous quarry, scarcely understanding that the blocks one touches have
-all been hewn into shape by human hands, and that the hills from which
-men brought them are but an outline in the distance.”...
-
-All that quiet falling day Jane and Peripatetica wandered in the
-transformed monastery, staring at the great metopes; lingering among the
-Saracenic carvings and jewelled windows, poring over Phœnician seals;
-over the amazing ecclesiastic needlework, the gold monstrances, the
-carved gems, and last and best of all some delicious reliefs at sight of
-which they forgave at once and forever their old enemy, the Eighteenth
-Century, for all its disgusting crimes against beauty. They sought madly
-through the books for some mention of these tall, adorable nymphs in
-adorably impossible attitudes, these curled and winged and dimpled
-babies, fluttering like fat little wrens sweetly ignorant of the laws of
-gravitation; but as always on any subject of interest Baedeker and the
-rest frigidly refused to tell the name of the man out of whose head and
-hands had grown these enchanting figures.
-
-“Oh, dear Unknown!” cries Jane regretfully, “why is your noble name
-buried in silence! I wish to make a pilgrimage to your tomb, to cover it
-with Sicilian roses, and breathe a prayer for the repose of your sweet
-and gracious soul.”
-
-“Me too!” echoes Peripatetica, in tender scorn of the stodgy rules of
-English grammar.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Paschal season is near.
-
-Always, in all lands of all faiths, the coming of Spring, the yearly
-resurrection of life and nature, has been welcomed with gladness. The
-occultation of Osiris, of Baldur, of Persephone, of the Christ, is
-mourned; their coming again hailed with flowers and feasting.
-
-Palermo is filling with visitors; with a glory of flowers and verdure in
-which the loveliest city in the world grows daily lovelier. The Conca
-d’Oro—the Shell of Gold—swims in a golden sea of sunshine.
-
-On the Wednesday before Easter the whole population exchanges cakes.
-Cakes apotheosized by surprising splendours of icing; icing, gilded,
-silvered, snowily sculptured into Loves and angels and figures of
-national heroes. Icing wrought into elaborate garlands tinted rose,
-purple, and green; built into towers and ornate architectural devices.
-Structures of confectionery three feet high are borne on big platters
-between two men. Every child carries gay little cakes to be presented to
-grandparents and godparents, to cousins and playmates.
-
-All Maundy Thursday the population moves from church to church. Masses
-moan incessant in every chapel. Before the Virgins on every
-street-shrine, draped in black, candles blaze and drip. Priests and
-monks hurry to and fro, bent upon preparations for the great spectacle
-of the morrow.
-
-Friday morning early all Palermo is in the streets in its best attire.
-Small children dressed as little cardinals, as nuns, as priests,
-bishops, angels with gilded wings, as Virgins, as John the Baptist, are
-on their way to the churches from which the processions are to flow.
-Monks and friars gather from outlying country convents.
-
-At ten o’clock a throbbing dirge begins. The first of the processions is
-under way. A band plays a funeral march, and is followed by acolytes
-swinging censers. Pious elderly citizens, perspiring in frock coats,
-carry tall, flaming candles that drop wax upon their clothes. A few
-priests, in black and purple, follow, bearing holy vessels. Behind these
-a row of men in mediæval armour and carrying halberds, surround a heavy,
-hand-borne bier hung with black velvet, on which rests a glass and gilt
-case containing an image of the Crucified—a life-sized image, brown with
-age. Presumably it has been taken from some ancient and revered Spanish
-crucifix, for it is crowned with thorns, is emaciated, is writhed with
-pain, painted with the dark, faded red of streaming wounds—one of those
-agonised figures conceived by the pious realism of the older Spanish
-sculptors.
-
-Immediately follows another hand-borne litter upon which is standing a
-tall Virgin clothed in black hood and mantle—a pallid, narrow-faced
-Virgin—also Spanish and realistic. The delicate clasped hands hold a
-lace handkerchief, her breast is hung with votive silver hearts. The
-features are distorted with grief, the lids, reddened with tears, are
-drooped over sunken, deep-shadowed eyes, and her countenance seamed and
-withered—a poignant figure of unutterable maternal woe! Burning candles
-alternate with mounds of roses about the edge of the platform on which
-she stands.
-
-As the dead Son and the mourning Mother pass, hats come off and heads
-are bowed, signs of the cross are made. A few of the older peasant women
-fall to their knees upon the sidewalk and mutter an Agnus Dei, a Hail
-Mary, with streaming tears. A priest walks last of all, rattling a
-contribution box at the end of a long stick, looking anxiously at the
-balconies and windows from which the well-to-do spectators lean. For his
-is but a poor church; the velvet palls and cloaks are cotton, and frayed
-and faded, the bier and platform old, and so massive that the stalwart
-bearers must set them down often to wipe away the sweat, which is why it
-takes advantage of the unpre-empted morning hours and is early in the
-field.
-
-Later in the day, in Gaspero’s cab and under his guidance, Jane and
-Peripatetica take up a coign of vantage in a square debouching upon the
-Corso Vittorio Emanuele, along which the Jesuits are to parade at four
-o’clock. Here the crowd is solidly packed, the balconies and windows
-crowded with the aristocracy of Palermo. The Guarda Mobili in their
-splendid uniforms keep open the way for the marching fraternities and
-sodalities with their crucifixes and Virgin-embroidered banners, open a
-lane for the monks, for the crowds of tiny angels and cardinals who must
-patter for hours in the slow-moving procession. Priests and acolytes
-swarm; censers steam, hundreds of candles of all weights and heights
-flare and flame, and then slowly, slowly, to the wailing music, moves
-forward a splendid catafalque of crystal in which lies stretched upon a
-bed of white velvet, richly wrought with gold, a fair youth. A youth
-with white, naked limbs, relaxed and pure; not soiled by the grimy,
-bloody agonies of martyrdom, but poetised to a picture of Love too early
-dead—a charming image. And the beautiful tall Virgin is not the simple
-Mother of the Carpenter convulsed with despair. She is a stately,
-sorrowful Queen, crowned, hung with jewels, robed in superb royal weeds;
-proudly refusing to show the full depth of her bereavement, as she
-follows her dead Son amid the wax torches shining palely in the sunshine
-through the white and green of the sheaves of lilies that grow about her
-knees.
-
-The emotional effect upon the crowd is intense; one can hear like an
-undertone the sound of indrawn, gulping breath. Gaspero passes his
-sleeve across the tears in his dark eyes.
-
-This version of the tragedy is lifted above the realism of pain into a
-penetrating and lovely symbolism that swells the heart with poignant and
-tender emotions as the divine funeral train winds slowly away, with
-perfume, with lights, and with the slow sobbing of the muffled drums.
-
-So had Sicilians two thousand years ago crowded every spring to see a
-similar spectacle of a weeping Queen of Love following an image of a
-lovely dead youth....
-
-“Ah! and himself—Adonis—how beautiful to behold he lies on his silver
-couch, with the first down on his cheeks, the thrice beloved
-Adonis—Adonis beloved even among the dead.... O Queen, O Aphrodite, that
-playest with gold, lo, from the stream eternal of Acheron they have
-brought back to thee Adonis—even in the twelfth month they have brought
-him, the dainty-footed Hours.... Before him lie all that the tall
-tree-branches bear, and the delicate gardens, arrayed in baskets of
-silver; and the golden vessels are full of the incense of Syria. And all
-the dainty cakes that women fashion in the kneading-tray, mingling
-blossoms manifold with the white wheaten flour, all that is wrought of
-honey sweet, and in soft olive-oil, all cakes fashioned in semblance of
-things that fly, and of things that creep, lo, here they are set before
-him.
-
-“Here are built for him shadowy bowers of green, all laden with tender
-anise, and children flit overhead—the little Loves—as the young
-nightingales perched upon the trees fly forth and try their wings from
-bough to bough....
-
-“But lo, in the morning we will all of us gather with the dew, and carry
-him forth among the waves that break upon the beach, and with locks
-unloosed, and ungirt raiment falling to the ankles, and bosoms bare we
-will begin our shrill sweet song.
-
-“Thou only, dear Adonis, so men tell, thou only of the demigods, dost
-visit both this world and the stream of Acheron.... Dear has thine
-advent been, Adonis, and dear shall it be when thou comest again.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Gaspero never permitted Jane and Peripatetica to lose anything. Doubling
-through narrow, black streets where lofty buildings nearly met above
-their heads and where they snatched hurried, delighted glimpses of
-intricate old grilles, of arched and wheeled windows, of splendid
-hatchments and fine carved portals—he brought them out at admirable view
-points for all the many similar parades in widely separated parts of the
-city.
-
-As the purple dusk came down they found themselves in the Marina,
-watching the last of the processions moving slowly down the broad avenue
-to the sea-street. The crowd had thinned. The small angels and John the
-Baptists went wearily upon dusty little feet, their crowns of now wilted
-roses canted at dissipated angles over their flushed and tearful faces,
-the heavy, half-burned wax torches wabbling dangerously near the
-draggled veils and drooping gilt wings.
-
-The bearers of the images paused often to set down their heavy burdens.
-The balconies began to blossom with tinted lights. Here and there the
-Virgin with her twinkling candles was turned toward a balcony filled
-with some specially faithful children of the church, and stood facing
-them a moment, tall, ghostly, tragical, in the gathering darkness,
-before passing onward in her long pilgrimage of mourning that was to end
-within the church doors as night came down.
-
-“It is enough, Gaspero,” they cried, as the flickering train passed away
-down the water avenue into the blue blackness of the shadowy evening,
-and then they went homewards full of that strange mingled sense of
-languor and refreshment—that “cleansing of the soul with pity and
-terror” which is the gift of the heroic tragedies....
-
-Every hour of that night the bells rang and masses sang throughout the
-city. All day Saturday the churches swarmed, and the purple veils, hung
-before the altar pictures throughout Lent, were rent from top to bottom
-to the sound of the wailing De Profundis. Sunday the religious world
-seemed to exhale itself in music and flowers and triumphant masses.
-Easter Monday morning the populace hurried through the necessary
-domestic duties at the earliest possible moment, for the Pasqua Flora is
-the day of villegiatura for all Palermo. Every one wears new clothes.
-Even the humble asinelli are, for once in the year at least, brushed and
-combed, and decorated with fresh red tassels if the master is too poor
-to afford more elaboration of the always elaborate harness. Those asses
-who have the luck to be the property of rich contadini appear
-resplendent in new caparison; with towering brass collars heavy with
-scarlet chenille, flashing with mirrors and inlays of mother-of-pearl,
-glittering from head to tail with brass buckles, with bells and red tags
-innumerable, drawing new carts carved and painted with all the myths and
-legends and history of Sicily in crude chromatic vivacity.
-
-Whole families stream countrywards in these carts to-day; babies clean
-and starched for once, grandmothers in purple kerchiefs tied under the
-chin and yellow kerchiefs crossed upon the breast, with gold hoops in
-their ears; daughters in flowered cottons, their uncovered heads wrought
-with fearful and wonderful pompadours, sleek and jet black.
-
-Along the seashore, up the sides of Pellegrino, in all the open country
-about Palermo, they spread and sun themselves, eat, sleep, make love,
-gossip, dance, and sing in the golden air.
-
-Gaspero drives slowly through the wide-spread picnic, pausing wherever a
-characteristic group attracts.
-
-Here lies a whole family asleep; gorged with endless coils of macaroni,
-saturated with sun—a mere heap of crude-coloured clothes, of brown
-open-mouthed faces, of lax limbs that to-morrow must be gathered up
-again for a hand-to-hand struggle for bread for another twelve-month.
-
-Under this tree a long table is spread with loaves, with meats, with
-iced cakes, and straw-covered flasks. A rich confrère of Gaspero
-celebrates the betrothal of his only daughter, a plump and solid
-heiress, who beneath an inky and mighty pompadour simpers at the broad
-jokes of her pursey, elderly fiancé. A solid fiancé, financially and
-physically. Altogether a solid match, says Gaspero. A dashing guest
-thrums his guitar and sings throatily of the joys of love and of money
-in the stocking.
-
-Here a group of very old men watch about a boiling pot hung above a
-little fire, and twitter reminiscences of youth, catching one last pale
-gleam of the fast sinking sun of their meagre, toilsome lives.
-
-Everywhere music and laughter and the smell of flowers and food and
-wine.
-
-A big piano-organ is playing a rouladed waltz to a ring of young
-spectators, crowding to watch the elaborate steps of dancers swinging
-about singly with grace-steps, with high prancings, with tarantella
-flourishes. Male dancers, all. Gaspero explains that no respectable girl
-would be allowed to join them, the Sicilian girl’s diversions being
-distressingly limited.
-
-One of the boyish dancers, with the keen, bold face and square head of a
-mediæval Condottiere, flourishes his light cane in fencing passes as he
-swings, which challenge inspires a spectator to leap into the ring with
-his own cane drawn. The newcomer, an obvious dandy in pointed
-patent-leather shoes, blue-ribboned hat, and light suit of cheap
-smartness, crosses canes dashingly with the would-be fencer, and the
-rest of the dancers drop back to see the fun.
-
-The Condottiere finds in a few passes that he has met his master and
-craftily begins a waiting game. Lithe and quick as a cat, he circles and
-gives way, his opponent driving him round and round the ring, lunging
-daringly and playing to the gallery. He flourishes unnecessarily,
-pursues recklessly, assumes a contemptuous carelessness of the boy,
-always circling, always on guard, always coolly thrifty of breath and
-strength.
-
-The dandy grows tired and angry, rushes furiously to make an end of his
-nimble evasive antagonist, who at last turns with cold courage and by a
-twist of his weapon sends the dandy’s cane flying clean over the ring of
-spectators, who scream with delight. But the Condottiere is a generous
-as well as a wily foe. He offers an embrace. The dandy reluctantly
-allows himself to be kissed on both cheeks, but the victor catches him
-about the waist and waltzes him around madly amid the laughter and
-bravas of the crowd.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is Jane’s and Peripatetica’s last day in Sicily. Gaspero has taken
-them to Santa Maria di Gesu, the Minorite Monastery, but has paused by
-the way for a look at San Giovanni degli Eremiti, whose little red domes
-float clear against the burning azure sky like coral-tinted bubbles, so
-airily do they rise from the green of the high hill-garden with its tiny
-cloisters of miniature columns and miniscule grey arches heavy with
-yellow roses. And yet from this rosy, arch little fane rang the Sicilian
-Vespers which gave the signal for one of the bloodiest butcheries in
-history. It was Pasqua Flora, and all Palermo, as it did yesterday, was
-feasting and dancing out of doors. One of the French soldiers—then in
-occupation, upholding the hated House of Anjou—insulted a Sicilian girl
-and was stabbed. Just then the Vesper bells rang from San Giovanni degli
-Eremiti, and at the signal the conspiracy, long festering, broke into
-open flame, and Palermo rose and massacred the French till the streets
-ran with blood.
-
-The Gesu Monastery has no such sanguinary associations. The plain little
-building, high on the hillside, stands buried among enormous cypresses
-and clouds of roses, and surrounded by the massive marble tombs and
-mortuary chapels of Palermo’s nobility and Sicily’s magnates. It is a
-place of great peace and silence. A place of unutterable beauty of
-outlook upon gorges feathered with pines, upon stern violet mountains
-melting into more distant heights of amethyst, into outlines of
-hyacinth, into silhouettes of mauve, into high ghostly shadows that
-vanish into floods of aerial blue. A place which looks on sea and shore
-and city, and where the chemistry of sun and air transmutes the
-multitudinous tones of the landscape to an incredible witchery of tint,
-to living hues like those of the colours of jewels, of flowers, of the
-little burning feathers of the butterflies’ wings.
-
-“Doubtless God might have made a more beautiful view than this from the
-Gesu, but doubtless God never did,” sighed Jane.
-
-But still Gaspero is not satisfied. He can never rest content with
-anything less than perfection. Yes; he admits the Gesu is admirable, but
-he knows a still more “molto bella vista.”
-
-“There is nothing better than the best,” says Jane sententiously. “I am
-drenched and satiated with all the loveliness that I can bear. Any other
-‘vista’ would be an anticlimax.”
-
-“Dear Jane,” remonstrated Peripatetica, “haven’t you yet guessed that
-Gaspero is a wizard? I suspected it the very first day. Of course, you
-can see that he’s no ordinary guide and cab-driver, and, as a matter of
-fact, I don’t believe there _are_ any such sights as the ones we think
-he has showed us. You’ve been on Broadway? Well, can you lay your hand
-on your heart, and honestly affirm that when you are there again you
-won’t at once realize that there never were such beauties as these we’ve
-been seeing? Won’t you know then that this is all a glamour—a hypnotic
-suggestion of Gaspero’s mind upon ours?”
-
-“Don’t be ridiculous!” snapped Jane. “What is all this rhodomontade
-leading to?”
-
-“To a desire to follow the wizard,” answered Peripatetica recklessly.
-“Whither Gaspero goeth I go! I am fully prepared to wallow in glamours,
-and besides we’ve luncheon in our basket, so don’t be tiresome, Jane.
-Let’s abandon the commonplace and ‘follow the Gleam.’”
-
-“Very well,” laughed Jane, climbing into the carriage. “Gaspero and
-‘gleam’ if you like.”
-
-Whether the molto bella vista ever existed remains still a subject of
-dispute. Peripatetica insists that it was only a pretext for leading
-them to a place where Gaspero intended they should lunch, but Jane, who
-always kicks against the philosophic pricks of the determinists,
-contends that she exercised a certain measure of free will in the
-matter. However that may be, they wound among mountain roads, by caves
-Gaspero said were once the dwellings of giants, by little outlying
-villages where old women span and wove in the doorways and young women
-made lace; where copper-workers sat in the street and with musical clang
-of little hammers beat out glittering vessels of rosy metal. They
-scattered flocks of goats from their path, the shaggy white bucks
-leaping nimbly upon the wall and staring at them with curious ironic,
-satyr-like glances; and far, very far up, they came upon a mountain
-meadow mistily shadowed by enormous gnarled olive trees—a meadow
-knee-deep in flowers. A meadow that was a sea of flowers, orange, golden
-and lemon, rippling and dimpling in the light and shade, breathed upon
-by the faint flying airs of those high spaces:
-
- “In Arcady, in Arcady!
- Where all the leaves are merry—”
-
-cried Peripatetica joyously.
-
-“Of course it’s Arcady,” said Jane, with conviction. “And we have come
-upon it in the Age—or perhaps the moment—of Gold. Gaspero,” she
-announced firmly, “we will lunch right here.”
-
-“But Signorina—the Vista!” protested the Wizard with a quizzical smile.
-
-It was really (Peripatetica is convinced) Gaspero’s subtle understanding
-of Jane’s character which led him to offer just sufficient opposition to
-fix her determination to stay at the very spot where he could best work
-his magic, for a flowing world of shadowy purple swam about them in a
-thousand suave folds down to a shining sea, and he could not have showed
-them any vista more beautiful. But why attempt to shake Jane’s pleased
-conviction it was really owing to her that for a few hours she and
-Peripatetica could truly say, “I too have lived in Arcadia.” That it was
-owing to her they cheerfully fed there, and lay cradled for long warm
-hours in that perfumed flood of flowers in happy thoughtless silence,
-wrapped in a fold of the Earth Mother’s—the great Demeter’s—mantle; a
-fold embroidered by the fine fingers of her daughter Persephone, the
-Opener of Flowers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That night, when the full moon rose over the silky sea, far down the
-horizon behind them slowly faded into the distance the ghostly silver
-peaks of the enchanted Land of the Older Gods.
-
-
-
-
- THE END
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- THE COMPLETE WORKS
-
- OF
-
- WILLIAM J. LOCKE
-
- “LIFE IS A GLORIOUS THING.”—_W. J. Locke_
-
- “If you wish to be lifted out of the petty cares of to-day, read one
- of Locke’s novels. You may select any from the following titles and
- be certain of meeting some new and delightful friends. His
- characters are worth knowing.”—_Baltimore Sun._
-
- The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne
- At the Gate of Samaria
- A Study in Shadows
- Where Love Is
- Derelicts
- The Demagogue and Lady Phayre
- The Beloved Vagabond
- The White Dove
- The Usurper
- Septimus
- Idols
-
- _12mo._ _Cloth._ _$1.50 each._
-
- Eleven volumes bound in green cloth. Uniform edition in box. $16.50
- per set. Half morocco $45.00 net. Express prepaid.
-
-=The Belovéd Vagabond=
-
- “‘The Belovéd Vagabond’ is a gently-written, fascinating tale. Make
- his acquaintance some dreary, rain-soaked evening and find the
- vagabond nerve-thrilling in your own heart.” —_Chicago
- Record-Herald._
-
-=Septimus=
-
- “Septimus is the joy of the year.”—_American Magazine._
-
-=The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne=
-
- “A literary event of the first importance.”—_Boston Herald._
-
- “One of those rare and much-to-be-desired stories which keep one
- divided between an interested impatience to get on, and an
- irresistible temptation to linger for full enjoyment by the
- way.”—_Life._
-
-=Where Love Is=
-
- “A capital story told with skill.”—_New York Evening Sun._
-
- “One of those unusual novels of which the end is as good as the
- beginning.”—_New York Globe._
-
-=The Usurper=
-
- “Contains the hall-mark of genius itself. The plot is masterly in
- conception, the descriptions are all vivid flashes from a brilliant
- pen. It is impossible to read and not marvel at the skilled
- workmanship and the constant dramatic intensity of the incident,
- situations and climax.”—_The Boston Herald._
-
-=Derelicts=
-
- “Mr. Locke tells his story in a very true, a very moving, and a very
- noble book. If any one can read the last chapter with dry eyes we
- shall be surprised. ‘Derelicts’ is an impressive, an important book.
- Yvonne is a creation that any artist might be proud of.”—_The Daily
- Chronicle._
-
-=Idols=
-
- “One of the very few distinguished novels of this present book
- season.”—_The Daily Mail._
-
- “A brilliantly written and eminently readable book.” —_The London
- Daily Telegraph._
-
-=A Study in Shadows=
-
- “Mr. Locke has achieved a distinct success in this novel. He has
- struck many emotional chords, and struck them all with a firm, sure
- hand. In the relations between Katherine and Raine he had a delicate
- problem to handle, and he has handled it delicately.” —_The Daily
- Chronicle._
-
-=The White Dove=
-
- “It is an interesting story. The characters are strongly conceived
- and vividly presented, and the dramatic moments are powerfully
- realized.”—_The Morning Post._
-
-=The Demagogue and Lady Phayre=
-
- “Think of Locke’s clever books. Then think of a book as different
- from any of these as one can well imagine—that will be Mr. Locke’s
- new book.”—_New York World._
-
-=At the Gate of Samaria=
-
- “William J. Locke’s novels are nothing if not unusual. They are
- marked by a quaint originality. The habitual novel reader inevitably
- is grateful for a refreshing sense of escaping the commonplace path
- of conclusion.”—_Chicago Record-Herald._
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- POEMS WORTH HAVING
-
-=Stephen Phillips=
-
- NEW POEMS, including IOLE: A Tragedy in One Act; LAUNCELOT AND
- GUINEVERE, ENDYMION, and many other hitherto unpublished poems.
-
- _Cloth, 12mo_ _$1.25 net_ _Half morocco, $4.00 net_ _Postage 10
- cents_
-
- “I have read the ‘New Poems’ of Stephen Phillips with the greatest
- interest. In my judgment it is the best volume that he has ever
- published.”—Wm. Lyon Phelps of Yale University.
-
- _Uniform Sets._ 4 volumes, including NEW POEMS, POEMS, PAOLO AND
- FRANCESCA, HEROD.
-
- _Cloth, $5.00 net_ _Half morocco, $15.00 net_ _Express 50 cents_
-
-=Laurence Hope=
-
- =COMPLETE WORKS.= Uniform Edition 3 volumes, 12mo. Bound in red
- cloth, in box.
-
- =India’s Love Lyrics=, including “The Garden of Kama.”
-
- =Stars of the Desert=
-
- =Last Poems.= Translations from the Book of Indian Love.
-
- _Cloth, $4.50 net_ _Postage 35 cents_ _Half morocco, $12.00_
- _Postage 50 cents_
-
- “The comparison of Laurence Hope to Sappho readily suggested itself
- to the admiring reviewers of her first book of poems.... The
- compliment was fully deserved.... As a singer of the melancholy of
- love and passion, Laurence Hope surpasses Swinburne in intensity of
- feeling and beauty of thought.” —_New York Evening Mail._
-
-=The Poems of Arthur Symons=
-
- A Collected Edition of the Poet’s works issued in two volumes with a
- Photogravure Portrait as Frontispiece.
-
- _8vo_ _$3.00 net_ _Half morocco, $10.00_ _Postage 24 cents_
-
-=The Fool of the World, and Other Poems=
-
- By ARTHUR SYMONS
-
- _12mo_ _$1.50 net_ _Half morocco, $5.00_ _Postage 15 cents_
-
- “Stands at the head of all British poets of his generation.”—_New
- York Evening Post._
-
-=The Poems of William Watson=
-
- Edited and arranged with an introduction by J. A. SPENDER.
-
- _In 2 volumes_ _12mo_ _cloth, $2.50 net_ _Half morocco, $7.50 net_
- _Photogravure Portrait_ _Postage 20 cents_
-
- “The lover of poetry cannot fail to rejoice in this handsome
- edition.”—_Philadelphia Press._
-
- “Work which will live, one may venture to say, as long as the
- language.”—_Philadelphia Public Ledger._
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- =VERNON LEE=
-
- Uniform sets boxed. _8 vols. Cloth. $12.00 net. Express extra. $1.50
- net each. Postage 10 cents._
-
- Limbo and Other Essays: “Ariadne in Mantua”
- Pope Jacynth, and Other Fantastic Tales
- Hortus Vitæ, or the Hanging Gardens
- The Sentimental Traveller
- The Enchanted Woods
- The Spirit of Rome
- Genius Loci
- Hauntings
-
- ⸪ “If we were asked to name the three authors writing in English
- to-day to whom the highest rank of cleverness and brilliancy might
- be accorded, we would not hesitate to place among them VERNON
- LEE.”—_Baltimore Sun._
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- =ELIZABETH BISLAND=
-
-=The Secret Life. Being the Book of a Heretic.=
-
- _12mo. $1.50 net. Postage 10 cents._
-
- “A book of untrammelled thought on living topics ... extraordinarily
- interesting.”—_Philadelphia Press._
-
- “Excellent style, quaint humor, and shrewd philosophy.”—_Review of
- Reviews._
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- =W. COMPTON LEITH=
-
-=Apologia Diffidentis=. An intimate personal book.
-
- _Cloth. 8vo. $2.50 net. Postage 15 cents._
-
- ⸪ “Mr. LEITH formulates the anatomy of diffidence as Burton did of
- melancholy; and it might almost be said that he has done it with
- equal charm. The book surpasses in beauty and distinction of style
- any other prose work of the past few years. Its charm is akin to
- that of Mr. A. C. Benson’s earlier books, yet Mr. Benson at his best
- has never equalled this.... A human document as striking as it is
- unusual.... The impress of truth and wisdom lies deep upon every
- page.”—_The Dial._
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- =GILBERT K. CHESTERTON=
-
-=Heretics=. Essays. _12mo. $1.50 net. Postage 12 cents._
-
- “Always entertaining.”—_New York Evening Sun._
-
- “Always original.”—_Chicago Tribune._
-
-=Orthodoxy=. Uniform with “Heretics.”
-
- _12mo. $1.50 net. Postage 12 cents._
-
- “Here is a man with something to say.”—_Brooklyn Life._
-
-=All Things Considered=. Essays on various subjects, such as:
-
- Conceit and Caricature; Spiritualism; Science and Religion; Woman,
- etc.
-
- _12mo. $1.50 net. Postage 12 cents._
-
-=The Napoleon of Notting Hill=. _12mo. $1.50._
-
- “A brilliant piece of satire, gemmed with ingenious
- paradox.”—_Boston Herald._
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- =CHARLES H. SHERRILL=
-
-=Stained Glass Tours in France=. How to reach the examples of XIIIth,
- XIVth, XVth and XVIth Century Stained Glass in France (with maps and
- itineraries) and what they are. _Ornamental cloth. 12mo. Profusely
- illustrated. $1.50 net. Postage 14 cents._
-
- ⸪ “The author wastes no time on technicalities, and it will be hard
- for the reader not to share the author’s enthusiasm.”—_New York
- Sun._
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- =FRANK RUTTER=
-
-=The Path to Paris=. The Record of a Riverside Journey from Le Havre to
- Paris. 62 Illustrations. _Cloth. 8vo. $5.00 net. Postage 20 cents._
-
- ⸪ A delightful account of a journey along the banks of the Seine.
- Impressions and adventures. Descriptions of historic and artistic
- associations. Of special value are the remarkable illustrations by
- Hanslip Fletcher.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- =ANATOLE FRANCE=
-
- “Anatole France is a writer whose personality is very strongly
- reflected in his works.... To reproduce his evanescent grace and
- charm is not to be lightly achieved, but the translators have done
- their work with care, distinction, and a very happy sense of the
- value of words.”—_Daily Graphic._
-
- “We must now all read all of Anatole France. The offer is too good
- to be shirked. He is just Anatole France, the greatest living writer
- of French.—_Daily Chronicle._”
-
- _Complete Limited Edition in English_
-
- Under the general editorship of Frederic Chapman. 8vo., special
- light-weight paper, wide margins, Caslon type, bound in red and
- gold, gilt top, and papers from designs by Beardsley, initials by
- Ospovat. _$2.00 per volume_ (except Joan of Arc), _postpaid_.
-
-=The Red Lily=. Translated by WINIFRED STEPHENS.
-
-=The Well of Saint Clare=. Translated by ALFRED ALLINSON.
-
-=Mother of Pearl=. Translated by FREDERIC CHAPMAN,
-
- Containing:
-
- The Procurator of Judea
- Our Lady’s Juggler
- Amycus and Celestine
- Madam de Luzy, etc.
-
- =The Garden of Epicurus=. Translated by ALFRED R. ALLINSON,
- Containing:
-
- In the Elysian Fields
- Card Houses
- Careers for Women
- The Priory, etc.
-
- =The Crime of Sylvestre Bonnard=. Translated by LAFCADIO HEARN.
-
- This novel was “crowned” by the French Academy in 1881, the author
- being received into membership in 1896.
-
- “The highest presentation of France’s many qualities and gifts is to
- be found in this exquisite book.”
-
-=Joan of Arc=. Translated by WINIFRED STEPHENS. 2 volumes. _$8.00 net
-per set. Postage extra._
-
- “THIS IS AN EPOCH-MAKING BOOK.... BENEATH THE SIMPLICITY OF THE
- MEDIÆVAL NARRATIVE THERE MAY STILL BE DISCERNED THE DELICIOUS IRONY
- AND THE DELICATE SUBTLE HUMOR OF THE NOVELS.” STEPHENS in “_French
- Novelists of Today_.”
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was corrected.
-
- ○ Unbalanced quotation marks were left as the author intended.
-
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
-
- ○ Inconsistent spelling was made consistent when a predominant form
- was found in this book; otherwise it was not changed.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEEKERS IN SICILY***
-
-
-******* This file should be named 55840-0.txt or 55840-0.zip *******
-
-
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
-http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/5/5/8/4/55840
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/55840-0.zip b/old/55840-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index a345ff3..0000000
--- a/old/55840-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h.zip b/old/55840-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 5b70f7e..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/55840-h.htm b/old/55840-h/55840-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index e99514c..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/55840-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11109 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
-<head>
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" />
-<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Seekers in Sicily, by Elizabeth Bisland and Anne Hoyt</title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css">
- body { margin-left: 8%; margin-right: 10%; }
- h1 { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; font-size: 1.4em; }
- h2 { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; font-size: 1.2em; }
- .pageno { right: 1%; font-size: x-small; background-color: inherit; color: silver;
- text-indent: 0em; text-align: right; position: absolute;
- border: thin solid silver; padding: .1em .2em; font-style: normal;
- font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; text-decoration: none; }
- p { text-indent: 0; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; text-align: justify; }
- sup { vertical-align: top; font-size: 0.6em; }
- .fss { font-size: 75%; }
- .sc { font-variant: small-caps; }
- .large { font-size: large; }
- .xlarge { font-size: x-large; }
- .xxlarge { font-size: xx-large; }
- .small { font-size: small; }
- .lg-container-b { text-align: center; }
- @media handheld { .lg-container-b { clear: both; } }
- .lg-container-l { text-align: left; }
- @media handheld { .lg-container-l { clear: both; } }
- .linegroup { display: inline-block; text-align: left; }
- @media handheld { .linegroup { display: block; margin-left: 1.5em; } }
- .linegroup .group { margin: 1em auto; }
- .linegroup .line { text-indent: -3em; padding-left: 3em; }
- div.linegroup > :first-child { margin-top: 0; }
- .linegroup .in1 { padding-left: 3.5em; }
- .linegroup .in16 { padding-left: 11.0em; }
- .linegroup .in18 { padding-left: 12.0em; }
- .linegroup .in2 { padding-left: 4.0em; }
- .linegroup .in3 { padding-left: 4.5em; }
- .linegroup .in5 { padding-left: 5.5em; }
- .linegroup .in6 { padding-left: 6.0em; }
- .linegroup .in7 { padding-left: 6.5em; }
- ul.ul_1 {padding-left: 0; margin-left: 2.78%; margin-top: .5em;
- margin-bottom: .5em; list-style-type: disc; }
- ul.ul_2 {padding-left: 0; margin-left: 6.94%; margin-top: .5em;
- margin-bottom: .5em; list-style-type: circle; }
- div.footnote > :first-child { margin-top: 1em; }
- div.footnote p { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
- div.pbb { page-break-before: always; }
- hr.pb { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-bottom: 1em; }
- @media handheld { hr.pb { display: none; } }
- .chapter { clear: both; page-break-before: always; }
- .figcenter { clear: both; max-width: 100%; margin: 2em auto; text-align: center; }
- div.figcenter p { text-align: center; text-indent: 0; }
- .figcenter img { max-width: 100%; height: auto; }
- .id001 { width:514px; }
- .id002 { width:392px; }
- .id003 { width:250px; }
- .id004 { width:502px; }
- .id005 { width:600px; }
- .id006 { width:527px; }
- .id007 { width:539px; }
- @media handheld { .id001 { margin-left:18%; width:64%; } }
- @media handheld { .id002 { margin-left:25%; width:49%; } }
- @media handheld { .id003 { margin-left:34%; width:31%; } }
- @media handheld { .id004 { margin-left:19%; width:62%; } }
- @media handheld { .id005 { margin-left:12%; width:75%; } }
- @media handheld { .id006 { margin-left:17%; width:65%; } }
- @media handheld { .id007 { margin-left:16%; width:67%; } }
- .ic002 { width:100%; }
- .ig001 { width:100%; }
- .table0 { margin: auto; margin-left: 4%; margin-right: 5%; width: 91%; }
- .nf-center { text-align: center; }
- .nf-center-c0 { text-align: left; margin: 0.5em 0; }
- .nf-center-c1 { text-align: left; margin: 1em 0; }
- p.drop-capa0_1_0_7 { text-indent: -0.1em; }
- p.drop-capa0_1_0_7:first-letter { float: left; margin: 0.100em 0.100em 0em 0em;
- font-size: 250%; line-height: 0.7em; text-indent: 0; }
- @media handheld {
- p.drop-capa0_1_0_7 { text-indent: 0; }
- p.drop-capa0_1_0_7:first-letter { float: none; margin: 0; font-size: 100%; }
- }
- .c000 { margin-top: 1em; }
- .c001 { page-break-before: always; margin-top: 4em; }
- .c002 { margin-top: 4em; }
- .c003 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-top: 1em;
- margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 20%; width: 60%; margin-right: 20%;
- margin-top: 4em; }
- .c004 { margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
- .c005 { page-break-before:auto; margin-top: 4em; }
- .c006 { margin-top: 2em; text-indent: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
- .c007 { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
- .c008 { margin-left: 13.89%; text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.5em;
- margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
- .c009 { vertical-align: top; text-align: right; padding-right: 1em; }
- .c010 { vertical-align: top; text-align: left; padding-right: 1em; }
- .c011 { vertical-align: top; text-align: right; }
- .c012 { page-break-before:auto; margin-top: 2em; }
- .c013 { margin-top: 2em; }
- .c014 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-top: 0.8em;
- margin-bottom: 0.8em; margin-left: 35%; margin-right: 35%; width: 30%; }
- .c015 { margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
- .c016 { text-decoration: none; }
- .c017 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-top: 1em;
- margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 10%; width: 80%; margin-right: 10%; }
- .c018 { margin-left: 5.56%; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
- .c019 { margin-left: 1.39%; }
- .c020 { margin-left: 5.56%; }
- .c021 { margin-left: 2.78%; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
- .c022 { margin-left: 2.78%; }
- .c023 { margin-left: 5.56%; text-indent: -5.56%; margin-top: 0.5em;
- margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
-
- h1.pg { font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 190%;
- clear: both; }
- h2.pg { font-weight: bold;
- font-size: 135%;
- clear: both; }
- h3,h4 { text-align: center;
- clear: both; }
- hr.full { width: 100%;
- margin-top: 3em;
- margin-bottom: 0em;
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
- height: 4px;
- border-width: 4px 0 0 0; /* remove all borders except the top one */
- border-style: solid;
- border-color: #000000;
- clear: both; }
- </style>
-</head>
-<body>
-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Seekers in Sicily, by Elizabeth Bisland and
-Anne Hoyt</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Seekers in Sicily</p>
-<p> Being a Quest for Persephone by Jane and Peripatetica</p>
-<p>Author: Elizabeth Bisland and Anne Hoyt</p>
-<p>Release Date: October 28, 2017 [eBook #55840]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEEKERS IN SICILY***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by Clarity, Barry Abrahamsen,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/seekersinsicily00wetmiala">
- https://archive.org/details/seekersinsicily00wetmiala</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>SEEKERS IN SICILY</h1>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div id='front' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/illus_004.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='small'>“<span class='sc'>Demeter’s Well-Beloved Children</span>”</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='xxlarge'>SEEKERS IN SICILY</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>BEING A QUEST FOR PERSEPHONE</div>
- <div>BY JANE AND PERIPATETICA</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c003' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Done into the Vernacular</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>By</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>Elizabeth Bisland and Anne Hoyt</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c003' />
-<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>NEW YORK: JOHN LANE COMPANY. MCMIX</div>
- <div class='line'>LONDON: JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='small'><i>Copyright, 1909</i></span></div>
- <div><span class='sc'>By</span> JOHN LANE COMPANY</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/illus_007.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>To</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'>ANDERS AND FRAU ZORN</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'><span class='sc'>from the North, in memory</span></span></div>
- <div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>of the Sun and the South,</span></span></div>
- <div><span class='small'><span class='sc'>this book is inscribed</span></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>A Pair of “Word Braiders”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/illus_009.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><b>NOTE</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_1_0_7 c004'><i>THE designs upon the cover of this book,
-and at the heads of the chapters, are the
-tribe signs or totems of the original inhabitants
-of the island of Sicily, which have
-survived all conquests and races and are still
-considered as tokens of good luck and defenders
-from the Evil-eye.</i></p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>
-<img src='images/illus_011.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='preface' class='c005'>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c006'><span class='sc'>When</span> this book was written—in the spring of the
-year—the Land of the Older Gods was unmarred by
-the terrible seismic convulsions which wrought such
-ruin in the last days of 1908.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Very sad to each of us it is when time and the sorrows
-of “this unintelligible world” carve furrows upon our
-own countenances, but when the visage of the globe
-shrivels and wrinkles with the lapse of ages then the
-greatness of the disaster touches the whole race. Sicily,
-whose history is so full of blood and tears, has been the
-victim of the greatest natural tragedy that man’s
-chronicles record because of this line drawn by Time
-upon our planet’s face—yet it leaves her still so fair,
-so poignantly lovely, that pilgrims of beauty will—forgetting
-this slight blemish—still journey to see the
-sweetest remnant of the world’s youth. Happily
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>Messina, the one city injured, was the one city where
-travellers rarely paused. All the others remain
-unmarred and are still exactly as they were when this
-chronicle of their ancient beauty and charm was set
-down.</p>
-<p class='c008'><span class='sc'>E. B. and A. H.</span></p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span><span class='xlarge'>CONTENTS</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='18%' />
-<col width='72%' />
-<col width='9%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>Preface</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#preface'>9</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='small'>CHAPTER</span></td>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>I</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>On the Road to the Land of the Gods</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch01'>15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>II</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>A Nest of Eagles</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch02'>45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>III</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>One Dead in the Fields</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch03'>126</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>IV</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Return of Persephone</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch04'>178</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>V</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>A City of Temples</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch05'>192</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>VI</td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='sc'>The Golden Shell</span></td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ch06'>229</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_013'>13</span><span class='xlarge'>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='72%' />
-<col width='27%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>“Demeter’s Well-Beloved Children”</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#front'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>“A Place Where the Past Reveals Itself”</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#illus_071'>68</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>“Pan’s Goatherd”</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#illus_137'>132</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>“Ætna, The Salient Fact of Sicily”</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#illus_193'>186</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>“The Saffron Mass of Concordia”</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#illus_207'>198</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>“Lifting Themselves Airily From a Sea of Flowers”</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#illus_229'>218</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>“Sicily’s Picture-book, The Painted Cart”</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#illus_247'>234</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c010'>“The Last Resting Place of Queen Constance”</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#illus_263'>248</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_015'>15</span>
-<img src='images/illus_017.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>SEEKERS IN SICILY</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='ch01' class='c012'>CHAPTER I <br /> <br /> <span class='sc'>On the Road to the Land of the Gods</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“He ne’er is crown’d with immortality</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Who fears to follow where airy voices lead.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<span class='sc'>Oh</span>, Persephone, Persephone!... Surely Koré is
-in Hell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is a discouraged voice from the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Peripatetica, that <i>sounds</i> both insane and improper.
-Would it fatigue you too much to explain in the vernacular
-what you are trying, in your roundabout way, to
-suggest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Thus Jane, a mere diaphanous mauve cloud, from
-which the glimmering fire picked out glittering points
-here and there. When Jane takes to teagowns she is
-really very dressy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica strolled up and down the dusky drawing-room
-two or three times, without answering. Outside
-a raging wind drove furiously before it in the darkness
-the snow that flew upward in long spirals, like desperate
-hunted ghosts. Finally she took up a book from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>table, and kneeling, to get the light from the logs on
-the page, began to read aloud.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These two were on such kindly terms that either
-one could read aloud without arousing the other to open
-violence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Persephone, sometimes called Koré—” read Peripatetica,
-“having been seized by Pluto, as she gathered
-narcissus, and wild thyme, and mint, and the violet
-into her green kirtle—was carried, weeping very bitterly,
-into his dark hell. And Demeter, her mother, missing
-her fair and sweet-curled daughter, sought her through
-all the world with tears and ravings; the bitter sound
-and moisture of her grief making a noise as of winter wind
-and rain. And her warm heart being so cold with pain
-the blossoms died on her bosom, and her vernal hair
-was shredded abroad into the air, and all growing things
-drooped and perished, and her brown benignant face
-became white as the face of the dead are white——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica closed the book, put it back on the table,
-and drew a hassock under her for a seat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I see,” said Jane. “Demeter is certainly passing
-this way to-night, poor dear! It’s a pity she can’t
-realize Persephone, that sweet soul of Spring, will come
-back. She always does come back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes; but Demeter, the mother-earth, always fears
-that this time she may not; that Pluto will keep her in
-hell always. And every time she makes the same outcry
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I suppose she always finds her first in Enna,” Jane
-hazarded. “Isn’t Enna in Sicily?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I think so; but I don’t know much about Sicily,
-though everybody goes there nowadays. Let’s go
-there, Jane, and help Demeter find Persephone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>“Let’s!” agreed Jane, with sympathetic enthusiasm,
-and they went.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-<p class='c007'>Now, being Americans, and therefore accustomed to
-the most obliging behaviour on the part of the male sex,
-it never occurred to them that Pluto might be ungallant
-enough to object to their taking a hand in. But he
-did—as they might have foreseen would be likely in a
-person so unmannerly as to snatch lovely daughters
-from devoted mothers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It began on the ocean. On quite a calm evening a
-wave, passing from under the side of the ship, threw
-its crest back—perhaps to look at the stars—and fell
-head over heels into their open port. Certainly as much
-as two tons of green and icy Atlantic entered impulsively,
-and by the time they were dried out and comforted by
-the tight-corseted, rosy, sympathetic Lemon every object
-they possessed was a mere bunch of depressed rumples.
-Throughout the rest of the voyage they presented the
-unfortunate appearance of having slept in their clothes,
-including their hats. These last, which they had believed
-refreshingly picturesque, or coquettish, at starting,
-had that defiantly wretched aspect displayed by the
-broody hen after she has been dipped in the rain-barrel
-to check her too exuberant aversion to race-suicide.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That was how Pluto began, and it swiftly went from
-bad to worse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Three large tourist ships discharged bursting cargoes
-of humanity upon Naples on one and the same day, and
-the hotel-keepers rose to their opportunity and dealt
-guilefully with the horde clamouring as with one voice
-for food and shelter. That one’s hard-won shelter was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>numbered 12 <i>bis</i> (an artful concealment of the unlucky
-number 13) was apparently an unimportant detail. It
-was shelter, though even a sea-sodden mind should have
-seen something suspicious in those egregious frescoes
-of fat ladies sitting on the knife edge of crescent moons
-with which Room 13 endeavoured to conceal its real
-banefulness. Even such a mind should have distrusted
-that flamingly splendid fire-screen in front of a
-walled-up fireplace; should have scented danger in
-that flamboyant black and gold and blue satin furniture
-of the vintage of 1870. There was plainly, to an observant
-eye, something sinister and meretricious in so much
-dressiness, but Jane and Peripatetica yielded themselves
-up to that serpent lodging without the smallest
-precaution, and lived to rue their impulsive confidence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To begin with, Naples, instead of showing herself all
-flowers and sunshine, tinkling mandolins, and moonlight
-and jasper seas, was as merry and pleasing as an
-iced sponge. Loud winds howled through the streets,
-driving before them cold deluges of rain, and in these
-chilling downpours the street troubadours stood one foot
-in the puddles snuffling songs of “Bella Napoli” to
-untuned guitars, with water dripping from the ends of
-their noses. Peripatetica—whose eyes even under her
-low-spirited hat had been all through the voyage full of
-dreamful memories of Neapolitan tea-roses and blue
-blandness—curled up like a disappointed worm and
-retired to a fit of neuralgia and a hot-water bottle.
-There was something almost uncanny in the scornful
-irony of her expression as she hugged her steaming
-comforter to her cheek, and paced the floor in time to
-those melancholy damp wails from the street. Instead
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>of tea-roses she was prating all day of American comforts,
-as she clasped the three tepid coils of the chilly
-steam-heater to her homesick bosom, while Jane
-paddled about under an umbrella in search of the
-traditional ideal Italian maid, who would be willing to
-contribute to the party all the virtues and a cheerful
-disposition, for sixty francs a month.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Minna, when she did appear, proved to be Swiss instead
-of Italian, but she carried an atmosphere of happy
-comfort about her, could spin the threads of three
-languages with her gifted tongue, while sixty francs
-seemed to satisfy her wildest dreams of avarice. So
-the two depressed pilgrims, soothed by Minna’s promise
-to assume their burdens the next day, fell asleep dreaming
-that the weather might moderate or even clear.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Eight o’clock of the following morning came, but
-Minna didn’t. Jane interviewed the concierge, who
-had recommended her. The concierge interviewed the
-heavens and the earth, and the circumambient air, but
-spite of outflung fingers and polyglot cries, the elements
-had nothing to say about the matter, and for twenty-four
-hours they declined to let the secret leak out that
-other Americans in the same hotel had ravished their
-Minna from them with the glittering lure of twenty
-francs more.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Finally it dawned upon two damp and depressed
-minds that some unknown enemy had put a <i>comether</i>
-on them—though at that time they had no inkling of
-his identity. Large-eyed horror ensued. First aid to
-the hoodooed must be sought. Peripatetica tied a strip
-of red flannel around her left ankle.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In all these very old countries,” she said oracularly,
-“secret malign influences from the multitudes of wicked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>dead rise up like vapours from the soil where they have
-been buried.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane listened and, pale but resolute, went forth and
-purchased a coral <i>jettatura</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let us pass on at once from this moist Sodom,” she
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Visions of sun and Sicily dawned upon their mildewed
-imaginations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now there is really but one way to approach Sicily
-satisfactorily. Of course a boat leaves Naples every
-evening for Palermo, but the Mediterranean is a treacherous
-element in February. It had broken night after
-night in thunderous shocks upon the sea wall, making
-the heavy stone-built hotel quiver beneath their beds,
-and in the darkness of each night they had seen the water
-squadron charge again and again, the foremost spinning
-up tall and white to fling itself in frenzied futile spray
-across the black street. So that the thought of trusting
-insides jaded by two weeks of the Atlantic to such a foe
-as this was far from their most reckless dreams. The
-none too solid earth was none too good for such as they,
-and a motor eats up dull miles by magic. Motors are
-to be had in Naples even when fair skies lack, and with
-a big Berliet packed with luggage, and with the concierge’s
-tender, rueful smile shedding blessings, at last
-they slid southward.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>—Pale clouds of almond blossoms were spread
-against grey terraces.... Less pale smells rose in
-gusty whiffs.... Narrow yellow streets crooked
-before them, where they picked a cautious hooting way
-amid Italy’s rising population complicated with goats
-and asses.... Then flat, muddy roads, and Berliet
-bumping, splashing between fields of green artichokes....
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>The clouds held up; thinned, and parted,
-showing rifts of blue.... Vesuvius pushed the mists
-from her brow, and purple shadows dappled her shining,
-dripping flanks.... Orange groves rose along
-the way. Flocks of brown goats tinkled past. More
-almond boughs leaned over walls washed a faded
-rose. Church bells clanked sweetly through the moist
-air from far-away hills. Runnels chattered out from
-secret channels fringed with fern. Grey olive orchards
-hung like clouds along the steep.... The sun was
-fairly out, and Italy assuming her old traditional air of
-professional beauty among the nations of the earth....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Berliet climbed as nimbly as a goat toward
-Sorrento. The light deepened; the sea began to peacock.
-More and more the landscape assumed the
-appearance of the impossibly chromatic back drop of an
-opera, and as the turn was made under the orange
-avenue of the hotel at Sorrento everything was ready for
-the chorus of merry villagers, and for the prima donna
-to begin plucking song out of her bosom with stereotyped
-gestures.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was there they began to offer the light wines of the
-country, as sweetly perfumed and innocent as spring
-violets; no more like to the astringent red inks masquerading
-in straw bottles in America under the same
-names, than they to Hercules. The seekers of Persephone
-drank deeply—as much as a wine-glass full—and
-warmed by this sweet ichor of Bacchus they bid
-defiance to hoodoos and pushed on to Amalfi.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Berliet swam along the Calabrian shore, lifting them
-lightly up the steeps, swooping purringly down the
-slopes,—swinging about the bold curves of the coast;
-rounding the tall spurs, where the sea shone, green and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>purple as a dove’s neck, five hundred feet below, and
-where orange, lemon, and olive groves climbed the narrow
-terraces five hundred feet above. They were
-following the old, old way, where the Greeks had gone,
-where the Romans went, where Normans rode, where
-Spaniards and Saracens marched; the line of the drums
-and tramplings of not three, but of three hundred conquests!
-They were following—in a motor car—the
-passageway of three thousand years of European history
-that was to lead them back beyond history itself to
-the old, old gods.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The way was broad and smooth, looping itself like a
-white ribbon along the declivity, and even Peripatetica
-admitted it was lovely, though she has an ineradicable
-tendency to swagger about the unapproachable superiority
-of Venezuelan scenery; probably because so few
-are in a position to contradict her, or because she enjoys
-showing off her knowledge of out-of-the-way places
-which most of us don’t go to. She had always sniffed at
-the Mediterranean as overrated in the matter of colour,
-and declared it pale and dull beside the green and blue
-fire of Biscayne Bay in Florida, but it was a nice day,
-and a nice sight, and Peripatetica handsomely acknowledged
-that <i>after</i> Venezuela this was the very best scenery
-she knew.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At Amalfi</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“Where amid her mulberry trees</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Sits Amalfi in the heat,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Bathing ever her white feet</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>In the tideless summer seas,”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>they climbed 175 steps to the Cappucini convent
-which hangs like a swallow’s nest in a niche of the cliffs,
-flanked by that famous terrace the artists paint again
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>and again, from every angle, at every season of the year,
-at every hour of the day. There they imbibed a very
-superior tea, while sea and sky did their handsomest,
-listening meanwhile to a fellow tourist brag of having
-climbed to Ravello in his motor car.</p>
-<p class='c007'>If one cranes one’s neck from the Cappucini terrace,
-on a small peak will be seen what purports to be a
-town, but the conclusion will be irresistible that the
-only way to reach such a dizzy eminence is by goat’s
-feet, or hawk’s wings, and the natural inference is that
-the fellow tourist is fibbing. Nevertheless one hates
-to be outdone, and one abandons all desire to sleep in
-one of those coldly clean little monk-cells of the convent,
-and climbs resolutely down the 175 steps again
-and interviews Berliet. Berliet thinks his chassis is
-too long for the sharp turns. Thinks that the road is
-bad; that it is also unsafe; that the hotel in Ravello
-is not possible; that he suspects his off fore tire; that
-there’s not time to do it before dark; that his owner
-forbids his going to Ravello at all; that he has an appointment
-that evening with a good-looking lady in
-Amalfi; that he is tired with his long run, and doesn’t
-want to any way. All of which eleven reasons appeared
-so irrefutable, collectively and individually, that
-Jane and Peripatetica climbed into their seats and
-announced that they would go to Ravello, and go
-immediately.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Berliet muttered unpleasant things in his native
-tongue as to signori being reckless, obstinate, and inconsiderate;
-wound them up sulkily and took them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica admitted in a whisper that up to that
-very day she had never even heard of Ravello, which
-proved to be a really degrading piece of ignorance, for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>every human being they met for the next three months
-knew all about the place—or said they did. Further
-experience taught them to know that Italy is crowded
-with little crumbling towns one has never heard of
-before, which when examined prove to be the very
-particular spots in which took place about a half of all
-the history that ever happened. History being a thing
-one must be pretty skilful if one means to evade it in
-Italy, for the truth is that whenever history took a
-notion to <i>be</i>, it promptly went on a trip to Italy and
-<i>was</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They hooted slowly again through narrow streets,
-pushed more goats and children out their way, and
-then Berliet swung round on one wheel and began to
-mount. Began to climb like the foreseen goat, to soar
-like the imagined hawk, up sharp zigzags that lifted
-them by almost exact parallels. Everything that puts
-on power and speed, and makes noises like bomb explosions
-in a saw-factory, was pushed forward or pulled
-back. They rushed noisily round and round the peak
-at locomotive speed, and finally half way up into the
-very top of the sky they pulled up sharply in a cobble-paved
-square. Berliet leaped nimbly out, unscrewed
-a hot lid—with the tail of his linen duster—from which
-lid liquids and steam and smells boiled as from an
-angry geyser, and they found themselves in the wild
-eyrie of Ravello. That ubiquituosity—(with the name
-of a hotel on his cap)—who springs out from every
-stone in Italy like a spider upon the foolish swarming
-tourist fly, was waiting for them in the square as if by
-appointment, and before they could draw the first gasp
-of relief he had their possessions loaded upon the backs
-of the floating population, and they were climbing in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>the dusk a stone stairway that called itself a street—meekly
-and weakly unwitting of their possible destination.
-The destination proved to be a vaulted courtyard,
-opening behind a doorway which was built of a
-choice assortment of loot from four periods of architecture
-and sculpture; proved to be a reckless jumble
-of winding steps, of crooked passages, of terraces, balconies,
-and loggias, and the whole of this destination
-went by the name of the Hotel Bellevue. And once
-there, then suddenly, after all the noise and odours,
-the confusion and human clatter of the last three weeks,
-they stepped quietly out upon a revetment of Paradise.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Below—a thousand feet below—in the blue darkness
-little sparks of light were Amalfi. In the blue darkness
-above, hardly farther away it seemed, were the larger
-sparks of the rolling planets. The cool, lonely darkness
-bathed their spirits as with a blessed chrism. The
-place was, for the night, theirs alone, and for one holy
-moment the swarming tourist failed to swarm.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>“In the Highlands! In the country places!”—</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>murmured Jane, gratefully declining upon a broad
-balustrade, and Peripatetica echoed softly—declining
-in her turn—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>... “Oh, to dream; oh, to awake and wander</div>
- <div class='line in5'>There, and with delight to take and render</div>
- <div class='line in5'>Through the trance of silence</div>
- <div class='line in5'>Quiet breath.”...</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>And Jane took it up again—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>... “Where essential silence cheers and blesses,</div>
- <div class='line in7'>And forever in the hill recesses</div>
- <div class='line in7'>Her more lovely music broods and dies.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>Just then essential silence was broken by the last
-protesting squawk of a virtuous hen, who seemed to be
-about to die that they might live. Peripatetica recognized
-that plaintive cry. Hens were kept handy in
-fattening-coops on the Plantation, against the sudden
-inroads of unexpected guests.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“When the big-gate slams chickens begin to squawk,”
-was a well-remembered Plantation proverb.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How tough she will be, though,” Jane gently
-moaned, “and we shan’t be able to eat her, and she
-will have died in vain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Little did she reck of Signor Pantaleone Caruso’s
-beautiful art, for when they had dressed by the dim,
-soothing flicker of candles in big clean bed-rooms that
-were warmed by smouldering olive-wood fires, they
-were sweetly fed on a dozen lovely dishes; dishes
-foamy and yellow, with hot brown crusts, made seemingly
-of varied combinings of meal and cheese, and
-called by strange Italian cognomens. And the late—so
-very late—pullet appeared in her due course amid
-maiden strewments of crisp salads; proving, by some
-Pantaleonic magic, to be all that a hen could or should
-be. And they drank gratefully to her manes in Signor
-Caruso’s own wine, as mellow and as golden as his
-famous cousin’s voice. After which they ate small,
-scented yellow apples which might well have grown in
-Hesperidian gardens, and drowsed contentedly by the
-musky olive-wood blaze, among bowls of freesias and
-violets, until the almost weird hour of half past eight,
-when inward blessedness and a day of mountain air
-would no longer be denied their toll.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet all through the hours of sleep “old forgotten,
-far-off things, and battles long ago” stirred like an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>undertone of dreams within dreams. The clank of
-armed feet moved in the street. Ghostly bells rang
-whispered tocsins of alarm, and shadowy life swept
-back and forth in the broken, deserted town. The
-“Brass Hats” glimmered in the darkness. Goths set
-alight long extinguished fires. Curved Saracen swords
-glittered faintly, and Normans grasped the heights
-with mailed hands. The Rufolis, the d’Affliti, the
-Confalones, and della Maras married, feasted, and
-warred again in dumb show, and up and down the
-stairs of this very house rustled the silk robes and soft
-shod feet of sleek prelates.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Even the sea below—where the new moon floated
-at the western rim like a golden canoe—was astir with
-the myriad sails of <i>revenants</i>. First the white wings of
-that—</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in18'><span class='small'>“Grave Syrian trader ...</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Who snatched his rudder and shook out his sail ...</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Between the Syrtes and soft Sicily.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>After him followed hard the small ghostly sails of the
-Greeks.</p>
-<p class='c007'>“They were very perfect men, and could do all and
-bear all that could be done and borne by human flesh
-and blood. Taking them all together they were the
-most faultlessly constructed human beings that ever
-lived, and they knew it, for they worshipped bodily
-health and strength, and spent the lives of generations
-in the cultivation of both. They were fighting men,
-trained to use every weapon they knew, they were
-boxers and wrestlers, athletes, runners and jumpers,
-and drivers of chariots; but above all they were seamen,
-skilled at the helm, quick at handling the sails,
-masters of the oar, and fearless navigators when half
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>of all navigation led sooner or later to certain death.
-For though they loved life, as only the strong and the
-beautiful can love it, and though they looked forward
-to no condition of perpetual bliss beyond, but only to
-the shadowy place where regretful phantoms flitted in
-the gloom as in the twilight of the Hebrew Sheol, yet
-they faced dying as fighters always have and always
-will, with desperate hands and a quiet heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The golden canoe of the young moon filled and sank
-behind the sea’s rim, but through the darkness came
-the many-oared beat of ponderous Roman galleys
-carrying the dominion of the earth within their great
-sides, and as they vanished like a fog-wreath along the
-horizon, followed fast the hawk-winged craft of the
-keen-bladed, keen-faced Saracen, whose sickle-like
-crescent would never here on this coast round to the
-full. For, far away on the grey French coast of Coutance
-was a Norman gentleman named Tancred, very
-strong of heart, and very stout of his hands. There
-was no rumour of him here, as he rode to the hunt and
-spitted the wild boar upon his terrible length of steel.
-What should the Moslems know of a simple Norman
-gentleman, or care?—and yet in those lion loins lay the
-seeds of a dozen mighty whelps who were to rend their
-Christian prey from the Moslem and rule this warm
-coloured South as kings and dukes and counts, and
-whose blood was to be claimed by every crown in
-Europe for a thousand years. Very few among the
-shadowy sails were those of the de Hautevilles, but
-quality, not quantity, counts most among men, and those
-ships carried a strange, potent race. Anna Comnena
-thus describes one of them:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This Robert de Hauteville was of Norman origin—he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>united a marvellous astuteness with immense
-ambition, and his bodily strength was prodigious. His
-whole desire was to attain to the wealth and power of
-the greatest living men; he was extremely tenacious
-of his designs and most wise in finding means to attain
-his ends. In stature he was taller than the tallest; of
-a ruddy hue and fair-haired, he was broad-shouldered,
-and his eyes sparkled with fire; the perfect proportion
-of all his limbs made him a model of beauty from head
-to heel, as I have often heard people tell. Homer says
-of Achilles that those who heard his voice seemed to
-hear the thundering shout of a great multitude, but it
-used to be said of the de Hautevilles that their battle
-cry would turn back tens of thousands. Such a man,
-one in such a position, of such a nature, and of such
-spirit, naturally hated the idea of service, and would
-not be subject to any man; for such are those natures
-which are born too great for their surrounding.”</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>When morning dawned all spirits of the past had
-vanished, and only the noisy play of the young hopes
-of the Caruso family disturbed the peace of the echoing
-court. Jane insisted upon calling these innocent infants
-Knickerbockers, because, she said, they were
-only short Pantaleones—which is the sort of mild
-pleasantry Jane affects. Peripatetica doesn’t lend
-herself to these gentler forms of jest. It was she who
-put in all that history and poetry. (See above.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ravello used to be famous for her dye stuffs, and
-for the complete thorough-goingness of her attacks of
-plague, but her principal industries to-day are pulpits,
-and fondness for the Prophet Jonah. Her population
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>in the day of dyes and plague was 36,000, and is now,
-by generous computation, about thirty-six—which does
-not include the Knickers. Just opposite the Hotel
-Bellevue is one of these pulpits, in the church of St.
-John of the Bull; a church which about a thousand
-years ago was a very superior place indeed; but worse
-than Goths or Vandals, or Saracens, or plague, was the
-pernicious activity of the Eighteenth Century. Hardly
-a church in Italy has escaped unscathed from its busy
-rage. No sanctuary was too reverend or too beautiful
-to be ravaged in the name of Palladio, or of “the classic
-style.” Marbles were broken, mosaics torn out,
-dim aisles despoiled, brass and bronze melted, carvings
-chopped and burned, rich glass shattered, old
-tapestries flung on the dust heap. All the treasures of
-centuries—sweet with incense, softened and tinted by
-time, sanctified by a thousand prayers, and beautified
-by the tenderest emotions—were bundled out of the
-way of those benighted savages, and tons of lime were
-had into the poor gaunt and ruined fanes to transform
-them into whited sepulchres of beauty. Blank plaster
-walls hid the sweetest of frescoes; clustered grey
-columns were limed into ghastly imitations of the
-Doric; soaring arches—flowered like forest boughs—vanished
-in stodgy vaultings; Corinthian pilasters
-shoved lacelike rood-screens out of the way, and fat
-sprawling cherubs shouldered bleeding, shadowy
-Christs from the altars.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The spirit which inspired this stupid ruthlessness
-was perfectly expressed by Addison, who, commenting
-upon the great Cathedral of Siena, said
-pragmatically:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“When a man sees the prodigious pains that our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>forefathers have been at in these barbarous buildings,
-one cannot but fancy what miracles of architecture
-they would have left us had they only been instructed
-in the right way; for when the devotion of those ages
-was much warmer than it is at present, and the riches
-of the people much more at the disposal of the priests,
-there was so much money consumed on these Gothic
-churches as would have finished a greater variety of
-noble buildings than have been raised before or since
-that time. Than these Gothic churches nothing can
-make a prettier show to those who prefer false beauties
-and affected ornaments to a noble and majestic simplicity”—of
-dull plaster!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Much has been said of the irreverence of the Nineteenth
-Century. The Eighteenth respected nothing
-their forefathers had wrought; not even in this little
-far-away mountain town, and St. John of the Bull is
-now—poor Saint!—housed drearily in a dull, dusty,
-echoing white cavern, with not one point of beauty to
-hold the protesting eye save the splendid marble pulpit—escaped
-by some miracle of ruth to stand out in
-that dull waste upon delicate twisted alabaster columns,
-which stand in their turn upon crawling marble lions.
-Its four sides, and its baldachino, show beautiful patterns
-of precious mosaics, wrought with lapis lazuli,
-with verd antique, and with sanguine Egyptian marbles.
-The carefullest and richest of these mosaics, of
-course—along the side of the pulpit’s stair—is devoted
-to picturing that extremely qualmish archaic whale who
-in all Ravello’s churches <i>unswallows</i> the Prophet Jonah
-with every evidence of emotion and relief.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Recently, in the process of removing some of the
-acres of Eighteenth Century plaster, there was brought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>to light in a little chapel in the crypt a life-sized relief
-of St. Catherine and her wheel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such a lovely lady!—so fair, so pure, so saint-like;
-with faint memories of old tinting on her small lips, on
-her close-folded hair, and her downcast eyes—that
-even the most frivolous of tourists might be moved to
-tears by the thought that she alone is the one sweet
-ghost escaped from all that brutal destruction of mediæval
-beauty; resurrected by the merest chance from
-her plaster tomb.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane at the thought of it became quite dangerously
-violent. She insisted upon digging up the Eighteenth
-Century and beating it to death again with its own
-dusty old wig, and was soothed and calmed only by
-being taken outside to look once more by daylight at
-the delicious marble mince of fragments which the
-Hotel Bellevue has built into its portals—Greek and
-Roman capitals upside down; marble lambs and
-crosses, gargoyles, and corbels adorning the sides and
-lintels in a charming confusion of styles, periods, and
-purposes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ravello, as are all these arid ancient towns from
-which the tides of life have drained away, is as dry and
-empty as an old last year’s nut; a mere hollow shell,
-ridged and parched, out of which the kernel of existence
-has vanished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A tattered, rosy-cheeked child runs up the uncertain
-footway—the stair-streets—with feet as light and sure
-as a goat’s. An old, old man, with head and jaws
-bound in a dirty red kerchief, and with the keen hawk-like
-profile of some far-off Saracen ancestry, crouches
-in a doorway with an outstretched hand. He makes
-no appeal, but his apparent confidence that his age
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>and helplessness will touch them, does touch them,
-and they search their pockets hastily for coppers, with
-a faint anguished sense of the thin shadow of a dial-finger
-which for them too creeps round and round, as
-for this old derelict man, for this old skeleton city....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A donkey heaped with brushwood patters up the
-steep narrow way; so narrow that they must flatten
-themselves against the wall to admit of his stolidly
-sorrowful passage. They may come and go, as all the
-others have come and gone, but our brother, the ass,
-is always there, recking not of Greek or Roman, of
-American or Tedeschi; for all of them he bears burdens
-with the same sorrowful stolidity, and from none does
-he receive any gratitude....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These are the only inhabitants of Ravello they see
-until they reach the Piazza and the Cathedral of Saint
-Pantaleone. They know beforehand that the Cathedral
-too has been spoiled and desecrated, but there
-still remain the fine bronze doors by the same Barisanus
-who made the famous ones in the church at
-Monreale in Sicily, and here they find the most beautiful
-of the pulpits, and the very biggest Jonah and the
-very biggest whale in all Ravello.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Before that accursed Bishop Tafuri turned it into a
-white-washed cavern the old chroniclers exhausted
-their adjectives in describing the glories of Saint Pantaleone’s
-Cathedral. The richness of its sixteen enormous
-columns of verd antique; its raised choir with
-fifty-two stalls of walnut-wood, carved with incredible
-richness; its high altar of alabaster under a marble
-baldachino glowing with mosaics and supported upon
-huge red Egyptian Syenite columns—its purple and
-gold Episcopal throne; its frescoed walls, its silver
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>lamps and rich tombs, its pictures and shrines and
-hangings—all pitched into the scrap heap by that
-abominable prelate, save only this fine pulpit, and the
-Ambo. The Ambo gives itself wholly to the chronicles
-of the prophet Jonah. On one stairside he leaps
-nimbly and eagerly down the wide throat which looks
-so reluctant to receive him, as if suspecting already the
-discomfort to be caused by the uneasy guest. But
-Jonah’s aspect is all of a careless gaiety; he is not
-taking this lodging for more than a day or two, and is
-aware that after his brief occultation his reappearance
-will be dramatic and a portent. On the opposite stair
-it happens as he had prophetically foreseen, the mosaic
-monster disgorging him with an air of mingled violence
-and exhausted relief.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No one can tell us why Jonah is so favourite a topic
-in Ravello. “<i>Chi lo sara</i>” everyone says, with that
-air of weary patience Italy so persistently assumes before
-the eccentric curiosity of Forestieri.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rosina Vokes once travelled about with a funny
-little playlet called “The Pantomime Rehearsal,”
-which concerned itself with the sufferings of the author
-and stage manager of an English house-party’s efforts
-at amateur theatricals. The enthusiastic conductor
-used to say dramatically:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now, Lord Arthur, you enter as the Chief of the
-fairies!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To which the blond guardsman replies with puzzled
-heaviness: “Yes; but <i>why</i> fairies?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Producing in the wretched author a sort of paralysis
-of bafflement. The same look comes so often into these
-big Italian eyes. The thing just <i>is</i>. Why clamour for
-reasons? It is as if these curious wandering folk,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>always staring and chattering and rushing about, and
-paying good money that would buy bread and wine,
-merely to look at old stones, should ask <i>why</i> the sun,
-or why the moon, or why anything at all?...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So they abandon Jonah and take on the pulpit instead,
-the most famous of all the mosaic pulpits in a
-region celebrated for mosaic pulpits. It is done after
-the same pattern as that of St. John of the Bull, but
-the pattern raised to the <i>n</i>th power. More and bigger
-lions; more and taller columns; richer scrolls of mosaics;
-the bits of stone more deeply coloured; the
-marble warmed by time to a sweeter and creamier
-blond. The whole being crowned, moreover, by an
-adorable bust of Sigelgaita Rufolo, wife of the founder
-of the Cathedral and giver of the pulpit. A pompous
-Latin inscription under the bust records the virtues of
-this magnificent patron of religion. The inscription
-including the names of all the long string of stalwart
-sons Sigelgaita brought forth, and it calls in dignified
-Latinity the attention of the heavenly powers to the
-eminent deserts of this generous Rufolo, this mediæval
-Carnegie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sigelgaita’s bust is an almost unique example of the
-marble portraiture of the Thirteenth Century—if indeed
-it truly be a work of that time, for so noble, so
-lifelike is this head with its rolled hair, its princely
-coronet and long earrings, so like is it to the head of
-the Capuan Juno, that one half suspects it of being
-from a Roman hand—those masters of marmoral records
-of character—and that it was seized upon by
-Sigelgaita to serve as a memorial of herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bernardo Battinelli, a notary of Ravello, writing in
-1540 relates an anecdote which shows what esteem was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>inspired by this marble portrait long after its original
-was dust:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I remember in the aforesaid month and year, the
-Spanish Viceroy Don Pietro di Toledo sent for the
-marble bust, which is placed in the Cathedral and
-much honest resistance was made, so that the first
-time he that came returned empty-handed, but shortly
-after he came back, and it was necessary to send it to
-Naples in his keeping, and having sent the magnifico
-Giovanni Frezza, who was in Naples, and Ambrose
-Flomano from this place to his Excellency, after much
-ado, by the favour of the glorious Virgin Mary, and by
-virtue of these messengers from thence after a few days
-the head was returned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the year 1851 the palace of these splendid Rufoli,
-which in the time of Roger of Sicily had housed ninety
-knights with their men at arms, had fallen to tragical
-decay. A great landslide in the Fifteenth Century
-destroyed the harbour of Amalfi; hid its great quays
-and warehouses, its broad streets and roaring markets
-beneath the sea, and reduced it from a powerful Republic,
-the rival of Venice and Genoa, to a mere fishing
-village. A little later the plague followed, and
-decimated the now poverty-stricken inhabitants of
-Ravello, and then the great nobles began to drift away
-to Naples, came more and more rarely to visit their
-Calabrian seats, and these gradually sank in the course
-of time into ruin and decay. Fortunately in the year
-before mentioned a rich English traveller, making the
-still fashionable “grand tour,” happened into Ravello,
-saw the possibilities of this crumbling castle set upon
-one of the most beautiful sites in the world, and
-promptly purchased it from its indifferent Neapolitan
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>owner. He, much absorbed in the opera dancers and
-the small intrigues of the city, was secretly and scornfully
-amused that a mad Englishman should be willing
-to part with so much good hard money in exchange for
-ivied towers and gaping arches in a remote country town.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Englishman mended the arches, strengthened
-the towers, gathered up from among the weeds the
-delicate sculptures and twisted columns, destroyed
-nothing, preserved and restored with a reverent hand,
-and made for himself one of the loveliest homes in all
-Italy. It was in that charming garden, swung high
-upon a spur of the glorious coast, that Jane and Peripatetica
-contracted that passion for Ravello which
-haunted them with a homesickness for it all through
-Sicily. For never again did they find anywhere such
-views, such shadowed green ways of ilex and cypress,
-such ivy-mantled towers, such roses, such sheets of daffodils
-and blue hyacinths. They dreamed there through
-the long day, regretting that their luggage had been
-sent on to Sicily by water, and—forgetting quite their
-quest of Persephone—that they were therefore unable
-to linger in the sweet precincts of the Pantaleone wines
-and cooking, devoting weeks to exploring the neighbouring
-hills, and to unearthing more pulpits and more
-Jonahs in the nearby churches.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the dusk they lingered by the Fountain of Strange
-Beasts, in the dusk they wandered afoot down the
-cork-screwed paths up which they had so furiously
-and smellily mounted. Berliet hooted contemptuously
-behind them as he crawled after, jeering as at “scare-cats,”
-who dared mount, but shrank from descending
-these abrupt curves and tiptilted inclines except in the
-safety of their own low-heeled shoes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>At Amalfi they plunged once again into the noisy
-tourist belt—the <i>va et vient</i>, the chatter, the screaming
-flutter of the passenger pigeons of the Italian spring.
-And yet there was peace in the tiny white cells in which
-they hung over the sheer steep, while the light died
-nacreously along the West. There was quiet in certain
-tiny hidden courts and terraces under the icy moonlight,
-and Jane said in one of these—her utterance
-somewhat interrupted by the chattering of her teeth,
-for Italian spring nights are as cold as Italian spring
-days are warm—Jane said:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What idiotic assertions are made in our time about
-ancient Europe having no love for, no eye for, Nature’s
-beauty! Did you ever come across a mediæval monastery,
-a Greek or Roman temple that was not placed
-with an unerring perception of just the one point at
-which it would look best, just at the one point at which
-everything would look best from it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course I never did,” Peripatetica admitted with
-sympathetic conviction. “We get that absurd impression
-of their indifference from the fact that our forebears
-were not nearly so fond of talking about their
-emotions as we. They had a trust in their fellow man’s
-comprehension that we have lost. We always imagine
-that no one can know things unless we tell them, and
-tell them with all our t’s carefully crossed and our i’s
-elaborately dotted. The old literatures are always
-illustrating that same confidence in other people’s
-imaginations, stating facts with what to our modern
-diffuseness appears the baldest simplicity, and yet
-somehow conveying all their subtlest meanings. Our
-ancestors happily were not ‘inebriated with the exuberance
-of their own verbosity.’... And now, Jane,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>bring that congealed nose of yours in out of the open
-air. The moon isn’t going on a vacation. She will
-be doing her old romance and beauty business at the
-same old stand long after we are dead and buried, not
-to mention to-morrow night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Berliet was all his old self the next day, and they
-swooped and soared, slid and climbed toward Pæstum,
-every turn around every spur showing some new beauty,
-some new effect. Gradually the coast sank and sank
-toward the sea; the snow-caps moved further back
-into the horizon; grew more and more mere white
-clouds above, more and more mere vapoury amethyst
-below, and at last they shot at a right angle into a wide
-level plain, and commenced to experience thrills. For
-the guide-books were full, one and all, of weird tales
-of Pæstum which lay, so they said, far back in a country
-as cursed and horrible as the dreadful land of the
-Dark Tower. About it, they declared, stretched leprous
-marshes of stagnant ooze choked with fat reeds,
-where fierce buffalo wallowed in the slime. The contadini
-passed through its deadly miasma in shuddering
-haste, gazing large-eyed upon a dare-devil Englishman
-who had once had the courage to pass a night there in
-order to gratify a bold, fantastic desire to see the temples
-by moonlight. It was such a strange, tremendous
-story, that of the Greek Poseidonia, later the Roman
-Pæstum.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Long ago those adventuring mariners from Greece
-had seized the fertile plain which at that time was covered
-with forests of great oak and watered by two clear
-and shining rivers. They drove the Italian natives
-back into the distant hills, for the white man’s burden
-even then included the taking of all the desirable things
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>that were being wasted by incompetent natives, and
-they brought over colonists—whom the philosophers
-and moralists at home maligned, no doubt, in the same
-pleasant fashion of our own day. And the colonists
-cut down the oaks, and ploughed the land, and built
-cities, and made harbours, and finally dusted their
-busy hands and busy souls of the grime of labour and
-wrought splendid temples in honour of the benign gods
-who had given them the possessions of the Italians and
-filled them with power and fatness. Every once in so
-often the natives looked lustfully down from the hills
-upon this fatness, made an armed snatch at it, were
-driven back with bloody contumely, and the heaping
-of riches upon riches went on. And more and more
-the oaks were cut down—mark that! for the stories of
-nations are so inextricably bound up with the stories
-of trees—until all the plain was cleared and tilled; and
-then the foothills were denuded, and the wave of destruction
-crept up the mountain sides and they too were
-left naked to the sun and the rains.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At first these rains, sweeping down torrentially, unhindered
-by the lost forests, only enriched the plain
-with the long hoarded sweetness of the trees, but by
-and by the living rivers grew heavy and thick, vomiting
-mud into the ever-shallowing harbours, and the
-lands soured with the undrained stagnant water.
-Commerce turned more and more to deeper ports, and
-mosquitoes began to breed in the brackish soil that
-was making fast between the city and the sea. Who
-of all those powerful land-owners and rich merchants
-could ever have dreamed that little buzzing insects
-could sting a great city to death? But they did.
-Fevers grew more and more prevalent. The malaria-haunted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>population went more and more languidly
-about their business. The natives, hardy and vigorous
-in the hills, were but feebly repulsed. Carthage
-demanded tribute, and Rome took it, and changed the
-city’s name from Poseidonia to Pæstum. After Rome
-grew weak Saracen corsairs came in by sea and grasped
-the slackly defended riches, and the little winged poisoners
-of the night struck again and again, until grass
-grew in the streets, and the wharves crumbled where
-they stood. Finally the wretched remnant of a great
-people wandered away into the more wholesome hills,
-the marshes rotted in the heat and grew up in coarse
-reeds where corn and vine had flourished, and the city
-melted back into the wasted earth. So wicked a name
-had the miasmatic, fever-haunted plain that age after
-age rolled away and only birds and serpents and wild
-beasts dared dwell there, or some outlaw chose to face
-its sickly terrors rather than the revenge of the law.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Think,” said Jane, “of the sensations of the man
-who came first upon those huge temples standing
-lonely in the naked plain! So lonely that their very
-existence had been long forgotten. Imagine the awe
-and surprise of such a discovery——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were spinning—had been spinning for half an
-hour—along a rather bad highway, and Peripatetica
-found it hard to call up the proper emotions in answer
-to Jane’s suggestion, so occupied was she in looking
-for the relishing grimness insisted upon by the guide-books.
-There were reeds; there were a very few innocuous-looking
-buffalo, but for the most part there
-were nice cultivated fields of grain and vines on either
-hand, and occasionally half a mile or so of neglected
-shrubby heath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>“Why, half of Long Island is wilder than this!”
-grumbled Peripatetica. “Where’s the Dark Tower
-country? Childe Roland would think this a formal
-garden. I <i>insist</i> upon Berliet taking us somewhere
-that will thick our blood with horror.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As it turned out, a wise government had drained the
-accursed land, planted eucalyptus trees, and was slowly
-reclaiming the plain to its old fertility, but the guide-books
-feel that the story is too good to be spoiled by
-modern facts, and cling to the old version of 1860.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Just then—by way of compensation, Berliet having
-fortunately slowed down over a bad bit—an old altar-piece
-of a Holy Family stepped down out its frame and
-came wandering toward them in the broad light of day.
-On the large mild gray ass—a real altar-piece ass—sat
-St. Anna wrapped in a faded blue mantle, carrying
-on her arm a sleeping child. At her right walked the
-child’s mother, whose thin olive cheek and wide, timid
-eyes seemed half ghostly under the white linen held
-together with one hand under her chin. Young St.
-John led the ass. A wreath of golden-brown curls
-blew about his golden-red cheeks, and he wore goat-hide
-shoes, and had cross-gartered legs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane now says they never saw them at all. That it
-was just a mirage, or a bit of glamourie, and that there
-is nothing remaining in new Italy which could look so
-like the typical old Italy—but if Jane is right then
-how did the two happen to have exactly the same
-glamour at exactly the same moment? How could
-they both imagine the benign smile of that strayed altar
-picture? Is it likely that a motor car would lend itself
-to sacred visions? I ask you that!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was certainly some illusion—not sacred—about
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>the dare-devilishness of that Englishman who
-once spent a moonlit night at the temples, for a little
-farming village lies close to the enclosure that shuts
-off the temples from the highway, the inhabitants of
-which village seemed as meek as sheep and anything
-but foolhardy, and there was reason to believe that
-they spend every night there, whether the moon shines
-or not.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the Temples were no illusion, standing in stately
-splendour in the midst of that wide shining green plain,
-by a sea of milky chalcedony, and in a semicircle behind
-them a garland of purple mountains crowned with
-snow. Great-pillared Neptune was all of dull, burned
-gold, its serried columns marching before the blue
-background with a curious effect of perfect vigour in
-repose, of power pausing in solid ease. No picture or
-replica gives the sense of this energy and power. Doric
-temples tend to look lumpish and heavy in reproductions,
-but the real thing at its very best (and this shrine
-of Neptune is the perfectest of Greek temples outside
-of Athens) has a mighty grace, a prodigious suggestion
-of latent force, of contained, available strength that
-wakes an awed delight, as by the visible, material expression
-of an ineffable, glorious, all-powerful god.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, certainly those Greeks——!” gasped Jane
-when the full meaning of it all began to dawn upon
-her, and Peripatetica, who usually suffers from chronic
-palpitation of the tongue, simply sat still staring with
-shining eyes. Greeks to her are as was King Charles’
-head to Mr. Dick. She is convinced the Greeks knew
-everything worth knowing, and did everything worth
-doing, and any further proof of their ability only fills
-her with a gratified sense of “I-told-you-so-ness.” So
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>she lent a benign ear to a young American architect
-there, who pointed out many constructive details,
-which, under an appearance of great simplicity, proved
-consummate grasp of the art, and of the subtlest secrets
-of architectural harmonics.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Before the land made out into the harbour Poseidon’s
-temple stood almost on the sea’s edge. The old
-pavement of the street before its portals being disinterred
-shows the ruts made by the chariot wheels still
-deep-scored upon it, and it was here</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“The merry Grecian coaster came</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Freighted with amber grapes, and Chian wine,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Green bursting figs, and tunnies steeped in brine—”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>anchoring almost under the shadow of the great fane
-of the Lord of the Waters; and here, when his cargo
-was discharged, he went up to offer sacrifices and
-thanks to the Sea-god of Poseidonia, and</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'>“Hung his sea-drenched garments on the wall,”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and prayed for skill to outwit his fellows in trade; for
-fair winds to blow him once more to Greece.</p>
-<p class='c007'>Besides the temple of Neptune there was, of course,
-the enormous Basilica, and a so-called temple of
-Ceres, and some Roman fragments, but these were so
-much less interesting than the golden-pillared shrine
-of the Trident God, that the rest of the time was spent
-in looking vainly and wistfully for Pæstum’s famous
-rose gardens, of which not even the smallest bud remained,
-and then Berliet gathered them up, and went
-in search of the Station of La Cava.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>
-<img src='images/illus_047.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='ch02' class='c005'>CHAPTER II <br /> <br /> <span class='sc'>A Nest of Eagles</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“So underneath the surface of To-day</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Lies yesterday and what we call the Past,</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>The only thing which never can decay.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Trustfully</span> and sleepily Jane and Peripatetica, in
-the icy starlight of La Cava, boarded the express of
-European <i>de Luxe</i>. Drowsy with the long day’s rush
-through the wind, they believed that the train’s clatter
-would be a mere lullaby to dreams of golden temples
-and iris seas and “the glory that was Greece.” No
-robbers or barbarians nearer than defunct corsairs
-crossed their imaginings; the hoodoo had faded from
-mind, shaken off by the glorious swoop of Berliet, and
-they supposed it left behind at Naples, clinging bat-like
-under the gaudy frescoes of Room 13 to descend
-on other unwary travellers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Half of their substance had been paid to the Compagnie
-Internationale des Wagon Lits for this night’s
-rolling lodging, and they begrudged it not, remembering
-that it entitled their fatigue to the comforts of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>room to themselves in all the vaunted superior civilization
-and decencies of a European compartment car.
-Presenting their tickets in trusting calm they prepared
-to follow the porter to a small but cosy room where
-two waiting white beds lay ready for their weary heads.
-But the Hoodoo had come on from Naples in that very
-train. Compartments and beds there were, but not
-for them. The porter led on, and in a toy imitation of
-an American Pullman, showed them to a Lilliputian
-blue plush seat and a ridiculous wooden shelf two feet
-above that pretended it could unfold itself into an
-upper berth. This baby section in the midst of a
-shrieking babble of tongues, a suffocation of unaired
-Latin and Teutonic humanity, was their compartment
-room, “à vous seules, Mesdames!” telegraphed for to
-Rome and made over to them with such flourish by
-the polite agent at Naples!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If the car was Lilliputian its passengers were not.
-Mammoth French dowagers and barrel-like Germans
-overflowed all its tiny blue seats, and the few slim
-Americans more than made good by their generous
-excess of luggage. It was a very sardine box.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In a fury too deep for words or tears Peripatetica
-and Jane sank into the few narrow inches the porter
-managed to clear for them, and resigned themselves
-to leaving their own dear bags in the corridor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They will, of course, be stolen, but then we may
-never need them again. We can’t undress, and shall
-probably be suffocated long before morning,” remarked
-Peripatetica bitterly, with a hopeless glare at the imitation
-ventilators not made to open. Their fury deepened
-at the slow struggles of the porter to adjust the
-inadequate little partitions, at the grimy blankets and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>pillows on the little shelves, at the curtains which didn’t
-conceal them, the wash-room without water or towels
-and the cattle-train-like burden of grunts and groans
-and smells floating on the unbreathable atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Morning dawned golden on the flying hills at last,
-and then deepest fury of all was Peripatetica’s, that
-passionate lover of fresh air, to find that in spite of
-everything she <i>had</i> slept, and was still breathing!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Calabria, lovely as ever, melted down to her glowing
-seas; one last swooping turn of the rails, and another
-line of faint hills rose opposite—and that was
-Sicily!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The train itself coiled like a weary serpent into a
-waiting steamer, which slipt smoothly by the ancient
-perils of Scylla and Charybdis; and nearer and nearer
-it rose, that gold and amethyst mountain-home of the
-Old Gods. The white curve of Messina, “the Sickle,”
-showed clear at the base of the cloud-flecked hills.
-Kronos, father of Demeter, enthroned on those very
-mountain peaks, had dropped his scythe at the sea’s
-edge, cutting space there for the little homes of men,
-and leaving them the name of his shining blade, “Zancle,”
-the sickle, through all Greek days. It was there,
-really there in actual vision, land of fire and myths;
-the place of the beginnings of gods and men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica and Jane burst from the car and climbed
-to the narrow deck above to get clearer view. The
-sea wind swept the dust from their eyes and all fatigue
-and discomfort from their memories. Their spirits
-rose to meet that Spirit Land where Immortals had
-battled and labored; had breathed themselves into
-man,—the divine spirit stirring his little passing life
-with revelation of that which passeth not; that soul
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>of beauty and wisdom, and of poetry which should
-move through the ages. Their eyes were wide to see
-the land where man’s imaginings had brought the
-divine into all surroundings of his life, until every tree
-and spring and rock and mountain grew into semblance
-of a god. Oh, was it all a “creed outworn”? Here
-might not one perchance still see</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“Proteus rising from the sea,</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Or hear old Triton blow his wreathèd horn”?</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>In these very mountains before them had man himself
-been shaped; hammered out by Vulcan upon his
-forge in Ætna. Here, in this land he had been taught
-by Demeter to nourish himself from the friendly earth,
-taught how to shelter himself from the inclement elements
-by Orion, Hunter and Architect—a god before
-he was a star. There Zeus, all-conquering wisdom,
-had prevailed against his opponents and placed his
-high and fiery seat, this very Ætna, upon the bound
-body of the last rebellious Titan, making even the
-power of ignorance the pediment of his throne. There
-the fair maiden goddesses, Artemis and Minerva and
-Persephone, had played in flowery fields. There had
-Pluto stolen the fairest away from among the blossoms,
-the entrance to his dark underworld gaping suddenly
-among the sunny meadows. There had the desolate
-mother Demeter lit at Ætna the torch for her long and
-desperate search. There had demi-gods and heroes
-lived and loved and struggled. Its very rivers were
-transformed nymphs, its islands rocks tossed in Cyclop’s
-battles. There Ulysses had wandered and suffered;
-there Pythagoras had taught, Theocritus had sung.
-There—but man nor woman either is yet entirely spirit;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>and though it was in truth the actual land of their
-pilgrimage, of the birthplace of myth, of beauty
-and wonder, Persephone had not yet returned. The
-icy wind was turning all sentiment into shivers and
-they fled back to the Twentieth Century and its Pullman
-car.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Messina looked still more enticing when close at
-hand; both prosperous and imposing with its lines of
-stone quays and palaces on the sea front. Beyond
-these there were famous fountains they knew, and
-colourful marketplaces, and baroque churches with
-spires like fluted seashells, and interiors gleaming like
-sea caverns with all the rich colour and glow of Sicilian
-mosaics. In one of the churches was the shrine of a
-miracle-working letter from the Madonna, said to have
-been written by her own hand. There was besides an
-old Norman Cathedral, built of Greek ruins and Roman
-remains; much surviving Spanish quaintness, but
-to two unbreakfasted <i>Wagon Lit</i> passengers all this
-was but ashes in the mouth. They felt that the attractions
-of Messina could safely remain in the guide-books.
-They were impelled on to Taormina....
-No prophetic vision warned them that in their haste
-they were losing the chance of ever seeing that doomed
-Sickle-City at all. In that placid, modern port, where
-travellers for pleasure rarely paused, there seemed
-nothing to stay them. No ominous shadow lay upon
-it to tell that it was marked for destruction by “the
-Earth-Shaker,” or that before the year had gone it
-would be echoing the bitter cry of lost Berytus:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here am I, that unhappy city—no more a city—lying
-in ruins, my citizens dead men, alas! most ill-fated
-of all! The Fire-god destroyed me after the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>shock of the Earth-Shaker. Ah me! From so much
-loveliness I am become ashes. Yet do ye who pass
-me by bewail my fate, and shed a tear in my honour
-who am no more. A tomb of tombless men is the
-city, under whose ashes we lie.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Taormina, the little mountain town, crouched under
-Ætna’s southern side, not far from those meadows of
-Enna from which Persephone had been ravished away.
-There she would surely first return to the upper world,
-and Demeter’s joy burst into flowers and sunshine.
-So there they decided to seek her, and turned their
-grimy faces straight to the train. The only sight-seeing
-that appealed to them now was a vision of the
-San Domenico Hotel with quiet white monkish cells
-like to Amalfi’s to rest their weariness in, peaceful
-pergolas, large bathtubs, and a hearty table d’hôte
-luncheon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So they stayed not for sights, and stopped not for
-stone—nor breakfast, nor washing, nor even for their
-trunks, which had not materialized, but sat in a dusty
-railway carriage impatient for the train to start.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It was beautiful,” remarked Jane, thinking of the
-harbour approach to the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Peripatetica, jumping at her unexpressed
-meaning as usual. “Messina has always been
-a famous beauty, and always will be. But she is, and
-always has been, an incorrigible cocotte,—submitting
-without a struggle to every invader of Sicily in turn.
-And she certainly doesn’t in the least look her enormous
-age in spite of having led a <i>vie orageuse</i>. Whenever
-the traces of her past become too obvious she goes
-and takes an earthquake shock, they say, and rises
-fresh and rejuvenated from the ruins, ready to coquette
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>again with a new master and be enticing and treacherous
-all over again.”<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c016'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. <span class='small'>Messina suffered a terrific earthquake shock in 1783 and
-has had in her history serious damage from seismic convulsions no less
-than nine times.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was hard to imagine on her modern boulevards
-the armies of the past—all those many conquerors that
-Messina had herself called in, causing half the wars
-and troubles of Sicily by her invitations to new powers
-to come and take possession, and to do the fighting for
-her that she never would do for herself; betraying in
-turn every master, good or bad, for the excitement of
-getting a new one....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Greeks, Carthagenians, Mamertines, Romans, Arabs,
-Normans, Spaniards—where were the ways of their
-tramplings now? On that modern light-house point
-there was not even a trace of the Golden Temple in
-which Neptune sat on a crystal altar “begirt with
-smooth-necked shells, sea-weeds, and coral, looking
-out eastward to the morning sun?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If it were near the 15th of August I would stay
-here in spite of everything,” ventured Peripatetica,
-looking up from her book. “The Procession of the
-Virgin is the only thing really worth seeing left in
-Messina.” And in answer to Jane’s enquiring eyebrows
-Peripatetica began to read aloud of that extraordinary
-pageant of the Madonna della Lettera and her
-car, that immense float, dragged through Messina’s
-streets by hundreds of men and women; of its tower
-fifty feet high, on which are ranged tiers over tiers of
-symbolically dressed children standing upon all its different
-stories; poor babies with painted wings made
-to fly around on iron orbits up to the very top of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>erection; of the great blue globe upon which stands
-a girl dressed in spangled gauze, representing the
-Saviour, holding upon her right hand—luckily supported
-by iron machinery—another child representing
-the Soul of the Blessed Virgin.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not real children—not live babies!” protested Jane.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, indeed, just listen to Hughes’ account of it.”
-Peripatetica read: “At an appointed signal this well-freighted
-car begins to move, when it is welcomed with
-reiterated shouts and vivas by the infatuated populace;
-drums and trumpets play; the Dutch concert in the
-machine commences, and thousands of <i>pateraroes</i> fired
-off by a train of gunpowder make the shores of Calabria
-re-echo with the sound; then angels, cherubim,
-seraphim, and ‘animated intelligences,’ all begin to
-revolve in such implicated orbits as to make even the
-spectators giddy with the sight; but alas for the unfortunate
-little actors in the pantomime; they in spite of
-their heavenly characters are soon doomed to experience
-the infirmities of mortality; angels droop, cherubim are
-scared out of their wits, seraphim set up outrageous
-cries, ‘souls of the universe’ faint away, and ‘moving
-intelligences’ are moved by the most terrible inversion
-of the peristaltic nerves; then thrice happy are those to
-whom an upper station has been allotted. Some of
-the young brats, in spite of the fracas, seem highly delighted
-with their ride, and eat their ginger-bread with
-the utmost composure as they perform their evolutions;
-but it not unfrequently happens that one or more of
-these poor innocents fall victims to this revolutionary
-system and earn the crown of martyrdom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane seized the book to make sure it was actually
-so written and not just one of Peripatetica’s flights of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>fancy, and plunged into an account of another part of
-the pageant—the giant figures of Saturn and Cybele
-fraternizing amiably with the Madonna; Cybele
-“seated on a large horse clothed like a warrior. Her
-hair is tied back with a crown of leaves and flowers
-with a star in front, and the three towers of Messina.
-She wears a collar and a large blue mantle covered
-with stars, which lies on the back of the horse. A
-mace of flowers in her right hand and a lance in her
-left. The horse is barded, and covered with rich trappings
-of red, with arabesques of flowers and ribbons.”...<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c016'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c007'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. <span class='small'>All this, along with every treasure of her past, has now
-disappeared.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What curious folk the Sicilians are! They accept
-new creeds and ceremonies, but the old never quite
-lose their place. Where else would the Madonna
-allow a Pagan goddess to figure in her train? And did
-you notice in this very procession they still carry the
-identical skin of the camel on which Roger entered the
-city when he began his conquest of Sicily? I wish it
-were near the 15th of August!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wish it were near the time this train starts, if it
-ever does,” replied Peripatetica crossly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And, as if but waiting the expression of her wish,
-the train did begin to stream swiftly along the deeply
-indented coast beside whose margin came that wild
-Norman raid upon Messina of the dauntless young
-hawks of de Hauteville. Roger, the youngest and
-greatest of the twelve sons, accompanied by but sixty
-knights and their squires, two hundred men in all,
-pouncing daringly upon a kingdom. A half dozen
-galleys slipped over from Reggio by night, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>morning sun flashed upon the dew-wet armour as they
-galloped through the dawn to Messina’s walls. The
-great fortified city was in front of them, a hostile country
-around them, and a navy on the watch to cut them
-off from reinforcements or return by sea. That they
-should succeed was visibly impossible. But determined
-faces were under the steel visors, the spirit of
-conquering adventure shining in their grey eyes.
-Every man of the host was confessed and absolved for
-this fight of the Cross against the Crescent and their
-young Commander was dedicated to a life pure and
-exemplary, if to him was entrusted the great task of
-winning Sicily to Christian dominion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They did it because they thought they could do it;
-as in the old Greek games success was to the man who
-believed in his success. The Saracens fell into a panic
-at the sight of that intrepid handful at their gates,
-thinking from the very smallness of the band that it
-must be the advance pickets of a great army already
-past their guarding navy and advancing upon the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So the Saracens gave up in panic, and Roger and
-his two hundred took all the town with much gold and
-many slaves, as was a conquering warrior’s due.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The key of Messina was sent to Brother Robert in
-Calabria with the proud message that the city was his
-to come and take possession of. And the Normans
-went on with the same bold confidence; and always
-their belief was as a magic buckler to them as over all
-the island they extended their conquest. Seven hundred
-Normans routed an army of 15,000 Saracens,
-killing 10,000. And young Serbo, nephew of Roger,
-conquered 30,000 Arabs, attacking them with only one
-hundred knights.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>It was one of Jane’s pet romances, the career of this
-landless youngest son of a small French noble carving
-out with sword and brain “the most brilliant of European
-Kingdoms,” leaving a dominion to his successors
-with power stretching far beyond Sicily as long as they
-governed upon his principles. The young conqueror,
-unspoiled by his dazzling success, ruled with justice,
-mercy, and genius, making Sicily united and prosperous;
-the freest country in the world at that time; the
-only one where all religions were tolerated, where men
-of different creeds and tongues could live side by side,
-each in his own way; each governed justly and liberally
-according to his own laws—French statutes for
-Normans, the Koran for Mussulmen, the Lombard
-laws for Italians, and the old Roman Code for the
-natives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Peripatetica,” Jane burst out. “Roger must have
-been a delightful person—‘so good, <i>so dear</i>, so great a
-king!’ Don’t you think there is something very appealing
-in a king’s being called ‘so dear’? It is much
-easier for them to be ‘great.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Normans are too modern for me now,” said Peripatetica,
-whose own enthusiasm was commencing to
-catch fire. “We are coming to the spot of all the
-Greek beginnings, where their very first settlement
-began—do you realize that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And Jane, who had been hard at work with her histories,
-could see it clearly. The little narrow viking-like
-boats of Theocles, the Greek merchant, driven before
-the sudden northeast storm they could not beat
-up against nor lie to, straight upon the coast of this
-dread land. It had always been a land awesome and
-mysterious to the Greeks. They had imagined half
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>the dramas of their mythology as happening there. It
-was sacred ground, too sacred to be explored by profane
-foot; and was besides the home of fierce cannibals,
-as they believed the Sikilians to be, and of all
-manner of monstrous and half divine beings. But,
-desperately choosing before certain destruction at sea
-the unknown perils of the shore, Theocles had rounded
-the point and beached his boats safely on that strip of
-yellow sand that still fringes the cove below Taormina.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He and his companions, who feared to adventure no
-perils of the treacherous Mediterranean in their tiny
-crafts, but feared very much the monsters of their
-imagination in this haunted country, built to Apollo
-an altar of the sea-worn rocks, and sacrificed on it
-their last meal and wine, praying him for protection
-and help to save them from the Læstrygones, from
-Polyphemus, and Hephæstos at his nearby smoking
-forge. And Apollo must have found it good, the savour
-of that his first sacrifice on Sicilian land, for straightway
-succour came. The natives, drawn down from
-the hillsides in curiosity at that strange fire on the shore,
-were not raging cannibals but peaceful and friendly
-farmer folk, who looked kindly on the shipwrecked
-merchants, and gladly bartered food and rich dark
-wine for Greek goods. And through the days of the
-storm the Greeks lived unmolested on the shore, impressed
-by all that met their eyes; the goodness of that
-“fairest place in the world.” When at last came
-favourable winds and the Greeks could set sail again,
-Theocles vowed to return to that fertile shore, and if
-Apollo, protector of colonists and giver of victory,
-should favour his enterprise, to build there a shrine in
-his honour.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>But in Athens none would believe his accounts of
-the rich land and the mild natives. They said that
-even so it would be unwise to disturb Polyphemus, or
-to run the risk of angering Hephæstos, and that it was
-no proper site for a colony any way! Theocles did not
-falter at discouragement; he took his tale to other
-cities and over in Eubœa the Chalcydians were won to
-him. After the oracle of Apollo had promised them
-his protection and all good fortune, more Ionians and
-some Dorians joined them; and in the spring they set
-forth, a great fleet of vessels laden with all necessary
-things to found a colony. Theocles piloted them to
-the spot of his first sheltering; and there on the red
-rock horns of the point above the beach they founded
-Naxos, and built the great shrine of Apollo Archagates,
-founder and beginner, with that wonderful statue which
-is spoken of as still existing in the time of Augustus,
-36 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Naxos itself had no such length of life. It knew
-prosperous centuries of growth and importance, of
-busy commerce and smiling wealth. Then came
-Dionysius, Tyrant of Syracuse, subdued the mother
-city to his jealous power and absolutely exterminated
-it, killing or carrying off into slavery all its population.
-“The buildings were swept away, and the site of Naxos
-given back to the native Sikilians. They never returned,
-and for twenty-two centuries no man has dwelt
-there.” Of all the shrines and palaces of Naxos not
-one stone remains upon another, not one surviving
-trace to identify now the exact site even of the Mother
-of all Greek cities in Sicily. But from her sprang
-Taormina.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Such of her population as managed to escape from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>Dionysius, climbed up to those steep rocks above and
-there, sheltering with the Sikilians, out of tyrants’
-reach in that inaccessible mountain nest, Greek and
-Sikilian mingling produced a breed of eagles that with
-fierce strugglings has held fast its own on those peaks
-through all the centuries.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But these shipwrecks and temples and sieges grew
-dim behind the gritty cloud of railroad cinders. Jane
-felt the past melt away from her and fade entirely into
-the cold discomfort of the present. She subsided into
-limp weariness in a corner of the carriage, incapable
-of interest in anything, while Peripatetica’s spirits revived,
-approaching the tracks of her adored Greeks,
-and her imagination took fire and burst into words.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh those wonderful days!” she cried. “If one
-could only have seen that civilization, that beauty, with
-actual eyes. Jane, wouldn’t you give anything to get
-back into the Past even for a moment?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I’d rather get somewhere in the now—and to
-breakfast,” grumbled Jane with hopeless materialism
-as she vainly tried to stay her hunger on stale chocolate.
-So Peripatetica saw visions alone, Jane only
-knowing dimly that miles and miles of orange groves,
-and of a sea a little paled and faded from its Calabrian
-blue, were slipping by.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A box of a station announced itself as Giardini-Taormina.
-A red-cheeked porter bore the legend
-“Hotel San Domenico” on his cap; and much luggage
-and two travellers fell upon him. But, ah, that hoodoo!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Desolated, but the hotel was full. Yes, their letter
-had been received, but it had been impossible to reserve
-rooms,” said the cheerful porter heartlessly; “no
-doubt other hotels could accommodate them.” He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>didn’t seem to feel his cheerfulness in the least diminished
-by the dismay pictured in the dusty faces before
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, well,” said Jane bravely, “picturesque monasteries
-are all very well, but modern comfort does count
-in the end. We will probably like the Castel-a-Mare,
-and if we don’t, there is the Timeo.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A small man buzzing “Metropole, Metropole!
-Come with me, Ladies—beautiful rooms—my omnibus
-is just going!” hung upon their skirts, but they
-brushed him sternly aside, and permitted the rosy-cheeked
-porter to pile them and the mountains of their
-motoring-luggage into a dusty cab, and sing “Castel-a-Mare”
-cheerily to its driver.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We will go there first as it’s nearest,” they agreed,
-“but if the rooms aren’t very nice, then the Timeo—the
-royalties all prefer the Timeo.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The road was twisting up and up a bare hillside.
-They roused themselves to think that they were approaching
-Taormina, the crown of Sicily’s beauty, the
-climax of all earthly loveliness, the spot apostrophised
-alike with dying breath by German poets and English
-statesmen, as being the fairest of all that their eyes had
-beheld on earth, place of “glories far worthier seraph’s
-eyes” than anything sinful man ought to expect in this
-blighted world according to Cardinal Newman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But where was it, that glamour of beauty? Underneath
-was a leaden stretch of sea, overhead a cold,
-clouded sky, jagged into by forbidding peaks. The
-grey road wound up and folded back upon itself, and
-slowly—oh dear departed Berliet, how slowly!—up they
-crawled. It was all grey, receding sea and rocky hillside,
-grey dust thick on parched bushes and plants,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>greyer still on grey olives and cactus, and what—those
-other dingy trees—could they be <i>almonds</i>!—those
-shrivelled and pallid ghosts of rosy bloom shivering in
-the icy wind? Was it all but a chill shadow, that for
-which they had left home and roaring fires and good
-steam heat?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A furry grey head surmounted a dust wave, a donkey
-and a small square cart emerged behind him, following
-a line of others even greyer and dustier. Jane
-looked listlessly at the forlorn procession until her eyes
-discerned colour and figures dim beneath the dirt on the
-cart’s sides, and underneath fantastic mud gobs what
-appeared to be carvings. Could these be the famous
-Painted Carts, the “walking picture books” of a romance
-and colour loving people, the pride of a Sicilian
-peasant, frescoed and wrought, though the owner lived
-in a cave—the asses hung with velvet and glittering
-bits of mirrors though he himself walked in rags?
-Was everything hoped for in Sicily to prove a delusion?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Up whirled the San Domenico porter in a cloud of
-dust, his empty carriage passing their laden one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You might try the ‘Pension Bellevue,’ ladies—beautiful
-outlook—opposite the Castel-a-Mare, if you
-are not suited there,” he called out as he rolled by.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They thanked him coldly, with spines stiffening in
-spite of fatigue.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A pension? Never! If they could not have ascetic
-cells at San Domenico or the flowery loggias of the
-Castel-a-Mare, then at least the chambers that had
-sheltered a German Empress!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Gardens and flowers began to appear behind the
-dust; a wave-fretted promontory ran into the sea below,
-a towering peak crowned with a brown rim loomed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>overhead. In a few more dusty twists of road the
-Castel-a-Mare was reached, and two large rooms with
-the best view carelessly demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Concierge looked troubled and sent for a bland
-proprietor. Rooms? He had none! wouldn’t have
-for a month—could give one room just for that very
-night—that was all!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To the Timeo then.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>More dusty road, a quaint gateway, a narrow street
-with all the town’s population walking in the middle
-of it, a stop in front of a delightful bit of garden. A
-stern and decided concierge this time—<i>No rooms!</i></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the mile and a half from the Castel-a-Mare at
-the end of one promontory, to the Internationale at
-the extreme end of the other, that dusty cab stopped at
-every hotel and, oh lost pride! at every pension in the
-town and out. The same stern refusal everywhere;
-no one wanted the weary freight. They felt their faces
-taking on the meek wistfulness of lost puppies vainly
-trying to ingratiate themselves into homes with
-bones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Does no one in the world want us?” wailed Peripatetica.
-“Can’t any one see how nice we really are
-and give us a mat and a crust?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Metropole man did want us,” reminded Jane
-hopefully. “He even begged for us. Let’s go there!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That had been the one and only place passed by,
-the Domenico porter had seemed so scornful of its
-claim at the station, but now they would condescend to
-any roof, and thought gratefully of that only welcome
-offered them in all Taormina.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>How pleased the little porter would be to have them
-coming to his beautiful rooms after all! Their meek
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>faces became proud again. They looked with approving
-proprietorship on the waving palm in front of the
-Metropole, and the old bell tower rising above it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica’s foot was on the carriage step ready to
-alight and Jane was gathering up wraps and beloved
-Kodak when out came a languid concierge and the
-usual words knelled in their ears—“<i>No rooms!</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They refused to believe. “But your porter said you
-had.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, an hour ago, but now they are taken.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A merciful daze fell upon Peripatetica and Jane....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>How they returned to the “Castel-a-Mare” and got
-themselves and their mountain of luggage into the one
-room in all Taormina they might call theirs for as much
-as a night, they never knew; when consciousness came
-back they were sitting in front of food in a bright dining-room,
-and knew by each other’s faces that hot
-water and soap must have happened in the interval.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Speech came back to Peripatetica, and she announced
-that she was never going to travel more, except to reach
-some place where she might stay on and on forever.
-Jane might tour through Sicily if she liked, but as for
-her, Syracuse and Girgenti and all could remain mere
-words on the map, and Cook keep her tickets—if she
-had to move on again on the morrow, she would go
-straight to Palermo and there stay!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane admitted to congenial feelings, and resigned all
-intervening Sicily without a pang. There would be no
-place in inhospitable Taormina for Persephone to
-squeeze into any way!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They went to question the Concierge of trains to
-Palermo. He took it as a personal grief that they
-must leave Taormina so soon. “The air of Palermo
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>is not like ours.” They hoped it was not, as they
-shivered in a cold blast from the open door, and put it
-to him that they could hardly live on air alone, and
-that Taormina offered them nothing more. But he
-had something to suggest—furnished rooms that he
-had heard that a German shop-keeper wished to let.
-Peripatetica did not take to the suggestion kindly, in
-fact her aristocratic nose quite curled up at it. But
-she assented dejectedly that they might as well walk
-there as anywhere, and give the place a look.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Through the dust and shrivelled almond blossoms
-they trailed back into town. The sun was still behind
-grey clouds and an icy wind whipped up the
-dust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Too late for the almond bloom, too early for warmth.
-What <i>is</i> the right moment for Sicily?” murmured
-Peripatetica.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The mountains with their sweeping curves into the
-sea were undeniably beautiful; the narrow town street
-they entered through the battlemented gate was full
-of gay colour, but it left them cold and homesick for
-Calabria. A little old Saracen palace, with some delicate
-Moorish windows and mouldings still undefaced,
-held the antiquity shop of the Frau Schuler. Brisk
-and rosy she seemed indeed the “trustable person” of
-the Concierge’s description.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yes, indeed, she had rooms and hoped they might
-please the ladies. Her niece would show them. A
-white-haired loafer was beckoned from the Square, and
-Peripatetica and Jane turned over to his guidance.
-Behind his faded blue linen back they threaded their
-way between the swarming tourists, children, panniered
-donkeys, and painted carts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>Suddenly the old man vanished into a crack between
-two houses, which turned out to be an alley, half stair,
-half gutter, dropping down to lower levels. Everything
-no longer needed in the kitchen economy of the
-houses on either side had been cast into the alley—the
-bones of yesterday’s dinners, vegetable parings of to-day’s,
-the baby’s bath, the father’s old shoes lay in a
-rich ooze through which chickens clucked and squabbled.
-At the bottom of the crack a high wall and a
-pink gateway ... they were in a delicious garden,
-descending a pergola of roses and grapes. Violets and
-freesias, geraniums and heliotrope spread in a dazzle of
-colour and sweetness under gnarled olives and almonds
-and blossoming plums; stone benches, bits of old
-marbles, a violet-fringed pool and a terrace leading
-down to a square white house, a smiling young German
-girl inviting them in, and then a view—dazzling
-to even their fatigued, dulled eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In front a terrace, and then nothing but the sea, 700
-feet below, the surf-rimmed coast line melting on and
-off indefinitely to the right in great soft curves of up-springing
-mountains, a deep ravine, then the San
-Domenico point with the old convent and church rising
-out of its gardens. On the left the ruins of the Greek
-theatre hanging over their heads; and on the very edge
-of the terrace an old almond-tree with chairs and a
-table under it, all waiting for tea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fortunately the villa’s interior showed comfortable
-rooms, clean, airy, and spacious. But the terrace settled
-it. They would have slept anywhere to belong to
-that. No longer outcast tramps but semi-proprietors
-of a villa, a terrace, a garden, and a balcony, they returned
-beaming to the friendly Concierge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>And all Taormina looked different now. The brocades
-and laces waved enticingly at the “antichita’s”
-doors, old jewels and enamels gleamed temptingly;
-mountains rose more majestic, the sea seemed less disappointingly
-lacking in Calabrian colour.... And as
-for the tourists, so disgustingly superior in the morning
-with their clean faces and unrumpled clothes, assured
-beds and table d’hôtes; now, how the balance had
-changed! They were mere tourists. What a superior
-thing to be an inhabitant, with a terrace all one’s
-own!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Life at the Villa Schuler was inaugurated in a pouring
-rain. But even that did not dim its charm; though
-to descend the Scesa Morgana—as the gutter-alley
-called itself—was like shooting a polluted Niagara,
-and the stone floors of the villa itself were damply
-chill, and American bones ached for once despised
-steam heat. Yet smiling little Sicilian maids, serving
-with an ardour of willingness that never American
-maid knew, with radiant smiles staggered through the
-rain bearing big pieces of luggage, carried in huge
-pitchers of that acqua calda the forestieri had such a
-strange passion for, and then, as if it were the merriest
-play in the world, pulled about heavy pieces of furniture
-to rearrange the rooms according to American
-ideas, which demanded that dressing-tables should have
-light on their mirrors, and sofas not be barriered behind
-the immemorial German tables.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Maria of the beaming smile, and Carola of the gentle
-eyes, what genius was yours? Two dumb forestieri,
-who had never learned your beautiful tongue, found
-that they had no more need of words to express their
-wants than a baby has to tell his to knowing mother
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>and nurses. Did they have a wish, all they had to do
-was to call “Maria!”—smile and stutter, look into her
-sympathetic face, and somehow from the depths of their
-eyes she drew out their desire....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Si, si, Signora!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was off and back again with a smile still more
-beaming.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Questo?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yes, “questo” was always the desired article!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At first they did make efforts at articulate speech,
-and with many turnings over of dictionary and phrase-book
-attempted to translate their meaning. But that
-was fatal. Compilers of phrase-books may be able to
-converse with each other, but theirs is a language apart—of
-their own, apparently—known to no other living
-Italians. They soar in cloudy regions of politeness,
-those phrase-books, all flourishes and unnecessary compliments;
-but when it comes to the solid substantials
-of existence they are nowhere! Towels are not towels
-to them, nor butter, butter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At first two trusting forestieri loyally believed in
-them, and book in hand read out confidently to Maria
-their yearnings for a clean table cloth, or a spoon. But
-a dictionary spoon never was a spoon to Maria—dazed
-for once she would look at them blankly until meaning
-dawned on her from their eyes; then “ah!” and she
-would exclaim an entirely different word from the dictionary’s,
-and produce the article at last.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But then according to Maria’s vocabulary “<i>questo?</i>”
-“<i>qui!</i>” were the only really vital and necessary words
-in all the Italian language. It merely depended upon
-how you inflected these to make them express any
-human need or emotion. “Questo” meant everything
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>from mosquito-bars to vegetables; and the combination
-of the two words with a sprinkling of “si’s”
-and “non’s” were all one needed to define any shade
-of feeling—pride, surprise, delight, regret, apology,
-sadness. From the time Maria brought in the breakfast
-trays in the mornings to the hot-water bottles at
-night it rang through the villa all day long; for the intricacies
-of her duties, the demands of the lodgers,
-scoldings from the Fraulein, chatter with other maids,
-“questo! qui!” sounded near and echoed from the
-distance like a repeated birdnote.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No nurse ever showed more pride in a precocious
-infant’s lispings than did Maria when they caught up
-her phrases and repeated them to her—when the right
-words to express the arrangement of tub and dinner
-table were remembered and stammered out. She
-seemed to feel that there might be hope of her charges
-eventually developing into rational articulate beings,
-and “questo-ed” every article about to them, with all
-the enthusiasm of a kindergartner.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Next morning the sun had come out, and so had
-Ætna. There it suddenly was, towering over the terrace,
-a great looming presence dominating everything;
-incredibly high and white, its glittering cone clear cut
-as steel against the blue morning sky, rising far above
-the clouds which still clung in tatters of drapery about
-the immense purple flanks. Enceladus for once lay
-quiet upon his fiery bed; no tortured breathings of
-steam floated about the icy clearness of the summit.
-It was a vision all of frozen majestic peace, yet awesomely
-full of menace, of the times when the prisoned
-Titan turned and groaned and shook the earth with his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>struggles, and poured out tears of blood in floods of
-burning destruction over all the smiling orchards and
-vineyards and soft green valleys.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Suddenly, Germans armed with easels and palettes
-sprang up fully equipped at every vantage viewpoint.
-The terrace produced a fertile crop of them, solemnly
-reducing the wonderful vision to mathematical dabs of
-purple and mauve and grey upon yellow canvas. One
-felt it comforting to know that even if Ætna never
-pierced the clouds again all Germany might feast its
-eyes on the colored snap shots then being made of that
-morning’s aspect of the Great Presence amid a patronising
-chorus of “Kolossals” and “achs reizends.”
-But once seen, it remained impressed on sense and
-spirit, that vision—whether visible or not. It was always
-with one, dominating all imaginings as it did every
-actual circumstance of life at Taormina, the weather,
-the temperature, the colour of every prospect. Though
-the sky behind San Domenico might be a blank and
-empty grey, <i>one knew it was there</i>, that mysterious and
-wonderful presence. And when it stood out, a Pillar
-of Heaven indeed, all clear and fair in white garment
-of fresh-fallen snow, it was still a menace to the blossoming
-land below, whether from its summit were sent
-down icy winds and grey mists or shrivelling fire and
-black pall of lava.</p>
-
-<div id='illus_071' class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/illus_071.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>“<span class='sc'>A Place Where the Past Reveals Itself</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Equal in importance with this vision of Ætna was
-the appearance of Domenica—both events happening
-in the same day. Domenica too began as a bland outline.
-Small, middle-aged, and primly shawled; a
-smooth black head, gold earrings, and a bearing and
-nose of such Roman dignity and ability that two weary
-forestieri yearned at once to put themselves and their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>undarned stockings into the charge of her capable little
-hands. She respectfully asserted her willingness to
-serve them; they could make that out—but how tell
-her their requirements and the routine of the service
-they wished? It was seen to be beyond the powers of
-any phrase-book or even of Maria, presiding over the
-interview with beaming interest, and carefully repeating
-with louder tone and hopeful smile all Domenica’s
-words. No mutual understanding could be reached.
-They gave it up, and regretfully saw the shining black
-head bow itself out. But Domenica had to be. Their
-fancy clamoured for her, and all their poor clothes,
-full of the dust of travel and the rents of ruthless washerwoman,
-demanded her insistently. A more competent
-interpreter was found, and their needs explained at
-length. Domenica’s eyes sparkled with willing intelligence;
-she professed herself capable of doing anything
-and everything they asked of her; and mutual delight
-gilded the scene until the question of terms came up.
-What would the ladies pay? They mentioned a little
-more than the Frau Schuler had told them would be expected,
-and waited for the pleased response to their
-generosity—but what was happening? The grey shawl
-was tossed from shoulders that suddenly shrugged, and
-arms that flew about wildly; fierce lightnings flashed
-from the black eyes, a torrent of ever faster and shriller
-words rose almost into shrieks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica and Jane shrank aghast, expecting to see
-a stiletto plunged into the stolid form of their interpreter,
-bravely breasting the fury.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What <i>is</i> the matter?” they cried.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh nothing,” smiled the interpreter, “she is saying
-it isn’t enough; that the ladies at the hotels pay
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>their maids more, and her husband wouldn’t permit
-her to take so little.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dear me, she need not! they certainly would not
-want such a fury.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The fury had subsided into tragic melancholy, and
-subdued after-mutterings of the storm rumbled up from
-the reshawled bosom.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She says she will talk it over with her husband to-night,”
-said the gentle interpreter with a meaning wink.
-“She is really good and able; the ladies will find her
-a brave woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They didn’t exactly feel that bravery was needed on
-her side as much as on theirs after that storm, but they
-had liked no other applicant, and again the imposing
-nose and capable appearance asserted their charm, and
-they remembered their stockings. Their offer still
-stood, they said, but it must be accepted or declined at
-once; they wanted a maid that very evening. Renewed
-flashes—she dared not accept such a pittance
-without consulting her husband.... Very well, other
-maids had applied, expecting less. A change of aspect
-dawned—she would like to serve the ladies, would they
-not give half of what she asked for? Consultation with
-the interpreter—ten cents more a day offered only—instant
-breaking out of smiles and such delighted bobbings
-and bowings as she departed that it seemed impossible
-to believe that furious transformation had ever
-really happened.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They felt a little uneasy. Had they caught a Tartar?
-Remembering all the tales of Sicilian temper it
-seemed scarcely comfortable to have a maid who might
-draw a stiletto should one give her an unpleasing order.
-They awaited the beginning of her service a bit doubtfully.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>But when that grey shawl was hung inside the
-villa door, the only fierceness its owner showed was in
-her energy for work. The black eyes never flashed
-again, until ... but that comes later. They beamed
-almost as happy and instant a comprehension of all
-needs as Maria’s. And her capacity for work was appalling.
-At first they watched its effects with mutual
-congratulations; such an accumulation of the dilapidations
-of travel as was theirs had seemed to them
-quite hopeless ever to catch up with, but now the great
-heaps of tattered stockings turned into neat-folded pairs
-in their drawers, under-linen coquetted into ribbons
-again, and all their abused belongings straightened
-into freshness and neatness once more. Domenica’s
-energy was as fiery as Ætna’s during an eruption, only
-unlike the mountains it never seemed to know a surcease.
-Dust departed from skirts instantly at the
-fierce onslaught of her brushings; things flew into their
-places; sewing seemed to get itself done as if at the
-wave of a magician’s wand. Accustomed to the dilatoriness
-of Irish Abigails at home, Peripatetica and Jane
-were quite dazzled with delight at first—but then incredibly
-soon came the time when there was nothing
-left undone; when the little personal waiting on they
-needed could not possibly fill Domenica’s days, and it
-became a menace, the sight of that little grey-clad
-figure asking with empty hands, “what next, Signora?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Demon,” they began calling her instead of
-Domenica, and felt that like Michael Scott and his
-demon servant, they would be obliged to set her to
-weaving ropes of sand, the keeping her supplied with
-normal tasks seemed so impossible. It became almost
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>a pleasure to find a gown too loose or too tight, that
-she might alter it, or to spot or tear one, and as for
-ripped skirt bindings or torn petticoat ruffles, they
-looked at each other in delight and cried exultantly,
-“a job for the Demon!” Tea-basket kettles to scour
-they gave her, silver to clean, errands to do, fine things
-to wash, their entire wardrobes to press out; yet still
-the little figure sat in her corner reproachfully idle,
-looking at them questioningly, and sighing like a furnace
-until some new task was procured her. Desperately
-they took to giving her afternoons off, and invariably
-dismissed her before the bargained time in the
-evening. But still to find grist for the mill of her industry
-kept them racking their brains unsuccessfully
-through all their Taormina days.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Home comforts and maid once secured they could
-turn to Taormina itself with open minds, and plunge
-into a flood of beauty and queernesses and history.
-Of the guide-books some say that Taormina was the
-acropolis of Naxos, an off-shoot of that first Greek
-town, others that it, like Mola, was a Sikilian stronghold
-long before the days of the Greeks. Jane’s private
-theory was that neither Greeks nor Sikilians had
-been its founders, that eagles alone would ever first
-have built on that dizzy windy perch!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the very ridge of a mountain spine with higher
-peaks overhanging, Taormina twists its one real street,
-houses climbing up or slipping down hill as best they
-may, all clinging tight, and holding hands fast along the
-street to balance themselves there at all. Dark stairway
-cracks between lead up or down, and overhead flying
-arches or linked stories keep the clasp unbroken.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>Here and there a little street manages to twist off and
-find a few curves for itself on another level, or the
-street widens into a wee square, or a terrace beside an
-old church is edged with a stone-benched balustrade
-where ancient loafers may sun themselves and look
-down at the tiny busy specks of fishing boats in the sea
-far below.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Every hour of the day the Street is a variety show
-with the mixed life passing through it, and acting its
-dramas there. Flocks of goats squeezing through on
-their way to pasture; donkeys carrying distorted wine
-skins or gay glazed pottery protruding from their panniers;
-women going to the fountain, balancing slender
-Greekish water jars on their heads; the painted carts
-carrying up the tourists’ luggage; the tourists themselves
-in veils and goggles bargaining at enticing shop
-doorways, or peering into the windowless room of
-Taormina’s kindergarten, where a dozen or more infants
-are primly ranged, every mother’s daughter with
-knitting pins in hand and silky brown curls knotted on
-top of head like little old women, sitting solemnly in the
-scant light of the open door, acquiring from a gentle
-old crone the art of creating their own stockings.
-There the barber strums his guitar on a stool outside the
-“Salone” door while he waits for custom; the Polichinello
-man obstructs traffic with the delighted crowds
-of boys collected by Punch’s nasal chantings and the
-shrill squeaks of “Il Diavolo.” There come the golden
-loads of oranges and lemons; green glistening lettuces
-and feathery finochi; bread hot from the bakers in
-queer twists and rings; live chickens borne squawking
-from market, and poor little kids going to the
-butchers. The busy tide of every-day life never ebbed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>its colourful flow from the beginning of the street at the
-arch of one old gateway until its end at the arch of the
-other. Buying and selling, learning, working, and
-idling, the Present surged there, but a step aside into
-any of the backways, and one was instantly in the
-Past. Old women spinning in doorways with the very
-same twirling spindles as those of two thousand years
-ago. The very same old women, one had almost said,
-their hawk-like dried faces were so unimaginably far
-removed from youth, from all modernness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The very names of the streets spell history and drama.
-History rises up and becomes alive.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the Street of Timoleon one hears the clank of
-armour—the Great Leader and his Corinthians swing
-down the road. Only a few days ago they had landed
-at the beach of ruined Naxos in answer to the call of
-Andromachus, Taormenium’s ruler. They have been
-warmly entertained at his palace, have there rested,
-learning from him of the lay of the land and state of
-affairs; now they set out to begin the campaign. The
-staring people stand watching the march of these
-strong new friends, murmuring among themselves in
-awestruck whispers of the portents attending the setting
-forth of these allies. How great Demeter and
-Persephone herself had appeared to the servitors of
-their temple, promising divine assistance and protection
-to this expedition for the succour of their island—a
-rumour too that Apollo had dropped the laurel
-wreath of victory from his statue at Delphi upon Timoleon’s
-head; a marvel, not a rumour, for it was beheld
-with very eyes by some amongst themselves. How the
-ships bringing these deliverers had come in through
-the night to the harbour below with mysterious unearthly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>fires hovering in front of them and hanging in balls at
-the masthead, to light them on the way!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In the midst of the soldiers is a taller figure—or one
-that seems so—a face like Jupiter’s own, of such majesty
-and sternness and calm. The crowd surges and thrills
-and shouts with all its heart and soul and stout Sicilian
-lungs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who is that?” ask the children.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Timoleon! Timoleon, the Freer!” they are answered
-when the shouting is over. “Remember all
-your life long that you have seen him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And when years later those boys, grown to manhood
-in a free prosperous Sicily, hear of the almost divine
-honours that grateful Syracuse is paying to her adored
-deliverer, of the impassioned crowds thronging the
-theatre, mad with excitement at every appearance
-of the great old blind man, they too thrill to know that
-their eyes too have seen “The Liberator,” greatest and
-simplest of men.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is the Street of the Pro-Consulo Romano. Here
-comes Verres, cruelest of tyrants, most rapacious of
-robbers. The people shrink out of the way, out of
-sight as fast as may be, at the first gleam of the helmets
-of the Pro-Consul’s guard, when “carried by
-eight stalwart slaves in a litter, lying upon cushions
-stuffed with rose leaves, clad in transparent gauze and
-Maltese lace, with garlands of roses on his head and
-round his neck, and delicately sniffing at a little net
-filled with roses lest any other odour should offend his
-nostrils,” the sybarite tyrant is borne along, passing
-the statue of himself he has just had erected in the
-Forum, on his way to the theatre.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Street of Cicero; it is only necessary to close
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>one’s eyes to see that lean, long-nosed Roman lawyer.
-A fixed, silent sleuth-hound on this same Verres’ track;
-following, following close, nose fixed to the trail, for
-all the cunning doublings and roundings of the fox,
-questing all over Sicily, gathering everywhere evidence,
-building up his case, silently, inexorably; until at last
-his quarry is cornered, no squirming tricks of further
-avail. Verres is caught by the throat, exposed, denounced;
-so passionately, that as long as man’s appreciation
-of logic and eloquence endures the great lawyer’s
-pleading of that case is remembered and quoted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Children are playing in the Via Sextus Pompeius,
-but one sees instead a gleam of golden armour, of white
-kilts swinging from polished limbs—the proud figure
-of Pompey; splendid perfumed young dandy who,
-the fair naughty ladies say, is the “sweetest-smelling
-man in Rome.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here, with instinctive climb to the heights, he is desperately
-watching the surge of that great new power
-flooding, foaming, submerging all the world; rising up
-to him even here, the bubbling wave started by that
-other Roman dandy, the young man Julius Cæsar,
-who knotted his girdle so exquisitely....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The street from which the Villa Schuler’s pink door
-opened was that of the Bastiones, where the town’s
-fortified wall had once been. Corkscrewing dizzily
-down the sheer hillside among the cacti and rocks ran
-a narrow little trail. Jane had settled it to her own
-satisfaction that this was the scene of Roger’s adventure
-when besieging Taormina, then Saracen Muezza—last
-stronghold on the East coast to hold out against him;
-as it had two hundred years ago been one of the last in
-succumbing to the Moslems.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>Roger had completely surrounded the strong place
-with works outside its walls, and was slowly reducing
-it by starvation. Going the rounds one day, with his
-usual reckless courage almost unaccompanied, he is
-caught in a narrow way by a strong party of the enemy.
-The odds are overwhelming, even to Normans, on that
-steep hillside. Roger must retreat or be cut down.
-For attackers and pursued the only foothold is the
-one narrow path. Evisand, devoted follower of Roger,
-is quick to see the advantage of that—one man alone
-may delay a whole host for a few important minutes
-there, and he offers up his life to cover his master’s
-escape. Alone, on the narrow way he makes a stand
-against all the Moslem swarm, with such mighty wielding
-of sword that it is five minutes before the crooked
-Moslem blades can clear that impediment from their
-way. Roger, who has had time to reach safety before
-the brave heart succumbs to innumerable wounds,
-dashes back with reinforcements, wins the day, recovers
-his loyal servitor’s body, buries it with royal
-honours, and afterwards builds a church in memory of
-this preservation, and for the soul of his preserver.
-And Taormina, yielding to Roger and starvation, regains
-her name and the Cross....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Picking their way one morning up through the puddles
-and hens of their own alleyway, Peripatetica,
-raising her eyes an instant from the slime to look at
-the label on the house corner, said:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who could have been the Morgana this scandal of
-a street ever stole its name from? ... you don’t suppose....”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, that it could have been the Fata Morgana?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>Her island first appeared somewhere off the Sicilian
-coast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Peripatetica! how could a fairy, lovely and enchanting,
-ever have become associated with this!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica had a fine newborn theory on her
-tongue’s tip, but ere she could voice it, a nervous hen
-above them suddenly decided there was no room on
-that road for two to pass on foot, and took to her wings
-with wild squawk and a lunge straight at Peripatetica’s
-face in an attempt to pass overhead. Peripatetica
-ducked and safely dodged all the succeeding hens whom
-the first dame’s hysteria instantly infected to like behaviour.
-By the time she caught her breath again in
-safety at the street’s level, the theory was lost, but another
-more interesting one was born to her as they proceeded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“‘Street of Apollo Archagates,’—Jane, do you see
-meaning in that? The Greeks always put their greatest
-temples <i>on the heights</i>—Athens, Girgenti, Eryx,
-wherever there were hills the Great Shrine was on the
-Acropolis. Taormina must have been the Acropolis
-of those Naxos people—they certainly never stayed on
-the unprotected shore below without mounting to these
-heights. I believe Apollo’s temple stood up here, not
-below. Here they built it, dominating the city, shining
-far out to sea, a mark for miles to all their ships
-and to the sailormen worshipping Apollo, Protector of
-Commerce.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No one has ever suggested that,” said Jane.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What if they haven’t? It’s just as apt to be true,
-though even tradition has left no trace of it now but
-the name of this dirty little street. I for one am going
-to believe it, and that was why the statue survived until
-the time of the Romans.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>And so it was that every step they took stirred up
-wraiths of myth and history. Even on the Street in
-the midst of all its humming bustle, rotund German
-tourists and donkeys, all the modern life would suddenly
-melt away, and they would resurrect old St. Elio,
-attired only in chains and his drawers, kneeling in
-front of the Catania gate, exhorting the Byzantine soldiers
-to cleanse themselves from their sins before destruction
-came from the Saracens then raging like mad
-wolves outside the devoted town’s walls, in a fury that
-it alone—save Rometta—of all Christian Sicily should
-still hold out against them. Then the air would fill
-with the screaming and strugglings of those old fierce
-eagle fights, and the donkey boys’ cries of “A-ah-ee!”
-would change to the fierce triumphant shouts of “Allah
-Akbar!” with which Ibrahim’s cruel soldiery finally
-broke in to massacre garrison and townsfolk.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Although Taormina sat apart on her mountain eyrie
-with no epoch-making events finding room on her perch
-to happen, the stream of all Sicily’s history, from first
-Greek settlement to the revolts of modern days against
-King Bomba’s tyranny, have surged around and through
-her. An American living in Taormina did a kindness
-to her native cook, for which in grateful return the cook
-insisted on presenting her a quantity of old coins, which
-her husband had turned up through the years in their
-little garden. Showing them to the Curator of a Museum,
-“Madame,” he said to the fortunate recipient
-of the gift, “you have a complete epitome of all Sicilian
-history in these coins.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the different races and dynasties dominating
-Sicily from her beginning, all the great cities that rose
-into local power were represented in these treasure
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>troves from the silt of the centuries, dug by a peasant
-from the soil of one little garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was the Greek theatre which first revealed the
-Sicily of their dreams to Peripatetica and Jane; consoling
-for the vague disappointment of those first days
-of dust and rain by the glamour of its presentment of
-the loveliness of nature and the majesty of the past.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Greek that wonderful ruin still essentially is, for all
-its Roman remodelling and incrusting of brick. Only
-the Greeks could have so lovingly and instinctively
-combined with nature and seized so harmoniously all
-nature’s fairest to enhance their own creation. The
-place, the setting, the spirit of it is Greek; what matter
-if the actual material shape now is Roman, with the
-Greek form only glimmering through like a body of
-the old statuesque beauty cramped and hidden under
-distorting modern dress? Not that the theatre’s
-Roman clothing is ugly—the warm red brick, contrasting
-with the creamy marble fragments, has an undeniable
-charm, Greek and Roman together. It is an exquisite
-ruin of human conceivings, contrived to have
-blue sea and curving shore and Ætna’s snowy cone as
-the background of the open stage arches, and in the
-foyer, the arcaded walk back and behind the top tiers
-of the auditorium, all the differing panorama of beauty
-of the northern coast line.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Nature from the beginning did more than man for
-the building, and now she has taken it back to herself
-again, blending Greek and Roman in binding of vine
-and flower and moss; twining all the stone-seated tiers
-into an herb and flower garden, and putting the song
-of birds into the vaulted halls of the Greek Chorus.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An enchanting place, where the Past seems to reveal
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>itself in all that it had most of beauty and splendour.
-Peripatetica and Jane thought themselves fortunate
-to live under its wings; actually in its shadow,
-and so be on intimate calling terms at any hour of the
-day, learning its beauty familiarly through every changing
-transformation of light, cool morning’s grey and
-glowing noon’s gold, fiery sunsets, blue twilights, and
-early moonrise—mountains and sea and wide-flung sky
-dissolving magically and mysteriously into ever different
-pictures.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They wandered through chorus halls and dressing-rooms,
-the obscure regions under the stage and the
-dizzy ones on top of it; strolled in the outside arcade
-on top of the auditorium, where the loveliness of the
-view was a fresh wonder every time it burst on them,
-sat in the top rows and the bottom ones on the flowery
-sod now covering all the seats, looking from every
-angle at that most charming of marble stage settings
-and most wonderful of all backgrounds, trying to
-imagine the times when the surrounding tiers had been
-filled with 4,000 eager spectators, and the walls had
-echoed to the tragedies of Æschylus, Sophocles, and
-Euripides.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Looking wonderingly at the curious drains and holes
-and underground passages below the stage, they wondered
-if Æschylus, that eminent stage manager as well
-as poet, had not himself perhaps contrived some of
-them on his visit to Sicily, to introduce new thrills of
-stage effects into the performances of his tragedies here.
-Æschylus, who was inventor of stage realism, first to
-introduce rich costuming, accessories, and stage machinery,
-the mutter of stage thunder, shrieks, and
-sounds from behind the scenes suggestive of the deeds
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>considered too shocking to happen in the audience’s
-sight—inventor of the “Deus ex Machina,” that obliging
-god popping from out his trap-door to divinely
-straighten out a situation snarled past natural conclusion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As one sat there in the calm splendour of the setting
-of earth and sky, sun, and great winds streaming overhead,
-it became easier to understand the spirit of the
-old Greek plays; how the drama had been to them not
-mere amusement but almost a form of religion, and an
-expounding of their beliefs, an attempt to “justify the
-ways of God to man.” If perhaps such settings had
-not instinctively formed the differing tendencies of their
-great play-writers; Æschylus to represent suffering as
-the punishment of sin; Sophocles to justify the law of
-God against the presumption of man; and in these
-spacious open-air settings if the great rugged elementary
-simplicity of their plays had not been necessary
-and inevitable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In the Greek tragedy the general point of view predominates
-over particular persons. It is human nature
-that is represented in the broad, not this or that highly
-specialized variation.... To the realization of this
-general aim the whole form of the Greek drama was
-admirably adapted. It consisted very largely of conversations
-between two persons representing two opposed
-points of view, and giving occasion for an almost
-scientific discussion of every problem of action raised
-in the play; and between these conversations were inserted
-lyric odes in which the chorus commented on the
-situation, bestowed advice or warning, praise or blame,
-and finally summed up the moral of the whole.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>More akin to an opera than to a play in our modern
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>sense, the Greek drama had as its basis music. The
-song and stately dance of its mimetic chorus being the
-binding cord of the whole, “bringing home in music
-to the passion of the heart the idea embodied in lyric
-verse, the verse transfigured by song, and song and
-verse reflecting as in a mirror to the eye by the swing
-and beat of the limbs they stirred to consonance of
-motion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Sitting in the thyme-scented breeze Peripatetica and
-Jane read Euripides until they seemed to become a
-part of a breathless audience waiting for his tragedies
-to be performed before their eyes, waiting for the first
-gleam of the purple and saffron robes of the chorus,
-sweeping out from their halls in chanting procession.
-And it would all seem to take place once more on the
-stage in front of them, that feast for the eye and ear
-and intelligence at once. It became clear that across
-such great unroofed space the actors could not rely on
-“acting,” in our sense, for their results. It must be
-something bigger and simpler than any exact realism
-of petty actions; play of facial expression, subtle
-changes of voice and gesture would be ineffectually
-lost there. So, though at first the stage conventions of
-a different age seemed strange to these modern spectators,
-the actors raised above their natural height on
-stilted boots, their faces covered by masks, their voices
-mechanically magnified; yet in wonderful effects of
-statuesque posings the meaning came clear to the eye,
-and the chanting intonation brought out every beautiful
-measure of the rolling majestic verse which a realistic
-conversational delivery would have obscured. So
-the representation became “moving sculpture to the
-eye, and to the ear, as it were, a sleep of music between
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>the intenser intervals of the chorus,” and the spectators
-found themselves “without being drawn away by
-an imitative realism from the calm of impassioned contemplation
-into the fever and fret of a veritable actor
-on the scene,” receiving all the beautiful lucid thought
-and sentiment of the text, heightened by the accompanying
-appeal to the senses of perfect groupings of
-forms and colours, of swaying dance, and song and recitative,
-until it all blended into one perfect satisfying
-whole—perhaps the most wonderful form of art production
-that has ever existed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And then some German tourist would scream, “Ach
-Minna, komm mal her! ’s doch famos hier oben!”
-and they would be waked from their day dream of old
-harmonies into the shrill bustling present again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is like all really great fresco painting,” said Peripatetica
-on one of these comings back, “kept in the
-flat. Anything huge has to be treated so as to make
-its meaning tell; it has to be done in flat outline to
-stay in the picture, to make the whole effective. All
-the great imposing frescoes are like that; when the
-seventeenth century tried to heighten its effects by
-moulding out arms and legs in the round, its pictures
-dropped to pieces; any idea it was trying to express
-became lost. One is conscious of nothing but the
-nearest sprawling realistic limb thrusting out at one.
-Oh, those delicious marvellous Greeks! everything
-that is beautiful and perfect they did first, and anything
-good that has ever been done since is only copying
-them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane had a deep respect for the Greeks herself, but
-she sometimes turned against too much laudation of
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>“Do you suppose the æsthetic effect of their tragedies
-was really greater than that of a Wagner opera,
-well given? That the lament for Iphigenia could be
-more deeply thrilling than Siegfried’s funeral march?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica almost bounded from her seat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But that’s just it!” she cried. “Wagner operas
-are a revival of the Greek ideal! the only modern analogy
-of their drama! He had the same idea of painting
-on a huge canvas great heroic figures in the flat, keeping
-them in the picture without rounding out into petty
-realism. And he has attempted exactly what they did,
-to present his dramatic theme in a mingling of music,
-poetry, picture, and dance, every branch of art combined!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s interesting, and perhaps true, my dear, but
-if you discourse on about King Charles’ head, we shall
-get caught by that shower racing down the coast.
-There is just time to beat it to home and Vesuvius!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Vesuvius was, after Domenica, their greatest acquisition,
-and the one that most soothingly spread about
-an atmosphere of home comfort. Until he came life
-had been a thing of shivers and sneezes, of days spent
-in ceaseless trampings to keep their chilled blood in
-circulation, and of evenings sitting swathed in fur coats
-and steamer rugs, with feet raised high above the cold
-drafts of the floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fireplaces, or any means of artificial heating were
-unknown to the villa. They had waited patiently for
-the Southern sun to come and do his duty, but he didn’t;
-and a day came when Jane took to bed as the only
-hope of warmth, when even Domenica sneezed and
-said it was “<i>molto freddo</i>,” and then Peripatetica sallied
-forth determined to find some warmth nearer than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>Ætna. “Vesuvius” was the result of her quest. Not
-much was he to look at outwardly. Small was his
-round black form; oh, pitifully small he seemed at first
-view to those whose only hope he was. A mere rusty
-tin lantern on three little feet, he looked—but when his
-warm heart began to glow and to send delicious hot
-rays percolating through the holes of his sides and
-pointed lid, the charms of his fiery nature won respect
-at once. He made his small presence felt incredibly,
-from stone floor to high ceiling. Shawls and coats
-could be shed, feet lowered and at once frozen spines
-relaxed into long-forgotten comfort.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>His breath was not pleasant to be sure, his charcoal
-fumes troubled at first, but when a Sicilian oracle had
-recommended the laying of sliced lemons on his head,
-all fumes were absorbed, he breathed only refreshing
-incense and became altogether a joy. Every day,
-except on rainy ones, when his company was called
-for earlier, he made his appearance at six of the evening—and
-how eagerly the sight of Maria bearing him
-in used to be waited for! Then with feet toasting and
-backs relaxing in delightful warmth, Peripatetica and
-Jane sat over his little glowing holes with quite the
-thrill and comfort of a real hearthstone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ardent fire worshippers they found themselves becoming
-in this supposedly Southern land. If Persephone
-had ever been as cold as they, they doubted if
-that <i>enlèvement</i> to Pluto’s warm, furnace-heated realm
-could have been so distasteful after all!</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Paddling out in the rain to hotels for meals was at
-first a drawback to life in the Villa Schuler. To sit
-with damp ankles through the endless procession of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>table d’hôte meals, and afterwards have the odoriferous
-bespatterings of the Scesa Morgana as dessert, was
-not an enjoyable feature of local colour. Frau Schuler
-was implored to feed her lodgers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But we are simple people; our plain cooking would
-not satisfy the ladies,” she protested, distressed. But
-the ladies felt that a crust and an egg in their own sitting-room
-would be more satisfying than all the triumphs
-of hotel chefs out in the wet. And to bread
-and eggs they resigned themselves. Instead came a
-five-course banquet, served by beaming Butler Maria
-in a dazzling new grass-green bodice—soup and macaroni,
-meat and vegetables, perfect in seasoning and
-succulence, crisp salad from the garden, and with it
-the demanded poached eggs which were to have constituted
-the whole dinner, almond pudding with a wondrous
-sauce; dates, oranges, sugary figs beaded on
-slivers of bamboo, mellow red wine. It seemed a very
-elastic two lire which could cover all that, as Frau
-Schuler said it did! Truly the Fraulein Niece was an
-artist. Peripatetica and Jane thereafter dined at home
-in tea gowns and luxury—and the pudding sauces grew
-more bland and wonderful every night. Also eggs continued
-to give originality by the vagaries of their appearance.
-As Peripatetica said, “they just ran along
-anyhow, and jumped on at any course they took a
-fancy to!” And to see where they were going to land—in
-the soup, the vegetables, the salad, the stewed
-fruit of dessert—or what still other and stranger companionships
-they might form, lent a sort of prize-packet
-excitement to each succeeding course. Dinner
-at the Villa Schuler, with little Vesuvius glowing warmingly
-through all his fiery eyes and steaming out spicy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>incense of lemon and mandarin peel, the soft low lamplight,
-the gleam of Maria’s smile and green bodice, the
-blessed remoteness from all tourist gabble, was truly a
-cosy function. They took to making elaborate toilets
-in honour of it, adding their Taormina acquisitions of
-old lace and jewels to Maria’s round-eyed amazement.
-When Jane burst out in an Empire diadem, and Peripatetica
-not to be outdone donned a ravishing lace cap,
-their status as good republicans was forever lost in the
-villa. Maria spread the tale of this splendour abroad,
-firmly convinced that these lodgers were incognito
-members of the most exalted nobility of distant “Nuova
-Yorka.” The tongues which could not pronounce
-their harsh foreign names insisted on labelling them
-the “Big and Little Princess”—and no protests could
-bring their rank down lower than “the most gentle
-Countesses,” upon their washing-bills.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It amused them in fine weather to try the various
-hotels for lunch. In mid-town was the Hotel Victoria,
-the haunt of artists and gourmets, famous for its food
-and for its garden, which climbed the hillside in blooming
-terraces and loggias, all stairways, springing bridges,
-and queer little passages leading to buildings and
-courts on different levels. Peripatetica and Jane wandered
-into it almost by accident. They noticed the
-name over a dingy door as they were strolling aimlessly
-one day, and Peripatetica remembered having heard
-of a picturesque garden within. Penetrating through
-empty hall and up various winding stairways they
-came to a charming garden court. There appeared
-the proprietor, and in Parisian French treated their
-curiosity as a boon and a pleasure. A little man, the
-Padrone, with nothing large about him but the checks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>of his trousers and the soft black eyes which turned
-upon the gay colour about him with gentle melancholy.
-He did the honours of the place with all the courtesy
-and dignity of Louis XIV showing Versailles. When
-they admired the aviary of Sicilian and tropical birds,
-the budding roses clambering everywhere, the strange
-feathery-fringed irises like gaudy little cockatoos, the
-delicate bits of Moorish carving and arches built into
-the hotel walls, he accepted all their enthusiasm for
-the charms of his property with no sign of pride, but
-rather with the pensive melancholy of one whose soul
-was above such things, as of one who knew the hollowness
-of earthly delights. Courteously he exhibited
-everything, taking them to still higher and more glowing
-terraces where his laden orange trees were burnished
-green and gold, and his violets sheets of deepest,
-royalest purple underneath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A pair of monkeys lived in cage up there, and while
-the Signor deftly fed them for the amusement of his
-visitors he warmed up into caustic philosophic comment
-upon human and monkey nature, comment not
-unspiced with wit. Peripatetica, always ready for philosophy,
-immediately plunged into the depths of her
-French vocabulary and responded in kind. The discussion
-grew warm and fluent, and the little Padrone
-became a new man. With kindling eye and a pathetic
-eagerness he kept the ball rolling in polished Voltairian
-periods, intoxicated apparently with the joy of mental
-intercourse. He snatched and clung to it, inventing
-new pretexts to detain them, new things to exhibit,
-while the talk rolled on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But Peripatetica, whose next passion to Philosophy
-is Floriculture, broke off to exclaim at the violets as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>they passed a bed of purple marvels. Emperors they
-were among violets. The Padrone immediately proffered
-some, setting two contadini to picking more.
-Peripatetica contemplating gluttonously the wonderful
-spread of the deep purple calyx, the long firm stems of
-those in her hand, and at the profusion of others sweetening
-the air, cried from her heart, “Oh, Monsieur,
-what luxury to have such a garden! You should be
-one of the happiest creatures in the world to be able
-to grow such flowers as these!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Padrone, from his knees, picking more violets,
-glanced up, and gloom fell over him again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Madame,” he inquired bitterly, “does happiness
-ever consist in what one possesses of material things?
-Contentment, perhaps—but happiness? Not the most
-beautiful garden in the world can grow that,” and with
-dark Byronic mystery, “Ah, one can live amid brightness
-and yet be very miserable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They parted with much friendliness, the Padrone
-hoping the ladies would do his hotel the honour of
-visiting it again. Surely, yes, they said; they would
-give themselves the pleasure of lunching there some
-day.... Upon that it seemed as if his gloom grew
-darker, but he implied courteously that that would do
-him too much honour, but if they did venture as much
-he would do his best to content them. His was but a
-rough little place, but it had been wont to be the haunt
-of artists and “they, you know, are always ‘<i>un peu
-gourmet!</i>’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What do you suppose is the story of that man?”
-they asked each other; and amused themselves inventing
-romantic pretexts to explain his air of blighted
-hopes and poetic pain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>Before long their curiosity impelled them to try the
-Victoria’s cuisine. They were a half hour before the
-time. No guests had yet gathered. They stood again
-in front of the aviary, but no polite philosopher made
-his appearance. A little yellow-haired maid in a frock
-as brightly purple as the violets, carrying decanters
-into the empty dining-room, was the only creature
-about. The sitting room offered them shelter from
-the wind, and for entertainment heaps of German
-novels and innumerable sketches of Sicilian scenery
-and types, which they hoped the Victoria’s artist patrons
-had not given in settlement of their hotel bills.
-A bell rang, and people streamed in until every seat in
-the clean, bare dining-room had its occupant. Not the
-artists Peripatetica and Jane were looking for, but
-types fixed and amusing, such as they had never before
-encountered in such numbers and contrasts. Rosy,
-bland English curates and their meek little wives;
-flashy fat Austrians, with powdered ladies of unappetizing
-look; limp English spinsters of the primmest propriety;
-seedy old men with dyed moustaches and loud
-clothes, diffusing an aroma of shady gambling-rooms.
-Scholarly old English professors; and Germans, Germans,
-Germans of all varying degrees of fatness, shininess,
-and loud-voicedness, but all united in double-action
-feeding power of knife and fork.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An expectant hush held them all for a while before
-empty plates. Then the little purple-gowned maid,
-and a sister one in ultramarine blue, with the same
-brilliant yellow hair knotted on top of her head, appeared
-with omelettes. Omelettes of such melting perfection
-as to explain the solemn expectancy of the
-waiting faces.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>Followed a meal in which every course—fish, vegetables,
-meat, and salad, in a land where the tourist expects
-to subsist alone on oranges and scenery—was of
-a deliciousness to have made a Parisian epicure compliment
-the chef of his pet restaurant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Germans were explained; lovers of feeding and
-of thrift, of course, they had come in their hordes to
-this modest Inn. And how they made the most of it!
-Back they called the little maids for two and three
-helpings of each delicious platter. Food was piled
-upon plates in mountains, but before Peripatetica and
-Jane could more than nibble at their own share, the
-German plates would be polished clean, and the little
-maids called for another supply. The caraffes of
-strong new Sicilian claret were emptied too, until
-Tedeschi faces grew very red, and tongues more than
-ever loud.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica and Jane dared not meet each other’s
-eyes. Next to them sat an elderly maiden lady from
-Hamburg “doing” Sicily without luggage, prepared
-for any and every occasion in black silk bodice and
-cloth skirt, which could be made short or long by one
-of the mysterious arrangements of loops and strings
-the female German mind adores. With maiden shyness
-but German persistence she firmly insisted on
-human intercourse with the French commercial traveller
-across the table. He clung manfully to the traditional
-gallantry of his race, though the Hamburgian’s
-accent in his mother tongue threw him into wildest confusion
-as to the lady’s meaning. When he confided
-his wife’s confinement to bed with a cold, and his ineffectual
-struggles to get the proper drugs for her in
-Taormina, the German lady announced the theory
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>that violent exercise followed by a bath was better cure
-for a cold than any drugs, “the bath the main point,”
-she said. “The exercise and the <i>transpiration</i> without
-that being of no use.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A <i>bath</i>! with a <i>cold</i>! Not a complete wash all
-over?” protested the startled Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, indeed, one must wash one’s self entirely—though
-it might be done a bit at a time—but completely,
-all over, with water and soap,” insisted the German,
-which daring hygienic theory so convinced the Frenchman
-that its propounder’s reason must be unhinged
-that stammering and trembling he gulped down his
-wine and fled from the table without waiting for the
-sweets.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All this time Peripatetica and Jane had caught no
-glimpse of their friend, the Padrone. They wondered,
-but decided that his poetic nature soared above the
-materialities of hotel keeping.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The meal had reached the sweet course—a pudding
-of delectableness no words can describe. It inspired
-even the gorged Germans with emotion. Thoroughly
-stuffed as they already were they still demanded more
-of its ambrosia and the purple-frocked one flew back
-to the kitchen, leaving the door open.... Alas! their
-philosopher of the garden, in cook’s apron, was pouring
-sauce on more pudding for the waiting maid!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ah, poor Philosopher! This the secret of his blighted
-being. The poet driven to cooking-pots, the artistic
-temperament expending itself in omelettes and puddings
-for hungry tourists. How wonder at the irony
-with which he had watched the monkeys feed!</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Maria and Vesuvius were not the only possessors of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>ardent temperaments in the Villa. Another existed in
-a round soft ball of tan and white fuzz.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Puppy!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He of the innocent grey eyes, black nose with pink
-tongue-trimming, and the most open and trusting heart
-in the world. On friends and strangers alike his
-smiles and warm licks fell. He bounded into every
-room all a-quiver of joy to be with such delightful
-people in such an altogether charming world. And
-never could it enter his generous thoughts that others
-might not equally yearn for his society; that Jane
-might object to having a liberal donation of fleas and
-mud left on the tail of her gown; that at 6 <span class='fss'>A.M.</span> Peripatetica
-might not be enchanted to have a friendly
-call and a boisterous worry of her slippers all over the
-stone floor; or Fraulein might prefer the front of the
-stove entirely to herself during sacredest rites of cooking.
-He could not be brought to understand. He
-was cheerfully confident that every one loved him as
-much as he loved them, and that nothing could possibly
-be accomplished in that family without his valuable
-assistance. Many times a day loud wails rose to
-heaven, announcing that he had come to grief in the
-course of his labours; had encountered some one’s
-foot or hand, or had some door shut in his face; but
-in the midst of grief he would see in the distance something
-being accomplished without him—charcoal being
-carried in, the hall swept, or the garden watered—and
-he would rise from his tears and offer his enthusiastic
-assistance once more, all undaunted, and continue to
-give encouraging chews to the worker’s ankles, and
-stimulating barks of advice entirely undeterred by
-being called “an <i>injurienza</i> puppy!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>Peripatetica claimed that his grey eyes showed that
-he was Norman descent, as Jane insisted they did in
-all the grey-eyed children of Taormina. But Fraulein,
-appealed to on that question, said he was of the
-colley race, and she revealed the dark and dreadful
-destiny laid upon him—that he was to grow up
-into a fierce and suspicious watch-dog; to live
-chained on the upper terrace, a menace to all intruders,
-a terror to frighten thieves from the garden
-plums!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And alas for natural bent of temperament when it
-must yield to contrary training. The grey-eyed one’s
-fate soon overtook him. Wild and indignant wails
-and shrieks woke Jane one sunny morning, and continued
-steadily in mounting crescendo all the while she
-clothed herself in haste to go to the rescue. Following
-the wails to the top of the garden she found the
-Puppy, a red ribbon around his soft neck, and from
-that a string attaching him to a pole. Nearby stood
-the Fraulein admonishing him that it was time his
-duties in life should begin, and he must commence
-to learn the routine of his profession without so much
-repining. In spite of Jane’s protests she insisted on
-leaving him there; and in vain all that quarter of
-Taormina rang with the wails of protesting indignation
-that welled from the confined one’s heart in the
-bewilderment of being left in loneliness, separated from
-all his friends and their doings. Every day after that
-he had to undergo his hour or two of schooling in the
-stern training of his grim profession. Soft-hearted
-Jane released him whenever she could, but Fraulein
-inexorably put him back, and even his playfellow
-Maria sternly held him to his duties. Between times
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>he mixed with the family again on the old footing, but
-it was pathetic to see how soon nature was affected by
-the mould into which it was pressed, how soon he acquired
-the mannerisms and habits of his profession—curbing
-his exuberance of sociability, imposing on himself
-a post on the door mat, when strangers appeared,
-confining all welcome to his tail end, which would still
-wag friendlily though head did its duty in theatrical
-staccato growls.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>In Taormina everything happens in the street.
-Houses are merely dark damp holes in which to take
-shelter at night, but life is lived outside them. Food
-is prepared in the street, clothes are mended there,
-hair is combed and arranged, neighbours gossiped with,
-lace and drawn-work made. The cobbler soles his
-shoes in the street, the tinsmith does his hammering
-and soldering there. It is the poultry run of hens and
-turkeys, the pasture grounds for goats and kids, the
-dance hall for light-footed children to tarantelle in, the
-old men’s club, the general living-room of all Taormina.
-Peripatetica and Jane found endless amusement
-there, though they seldom tarried in town. Like
-Demeter they wandered all day in meadow and mountain
-seeking Persephone, and found her not. Preparation
-for her beloved coming Mother Demeter seemed
-to be making everywhere; grass springing green when
-once the cold rain ceased, and carpets of opening blossoms
-spreading in orchards and fields for the little
-white feet to press. Every night they said, “She will
-come to-morrow,”—but still Demeter’s loneliness dissolved
-into cold tears hiding the face of the sun, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>the chill winds told of nothing but Ætna’s snow, and
-the Lost One did not return.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But though they searched for her in vain in the setting
-of sunshine and blossom their fancy had pictured,
-Peripatetica and Jane found much else on their rambles—idyls
-of Theocritus still being lived, quaint little
-adventures, bits of local colour, new friends and old
-acquaintances among contadini, animals and flowers,
-and always and all about, the Bones of the Past.
-Everywhere obscured under the work-a-day uses of the
-Present, or rising out of them in beauty; half hidden
-among flowers in lonely fields or a part of squalid modern
-huts, they stumbled upon those remains of antiquity,
-debased and crumbled and inexplicable often, but
-beautiful with a lost strange charm, sad and haunting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Taormina prides herself more on scenery than antiquities,
-but they found many of the latter in their
-scrambles on rough little mountain trails, learning all
-sorts of charms and secrets undreamed of by luxurious
-tourists rolling dustily in landaus along the one
-high road. Theirs was an unhurried leisure to take
-each day as it came. Without plans or guides they
-merely wandered wherever interest beckoned, until
-gradually they learned all the town and its setting of
-mountain and shore by heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They sallied forth untrammelled of fixed destination,
-ready to take up with the first adventure that offered—and
-one always did offer to adventurers of such receptive
-natures. They made plans only to break them;
-for inevitably they were distracted by something of interest
-more vital than the thing they had set out to see.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They might start, staff in hand, on a pilgrimage to
-the Madonna of Rocca Bella, whose brown shrine
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>nestled dizzily on one of the strange peaks shooting
-their distorted summits threateningly above their own
-Villa, those peaks so vividly described by another
-Idle Woman in Sicily: “Behind, wildly flinging themselves
-upwards, rise three tall peaks, as of mountains
-altogether gone mad and raving.... The nearest
-peak of a yellow-grey, splintered and cleft like a lump
-of spar, and so upright that it becomes a question how
-it supports itself, is divided into two heads—one thrusting
-itself forward headlong over the town and crowned
-with the battlements of a ruined Saracenic-Norman
-castle; the other in the rear carrying the outline of a
-little church, and the vague vestige of a house or two;
-Saracenic-Norman castle and church (Madonna della
-Rocca) both so precisely the tint of the rock that it requires
-time and patience to disentangle each, and not
-to put the whole down as a further evidence of mountain
-insanity.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When Jane sat herself, muffled in furs and rugs, to
-read or sew in one of the quaint tile-encrusted arbours
-of the garden, those jagged peaks fell out of the sky
-overhead so menacingly, coming ever nearer and
-nearer to her shrinking head, that for all the sweetness
-of the flowers and birds she never could stay there long,
-but always, panic-struck, fled to the bare sea-terrace,
-and the prospect of calm and distant Ætna.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But to go back to Our Lady of Rocca Bella, which
-Peripatetica and Jane never managed to see, there
-were so many distractions on that path! Did they
-start with the firmest of pilgrim intentions, a new garden
-opened unexplored paths of sweetness, or a brown
-old sea-dog, Phrygian-capped, smiled a “buon giorno”
-on his bare-footed way up from the shore, showed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>them the strange sea creatures gleaming under the
-seaweed in his basket, and enticed them down to the
-shore. There on the golden beach of Theocles’ landing
-place, they embarked in a heavy boat pulled by
-their friend, and another old gold-earringed mariner,
-to the “<i>grotte molto interessante</i>” in the Isola Bella.
-They poked their heads between waves into coral caves
-where the light filtering through the bright water was
-dyed almost as intense an azure as in the famous Capri
-Blue Grotto, and the whole coast line of mountains
-came to them in a new revelation of beauty from the
-level of wide-stretching sea. And beside the queer
-bits of coral presented by the sea-dogs as souvenirs,
-they carried away salt-water whetted appetites of wonderful
-keenness, and pictures, bestowed safely behind
-their eyes, of deliciously moulded mountain sides rising
-straight from clear green seas, of wave-carved fantasies
-in sun-bathed coral rocks, of red nets being
-stretched on yellow sands by bare-legged, graceful
-fisher folk; memories they would not have exchanged
-for any wide map-like vista the Madonna could have
-given them from her high-perched eyrie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was the same story with the Fontana Vecchia. If
-they had persisted in reaching its clear spring they
-might have heard the nightingales singing in the
-wooded dell, but they would never have known Carmela
-and her sunny mountain meadow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was a day of shifting clouds and cold winds. Peripatetica
-was depressed. Her energies wilted in the
-cold, and she had only gone forth to walk because the
-salon was too icily vaultlike for habitation. Jane tried
-to cheer her with prospect of hot tea at the Fontana,
-but her spirit refused to respond to any material comforting.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>She complained of what had been troubling
-her for some time, a sense of feeling a mere ghost herself
-in these Past-pervaded spots; a cold and shivering
-ghost aimlessly blown about in the wind, pressed
-upon by all the thronging crowds of other ghosts haunting
-these places where through the centuries each succeeding
-throng of beings had struggled and laboured,
-laughed and suffered. Living among ghosts in these
-days of idleness, her own existence cut off from the
-real living and doing of the world, from the duties and
-responsibilities of her own place in life, from the warm
-clutching hands of the people dependent on her, she
-had come to seem to herself entirely vague and ineffectual.
-She felt a mere errant, disembodied spirit,
-she said, and it was a bleak and dreary feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane said she thought a disembodied spirit, able to
-soar over the sharp cobbles of that road, an exceedingly
-enviable thing to be at that moment; but she
-quite understood, and was herself affected by the same
-sense of chill aloofness from actual, vital human living.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And then they saw Carmela—a little old Sibyl twirling
-her distaff at an open gate that looked out on the
-quiet road. Sitting in the sun with cotton kerchief,
-bodice, and apron all faded into soft harmonies of
-colour, she made such a picture through the arch of the
-gate’s break in the dull stone wall, with the green of
-the garden behind her, that they stopped a moment to
-look.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Buon giorno”—the picture smiled, her little round
-face breaking into friendly wrinkles. She rose to her
-bare feet, and with graceful gesture invited them in—wouldn’t
-they like to see the farm? she asked. There
-was a <i>molto bella vista</i> beyond. Always welcoming the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>unexpected they at once accepted, and found themselves
-passing through olive and orange groves. The
-property was not hers, their hostess explained; she was
-merely a servant; it all belonged to a <i>molto vecchia</i>
-lady, Donna Teresa by name. Though owning no
-part of it, Carmela pointed out the old vines, the thriving
-newly planted young vineyard, the grafts on the
-almond trees, with proud proprietorship.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Donna Teresa made her appearance; a tiny bent
-crone, bare-footed like her maid and dressed in cottons
-as faded if not as patched, but showing traces of a refined
-type of beauty in the delicate features of her old
-face and the soft fine white hair curling still like grape
-tendrils about her well-shaped head. She accepted
-her maid’s explanation of the strangers’ presence, and
-proceeded to outdo her in hospitality. They must do
-more than see the vista—must pick some flowers too.
-With cordial toothless chatter, of which the friendly
-meaning was the only thing they could entirely understand,
-she led through the farmyard court where blue
-and white doves cooed on the carved stone well-head,
-and a solemn white goat, his shaggy neck hung about
-with charms and amulets, attached himself to the party
-and followed down the stone stairs to a lower terrace.
-There was a view entrancing indeed, also a strange
-little old round building resembling a Roman tomb.
-Carmela could tell no more than that it was <i>cosa di
-molto antichita</i> and very useful to store roots in. Under
-a sheltering wall was a purple bank of violets to which
-the old Donna led them with much pride, inviting them
-to pick for themselves. When they did so too modestly
-to suit her, she fell on her knees and gathered
-great handfuls, thrusting on them besides all the oranges
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>and mandarins they could carry, until her lavishments
-became an embarrassment. For all her bare feet and
-poor rags there was that in the grace of her hospitality
-they felt they could not offer money to. All they could
-do was to press francs into the maid’s hand, offer the
-Donna, as curiosities from distant America, the maple
-sugar drops Jane had filled her pocket with before
-starting, and try to make smiles fill the gaps in thanks
-of their halting Italian.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Carmela showed redoubled friendliness from the
-moment America was mentioned. She still clung to
-them after her mistress bade them goodby at the gate,
-and offered to show them another vista still more beautiful.
-They would rather have continued their interrupted
-way, but the little round face falling sadly
-changed their protestations into thanks, and she trotted
-happily beside them, smiling at their compliments on
-the even thread she spun as she walked, confiding how
-much it brought her a hank, what she could spin in a
-day, and that Donna Teresa was a good mistress, but
-a little weakened in her head by age.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She pattered along, her bare feet skimming carelessly
-over the sharp-cobbled road, spindle steadily
-whirling, past the Campo Santo, where at the top of a
-sudden ravine the road forked and strings of panniered
-donkeys and straight, graceful girls with piles of
-linen on their heads were going down to a hidden
-stream tinkling below. They longed to follow, but
-Carmela took them on around a curve, through a door
-in a high wall, past a deserted barn, along a grassy
-path under almond trees, and they found themselves
-in a spot that made them catch breath with delight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The crown of a mountain spur dropped in terraced
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>orchards and gardens to the sea below. Taormina
-was hidden behind intervening heights. Below, an
-opal sea divided Sicily from wraiths of the Calabrian
-mountains drifting along the horizon, and curves of
-yellow sand and white, surf-frothed rocks outlined the
-far indentations of the Island’s mountainous coast
-spreading blue and rosy-purple on their left. Fringed
-with blossoming plum and yellow gorse, the spur on
-which they stood dropped sheer to the river ravine,
-and above still towered Mola and Monte Venere.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was a world of sun and colour and sweet silence.
-The cold, moaning wind was shut off by the heights
-behind them, and turned full to the glowing South, a
-real warmth of sun bathed the sheltered spot and had
-spread a carpet of flowers of more brilliant and harmonious
-arabesques than any of Oriental weaving.
-Of purple and puce and gold, coral and white and
-orange, of blues faint and deep, of rose and sharp
-crimson, it was woven exquisitely through the warp of
-young spring green. Even without the view, nothing
-so sweet and really springlike as that bit of mountain
-meadow had Peripatetica and Jane yet seen. They
-cried out in joy and sat them down among all the unknown
-bewitching flowers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Carmela’s face lit up at their appreciation. She too
-sat down, let her spindle fall, and gazed about as if her
-eyes loved what they rested upon; then looking from
-one strange face to the other:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are really from America?” she asked, and
-let her pathetic little story pour out. Nine children
-she had borne, and all but one dead. She told how
-that one, a splendid youth, had gone to America three
-years ago to make a fortune for himself and her, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>at first had written to her that he was doing well; but
-for two years she had spent her hard earnings to have
-letters written to him, and had prayed with tears at
-the Madonna’s shrine, but for two long years now—no
-answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Her round little old, yet childlike, face fell into
-tragic lines. With work-scarred hands clasping her
-knees across her patched apron she sat, a creature of
-simple and dignified pathos, opening her heart in brief
-and poignant words to the response in Peripatetica’s
-eyes. Among the blossoms and the bees the three
-women of such different lives and experiences, with
-the barrier of a strange tongue between them, came
-into close touch for a moment in the elementary humanity
-of that pain known to all women—Goddess
-Demeter and ragged peasant alike—when their dearest
-has gone forth from the longing shelter of their arms
-and theirs is the part of passive loneliness and waiting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, life was <i>brutta</i>,” said Carmela simply, “but
-one had always one’s work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Picking up the spindle, winding again her even
-thread, smilingly she bade these strange friends “<i>a
-rivedercela</i>,” and departed, a certain tragic dignity
-clinging to the square little figure going sturdily, yet
-with head drooping, back to her life of hard and lonely
-labour. Whether that moment of sympathetic intercourse
-had meant anything to her or not, to the two
-idle ones that trusting touch of the life about them
-meant much. It pulled them out of the world of
-ghosts, from the empty sense of being outside of any
-connection with other lives, and by that contact of
-living, pitiful drama they came back into realities.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>For all the tiny extent of Taormina’s boundaries,
-the discoveries of its antiquities seemed never ending;
-the cella of a Greek temple hidden in San Pancrazio’s
-church; the tiny Roman theatre, a section of its pit
-and auditorium with seats still in perfect rows sticking
-out from another old church whose greediness had
-only succeeded in half swallowing it; the enormous
-Roman baths whose old pools and conduits a thriving
-lemon orchard is now enjoying; the Roman pavement
-next to the Hotel Victoria; that bit of Greek inscription
-hospitably let into church walls, exciting imagination
-with its record that the “people of Tauromenium
-accord these honours to Olympis, son of Olympis” for
-having gained the prize in horse racing at the Pythian
-games.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The wall of the loveliest garden in Taormina is
-honeycombed with ancient tombs. The slender cypresses,
-like exclamation points emphasizing its rhythms
-of colour, have their roots among the very bones of antiquity.
-In this garden Protestant worship has succeeded
-Catholic in the old Chapel of the delicious little
-Twelfth Century Convent whose cloisters are now an
-English lady’s villa—and who knows in how many
-earlier shrines man’s groping faith has prayed in this
-very spot?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All over Taormina fragments of old marbles and
-carvings and columns appear in the most unlikely
-places; a marble mask from the theatre over the door
-of a modest little “Sarta” in a back alleyway, bits of
-porphyry columns supporting the steps of a peasant’s
-hovel. The traces of Norman and Saracen embellishment
-are, of course, even more numerous, almost
-every house on the street breaking out into some odd
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>and delicate bit. The façade of the palace in which
-dwelt the Frau Schuler’s antiquity shop is freaked
-with charming old lava inlays and queer forked “merluzzi”
-battlements. Forcing one’s way through the
-chickens into its courtyard, one finds a vivid Fourteenth
-Century relief of the story of Eve’s creation, temptation,
-and punishment climbing up the stone stairway,
-and an inscription “<i>Est mihi i locu refugii</i>,” which
-tradition says was placed by John of Aragon taking
-refuge here once in the days when it was a Palace of
-the Aragonese Kings. Beyond that inscription with
-its legend, and some few Spanish-looking iron balconies,
-the Spaniard has left no trace of his dominion
-in Taormina. The Norman printed himself on churches
-and convents, but it is the Greeks and Romans, and
-above all the Saracens, who have stamped themselves
-indelibly upon Taormina. Moorish workmen must
-have been employed by their conquerors for centuries
-to build them palaces and convents, baths and even
-churches. And the Arab blood still shows strongly in
-hawk-like, keen-eyed faces passing through Taormina’s
-streets as haughtily as in the days when their progenitors
-ruled there with hand of iron upon the dogs of
-Christians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In those Moslem days much liberty in the practice
-of religion was allowed to such of the Christians as did
-not show the cross in public, read the gospel loud
-enough to penetrate to Moslem ears, or ring their
-church bells “furiously.” How often in Sicily one
-wishes that last regulation were still in force! They
-might go on worshipping freely in all existing churches
-and convents, though to build new ones was not allowed.
-In matters of religion the Arab was strangely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>liberal, but in civil matters he reduced the conquered
-people to a sort of serfdom. Christians were not allowed
-to carry arms, to ride on horseback, or even
-donkeyback, to build houses as high as the Mussulman’s,
-to drink wine in public, to accompany their
-dead to burial with any pomp or mourning. Christian
-women might not enter the public baths when
-Moslem women were there, nor remain if they came
-in. Christians must give way to Moslems on the street;
-indoors they must rise whenever a man of the conquering
-race came in or went out. “And that they
-might never forget their inferiority, they had to have a
-mark on the doors of their houses and one on their
-clothes.” They were bid wear turbans of different
-fashion and colour from Moslems, and particular
-girdles of leather.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet many good gifts these Eastern conquerors
-brought—introduction of silkworms and the mulberry,
-of sugar-cane and new kinds of olives and vines;
-new ways of preserving and salting fish; new processes
-of agriculture and commerce; their wonderful methods
-of irrigation; the clear Arabic numeration; advance
-in medicine, astronomy, mathematics, all sciences; and
-even “the slaves in Sicily under the Moslem rule were
-better off than the Italian populations of the mainland
-under the Lombards and Franks.”</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane and Peripatetica were taking tea in the San
-Domenico gardens—a flowery terrace dizzily flung out
-to sea, and almost as high as their own. There is
-nothing prettier in Taormina than that garden; tile-paved,
-mossy stone pergolas of dense shade still breathing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>of quiet monkish meditations; open, yet sheltered,
-nooks to bask in the sun, and the loveliness of the outlook
-on Ætna and his sweeping foothills, and the milky-streaked
-green sea; mats of fragrant sweetness, purple
-and ivory, of violets and freesias; royal splash of bougainvilla
-against the buff stucco of old convent walls;
-coast steamers, white yachts, and tiny black fishing
-boats far, far below, the only hint of the world’s bustle;
-here in the garden was only slumberous quiet and
-fragrant peace.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“On his terrace high in air</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Nothing doth the good monk care</span></div>
- <div class='line in5'><span class='small'>For such worldly themes as these.</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>From the garden just below</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Little puffs of perfume blow,</span></div>
- <div class='line in3'><span class='small'>And a sound is in his ears</span></div>
- <div class='line in5'><span class='small'>Of the murmur of the bees</span></div>
- <div class='line in3'><span class='small'>In the shimmering chestnut trees.</span></div>
- <div class='line in3'><span class='small'>Nothing else he heeds or hears.</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>All the landscape seems to swoon</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>In the happy afternoon.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Little has been changed since the good monk really
-dozed there. The charm of his peaceful days still
-lingers in cloister and garden, and the conventual atmosphere
-still asserts itself in spite of the frivolous
-swarm of tourists, who leave innovation trunks in the
-stone-flagged corridors. But that same tourist sits in
-the monk’s painted wooden stalls, has a beflowered
-little shrine and altar perhaps opposite his own bedroom
-door; walks under saintly frescoes, hangs his hat
-on the Father’s carved towel-frame outside the Refectory
-door, and eats his dinner under pictures of
-martyrdoms. The chapel in the midst of the modern
-caravanserai is still the parish church, the vaulted stone
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>corridors echo to the solemn boom of its organ many
-times a day—a wrong turn on the way to the dining-room
-and the tourist finds himself not in gas-lit, soup-redolent,
-salle-à-manger, but among the dim, carved
-stalls, taper-lit altars, and incense-sweet air of the
-chapel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was the one place which ever caused Peripatetica
-and Jane to think ungratefully of their villa. Whenever
-they wandered through either of the vine-draped
-old cloisters; looked up the delightfully twisted stone
-stairways, and along mysterious Gothic passages, they
-wished that they too might have had a “belonging”
-door in one of the arches of that quiet incense-perfumed
-corridor, such sense of unhurried calm reigned there;
-the frescoed saints over each cell door looked so peacefully
-benignant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Jane,” queried Peripatetica, “do you notice that
-these Saints are all women?—a gentle lady saint over
-every Brother’s door! even where no living woman was
-allowed to penetrate they still clung to some memory
-of the Eternal Feminine!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Tea was seeming unusually good that afternoon after
-hours passed amid the excitements and wonderful finds
-and bargains of the beguiling antiquity shops of Taormina’s
-main street. Now, the pot drained to the last
-drop, the last crumb of bread and honey eaten, they
-sat tranquilly watching the shadows lengthen in the
-garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is the only really peaceful spot in Taormina,”
-said Jane. “What a relief to escape from all that old
-overwhelming Past for once and just be soothingly
-lulled in this placid monkish calm. I know nothing
-ever happened here more exciting than the scandal of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>some fat Brother’s unduly prolonging his siesta in a
-sheltered nook, and so missing Vespers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A boy appeared at her elbow; one of the little shy
-fauns of Von Gloëden’s photographs. He pulled a
-cactus leaf out of one pocket, a penknife out of another,
-and trimming off the cactus prickles tossed the leaf
-out into space in such deft way that in graceful curves
-and birdlike swoops it whirled slowly down to the far
-bottom of the cliff. Jane leaned over the gratefully
-substantial stone parapet and watched, fascinated, as
-he proceeded to send yet another and another after it
-in more elaborate curves each time. The boy’s shyness
-melted under her admiration of his trick and the
-coppers it was expressed in; he showed white teeth in
-much merriment when she too attempted to toss the
-green discs only to have them drop persistently without
-any whirling. He began to chatter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, it was very high that cliff, and of much interest
-to pitch things over and watch them fall. In the
-old days they had pitched men over it—yes indeed,
-prigionieri; many hundreds of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh Peripatetica! black dramas even here! what
-can he mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The insurgent slaves of the Servile War, perhaps.
-Their whole garrison was hurled alive over some cliff
-here—native tradition may have it this one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane remembered. Eight hundred men thus treated
-by Publius Rupilius, Roman Consul in 132 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The dark flood of old cruelty surged back to her.
-Sicily was a country of great landowners holding
-estates of eighty miles round and more; working them
-by slave labour; owning slaves in thousands. Twenty
-thousand slaves was not an exaggerated number for a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>great noble to own, two hundred a fair allowance for
-an ordinary citizen. Two-thirds of Sicily’s population
-were then slaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of course the human live-stock possessed in such
-indistinguishable hordes, like cattle, had to be branded
-with the owner’s mark. They did their work in irons,
-to be safely under their overseer’s power; were lodged
-in holes under ground; their daily rations but one
-pound of barley or wheat, and a little salt and oil.
-Against atrocious cruelties they revolt at last. All over
-Sicily they rise, two hundred thousand men soon finding
-arms and power to mete to masters the same cruelties
-that had been shown them. For six years all the
-might of Rome cannot crush them, but eventually her
-iron claw closes in upon them—only impregnable Enna
-and Taormina still remain in the hands of the slave
-army. It is a struggle to test all Rome’s mettle. These
-slaves too are of the eagle’s blood. Men free-born
-and bred, most of them; Greeks and Franks from the
-mainland, prisoners of war or of debt. Fiercely, indomitably,
-they cling to their rocky eyries. But in
-Taormina starvation fights direfully against them.
-There was not one grain, one blade of grass even, left.
-Still the garrison clings and strikes back at the Romans.
-They devour their own children, next the women, then
-at last eat one another—but still hold out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Commanus, the slave commander, weakens and tries
-to escape from the horrors. He creeps alone from the
-city, but is captured and brought before the Consul.
-He knows what methods will be tried to make him give
-information of the town’s condition—can his weakness
-hold out against torture? With apparent acquiescence
-he appears willing to answer all Roman questions, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>bends his head and draws his cloak over it as if shielding
-his eyes to better collect his thoughts.... Under
-the cloak he grips his throat between his fingers and
-with the last remnant of once phenomenal physical
-strength crushes his own windpipe, and falls safely
-silent at the Consul’s feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the horrors of Taormina in that siege are too
-much for another slave—a Syrian. He betrays the
-town to the Romans ... and Publius disposes of all
-the remaining garrison over the edge of the cliff.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Shopping is an important part of a stay in Taormina.
-Surely no other street of its length anywhere
-in the world has so many beguilements to part the
-tourist from his coin. The dark little shops spilling
-their goods out upon the pavement; things so bizarre,
-so good, so cheap, the lire of the forestieri flow away
-in torrents. Beautiful inlaid furniture; lovely old
-jewelry of flawed rubies and emeralds set amid the
-famous antique Sicilian pearl-work and enamelling.
-Old Spanish paste in delightful designs; red Catanian
-amber, little Roman intaglios, delicate old cameos,
-enamelled orders; necklaces, rings, pendants; earrings
-in odd and charming settings; delightful old
-trinkets in richer assortment of variety and quality here
-than any other place in Italy. Old Sicilian thread lace,
-coarse but effective, in shawls and scarfs of many
-charming old designs; old altar lace too in great abundance;
-better laces, as one may have luck to find them,
-or to be on the spot when gleanings from churches and
-convents in the interior are brought in—bundles containing
-varied treasures, from brocades and embroideries
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>and splendid lace of priestly vestments, to drawn-work
-altar cloths and the lace cottas little choirboys’
-restless arms have worn sad holes in. Churchly silver
-too, reliquaries and ornaments and old medals, abound
-in Taormina for scarcely more than the value of the
-silver’s weight. Old coins dug up in its gardens, the
-old porcelains bought from its impoverished nobles;
-old drawn-work, on heavy hand-woven linen, still
-firmly carrying its processions of marvellous beasts and
-birds and personages in wide lace-like bands. Beasts
-conceived by the same imagination that evolved the
-gargoyles of Gothic cathedrals, such wonderful mixtures
-of animal and bird and human as Adam never
-named in Garden of Eden. These horned birds and
-winged animals processioning around churchly altar
-cloths are old, old pagan Siculian luck charms—protectors
-against the evil eye. Peripatetica and Jane instantly
-proceeded to combat their Hoodoo with valiant
-processions of fat little many-horned stags romping
-around throat and wrist—and of all the many exorcisms
-they had tried this truly seemed the most effective!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Taormina’s naïve native pottery, too, drapes the outside
-walls of shops and doorways in bright garlands of
-strange shapes of fishes and fruits and beasts, is stacked
-in shining heaps of colour, jugs and pots and platters
-of every possible form and design. Some of it reminiscent
-of Sevillian pottery in elaborate Renaissance decoration,
-but for the most part rough little shapes of clay,
-covered with hard bright glaze and no two ever exactly
-alike in either shape or tint. The favourite model being a
-gay Sicilian Lady Godiva, riding either a stag or a cock,
-attired proudly in a crown and a floating blue ribbon!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Day after day, all through March, the sun moped behind
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>clouds, the wind lashed the sea against the rocks,
-and milky foam bands streaked the turbid green. Rain
-beat on the Villa windows, and even through them, to
-the great amusement of Maria, who appeared to consider
-mopping up the streaming floors a merry contest
-with the elements.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But when the rare sun burst out and revealed a
-fresh-washed sky, a land shimmering through thinnest
-gauze of mist, or the moon could escape from the clouds
-and rise behind the theatre ruins to hang, hugely
-bright over the gleaming sea floor so far, far below, it
-seemed a fair world all prepared to greet its radiant
-returning goddess.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On such days no shop could beguile. Even the old
-dames weaving towels on hand looms by their open
-doors, always so ready for friendly chat with these
-forestieri, would be passed with only a smile, for the
-breath of the fields called loudly to hillside and orchard,
-“where all fair herbs bloom, red goat-wort and endive,
-and fragrant bees-wort”; the only sound breaking the
-sunny calm being the notes of a shepherd boy on a
-neighbouring hill, piping as if his reed flute held the very
-spirit of youth, the bubbling notes sparkling like a little
-fountain of joy flinging its spray on the spring breeze.
-Or on a day like this to wander far afield; or else in the
-high hillside orchards where the birds sang “Sicily!
-Sicily! Sicily!” or called mockingly “Who are you?
-Who are you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On such a day they adventured to Mola and the
-heights of Monte Venere’s peak in the company of
-those brave <i>asinelli</i> Giovanino and Francesco, and in
-the charge of Domenico, Sheik of guides, whose particular
-exploitation they had long ago become.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>Loafing in the fountain square, watching the women
-filling jars at the fountain, and speculating as usual
-over the history of its presiding deity (who as St. Taypotem
-is the local genius and emblem of the town, a
-saint utterly unknown to churchly calendar)—a lady
-centaur, and a two-legged one at that, uprearing her
-plump person on two neat little hoofed heels raised
-high above the four archaic beasts spouting water—Peripatetica
-and Jane fell a prey to a genial Arab, a
-beguiling smile wrinkling his dark hawk-like face.
-Wouldn’t they like a donkey ride? The best donkeys
-in all Sicily were his—Domenico’s—guide No. 5, beloved
-of all tourists, as they could see by reading his
-book. A dingy little worn note-book was fluttered
-under their noses, an eager brown finger pointed to this
-and that page of English writing, all singing the praises
-of Domenico and his beasts on many an expedition.
-More influenced by the smile than the testimonials
-they promised that he should conduct them to Mola.
-From that instant Domenico’s wing was spread over
-them in brooding solicitude. Yes, the weather was too
-threatening to ride out anywhere that afternoon, but
-did they know all the sights of the town? he inquired.
-Had they seen the Bagni Saraceni? No, they admitted.
-Oh, that was <i>molto interessante</i> and close at
-hand; he would show them! Hypnotized by the smile
-they followed meekly, though the Bagni turned out to
-be the Norman Moorish ruins of the San Stefano Palace
-with which they were already familiar. But not
-as it was shown by Domenico. The surly old contadina
-in charge, bullied into offering the choicest of the
-oranges and flowers growing among the ruins, the
-smile gilding all the dark corners of antiquity and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>lighting up the vaulted cellar in which by graphic pantomime
-of jumps into its biggest holes they were shown
-exactly how the Saracens had once bathed, much as
-more modern folk did, it seemed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After that days came and went of such greyness and
-cold wind or rain, that Domenico and his donkeys
-attended in vain at the pink gateway to take Peripatetica
-and Jane excursioning. But not for that did they
-lose the sunniness of the smile. Like a benevolent
-spider, Domenico was to be always lying in wait to
-pounce around any corner with friendly greeting, to
-give them the news of the town in his patois of mixed
-Italian, English, and pantomime; to suggest carrying
-home their bundles for them if they were on a shopping
-tour, to point out an antiquity or garden to inspect
-if they seemed planless, or a lift home on the
-painted cart whose driver he had been enlivening with
-merry quips, when met on the high road outside town.
-And once, oh blessed time, when he encountered Jane
-at the Catania gate, her tongue hanging out with thirst
-and fatigue after a long mountain climb, he haled her
-straightway into a friend’s garden to refresh herself
-with juicy oranges from the trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Finally the long waited-for day came, when not a
-cloud threatened and the mountains beckoned through
-crystalline, sunny air. So Francesco and Giovanino
-laden with Peripatetica and Jane, Domenico and a
-brown young hawkling of the Domenican brood laden
-with lunch, they climbed upwards. Ætna stood out
-in glistening, freshly renewed snow mantle, icy sharp
-against the most perfect of blue skies. Taormina
-dropped far below, a tiny huddled human nest of brown
-among the green, green hilltops. Mola, which for so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>long had loomed far over their heads on its beetling
-crags, now too sank below. The pink mountain villa
-where Hichens had written “The Call of the Blood,”
-the vineyards and the orchards, all dropped away.
-Only Ætna, high and white, soared against the sky,
-remote and inaccessible. The trail grew steeper and
-steeper, but Francesco and Giovanino, noble pair,
-with unbroken wind and gloomy energy picked their
-way unfalteringly among the rolling stones, and both
-Domenicos, like two-legged flies, seemed to take to
-the perpendicular as easily as the horizontal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Francesco, tall and grey and of a loquacious turn of
-mind, made all the mountains echo to his voice whenever
-a fellow <i>asinello</i> was encountered on the trail.
-Giovanino, small and brown, attended strictly to the
-business of finding secure places for his tiny hoofs
-among the stones, but developed two idiosyncrasies
-rather dismaying to his rider. Whenever the path led
-along a precipice’s edge, on the very outside edge of it
-would his four obstinate little feet go, with Jane’s feet
-dangling horribly over empty space; whenever it
-skirted a stone wall his furry sides insisted upon rubbing
-it clingingly, sternly regardless of his rider’s toes.
-The path ceased being a path. It became a stairway
-climbing up the mountains’ bare marble side in rough
-stone steps a foot or more in height.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But we can’t ride up <i>that</i>!” cries the appalled Peripatetica
-in the lead. In vain Domenico assures her
-that she can, that people do it every day. She looks
-at its dizzy turns and insists on taking to her own feet.
-Jane, having acquired a reverential confidence in Giovanino’s
-powers after their mutual tussles, puts more
-faith in his head and knees than in her own, and goes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>on, clutchingly. Young Domenico, hanging like a
-balance weight to Giovanino’s tail, keeps up a chorus of
-“Ah-ees” and assurances that the Signorina need have
-no fear, he is there to guide her! In reality he knows
-that his small person could no more interfere with the
-orbit of Giovanino’s movements than with those
-of the planets, but also that there is no more need
-that he should—Giovanino’s grey head holds a perfect
-chart of the way, with the safest hoof-placings
-plainly marked out on it, and he follows it imperturbably.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Travellers to Monte Venere do not know much of
-what they are passing the last forty minutes. They are
-too busy wondering whether each minute will not be
-their last—on those daunting stairs of living rock and
-rolling stones. Breathless, dizzy, speechless, they at
-last realize a firm level terrace is under foot, and reel
-against the comforting solid walls of the little <i>tratoria</i>.
-The donkeys are quite unruffled and unheated, less dejected
-than when they started. The young Domenico,
-who has pulled himself on shuffling small bare feet
-thrust in his father’s heavy boots all up that mountain
-wall, is as unflushed of face, unshortened of breath, as
-if he had come on wings! Old Domenico, escorting
-an exhausted Peripatetica, is bubbling faster than ever
-with vehement chatter. He cannot understand why
-his charges insist on rest, on holding fast to the solid
-house. It fills him with surprised distress that they
-will not go on to the top. “The view over all Sicily
-awaits them there, and it is such a clear day. Corragio!
-only one-half hour more!”...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But Peripatetica and Jane plant their feet on that
-little level platform with more than donkey obstinacy—with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>reeling heads they look out into the great blue
-gulfs of air and over the green ripples of mountain tops.
-This is high enough for them, they pant, feeling like
-quivering earth-worms clinging to the top of a telegraph
-pole and invited to go out along the wires.
-Shivering in the wind which, in spite of sun, is icy
-keen at this height, they proceed to eat their cold
-lunch; the tratoria offering only tables and crockery,
-wine, goat’s milk, and coffee to its patrons. Between
-two infants of the house begging for tidbits, three skeleton
-dogs so long unacquainted with food they snatched
-greedily even at egg shells, a starved cat, and the two
-Domenicos, who, it seems, also expect to lunch on
-their leavings, Peripatetica and Jane have themselves
-no heart to eat. Wishing they had brought another
-<i>asinello</i> laden only with food, that all the inhabitants
-of this hungry height might for once be filled, they
-divide their own meal as evenly as possible among all
-its aspirants and try to sustain themselves on the view.
-Peripatetica looked on the far expanse of hills and sea
-below, sourly asserting her fixed lowlander’s conviction
-that mountains are only beautiful looked up to,
-and that a bird’s-eye-view is no view. But when a
-comforting concoction of hot goat’s milk and something
-called coffee had been swallowed, and numbed
-fingers thawed out over the tiny fire of grapevine prunings
-in the tratoria kitchen, they succumbed to Domenico’s
-insistence about the view it is their duty to
-see, and climbed higher.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The crest of Monte Venere is a green knoll rising
-above rock walls. Around and below it enough mountains
-to fill a whole world roll confusedly on every
-side. They felt more than ever like earth-worms too
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>far removed from friendly earth, and stayed only to
-listen to the pipings of a curly-headed goatherd flinging
-trills out into space; while Domenico, pained at
-their indifference to his vaunted coup d’état of “bella
-vistas,” but benevolent still, clambered about like a
-goat himself, gathering for them the “mountain violets”
-as he called the delicate mauve flowers starring
-the sod.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So soon they were back at the tratoria that Francesco
-and Giovanino had not half chewed their little
-handfuls of hay, and young Domenico’s red tongue
-was still delightedly polishing off the interior of their
-tin of potted chicken, while the lean dogs watched
-enviously, waiting for their chance at this queer bone.
-Another personage was lunching luxuriously, stretched
-at his ease on the steep hillside, a large sleek white
-goat, munching solemnly at grass and blossom, wagging
-his beard and rolling watery pink-rimmed eyes
-with such evangelical air of pious complacence Peripatetica
-and Jane instantly recognized him as an incarnation
-of a New England country deacon, and sat
-down respectfully to pass the time of day with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Going down even Jane takes to her own feet. Slipping,
-sliding, jumping, the worst is somehow past with
-bones still unbroken. The mountainside is yet like
-the wall of a house, but Domenico, with more cries of
-“corragio,” and proverbs as to those who “Va piano,
-va sano,” urges them to mount, and Jane, quite confident
-that four legs have more clinging power than
-two, is glad to lie back along Giovanino’s tail while he
-balances himself on his nose, with young Domenico
-serving as a brake on his tail, and so slides and hitches
-calmly down hill.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>Mola is a climb again, the narrow path twisting up
-the one accessible ledge to its sharp peak. One wonders
-why human beings ever first climbed there to
-build, and even more why they still live in its cramped
-buildings, and with what toil they can find ways to
-squeeze daily bread out of the bleak rocks. Yet before
-the first Greek colonists landed at Naxos, Mola
-was already a town. It looked down on infant Taormina
-when the Naxos refugees fled to its heights. It
-loomed above, still Siculian and intact, on its bare unassailable
-crags, through all the squabbles and screamings
-below of the different eagle broods taking possession
-of Taormina’s nest. The conqueror who tried
-to take Mola had usually only his trouble for his pains.
-Even Dionysius, with all Sicily clutched in his cruel
-hand, failed in his snatch at Mola. His attempt to
-steal into it by surprise one dark winter’s night ended
-in an ignominious, breakneck, hurling repulse of tyrant
-and all his victory-wonted veterans. And Mola still
-lives to-day. All its huddled houses seem to be inhabited,
-though only bent old men, palsied crones,
-black pigs, and babies are to be met with in its steep
-narrow alleys. Domenico said scornfully that there
-was nothing to be seen in it, but led the way to the
-tiny town-square terrace beside the church, and had
-a brown finger ready to emphasize all points of interest
-in the spread of country and sea stretching below
-its parapet. Once Mola had a sister town, he told, on
-another crag across the valley; but Ætna opened a
-sudden mouth and lava rivers pouring down to the sea
-flowed over it and swallowed it completely. Whether
-this is actual history or Domenican invention remains
-in doubt. No other historian mentions the lost town.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>But then, as Domenico said, there is Ætna, and there
-the lava mound still black and ugly, as proof!</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Again it rained, and Ætna sulked behind a cloudy
-mantle. Vesuvius worked all day long, yet fur coats
-were a necessary house dress. The poor Demon took
-the influenza and coughed, and shivered in spite of her
-hot energies; turned livid yellow and feverish, and had
-to be sent to a doctor. Scarcely able to hold her head
-up, but protesting to the end, she gave in to going
-home to bed and staying there. But first she reappeared,
-pale but proud, with a fashionably dressed
-young lady of fourteen, her <i>figlia</i> Adalina, to whom she
-had shown and told everything, and who could do all
-the ladies’ service quite as well as herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Adalina was very high as to pompadour and equally
-high as to the French heels on the tight boots which
-finished off the plump legs emerging from her smart
-kilted skirt—but height of intelligence was not in her;
-none of her mother’s quickness and energy seemed to
-have passed into the head under the high rolling thatch
-of hair. Feet were Adalina’s strong point, and she
-knew it. There was probably not another such grand
-pair of real French boots as hers in all Taormina!
-So her life consisted in showing them off. She arranged
-Peripatetica’s and Jane’s belongings, and
-brushed their clothes, as Mother had shown her, but
-with pirouettings and side steps—one, two, three, all
-the best dancing positions—between every touch of
-brush or laying out of garment. It absorbed so much
-time to keep her feet arranged in the most perfect placings
-to exhibit pointed toes that very little else could be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>expected of her in the course of the day. She opened
-her mouth wide at Peripatetica’s and Jane’s broken
-babblings, but no sense from them ever penetrated her
-intelligence. Maria had to be called to interpret everything,
-and usually to do it too. A charm seemed to
-have departed from the villa with no Demon to keep
-them comfortable and uncomfortable at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why should we wait and shiver here any longer?”
-asked Peripatetica. “Persephone is surely coming
-first on the other side of Ætna.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why should we? Let us start on,” said Jane.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Domenica returned to them, a pale yellow Demon,
-but bustling as ever, too late to affect their decision.
-Trunks were packed, towering packing-cases stuffed
-with their Taormina acquisitions. Fraulein’s last wonderful
-pudding eaten, Ætna seen looming vapory white
-above the terrace for the last time, Old Nina had carried
-down through the garden from the well, in a Greek
-jar on her grey head, the water for their last tub, Maria
-had peeped her last “Questo,” Frau Schuler and her
-polite son, the Fraulein, Maria, and Carola, had all
-presented fragrant nosegays, Adalina, too, with pompadour
-more aggressive than ever, appeared to offer
-them violets and hint a receptivity to a parting douceur
-herself. Every one was bidding them regretful farewells.
-Touched, and themselves regretful to leave so
-much kindness and charm, with melting heart the last
-goodby of all was said to Domenica, and her wages for
-the last two weeks pressed into her palm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You have served us so well, we have made no deduction
-for the days you were first ill, and we had no
-one; nor for the days when we had your little girl instead,”
-said Jane.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>Oh! had Ætna burst into eruption? The whole smiling
-morning landscape was darkened by the wild black
-figure pouring down shrill volleys of wrathful Italian on
-their devoted heads. This Fury threatening with
-flashing eyes and wild gesture was their gentle Domenica—now
-a demon indeed!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They shrank aghast unable to catch a word in the
-rapid torrent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What <i>is</i> the matter?” they cried to Frau Schuler.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With Teuton phlegm she dropped a word into the
-flood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You have not paid her for the hour she has been
-here this morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, because we have paid her just the same for the
-days on which we had no one and the ten days on which
-we had only that stupid child—and have given the
-precious Adalina a <i>mancia</i> too. But good gracious,
-we will pay her more if she feels that way!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Indeed, you must not!” said the Frau briskly.
-“It is an abominable imposition. She has been much
-overpaid now, that is the trouble, she thinks you easy
-game. Listen, my woman, and shame yourself,” she
-turned to Domenica, “you disgrace your town to these
-good Signorine, who have acted so generously to you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The raging demon looked into her calm face and at
-the two astounded American ones, and the storm
-quieted as quickly as it had come ... in an instant’s
-metamorphosis she was again the amiable little person
-of all the weeks of service, saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Many, many thanks to the ladies, and a pleasant
-journey, and might they come back again soon to
-Taormina!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She snatched Peripatetica’s coat away from Maria,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>and Jane’s kodak from out her hand, and bore them
-off to the carriage with all her usual assiduous energy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One last pat to the puppy, graduated this very morning
-to real collar and chain attaching him to new huge
-kennel, the warring friendliness of his heart and the
-conscientious effort to live up to his responsibilities
-struggling more pathetically than ever in his grey eyes,
-and they passed up the pergola for the last time, and
-out of the pink gate to continue their quest.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>
-<img src='images/illus_130.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='ch03' class='c005'>CHAPTER III <br /> <br /> <span class='sc'>One Dead in the Fields</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div><span class='small'>“Where he fell there he lay down and died.”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Sir John Lubbock</span> tells a story—and this story
-teaches an obvious lesson—of certain red warrior ants,
-who capture black fellow pismires, and hold them as
-slaves; an outrage which must certainly shock all true
-pismitarian ants. The captors become in time so dependent
-upon their negro servants that, when deprived
-of their attendants, they are unable to feed or clean
-themselves, and lie helplessly upon their backs, feebly
-waving their paws in the air!...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica, having but recently suffered the loss of
-a maiden slave of a dozen years’ standing, had suffered
-a like moral disintegration, and she violently lost her
-taste for travel whenever it became necessary to move
-from one place to another, attempting to deal with her
-packing by a mere series of helpless paw-wavings, most
-picturesque to observe, but which for all practical purposes
-were highly inefficient. So when she and Jane
-dropped down and down the zigzags to Giardini—each
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>of those famous views self-consciously presenting itself
-in turn for the last time—the light figure which hurled
-itself boldly down the steeps by a short cut, springing
-along the daring descent with the sure-footed confidence
-of a goat, proved to be not a wing-heeled Mercury
-conveying an affectionate message from the gods,
-but merely a boy from the villa fetching Peripatetica’s
-left-behind nail brush, hot-water bottle, and umbrella....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>From Giardini a spacious plain curves all the way
-to Syracuse. This broken level is built upon a
-foundation of inky lava cast out from Hephæstos’
-forge in Ætna, in whose wrinkled crevices of black and
-broken stone has been caught and held all the stored
-richness of the denuded mountains so long ago stripped
-of trees; and in this plain grain and flowers and trees
-innumerable find food and footing. Peripatetica, bred
-in deep-soiled, fertile fields with wide horizons, drew,
-as they passed into the open vistas, deep breaths of
-refreshment and joy. The fierce, soaring aridity of
-Taormina had oppressed her with a restless sense of
-imprisonment. Her elbows were as passionate lovers
-of liberty as the Spartans, and she demanded proper
-space in which to move them. What she called a view
-was a <i>view</i>, not merely more mountains climbing, blind
-and obstinate, between the eye and the landscape.
-Being, too, of a race always worshippers of Demeter—a
-race which had spent generations in her service,
-which considered the cultivation of the soil the only
-possible occupation of a gentleman, and all other businesses
-the mere wretched astonishing fate of the unfortunate—she
-rejoiced loudly and fatiguingly over the
-blessedness of a return to a sweet land of farms.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>“I don’t call that Taormina window-box-gardening
-on tiny stone ledges a thousand feet up in the air
-<i>farming</i>,” she scoffed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If your tongue was a spade what crops you would
-raise!” sniffed Jane.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I raise big harvests of diversion in my own
-spirit,” retorted the unsuppressed chatterer. “Besides,
-it’s now my turn to talk. You have done a lot
-of elaborate speechifying about Taormina. I made
-you a present of the whole jaggèd, attitudinizing old
-place, and for the moment I mean to flow unchecked!
-You needn’t listen if you don’t like. I enjoy hearing
-myself speak, whether anyone pays the smallest attention
-or not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Which was why, while Jane settled down comfortably
-to a copy of Theocritus, Peripatetica continued
-to entertain her own soul with spoken and unspoken
-comments as to a certain restful letting down
-of tension which resulted from sliding away from the
-dazzling, lofty Olympianism of Taormina into a region
-Cyclopean, perhaps, but with a dawning suggestion of
-coming humanity. For here, in this plain, succeeding
-those bright presences that were the elementary
-forces of nature—forces of the earth and sea and sun,
-of fire and dew, of thunder, wind, and rain, of the shining
-day, and the night with its changing moon—first
-came the primitive earth-spirits, rude and rugged, or
-delicate and vapourous. Creatures not gods—no
-longer immutable and immortal, but stronger, older,
-greater than man, who was yet to come. Creatures
-partaking somewhat of the nature of both gods and
-men, but subject to transformation into stream and
-fountain, into tree and flower; very near to the earth,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>yet swayed by human passions, by human sorrows and
-joys.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This plain was the home of nymph and oread, of
-dryad and faun. Here had the Cyclops and the Titans
-wrought—first of the great race of Armourers and
-Smiths—under the tutelage of Vulcan, shaping the
-beams of the heavens, and the ribs of the earth; arming
-the gods and forging the lightning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ulysses, the earliest of impassioned tourists, had had
-dealings on this very spot with the last of the Cyclops.
-A degenerate scion of the great old race, as the last of
-a great race is apt to be, Polyphemus had sunk to the
-mere keeping of sheep, and according to Ulysses’ own
-story he got the better of Polyphemus, and related,
-upon returning home, the triumph of his superior cunning,
-with the same naïve relish with which the modern
-Cookie retails his supposed outwitting of the native
-curio dealer. Very near to the train, as it ran by the
-sea’s edge, lay the huge fragments of lava which the
-blinded Cyclop had cast in futile rage after the escaping
-Greeks. He was a great stone-thrower, was Polyphemus,
-for further along the coast lay the boulders
-he had flung at Acis, the beautiful young shepherd.
-Polyphemus having still an eye in those days, his aim
-was truer, and the shepherd was killed, but who may
-baffle true love? The dead boy melted away beneath
-the stones and was transformed to the bright and racing
-river Acis (which they crossed just then), and the
-river, flowing round the stones, runs still across the
-plain to fling itself into the arms of the sea-nymph
-Galatea. So the two still meet as of old, and play
-laughingly together in and out among the huge rocks,
-which certainly might have been flung there by Ætna
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>in one of her volcanic furies, but which, if one may
-believe the Greek story, were really the gigantic weapons
-of a cruel jealousy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane and Peripatetica could put their heads out of
-the windows and study history and legend at their ease,
-the train ambling amiably and not too rapidly through
-the lovely land, where the near return of Persephone
-was foreshadowed in the delicate rosy clouds of the
-Judas trees drifting across the black green of dense
-carobs. It was foretold, too, by the broad yellow mustard
-fields blooming under the shadow of silver-grey
-olive orchards; Fields-of-the-Cloth-of-Gold they were,
-about which Spring was pitching white tents of plum
-flowers in which to sign royal alliance with Summer.
-They saw old Sicilian farm-steadings here and there
-crowning the rising ground on either hand, freaked
-and lichened with years, and showing among their
-spiring cypresses the square towers to which the inhabitants
-had fled for safety in the old days of Levantine
-piracy. Many of these houses were very old, six
-or eight hundred years old, it was said. Orange and
-lemon groves on either side the way still hung heavy
-with fruit, plainly feeling it a duty laid upon them to
-look like the trees in Benozzo Gozzoli’s frescoes; like
-the trees of all the Old Masters’ backgrounds. Invariably
-being round, close clumps of green set thick
-with golden balls, quite unlike the orange trees in
-America, which have never had proper decorative and
-artistic models set for their copying, and therefore grow
-carelessly and less beautifully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As far as the eye could reach the whole land was
-furred with the tender green of sprouting corn. For
-this was once Europe’s granary, and the place of Rome’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>bread; here Demeter first taught man to sow and reap,
-and despite Ætna’s fires, despite the destruction and
-ravaging of a thousand wars, and thousands of years
-of careless unrestorative use of the soil, corn still grows
-on this plain, so hard, so perfect, and so nourishing of
-grain that no Sicilian can afford to eat it, selling his
-own crop to macaroni manufacturers, and contenting
-himself with a poorer imported wheat for his dark daily
-bread.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In these rich meadows, too, replacing the frigid little
-Evangelical-looking goat of Taormina, browsed fat
-flocks in snowy silken fleeces, and with long wavy
-horns. Flocks that were tended by shepherds draped
-in faded blue or brown hooded cloaks, wearing sheep’s
-wool bound about their cross-gartered legs, their feet
-shod with hairy goat-skin shoes. They leaned in contemplative
-attitudes on long staves—as every right-minded
-shepherd should—so old a picture, so unchanged
-from far-off, pastoral days! Just so had they
-shown themselves to Theocritus, when that sweet
-young singer of the early time had wandered here
-among the herdsmen, the fishers, and the delvers in the
-good brown earth, in the days when the Greeks still
-lived and ruled here, so long and long ago.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wish they would pipe,” said Peripatetica. “It
-only needs to complete the picture that innocent sweet
-trilling of the shepherd’s reed that is like the voices of
-the birds and of the cicalas.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, they daren’t do it here in high noon,” remonstrated
-Jane. “For fear of Pan, you know.” And
-she turned back the pages of her little book to read
-aloud the sweetest and perfectest of the Idyls....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span><span class='sc'>Thyrsis.</span> Sweet, meseems, is the whispering sound
-of yonder pine tree, goatherd, that murmureth by the
-wells of water; and sweet are thy pipings. After Pan
-the second prize shalt thou bear away, and if he take
-the horned goat, the she-goat shalt thou win; but if he
-choose the she-goat for his meed, the kid falls to thee,
-and dainty is the flesh of kids ere the age when thou
-milkest them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Goatherd.</span> Sweeter, O shepherd, is thy song
-than the music of yonder water that is poured from
-the high face of the rock! Yea, if the Muses take the
-young ewe for their gift, a stall-fed lamb shalt thou
-receive for thy meed; but if it please them to take the
-lamb, thou shalt lead away the ewe for the second prize.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Thyrsis.</span> Wilt thou, goatherd, in the nymphs’
-name, wilt thou sit thee down here, among the tamarisks,
-on this sloping knoll, and pipe while in this place
-I watch thy flocks?</p>
-
-<div id='illus_137' class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/illus_137.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>“<span class='sc'>Pan’s Goat Herd</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>Goatherd.</span> Nay, shepherd, it may not be; we may
-not pipe in the noontide. ’Tis Pan we dread, who
-truly at this hour rests weary from the chase; and
-bitter of mood is he, the keen wrath sitting ever at his
-nostrils. But, Thyrsis, for that thou surely wert wont
-to sing <i>The Affliction of Daphnis</i>, and hast most deeply
-meditated the pastoral muse, come hither, and beneath
-yonder elm let us sit down, in face of Priapus and the
-fountain fairies, where is that resting-place of the
-shepherds, and where the oak trees are. Ah! if thou
-wilt but sing as on that day thou sangest in thy match
-with Chromis out of Libya, I will let thee milk, ay,
-three times, a goat that is the mother of twins, and
-even when she has suckled her kids her milk doth fill
-two pails. A deep bowl of ivy-wood, too, I will give
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>thee, rubbed with sweet bees’-wax, a two-eared bowl
-newly wrought, smacking still of the knife of the
-graver. Round its upper edges goes the ivy winding,
-ivy besprent with golden flowers; and about it is a
-tendril twisted that joys in its saffron fruit. Within is
-designed a maiden, as fair a thing as the gods could
-fashion, arrayed in a sweeping robe, and a snood on her
-head. Beside her two youths with fair love-locks are
-contending from either side, with alternate speech, but
-her heart thereby is all untouched. And now on one
-she glances, smiling, and anon she lightly flings the
-other a thought, while by reason of the long vigils of
-love their eyes are heavy, but their labour is all in vain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Beyond these an ancient fisherman and a rock are
-fashioned, a rugged rock, whereon with might and
-main the old man drags a great net for his cast, as one
-that labours stoutly. Thou wouldst say that he is
-fishing with all the might of his limbs, so big the sinews
-swell all about his neck, grey-haired though he be, but
-his strength is as the strength of youth. Now divided
-but a little space from the sea-worn old man is a vineyard
-laden well with fire-red clusters, and on the rough
-wall a little lad watches the vineyard, sitting there.
-Round him two she-foxes are skulking, and one goes
-along the vine-rows to devour the ripe grapes, and the
-other brings all her cunning to bear against the scrip,
-and vows she will never leave the lad, till she strand
-him bare and breakfastless. But the boy is plaiting
-a pretty locust-cage with stalks of asphodel, and fitting
-it with reeds, and less care of his scrip has he, and of
-the vines, than delight in his plaiting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All about the cup is spread the soft acanthus, a
-miracle of varied work, a thing for thee to marvel on.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>For this bowl I paid to a Calydonian ferryman a goat
-and a great white cream cheese. Never has its lip
-touched mine, but it still lies maiden for me. Gladly
-with this cup would I gain thee to my desire, if thou,
-my friend, wilt sing me that delightful song. Nay, I
-grudge it thee not at all. Begin, my friend, for be
-sure thou canst in no wise carry thy song with thee to
-Hades, that puts all things out of mind!</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>The Song of Thyrsis.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i> Thyrsis
-of Ætna am I, and this is the voice of Thyrsis.
-Where, ah! where were ye when Daphnis was languishing;
-ye Nymphs, where were ye? By Peneus’
-beautiful dells, or by dells of Pindus? for surely ye
-dwelt not by the great stream of the river Anapus, nor
-on the watch-tower of Ætna, nor by the sacred water
-of Acis.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>For him the jackals, for him the wolves did cry; for
-him did even the lion out of the forest lament. Kine
-and bulls by his feet right many, and heifers plenty,
-with the young calves bewailed him.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Came Hermes first from the hill, and said, “Daphnis,
-who is it that torments thee; child, whom dost
-thou love with so great desire?” The neatherds came,
-and the shepherds; the goatherds came; all they asked
-what ailed him. Came also Priapus,—</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>And said: “Unhappy Daphnis, wherefore dost thou
-languish, while for thee the maiden by all the fountains,
-through all the glades is fleeting, in search of thee?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>Ah! thou art too laggard a lover, and thou nothing
-availest! A neatherd wert thou named, and now thou
-art like the goatherd.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“For the goatherd, when he marks the young goats
-at their pastime, looks on with yearning eyes, and fain
-would be even as they; and thou, when thou beholdest
-the laughter of maidens, dost gaze with yearning
-eyes, for that thou dost not join their dances.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet these the herdsman answered not again, but he
-bare his bitter love to the end, yea, to the fated end he
-bare it.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ay, but she too came, the sweetly smiling Cypris,
-craftily smiling she came, yet keeping her heavy anger;
-and she spake, saying: “Daphnis, methinks thou didst
-boast that thou wouldst throw Love a fall, nay, is it
-not thyself that hast been thrown by grievous Love?”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>But to her Daphnis answered again: “Implacable
-Cypris, Cypris terrible, Cypris of mortals detested,
-already dost thou deem that my latest sun has set; nay,
-Daphnis even in Hades shall prove great sorrow to
-Love.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Get thee to Ida, get thee to Anchises! There are
-oak trees—here only galingale blows, here sweetly hum
-the bees about the hives!</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thine Adonis, too, is in his bloom, for he heards
-the sheep and slays the hares, and he chases all the
-wild beasts. Nay, go and confront Diomedes again,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>and say, ‘The herdsman Daphnis I conquered, do
-thou join battle with me.’”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ye wolves, ye jackals, and ye bears in the mountain
-caves, farewell! The herdsman Daphnis ye never
-shall see again, no more in the dells, no more in the
-groves, no more in the woodlands. Farewell Arethusa,
-ye rivers good-night, that pour down Thymbris your
-beautiful waters.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Begin, ye Muses dear, begin the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That Daphnis am I who here do herd the kine,
-Daphnis who water here the bulls and calves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“O Pan, Pan! whether thou art on the high hills of
-Lycæus, or rangest mighty Mænalus, haste hither to
-the Sicilian isle! Leave the tomb of Helice, leave that
-high cairn of the son of Lycæon, which seems wondrous
-fair, even in the eyes of the blessed.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Give o’er, ye Muses, come, give o’er the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Come hither, my prince, and take this fair pipe,
-honey-breathed with wax-stopped joints; and well it
-fits thy lip; for verily I, even I, by Love am now haled
-to Hades.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Give o’er, ye Muses, come, give o’er the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now violets bear, ye brambles, ye thorns bear violets
-and let fair narcissus bloom on the boughs of juniper!
-Let all things with all be confounded—from
-pines let men gather pears, for Daphnis is dying! Let
-the stag drag down the hounds, let owls from the hills
-contend in song with the nightingales.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Give o’er, ye Muses, come, give o’er the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>So Daphnis spake, and ended; but fain would Aphrodite
-have given him back to life. Nay, spun was all
-the thread that the Fates assigned, and Daphnis went
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>down the stream. The whirling wave closed over the
-man the Muses loved, the man not hated of the nymphs.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Give o’er, ye Muses, come, give o’er the pastoral song!</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>And thou, give me the bowl, and the she-goat, that
-I may milk her and pour forth a libation to the Muses.
-Farewell, oh, farewells manifold, ye Muses, and I,
-some future day, will sing you yet a sweeter song.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><i>The Goatherd.</i> Filled may thy fair mouth be with
-honey, Thyrsis, and filled with the honeycomb; and
-the sweet dried fig mayest thou eat of Ægilus, for thou
-vanquishest the cicala in song! Lo, here is thy cup,
-see, my friend, of how pleasant a savour! Thou wilt
-think it has been dipped in the well-spring of the Hours.
-Hither, hither, Cissætha: do thou milk her, Thyrsis.
-And you young she-goats, wanton not so wildly lest
-you bring up the he-goat against you.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>“What a crowded place Sicily is!” cried Jane,
-heaving an oppressed breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Isn’t it?” sympathized Peripatetica. “Here we
-are on our way to the very fountain, as it seems, of
-history—Syracuse, where nearly everything happened
-that ever did happen, and yet one has to mentally push
-one’s way through a swarming crowd of events to get
-there, because almost everything that didn’t happen
-in Syracuse occurred in these Sicilian plains. When
-you think of the layer on layer of human life, like geologic
-strata, that lies all over this place, you realize
-that it would take half a lifetime to come to some understanding
-of the significance of it all, and that it’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>foolish to go on until one can get some hold upon the
-meaning of what lies right here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This “simple but first-class conversation” took
-place in the eating-station at Catania which the two
-had all to themselves, most of the Tedeschi tourists
-frugally remaining in the train and staying their pangs
-from bottles, and with odds and ends out of paper
-parcels, from which feasts they emerged later replete
-but crumby.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Poor Catania! sunk to a mere feeding-trough for
-passing tourists. She, the great city sitting blandly
-among her temples and towers, wooed for her money
-bags by all the warlike neighbours. For whenever her
-neighbours squabbled with one another, which was
-pretty nearly all the time—or whenever an outsider intervened—each
-strove to engage the aid of this rich
-landholder, sending embassies and emissaries to bully
-or cajole Catania. As rich folk will, she always tried to
-protect herself by taking neither side completely, speaking
-fair to each, and, like all Laodiceans, she made
-thereby two enemies instead of one, and was considered
-fair prey by both.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That splendid, dangerous dandy, Alcibiades, was
-one of these ambassadors. Almost under the feet of
-Jane and Peripatetica, as they sat with their mouths
-full of crisp delectable little tarts, had the wily Athenian
-spoken in the Catanian theatre. The older men enjoyed
-his eloquent, graceful Greek, but they were quite
-determined not to be persuaded by it to let his fleet
-enter their harbour, his army enter their city, or to be
-used as a base from which to strike the Syracusians.
-The Catanians didn’t like Syracuse, but they didn’t
-mean to embroil themselves with her. They secretly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>hoped the Athenians would reduce that dangerous
-neighbour to despair, but if either destroyed the other—why,
-then it would be well to be able to show the
-victor their clean hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Alcibiades was quite aware he was not convincing
-them, but he enjoyed turning brilliant periods in public,
-and was meanwhile pleasantly conscious of the
-young men in the audience admiring the chasing of
-his buckles, the artful folds of his gold-embroidered
-chalmyde, the exquisite angle at which he knotted his
-fillet, privately resolving to readjust their own provincial
-toilets by the model of this famous glass of fashion.
-And when they all poured out of the theatre after his
-brilliantly preferred request had been politely refused,
-he could afford to smile calmly, for, behold! there was
-the Athenian fleet in the harbour, the Athenian army
-in the city. He had not been using those well-turned
-phrases for mere idleness. They had availed to keep
-the authorities occupied while his subordinates had
-executed his commands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And their caution was of no avail whatever, for in
-due time, when Alcibiades was in exile and the Athenians
-rotting in the Latomiæ, Syracuse duly turned and
-“took it out of” Catania. Took it out good and hard
-too.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was no use stopping over a train to see the
-old theatre and realize for themselves this curious bit
-of history; it only meant crawling through black passages
-by the light of a smoky candle, for Ætna in 1669—in
-a fit of ennui with poor Catania—had pitched
-down thousands of tons of lava upon her and hid all
-the rich city’s ancient glories from the sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was from Catania that another interesting Greek
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>had set out upon his last journey. A journey to the
-crest of that volcano which has been constantly taking
-a hand in the destinies of Sicily, with what—in its
-careless malice, its malignant furies—seems almost like
-the personal wickedness of some demon; that incalculable
-mountain whose soaring outlines had been coming
-out at Jane and Peripatetica all day whenever the
-train turned a corner, as if to reassure them that they
-couldn’t lose her if they tried. Ætna was from the
-very beginning the pre-eminent fact in this part of Sicily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>First Zeus—who always had a cheerful disregard of
-any rules of chivalry in dealing with his enemies—tied
-down the unlucky Titan Enceladus upon this very
-spot, and, gathering up enough of Sicily to make a
-mountain the size of Ætna, heaped it on top of him,
-probably congratulating himself the while that he had
-put a complete end to that particular annoyance. But
-quite a number of rulers since Zeus have discovered
-that in a rebellious temperament there reside resources
-of annoyingness which even a god cannot entirely
-foresee or provide against, and the Titan still heaves
-restlessly at his load from time to time, rocking the
-whole island with his struggles, toppling towers, engulfing
-cities, tearing the earth apart in his furies.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Some of the myths accuse Demeter herself of having
-set Ætna alight in her frenzy, that all Sicily might thus
-be illumined to aid her in the search for Persephone,
-and that never since that reckless day has she been able
-to extinguish it, but must fight, with rain and dews and
-snows to save her people’s bread from the flames forever
-threatening to destroy it. The fire pours forth
-from time to time, spreading cruel ruin, but ever, aided
-by her, man creeps up and up once more. Up to Randazzo;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>up to Brontë, the “thunder town,” given to
-Lord Nelson by Marie Antoinette’s sister, then Queen
-of the Two Sicilies, where the Dukes of Brontë, Nelson’s
-descendants, still live part of each year in their
-wild eyrie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The vine and the olive climb and climb after each
-catastrophe. They cover the old scars of the eruptions,
-perch in crevices where a goat can scarce stand,
-and wring from the rich crumbs of soil “wine that
-maketh glad the heart of man, and oil that causeth his
-countenance to shine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Up to the top of this Ætna—ten thousand feet up—on
-the last journey from Catania climbed Empedocles,
-that strange figure who passes with ringing brazen
-sandals through the history of Sicily. Empedocles,
-clothed in purple, crowned with a wreath of golden
-leaves, followed by thousands to whom he taught some
-strange, half Pythagorean worship, the form and meaning
-of which have vanished with time, save for some
-hints of a sort of mental healing practised upon his
-followers. Empedocles, composing vast poems of
-thousands of lines, and vaunting himself as a Super-man,
-saying:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“An immortal god, and no longer a mortal man, I
-wander among you; honoured by all, adorned with
-priestly diadems and blooming wreaths. Into whatever
-illustrious towns I enter men and women pay me
-reverence, and I am accompanied by thousands who
-thirst for their advantage; some being desirous to
-know the future, and others, tormented by long and
-terrible disease, waiting to hear the spells that soothe
-suffering.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whether his following fell away; whether he became
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>the victim of some wild melancholy, some corroding
-<i>welt-schmerz</i>—unable to cure the ills of his own
-soul with his own doctrines—no one knows, but the
-dramatic manner of his exit printed his name indelibly
-upon the memory of the world from which he fled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Deserting late at night a feast in Catania, he mounted
-a mule, climbed the rough steeps, threaded the dusky
-oak woods, dismissed his last follower, and—after lingering
-a moment to listen to the boy-harper Callicles
-singing in the dawn at the edge of the forest—he passed
-on upward through the snows, and was seen no more
-by human eye. Only the brazen sandal was found
-beside the crater, into whose unutterable furnace—urged
-by some divine despair—he had flung himself:
-all that had been that aspiring, passionate life vanishing
-in an instant in a hiss of steam, a puff of gas, upon
-the most stupendous funeral pyre ever chosen by man.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>There was endless history waiting to be looked into
-at Catania; frightful passagings and scufflings, massacres
-and exilings, murders, conspiracies and poisonings,
-and every other uncomfortable exhibition of
-“man’s inhumanity to man”—accompanied, of course,
-by heroisms, patriotic self-sacrifice, and a thousand
-humble, unremembered kindnesses and virtues, such
-as forever form warp and woof of the web of life and
-time. But railway schedules, even in Sicily, are almost
-heartlessly indifferent to tradition, and when the
-last tartlet was consumed the two seekers for Persephone
-were dragged Syracuse-ward, along with the
-crumby Tedeschi, divided during the long afternoon
-between increasing drowsiness and reproachful Baedekers.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>At last came sea marshes, where salt-pans evaporated
-in the sun, and toward sunset the train dumped
-them all promiscuously into station omnibuses at the
-capital of history; too grubby and fatigued to care
-whether the first class in historical research was called
-or not.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Tedeschi, after their frugal fashion, went in
-search of cheap pensions in the city, and only Jane and
-Peripatetica entered the wheeled tender of the Villa
-Politi, along with a young Italian pair, obviously engaged
-upon a honeymoon. A pair who never ceased
-to look unutterable things at each other out of fine
-eyes bistred with railway grime, nor ceased to murmur
-soft nothings from lips surrounded with the shadows
-of railway soot, undaunted by the frank interest
-of the hotel portier hanging on to the step, nor by the
-joltings of the dusty white road that led, through the
-noisy building of many ugly new villas, up to bare,
-wind-swept heights.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Strong in the possession of a note from the proprietor
-promising accommodation, with which, this time,
-the wayfarers had had the prudence to arm themselves,
-Jane and Peripatetica swept languidly up the steps,
-ordering that their luggage be placed in their rooms
-and tea served immediately upon the terrace.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But there were no rooms. No rooms of any kind,
-single or double!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The note was produced. There it was, down in
-black and white!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The young Signor Antonio drew a similar weapon—more
-black and white promises!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Padrone raised eyes and hands in a gesture almost
-consoling in its histrionic effectiveness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>Could he <i>make</i> guests depart at the time they said
-they would depart?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Could he cast them out neck and crop when they
-found Syracuse so attractive that they changed their
-minds about going away and vacating rooms promised
-to others?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He left it to Jane. He left it to Peripatetica. He
-left it to Signor Antonio. He left it to Signor Antonio’s
-beautiful bride, his “bellissima sposa.” <i>Could</i> he?
-He asked that!...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The two seekers were sternly sarcastic. Signor
-Antonio imitated the histrionic attitude. The Bellissima
-Sposa simply smiled fatuously. Beloved Antonio
-now held her destinies in his strong hand. Was
-it a royal suite? Well and good. Was it a corner of
-a stone wall under an umbrella? It was still well and
-good, for would she not still be with her Antonio?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The honeyed submissiveness of this was too much
-for even the wicked obduracy of the Padrone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There <i>was</i> a billiard room—for the night. To-morrow
-some one must keep his promise and go. They
-could choose among themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The bride was led away to the billiard room, still
-gazing upon her Antonio with intoxicated content, and
-two cross females, shaking the dust of the Villa Politi’s
-glowing garden and vine-wreathed terraces from their
-feet, jolted back again indignantly along the bare,
-windy heights fretted by the clamour of a sirocco-tortured
-sea. Past the gritty precincts of the ugly
-building villas, to the gaunt precincts of an hotel within
-the shrunken town. There to climb early into beds of
-the sloping pitch and rugged surface of a couple of
-tiled roofs; to lay their heads upon pillows undoubtedly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>stuffed with the obdurate skulls of all Syracuse’s myriad
-dead, and to listen in the wakefulness thereby induced
-to the dull sickening thuds about the floor which they
-knew, for good and sufficient reasons, to be the nocturnal
-hopping of the mighty Syracusan flea....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Fancy anyone being tempted to remain over <i>here</i>!”
-sneered Peripatetica.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was in the morning. They had compared the
-bleatings of the goats; the raucous early cries of the
-population; the effects of sirocco; the devices by
-which, clinging with teeth and nails, they had succeeded
-in maintaining their perch on the tile roofs; had boasted
-of their shikarry among the hopping, devouring monsters
-of the dark.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Talk of history!” mourned Jane. “Who could
-be the adequate Herodotus of last night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They were on their way to the Temple of Minerva.
-The route led by a wide sea-street, half of whose length
-gave upon that famous Inner Harbour so often filled
-with hostile fleets, so often barred by great chains, so
-often echoing with clanging battles, with the bubbling
-shrieks of the drowning. Now the sparkling waters
-rolled untinged with blood, the clean salt air swept unhindered
-across their path, for half of the huge sea-wall
-had been recently demolished to let in wind and
-sun, though part still towered grimly, darkening the
-way, shutting out the light from the opposite dwellings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The path turned at right angles and wound through
-narrow foot-pathless cracks, between houses; cracks
-that served the older Syracuse in lieu of streets, where
-swarmed in the dingy narrownesses the everlasting goat,
-the ever pervasive child. Very different children these
-from those cherub heads, with busy little legs growing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>out of them, who formed the rising population of Taormina.
-Taormina, who has solved that whole question
-of educating children; a question which still so puzzles
-the unintelligent rest of mankind. For weeks they had
-walked the ancient ways of that high-perched town,
-picking careful steps amid its infant hordes, and never
-once had they heard a cry, or seen a discontented child.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Occupation was the secret of all that cherubic
-goodness, I think,” said Peripatetica reflectively.
-“Don’t you remember that every single one of them
-had a job?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course, I remember,” said Jane crossly. “You
-needn’t remind <i>me</i>. It was only twenty-four hours ago
-we were there—though it seems ages since we fell out
-of the tender protecting care of dear ‘Questo-qui.’
-You can put it all in the book if you feel you must talk
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Jane, your usually charming temper has been
-spoiled by a night on a roof. It has made a cat of
-you,” persisted Peripatetica as she calmly circled round
-a goat. When the fount of her eloquence was unsealed
-it was not to be choked by the mere casting of a stony
-snub into it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I devoted some of the dark hours on my tiles to
-profound philosophic reflection upon the Taorminian
-methods with children,” she continued. “I have often
-thought the ennui suffered by children and pet animals
-was the cause of much of their restless fretfulness.
-Even the most undeveloped nature feels the difference
-between a real occupation and an imitation one; feels
-the importance of being an economic factor. Now
-those Taormina children from the age of two years are
-made to feel they are really important and necessary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>members of the family. They knit as soon as they can
-walk; they sew, they do drawn-work, at five. They
-sit in the streets at little tables and help cobble shoes
-or mend teakettles. They shop for busy parents; they
-fetch and carry. They pull out of the gardens and
-orchards weeds as tall as themselves, and everywhere
-are calm and self-respecting, and receive from their
-parents and their grown-up neighbours that serious
-courtesy and consideration due to useful and well-behaved
-citizens. One does not slap or jerk or scold valuable
-and important members of the community, and
-no youthful Taorminian would permit such an unjustifiable
-liberty from a parent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Borne on this flood of words they suddenly flowed
-out into a big irregular square where stood one of the
-most curious buildings in the world; the great temple
-of Pallas of the Syracusans. The enormous fluted
-Doric columns were sunk into the walls of a Cathedral,
-for Zosimus, bishop of Syracuse in the Seventh Century,
-had seized the columned frame and had plastered
-his church upon it—but so great was the diameter of
-the pillars that their sides and capitals protruded
-through the walls inside and out like the prodigious
-stone ribs of some huge skeleton. The Saracens had
-come later, and, after slaughtering the priests and
-women who clung shrieking to the altars, had added
-battlements to the roof, and the Eighteenth Century,
-being unable, of course, to keep its finger out of even
-the most reverend pie, had gummed upon the portal a
-flaring baroque façade of yellow stone. But through
-all disfigurements and defacements the temple still
-showed its soaring majesty, and Peripatetica, at sight
-of it, cried:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>“One dead in the fields!”...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For suddenly was revealed to the two the meaning
-of what they had been journeying to see—it was the
-dead body of a great civilization.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here, nearly three thousand years since, had come
-Archias, the rich Heraclid of Corinth. He had gathered
-sullenly into little ships his wealth, his family, and
-his servants, and had fled far down the horizon, an
-execrated fugitive because of the slaying of beautiful
-Actæon. And, finding on the coast of the distant
-God’s-land a reproduction of the bays and straits of
-the Corinth which had cast him out, he founded there
-a city. A city that was to have a life like the life of
-some gifted, powerful man, growing from timid infancy
-to a lusty youth full of dreams and passions and vague
-towering ambitions; struggling with and conquering
-his fellows; grasping at power and glory, heaping up
-riches unbelievable, decking himself in purple and gold,
-living long and gloriously and tumultuously; and who
-was to know rise and fall, defeats and triumphs, and
-finally was to die on the battlefield, and be left there by
-the victor to rot. So that all the flesh would drop from
-the long frame, the muscles dry and fall apart, the
-eyes be sightless, and the brain dark; and the little
-busy insects of the earth would carry away the fragments
-bit by bit, and on the field where he lay would
-be found at last only the hollow skull once so full of
-proud purpose; only the slack white bones of the arm
-that had wielded the strong sword, the vast arch of the
-gaunt ribs that once had sheltered the brave heart of
-Syracuse. And among these dry bones little curious
-creatures would come to peep and peer and build their
-homes; spiders spinning webs over the empty eye
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>sockets, mice weaving their nests among the wide-flung
-knuckles....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One little spider, about ten minutes old, lay in wait
-for these two tourist flies at the side door of the Cathedral
-with an offer to guide them, and though they
-sternly endeavoured to brush the insect aside, doubting
-his infantile capacity to direct their older intelligences,
-the Spider was not of the to-be-brushed-aside
-variety and knew better than they what they really
-needed. While they wandered through the vulgar
-uglinesses of Zosimus’ shrine, trying to recall Cicero’s
-glowing picture of the temple in its glory, he never took
-his claws off of them. While they talked of the great
-doors inlaid with gold and ivory, of the brazen spears,
-of the cella walls frescoed with the portraits and the
-battles of the Sikel Kings, of the pedestals between each
-column bearing images of the gods in ivory, silver, and
-bronze, the Spider was patient and merely murmured
-“Greco” or “molto antico” by way of encouraging
-chorus. He let them babble unchecked of the tall
-image of armed Pallas standing behind the altar, with
-plumed helmet and robe of Tyrian purple, grasping her
-great spear in her right hand and resting the left hand
-upon the golden shield that bore a sculptured Medusa
-head. Upon her pedestal was carved the cock, the
-dragon, and the serpent, and the altar before her was
-heaped with fresh olive boughs about the smouldering
-spices sending up wavering clouds of scented smoke that
-coiled among the ceiling’s gilded plates. Without, upon
-the roof, stood another great shield of gilded bronze, a
-beacon for sailors who, setting out upon long voyages, carried
-a cup of burning ashes from her altar to sprinkle on
-the waves as the glittering landmark faded down the sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>But when these reminiscences of the “molto antico”
-finally exhausted themselves, the Spider rose to his
-occasion. He was vague about Minerva, but Santa
-Lucia was his trump card. He was eminently capable
-of guiding any number of travellers to the chapel of
-that big swarthy idol adorned with wire-and-cotton
-wreaths, and hung about with votive silver hands and
-hearts, arms and legs, in grateful testimony of the
-limbs and organs cured by her mercy and power. He
-could pour out in burning Sicilian, illustrated by superb
-spidery gestures, a thrilling description of the
-yearly <i>villegiatura</i> of Syracuse’s patron saint. How
-twice in a twelvemonth she feels the need of change
-of air, and all the town attends her visit of a few days
-to the church beyond the bridge, she being escorted by
-priests and censors, and blaring bands, and wearing her
-finest jewels and toilet, as befits a lady on ceremonial
-travels. It is a festa for all Syracuse, Spider explains,
-with much good eating and “molto buono vino.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane, always a molten mass of useful information,
-interjects sotto voce into the flood of his narrative that
-precisely the same ceremony was used for the image
-of Diana when she was the patron goddess of the
-Syracusans, and the very same molto buono vino so
-overcame the populace at one of Diana’s festas that
-Marcellus, the Roman, after a siege of three years,
-captured the long and fiercely defended city that very
-night.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Spider took them later to see the handful of
-fragments alone remaining of Diana’s fane—broken
-columns sunk in a fosse between two houses—though
-once a temple as splendid as Minerva’s. A temple
-served by many priestesses, and surrounded by a great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>grove sloping down to the fountain of Arethusa. Among
-these trees the Oceanides herded the sacrificial deer,
-and troops of just such silken-coated, wavy-horned
-goats as feed to-day upon the Catanian plain. And to
-this grove came young girls, offering up, to please the
-great Huntress, their abandoned childish toys of baked
-clay. For oddly enough the wild, arrowy goddess who
-loved to shed the blood of beasts, adored children, and
-was a special patron of theirs, and would even listen
-favourably to the petitions of barren wives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There seemed some strange vagueness, some shadowy
-inexplicableness in the worship of Diana. All the
-other gods typified some force of nature, some resultant
-struggle and passion of man caught in nature’s web,
-but of the moon they knew only that it influenced tides
-and the growing of plants. What is one to make then
-of this fierce ivory-skinned Maid who sweeps, crescent-crowned,
-through the moonlit glades of the deep primitive
-forests, with bayings of lean questing hounds and
-echoing call of silver horns, hard on the track of crashing
-boar, of leaping deer? There is something as glimmeringly
-elusive, as magically haunting in the personality
-and the worship of Diana as in the moon itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They offered the web of this conundrum to the Spider,
-but he wisely refused to allow himself to be entangled
-in it. This, however, is anticipating the real course of
-events.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Already, before leaving the Cathedral, another conundrum
-had been asked and not answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>High on opposite sides of the walls of the nave Jane
-and Peripatetica had observed two ornate glass and
-gilt coffins. The one on the left contained the half-mummy,
-half-skeleton of a man. A young, beardless
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>face it was, the still fair skin drawn tight over the
-features; the still blond hair clustering about it in curls
-of dusty gold. The fleshless visage was handsome,
-and though strange and ghostly, not repulsive. The
-skeleton body was clothed in velvet and gold, and the
-bony, gloved fingers clasped a splendid silver-scabbarded
-sword; an empty dagger case was hanging
-from an embroidered baldrick across the dead man’s
-breast. He lay on his side in an uneasy attitude, looking
-through the transparent pane of his last home
-toward the opposite crystal sarcophagus. This opposite
-coffin contained a half-mummied, half-skeleton
-woman—a woman also young and fair-haired; artfully
-coiffed, her tresses wrapped with pearls. Neither
-was <i>her</i> face repulsive; some strange process had preserved
-a dry whiteness in the skin stretched smooth
-and unwrinkled upon the bones and integuments,
-though all the flesh was gone. She too was clothed
-in gold and silk in a fashion centuries old. Through
-the lace of the sleeves showed the white polished bones
-of what must once have been warm rounded arms.
-She too was gloved; she too crouched upon her side
-uneasily, but she did not face her companion. Her
-head was thrown back as if in pain; and plunged
-through the pointed silk corselet—just where there
-must once have beat a young heart—was the gold-handled
-dagger from the empty dagger case hung to
-the embroidered baldrick.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Who were they?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>What tragedy was this? why did they lie here in
-their crystal sepulchres—was it the record of some
-strange crime, preserved with meticulous care for all
-the world to see?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>The Spider could not tell. They had always been
-there. He did not know their names or their story.
-He could not refer to anyone who did. Baedeker was
-equally indifferent and uncommunicative; he made no
-mention of them. Hare was silent. Sladen ignored
-them. No questioning of guide-books or guides ever
-unravelled that mystery.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>From the temple of Diana the Spider led Jane and
-Peripatetica through more narrow, crooked streets
-thronged with rough, fierce Syracusan children, to see
-the Sixteenth Century palace of the Montaltos, now
-fallen on grimy days. The windows with their ogives
-and delicate twisted columns were crumbling, and the
-noble court—through which silken guests and mailed
-retainers had passed to mount the great stairs and
-throng the long balconies—was now full of squalid,
-squalling populace, and flocks of evil-savoured brown
-goats being milked for the evening meal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For some unexplained reason the mere presence of
-the Spider was an offence to the lowering boys who
-laired in this court. His grown-up air of being capably
-in charge of two female forestieri stank in their
-resentful nostrils, but Spider was an insect of his hands,
-landing those hands resoundingly upon the cheeks of
-his buffeters and hustlers until an enraged mother took
-the part of one of her discomfited offspring, and under
-her fierce cuffings the Spider melted into outraged tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica had already discovered that angry English
-had a demoralizing effect upon the natives. Its
-crisp consonants seemed as daunting as blows to the
-vowelled Sicilian; armed with which, and a parasol,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>the Spider was rescued and borne half way to the
-fountain of Arethusa before he could control his sniffles
-and his protesting fingers, upon which he offered passionate
-illustration that even Hercules could not overcome
-the odds of ten to one, and that tears under the
-circumstances left no smirch upon nascent manhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane, with her usual large grasp of financial questions,
-applied a lire to the wounded heart with the happiest
-results, and it was a once more united and cheerful
-trio which leaned over Arethusa’s inadequate little
-fount with its green scum and its frowzy papyrus plants.
-Poor Nymph! She of the rainbow, and the “couch
-of snows”—she whose “footsteps were paved with
-green.” Flying from the gross wooing of Alpheus she
-comes all the way from Elis under the sea to take
-refuge with moon-crowned Artemis—Artemis “the protectress”—and
-for safety is turned into a sparkling
-pool which feeds all Syracuse with its sweet waters.
-Now Artemis is dead. Her cool groves have given way
-to acres of arid stone convents; earthquakes have
-cracked Arethusa’s basin, letting the sea in and the
-sweet water out; modern bad taste has walled her
-vulgarly about, and the poor old nymph can only
-gurgle reiterantly, “I was once a beauty; long ago,
-long ago!” with not the smallest hope that any tourist
-will believe it.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>The Spider has retired to his web. <i>Pranzo</i> has been
-discussed, and Jane and Peripatetica, refreshed, are taking
-another nibble at the vast mouthful of Syracuse’s past.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was a thrilling <i>pranzo</i>. Not because of the food,
-nor of its partakers. The food was the same old stereotyped
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>menu. Gnocchi with cheese. Vegetables, divorced
-from the meats—they cannot apparently occupy
-the same course in any part of Italy. More cheese—a
-<i>jardinière</i> of pomegranates, oranges, dates, and almonds.
-Wine under a new name, but with the same delicate
-perfumed savour of all the other wines they have drunk.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No more did the guests offer any startling variety.
-The same tall condescending English woman; elderly,
-manacled with bracelets, clanking with chains; domineering
-a plain, red cheek-boned, flat-chested daughter
-obviously needing a lot of marrying off on Mamma’s
-part; dominating also a nervous, impetuous husband—the
-travelling Englishman being much given to
-nervous impetuosity. A few fat, greasy Italians with
-napkin corners planted deeply into their collars, and
-scintillating the gross joys of gluttony. Two dark-faced
-melancholy-eyed <i>foreigners</i>, not easily placed as
-to nationality. All types of feminine Americans. If
-it were possible to see only their eyes they would be
-recognizable as Americans from their glance of bold,
-alert self-confidence and cheerfulness, very noticeable
-by contrast with the European eye. Also if one could
-see only that inevitable ready-made silk bodice the
-wearers would be recognizable as fellow countrywomen.
-The man who manufactures that type of bodice at
-home must be rich beyond the dreams of avarice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No; the thrill of the <i>pranzo</i> was due to invisible
-causes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Behind the door from which the hopelessly estranged
-meat and vegetables emerged there arose a clash and
-murmur as of some domestic storm, and the waiters
-passed the spinach course with an air so tense and distrait
-that the crunching horde felt their forks strain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>with curiosity in their hands. Even the fat Italians
-paused in their gorging to stare. Even the foreigners’
-melancholy dark eyes grew interested.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>After the spinach course ensued a long interval; the
-waiters lingering about with empty platters and furtive
-pretences of occupation, plainly not daring to enter
-that door, behind which ever waxed the loud rumour
-of domestic war.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The interval increased in length. The clamour rose
-and rose, and someone went in search of the Padrone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ours was a splendid Padrone; clothed upon with a
-<i>redingote</i> and an historic and romantic dignity. For
-had not Guy de Maupassant mentioned him with respectful
-affection in “La Vie Errante”? The memory
-of which artistic appreciation still surrounded him
-with an aura. The Padrone entered that fateful door
-with calm, stern purpose, while the guests crumbled
-their bread in patient hope.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The domestic storm drew breath for one terrible
-moment, then suddenly rose to the fury of a cyclone,
-and the Padrone was shot convulsively forth into our
-midst, the romantic aura hanging in tragic tatters
-about him. Holding to the wall he swallowed hard
-several times, seeking composure, then passed, with
-knees wabbling nervously beneath the stately redingote,
-to the office, where could be witnessed his passionately
-protesting gestures and whispers poured into the sympathetic
-bosom of the concierge.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cyclone had expended itself; the courses resumed
-their course, but what had taken place behind
-that closed door was never known. It remained another
-Syracusan mystery.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>The Museo at Syracuse, though small, is the best in
-Europe, for here, as on an open page, is written the
-whole history of the island of Sicily—not a gap or a
-break in the story of more than three thousand years;
-of perhaps five thousand years, for it antedates all the
-certain dates of history. Here are cases full of the
-stone and obsidian tools and weapons of the autochthonous
-Sikels; their crude pottery, their rough burial urns,
-their bone ornaments, and feathery wisps of their woven
-stuffs. These are all curiously like the relics of the
-Mound-builders of America, now in the Smithsonian
-Institution. Apparently the Stone Age was as deadeningly
-similar everywhere as is our own Age of Steel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Follows the rude metal working of the Siculians,
-who, having some knowledge of the use of iron, can
-build boats, and come across the narrow strait at Messina
-and drive out the Sikels. So long ago as that the
-old process of “assimilation” begins. The Siculians
-begin to work in colour, to ornament their pottery, to
-dye their stuffs, to mark their silver and iron with rough
-chisel patterns—patterns and colours again astonishingly
-like those of our own Pueblo Indians.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There are fragments of Phœnician work here and
-there—the traders from Tyre and Sidon are beginning
-to cruise along the coast and barter their superior wares
-with the inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All at once the arts make a great spring upward.
-The Greeks have appeared. Rude, archaic, Dorian,
-these arts at first, but strong, and showing a new spirit.
-The potteries have a glaze, the patterns grow more intricate,
-the reliefs show a plastic striving for grace and
-life, the ornaments are of gold as well as silver and
-bronze, and steel has appeared. Follows a splendid
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>flowering; an apogee of beauty is reached. Vases of
-exquisite contours covered with spirited paintings, pictures
-of life and death, of war and love. Coins that
-are unrivaled in numismatic beauty; struck frequently
-with the quadriga to celebrate the winning of the chariot
-race at the Olympic games; a triumph valued as greatly
-by the Greeks of Sicily as is the winning of the Derby
-by English horsemen. Tools, jewels, arms, all adorned
-with infinite taste and skill. Statues of such subtle
-grace and loveliness as this famous “Nymph,” the
-long-buried marble now grown to tints of blond pearl.
-Figurines of baked clay, reproducing the costumes, the
-ornaments, the physiology of the passing generations—faces
-arch, lovely, full of gay humour. Splendid sarcophagi,
-and burial urns still holding ashes and calcined
-bones, and tiny clay reproductions of the death
-masks of the departed, full of tender human individuality,
-or else heads of the gods, such as that enchanting
-tinted and crowned Artemis, that still lies in one of the
-great sarcophagi amid a handful of burned bones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Punic and Roman remains begin to show themselves,
-recording that tremendous struggle between Europe
-and Africa for dominion in the midland sea, under the
-impact of which the Greek civilization is to be crushed.
-Byzantine ornament appears. Africa makes another
-struggle and is for a while triumphant, leaving record
-of the Moorish domination in damascened arms, in
-deep-tinted tiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Goths and Normans fuse with the Saracen arts
-at first, but soon dominate the Eastern influence and
-shake it off, developing an art inferior only to the Greek.
-The Spanish follow, baroque, sumptuous, pseudo-classical.
-All the story of all the conquerors is here.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>“Oh!” sighs Peripatetica. “What an illustrated
-history; I could go on turning its pages for days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, you’ll turn them alone!” snapped Jane,
-clutching frantically at her side, and adding in a dreadful
-whisper: “There are <i>fleas</i> hopping all over these
-historical pages. Come away this instant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But they linger a moment on the way out to look
-again at the famous headless Venus Landolina.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is only one real Venus,” commented Peripatetica
-contemptuously. “The Melian. All the rest
-are only plump ladies about to step into their baths. I
-detest these fat women with insufficient clothing who
-sprawl all over Europe calling themselves the goddesses
-of love. Goddesses indeed! They look more like
-soft white chestnut worms. That great dominating,
-irresistible lady of the Louvre is a deity, if you like—Our
-Lady of Beauty—besides, this little person’s calf
-is flat on the inner side.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Iss it not righd dat her calve should be vlat on de
-inside?” queried an elderly Swiss, also looking, and
-showing all her handsome porcelain teeth in a smile
-of anxious uncertainty. “I dink dat must be righd,
-because Baedeker marks her wid a ztar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t allow your opinions to be unsettled by this
-lady’s,” consoled Jane sweetly. “She isn’t really an
-authority. It would be wiser perhaps and more comfortable
-to be guided by Baedeker.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Bud she has no head,” grieved the Swiss. “How
-can Baedeker mark her wid a ztar w’en she has no
-head?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>How indeed? But then, there is such a lot of
-body!...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>It is some days later. They have “done” the river
-Amapus; have been rowed among the towering feathery
-papyrus plants, the original roots of which were
-sent to Heiro I. by Ptolemy, and which still flourish in
-Sicily though all the parent plants have vanished out
-of Egypt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They have looked down into the clear depths of La
-Pisma’s spring. Jane says it is less beautiful than the
-Silver Spring in Florida out which the Ocklawaha
-river rises, but that fountain of a tropical forest—transparent
-as air, and held in a great argent bowl—has
-no history, while La Pisma was the playmate of
-fair Persephone, and on seeing her ravished away by
-fiery Pluto melted quite away into a flood of bright
-tears. And it was she who, having caught up Persephone’s
-dropped veil, floated it to the feet of Demeter,
-and told her where to look for the lost daughter. La
-Pisma and Anapus her lover were, too, the real guardians
-of Syracuse, for as one after another of the armies
-of invading enemies camped on their oozy plain they
-sapped the invaders’ strength, and blighted their courage
-with fevers from the miasmatic breaths exhaled
-upon the foes as they slept.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane and Peripatetica have found another mystery.
-Syracuse, it appears, is full of mysteries. This last is
-known as the Castle of Euryalus, and they must take
-horse and drive to it, six miles from the hotel, though
-still within the walls of the original city, once twenty-two
-miles about; shrunk in these later days to less
-than three. This six miles of pilgrimage gives ample
-time to search the guide-books for information as to
-this thing they have come out for to see. But the
-guide-books palter, and shuffle and evade, as they are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>prone to do about anything really interesting. Euryalus,
-solid enough to their eyes and to their sense of
-touch, seems as illusive in history as the cloudy towers
-of the Fata Morgana—now you see it, and now you
-don’t. It seems to come from nowhere. No one can
-tell when or by whom it was built, but it always turns
-up in the history of Syracuse in moments of stress—much
-like those Christian patron-saints who used suddenly
-to descend in shining armour to turn the tide of
-battle. One hears of Dionysius strengthening it when
-news comes that the dread Himilcon is on his way
-from Carthage with two hundred triremes accompanied
-by rafts, galleys, and transports innumerable. Dionysius
-makes Euryalus the key of a surprise he prepares
-for the Carthagenians, for when the latter come sailing
-into the harbour—“A forest of black masts and dark
-sails, with transports filled with elephants trumpeting
-at the smell of land,” and from the West “comes trampling
-across the plain by the Helorian road and the
-banks of the Anapus, the Punic army 300,000 strong,
-with 3,000 horse led by Himilcon in person,”—there
-stands waiting for them one of the most amazing works
-ever wrought by the will of a single man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dionysius in twenty days has built a wall three miles
-long barring Himilcon’s ingress at the only weak point.
-Seventy thousand of the inhabitants of Syracuse had
-worked at this building. Forty thousand slaves had
-been in the Latomiæ cutting the blocks of easily hewn
-sandstone, which six thousand oxen carried to the
-wall, while other armies of men had been upon the
-slopes of Ætna ravaging the oak woods for huge beams.
-When Himilcon comes the wall is complete.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then there are more appearings and disappearings
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>through the years, and suddenly Euryalus fills the foreground
-again. Archimedes is helping Hieronymus to
-fortify it against Marcellus—is designing veiled sally
-ports, and oblique apertures from which his “scorpions”
-and other curious war engines may hurl stones,
-is placing there the burning glasses with which he will
-set the Roman galleys on fire by means of the sun’s
-heat. But though the Carthagenians were terrible the
-Roman is more terrible still, and in spite of Archimedes
-they get into Syracuse after a three years’ siege. While
-the furies of final capture are raging Archimedes sits
-calmly drawing figures upon the sand. A Roman
-soldier rushing by carelessly smears them with his foot.
-Archimedes is angry, and “uses language.” The soldier,
-angry in his turn—no doubt “language” in Greek
-sounded especially insulting—shortens his sword and
-stabs “the greatest man then living in the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Marcellus sheds tears when he hears it, and buries
-the father of mathematics with splendid honours,
-marking the tombstone—as Archimedes had wished—with
-no name, with only a sphere and a cylinder. He
-spared Syracuse too; left her temples and splendours
-intact, and forbid the usual plundering and massacres.
-Marcellus was, it seems, in every way a very decent
-person, and Peripatetica grieved that those frigid Romans
-wouldn’t let him have a triumph when he went
-home, and Jane breathed a hope that he used more
-language to that murderous soldier....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Later comes Cicero to Syracuse, hunting evidence
-against Verres, who had, as pro-consul, robbed the
-city of all the treasures Marcellus had spared, and the
-great lawyer takes time from his examination of witnesses
-to look out Archimedes’ resting place. He finds
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>it overgrown with thistles and brambles, but recognizes
-it by the sphere and cylinder, and sets it once
-more in order.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“So Tully paused, amid the wrecks of time,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>On the rude stone to trace the truth sublime,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Where at his feet in honoured dust disclosed</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>The immortal Sage of Syracuse reposed.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You cribbed that from one of the guide-books,”
-jeered Jane.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course I did,” admitted Peripatetica with calm
-unblushingness. “Do you imagine I go around with
-samples of formal Eighteenth Century Pope-ry concealed
-about my person?”</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>They are on their way to the theatre, passing by the
-ancient site of the Forum, which site is now a mere
-dusty, down-at-heels field where goats browse and
-donkeys graze, and where squads of awkward recruits
-are being trained to take cover behind a couple of grass
-blades, to fire their empty rifles with some pretence at
-unanimity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The road winds between walled orange and lemon
-groves, in which contadini are drying and packing
-miles of pungent golden peel for transportation to
-French and English confectioners. The air is redolent
-with it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Themistocles—Jane doubts his sponsors in baptism
-having had any hand in this, but the grubby card he
-presented with so pleasant a glance, so fine a gesture at
-the time of striking a bargain for the day, bore it printed
-as plain as plain—Themistocles, then, dismounts before
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>a small drinking shop lying at the foot of an elevation.
-With one broad sweep of his hand he signifies
-that he is making them free of history, and yields
-them to the care of a nobleman in gold and blue; a
-nobleman possessing a pleasing manner and one of
-those plangent, golden-strung voices which the lucky
-possessors always so enjoy using.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The two demand the Latomia Paradiso; the name
-having seduced their sentimental imaginations. The
-peer intimates that the name is misleading, but with
-gentle firmness they drop down the path which descends
-into the quarries from which Dionysius hurriedly
-snatched the material for his wall; material (almost as
-easy to cut as cheese, but hardening in the air) which
-has been dug, scooped, and riven away as fantastically
-as if sculptured by the capricious flow of water, leaving
-caverns, towers, massy columns, arches, a thousand
-freaked shapes. Now all this is draped with swaying
-curtains of ivy, with climbing roses heavy with unblown
-buds, with trailing geraniums hanging from
-crannies, with wild flowers innumerable. Lemon and
-fig trees grow upon the quarries’ floor, mosses and
-ferns carpet the shady places, black-green caroba trees
-huddle in neglected corners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The nobleman, however, is impatient to show other
-wonders. He leads the way into caverns through
-whose openings shafts of sunlight steal, turning the
-dusk within to a blond gloom, caverns where rope-makers
-walk to and fro twisting long strands, twirling
-wheels, with a cheerful chatter that booms hollowly
-back to them from the vaulted darkness over their
-heads; where the birds who flit in and out hear their
-twitterings reflected enormously, with a curious effect;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>where even the sound of dripping moisture is magnified
-into a large solemnity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He has saved the best for the last. Here an arch
-soars a hundred feet, giving entrance to a lofty narrow
-cave. Where the sides of the arch meet is a small
-channel of chiselled smoothness, ending in an orifice
-through which a glimpse of the sky shows like a tiny
-blue gem. It is the Ear of Dionysius. In this cave,
-so the story runs, the Tyrant confined suspected conspirators,
-for this is a natural whispering gallery, and
-the lowest of confidential talk within it would mount
-the walls, each lightest word would run along that
-smooth channel, as through the tube of an ear, and
-reach the listener at the orifice. For the uneasy Dictator
-knows that his turbulent Greek subjects, who
-cannot rule themselves, are equally unable to bear
-placidly the rule of another, and it would have been interesting,
-and at times exciting, to have been permitted
-to watch that stern, bent face as the rebellious protests
-climbed in whispers to the greedy ear a hundred feet
-above.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A wonderful echo lives in this cave. Now it is plain
-why the guide has such large and vibrant tones—he
-was chosen because of that natural gift.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Addio!” he cries gaily. “<i>Addio</i>,” calls the darkness,
-a little sadly and wistfully. The guide sings a
-stave, and all the dusk is full of melodious chorus. He
-intones a sonorous verse, and golden words roll down
-to them through the gloom.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Speak! speak!” the nobleman urges, and Jane and
-Peripatetica meekly breathe a few banalities in level
-American tones. Not a sound returns; their syllables
-are swallowed by the silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>“Staccato! staccato!” remonstrates the guide, and
-when they comply, light laughing voices vouchsafe
-answers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think,” says Peripatetica reflectively, as they leave
-the Latomia, “that one has to address life like that if
-one is to get a clear reply—to address it crisply, definitely,
-with quick inflections. Level, flat indefiniteness
-will awake no echoes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“‘How true’! as the ladies write on the margins of
-circulating library books,” comments Jane with unveiled
-sarcasm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The guide has lots more up his gold-braided sleeve.
-He opens a gate and displays to them with a flourish
-the largest altar in the world. Six hundred feet one
-way, sixty feet the other; cut partly from solid rock,
-made in part of masonry. Hiero II. thought he knew
-a trick of governing worth any amount of listening at
-doors. Those who are fed and amused are slack conspirators.
-So this huge altar to Zeus is built, and here
-every year he sacrifices 450 oxen to the ruler of heaven.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It must have rather run into money for him,” says
-Jane thoughtfully, “but he probably considered it
-cheaper to sacrifice oxen than be sacrificed himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” says Peripatetica, who has just been consulting
-the guide-book. “It must have been rather like
-the barbecues the American politicians used to give to
-their constituents half a century ago, for only the choicest
-bits were burnt before the gods, sprinkled with oil
-and wine and sweet-smelling spices, and the populace,
-I suppose, carried home the rest. No doubt Hiero
-found it a paying investment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The theatre, when reached, is found, of course, to
-have a beautiful situation. All Greek theatres have.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>They were a people who liked to open all the doors of
-enjoyment at once, and when they filled this enormous
-semicircle (24,000 could sit there) cut from the living
-rock upon the hillside, they could not only listen to the
-rolling, organ-like Greek of the great poets, and have
-their souls shaken with the “pity and terror” of tragedy,
-or laugh at the gay mockery of comedy, but by
-merely lifting their eyes they could look out upon the
-blue Ionian sea, the smiling flowered land, and in the
-distance the purple hills dappled with flying shadows.
-In their time all the surrounding eminences were
-crowned with great temples, and behind them—this
-was a contrast very Greek—lay the Street of Tombs.
-For they had not a shuddering horror of death, hastening
-their departed into remote isolation from their own
-daily life. They liked to pass to their occupations and
-amusements among the beautiful receptacles made for
-the ashes of those they had loved.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In this theatre Syracuse saw not only the great
-dramas, but the great dramatists and poets. Æschylus,
-sitting beside Hiero I., saw all his plays produced
-here; “The Ætnaiai” and “The Persians” were written
-for this stage. Pindar was often here; so were Bacchylides
-and Simonides, and a host of lesser playwrights.
-Indeed, no theatre has ever known such
-famous auditors. Theocritus, Pythagoras, Sappho, Empedocles,
-Archimedes, Plato, Cicero, have all sat here.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Plato was long in Syracuse; called by Dionysius to
-train his son Dion, he labours with such poor success
-that Dion is driven from the power inherited from his
-father, by the citizens outraged at the grossness of his
-vices. Before this fall Plato has left him in disgust,
-Dion remarking with careless insolence:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>“I fear you will not speak kindly of me in Athens.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To which the philosopher, with still more insolent
-sarcasm, replies:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We are little likely to be so in want of a topic in
-Athens as to speak of you at all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yet it would seem as if no good effort was ever
-wholly lost, for when Dion, earning his bread in exile
-as an obscure schoolmaster, is sneeringly asked what
-he ever learned from Plato, his dignified answer is,
-“He taught me to bear misfortune with resignation.”</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Themistocles has conducted them, with much cracking
-of his whip, much irrelevant conversation, quite to
-the other side of what once was Syracuse, and has deposited
-them before a little low gate that pierces a high
-wall. Inside this gate is a tiny garden cultivated by
-two monks who do the work by means of short-handled
-double-ended hoes; a laborious-looking Sicilian implement.
-The garden is full of pansies growing between
-low hedges of sweet-smelling thyme and rosemary.
-At the same moment there debarks a carriage
-load of touring Germans. Typical touring Germans;
-solid, rosy, set four-square to the winds; all clinging
-to Baedekers encased in covers of red and yellow cross
-stitch of Berlin wool, all breathing a fixed intention of
-seeing everything worth seeing in the thorough-going
-German fashion. The monks openly squabble as to
-the division of the parties who have come to see the
-church and the catacombs, and eventually the big,
-shaggy, red-haired one, who might be some ancient
-savage Gaul come to life, sullenly carries off the Teutons.
-It is somewhat of a shock to Jane and Peripatetica
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>when their slim, supple, handsome Sicilian explains
-to them that this contest has its reason not in their personal
-charm, but is owing to a reluctance to guide the
-hated Tedeschi.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is something inexplicable in this universal unpopularity
-of the Teuton in Italy. Germany has been
-dotingly sentimental about Italy for generations.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'>“Kennst du das Land”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>has hovered immanent on every lip from beyond the
-Rhine ever since the days of Goethe. They passionately
-study her language, her literature, her monuments,
-and her history. They make pilgrimages to
-worship at all her shrines, pouring in reverent Pan-Germanic
-hordes across the Alps to do it, and despite
-their extreme and skilful frugality they must necessarily
-leave in the Peninsula hundreds of thousands of
-their hard-earned, laboriously hoarded marks, which
-they have not grudged to spend in the service of beauty.
-Yet Italy seems possessed of a sullen repugnance to the
-entire race.</p>
-<p class='c007'>“Tedeschi!” hisses the monk. “Tutto ‘<i>Ja! Ja!
-Wunderschön!</i>’” with a deliriously funny imitation of
-their accent and gestures, as he steers swiftly around a
-corner to prevent the two parties fusing into one.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The church of San Giovanni is, of course, founded
-upon a Greek temple—most Sicilian churches are, and—of
-all places!—this one stands upon a ruin of a temple
-of Bacchus—the fragments of which poke up all through
-the tiny garden. The church, equally, of course, has
-been Eighteenth Centuried, but happily not wholly;
-remaining a great wheel window, and beautiful bits
-here and there of Twelfth Century Gothic in the outer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>walls, though the interior is in the usual dusty and
-neglected gaunt desuetude. The whole place is in decay,
-even the attendant monastery is crumbling, the
-number of monks shrunk to a mere handful, despite
-the fact that this is a spot of special sanctity, for when
-they descend into the massive chapel of the crypt there
-is pointed out to them the little altar before which Saint
-Paul preached when he was in Syracuse.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course, St. Paul was here,” said Jane. “Everybody
-who was anybody came to Syracuse sooner or
-later—including ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The guide is firm as to the altar having stood in this
-very chapel when that remarkable Hebrew poured out
-to the Syracusans his strange new message of democracy,
-but this is clearly the usual fine monkish superiority
-to cramping probabilities, for such rib-vaultings
-as these were as yet undreamed of by the architects of
-Paul’s day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The altar is Greek, and no doubt was standing in
-the fane of Bacchus when the Jew spoke by it. The
-Greeks were interested and tolerant about new religions,
-and the life and death which Paul described would
-hardly have seemed strange to them, spoken in that
-place. That birth and death, the blood turned to
-wine, the sacred flesh eaten in hope of regeneration,
-having so many and such curious resemblances to the
-legends, and to the worship of the Vine God celebrated
-on that very spot. “At Thebes alone,” had said Sophocles,
-speaking of the birth of Bacchus, “mortal women
-bear immortal gods.” The violent death, the descent
-into hell, the resurrection, were all familiar to them,
-and what a natural echo would be found in their hearts
-to the saying, “I am the true Vine.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>The monk only smiles bitterly when it is demanded
-of him to explain why a spot of so reverent an association
-should be abandoned to dust and decay, and to
-the interest of curious tourists, when the mere apocryphal
-vision of an hysterical peasant girl should draw
-hordes of miracle-seeking pilgrims to Lourdes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Perhaps there was something typical in that anguished
-Christ painted upon the great flat wooden
-crucifix that hung over the altar in the crypt; a Christ
-fading slowly into a mere grey shadow; the dim,
-hardly visible ghost of a once living agony....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The monk goes before, the flickering candle which
-he shades with his fingers throwing a fan of yellow rays
-around his tonsured head. These are the Catacombs
-of Syracuse.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'>“On every hand the roads begin.”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Roads underground, these, leading away endlessly
-into darkness. At long intervals they widen into
-lofty domed chapels rudely hewn, as is all this place,
-directly from the rock. Here and there a narrow shaft
-is cut upward through the earth, letting in faint gleams
-of sunshine through a fringe of grass and ferns, showing
-sometimes an oxalis drooping its pale little golden
-face to peer over the shaft’s edge into the gloom below.
-And in all these roads—miles and miles of roads, extending
-as far as Catania it is said; roads under roads
-three tiers deep—and in all these roads and chapels
-are only open graves. Graves in the floor beneath
-one’s feet; graves in every inch of the walls; graves
-over graves, graves behind graves. Great family
-graves cut ten feet back into the rock, containing narrow
-niches for half a dozen bodies—graves where four
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>generations have slept side by side. Graves that are
-mere shallow scoopings hardly more than three spans
-in length, where newborn babies must have slept alone.
-Tombs innumerable beyond reckoning, all hewn from
-the solid rock, and each and all vacant. An incredibly
-vast city of the dead from which all the dead inhabitants
-have departed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is the crowning mystery of mysterious Syracuse.
-Who were this vast army of the buried? And
-where have their dead bodies gone?... Christians,
-everyone says.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But why,” clamours Peripatetica, “should Christians
-have had these peculiar mole-like habits?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The monk merely shrugs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I know,” she goes on quickly before Jane can
-get her mouth open. “Persecution is the explanation
-always given, but will you tell me how you can successfully
-persecute a population of this size? There
-must be half a million of graves, at least, in this place,
-and there would have to be a good many living to bury
-the dead, and Syracuse in its best days hadn’t a million
-inhabitants. Now, you can’t successfully martyrize
-nine-tenths of the population, even if it is as
-meek and sheep-like as the early Christians pretended
-to be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They didn’t all die at once,” suggests Jane helpfully.
-“This took years.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should think it did! Years? It took generations,
-or else the Christians died like flies, and proved that
-piety was dreadfully undermining to the health. No
-wonder the pagans wouldn’t accept anything so fatal.
-But populations as large as this one must have been
-to furnish so many dead, don’t go on burrowing underground
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>for generations. They come out and impose
-their beliefs upon the rest. And, besides, how can the
-stories of their worshipping and burying in secret be
-true when the mass of material taken out of these excavations
-would have to be put somewhere? And
-how could the presence or the removal of all that
-refuse stone escape attention? The persecuted Christian
-theory doesn’t explain the mystery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Even Peripatetica had to pause sometimes for breath,
-and then Jane got her innings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Equally mysterious, in my opinion,” she said, “is
-the rifling of all these graves. The monk tells me ‘the
-Saracens did it,’ but the Saracens were in Syracuse less
-than two hundred years, and of all these myriad graves
-only two or three have been found intact, and these
-two or three were graves beneath graves. Every other
-one for sixty miles, from the largest to the smallest, has
-been opened and entirely emptied. The Saracen population
-in Syracuse was never very large. It consisted
-in greater part of the ruling classes. The bulk of the
-people were natives and Christians, who would regard
-this grave-rifling as the horridest sacrilege, and if the
-Saracens undertook alone this enormous task they
-would have had, even in two hundred years, time for
-nothing else. The opening of the graves is as strange
-a puzzle as the making of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Perhaps some last trump was blown over Syracuse
-alone,” hazarded Peripatetica, “and all the dead
-here rose and left their graves behind them empty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Come up into the air and sunlight,” said Jane.
-“Your mind shows the need of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the little gate sat one of the monastery dependents,
-whose perquisite was a permission to sell post-cards,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>and such coins and bits of pottery as he could retrieve by
-grubbing in the rubbish of the empty graves. He had
-a few tiny earthenware lamps, marked with a cross
-and still smoke-blackened, some so-called tear jugs,
-and one or two small clay masks which, from the closed
-eyelids and smooth sunken contours, must have been
-modelled in miniature from real death masks. Among
-these they found Arsinoë—or so they named her—whose
-face was touched with that strange, secret archness,
-that sweet smiling scorn so often seen on faces
-one day dead. The broad brow with its drooping hair,
-the full tender lips so instinct with vivid personality,
-went with them, and became to them like the record
-of some one seen long ago and dimly remembered,
-though the lovely benignant original must have been
-mere dust of dust for more than a thousand years.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>A nun in a faded blue gown has been showing them
-the relics of Santa Lucia. She has also been telling
-them how the Saint, when a young man admired her
-eyes, snatched them out of her head with her own hands
-and handed them to the young man on a plate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What a very rude and unpleasant thing to do!”
-comments Jane in English. “But invariably saints
-seem so lamentably deficient in amiability and social
-charm.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The nun unlocks the gate of the Cappucini Latomia,
-and Jane and Peripatetica descend the long stair cut
-in the rocks. They are seeking the place where the
-remnant of that army Alcibiades so skilfully introduced
-into Catania, finally perished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They have been reading tales of the Athenians’ long
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>siege of Syracuse, of their final frightful despairing
-struggle, so full of anguish, terror, and fierce courage—“when
-Greek met Greek”—and they have come to
-look at the spot where those seven thousand unhappy
-prisoners finally found an end. When they were driven
-into this quarry they were all that remained of the
-tremendous expedition which Athens had drained her
-best blood to send. Alcibiades had fled long ago, and
-was in exile. Nicias and Demosthenes, who had surrendered
-them, were now dead; fallen on their own
-swords. The harbour of Syracuse was strewn with the
-charred wrecks of their fleet. The marshes of Anapus
-were rotting with their comrades, the fountain of Cyane
-choked with them. They themselves were wounded
-to a man, shuddering with fevers, starving, demoralised
-with long fighting and the horrible final <i>débâcle</i>
-when they were thrust all together into this Latomia;
-not as now a glorious garden with thyme and mint and
-rosemary beneath their feet, ivy-hung, full of groves
-and orchards, but raw, glaring, shaled with chipped
-stone, the staring yellow sides towering smoothly up
-for a hundred feet to the burning blue of the Sicilian
-sky. There in that waterless furnace for seventy days
-they died and died. Died of wounds, of thirst, of
-starvation; died of the poisonings of those already
-dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And the populace of Syracuse came day by day,
-holding lemons to their noses, to look down at them
-curiously, until there was not one movement, not one
-sound from any one of the seven thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is but one human gleam in the whole demoniacal
-story—a touch characteristically Greek. Some
-of the prisoners had beguiled the tedium of dying by
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>chanting the noble choruses of Euripides’ newest play,
-which Syracuse had not yet heard, and these had been
-at once drawn up from among their fellows and treated
-with every kindness. They were entreated to repeat
-as much as they could remember of the poet’s lines
-again and again, and were finally sent back to Athens
-with presents and much honour.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Not a trace of the tragedy remains. The only record
-of death now in those lovely wild, deep-sunken
-gardens is a banal monument to Mazzini, and a tomb
-hollowed out of the wall in one of the caves. A tomb
-closed with a marble slab, upon which was cut an
-epitaph telling, in the pompous formal language of that
-day, of the young American naval lieutenant who died
-here suddenly on his ship in the first decade of the
-Nineteenth Century, and because he was a Protestant,
-and therefore could not occupy any Catholic graveyard,
-was laid to rest alone in this place of hideous
-memories.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Poor lad! Sleeping so far from his own people, and
-thrust away here by himself, since he must, of course,
-not expect to lie near those who had been baptised with
-a different motion of the fingers. Seeing which isolation
-Peripatetica quoted that amused saying of an
-ironic old Pagan world, “Behold, how these Christians
-love one another!”</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>It is the terrace of the Villa Politi. They have
-finally forgiven the villa, and have climbed up here
-from the Latomia to sit on its lovely terrace, to drink
-tea and eat the honey of Hybla, to look down on one
-side into the blossom-hung depths of the Athenians’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>prison, on the other out to the mauve and silver of the
-twilight sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Peripatetica,” says Jane with great firmness, “I
-am suffering from an indigestion of history. I am
-going away somewhere. All these spirits of the past
-block up the place so that I’ve no freedom of movement.
-It’s an oppression to feel that every time one
-puts a foot down it’s in the track of thousands and
-thousands of dead feet, and that one’s stirring up the
-dust of bones with every step we take. Everything we
-look at is covered so thick with layer on layer of passion
-and pain that I’ve got an historic heartache. <i>I</i>
-leave to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica didn’t answer at first. She was looking
-out over the dusky sea, from which breathed a soft
-slow wind.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The change had come while they were in the Latomia;
-had come suddenly. That bleak unkindness
-in the atmosphere—of which they were always conscious
-even in the sun—had all at once disappeared.
-Even though the sun was gone a mild sweetness seemed
-to exhale from the earth, as from a heart at last content.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Jane,” said Peripatetica, turning shining eyes upon
-her, “Persephone has returned. Let us go to Enna
-and meet her!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>
-<img src='images/illus_184.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='ch04' class='c012'>CHAPTER IV <br /> <br /> <span class='sc'>The Return of Persephone</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div><span class='small'>“God’s three chief gifts, Man’s bread and oil and wine.”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>No doubt the usual things that happen to travellers
-happened to Jane and Peripatetica at Enna-Castrogiovanni,
-and on their way to it. Things annoying
-and amusing, tiresome or delightful, but they have no
-memory of these things, all lesser matters having been
-swallowed up in the final satisfaction of their quest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Memory is an artist who works in mosaic, and all
-the fantastic jumble and contrast of the experiences of
-travel she heaps pell-mell together in her bag. Bits of
-sights but half seen, but half understood; vague memories
-of other things seen before and seemingly but
-slightly related to these new impressions, mere faint
-associations but partly realised, along with keen emotions
-and strong pleasures; all tumbled in together
-and rubbing corners with petty vexations, small inconveniences,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>practical details. Memory gathers them
-all without discrimination and carries them along with
-her, a most unsatisfactory-looking mess at first sight,
-out of which it would seem nothing much could be
-made. But give her time. While one’s attention is
-occupied with other matters she is busy—sorting, arranging,
-rejecting here, adding there. Recollections
-that bulked large at first she often files down to a mere
-point; much that appeared but dull rubbish with no
-colour she finds valuable when pushed into the background,
-because its neutral tones serve to bring out
-more clearly the outlines of the design. Dark bits are
-skilfully employed for the sake of the contrast, and to
-intensify the warm tones of richer fragments. The
-shadowy associations give body and modelling to impressions
-otherwise flat and ineffective. All at once
-the picture is seen; a complete delineation of an episode,
-taking form and warmth, and vivid life; and
-over the whole she spreads the magic bloom of distance,
-which transforms the crude materials, hides the
-joinings of the mosaic, and makes of it a treasure of the
-soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Something of this sort she did for Castrogiovanni.
-’Tis but an impressionist picture. They only see, looking
-back to it, two great, divine shadows breathing
-such passion and pain, such essential, heart-stirring
-loveliness that the eye hardly observes the wreathed
-border about the picture, a border which serves merely
-as a frame for those two significant figures revived from
-the dreams of primitive man.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here is an incident taken from the unimportant
-frame of the picture....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane and Peripatetica are in the train. It seems
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>quaint to be finding one’s way to the “Plutonian Shore”
-in a little puffing, racketting Sicilian train. To be
-properly in the picture they should have been included
-in a band of pilgrim shepherds piping in the hills as
-they wander upward to the great shrine of Demeter,
-to give thanks for the increase of their flocks, to offer
-her white curds, and goat cheeses, and the snowy wool
-of washed fleeces. Pilgrims who are weeks upon the
-road; climbing higher and higher each day through
-the steady sunshine, and sleeping at night under the
-large stars, with the little olive-wood fire, that cooked
-the evening meal, winking and smouldering beside
-them in the dewy darkness. Resting here and there
-at the Greek farms, where new pilgrims are waiting to
-add themselves to the pious band.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane, who consults her Theocritus oftener in Sicily
-than her Baedeker—for she says she finds that Theocritus
-has on the whole a better literary style—is the
-one who suggests this idyllic alternative.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Just listen to him!” she cries. “This would be
-travel really worth while recording. He is telling of
-just such a journey, and of the pause at one of the hill
-farms:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“‘So I, and Eucritus, and the fair Amyntichus,
-turned aside into the house of Phrasidamus, and lay
-down with delight in beds of sweet tamarisk and fresh
-cuttings from the vines, strewed on the ground. Many
-poplars and elm trees were waving over our heads, and
-not far off the running of the sacred water from the
-cave of the nymphs warbled to us; in the shimmering
-grass the sunburnt grasshoppers were busy with their
-talk, and from afar the owl cried softly out of the
-tangled thorns of the blackberry. The larks were singing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>and the hedge birds, and the turtle dove moaned;
-the bees flew round and round the fountains, murmuring
-softly. The scent of late summer and the fall of
-the year was everywhere; the pears fell from the trees
-at our feet, and apples in number rolled down at our
-sides, and the young plum trees bent to the earth with
-the weight of their fruit.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“‘The wax, four years old, was loosed from the heads
-of the wine jars. O! nymphs of Castalia, who dwell
-on the steeps of Parnassus, tell me, I pray you, was it
-a draught like this that the aged Chiron placed before
-Hercules, in the stony cave of Phulus? Was it nectar
-like this that made that mighty shepherd on Anapus’
-shore, Polyphemus, who flung the rocks upon Ulysses’
-ships, dance among his sheep-folds? A cup like this ye
-poured out now upon the altar of Demeter, who presides
-over the threshing floor. May it be mine once
-more to dig my big winnowing-fan through her heaps
-of corn; and may I see her smile upon me, holding
-poppies and handfuls of corn in her two hands!’”</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Instead of being accompanied on their arcadian
-journey by Eucritus and the fair Amyntichus, they have
-as companions in the little carriage of the Regie Ferrovia
-the two dark foreigners from Syracuse, upon
-whose nationality they have speculated at idle moments.
-They prove to be Poles. Two gentlemen from Cracow,
-escaped for a moment from its snows to make a
-little “giro” in the Sicilian sunshine.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Conversation develops around Ætna—of all places!
-Peripatetica catches sight of it, as the train rounds a
-curve, sees it suddenly looming against the sky, a glittering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>cone of silver swimming upon a base of misty
-hyacinth-blue. By a gesture she calls everyone’s attention
-to this new and charming pose of that ever
-spectacular mountain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane glances up from her book and signifies a condescending
-approval, but the sight has a most startling
-and electrifying effect upon the Poles. They miss, in
-their enthusiasm, flinging themselves from the carriage
-window merely by a hair’s breadth, and crying, “Ætna!
-Ætna!” with passionate satisfaction, not only solemnly
-clasp hands with one another, but also grasp and shake
-the limply astonished hands of Jane and Peripatetica.
-Transpires that the foreigners have been three weeks
-in Sicily without once having caught a glimpse of the
-ever present, ever dominant mountain, since, with
-sulky coquetry, whenever they were within sight it
-promptly hid in veils of mist, and now they are bound
-for Cracow, via Palermo, facing uneasily the confession
-at home of having been to the play and missed seeing
-the star.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They hang from the window in eager endeavour to
-cram all lost opportunities into one, and rend the
-heavens with lamentations when the carriage comes to
-rest immediately opposite a tiny station whose solid
-minuteness is sufficient to blot from sight all that distant
-majesty.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is like life,” the taller foreigner wails, sinking
-back baffled from an attempt to pierce the obdurate
-masonry with a yearning eye. “One little ugly emotion
-close by can shut out from one’s sight all the loftiest
-beauties of existence!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This fine generalization gathers acuity from the fact
-that a sharp turn soon after leaving the station piles
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>up elevations that quickly rob them of their long-sought
-opportunity, but for the rest of the time that the paths
-of the four lie together the Poles insist upon attributing
-to the direct intervention of Jane and Peripatetica the
-wiping of this blot from their travelling ’scutcheon—an
-attitude which Jane and Peripatetica find both soothing
-and refreshing, and they affect a large familiarity
-and possessiveness with the Volcano, which the Poles
-bear with polite and grateful respect; the more so, no
-doubt, as the two seekers possess—as Americans—a
-novelty almost more startling and intense than Ætna.
-The gentlemen from Cracow have never met Americans
-until now, and make no attempt to disguise the exhilaration
-of so unwonted a spectacle—confessing that in
-their turn they too have been speculating upon the
-racial identity of “the foreign ladies,” whose nationality
-they were unable to guess. They are consumed
-with an inexhaustible curiosity to get the “natives’”
-point of view, and exchange secret glances of surprise
-and pleasure at the exhibition of human intelligence
-in a people so remote from Cracow. When the necessary
-change of train detaches them from their eager
-investigations Peripatetica is still futilely engaged in
-her persistent endeavour to combat in the European
-mind its strange delusion as to the real relations of the
-sexes in her own land.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>... “No; the American man in no respect resembles
-the Sicilian donkey ... no; he does not ordinarily
-spend his life toiling humbly under the intolerable
-loads laid upon him by his imperious mate....
-No; he is not a dull unintelligent drudge wholly unworthy
-of the radiant beings who permit him to surround
-them with an incredible luxury.... No; the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>American woman is not his intellectual superior. In
-everything of real practical importance <i>he</i> is immensely
-the superior.... No; he isn’t this.... No; he
-isn’t that.... He isn’t any one of the things the European
-thinks he is and—good bye!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The mountains all this while have been peaking up;
-mounting, climbing, rolling more wildly, and at last
-two of them soar splendidly, sweep up close on to
-three thousand feet into the sky ... Castrogiovanni
-and Calascibetta, and the train drops Jane and Peripatetica
-at their feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Memory has cast out, or has pushed into the background,
-the long weary jolting up to the wild little wind-swept
-town; makes no record of the hotel or the fellow
-tourists; has jotted down a certain straight wild beauty
-in the inhabitants, who have eagle-like Saracen profiles,
-but grey Norman eyes. Has left well in the foreground
-a dark castle, and a cluster of half-ruined
-towers. All else of modern details she has rejected,
-except a great wash of blue, a vast vista of tumbling
-broken landscape, huge and stern, for she has been
-busy with a picture of the past; building up an imagination
-of vanished gods moving about their mighty
-affairs, playing out Olympian dramas in this lofty land.
-Here is the very centre of the God’s-land, the “umbilicus
-Siciliæ,” the Key of Sicily, Enna “the inexpugnable,”
-the strongest natural fortress in the world,
-which no one ever took except by treachery; which the
-Saracens besieged in vain for thirty-one years, and
-when they finally got it, through a treason, the Normans
-in their turn could not dislodge them until all
-Sicily had been theirs for a quarter of a century, and
-then only through another betrayal. In the great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>slave war Eunus, the serf, held it against the whole
-power of Rome for two years until he too was betrayed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Broken and wild as is the land it is still cultivated;
-the olive still climbs up to where the clouds come
-down, but where are the magnificent forests, the wonder
-and joy of antiquity? Where the brooks and
-streams and lakes, whose dropping waters sang all
-through the records of the elder world? Where are
-those fields so blessed by Demeter that they offered to
-the hands of men illimitable floods of golden grain?
-Where are the vines that wreathed the mountains’
-brows with green and purple grapes, as if it had been
-the brow of Dionysius the wine god? Where, too, are
-the meadows so thick with flowers that for the richness
-of the perfume the hounds could not hold the scent of
-the game? Meadows where the bees wantoned in such
-honeyed delight that the air vibrated with their murmuring
-as with the vibrating of multitudinous harp
-strings?...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Listen to the story, which, when it was told was only
-a prophecy and a warning, but a warning never heeded.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Erysicthon cuts down the grove sacred to Demeter.
-A grove so thick “that an arrow could hardly pass
-through; its pines and fruit trees and tall poplars
-within, and the water like pale gold running through
-the conduits.” One of the poplars receives the first
-stroke, and Demeter, hearing the ringing of the axe,
-appears, stern and awful, hooded and veiled, and
-carrying poppies in her hand. To the ravager of her
-groves she threatens a divine curse of an everlasting
-thirst, of an insatiable, unsatisfied hunger, and the
-workmen, awed, depart, leaving the axes sticking in
-the trees, but Erysicthon drives them to their task
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>again with blows, and soon the grove is levelled, and
-the heat of the day enters where once all was sweet
-shade. Erysicthon laughs at the futile curse of the
-goddess; he has had his will and nothing has happened.
-The water still runs and he can slake his
-drought, but the water escapes as he stoops for it,
-sinking into the earth before his eyes, leaving upon his
-lips only choking dust. No one can safely ignore the
-warnings of the gods, and he wanders, whipped by intolerable
-longings, and dies dreadfully, raving of his
-own folly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Neither Greeks, Romans, Saracens, nor Norman
-heed this parable, told ages and ages before the meaning
-of the loss of forests was understood. All over the
-land the clothing of oaks, chestnuts, and pines was
-stripped from the hills, and slowly but surely the curse
-of Demeter has turned it into a place of thirst. To-day
-less than five per cent of the whole island contains
-timber, and these high lands, these “fields which
-in the days of the Greeks returned one hundred times
-the amount of seed sowed, now yield but seven-fold,
-and only one-ninth of all the land is productive.” This
-is the story of the ravaging of Enna, once the true garden
-of Paradise, and now a rocky waste burned to the
-bone.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-<div id='illus_193' class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/illus_193.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>“<span class='sc'>Ætna, The Salient Fact of Sicily</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Always from the very earliest records the goddess of
-the harvest was worshipped in this place. Long before
-the coming of the Greeks the Siculians had here a
-shrine to Gaia, the Earth Mother, from whose brown
-breast man sucked his life and food. And the Siculians
-had traditions of the Sikels making pilgrimages to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>Enna to give thanks to a goddess representing some
-principle of fertility, by whose power the earth was
-made blessed to its children. Very vague and shadowy
-are the traditions of the worship of this Bread-giver.
-There are hints of a great cave with a rude
-dark figure within, this idol having, curiously, a head
-roughly resembling the head of a horse, where the people
-timidly laid their offerings of the first fruits of their
-primitive culture. This figure is heard of later at
-Eleusis, to which the Greeks transpose the image and
-the worship, but the myth, so sympathetic to the Greek
-nature, becomes refined and spiritualized; takes on
-many new plays of thought and colour, and when the
-great temple of Demeter is built here the story has
-cleared and defined itself, and is hung about with the
-garlands of a thousand gracious imaginings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Our Lady of Bread—daughter herself of Zeus, the
-overarching sky—has one child, Persephone, the spirit
-of Spring, that dear vernal impulse which rejuvenates
-all the world and “puts a spirit of life in everything”;
-that is forever sweetly renewing hope of happiness.
-Persephone’s playmates are the maiden goddesses,
-Pallas and Artemis, and also those light spirits of the
-fields, the water and the air—the nymphs, the oreads,
-and the oceanides—but she is not without duties and
-labours too, for “Proserpina, filling the house soothingly
-with her low song, was working a gift against the
-return of her mother, with labour all to be in vain.
-In it she marked out with her needle the houses of
-the gods and the series of the elements, showing by
-what law nature, the parent of all, settled the strife of
-ancient times.... The lighter elements are borne
-aloft; the air grows bright with heat; the sea flows;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>the earth hangs in its place. And there were divers
-colours in it; she illuminated the stars with gold, infused
-a purple shade into the water, and heightened
-the shore with gems of flowers; and under her skilful
-hand the threads with their inwrought lustre swell up
-in counterfeit of the waves; you might think the sea
-wind caused them to creep over the rocks and sands.
-She put in the fire zones, marking with a red ground
-the midmost zone possessed by burning heat; on either
-side lay the two zones proper for human life, and at
-the extremes she drew the twin zones of numbing cold,
-making her work dun and sad with the lines of perpetual
-frost. She works in, too, the sacred places of
-Dis and the Manes so fatal to her. And an omen of
-her doom was not wanting, for as she worked, as if
-with foreknowledge of the future, her face became wet
-with a sudden burst of tears. And now in the utmost
-border of the tissue she had begun to wind in the wavy
-line of the Ocean that goes round about all, but the
-door sounds on its hinges, and she perceives the goddesses
-coming; the unfinished work drops from her
-hands and a ruddy blush lights her clear and snow-white
-face.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Leaving her needle in the many-coloured web, she
-wanders down the mountain side to Lake Pergusa, then
-lying like a blue jewel in enamelled meads, but ever since
-that tragic day dark and sulphurous, as with fumes of
-hell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This is the story of the ravishment, as told in the
-great Homeric Hymn that was sung in honour of the
-Mother of Corn.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I begin the song of Demeter. The song of Demeter
-and her daughter Persephone, whom Aidoneus
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>carried away as she played apart from her mother with
-the deep-bosomed daughters of the Ocean, gathering
-flowers in a meadow of soft grass—roses and the crocus
-and the fair violets and flags and hyacinths, and above
-all the strange flower of the narcissus, which the Earth,
-favouring the desire of Aidoneus, brought forth for the
-first time to snare the footsteps of the flower-like girl.
-A hundred heads of blossom grew up from the roots
-of it, and the sky and the earth and the salt wave of
-the sea were glad at the scent thereof. She stretched
-forth her hands to take the flower; thereupon the earth
-opened and the King of the great nation of the Dead
-sprang out with his immortal horses. He seized the
-unwilling girl, and bore her away weeping on his
-golden chariot. She uttered a shrill cry, calling upon
-Zeus; but neither man nor god heard her voice, nor
-even the nymphs of the meadow where she played;
-except Hecate only, sitting as ever in her cave, half
-veiled with a shining veil, and thinking delicate thoughts,
-she, and the Sun also, heard her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So long as Persephone could still see the earth and
-the sky and the sea with the great waves moving, and
-the beams of the sun, and still thought to see again her
-mother, and the race of the ever-living gods, so long
-hope soothed her in the midst of her grief. The peaks
-of the hills and the depths of the sea echoed her cry.
-And the Mother heard it. A sharp pain seized her at
-the heart; she plucked the veil from her hair, and cast
-down the blue hood from her shoulders, and fled forth
-like a bird, seeking her daughter over dry land
-and sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nine days she wandered up and down upon the
-earth, having blazing torches in her hands, and in her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>great sorrow she refused to taste of ambrosia, or of the
-cup of the sweet nectar, nor washed her face. But
-when the tenth morning came Hecate met her, having
-a light in her hands. But Hecate had heard the voice
-only, and had seen no one, and could not tell Demeter
-who had borne the girl away. And Demeter said not
-a word, but fled away swiftly with Hecate, having the
-blazing torches in her hands, till they came to the Sun,
-the watchman of Gods and men; and the goddess
-questioned him, and the Sun told her the whole
-story.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>What a picture the Greek singer makes of the melancholy
-earth calling for comfort to the moon! for Hecate
-was not Artemis, but a vaguer, vaster principle of the
-night; an impersonalized shadow of the Huntress, as
-Hertha was the shadow, formless and tremendous, of
-Demeter. Hecate was a pale luminous force, “half
-veiled with a shining veil, and thinking delicate
-thoughts,” and ten days later, having rounded to the
-full, the bereaved mother meets her “bearing a light
-in her hands,” though the night is nearing morning,
-and moon and earth turn together toward the coming
-sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Homeric Hymn tells much of the wandering
-and grieving mother; of her disguises; of her nursing
-of the sick child Demophoon, whose own mother
-snatched him back from the immortality which the
-goddess was ensuring by passing him through the fire—as
-many a loving and timid mother since has held
-her son back from the fires that confer immortality.
-The Hymn tells of her teaching of Triptolemus of the
-winged feet, instructing him in Eleusinian mysteries—“those
-mysteries which no tongue may speak. Only
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>blessed is he whose eyes have seen them; his lot after
-death is not as the lot of other men!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But Jane and Peripatetica loved more the story of
-the ending of her vigil, when Hermes descended into
-Hell in his chariot.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And Persephone ascended into it, and Hermes took
-the reins in his hands and drove out through the infernal
-halls; and they two passed quickly over the
-ways of that long journey, neither the waters of the
-sea, nor of the rivers, and the deep ravines of the hills,
-nor the cliffs of the shore resisting them; till at last
-Hermes placed Persephone before the door of the temple
-where her mother was, who, seeing her, ran out
-quickly to meet her, like a Mænad coming down a
-mountain side dusky with woods.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So these two saw Persephone come home; saw the
-spring return to the earth in the high places of the gods.
-Saw the land, even though no longer a paradise, yet—despite
-Erysicthon’s foolish waste of the sacred trees—saw
-it “laden with leaves and flowers and the waving
-corn,” and, having seen it, they passed on through
-Sicily satisfied.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>
-<img src='images/illus_200.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='ch05' class='c012'>CHAPTER V <br /> <br /> <span class='sc'>A City of Temples</span></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“’Tis right for him</span></div>
- <div class='line in6'><span class='small'>To touch the threshold of the gods.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>They</span> were running swiftly through the dark. On
-either hand was a dim and gloomy land of bare, shrivelled
-peaks, grey cinder heaps, and sulphurous smells.
-Intermittently visible by the strange subterranean
-glowings rose black, glowering mountains in the background,
-and nearer at hand were shadowy shapes of
-men and asses bringing sulphur from the mines.
-Within, the garlic-reeking tongue of a flickering gas-lamp
-vaguely illumined the dusk of the railway carriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is Pluto’s own realm,” declared Jane, removing
-her nose from the window-pane, through which
-she had been endeavouring to peer into the outer gloom.
-“If it’s not the very threshold of the infernal regions it
-ought to be. Peripatetica, you might spare me a
-glimmer or two from your Baedeker. Were there no
-temples to Pluto here? These are surely the very surroundings
-in which he should have been worshipped.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>“A temple to Pluto?” replied Peripatetica sleepily.
-“Where?... I never heard of one that I can remember;
-have you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane suddenly realized that her recollections held no
-account of any spot where that dark King of the Under
-World had been honoured under the sun; it was another
-mystery of the past, to which there was no answer,
-though Peripatetica gave up her nap in the effort
-to solve it—why had Pluto, supreme in the Under World
-as Zeus in the Upper one, beneath whose sway all men
-born must come, remained so unhonoured among living
-men?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Greeks did believe in a future life; the spirit
-expiating or rewarded for deeds done in the flesh.
-Those were facts which men thought they knew, which
-were an integral axis of their faith—how so believing,
-did they treat it thus unconcernedly, seeing things in
-such different proportions from ourselves? So much
-concern for the fulness of life in the present, so little for
-the shadowy hereafter—shrines and temples and sacrifices
-on every hillside to the Deities of Life, of Birth,
-and Fertility; nothing for the God of Death.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Death and Life—they touched as closely in ancient
-days as now, perhaps more closely. The Greeks did
-not push away their dead to a dim, silent oblivion.
-Near to the warm heart of life they were held in bright,
-oft-invoked memory. In the busiest centres of life
-were placed the tombs of their dead; close to the
-theatre—to the Forum—wherever the living most
-thronged the Road of Tombs was; one where all the
-busiest tide of life flowed. Invocations and offerings
-and sweet ceremonies of remembrance were given to
-their dead more often than tears. And constantly the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>living turned to the dear and honoured dead—“much
-frequented” was the Greek adjective which went
-oftenest with the tomb. But the grim God of Death
-was apparently not for living man to make his spirit
-“sick and sorry” by worshipping. It was Life—glorious,
-glowing fulness of life to the uttermost—that was
-important to the Greek; Life that governed Death and
-made it either honoured and reposeful, or a state of
-shadowy wanderings and endless regret.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To the modern mind, still tinged with mediæval morbidity,
-groping back into the clear serenity of those
-golden days, it seemed to be life, life, only life that
-preoccupied the Greeks, and yet, they too had hearts
-to feel Death’s sting even as we—to be aware of the
-underlying sadness of all the joy upon this rolling
-world. They too could deeply feel the inexorable
-mingling of delight and pain, of life and loss....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Their great Earth Mother, blond and sunny as her
-golden grain, the deity of all fruitfulness and beneficent
-increase, is also <i>Ceres Deserta</i>—the Mater Dolorosa—shrouded
-in the dark blue robe of all earth’s
-shadows, haggard with tears of wasting desolation—“the
-type of divine sorrow,” as well as of joyous fruition
-... her emblem the blood-red poppy, symbol in
-its drowsy juices, of sleep and death, as in its multitudinous
-seeds the symbol of life and resurrection.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And her daughter, like herself the most specially and
-intimately beloved by the Greeks among all their deities,
-had even more the dual quality—Goddess of
-Spring, of resurrection, and rejuvenescence, and yet
-too, Queen of the dark Under World. She was the
-impulse of all spring’s teeming life, and yet herself
-“compact of sleep and death and narcotic flowers bearing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>always in the swallowed pomegranate seeds the
-secret of ultimate decay, of return to the grave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Korè, the maiden, the incarnation of all fresh and
-sweet and innocent joyousness, was also symbol of its
-evanescence—“a helpless plucked flower in the arms of
-Aidoneus,” so that upon the sarcophagi of women who
-had died in early youth the Greeks were wont to carve
-Pluto’s stealing of Persephone, picturing the Divine
-Maiden with the likeness of the dear dead one’s face.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Dark, blurred shapes in Greek-like drapery of many-folded
-cape and shawl, appeared now and then in
-shifting crowds upon station platforms, like the uneasy
-shades of Pluto’s kingdom seeking escape.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To Peripatetica and Jane it began to seem as if their
-quest for the Lost Spring had taken them into the Under
-World of her imprisonment to behold with thrills of
-half pity, half awe, in “that dim land where all things
-are forgotten” her transformation into the mate of
-gloomy Dis, no longer bright, golden-haired girl-flower,
-but veiled <i>Proserpina Despœna</i>, the Queen of the Dead,
-where now:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Pale, beyond porch and portal,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>Crowned with calm leaves, she stands,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Who gathers all things mortal</div>
- <div class='line in3'>With cold immortal hands;</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in1'>She waits for each and other,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>She waits for all men born,</div>
- <div class='line in1'>Forgets the Earth, her mother,</div>
- <div class='line in3'>The life of fruits and corn.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Escaping at last from the sulphur fumes, the strange
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>glares and the Hades visions, they found themselves
-standing under a clear star-strewn sky with a gentle
-air blowing in their faces. In an open carriage they
-were whirled off, they knew not where, into the night,
-stars bright overhead and lights like fallen stars on a
-high hill to the right, the soft wind of the darkness
-breathing of spring and green growing things.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Suddenly there was the welcoming door of the Hotel
-des Temples, and then little white bedrooms and quick
-oblivion.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>There is a pounding on Jane’s door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hurry, you sluggard!” says Peripatetica’s voice.
-“Come out and see what a delicious place this is!”
-and she enters radiant. “There’s no mistake about
-spring this time; everything is riotous with it—and it’s
-real country. Not mere theatrical scenery like Taormina,
-nor mere bones and stones like Syracuse, but
-real dear Arcadian country, with trees, actually <i>trees</i>!
-and there are great golden temples rising out of the
-trees, with the sea and the hills behind, and nothing
-but sweet peaceful meadows and orchards all around
-us—I want to stay here forever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When Jane too stood upon the hotel terrace drinking
-in all the fairness of the outlook which Peripatetica
-silently but proudly displayed, in the proprietorship of
-earlier rising, she was quite ready to echo the wish.
-Billowy orchards of almonds in tenderest leafage, hoary
-groves of olives, the silver and white of wind-stirred
-bean-fields in blossom, vivid emerald of young wheat,
-crimson meadows of lupine rolling down to a peacock
-sea glittering to a wide horizon.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>Soft mountains, not too high; old stone pines black
-against the azure sky; brown walls of convents, and
-bell towers emerging from the dark green of oranges
-and pines; and rising out of all this Arcadian sweetness
-of meadow and grove the tawny columns of the
-Temples.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, let’s get to them at once!” cried Jane, and
-guideless and impatient they went, as the bird flies,
-straight across the intervening country, towards those
-beckoning golden pillars. Plunging down the hillside
-in front, garden-orchard, ploughed field, dusty highroad—all
-were merely a road between them and those
-temples of Lost Gods still rising unsubmerged above
-the tree tops. Little boys digging in the fields shyly
-offered them fossil shells and the bits of pottery their
-shovels had turned up, old women at garden gates
-called invitations to come in and pick oranges or inspect
-the ruins of “Casa Greco’s,” but they held straight
-on through olive groves seemingly old as the temples
-themselves, through velvety young wheat and flowery
-meadows. The distance was greater than had appeared
-from above. Sometimes the gleam of columns
-through the green beckoned illusively to impossible
-short cuts, as when a tempting grass path seemed to
-run straight to the feet of the nearest temple and instead
-led into a farmyard inhabited by fiercely barking
-dogs. A noise that called out the farm people to
-explain as politely as if these were the first strangers
-who had ever made the intrusive mistake, that an impassable
-wall made it impossible to reach the Temples
-through their property, and to detail a wee, starry-eyed
-bronze faun in tattered blue rags to put them
-upon the correct but roundabout road.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>In the glowing sun of the spring morning—the old
-world renewing itself in blooming freshness all about—songs
-of birds and petals of fruit-blossoms in the air,
-against the shimmering blue of sky and sea and the
-new green of the earth’s breast, was upreared the
-saffron mass of Concordia—shrine of a Peace twenty
-centuries old.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It looked its name, did Concord, standing with all its
-amber columns worn but perfect, in unbroken accord,
-still upholding architrave and tympanum.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Intact in all but roof, on its platform of steep, worn
-steps it stands—in the midst of fields and groves that
-were once a clanging stone city, close beside the dusty
-highroad along which come the landau loads of hurried
-tourists—with its calm still unbroken. It embodies
-the permanence of peace through all the evanescent
-life of the flowing years. Unaltered through all
-the changes of time, its Doric columns rise, tranquil
-and fair, and hospitably it offers welcome to all who
-come.</p>
-
-<div id='illus_207' class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/illus_207.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>“<span class='sc'>The Saffron Mass of Concordia</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>As of old one may climb its steps to worship and
-admire. The road winds to its very base, and it stands
-as free to all comers as to the sun and wind. It alone
-of all the glories of once magnificent Akragas remains
-in its original shape. Other shrines were greater,
-larger, more splendid in their day. The high house of
-Zeus, with its mammoth columns, was nearly three
-times the height of Concord; it had an enclosure of
-three hundred and seventy-two feet to Concord’s one
-hundred and thirty-eight, and must once have looked
-scornfully on its little neighbour. Hercules, with his
-marvels of sculpture and painting; Juno, with her
-statue-enriched “thymele” terrace extending her precincts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>around its out-door altar and her renowned picture
-by Zeuxis, for whose composite beauty the five
-loveliest girls of the city had been models, probably
-outranked simple Concord. No record of its holding
-venerated treasures of beauty has come down from the
-days of its prime. Yet it alone has survived whole;
-emerging intact from the storms of war and nature, as
-if its own distilled atmosphere of serenity has acted as
-a preservative against Time. Even the Middle Ages
-treated it gently. St. Gregory of the Turnips took it
-for a shrine, and a gentle, serene saint he must have
-been; one able to dwell in the abode of Peace without
-feeling any desire to alter and rebuild, glad to look out
-of its open peristyle and watch his turnips in the sunny
-fields, wisely refraining from choking the pillars into
-walls and plaster like poor Minerva’s at Syracuse.
-Concordia’s cella seemed to have been just a cosy fit
-for St. Gregory and he a careful tenant, leaving only
-the two arched openings in its walls to mark his occupancy.
-And so the Temple is to-day the best preserved
-in existence—shorn of all its statues, stucco, and
-decoration, a little blurred and worn in outline, as if
-Time’s maw, while refraining from crushing, has yet
-mumbled it over gently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was apparently this completeness of preservation
-which had so enamoured Goethe that he dared to
-speak lightly of the stern majesty of the temple of
-Pæstum by comparison. Poseidon’s great fane he
-thought as inferior to Concord’s as a hero is inferior to
-a god.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A god to a hero,” quoted Jane with a resentful
-sniff. “It was just like that pompous, stodgy old German
-to be carried away by mere preservation, and to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>prefer this sugary-slightly-melted-vanilla-caramel temple
-to that solemn splendour of Pæstum.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What an abominable simile you’ve used for this
-lovely thing,” scolded Peripatetica. “You’re even
-worse than Goethe—if possible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It isn’t an abominable simile,” protested Jane flippantly.
-“It <i>is</i> exactly the colour of a good vanilla
-caramel, and moreover it looks like one licked all over
-by some giant tongue.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Having said an outrageous thing she pretended to
-defend it and believe it, but her heart smote her for
-irreverence as she and Peripatetica strolled about the
-peristyle, gazing through the columns at the pictures
-their tawny flutings framed, and she grudgingly admitted
-that the situation at least was divine.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Perched on the crest of a sheer-dropping rocky cliff,
-Concordia faces the west. To the south dark blue
-sea, and to the north billowy woods and fields in all the
-gamut of spring greens surge up to the apricot-tinted
-town, which is the last shrunken remnant of old Akragas.
-Beneath the cliff green meadows stretch smooth
-to the African Sea. Eastwards, on a neighbouring
-knoll, Juno lifts her exquisite columns against the blue,
-and softly moulded hills melt into the distant ruggedness
-of Castrogiovanni’s mountains. To the north lie
-fields and groves and orchards, with dottings of farmhouse
-and church, up to the top of the Rupe Athena,
-where, with her usual passion for conspicuousness, high
-Athena had once kept watch in her Temple, that now,
-according to the so frequent fate of the mighty, is
-fallen into nothingness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>How worshipful his blithe gods of Sun and Abundance
-must have here appeared to the Greek; how
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>good the world spread out for him in all its fairness;
-the citadel-crowned hill protecting his rich city, the
-shining sea carrying his commerce; the mountains of
-the bounteous Earth Mother’s home encircling the
-rolling groves and meadowland she blessed so fruitfully,
-and the triumphs of his own handiwork in the
-marvellous temples and buildings of this splendid
-Akragas, “fairest of mortal cities,” as even the poets
-of Greece admitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Plutonian shore of the previous night seemed
-very far away, now that Persephone was back in her
-own “belonging” country again; the dark terrors of
-Hades had grown dim. Naturally the gods of Light
-and Day were the only ones worshipped; they were
-supreme for life—and after—ah well! “the dark Fate
-which lay behind gods and men could not be propitiated
-by any rites, and must be encountered manfully
-as one meets the inevitable.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course there were no temples to Pluto, they
-wouldn’t have known how to build one,” said Peripatetica,
-looking from the enclosed cella to the sunlit
-peristyle outside. “I never quite realized before the
-cheerful, self-possessed publicity of Greek worship;
-their temples standing always in these open elevated
-sites; open themselves to the light and air—majestically
-simple. There is just the little enclosure to shelter
-the statue of the god, and all the rest is clear openness,
-where the worshippers stood under glowing sun
-and sky, or looking out into it. It’s essentially an
-out-of-door building, the Greek Temple, spreading its
-beauty to light and air like a flower. Pluto would have
-had to evolve a type of his own, he never could have
-fitted into this calm cheerfulness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>“No,” pondered Jane, “there is no room for superstitious
-terrors in the sunshine. I wonder does
-superstition turn naturally to caves and gloom, or do
-dark holes in the ground breed it? There is all the
-space of light and darkness between the sermon preached
-on the Mount, all beatitudes and tenderness, and the
-theology of the monks in the Middle Ages after the
-Christians had made their churches in such catacombs
-as those of Syracuse.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All Girgenti’s temples are wrought from this native
-chrome-yellow tufa; a sort of solidified sea-beach—compacted
-sand, pebbles, and fossil shells. The original
-snow-white stucco, made of marble dust, has flaked
-away, save here and there in some protected niche.
-The dry sirocco gnaws into the soft sandstone, and
-on the seaside of the columns show the long deep scorings
-of its viewless teeth, sunk in places nearly half
-through the huge diameter of the pillars.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica was in two minds as to whether the
-temples had not been even more lovely in their original
-virgin whiteness. “After all,” she mourned, “they
-are but a frame without the pictures; for the Greek
-temple existed primarily to be a setting for its sculpture.
-Sculpture was an essential part of its planning,
-not a mere decoration, and without it pediment, metopes,
-frieze, and pedestals are meaningless forms.
-That sculpture that stood and walked on the pediments
-and gave life to the frieze; that animated the
-exterior, or sat calm and strong in the central shrine.
-To a Greek even this wonderfully preserved Concordia,
-bare of sculpture, would seem but a melancholy
-skeleton of a once fair shrine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But Jane was obstinately sure that nothing could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>be better than the natural harmonies of the naked
-stone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nothing,” she insisted with bland firmness, “not
-even your blind conviction that everything the Greeks
-did was exactly right—just because they did it—will
-persuade me that they improved these temples by any
-marble plaster. Come over here and look at the warm
-red gold of those soaring fluted stems against the vivid
-blue! It is as if the splendour of sunset glowed upon
-them all day long. As if they had soaked in so much
-sun through all the bright centuries that now even the
-very stones gave it out again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica had been half inclined to believe this
-herself at first, but of course Jane’s opposition clinched
-her wavering suffrages for the stucco.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You lack in imagination,” she announced loftily.
-“You see only what you see. Try to realize what the
-marble background meant to the saffron-robed, flower-garlanded
-priests, and to the worshippers massed on
-the steps and in the peristyles in delicate-tinted chiton
-and chamyle—crocus, daffodil, violet-rose, ivory—like
-a living flower wreath from out the spring meadows
-encircling the white temple’s base—”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, do stop trying to be Pater-esque!” scoffed
-Jane, “and let’s go to luncheon. That sounds too
-much like sublimated guide-book, and the hotel looks
-miles away to my unimaginative eye.”</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>“We won’t, will we?” said Jane half an hour later,
-with her irreverent mouth full.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica knew what she meant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go on to-morrow? No, indeed. We’ll telegraph
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>Cook to send our mail here until further notice—the
-idea of being told there was nothing to linger for at
-Girgenti! It’s the nicest place we’ve yet found in
-Sicily.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The room was full of the munching of tourists.
-From the talk in German, English, and French, could
-be gathered they had one and all “done” the five temples,
-the tombs, and San Niccola that morning—would
-“take in” the town sights that afternoon and pass on
-that evening or the next morning. The two Seekers,
-to whom the morning had not been long enough in
-which to dream and dispute over one temple, felt their
-heads growing dizzy at the rush with which the tourist
-stream flowed along its Cook-dug channels, and they
-gladly resolved to leave the current and climb up high
-and dry on the bank of this inviting little backwater.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The announcement of their intention to stay on
-seemed to give the polite young proprietor of the hotel
-a strange shock. He offered better rooms looking on
-the terrace, and <i>pension</i> rates if they stayed more than
-three days, instead of the usual week for which that
-reduction is commonly made. A flutter of excitement
-at their behaviour passed at once through all the personnel
-of the hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>First came the concierge. “You are really not leaving
-to-morrow morning, ladies? For what day do you
-wish me to get your tickets stamped?” He was startledly
-incredulous when told that the day was still too
-far in the future for a date to be fixed. The porter
-came to ask at what time he was to carry out their
-luggage in the morning—the head waiter to know for
-which train they wished to be called. The stolid
-chambermaid’s mouth fell open in surprise when asked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>to move their things to other rooms. The two-foot-high
-Buttons shifted about chairs four times his own
-size in the lobby to get a chance to gaze satisfactorily
-at such peculiar ladies, and by tea-time the German
-waiters were staring as they carried about tea-trays,
-and pointing out to one another the strangely behaving
-two who were not leaving the next day!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The pretty little hotel was like a railway restaurant.
-Successive sets of hurried tourists appeared, made a
-one-meal or a one-night stop, and rushed on, leaving
-their places to others. In a week’s time so many sets
-had come and gone that Peripatetica and Jane began
-to take on the air of pre-historic aborigines; as if they
-had been sitting on their sunny bank watching all the
-invading hordes of nations since the Carthagenians
-made their first raid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>By way of emphasizing the superior intelligence of
-their own methods they savoured slowly and lingeringly
-Girgenti’s endless charms. Loafing placidly on
-the flowery terrace for an hour after breakfast to enjoy
-the distant view of the golden temples, or to watch the
-patient labours of ancient brown Orlando and his
-ancient grey ass Carlo, who spent all their waking
-hours in climbing down, down the precipitous road to
-the Fonte dei Greci with empty water-barrels, and
-toilsomely bringing them up full and dripping to be
-emptied into the terrace well with its lovely carved
-well head. Or they retired to the niche below the
-terrace stairs under the feathery pepper tree, and sat
-amid a blaze of poppies and mauve to write letters,
-punctuated by frequent pauses to look across the olive
-orchards and young wheat fields to the wide blue fields
-of the sea. And every day they strolled away through
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>the orchard footpaths towards the temples, which were
-ever their goal, though they might be hours in reaching
-that goal because of being led away by adventures on
-the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was by way of this footpath that they first fell
-into the hands of Fortunato. They were forever falling
-into some one’s hands and finding the results agreeable,
-for they kept their minds open to suggestion and
-abjured all hard and fast lines of intention, being wise
-enough to realize that what is known as “a good traveller”
-usually misses all the good of travel by the cut-and-driedness
-of his aims.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fortunato was sure that he could “spika da Englishy,”
-though what led him to suppose so, other than
-a large command of illuminative gesture, never became
-clear. Some half-dozen words—adorned with superfluous
-vowels to a point of unrecognizability—he did
-possess; the rest was Sicilian, sympathy, and vivid intelligence,
-which sufficed to make him the perfectly
-delightful guide he explained himself to be. His age
-he declared to be fourteen, he looked all of ten, but
-his knowledge of the world, of life, of history, and of
-the graces of conversation could hardly have been
-acquired by any one less than forty. Within twenty
-minutes he had made them free of such short and simple
-annals of his career as he judged to be suited to
-their limited forestieri minds, having first firmly assumed
-the burden of all their small impedimenta—jackets,
-kodaks, and parasols. He was one of fifteen,
-he explained, and also the main staff of his parents’
-declining years; the six staffs younger than himself
-being somewhat too short for that filial office. The
-other eight had been removed from this service by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>combined ravages of marriage, the army, and emigration.
-When time and the growth of his juniors enabled
-him to lay down his absorbing duties he had the
-intention of joining in Nuova Yorka a distinguished
-barber, who enjoyed the privilege of being his elder
-brother. Nuova Yorka, he had been given to understand
-by this brother, boasted no such mountains as
-these of Girgenti, but its streets were filled for months
-with hills of ice and snow, and this information Peripatetica
-and Jane were regretfully obliged to confirm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No matter! even such rigours could not check his
-ambition to “barb,” and as his brother had explained
-how necessary it was that he should be complete master
-of Englishy before landing in Nuova Yorka if he
-hoped to escape being “plucked” (great business of
-illuminating gestures of rapacity) he employed in guiding
-Americans such brief hours as he could snatch from
-school.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They discovered later that Fortunato snatched from
-school just seven entire days every week.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It had been the intention of the two to spend the
-morning among the gigantic ruins of the temple of
-Zeus, and yet when Fortunato put pressure upon their
-ever flexible impulses at the gate of the strange old
-Panitteri garden, they found themselves instead under
-the walls of the church of San Niccola, where the gillyflowers
-and wild mignonette rioted from every crevice.
-Meekly they climbed a great stone terrace adorned
-with crumbling statues and Corinthian entablatures.
-Meekly they examined the great baths, and delighted
-in the shining panorama of sea and plain and hill, with
-golden Concordia seen in its most lovely aspect between
-two gigantic stone pines.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>Still sternly shepherded by the small guide they
-climbed down again to make a closer acquaintance
-with the Oratory of Phalaris. Phalaris of the infamous
-legend of the brazen bull, into whose heated body were
-cast the enemies of the ancient Tyrant of Akragas,
-because that humorous gentleman’s fancy was highly
-diverted by the similarity of their moanings, as they
-slowly roasted, to the lowing of kine. It is said that
-he fretted a good deal because nobody else appeared
-to think the thing as good a joke as it seemed to him,
-but then taste in jests <i>will</i> differ, unfortunately. The
-Carthagenians when they came over and conquered
-Sicily were quite delighted with the ingenious toy, and
-carried it off triumphantly to Africa. They were
-finished artists in torture themselves, and appreciated
-a valuable new idea. Scipio found the bull in Carthage,
-when he made a final end of that city, and he
-returned it to Akragas, but appetite for really poignant
-fun appears to have died out by that time, and Fortunato,
-whom they consulted, seemed to think it was
-probably eventually broken up for the purpose of manufacturing
-braziers, or possibly warming-pans.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Memory of the Bull almost obscured the fact that
-the Oratory was a beautiful Greek chapel, such as was
-used to hold some statue of a god, and the memorials
-of ancestors, and served for private daily devotions
-without need of a priest. The Normans had the same
-habit of private family chapels, so the Oratory had
-served them in turn, being pierced by a Norman window
-and the square-headed entrance door fitted with
-an arch.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Half a dozen races and centuries had each had a
-hand in the Church and Convent of San Niccola too,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>apparently. It was built from stones filched from that
-vast ruin of the Temple of Zeus they were on their
-roundabout way to see, and which has always been an
-exhaustless quarry for Girgenti. So late as in the last
-century the huge stones that formed the Porto Empedocle,
-a long mole from which the sulphur is shipped,
-were stolen from poor Zeus. Doors, windows, roofs,
-arches, had been added or changed in San Niccola,
-just as each generation needed, and each in the taste
-of the period. The holy-water stoup at the entrance,
-for example, was an enormous marble hand, taken
-from one of the temples. For the Greeks too had
-fonts of holy water, consecrated by plunging into it a
-burning torch from the altar, and as the worshippers
-entered they were asperged with a branch of laurel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The poor Saint was not in flourishing circumstances
-in these later days, it would seem, judging by the bareness
-of his sanctuary, and the torn cotton lace upon
-the altars, and yet he was an industrious healer, if one
-might reason from the votives that hung about his
-picture. A few were wrought in silver, but more in
-wax, or carved and painted wood, reproducing with
-hideous fidelity the swollen limbs, the cancerous breasts,
-the goitered throats, the injured eyes, the carbuncles
-and abcesses he had healed through his miraculous intervention.
-Indeed, he was a general jobber in miracles,
-for the naïve, rude little paintings on the wall
-showed a spirited donkey running away with a painted
-cart, the terrified occupant frantically making signals
-of distress to San Niccola in heaven, who was preparing
-promptly to check the raging ass. Or he was
-drawing a chrome-yellow petitioner from a cobalt sea,
-or turning a Mafia dagger aside, or finding a lost child
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>in the mountains. He certainly “studied to please,”
-and it did seem a pity he should be housed in so bare
-and poverty-stricken a shrine. Many less active saints
-lived amid welters of gilding and luxury.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In spite of Fortunato dragging them aside later to
-see a little “Casa Greco,” where they could trace delicate
-tesselated pavements and the bases of the columns
-of the atrium amid the grass, they still succeeded in
-arriving that same afternoon at their original goal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Only the temple of Diana at Ephesus was larger
-than this great shrine to the spirit of the overarching
-sky, and even yet, though moles and churches and
-villas have been wrought from its remains, the gigantic
-ruin daunts the imagination with its colossal fragments,
-its huge tumble of stone, its fallen mountains of masonry.
-Each triglyph alone weighed twelve tons, and
-the enormous columns around the whole length of its
-three hundred and seventy-two feet were more than
-sixty feet high. Theron, the benevolent despot of
-Akragas, built it with the labours of his Carthagenian
-captives, and no doubt a memory of their frightful
-toilings in the Sicilian noons inspired the Carthagenians,
-when they captured the city, to their fury of destruction
-against the fane they themselves had wrought.
-It would seem as if only some convulsion of nature
-could have brought down that prodigious construction,
-but still visible upon the bases of the fallen pillars are
-the cuts made by the Punic conquerors, sufficient to
-disturb the equilibrium of even these monster columns.
-When their rage had at last expended itself nothing of
-all that incredible mass of masonry remained standing
-save three of the enormous Telamone—the male caryatids—that
-had supported the entablature. And so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>firmly were these built that they stood there for fifteen
-centuries more before time and a quaking of the earth
-at last brought them down.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now the last of these lies in the centre of the ruin,
-perhaps the most impressive figure wrought by man’s
-hands, so like does it seem—blurred, vague, tremendous—to
-some effort to symbolize in stone the whole
-human race—the very frame of the world itself. Shoulder
-and breast an upheaved mountain range, down which
-the mighty muscles pour like leaping rivers to the plain
-of the enormous loins and thighs. Rough-hewn locks
-cluster about the frowning brows, as a gnarled forest
-grips a cliff’s edge, from beneath which stare darkly
-the caverned eyes. Primeval, prehistoric in form, overrun
-by gnawing lichens, smeared by lapse of time to a
-mere vast adumbration of the human form.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This temple had been the supreme effort of Akragas,
-the richest and most beautiful city the Greeks ever
-built. The stories of its wealth, of its luxury, of its
-gardens, palaces, theatres, baths, its gaieties, and its
-pomps, sound like a description of Rome under the
-Empire, and would be incredible if such ruins as this
-did not exist to attest to the facts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Far more characteristic of the Greek were those twin
-temples of Castor and Pollux</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>—“These be the great Twin Brethren</span></div>
- <div class='line in2'><span class='small'>To whom the Dorians pray”—</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>to which Fortunato turned their steps as a refreshing
-counteraction of the stern immensities of Zeus. Light,
-delicate, gracious fragments they were, lifting themselves
-airily from a sea of flowers on the edge of the
-ravine-like Piscina, once the reservoir for the city’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>water, but now full of lemon orchards, and fringed by
-immense dark carouba trees....</p>
-<p class='c007'>Another day, conducted by Fortunato always, they
-pilgrimed to the temple of Hercules, oldest and most
-archaic of them all, containing still in the cella remains
-of the pedestal on which stood that famous bronze
-statue of the muscular hero and demigod. The statue
-which that unscrupulous collector, Verres, tried to remove
-and thereby provoked a riot in the city. In this
-temple too had hung Zeuxis’ renowned painting of
-Hercules’ mother, Alcmena.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was on still another day that Fortunato led through
-olive groves and bowery lanes to the temple of Juno
-Lacina, beguiling the way with light songs—some of
-them distinctly light—and scintillating conversation
-upon all matters in the heavens above, the earth beneath,
-and the waters under the earth. He mimicked
-deliciously the characteristics of English, French, German,
-and American tourists, differentiating their national
-peculiarities with delicate acuity. He made no
-effort to disguise that he had pondered much upon the
-sexes, and opined, with a shrug, that there was a hopeless
-and lifelong irreconcilability in their two points of
-view. Marriage, he frankly conceded to be a necessity,
-but considered it a lamentable one. Of course
-one must come to it soon or late, but, for a man, how
-sad a fate! Then he broke off to sing of undying passion,
-and interrupted himself to ask if the donkeys in
-Nuova Yorka were as quick and strong as those of
-Sicily; he supposed the streets must be crowded with
-them, where the needs of commerce were so great.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Eventually he brought them out upon the lovely
-eminence of the temple of the Mother of Heaven—Juno
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>Lacina, special deity of mothers, which crowns
-the edge of a sheer cliff of orange-yellow tufa four hundred
-feet above the sea. The sea had washed close
-under the cliff when the temple was first built, but now
-at its foot the alluvial plains stretch level and rich, bearing
-orchards and meadows and vineyards more fertile
-than any old Akragas knew, though this very shrine
-was built from the proceeds of exportation of oil to
-Carthage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Earthquakes had shaken down more than half
-the tall, slim columns. Sirocco has bitten deep into
-those still standing, and into the fallen fragments which
-strew the landward slope; fragments lying among
-gnarled olives, seemingly as wind-eaten and ancient as
-themselves. Among these fluted fragments grew wild
-pansies and crimson lupins, from which little Fortunato
-gathered nosegays, as he shrilled, in his boyish falsetto,
-songs of love and sorrow—or sat and kicked his heels
-upon the margin of an old bottle-shaped cistern. Tourists
-whirled up dustily for a cursory inspection—Baedeker
-in hand—and whirled as quickly away, bent on
-getting through the sights and passing on; but still
-Peripatetica and Jane lingered and dreamed among
-the ruins until Fortunato, visibly bored, suggested a
-short cut back to the hotel. It led them by fields of
-lupin, spread like crimson velvet mantles on the hillside,
-where the contadini cut the glowing crop, heaping
-it upon asses until they seemed but a moving mass
-of blossom trotting home on brown legs. Goats, Fortunato
-volunteered, detested—for some curious goatish
-reason he could not explain—this picturesque food,
-but donkeys! ah, to donkeys it was—in a burst of superlative
-explanation—“the donkey macaroni.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>This short cut led, too—apparently to Fortunato’s
-surprise and dismay—directly through a walled farmyard
-surrounding a frowning, half-ruined casa, nail-studded
-of door and barred of window, and with an air
-of ancient and secretive menace. It was the sort of
-place travellers in such books as “The Mysteries of
-Udolpho” used to come upon at nightfall, far from
-any other habitation, with a thunderstorm about to
-break among the mountains, and the leader of their
-four-horsed travelling carriage hopelessly lame, so that
-the delicate and shrinking heroine must, willy nilly,
-beg for a night’s accommodation and the surly inhabitant’s
-sinister hospitality. Curiously enough the
-dwellers in this casa were, it seemed, of the exact
-Udolpho variety. Ringing the correctly rusty bell, and
-battering upon the massive gate with their parasol
-handles aroused a storm of deep-mouthed baying of
-dogs within, and a fierce brown face finally appeared
-at a small wooden shutter to demand the cause of the
-intrusion. Fortunato’s heart and legs plainly turned
-to water at the sight of this person, but realizing that
-he had got Jane and Peripatetica into a hole and must
-get them out, he wheedled in such honeyed and persuasive
-Sicilian, that at last, and reluctantly, the heavy
-portal</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>“Ground its teeth to let them pass,”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>the furious dogs having first been chained. Very arid
-and ruined and poor this jealously guarded dwelling
-seemed. Nothing was visible the protection of which
-required those four big wolf-like dogs that shrieked
-and bounded and tore at their chains as the intruders
-passed; nor that the lean fierce man and his leaner
-and fiercer wife and children should accompany them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>like a jailer’s guard to the exit. Fortunately this nether
-door was unbarred before the lean man demanded
-money for having permitted them to cross his land,
-and having a sense of Fortunato’s imploring eyes upon
-them they made the gift a lire instead of a copper,
-and pushing through the door fled as for their lives.</p>
-<p class='c007'>“So there really was an Italy like the Italy of the
-romantic Georgian novel!” said Jane wonderingly, as
-soon as she could catch breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s only another proof,” gasped Peripatetica,
-“that travellers really do tell the truth. It’s the ignorant
-stay-at-homes who can’t believe anything they
-haven’t seen themselves. Fortunato,” she demanded
-sternly, “who are those people, and why do they behave
-so absurdly? What are they concealing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But no explanation was to be had from that erstwhile
-fluent and expansive <i>homme du monde</i>. He was
-frightened, he was vague, and simply darkened counsel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I strongly suspect there is some Mafia business behind
-all this—you naughty boy!” said Jane reprovingly,
-but Fortunato only pulled his cap over his eyes
-and slunk away without claiming his day’s wage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Because of this episode Fortunato found his offered
-services frigidly dispensed with the next day when he
-presented himself, Jane and Peripatetica setting out
-alone to explore the town of Girgenti. They were
-quite sure they could themselves discover a short cut
-to the small city which would be much more amusing
-than the dusty highway. It seemed but a stone’s
-throw distant, and surely by striking down this footpath,
-and rounding that rise....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An hour later, panting, dripping, and disgusted, they
-climbed into the rear of the town, having stumbled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>through the boulders of dry water-courses, struggled
-over the huge old rugged pavements of ancient Akragas—washed
-out of their concealment by winter torrents—skirted
-outlying villas, and laboured up steps. The
-short cut had proved the longest way round they could
-possibly have taken to the inadequate, shabby little
-museum they had set out to see in this modern successor
-of the great Greek city. Girgenti, though one
-of the most thriving of Sicilian towns, thanks to its
-sulphur mines, only manages to fill one small corner
-of the hill acropolis of that ancient city, which once
-covered all the miles stretching between this and the
-temple-crowned ridge of the southern boundary of
-cliffs. Akragas found space for nearly a million of inhabitants
-where Girgenti nourishes but twenty thousand
-or so.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was not till 580 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> that this Rhodian colony was
-founded, so Akragas was a century and a half younger
-than her great rival, Syracuse—the offspring of Corinth.
-But that site on the steep river-girt hill, rising
-from such fertile country, proved so favourable to life
-and commerce; trade with the opposite coast of Africa
-developed so richly, that Akragas’ rise to wealth and
-power was rapid, and she was soon pressing Syracuse
-hard for the place of first city. Her temples were the
-greatest of all Sicily, almost of all Greece. The city’s
-magnificence became a bye-word, and accounts of the
-wealth and prodigality of its private citizens read like
-Arabian Nights imaginings. In the public gymnasium
-the people used golden strigils and gold vessels for oil.
-One rich Akragantine kept slaves in waiting all day
-at the door of his great mansion to invite every passing
-stranger in to feast and repose in his spacious courts,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>where there were baths and fresh garments always
-waiting and slaves to entertain with dance and music;
-flower garlands and food and wine unlimited at his
-call. There was wine in the cellars by the reservoir
-full—three hundred reservoirs of nine hundred gallons
-each—hewn in the solid rock! This same genial
-Gelleas, when five hundred riders came at once from
-Gela, took them all in, and, it being the dead of winter,
-presented each man with new warm garments.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They delighted in pageants and splendid public festivals,
-these splendour-loving Akragantines, of whom
-their philosopher Empedocles said that they “built as
-if they were to live forever and feasted as if they were
-to die on the morrow!” We know they went out to
-welcome young Exainetos, victor at the Olympian
-Games, with three hundred glittering chariots drawn
-all by milk-white horses; we know of the wonderful
-illuminations that lit all the city, from the monuments
-of the high Acropolis to the temple-crowned sea-rampart,
-when a noble bride passed at night to her new
-home, with flutings and chorus, and an escort of eight
-hundred carriages and riders innumerable.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now the town seemed to be mostly a winding tangle
-of steep stairs—with houses for walls—and these stairs
-were bestrewn with ancient remnants of vegetables that
-had outlived their usefulness, and a swarming population
-of children. Fazelli mentions an Agrigentian
-woman of his time who brought forth seventy-three
-children at thirty-three births, and judging from the
-appearance of the streets that rabbit-like practice still
-maintains. Way could hardly be made through the
-swarm of juvenile pests, clamouring for pennies and
-offering themselves as guides, until a boy in slightly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>cleaner rags was chosen to show the way to the Cathedral.
-Once given an official position he furiously put
-his competitors to flight, and with goat-footed lightness
-flitted before up the ladder-like alleys, while the
-two panted after until it seemed as if they should be
-able easily to step off into the sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A queer old Fourteenth Century campanile, with
-Norman ogives and Moorish balconies, still gives character
-to the exterior of this thousand-foot-long Cathedral
-of San Gerlando perched aloft in the windy blue,
-but inside the Eighteenth Century had done its worst.
-Baroque rampant; colossal stucco mermaids and cupids,
-interspersed with gilded whorls and scrolls as
-thick as shells upon the “shell-work” boxes of the seaside
-booths. A giant finger could flick out a dozen
-cupids anywhere without their ever being missed.
-Yet it stands upon the ruins of a temple to Jove, and
-here for more than two thousand years have prayers
-and praise and incense gone up to the gods of the
-overarching blue that looks so near, so that even stucco
-and gilding cannot render it irreverent or lessen its
-power to brood the children of earth beneath its wings.</p>
-
-<div id='illus_229' class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/illus_229.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='sc'>Temples of Castor and Pollux, Girgenti</span><br />“<span class='sc'>Lifting Themselves Airily From a Sea of Flowers</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>Even so it seemed to-day, for merrily and thickly as
-the throngs of naked little stucco cupids chased each
-other on the walls, infants of flesh and blood in gay
-rags and heavy hob-nailed shoes swarmed over the
-marble floor. As if it were a kindergarten small boys
-played games of tag around the columns, small girls
-trotted about more demurely, or flocked like rows of
-perching sparrows around the numerous altars. The
-church resounded with the hum of their voices and the
-patter of their feet; yet the old women at prayer continued
-their devotions, quite undisturbed, and no passing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>priest or sacristan did more than shake a gentle
-finger at some especially boisterous youngster.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The sacristy holds the jewel of the Cathedral, a
-ravished jewel which does not belong at all in this
-ecclesiastical setting—the lovely Greek sarcophagus
-portraying the passionate story of Hippolytus and
-Phædra. This is the one remnant now left to Akragas
-out of all her treasures of Greek art. Found in the
-temple of Concord, where the gentle St. Gregory had
-probably cherished it, the Girgentians offered it to
-their Cathedral, and in that most tolerant of churches
-it served for long as the High Altar until influx of the
-outer world made some sense of its incongruity felt
-even here. At one end of the tomb Phædra swoons
-amourously among her maidens, their delicate little
-round child-like faces and soft-draped forms melting
-into the background in exquisite low relief. Two of a
-more stately beauty hold up the Queen’s limp arms
-and support her as she confesses to her old nurse the
-secret passion consuming her for that god-like boy,
-son of her own husband, whom with all her fiery blood
-she had once hated as illegitimate rival to her own children,
-but now had come to find so dear that she “loved
-the very touch of his fleecy coat”—that simple grey-and-white
-homespun his Amazon mother’s loving
-fingers had woven. In high bold relief of interlacing
-trees Hippolytus on the other side hunts as joyously as
-his patroness Artemis herself. Opposite, arrested
-among his dogs and companions, he stands in the clear
-purity of his young beauty, like “the water from the
-brook or the wild flowers of the morning, or the beams
-of the morning star turned to human flesh,” turning
-away his head from the bent shrunken form of the old
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>nurse pleading her shameful embassy. And on the
-other end is carved the tragedy of his death, the revenge
-of Aphrodite in anger at his obduracy against
-herself and her votary Phædra. “Through all the
-perils of darkness he had guided the chariot safely
-along the curved shore; the dawn was come, and a
-little breeze astir as the grey level spaces parted delicately
-into white and blue, when angry Aphrodite
-awoke from the deep betimes, rent the tranquil surface;
-a great wave leapt suddenly into the placid distance
-of the little shore, and was surging here to the
-very necks of the plunging horses, a moment since enjoying
-so pleasantly with him the caress of the morning
-air, but now, wholly forgetful of their old affectionate
-habit of obedience, dragging their leader headlong
-over the rough pavements.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Life seemed to breathe from the ivory-coloured
-marble. So vividly had its creator’s hand carried out the
-conception of his brain that all the elapsed centuries
-since the vision of beauty had come to him were but as
-drifting mists. Races, dynasties, powers, the very form
-of the earth itself, had altered, in the changing ages, but
-the grace of this little dream was still a living force.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“Oh Attic shape! Fair Attitude! with brede</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Of marble men and maidens, over wrought</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>With forest branches and the trodden weed;</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Thou, silent form, dost tease us out of thought</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>As doth eternity; Cold Pastoral!</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>When old age shall this generation waile</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Thou shalt remain, in midst of other woe</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Than ours, a friend to man, to whom thou say’st,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>‘Beauty is truth, truth beauty,’—that is all</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>On the steps of the Cathedral they witnessed a pretty
-sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Peripatetica,” announced Jane, “I will not walk
-back to the hotel! It may be only one mile from town,
-by the high road, but it was certainly four by that short
-cut, and all this hill-climbing on slippery cobbles has
-turned my knees to tissue paper. The boy must get
-us a cab—how does one say it? You tell him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The boy hesitated at first at Peripatetica’s request,
-but went off in obedience to the firm command of her
-tone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Accustomed to the ubiquitous, ever present and ever-pestering
-cab of Taormina and Syracuse, they expected
-his instant return. But the minutes passed and
-passed, and sitting on the parapet of the Cathedral
-steps they had long opportunity to watch the world
-wag on. Apparently it was “Children’s Day” at the
-Cathedral, to which they were being mustered for
-catechism. The swarms inside were now explained.
-Though it had seemed as if every child in town must
-already be there, they were still flocking in.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mites of every size and sort between the ages of two
-and ten, small things with no accompanying elders,
-came toiling up the steep streets Cathedralwards,
-climbing the long flights of steps and boldly shoving
-into the great doorway.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But the different manner of their coming! The unfaltering
-steady advance of the devout—heads brushed,
-shirts and frocks clean, faces set and solemn, no words
-or smiles for their companions, minds fixed on duty.
-Little girls came in bands, tongues going like mill-hoppers
-even as they plunged within the sacred portal.
-Little boys enlivened their pilgrimage with chasings
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>and scuffles. Wee tots, timidly attached to the hand
-of some patriarch of eight or nine; receiving therefrom
-protecting encouragement, or being ruthlessly dragged
-along at the top speed of chubby legs, regardless of their
-streaming tears. Loiterers arriving with panting pink
-tongues, stockings half off and dragging, clothes all in
-disarray from some too delightful game on the way,
-plodding breathless up the steps with worried rubbings
-on clothes of dirty little paws; still casting reluctant
-looks at the sunshine before they made the
-plunge behind the dark leather curtain. Reprobates,
-at the very last refusing to enter at all; refusing to exchange
-the outer darkness of play and sunshine for the
-inner light of wax tapers and the Catechism; giving
-themselves boldly over to sin on the very Cathedral
-steps in merry games of tag and loud jeerings and
-floutings of the old beggar men who had given up their
-sunny posts at the doors in attempts to drive these
-backsliders in. And the Reluctant, coming with slow
-and dragging feet; heads turned back to all the mundane
-charms of the streets, lingering as long as possible
-before final hesitating entrance. For these last it
-was very hard that, straight in their way, just in front
-of the Cathedral, a brother Girgentian, whose very
-tender age still rendered him immune from religious
-duties, was thrillingly disporting himself with an iron
-barrel-hoop tied to a string, the leg of a chicken, and
-two most delightful mud-puddles. The care-free
-sportings and delicious condition of dirt of this Blessed
-Being made their own soaped and brushed virtue most
-cruelly unsatisfying to many of the Pilgrims. But
-there was the Infant Example, who, with crisp short
-skirts rustling complacency, and Mother’s large Prayer-book
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>clasped firmly to her bosom, climbed the steps
-with eyes rolled raptly heavenwards and little black
-pig-tails vibrating piety. And some little boys with
-both stockings firmly gartered, jackets irreproachably
-buttoned, and a consciousness of all the answers to the
-Catechism safely bestowed in their sleek little heads,
-made their way in eagerly, wrapped in the “showing off”
-excitement. These little Lambs passed coldly and disapprovingly
-through those who had chosen to be goats
-in the outer sunshine. But many small ewes sent
-glances of fearful admiration from soft dark eyes at
-those bold flouters of authority, and many proper
-youths looked sidewise at them so longingly it was
-plain that only the fear of evil report taken home by
-sisters in tow, kept them from joining the Abandoned
-Ones.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica, amused and interested, forgot the flight
-of time. Jane, suddenly realizing it, cried:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That boy has been gone a half hour—do you suppose
-you really told him to get a cab? I believe you
-must have said something wild and strange which the
-poor thing will spend the rest of his life questing while
-we turn into lichens on this parapet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica, indignantly denying this slur on her
-Italian, insisted she had clearly and correctly demanded
-a cab, and a cab only.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I remember,” she reflected, “the boy looked very
-troubled as he went off—and now that I come to think
-of it, we haven’t met a horse in this town to-day. The
-Romans must have looted all the conveyances in their
-last sack of the city; the only one left is now kept in
-the Museum in a glass case, and allowed out for no
-less a person than the German Emperor—but I <i>won’t</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>walk back. I should suppose the boy had deserted
-us, except that he hasn’t been paid.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Poor little wretch! That was why he looked so
-troubled,” exclaimed Jane. “He knew the long and
-difficult search he was being sent upon, and perhaps
-thought it was a mere Barbarian ruse to shake him off,
-so that we could get away without paying him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As she spoke the sound of thudding hoofs echoed
-from the walls of the Cathedral, and the white anxious
-face of their guide appeared on flying legs. The reassurance
-that changed his expression into a beaming
-smile at sight of the two still there, made it clear that
-Jane’s supposition had been correct. He had evidently
-feared to find both his clients and the silver rewards
-of his labours vanished. The relief with which
-he gasped out his explanation of having had to go all
-the way down into the valley to the railway station to
-get a carriage which was now on its way while he had
-dashed ahead on foot up a short cut, was so pathetic
-they gave him double pay to console him for his worry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And then with a noise between the rumble of a thunderstorm
-and the clatter of a tinman’s wagon came
-their “carrozza.” Its cushions were in rags, the harness
-almost all rope, one door was off a hinge and swung
-merrily useless—but two lean steeds drew this noble
-barouche and two men in rags sat solemnly on its
-ricketty box with such an air of importance its passengers
-felt as if they were being conducted homeward in
-a chariot of state.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Fortunato, restored to favour, was leading them up
-the Rupe Athena, that rose steeply immediately behind
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>their hotel; he was leading them not straight up,
-but by a series of long “biases”—as Jane expressed
-it. The end of the first bias reached the little lonely
-church of San Biago, dreary and uninteresting enough
-in its solitary perch, save for the fact that it stood upon
-the site of a temple to Demeter and Persephone:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“Our Lady of the Sheaves,</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>And the Lily of Hades, the Sweet</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Of Enna”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>placed here no doubt because this high spur was the
-only point in Girgenti from which one could catch a
-glimpse of the lofty steeps of Enna-Castrogiovanni.</p>
-<p class='c007'>Turning at a sharp angle again they went slanting
-up across the bare hillside, the wild thyme sending up
-a keen sweet incense beneath their climbing feet, until
-they came to the verge of the great yellow broken cliff
-that shot up more than a thousand feet from the valley
-below. Some crumpling of the earth’s crust, ages ago,
-had forced up this sheer mass of sandstone, hung now
-with cactus, thyme, and vines, which served as one of
-the natural defences of Akragas, behind whose unscalable
-heights the unwarlike city had been enabled peacefully
-to pursue its gathering of wealth and luxury.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fortunato, leaning over the marge, clapped his hands
-suddenly, and a cloud of rock pigeons flew forth from
-the crevices, to wheel and flutter and settle again
-among the vines. Probably descendants of those
-pigeons who lived in these same crevices in the days of
-the monster Phalaris, and helped to compass his death.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Pythagoras—that strange wanderer and mystic,
-whose outlines loom so beautiful and so incomprehensible
-through the vagueness of legend, was first flattered
-and then threatened by the Tyrant, who feared
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>the philosopher’s teachings of freedom and justice.
-At one of those public discussions, so impossible in any
-other country ruled despotically, and yet so characteristically
-Greek—Pythagoras rounded a burst of eloquence
-by pointing to a flock of these pigeons fleeing
-before a hawk.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='small'>“See what a vile fear is capable of,” he cried. “If but one of these
-pigeons dared to resist he would save his companions, who would
-have time to flee.”</span></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Fired by the suggestion the old Telemachus threw
-a stone at the Tyrant and despite the efforts of his
-guards, Phalaris was ground to a bloody paste by the
-stones and fury of the suddenly enfranchised Akragantines.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is our last day,” Jane had said; “we will go and
-bid the temples good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Which was why she and Peripatetica were scaling
-in the sunset the golden cliffs which Concordia crowned,
-having come to it by a détour to Theron’s tomb.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They drew themselves laboriously up to the crest,
-and sank breathlessly upon the verge among the crumbled
-grave pits, where the Greeks buried their dead
-along the great Temple road. Not only their beloved
-human companions they interred here, but the horses
-who had been Olympian victors, their faithful dogs,
-and their pet birds. It was in rifling these graves, in
-search of jewels and treasure, that the greedy Carthagenians
-had reaped a hideous pestilence as a price
-of their impiety. Now the graves were but empty
-grass-grown troughs, and one might sit among them
-safely to watch the skyey glories flush across the sapphire
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>sea, and redden the hill where the little shrunken
-Girgenti sent down the soft pealing of Cathedral
-chimes from her airy distance. Beside them Concordia’s
-columns deepened to tints of beaten gold in the
-last rays, and across the level plain far below—already
-dusk—the people streamed home from their long day’s
-labour. Flocks of silky, antlered goats strayed and
-cropped as they moved byre-wards, urged by brown
-goatherds who piped the old country tunes as they
-went. The same tunes Theocritus listened to in the
-dusk thousands of summers since, or that Empedocles,
-purple-clad, and golden-crowned, might have heard
-vaguely fluting through his dreams of life and destiny
-as he meditated beneath these temple shadows as night
-came down.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Asses pattered and tinkled towards the farms, laden
-with crimson burdens of sweet-smelling lupin. Painted
-carts rattled by with oil or wine; and cries and laughter
-and song came faintly up to them as the evening
-grew grey.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How little it changes,” said Peripatetica wistfully.
-“We will pass and vanish as all these did on whose
-tombs we rest, and hundreds of years from now there
-will be the same colours and the same songs to widen
-the new eyes with delight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let us be grateful for the joys of Theocritus, and
-for our joys and for the same joy in the same old beauties
-of those to come,” said Jane, sententiously. “And
-let us go home, for the moon is rising.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Large and golden it came out of the rosy east, the
-west still smouldering with the dying fires of the ended
-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Their way led through the olive orchards, grown
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>argent in the faint light, and taking on fresh fantasies
-of gnarling, and of ghostly resemblances to twisted,
-convoluted human forms. Among the misty olives the
-blooming pear-trees showed like delicate silvery-veiled
-brides in the paling dark, and with the falling dew
-arose the poignant incense of ripening lemons, of blossoming
-weeds, and of earth freshly tilled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Wandering a little from the faintly traced path,
-grown invisible in the vagueness of the diffused moon-radiance,
-they called for help to a young shepherd going
-lightly homeward, with his cloak draped in long
-classic folds from one shoulder, and singing under his
-breath. A shepherd who may have been merely a
-commonplace, handsome young Sicilian by day, but
-who in this magic shining dusk was the shepherd of all
-pastoral verse, strayed for a moment from Arcady.
-Following his swift light feet they were set at last into
-the broad road among the herds and the asses and the
-homing labourers—Demeter’s well-beloved children.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“E’en now the distant farms send up their smoke,</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>And shadows lengthen from the lofty hills.</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>—Now the gloaming star</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Bids fold the flock and duly tell their tale,</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>And moves unwelcome up the wistful sky.</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Go home, my full-fed goats,</span></div>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>Cometh the Evening Star, my goats, go home.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>
-<img src='images/illus_241.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 id='ch06' class='c005'>CHAPTER VI <br /> <br /> <span class='sc'>The Golden Shell</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c013'>
- <div><span class='small'>“<i>Kennst du das Land, wo die Citronen blüh’n?</i>”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='sc'>When</span> Ulysses Grant had ended the Civil War in
-America and was made President, he turned from
-uttering his solemn oath of office before the cheering
-multitudes and said under his breath to his wife who
-stood beside him, in that tone of half-resentful, half-weary
-patience the American husband usually adopts
-in speaking to his mate, “Well, now, Julia, I hope
-you’re satisfied!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was the same exasperated patience in Jane’s
-voice as she climbed into the railway carriage for Palermo
-and, throwing herself back upon the cushions,
-exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, now, Peripatetica, I hope you’ve had enough
-of the Greeks! For my part I go on to the next course;
-something a little more modern. Tombs and goddesses
-and columns and myths cloy as a steady diet for
-months, and even the ridiculous pompous old Eighteenth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>Century would seem rather home-like and
-comfy as a change. I could find it in my heart to
-relish a bit of the odious decadence of <i>l’art nouveau</i>
-simply by way of contrast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Peripatetica treated this shameful outburst with all
-the stern contempt it so truly merited, as she was engaged
-in making the acquaintance of a descendant of
-that great race of Northmen who had made history all
-over Sicily and the rest of Europe. He too was a conqueror,
-though his weapon was a paint-brush and a
-modelling tool instead of a sword, and kings received
-him with all the honours due an acknowledged ruler
-of a realm. He dwelt by a great lake far to the north
-in that “nursery of kings” in a home built five hundred
-years ago of huge fir-trees; logs so sound and clean-fibred
-that the centuries had left the wood still as firm
-as stone. Making his play of resurrection of the old
-wild melodies of the North, of the old costumes and industries
-of the people from whose loins had sprung half
-the rulers of the continent. The Sea Rover’s blood was
-strong in him too, driving him to wander in a boat no
-bigger than those of his Viking ancestors along the stormy
-fjords and fierce coasts to the still more distant north.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For the adornment of the log-built home Sicily had
-yielded to his wise searching various relics of antiquity,
-Greek, Norman, Saracen, and Spanish, and in the
-ensuing days in which Jane and Peripatetica were permitted
-to tread the same path with the Northman and
-his beautiful wife, these treasures came out of pockets
-to be fitted with dates and history, and even, in the delightful
-instance of one small ghostly grotesque, to
-change owners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>While the two seekers of Persephone were gathering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>and savouring this refreshing tang of the cold salt
-of the northern seas, this large vista of the gay, poised
-strength of a mighty race—their train was looping and
-coiling through summer hills to the seat of summer—cherry
-and apple, peach and pear trees tossed wreaths
-of rose and white from amid the grey of olives and the
-green of citron, for this was the land of Mignon’s homesick
-dream—“das Land, wo die Citronen blüh’n.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Miles and miles and miles of orange and lemon
-groves ran beside their path; climbing the hills and
-creeping down to the edge of the tideless sea. Trees
-that were nurtured like babies; each orchard gathered
-about old grey or rose-washed tanks holding the precious
-water which is the life-blood of all this golden
-culture during the rainless summer. Tanks moist
-and dripping and fringed with ferns, mirroring the
-overhanging yellow fruit, or the pink geraniums that
-peeped over the shoulders of the broad-bladed cacti to
-blush happily at their own reflections in the water.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An exquisite form of orcharding, this, as delicate and
-perfect as a hot-house, with every inch of the soil utilized
-for the vegetables set about the trees’ roots, and
-the trees themselves growing in unbelievable numbers
-to the acre. For not one superfluous leaf or branch
-was there—just the requisite number to carry and
-nourish the greatest possible quantity of fruit. In
-consequence of which the whole land was as if touched
-by some vegetable Midas and turned all to gold. Millions
-and millions of the yellow globes hung still unpicked,
-though already the trees were swelling the buds
-which within ten days were to break forth into a far-flung
-bridal wreath, and intoxicate all the land with
-honeyed perfumes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>And, mark you, how nations are influenced by their
-trees! In the bad old days of constant war and turmoil
-the isolated family was never secure, and the
-people clung to the towns, but modern careful culture
-of the orange has forced orchardists to live close by
-their charges, and the population is being slowly pushed
-back into rural life, with the result of better health,
-better morals, and a great decrease of homicides. One
-has really no convenient time for sticking knives into
-one’s friends when one is showing lemon-trees how to
-earn $400 an acre and orange-trees half as much....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is the most beautiful town in the whole world,”
-said Peripatetica in that tiresomely dogmatic way she
-has of expressing the most obvious fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They had wandered out of their hotel, and through
-a pair of stately iron gates crowned with armorial
-beasts. Beyond the gates lay a garden. But a garden!
-Acres of garden, laced by sweeping avenues,
-shadowed by cypress and stone pines, by ilex and laurel.
-From the avenues dipped paths which wound through
-<i>boscoes</i>, looped under bridges veiled with curtains of
-wisteria and yellow banksias, climbed again to pass
-through pleached walks; paths that tied themselves
-about shadowy pools where swans floated in the gloom
-of palm groves, or debouched across emerald lawns
-where clumps of forget-me-nots and cinerarias made
-splashes of bold colour in the grass.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They do these things so well in Europe,” remarked
-Peripatetica approvingly, as a splendid functionary, in
-a long blue coat and carrying a silver-headed staff,
-lifted his cockaded hat to them as they entered the
-gates. “Now where at home would one find one of
-our park guardians with such a manner, and looking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>so like a nobleman’s servant? This,” she went on, in
-an instructive tone, being newly arisen from a guide-book,
-“is the Giardino Inglese; one of the public
-parks, and it has exactly the air of loved and carefully
-tended private possession.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They lounged over the parapets of the carved bridges,
-with their elbows set among roses, to look down into
-the little ravines where small runnels flowed among the
-soft pink-purple clouds of Judas-trees. They were
-tempted into allées bordered their whole length with the
-white fountains of blossoming spireas, or hedged on
-both sides by pink hermosas. They strolled past
-clumps of feathery bamboos to gaze along the shadowy
-vistas of four broad avenues meeting at a bright circle
-where a sculptured fountain tossed its waters in the
-sun. They lingered in paths where tea-roses were
-garlanded from tree to tree, or by walls curtained by
-Maréchale Niels. They inspected the nurseries and
-admired the greenhouse. They came with delight upon
-a double ring of giant cypresses lifting dark spires
-into the dazzling blue of the sky, and sat to rest happily
-upon a great curved marble seat whose back had
-lettered upon it a reminder to the “Shadowed Soul”
-that wisdom comes only in shade and peace.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“E La Sagezza Vieni Solo</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Nel’ Ombra E Pace.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>And finally they mounted the little tiled and columned
-belvedere hanging at the corner of the garden’s lofty
-wall to gaze upon a view unrivalled of this most beautifully
-placed city.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Palermo lay stretched before them in its plain of the
-Conca d’Oro—the golden shell. Round it as a garland
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>rose a semicircle of vapoury mountains like rosy-purple
-clouds, bending on beyond the plain on either
-side to clasp a bay of dazzling violet whose waters
-glowed at the city’s feet; the city itself warmly cream-tinted
-and roofed with dull red tiles. A city towered,
-columned, arched; with here the ruddy bubbles of San
-Giovanni degli Eremiti’s domes, there the tall spires and
-fretted crest of the Cathedral; and flowing through it
-all, or resting here and there in pools, the green of
-orange groves, the flushing mist of Judas-trees, the
-long stream of verdant parks and gardens.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not only is this the loveliest city in the whole
-world,” said Jane, “but this is also the sweetest of all
-gardens, and a curious thing is that we seem to have
-it quite to ourselves. You’d suppose all Palermo
-would want to come here for at least half of every day,
-but not a soul have we met except those two dear,
-queer old gardeners sitting on the tank’s edge playing
-a game with orange seeds.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, if the Palermians haven’t intelligence enough
-to use such a garden, we have,” announced Peripatetica.
-“And we will come here every day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Which they did for a while; bringing their fountain
-pens to write letters in the bosco, or resting after sight-seeing
-in the cool shade of the cypress ring. And it
-might have served them to the end as their intimate
-joy had it not been for Peripatetica’s insane passion
-for gardening.</p>
-
-<div id='illus_247' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/illus_247.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>“<span class='sc'>Sicily’s Picture-book, The Painted Cart</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>All about the edge of the long <i>tapis vert</i> which lay
-before the handsome building at the end of the garden—a
-building which they supposed housed some lucky
-park official—stood at intervals fine standard roses.
-Now one unlucky day Peripatetica descried aphides upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>the delicate shoots and young buds of these standards.
-That was sufficient. An aphis, to her rose-growing
-mind, is a noxious wild beast, and promptly stripping
-off her gloves she ravened among them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Perhaps you’d better leave them alone,” warned
-Jane in a whisper. “The gardeners look so surprised.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By no means!” objected Peripatetica in lofty obstinacy,
-with a backward glance of contempt at the
-visibly astonished attendants. “The city no doubt
-pays them well to grow roses, and I mean to shame
-them for this indecent neglect of their duties. Besides,
-I am enjoying it immensely; I’ve been hungering and
-thirsting for a little gardening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That very day it was conveyed to their intelligence—or
-their lack of it—that they had not been enjoying
-the Giardino Inglese, a dull park which lay almost
-opposite, but had been calmly annexing the private
-grounds of Prince Travia. He, however, being a
-model of princely courtesy, was glad to have the foreign
-ladies amuse themselves there as much as they liked.
-Only once more did they see it; on the day of departure,
-when they blushingly left a tip in the hands of
-the handsome old silver-staffed portiere, who had truly
-looked like a nobleman’s servant, and behaved like
-one as he saluted them with unprotesting dignity each
-time they had passed in and out of that beauteous spot
-in which they had no right to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were many other gardens in Palermo, but
-none so fair. The green world was so enchanting in
-this glowing spring that a day of <i>villegiatura</i> was necessary
-between every two days of sight-seeing, and having
-been banished from the Travia garden by their
-own innate sense of decency, they took lunch in their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>pockets and set out for the famous Villa Giulia which
-had aroused such enthusiasm in Goethe.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Villa Giulia, as they might have foreseen, was
-just the sort of thing Goethe would have liked—and
-they had been violently disagreeing with Goethe all
-over Sicily. An untouched example of the most tiresome
-form of Eighteenth Century gardening—a cross
-between a wedding cake and a German Noah’s Ark.
-All rigid, glaring, gravelly little allées, with trees as
-denuded of natural luxuriance as a picked chicken;
-sugar-icing grottoes; baroque fountains; gaudy music
-kiosks; cages of frowzy birds and mangy monkeys;
-and posé busts in self-conscious bowers. Not here
-could these Eden-exiled Eves lunch, nor yet in the untidy,
-uninteresting Botanic Gardens next door—a wilderness
-of potted specimens and obtrusive labels—but
-wandering melancholily around a vast egregious gas
-tank, they came upon a long, neglected avenue of great
-trees; all that was left of some once lovely villa swept
-out of existence by the gas works. And here upon a
-stone bench in the glimmering shade they fed at the
-feet of a feeble little knock-kneed marble King. One
-of the Spanish monarchs of Sicily it was, thus commemorated
-in marble Roman armour and a curled marble
-wig, and his rickety, anæmic majesty moved them to
-smiling pity, so feeble and miserable he looked, forgotten
-and overshadowed by modern gas tanks, his
-boneless legs ready to give under him, and his peevish
-face smeared with creeping lichens. The green tunnel
-of the trees framed a blazing sapphire at the other end—a
-glimpse of the bay—and ragged pink roses, and
-neglected purple iris bloomed together along the path.
-Ere another year the blight of the gas works will have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>swept away the airy avenue, the wilding flowers, the
-poor spineless little King, and the two bid it all a wistfully
-smiling farewell, knowing they should never again
-eat an April day’s bread and cheese under those sweet
-auspices.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>... Will travellers from the roaring cities of Central
-Africa come a couple of centuries hence and mark with
-regret the last bit of some now flourishing boscage
-being eaten away by Twenty-Second Century progress,
-and smile indulgently at one of our foolishly feeble
-statues, in granite frock coats, tottering to lichened oblivion?
-No doubt. Palermo has seen so many changes
-since the Phœnicians used to trade and build along
-this coast. For this was the Carthagenian “sphere of
-influence” from the first, and the Greeks were here
-but little, and have left no traces in Palermo, though
-in the long wars between Carthagenian and Greek it
-was captured by the latter from time to time, and held
-for a space. The Greeks called it Panormous—meaning
-all harbour, for in their day deep water curved
-well up into the town, where are now streets and palaces
-and hotels. Of course Rome held it for a while,
-as she held pretty nearly everything. Held it for close
-upon a thousand years—with the Goths for its masters
-at one interval—but there are few traces of Rome
-either, and then the Arabs took it and set their seal so
-deep, in less than two centuries, that after the lapse of
-nearly another thousand years their occupation is still
-visible at every turn. For under the Saracens it was
-a capital, and after their destruction of Syracuse, which
-ended Greek domination in the Island, it gained a pre-eminence
-among Sicilian cities never afterwards lost.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>That garrulous old traveller from Bagdad, Ibn Haukal,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>writing in 943, says that Palermo then had a most
-formidable nine-gated wall, a population of close upon
-half a million, and many mosques. He also says that
-near where the Cathedral now stands was a great swamp
-full of papyrus plants, serving not only for paper but
-for the manufacture of rope.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Already Sicily was beginning to suffer from the scarcity
-of water, and the merchant from Bagdad, accustomed
-to the abundant pools and conduits of his own
-city, makes severe comments upon the lack of these in
-Palermo. It could only have been by contrast, however,
-that the Palermians could have seemed to Haukal
-dirty, because Jane and Peripatetica, going to see a
-part of the old Moorish quarter, in process of demolition,
-found multitudinous water-pipes in the houses,
-entering almost every chamber. Haukal says that the
-Greek philosopher Aristotle was buried in one of the
-mosques of Palermo, and he opines that the most serious
-defect of the citizens was their universal consumption
-of onions. Peripatetica—to whom that repulsive
-vegetable is a hissing and an astonishment—read aloud
-in clamant sympathy this outburst of Haukal’s:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is not a person among them, high or low,
-who does not eat them in his house daily, both in the
-morning and at evening. This is what has ruined their
-intelligence and affected their brains and degraded their
-senses and distracted their faculties and crushed their
-spirits and spoiled their complexions, and so altogether
-changed their temperaments that everything, or almost
-everything, appears to them quite different from what
-it is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That gentleman from Bagdad is a man after my
-own heart,” she declared triumphantly. “I have always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>been sure that people who eat onions must be
-those to whom ‘almost everything appears quite different
-from what it is,’ for if they had the slightest idea of
-‘what it is’ for other people to be near them after they
-have indulged that meretricious appetite they would
-certainly never do it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This Arab impress, though visible everywhere, is
-more a general atmosphere than definite remains; for
-with but few exceptions their creations are so overlaid
-and modified by subsequent Occidental work that it
-glows through this overlay rather than defines itself.
-It was while searching for Moorish fragments that Jane
-and Peripatetica came upon La Ziza. The guide-books
-unanimously asserted that Al Aziz—La Ziza—was
-the work of the Norman King, William I., but the
-guide-books, they had long since discerned, were as
-prone to jump to unwarranted conclusions, and, having
-jumped, to be as aggravatingly cocksure in sticking
-to their mistakes as was Peripatetica herself. So
-they took leave to doubt this assertion, and concluded
-that William probably seized the lovely country-house
-of some Moorish magnate, adding to it sufficiently to
-make of it a “lordly pleasure dome” for himself in the
-wide orange gardens, but the core of the place was
-wholly Moorish in character; well worth the annexing,
-well worth its name Al Aziz—The Beloved.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They came through the hot, white sunshine up wide,
-low steps, through a huge grille in an enormous archway,
-to find a windowless room where the glaring day
-paled to glaucous shadow against the green tiles of a
-lofty chamber, as cool and glistening as a sea cave.
-And the sound of rippling water echoed from the lucent
-sides and honeycomb vaultings, for a shining
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>fountain gushed from the wall into a tiled channel of
-irregular levels, artfully planned to chafe the sliding
-water into music before it slept for awhile in a pool,
-and then slipped again through another channel to
-another pool, and so passed from the chamber—having
-glinted over its shining path of gold and green and
-blue, and having filled the place with cool moisture and
-clear song.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“With fierce noons beaming,</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Moons of glory gleaming,</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Full conduits streaming</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Where fair bathers lie—”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Quoted Peripatetica—who might be safely counted on
-to have a tag of verse concealed about her person for
-every possible occasion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Did you ever see anything that so adequately embodied
-the Arab conception of pleasure? Coolness,
-moisture, the singing of water, noble proportions, and
-clean colour wrought into grave and continent devices?
-Was there ever anything,” she went on, “so curious as
-the contradictions of racial instincts? Who could suppose
-that this would be the home-ideal of those wild
-desert dwellers who always loved and fought like demons;
-who were the most voluptuous, the most cruel,
-the most poetic and the ‘so fightingest’ race the world
-has probably ever seen!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, contradictions!” laughed Jane. “Here’s a
-flat contradiction, if you like. Please contemplate the
-delicious, the exquisite absurdities of these frescoes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>For, needless to say, the Eighteenth Century had not
-allowed to escape so exquisite an opportunity to make
-an ass of itself, and had spread over the clean, composed
-patterns of the tiled walls a layer of lime-wash
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>on which it had proceeded to paint in coarse, bright
-colours indecently unclad goddesses, all flushed blowzy
-and beribboned; all lolloping amourously about on
-clouds or in chariots, or falling into the arms of be-wigged
-deities of war or of love. Fortunately the
-greater part of these gross conceptions had been diligently
-scrubbed away, but enough remained to make
-Peripatetica splutter indignantly:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, of all the hideous barbarians! The Eighteenth
-Century was really the darkest of dark ages.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear,” Jane explained contemptuously, “the
-Eighteenth Century wasn’t a period of time. It was
-merely a deplorable state of mind. And the mind
-seems to have been slightly tipsy, it was so fantastic
-and ridiculous, and yet so gravely self-satisfied.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>La Cuba, another Saracenic relic, was so obliterated
-into the mere military barrack to which it had been
-transformed that there was nothing for it but to pass
-on to the Normans, and to great Roger de Hauteville,
-a fit companion of the Paladins, so heavy a “Hammer
-of the Moors” was he—so knightly, so romantic, so
-beautiful.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Not until twelve years after that bold attempt at
-Messina to conquer a kingdom with only sixty companions
-was Roger able to enter Palermo, and he and
-his nephews chose for themselves “delectable gardens
-abounding with fruit and water, and the knights were
-royally lodged in an earthly paradise.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No hideous massacre or sack followed the taking of
-Palermo, for though Roger had conquered the island
-for himself he was a true mirror of chivalry, and was
-never cruel. He was chivalrous not only to the defeated,
-but to those other helpless creatures, women, who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>in his day were mere pawns in the great military and
-political games played by the men; married whether
-they would or no, and unmarried without heed of any
-protest from them; thrust into convents against their
-wishes, and haled out of convents if they were needed.
-And swept ruthlessly from the board when they had
-served their purpose, or when they got in the way of
-those fierce pieces passaging back and forth across the
-chequered squares of the field of life. Roger loved the
-Norman maid Eremberga from his early boyhood, it
-appears, and as soon as his hazardous fortunes would
-permit she was had out from Normandy, and the history
-of the great soldier is full of his devotion, and of
-her fidelity and courage. As at the siege of Troina,
-when the two were reduced by hunger and cold to the
-greatest extremities, sharing one cloak between them,
-so that finally Roger, rendered desperate by his wife’s
-sufferings, burst through the ring of Saracens, leaving
-her to defend the fortress with unshaken valour until
-he returned with a force adequate to save her, and raise
-the siege.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There is an amusing story of Roger and his eldest
-brother, that ruthless old fox, Robert Guiscard. They
-were fighting one another at the time, and Roger’s soldiers
-captured Robert, who was disguised and spying.
-He with difficulty rescued Robert from the angry captors,
-took him to a private room, kissed him, helped
-him to escape, and promptly next day fell upon his
-forces with such fury that Robert was glad to make
-peace and fulfil the broken promises which had caused
-the dispute....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was not Roger, the great Count—he had little time
-in his busy life for building—but his son Roger the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>King, who raised the great pile at Monreale which
-Jane and Peripatetica were on their way to see. Not
-by way of the winding rocky road which for centuries
-the pious pilgrims had climbed, but whisked up the
-heights by an electric tram which pretended it was a
-moving-picture machine, displaying from its windows
-an ever widening panorama of burning blue sea, of
-pink and purple mountains, of valleys down which
-flowed rivers of orange groves, of a domed and spired
-city in the plain, and a foreground freaked with an
-astonishing carpet of flowers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you were to see that in a picture you wouldn’t
-believe it,” quoted Jane from the famous Book of
-Bromides, writhing her neck like an uneasy serpent in
-an endeavour to see it all at once.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, of course, you wouldn’t,” said Peripatetica resentfully.
-“And when we try to tell it to people at
-home they’ll simply say our style is ‘plushy.’ There’s
-nothing so resented as an attempt to carry back in
-words to a pale-coloured country the incredible splendours
-of the south. The critics always call it ‘orchid
-and cockatoo writing,’ and sulkily declare, whenever
-they do have a fairly nice colourful day, that they are
-sure the tropics have nothing finer, whereas, if they
-only knew, it is but an echo of an echo of the real
-thing, and—” but words failed even Peripatetica.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the breezy height, dominating all the deep-toned
-landscape, stood the Abbey church of Monreale—truly
-a royal mount, crowned by one of the finest shrines in
-Europe. The famous bronze doors of the main entrance
-had been oxidised by time and weather with a
-patine of greens and blues that lent subtle values to
-the bold delicate modelling of the metal, framed in a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>toothed doorway of warm, cream-tinted stone, whose
-magic harmony of colour was a fitting preliminary to
-the lofty glories of the interior. An unbelievable interior!
-faced throughout its three hundred and thirty-three
-feet of length with millions upon millions of tiny
-stones, gold and red and blue—stones of every colour.
-For all the interior they found, up to the very roof,
-was of this dim, glowing, gold-mosaic set with pictures
-of the Christian faith—the creation of Adam and Eve,
-the temptation by the Serpent, the casting out from
-Eden, the wrestling of Jacob, the whole Bible history,
-culminating above the altar in a gigantic Christ. More
-than 700,000 square feet of pictures made of bits of
-stone; and around and about pulpit, ambo, and altar,
-across steps and pavement, and enclosing every window
-and door, lovely mosaic patterns and devices, no
-two alike....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Brown-faced old peasants pushed aside the leathern
-curtain at the entrance and knelt, crossing themselves,
-in the shadow of enormous pillars, as their forebears
-had knelt and crossed themselves there for a thousand
-years. A mass droned from a side altar. Groups of
-young priests-in-the-making sauntered gossipping in
-whispers, or coming and going on ecclesiastic errands.
-Knots of tourists stared and wandered about the great
-spaces, and from behind the high altar rose boys’ voices
-at choir practice, echoing thin and pure from the painted
-roof.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of all the Norman print upon Sicily nothing gave
-like this great church a sense of the potency of Tancred
-de Hauteville and his mighty brood. For no defacing
-hand has been laid upon this monument to their piety
-and power. It stands as they wrought, tremendous,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>glorious; commemorating the winning of the kingship
-of the Land of the Gods. A story as strange as any of
-the myths of the mythic world. And perhaps thousands
-of years hence the historians will relegate the
-Norman story, too, to the catalogue of the incredible—to
-the list of the sun-myths; and Tancred will be
-thought of as a principle of life and fecundity—his
-twelve strong sons be held to be merely signs of months
-and seasons.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of the great Benedictine Abbey founded by William
-in connection with the Cathedral almost nothing remains
-unaltered except the delicious cloistered court
-with its fountain, and its two hundred and sixteen delicate,
-paired columns, no two alike, and with endless
-variations of freakish capitals.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All this freshness and richness of invention resulted
-from the mingling of the Saracen with the Norman, all
-this early work being wrought by Moslem hands under
-Norman direction, since King Roger and King William
-were no bigots, and, giving respect and security to their
-Saracen subjects, could command in return their skilled
-service and fine taste. So that this bold, springing,
-early Norman architecture, Gothic in outward form, is
-adorned by the chaste, delicate minuteness of the grave
-Arab ornament.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>... It is Palm Sunday, and Jane and Peripatetica
-are at a reception—otherwise a Sicilian high mass.
-They have come, still on the trail of their beloved Normans,
-who have almost ousted the Greeks in their
-affections, to the Cappella Palatina in the Royal Palace.
-The chapel is less than a third as large as Monreale
-but is even more golden, more dimly splendid, more
-richly beautiful than the Abbey Church. It is crowded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>to the doors. Everywhere candles wink and drip in
-the blue clouds of incense. The voices of boys soar in
-a poignant treble, and the organ tones of men answer
-antiphonally. The priests mutter and drone, and occasionally
-take snuff. Mass goes on at a dozen side
-altars, oblivious of the more stately ceremonies conducted
-in the chancel. The congregation comes and
-goes. A family with all the children, including baby
-and <i>nounou</i>, enter and pray and later go out. Aristocrats
-and their servants kneel side by side. The
-crowd thickens and melts again, and companions separate
-to choose different altars and different masses,
-according to taste. All are familiar, friendly, at ease.
-The divine powers are holding a reception, and worshippers,
-having paid their respects, feel free to leave
-when they like. Long palm branches are carried to
-the altar from time to time by arriving visitors, each
-branch more splendid than the last. Palms braided
-and knotted, fluttering with ribbons, tied with rosettes
-of scarlet and blue, wrought with elaborate intricacies—hundreds
-of branches, which are solemnly sanctified,
-asperged, censed, with many genuflections. Priests in
-gold, in white, in scarlet, accompanied by candles,
-swinging censors and chanting, take up the palms and
-make a circuit of all the altars among the kneeling
-worshippers, and finally distribute the branches to
-their owners who bear their treasures away proudly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>With them go Jane and Peripatetica, joining a group,
-who, having paid their respects to heaven, are now
-ambitious to inspect the state chambers in the palace
-of their earthly sovereign. These prove to be the usual
-dull, uninviting apartments—flaring with gilt, and with
-the satins of <i>criard</i> colours which modern royalty always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>affect. There are the usual waxed floors, the
-usual uncomfortable <i>fauteuils</i> ranged stiffly against
-walls hung with inferior pictures, that are so tediously
-characteristic of palaces, and it is with relief and delight
-that Jane and Peripatetica find sandwiched amid
-these vulgar rooms two small chambers that by some
-miracle have escaped the ravages of the upholsterer.
-Two chambers, left intact from Norman days, that are
-like jewel caskets. Walls panelled with long smooth
-slabs of marble, grown straw-coloured with age, the
-delicate graining of the stone being matched like the
-graining of fine wood; panels set about with rich mosaics
-of fantastic birds and imaginary beasts framed in
-graceful arabesques. These are the Stanza Ruggiero;
-the rooms occupied by King Roger, the furnishings,
-such scant bits as there are, being also of his time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In Roger’s day,” commented Jane, “kings were
-not content with housings and plenishings of the ‘Early
-Pullman, or Late Hamburg-American School’; they
-knew how to be kingly in their surroundings.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s a curious fact,” agreed Peripatetica, “that there
-isn’t a modern palace in Europe that a self-respecting
-American millionaire wouldn’t blush to live in. No
-one ever hears of great artists being called upon to
-design or beautify a modern royal residence. Bad
-taste in furnishing seems universal among latter-day
-kings, who appear to form their ideas of domestic decoration
-from second-rate German hotels. Fancy any
-one seeing the high purity and beauty of Roger’s chambers
-and then ordering such ruthless splashings of gilt
-and cotton satin! Why, even ‘the best families’ of
-Podunk or Kalamazoo would gibe at the contrast, and
-as for the Wheat and Pork Kings of Denver or Chicago—they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>would have the whole place made <i>époque</i> in a
-week, if they had to corner the lard market, or form a
-breakfast-food trust to be able to afford it!”</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>“God made the day to be followed by the night.
-The moon and stars are at His command. Has He
-not created all things? Is He not Lord of all? Blessed
-be the Everlasting God!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane was reading aloud from her guide-book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They had been to Cefalu, looking for Count Roger
-in the great Cathedral built by his son, but found that
-he had vanished long ago, and his sarcophagus was in
-Naples. They had found instead traces of Sikel,
-Greek, and Roman; had lingered long before the
-splendid church, so noble even in decay, and now they
-were back again in Palermo, still on the track of their
-Normans. What Jane read from her book was also
-inscribed over the portal of Palermo’s Cathedral before
-which they stood, but being carved in Cufic script,
-and Jane’s Cufic being—to put it politely—not fluent
-enough to be idiomatic, she preferred to use the guide-book’s
-translation rather than deal with the original.</p>
-
-<div id='illus_263' class='figcenter id007'>
-<img src='images/illus_263.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><span class='sc'>The Cathedral at Palermo</span>—“<span class='sc'>The Last Resting Place of Queen<br />Constance</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c007'>They had been skirting about the Duomo for days,
-for it dominated all Palermo with its bigness. Seated
-in a wide Piazza that was dotted about with mussy-looking
-marble saints and bishops, and a great statue
-of Santa Rosalia, the city’s patron, the Cathedral was
-flanked by the huge Archepiscopal Palace, by enormous
-convents and public buildings, so that one couldn’t hope
-to ignore or escape it. Yet they had deferred the Duomo
-from day to day because they knew their pet abomination,
-the Eighteenth Century, had been there before
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>them, and that they would find it but an extremely
-mitigated joy in consequence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They knew that the swamp full of pxapyrus plants
-of Haukal’s time had given way to the “Friday
-Mosque” which the two Rogers and William the Bad
-had left undisturbed, but which had been pulled down
-by William the Good—being somewhat ruinous, and
-also seeing that William was “the Good” in the eyes
-of his ecclesiastic historians because he reversed the
-old Norman liberality to his Moslem subjects. Then
-Walter of the Mill, an Englishman, built the Cathedral,
-making it glorious within and without, and time
-and additions only made it more lovely until the modern
-tinkering began. A foolish, unsuitable dome was
-thrust among its delicate towers, and the whole interior
-ravaged and vulgarised.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Still, if one were hunting Normans, the Cathedral
-must be seen, and most of all they wished to find the
-last resting-place of Constance, around whose memory
-hung a drama and a mystery, and drama and mystery
-were as the very breath of their nostrils to Jane and
-Peripatetica.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The interior was impressive for size despite all the
-scrolled and writhed and gilded mud pies with which
-Ferdinand Fuga, the Neapolitan, had plastered it by
-way of decoration, and here and there still lingered
-things worth seeing. Such as the delicious bas reliefs
-of Gagini, Sicily’s greatest native sculptor; his statues
-of the Apostles and the fine old choir stalls, only making
-clearer by their ancient beauty how much that was beautiful
-had been swept away. Also there was the splendid
-silver sarcophagus of Santa Rosalia, weighing more
-than a thousand pounds, and other such matters, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>the real attraction of the Cathedral was the great porphyry
-tombs of the Kings—huge coffers of ensanguined
-stone, as massive and tremendous as the
-mummy cases of the Pharaohs. Here lay Roger the
-King in the sternest and plainest of them, under a
-fretted Gothic canopy. In one more ornate, his daughter
-Constance, and near at hand her husband Henry
-VI. of Germany, and their son, the Emperor Frederick
-the Second.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane and Peripatetica longed that Constance, like
-Hamlet’s Father might</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'>“ope those ponderous and marble jaws”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'>and come forth to tell them the real story of her strange
-life. For she too had been one of those hapless feminine
-pawns used so recklessly in the game of kingdoms
-played by the men about her; yet a whisper still
-lingered that this pawn had not been always passive,
-but had reached out her white hand and lifted the king
-from the board, and thus altered the whole course of
-the game!</p>
-<p class='c007'>Constance, King Roger’s daughter, had early made
-her choice for peace and safety by retiring into the
-veiled seclusion of the convent. But even the coif of the
-religieuse was no sure guard if the woman who wore it
-was an heiress, or of royal blood, and, the German alliance
-being needed after her father’s death, she was
-plucked forth by her brother, and in spite of her vows
-wedded to Henry of Hohenstaufen, son of Frederick
-Barbarossa, a man of such nature she must have hated
-him from the first. She bore him one son, and when
-her brother and her nephew—William the Bad and
-William the Good—were both dead without heirs,
-Henry Hohenstaufen immediately laid claim to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>Sicilian crown in the name of his son. The Sicilians,
-however, had no mind to be ruled by the Germans,
-and chose instead Tancred, son of the House of de
-Hauteville, though with a bar sinister upon his shield.
-Tancred—a good and able sovereign—fought off Henry
-for five years, but then he too was dead, and only his
-widow and infant son stood between Henry, now Emperor
-of Germany, and the much-lusted-after throne of
-Sicily. Against the wish of Constance, who would
-have gladly abjured her rights, the German invaded
-the island and after incredible cruelties and ravagings
-reduced the widow and baby King to such straits that
-they negotiated an honourable surrender. But no sooner
-were they in Henry’s hands than the child was murdered,
-and there ensued a reign of abominable oppressions
-and furious revolts, stamped out each time with
-blood and fire, and followed by still bitterer injustice
-and plunderings. When matters had reached a stage
-of desperation Henry died suddenly while besieging a
-rebellious town.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now in the Middle Ages no charge was so frequently
-and lightly made as that of poisoning. Nearly all
-sudden deaths not wrought by cold steel were attributed
-to some secret malfeasance by drugs. The fear
-of it fairly obsessed the mediæval mind, and gave rise
-to legends of poisoned gloves and rings, deadly smelling-balls
-and pounce boxes, and fatal chalices. A
-whole series of myths grew around it. Modern bacteriological
-discoveries, and a knowledge of ptomaines,
-incline the modern mind to believe that many a poor
-wretch brutally done to death for the crime of poisoning
-really died an innocent martyr to medical ignorance.
-Yet Henry’s taking off was so welcome and so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>opportune, and that Constance had struggled to protect
-her fellow countrymen and kinspeople from his
-cruelties was so well known, it began to be breathed
-about that she was a second Judith who had reached
-out in agony to protect her people, even though the
-blow fell upon the father of her child. At all events,
-whatever the truth may have been, she, when she buried
-Henry with imperial pomp, cut off her magnificent hair
-and laid it in his tomb. Then, sending away the Germans,
-she ruled “in peace with great honour” until the
-son she had trained to mercy and virtue was ready to
-take her place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now they all lie here together under their pompous
-canopies, and whatever may be the real dramas of
-those fierce and turbulent lives, the great porphyry
-sarcophagi combine to turn a face of cynical and haughty
-silence to the importunate questioning of peeping
-tourists.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In 1781 the tombs were opened by the Spanish King
-Ferdinand I., who found Constance’s son Frederick
-robed and crowned, with sword and orb beside his
-pillow, and almost lifelike in preservation. Henry too
-was almost unchanged by the six hundred years that
-had passed in such change and turmoil beyond the
-walls of his silent tomb, and he lay wrapped from head to
-heel in yellow silk with the heavy blond tresses of his
-wife laid upon his breast, still golden despite the lapse
-of long centuries, but “nulle ne peut dire si c’est le
-dernier sacrifice d’une femme dévouée, ou l’homage
-ironique d’une reine contrainte à choisir entre deux
-devoirs; placée entre son époux et son peuple, entre
-sa famille et sa patrie.”</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>Gaspero was a gift—a priceless parting gift from the
-Northman, who had gone farther south to the Punic
-shores from whence had come the first settlers of the
-Palermian Coast. And to console Jane and Peripatetica
-for the loss of his charming boyish gaiety he had
-made over to them that treasure. For Gaspero not
-only drove the smartest and most comfortable of all
-the victorias on hire to the public, but he was an artist
-in the matter of sight-seeing. A true gastronome,
-mingling flavours with delicate wisdom; keeping delicious
-surprises up his sleeve lest one’s spirit might
-pall, and mingling tombs and sunshine, crypts and
-“molto bella vistas,” history and the colourful daily
-life of the people, with a masterhand. And all so fused
-in the warm atmosphere of his own sympathetic and
-indulgent spirit that “touristing” became a feast of the
-soul unknown to those not guided by his discreet and
-skilful judgment. He knew where one might purchase
-honey which bees had brewed from orange
-flowers into a sublimated perfume; and he introduced
-them to certain patisseries at Cafleisch’s that gave afternoon
-tea a new meaning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was Gaspero who took them to the lofty shrine of
-Santa Rosalia on Monte Pellegrino; that grotto where
-lived the royal maiden hermit, and where lie her bones
-within the tomb on which Gregorio Tedeschi has made
-an image of her in marble with a golden robe, glowing
-dimly in the light of a hundred lamps. On that rosy
-height, dominating the beautiful landscape, Gaspero
-told them the story of the niece of William the Good,
-whose asceticism and devotion set so deep a seal of reverence
-upon the people of Palermo that they enshrined
-her as the city’s patron saint, and still celebrate her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>memory every year with a great festival. All the population
-climb the hill in July to say a prayer in her
-windy eyrie, and the enormous car bearing her image
-is dragged through the city’s streets, so towering in its
-gilded glories that one of the city gates has been unroofed
-to permit of its entrance. At that time the
-Marina—the wide sea-front street—instead of being
-merely a solemn Corso for the staid afternoon drive
-of the upper classes, becomes the scene of a sort of
-Pagan Saturnalia. The Galoppo takes place then—races
-of unmounted free horses—delicious races, Gaspero
-says, in which there can be no jockeying, and in
-which the generous-blooded animals strive madly to
-distance each other from sheer love of the sport and
-the rivalry. A gay people’s revel, this, of flying hoofs
-and tossing manes; of dancing feet; of cries and songs;
-mandolins, pipes, and guitars fluting and twittering.
-The water-sellers with their glittering carts and delicate
-bubble-like bottles crying <i>acqua fredda</i>, offering golden
-orange juice, and the beloved pink anisette. The
-Polichinello booths, the open-air puppet shows, the
-toy-sellers with their tall poles hung with sparkling
-trifles, the tables spread with dainties of rosy sugar,
-with melting pastries, with straw-covered flasks of
-wine. All perspiring, talking, laughing, guzzling, gormandising
-in honour of the anæmic, ascetic girl who
-passed long, lonely, silent days and nights in passionate
-ecstasies and visions in those high, voiceless solitudes.
-Gaspero made it all very vivid, with hands,
-lips, eyes. He was possessed with the drama and
-strange irony of it.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>“Have the Signorine ever seen a Sicilian puppet
-show?” Gaspero demanded, à propos of nothing in particular,
-turning from a brown study on the box to inquire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He plainly intended that this should be a memorable
-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>No; the Signorine had not seen a puppet show. If
-they properly should see one then they would see one.
-It was for Gaspero to judge. Very well, then. He
-would come for them at half past eight that evening—at
-least, he added with proud modesty, if the Signorine
-would not object to his wearing his best clothes. His
-festa garments, and not the uniform of his calling.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Object! On the contrary, they would be flattered.
-Gaspero settled back to his duties with the triumphant
-expression of the artist who by sudden inspiration has
-added the crowning touch to his picture. He composed
-the days for them on his mental palette, and this
-one he plainly considered one of his masterpieces.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Yesterday had been a failure. Jane and Peripatetica
-had waked full of plans, but before the breakfast
-trays had departed they were aware of a heavy sense of
-languor and ennui which made the pleasantest plans a
-prospect of weariness and disgust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you sit around in a dressing-gown all day we’ll
-never get anything done,” suggested Peripatetica
-crossly, as Jane lounged in unsympathetic silence at
-the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Considering that you’ve been half an hour dawdling
-over your hair and have got it up crooked at last,
-I wouldn’t talk about others,” snapped Jane over her
-shoulder without changing her attitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A strained silence ensued. Peripatetica slammed
-down a hand mirror and spilled a whole paper of hairpins,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>which she contemplated stonily, with no movement
-to recover them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A hot wind whirled up a spiral of dust in the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My arms are so tired I can’t make a coiffure,”
-wailed Peripatetica.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane merely laid her head on the window sill and
-rolled a feeble, melancholy eye at the disregarded hairpins.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The wind sent up another curtain of hot dust.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know what’s the matter,” complained Jane,
-“but I don’t feel as if I wanted to see another sight—ever—as
-long as I live.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Perhaps this is the sirocco one hears of,” piped
-Peripatetica weakly. “The guide-book says ‘the effect
-of it is to occasion a difficulty in breathing, and a lassitude
-which unfits one for work, especially of a mental
-nature.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>By this time there could be no doubt of the sirocco.
-A hot, dry tempest raged, whipping the rattling palms,
-driving clouds of dust before it, so that Jane could only
-dimly discern an occasional scurrying cab, or an overtaken
-pedestrian pursuing an invisible hat through the
-roaring fog of flying sand. The day had turned to a
-brown and tempestuous dusk, and the voice of a hoarse
-Saharan wind shouted around the corners.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But that was yesterday. To-day was golden and
-gracious. Rain in the night had cooled and effaced
-all memory of the sirocco, and Gaspero was outdoing
-himself in astonishing and piquant contrasts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He drove them to the Cappucini Convent by the devious
-route of the Street of the Washerwomen. This
-roundabout way of reaching the Convent was one of
-Gaspero’s artful devices.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>Down each side of the broad tree-shadowed way,
-bordered on either hand by the little stone-built cubicles
-washed pink or white or blue, in which lived the
-multitudinous laundresses, ran a clear rushing brook.
-These brooks flowed through a sort of shallow tunnel
-with a wide orifice before each dwelling, and in every
-one of these openings was standing a bare-legged
-blanchisseuse, dealing strenuously with Palermian
-linen, with skirts tucked up above sturdy knees that
-were pink and fresh from the rush of the bright water.
-Vigorous girls trotted back and forth with large baskets
-heaped with wet garments, and bent, but still energetic,
-granddams spread the garments to dry. Hung them
-from the tree branches, swung them from the low
-eaves of the little dwellings, threaded them on lines
-that laced and crossed like spiderwebs, so that the
-whole vista was a flutter of fabrics—rose and white and
-green—dancing in the breeze. A human and homely
-scene, with play of brown arms and bright eyes amid
-the flying linen and laces; with sounds of rippling
-leaves, of calls and laughter, and the gurgling of quick
-water—drudgery that was half a frolic in the cheerful
-sunshine.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now behold Gaspero’s sense of dramatic contrast!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A plain, frigid façade, guarded by a bearded and
-rather grubby monk in a brown robe. The eye does
-not linger upon the grubby monk, being led away instantly
-by the vista through the arched doorway behind
-him of a cloistered court; a court solemn with the
-dark spires of towering cypresses, and brilliant with
-roses—roses wine-coloured, golden, pink. Behind this
-screen of flowers and trees lies the bit of ground possessing
-the peculiar property of quickly desiccating and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>mummifying the human bodies buried in it. Many
-hundreds have been laid in this earth for awhile, and
-then removed to the convent crypts to make room for
-others. It is to these crypts another monk leads the
-way. A saturnine person this, handing his charges
-over to another, still more gloomy, who sits at the foot
-of the stairs and watches at the crypt’s entrance. A
-perfectly comprehensible depression, his, when one reflects
-that all the sunshiny hours of these golden Sicilian
-days he sits at the shadowed door of a great tomb,
-mounting guard over surely the most grisly charge the
-mind can conceive; over Death’s bitterest jest at Life.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The walls of the high, clean corridors are lined with
-glass cases like a library, but instead of printed books
-the shelves are crammed with ghastly phantoms of
-humanity, all grinning in horrible, silent amusement as
-at a mordant, unutterable joke.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Jane and Peripatetica gasp and clutch one another’s
-hand at the grey disorder of this soundless merriment—breathless,
-fixed, perpetual.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here and there a monk, crowded for lack of space
-from the shelves, hangs from a hook in limp, dishevelled
-leanness, his head drooped mockingly sidewise,
-his shrunken lips twisted in a dusty fatuous leer, a lid
-drooped over a withered eye in a hideous wink. Others
-huddle in fantastic postures within their contracted
-receptacles, as if convulsed by some obscenely wicked
-jest which forces them to throw back their heads, to
-fling out their hands, to writhe their limbs into unseemly
-attitudes of amusement. One lies flat, with
-rigid patience in every line of the meagre body, a rictus
-of speechless agony pinching back the mouldy cheeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Coffins are heaped about the floor everywhere.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>Through the glass tops the occupants grin in weary
-scorn from amid the brown and crumbling flowers that
-have dried around their faces.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The ghastliest section of this ghastly place is that
-where the women crouch in their cases, clad in the
-fripperies of old fashions. Earrings swing from dusty
-ears; necklaces clasp lean grey throats; faded hair is
-tortured into elaborate coiffures; laces, silks, and ribbons
-swathe the tragic ruins of beauty. And these
-women, too, all simper horribly, voicelessly, remembering
-perhaps how dear these faded gauds once were before
-they passed beyond thought of “tires and crisping
-pins.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why do they do it?” demanded Peripatetica in
-whispered disgust. “What strange passion for publicity
-prompts them thus to flout and outrage the decent
-privacies of death”—for they noted that each case
-bore a name and the date of decease, and that some of
-these dates were but of a few years back. “Didn’t they
-<i>know</i>, from having seen others, how they themselves
-would look in their turn? Why would any woman be
-willing to come here in laces and jewels to be a disgusting
-nightmare of femininity for other women to
-stare at?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Vanity of vanities—all is vanity!” murmured Jane.
-“Now they all lie here laughing at the strange vanity
-that brought them to this place—at the vanity that will
-bring others in their turn to this incredible hypogeum.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then they turned a corner and came suddenly upon
-the little horribly smiling babies, and instantly fled in
-simultaneous nausea and disgust—flinging themselves
-at Gaspero, who with a tenderly sympathetic manner
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>suggested an expedition to La Favorita as a corrective
-of gruesome impressions. Carrying them swiftly to it
-by way of the long double boulevards of the newer
-Palermo, between the smiling villas of creamy stone
-that were wreathed with yellow banksias and purple
-wisteria, their feet set among gay beds of blossoms and
-facing the cheerful street life of the town.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How odd these Sicilians are!” reflected Jane, as
-they drove. “An incomprehensible mixture to an
-Anglo-Saxon. For example one finds almost universal
-open-hearted gentleness and courtesy, and yet the
-Mafia holds the whole land in a grip of iron—a dangerous,
-murderous, secret society as widespread as the
-population, yet never betrayed, and uncontrollable by
-any power, even so popular and so democratic a one
-as the present government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes; their attitude to life is as puzzling as the face
-they turn toward death,” agreed Peripatetica, remembering
-that almost every other building in Taormina
-and many in Palermo wore nailed to the door a broad
-strip of mourning—often old and tattered—on which
-was printed “Per mio Frate,” or “Per mia Madre”—that
-even a newspaper kiosk had worn weeds—“Per
-mio Padre.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At that very moment there passed a cheerful hearse,
-all glass and gilding, wreathed with fresh flowers into
-a gay dancing nosegay, and hung with fluttering mauve
-streamers which announced in golden letters that the
-white coffin within enclosed all that was mortal of some
-one’s beloved sister Giuseppina. It might have been
-a catafalque of some Spirit of Spring, so many, so sweet,
-so daintily gracious were the blooming boughs that
-accompanied Giuseppina to her last resting-place....
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>And yet they had but just come from the grim horrors
-of that crypt of the Cappuccini!...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>La Favorita, curiously, is one of the few monuments
-of beauty or charm left by that long reign of the Spanish
-monarchs of Sicily, which, with some mutations,
-lasted for about six hundred years. They loaded the
-land with a weight of many churches and convents, yet
-what one goes to see is what was done by the Greeks,
-the Moslems, and the Normans. La Favorita is not
-old, as one counts age in that immemorial land of the
-High Gods. A slight century or so of age it has, being
-built for the villegiatura of Ferdinando IV. at the period
-when the Eighteenth Century affected a taste in Chinoiseries,
-bought blue hawthorn jars, ate from old
-Pekin plates, set up lacquered cabinets, and built
-Pagoda-esque pleasure houses. The Château is but a
-flimsy and rather vulgar example of the taste of the
-day, but the Eighteenth Century often planted delicious
-gardens, and the pleached allées, the ilex avenues,
-the fountains and plaisances of La Favorita, make an
-adorable park for modern Palermo, having by time
-and the years grown into a majestic richness of triumphant
-verdure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But Gaspero is not content with La Favorita. He
-has things even better in store for Jane and Peripatetica—explaining
-that by giving the most minute gratuity
-to the guardian of the park’s nether portal they
-may be allowed to slip through into a private path that
-leads to the sea. They do give the gratuity, and do
-slip through, winding along a rough country road leading
-under the beetling red cliffs of Pellegrino; by way
-of olive orchards, mistily grey as smoke, through which
-burn the rosy spring fires of the Judas-trees, whose
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>drifting pink clouds are so much more beautiful than
-the over-praised almond blossoms. They skirt flowery
-meadows all broad washes of gold and mauve, past a
-landscape as fair as a dream of Paradise, and Gaspero
-draws up at last upon a beach of shining silver
-upon which a sea of heaving sapphire lips softly and
-without speech. A sea that strews those argent sands
-with shells like rose petals, like flakes of gold, like little,
-curled, green leaves. And dismounting they rest there
-in the sunset, forgetting “dusty death,” and glad to be
-alive; glad of Gaspero’s tender indulgent joy in their
-pleasure as he gathers for them the strewn sea-flowers,
-tells them little Sicilian stories of the people, and makes
-them entirely forget they haven’t had their tea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was in returning from this place of peace that he
-had that crowning inspiration about the puppet show,
-which is why in the darkness of that very evening they
-are threading a black and greasy alleyway which smells
-of garlic and raw fish. But they go cheerfully and confidently
-in the dimly seen wake of Gaspero’s festa richness
-of attire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An oil torch flares and reeks before a calico curtain.
-This curtain, brushed aside, shows a pigeon-hole room,
-nine feet high, very narrow, and not long. On either
-wall hangs a frail balcony, into one of which the three
-wriggle carefully and deposit themselves on a board
-hardly a palm’s breadth wide. From the vantage point
-of these choice and expensive seats—for which they
-have magnificently squandered six cents apiece—they
-are enabled to look down about four inches on the
-heads of the commonality standing closely packed into
-the narrow alley leading to the stage. A strictly masculine
-commonality, for Gaspero explains in a whisper
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>that the gentler sex of Palermo are not expected to
-frequent puppet shows, lest their delicate sensibilities
-may suffer shock from the broad behaviour of the
-wooden dolls. Of course, he hurries to add, handsomely,
-all things are permitted to forestieri, whose
-bold fantasticalities are taken for granted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The groundlings appear to be such folk as fishpeddlers,
-longshoremen, ragpickers—what you will—who
-smoke persistent tiny cigarettes, and refresh themselves
-frequently with orange juice, or anisette and water.
-These have plunged to the extent of two cents for their
-evening’s amusement, and have an air of really not considering
-expense. The gallery folk are of a higher
-class. On Peripatetica’s right hand sits one who has
-the air of an unsuccessful author or artist; immediately
-upon the entrance of the forestieri he carefully
-assumes an attitude of sarcastic detachment, as of one
-who lends himself to the pleasures of the people merely
-in search of material. Opposite is an unmistakable
-valet who also, after a quick glance at the newcomers,
-buttons his waistcoat and takes on an appearance of
-indulgent condescension to the situation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A gay drop curtain, the size of a dinner napkin, rolls
-up after a preliminary twitter from concealed mandolins.
-The little scene is set in a wood. From the left
-enters a splendid miniature figure glittering in armour,
-crowned, plumed, and robed, stepping with a high
-melodramatic stride. It is King Charlemagne, the
-inevitable <i>deus ex machina</i> of every Sicilian puppet
-play. Taking the centre of the stage and the spotlight,
-he strikes his tin-clad bosom a resounding blow
-with his good right wooden hand, and bursts into passionate
-recitative.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>“The cursèd Moslem dogs have seized his subjects
-upon the high seas, and cast them into cruellest slavery.
-Baptised Christians bend their backs above the galley
-oars of Saracen pirate ships, and worse—oh, worst of
-all!”—both hands here play an enraged tattoo upon
-his resounding bosom-pan—“they have seized noble
-Christian maidens and haled them to their infernal
-harems.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“S’death! shall such things be? No! by his halidome,
-<i>no</i>! Rinaldo shall wipe this stain from his
-‘scutcheon. What ho—without there!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Enter hastily from right Orlando.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“His Majesty called?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Called? well rather! Go find me that good Knight
-Rinaldo, the great Paladin, and get the very swiftest
-of moves on, or something will happen which is likely
-to be distinctly unpleasant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Orlando vanishes, and in a twinkling appears Rinaldo,
-more shining, more resplendent, more befeathered
-even than the King; with an appalling stride
-(varied by a robin-like hop), calculated to daunt the
-boldest worm of a Moslem.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He awaits his sovereign’s commands with ligneous
-dignity, but as the King pours out the tale his legs
-rattle with strained attention, and when the Christian
-maids come into the story his falchion flashes uncontrollably
-from its sheath.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“<i>Will</i> he go? Will a bird fly? Will a fish swim?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Charlemagne retires, leaving Rinaldo to plan the
-campaign with Orlando.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Enter now another person in armour, but wearing
-half an inch more of length of blue petticoat, and with
-luxuriant locks streaming from beneath the plumed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>helmet. ’Tis Bramante, the warrior maiden, who in
-shrill soprano declines to be left out of any chivalric
-ruction. Three six-inch swords flash in the candlelight;
-three vows to conquer or die bring down the
-dinner napkin to tumultuous applause.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The pit has been absorbed to the point of letting its
-cigarettes go out, and the author and the valet hastily
-resume their forgotten condescension.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Every one cracks and eats melon seeds until the second
-act reveals the court of a Saracen palace.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The thumps of the three adventurers’ striding feet
-bring out hasty swarms of black slaves, who fall like
-grain before the Christian swords. Better metal than
-this must meet a Paladin!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Turbaned warriors fling themselves into the fray,
-and the clash of steel on steel rings through the palace.
-Orlando is down, Rinaldo and Bramante fight side by
-side, though Rinaldo staggers with wounds. The
-crescented turbans one by one roll in the dust, and as
-the two panting conquerors lean exhausted upon their
-bloody swords—enter the Soldan himself!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Now Turk meets Paladin, and comes the tug of war.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bramante squeaks like a mouse; hops like a sparrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><i>Ding, dong!</i> Rinaldo is beaten to his knee and the
-Soldan shortens his blade for a final thrust, but—Bramante
-rushes in, and with one terrific sweep of her
-sword shears his head so clean from his shoulders
-that it rolls to the footlights and puts out one of the
-candles.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><i>Ha! ha!</i> He trusted in his false god, Mahound!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bramante hops violently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Enter suddenly, rescued Christian Maid. Also in
-armour; also possessing piercing falsetto.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>Saved! saved! She falls clattering upon Rinaldo’s
-breast, and Bramante, after an instant’s hesitation,
-falls there on top of her, with peculiarly vicious intensity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>More dinner napkin. More frenzied applause.
-Gaspero draws a long breath. His eyes are full of tears
-of feeling.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Scene in the wood again. Charlemagne has thanked
-Rinaldo. Has thanked Bramante. Has blessed the
-Christian Maid, and has retired exhausted to his afternoon
-nap!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Christian Maid insists upon expressing <i>her</i> gratitude
-to the Paladin with her arms round his neck.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Bramante drags her off by her back hair, a dialogue
-ensuing which bears striking likeness to the interview
-of cats on a back fence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Christian Maid opines that Bramante is <i>no lady</i>, and
-swords are out instantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><i>One, two, three!—clash, slash, bang!</i></p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Rinaldo hops passionately and futilely around the
-two contestants.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ladies! Ladies! he protests in agony, but blood is
-beginning to flow, when, suddenly, a clap of thunder—a
-glitter of lightning!</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The cover of an ancient tomb in the wood rolls away,
-and from the black pit rises a grisly skeleton. Six legs
-clatter and rattle like pie-pans; swords fall. It is the
-ghost of Rinaldo’s father. Christian Maid is really
-Rinaldo’s sister, he explains, carried off by Saracens
-in her childhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Skeleton pulls down the cover of the tomb and retires
-to innocuous desuetude.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Opportune entry of Orlando miraculously cured of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>his wounds. Rinaldo has an inspiration, and bestows
-upon Orlando the hand of the Christian Maid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the tins of the kitchen tumble at once—everybody
-has fallen on every one else’s mail-clad bosom!...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dear Gaspero! It has been a <i>wonderful</i> day.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>A slow, fine rain falls. Vapours roll among the
-vapoury hills.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is just the day for the museum, and such a museum!
-Not one of those cold and formal mausoleums
-built by the modern world for the beauties of the dead
-past, but a fine old monastery of the Philippines with
-two cloistered cortile; with a long, closed gallery for the
-hanging of the pictures; with big refectories, ambulatories,
-and chapels for housing the sculpture, and
-with its little cells crammed with gold and silver work,
-with enamels, with embroideries, with jewels. A
-gracious casket for the treasures of old time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The rain is dripping softly into the open cloister,
-where the wet garlands of wisteria and heavy-clustered
-gold of the banksias are distilling their mingled fragrance
-in the damp air. The rain makes sweet tinklings
-in the old fountains and in the sculptured wellheads
-gathered in the court; on the cloister walls are
-grouped bas-reliefs—tinted Madonnas by Gagini;
-Greek fragments, stone vases standing on the floor,
-twisted columns, broken but lovely torsos.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Indeed, it is not like a museum at all. No ticketed
-rigidity, no historical sequence—just treasures set
-about where the setting will best accord with and display
-their beauties. There is not even a catalogue to
-be had, which gives a delightful sense of freedom at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>first, but this has its drawbacks when Jane and Peripatetica
-come to the tomb of Aprilis in a side chamber,
-and wish to know something more of this sad little
-maid sculptured into the marble of the tomb’s sunken
-lid—wrapped in a straitly folded wimple, with slim
-crossed feet, and small head turned half aside; smiling
-innocently in the sleep which has lasted so long. Aprilis,
-whose April had never blossomed into May, and whose
-epitaph has for five hundred years called Sicily to witness
-the grief of those who lost her:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“Sicilia, Hic Jacet Aprilis. Miseranda Puella</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Unicce Quælugens Occultipa Diem 18 Otobre</span></div>
- <div class='line in16'><span class='small'>XIII 1495.”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>Of course, the guide-books ignore her. Trust the
-guide-books to preserve a stony silence about anything
-of real human interest!...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Another court; a great basin where papyrus grows,
-where bananas wave silken banners amid the delicate
-plumes of tall bamboo, where are more purple wreaths
-of wistaria and snow-drifts of roses, and where the
-treasures are mostly Greek. Very notable among these
-a marble tripod draped with the supple folds of a
-python; the lax power of the great snake subtly contrasted
-with, and emphasized by, the rigid lines of the
-seat of the soothsayer. More notable still, in the Sala
-del Fauna, is an archaic statue of Athene from Selinunto—like
-some splendid sharded insect in her helmet
-and lion skin—rescued from that vast wreck of a city.
-They had travelled from Palermo a few days before to
-see that city, drawn by Crawford’s fine passages of description,
-and there they, too, had wondered at the
-astonishing remains of those astonishing Greeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>... “There is nothing in Europe like the ruins of
-Selinunto. Side by side, not one stone upon another,
-as they fell at the earthquake shock, the remains of
-four temples lie in the dust within the city, and still
-more gigantic fragments of three others lie without the
-ruined walls. At first sight the confusion looks so
-terrific that the whole seems as if it might have fallen
-from the sky, from a destruction of the home of the
-gods—as if Zeus might have hurled a city at mankind,
-to fall upon Sicily in a wild wreck of senseless stone.
-Blocks that are Cyclopean lie like jackstraws one upon
-another; sections of columns twenty-eight feet round
-are tossed together upon the ground like leaves from
-a basket, and fragments of cornice fifteen feet long lie
-across them, or stand half upright, or lean against the
-enormous steps. No words can explain to the mind
-the involuntary shock which the senses feel at first
-sight of it all. One touches the stones in wonder, comparing
-one’s small human stature with their mass, and
-the intellect strains hopelessly to recall their original position;
-one climbs in and out among them, sometimes
-mounting, sometimes descending, as one might pick
-one’s way through an enormous quarry, scarcely understanding
-that the blocks one touches have all been
-hewn into shape by human hands, and that the hills
-from which men brought them are but an outline in the
-distance.”...</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All that quiet falling day Jane and Peripatetica wandered
-in the transformed monastery, staring at the
-great metopes; lingering among the Saracenic carvings
-and jewelled windows, poring over Phœnician
-seals; over the amazing ecclesiastic needlework, the gold
-monstrances, the carved gems, and last and best of all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>some delicious reliefs at sight of which they forgave at
-once and forever their old enemy, the Eighteenth Century,
-for all its disgusting crimes against beauty. They
-sought madly through the books for some mention of
-these tall, adorable nymphs in adorably impossible
-attitudes, these curled and winged and dimpled babies,
-fluttering like fat little wrens sweetly ignorant of the
-laws of gravitation; but as always on any subject of
-interest Baedeker and the rest frigidly refused to tell
-the name of the man out of whose head and hands had
-grown these enchanting figures.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, dear Unknown!” cries Jane regretfully, “why
-is your noble name buried in silence! I wish to make
-a pilgrimage to your tomb, to cover it with Sicilian
-roses, and breathe a prayer for the repose of your sweet
-and gracious soul.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Me too!” echoes Peripatetica, in tender scorn of
-the stodgy rules of English grammar.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>The Paschal season is near.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Always, in all lands of all faiths, the coming of Spring,
-the yearly resurrection of life and nature, has been welcomed
-with gladness. The occultation of Osiris, of
-Baldur, of Persephone, of the Christ, is mourned; their
-coming again hailed with flowers and feasting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Palermo is filling with visitors; with a glory of flowers
-and verdure in which the loveliest city in the world
-grows daily lovelier. The Conca d’Oro—the Shell of
-Gold—swims in a golden sea of sunshine.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the Wednesday before Easter the whole population
-exchanges cakes. Cakes apotheosized by surprising
-splendours of icing; icing, gilded, silvered, snowily
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>sculptured into Loves and angels and figures of national
-heroes. Icing wrought into elaborate garlands tinted
-rose, purple, and green; built into towers and ornate
-architectural devices. Structures of confectionery three
-feet high are borne on big platters between two men.
-Every child carries gay little cakes to be presented to
-grandparents and godparents, to cousins and playmates.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All Maundy Thursday the population moves from
-church to church. Masses moan incessant in every
-chapel. Before the Virgins on every street-shrine,
-draped in black, candles blaze and drip. Priests and
-monks hurry to and fro, bent upon preparations for the
-great spectacle of the morrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Friday morning early all Palermo is in the streets in
-its best attire. Small children dressed as little cardinals,
-as nuns, as priests, bishops, angels with gilded
-wings, as Virgins, as John the Baptist, are on their way
-to the churches from which the processions are to flow.
-Monks and friars gather from outlying country convents.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At ten o’clock a throbbing dirge begins. The first
-of the processions is under way. A band plays a
-funeral march, and is followed by acolytes swinging
-censers. Pious elderly citizens, perspiring in frock
-coats, carry tall, flaming candles that drop wax upon
-their clothes. A few priests, in black and purple, follow,
-bearing holy vessels. Behind these a row of men
-in mediæval armour and carrying halberds, surround
-a heavy, hand-borne bier hung with black velvet, on
-which rests a glass and gilt case containing an image
-of the Crucified—a life-sized image, brown with age.
-Presumably it has been taken from some ancient and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>revered Spanish crucifix, for it is crowned with thorns,
-is emaciated, is writhed with pain, painted with the
-dark, faded red of streaming wounds—one of those
-agonised figures conceived by the pious realism of the
-older Spanish sculptors.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Immediately follows another hand-borne litter upon
-which is standing a tall Virgin clothed in black hood
-and mantle—a pallid, narrow-faced Virgin—also Spanish
-and realistic. The delicate clasped hands hold a
-lace handkerchief, her breast is hung with votive silver
-hearts. The features are distorted with grief, the lids,
-reddened with tears, are drooped over sunken, deep-shadowed
-eyes, and her countenance seamed and
-withered—a poignant figure of unutterable maternal
-woe! Burning candles alternate with mounds of roses
-about the edge of the platform on which she stands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As the dead Son and the mourning Mother pass, hats
-come off and heads are bowed, signs of the cross are
-made. A few of the older peasant women fall to their
-knees upon the sidewalk and mutter an Agnus Dei, a
-Hail Mary, with streaming tears. A priest walks last
-of all, rattling a contribution box at the end of a long
-stick, looking anxiously at the balconies and windows
-from which the well-to-do spectators lean. For his is
-but a poor church; the velvet palls and cloaks are cotton,
-and frayed and faded, the bier and platform old,
-and so massive that the stalwart bearers must set them
-down often to wipe away the sweat, which is why it
-takes advantage of the unpre-empted morning hours
-and is early in the field.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Later in the day, in Gaspero’s cab and under his
-guidance, Jane and Peripatetica take up a coign of
-vantage in a square debouching upon the Corso Vittorio
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>Emanuele, along which the Jesuits are to parade
-at four o’clock. Here the crowd is solidly packed, the
-balconies and windows crowded with the aristocracy
-of Palermo. The Guarda Mobili in their splendid uniforms
-keep open the way for the marching fraternities
-and sodalities with their crucifixes and Virgin-embroidered
-banners, open a lane for the monks, for the
-crowds of tiny angels and cardinals who must patter
-for hours in the slow-moving procession. Priests and
-acolytes swarm; censers steam, hundreds of candles of
-all weights and heights flare and flame, and then slowly,
-slowly, to the wailing music, moves forward a splendid
-catafalque of crystal in which lies stretched upon a bed
-of white velvet, richly wrought with gold, a fair youth.
-A youth with white, naked limbs, relaxed and pure;
-not soiled by the grimy, bloody agonies of martyrdom,
-but poetised to a picture of Love too early dead—a
-charming image. And the beautiful tall Virgin is not
-the simple Mother of the Carpenter convulsed with
-despair. She is a stately, sorrowful Queen, crowned,
-hung with jewels, robed in superb royal weeds; proudly
-refusing to show the full depth of her bereavement, as
-she follows her dead Son amid the wax torches shining
-palely in the sunshine through the white and green of
-the sheaves of lilies that grow about her knees.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The emotional effect upon the crowd is intense; one
-can hear like an undertone the sound of indrawn, gulping
-breath. Gaspero passes his sleeve across the tears
-in his dark eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This version of the tragedy is lifted above the realism
-of pain into a penetrating and lovely symbolism
-that swells the heart with poignant and tender emotions
-as the divine funeral train winds slowly away,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>with perfume, with lights, and with the slow sobbing of
-the muffled drums.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So had Sicilians two thousand years ago crowded
-every spring to see a similar spectacle of a weeping
-Queen of Love following an image of a lovely dead
-youth....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah! and himself—Adonis—how beautiful to behold
-he lies on his silver couch, with the first down on
-his cheeks, the thrice beloved Adonis—Adonis beloved
-even among the dead.... O Queen, O Aphrodite,
-that playest with gold, lo, from the stream eternal of
-Acheron they have brought back to thee Adonis—even
-in the twelfth month they have brought him, the dainty-footed
-Hours.... Before him lie all that the tall tree-branches
-bear, and the delicate gardens, arrayed in
-baskets of silver; and the golden vessels are full of the
-incense of Syria. And all the dainty cakes that women
-fashion in the kneading-tray, mingling blossoms manifold
-with the white wheaten flour, all that is wrought
-of honey sweet, and in soft olive-oil, all cakes fashioned
-in semblance of things that fly, and of things that creep,
-lo, here they are set before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here are built for him shadowy bowers of green,
-all laden with tender anise, and children flit overhead—the
-little Loves—as the young nightingales perched
-upon the trees fly forth and try their wings from bough
-to bough....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But lo, in the morning we will all of us gather with
-the dew, and carry him forth among the waves that
-break upon the beach, and with locks unloosed, and
-ungirt raiment falling to the ankles, and bosoms bare
-we will begin our shrill sweet song.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thou only, dear Adonis, so men tell, thou only of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>the demigods, dost visit both this world and the stream
-of Acheron.... Dear has thine advent been, Adonis,
-and dear shall it be when thou comest again.”</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Gaspero never permitted Jane and Peripatetica to
-lose anything. Doubling through narrow, black streets
-where lofty buildings nearly met above their heads
-and where they snatched hurried, delighted glimpses
-of intricate old grilles, of arched and wheeled windows,
-of splendid hatchments and fine carved portals—he
-brought them out at admirable view points for all the
-many similar parades in widely separated parts of the
-city.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As the purple dusk came down they found themselves
-in the Marina, watching the last of the processions
-moving slowly down the broad avenue to the sea-street.
-The crowd had thinned. The small angels and John
-the Baptists went wearily upon dusty little feet, their
-crowns of now wilted roses canted at dissipated angles
-over their flushed and tearful faces, the heavy, half-burned
-wax torches wabbling dangerously near the
-draggled veils and drooping gilt wings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The bearers of the images paused often to set down
-their heavy burdens. The balconies began to blossom
-with tinted lights. Here and there the Virgin
-with her twinkling candles was turned toward a balcony
-filled with some specially faithful children of the
-church, and stood facing them a moment, tall, ghostly,
-tragical, in the gathering darkness, before passing onward
-in her long pilgrimage of mourning that was to
-end within the church doors as night came down.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is enough, Gaspero,” they cried, as the flickering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>train passed away down the water avenue into the
-blue blackness of the shadowy evening, and then they
-went homewards full of that strange mingled sense of
-languor and refreshment—that “cleansing of the soul
-with pity and terror” which is the gift of the heroic
-tragedies....</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Every hour of that night the bells rang and masses
-sang throughout the city. All day Saturday the churches
-swarmed, and the purple veils, hung before the altar
-pictures throughout Lent, were rent from top to bottom
-to the sound of the wailing De Profundis. Sunday
-the religious world seemed to exhale itself in music
-and flowers and triumphant masses. Easter Monday
-morning the populace hurried through the necessary
-domestic duties at the earliest possible moment, for the
-Pasqua Flora is the day of villegiatura for all Palermo.
-Every one wears new clothes. Even the humble asinelli
-are, for once in the year at least, brushed and
-combed, and decorated with fresh red tassels if the
-master is too poor to afford more elaboration of the
-always elaborate harness. Those asses who have the
-luck to be the property of rich contadini appear resplendent
-in new caparison; with towering brass
-collars heavy with scarlet chenille, flashing with mirrors
-and inlays of mother-of-pearl, glittering from head
-to tail with brass buckles, with bells and red tags innumerable,
-drawing new carts carved and painted with
-all the myths and legends and history of Sicily in crude
-chromatic vivacity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whole families stream countrywards in these carts
-to-day; babies clean and starched for once, grandmothers
-in purple kerchiefs tied under the chin and
-yellow kerchiefs crossed upon the breast, with gold
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>hoops in their ears; daughters in flowered cottons,
-their uncovered heads wrought with fearful and wonderful
-pompadours, sleek and jet black.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Along the seashore, up the sides of Pellegrino, in all
-the open country about Palermo, they spread and sun
-themselves, eat, sleep, make love, gossip, dance, and
-sing in the golden air.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Gaspero drives slowly through the wide-spread picnic,
-pausing wherever a characteristic group attracts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here lies a whole family asleep; gorged with endless
-coils of macaroni, saturated with sun—a mere heap of
-crude-coloured clothes, of brown open-mouthed faces,
-of lax limbs that to-morrow must be gathered up again
-for a hand-to-hand struggle for bread for another twelve-month.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Under this tree a long table is spread with loaves,
-with meats, with iced cakes, and straw-covered flasks.
-A rich confrère of Gaspero celebrates the betrothal of
-his only daughter, a plump and solid heiress, who beneath
-an inky and mighty pompadour simpers at the
-broad jokes of her pursey, elderly fiancé. A solid
-fiancé, financially and physically. Altogether a solid
-match, says Gaspero. A dashing guest thrums his
-guitar and sings throatily of the joys of love and of
-money in the stocking.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Here a group of very old men watch about a boiling
-pot hung above a little fire, and twitter reminiscences of
-youth, catching one last pale gleam of the fast sinking
-sun of their meagre, toilsome lives.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Everywhere music and laughter and the smell of
-flowers and food and wine.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A big piano-organ is playing a rouladed waltz to a
-ring of young spectators, crowding to watch the elaborate
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>steps of dancers swinging about singly with grace-steps,
-with high prancings, with tarantella flourishes.
-Male dancers, all. Gaspero explains that no respectable
-girl would be allowed to join them, the Sicilian
-girl’s diversions being distressingly limited.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>One of the boyish dancers, with the keen, bold face
-and square head of a mediæval Condottiere, flourishes
-his light cane in fencing passes as he swings, which
-challenge inspires a spectator to leap into the ring with
-his own cane drawn. The newcomer, an obvious
-dandy in pointed patent-leather shoes, blue-ribboned
-hat, and light suit of cheap smartness, crosses canes
-dashingly with the would-be fencer, and the rest of the
-dancers drop back to see the fun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Condottiere finds in a few passes that he has
-met his master and craftily begins a waiting game.
-Lithe and quick as a cat, he circles and gives way, his
-opponent driving him round and round the ring, lunging
-daringly and playing to the gallery. He flourishes
-unnecessarily, pursues recklessly, assumes a contemptuous
-carelessness of the boy, always circling, always on
-guard, always coolly thrifty of breath and strength.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The dandy grows tired and angry, rushes furiously
-to make an end of his nimble evasive antagonist, who
-at last turns with cold courage and by a twist of his
-weapon sends the dandy’s cane flying clean over the
-ring of spectators, who scream with delight. But the
-Condottiere is a generous as well as a wily foe. He
-offers an embrace. The dandy reluctantly allows himself
-to be kissed on both cheeks, but the victor catches
-him about the waist and waltzes him around madly
-amid the laughter and bravas of the crowd.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>It is Jane’s and Peripatetica’s last day in Sicily.
-Gaspero has taken them to Santa Maria di Gesu, the
-Minorite Monastery, but has paused by the way for a
-look at San Giovanni degli Eremiti, whose little red
-domes float clear against the burning azure sky like
-coral-tinted bubbles, so airily do they rise from the
-green of the high hill-garden with its tiny cloisters of
-miniature columns and miniscule grey arches heavy
-with yellow roses. And yet from this rosy, arch little
-fane rang the Sicilian Vespers which gave the signal
-for one of the bloodiest butcheries in history. It was
-Pasqua Flora, and all Palermo, as it did yesterday, was
-feasting and dancing out of doors. One of the French
-soldiers—then in occupation, upholding the hated
-House of Anjou—insulted a Sicilian girl and was
-stabbed. Just then the Vesper bells rang from San
-Giovanni degli Eremiti, and at the signal the conspiracy,
-long festering, broke into open flame, and Palermo
-rose and massacred the French till the streets ran with
-blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Gesu Monastery has no such sanguinary associations.
-The plain little building, high on the hillside,
-stands buried among enormous cypresses and
-clouds of roses, and surrounded by the massive marble
-tombs and mortuary chapels of Palermo’s nobility and
-Sicily’s magnates. It is a place of great peace and
-silence. A place of unutterable beauty of outlook
-upon gorges feathered with pines, upon stern violet
-mountains melting into more distant heights of amethyst,
-into outlines of hyacinth, into silhouettes of
-mauve, into high ghostly shadows that vanish into
-floods of aerial blue. A place which looks on sea and
-shore and city, and where the chemistry of sun and air
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>transmutes the multitudinous tones of the landscape
-to an incredible witchery of tint, to living hues like
-those of the colours of jewels, of flowers, of the little
-burning feathers of the butterflies’ wings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Doubtless God might have made a more beautiful
-view than this from the Gesu, but doubtless God never
-did,” sighed Jane.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But still Gaspero is not satisfied. He can never rest
-content with anything less than perfection. Yes; he
-admits the Gesu is admirable, but he knows a still
-more “molto bella vista.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is nothing better than the best,” says Jane
-sententiously. “I am drenched and satiated with all
-the loveliness that I can bear. Any other ‘vista’ would
-be an anticlimax.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dear Jane,” remonstrated Peripatetica, “haven’t
-you yet guessed that Gaspero is a wizard? I suspected
-it the very first day. Of course, you can see
-that he’s no ordinary guide and cab-driver, and, as a
-matter of fact, I don’t believe there <i>are</i> any such sights
-as the ones we think he has showed us. You’ve been
-on Broadway? Well, can you lay your hand on your
-heart, and honestly affirm that when you are there
-again you won’t at once realize that there never were
-such beauties as these we’ve been seeing? Won’t you
-know then that this is all a glamour—a hypnotic suggestion
-of Gaspero’s mind upon ours?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t be ridiculous!” snapped Jane. “What is
-all this rhodomontade leading to?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“To a desire to follow the wizard,” answered Peripatetica
-recklessly. “Whither Gaspero goeth I go!
-I am fully prepared to wallow in glamours, and besides
-we’ve luncheon in our basket, so don’t be tiresome,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>Jane. Let’s abandon the commonplace and ‘follow
-the Gleam.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very well,” laughed Jane, climbing into the carriage.
-“Gaspero and ‘gleam’ if you like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Whether the molto bella vista ever existed remains
-still a subject of dispute. Peripatetica insists that it
-was only a pretext for leading them to a place where
-Gaspero intended they should lunch, but Jane, who
-always kicks against the philosophic pricks of the determinists,
-contends that she exercised a certain measure
-of free will in the matter. However that may be,
-they wound among mountain roads, by caves Gaspero
-said were once the dwellings of giants, by little outlying
-villages where old women span and wove in the
-doorways and young women made lace; where copper-workers
-sat in the street and with musical clang of little
-hammers beat out glittering vessels of rosy metal.
-They scattered flocks of goats from their path, the
-shaggy white bucks leaping nimbly upon the wall and
-staring at them with curious ironic, satyr-like glances;
-and far, very far up, they came upon a mountain
-meadow mistily shadowed by enormous gnarled olive
-trees—a meadow knee-deep in flowers. A meadow
-that was a sea of flowers, orange, golden and lemon,
-rippling and dimpling in the light and shade, breathed
-upon by the faint flying airs of those high spaces:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='small'>“In Arcady, in Arcady!</span></div>
- <div class='line in1'><span class='small'>Where all the leaves are merry—”</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>cried Peripatetica joyously.</p>
-<p class='c015'>“Of course it’s Arcady,” said Jane, with conviction.
-“And we have come upon it in the Age—or perhaps
-the moment—of Gold. Gaspero,” she announced
-firmly, “we will lunch right here.”</p>
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>“But Signorina—the Vista!” protested the Wizard
-with a quizzical smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was really (Peripatetica is convinced) Gaspero’s
-subtle understanding of Jane’s character which led
-him to offer just sufficient opposition to fix her determination
-to stay at the very spot where he could best
-work his magic, for a flowing world of shadowy purple
-swam about them in a thousand suave folds down to a
-shining sea, and he could not have showed them any
-vista more beautiful. But why attempt to shake Jane’s
-pleased conviction it was really owing to her that for a
-few hours she and Peripatetica could truly say, “I too
-have lived in Arcadia.” That it was owing to her they
-cheerfully fed there, and lay cradled for long warm
-hours in that perfumed flood of flowers in happy thoughtless
-silence, wrapped in a fold of the Earth Mother’s—the
-great Demeter’s—mantle; a fold embroidered by
-the fine fingers of her daughter Persephone, the Opener
-of Flowers.</p>
-<hr class='c014' />
-<p class='c007'>That night, when the full moon rose over the silky
-sea, far down the horizon behind them slowly faded
-into the distance the ghostly silver peaks of the enchanted
-Land of the Older Gods.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>THE END</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span><span class='large'>THE COMPLETE WORKS</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>OF</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'>WILLIAM J. LOCKE</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>“<span class='sc'>Life is a glorious thing.</span>”—<i>W. J. Locke</i></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'>“If you wish to be lifted out of the petty cares of to-day, read one
-of Locke’s novels. You may select any from the following titles and
-be certain of meeting some new and delightful friends. His characters
-are worth knowing.”—<i>Baltimore Sun.</i></p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c019'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne</div>
- <div class='line'>At the Gate of Samaria</div>
- <div class='line'>A Study in Shadows</div>
- <div class='line'>Where Love Is</div>
- <div class='line'>Derelicts</div>
- <div class='line'>The Demagogue and Lady Phayre</div>
- <div class='line'>The Beloved Vagabond</div>
- <div class='line'>The White Dove</div>
- <div class='line'>The Usurper</div>
- <div class='line'>Septimus</div>
- <div class='line'>Idols</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>12mo.</i> <i>Cloth.</i> <i>$1.50 each.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'>Eleven volumes bound in green cloth. Uniform edition in box.
-$16.50 per set. Half morocco $45.00 net. Express prepaid.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>The Belovéd Vagabond</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>“‘The Belovéd Vagabond’ is a gently-written, fascinating tale.
-Make his acquaintance some dreary, rain-soaked evening and find
-the vagabond nerve-thrilling in your own heart.”
-—<i>Chicago Record-Herald.</i></p>
-<p class='c015'><b>Septimus</b></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Septimus is the joy of the year.”—<i>American Magazine.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>“A literary event of the first importance.”—<i>Boston Herald.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“One of those rare and much-to-be-desired stories which keep one
-divided between an interested impatience to get on, and an irresistible
-temptation to linger for full enjoyment by the way.”—<i>Life.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>Where Love Is</b></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“A capital story told with skill.”—<i>New York Evening Sun.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“One of those unusual novels of which the end is as good as the
-beginning.”—<i>New York Globe.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span><b>The Usurper</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>“Contains the hall-mark of genius itself. The plot is masterly in
-conception, the descriptions are all vivid flashes from a brilliant
-pen. It is impossible to read and not marvel at the skilled workmanship
-and the constant dramatic intensity of the incident, situations
-and climax.”—<i>The Boston Herald.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>Derelicts</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>“Mr. Locke tells his story in a very true, a very moving, and a
-very noble book. If any one can read the last chapter with dry
-eyes we shall be surprised. ‘Derelicts’ is an impressive, an important
-book. Yvonne is a creation that any artist might be proud
-of.”—<i>The Daily Chronicle.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>Idols</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>“One of the very few distinguished novels of this present book
-season.”—<i>The Daily Mail.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“A brilliantly written and eminently readable book.”
-—<i>The London Daily Telegraph.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>A Study in Shadows</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>“Mr. Locke has achieved a distinct success in this novel. He has
-struck many emotional chords, and struck them all with a firm,
-sure hand. In the relations between Katherine and Raine he had
-a delicate problem to handle, and he has handled it delicately.”
-—<i>The Daily Chronicle.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>The White Dove</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>“It is an interesting story. The characters are strongly conceived
-and vividly presented, and the dramatic moments are powerfully
-realized.”—<i>The Morning Post.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>The Demagogue and Lady Phayre</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>“Think of Locke’s clever books. Then think of a book as different
-from any of these as one can well imagine—that will be Mr.
-Locke’s new book.”—<i>New York World.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>At the Gate of Samaria</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>“William J. Locke’s novels are nothing if not unusual. They are
-marked by a quaint originality. The habitual novel reader inevitably
-is grateful for a refreshing sense of escaping the commonplace
-path of conclusion.”—<i>Chicago Record-Herald.</i></p>
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span><span class='large'>POEMS WORTH HAVING</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>Stephen Phillips</b></p>
-<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>New Poems</span>, including <span class='sc'>Iole</span>: A Tragedy in One Act;
-<span class='sc'>Launcelot and Guinevere</span>, <span class='sc'>Endymion</span>, and many other
-hitherto unpublished poems.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div><i>Cloth, 12mo</i> <i>$1.25 net</i> <i>Half morocco, $4.00 net</i> <i>Postage 10 cents</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'>“I have read the ‘New Poems’ of Stephen Phillips with the greatest
-interest. In my judgment it is the best volume that he has
-ever published.”—Wm. Lyon Phelps of Yale University.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'><i>Uniform Sets.</i> 4 volumes, including <span class='sc'>New Poems</span>,
-<span class='sc'>Poems</span>, <span class='sc'>Paolo and Francesca</span>, <span class='sc'>Herod</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'><i>Cloth, $5.00 net</i> <i>Half morocco, $15.00 net</i> <i>Express 50
-cents</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>Laurence Hope</b></p>
-<p class='c018'><b><span class='sc'>Complete Works.</span></b> Uniform Edition 3 volumes, 12mo. Bound
-in red cloth, in box.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'><b>India’s Love Lyrics</b>, including “The Garden of Kama.”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'><b>Stars of the Desert</b></p>
-
-<p class='c018'><b>Last Poems.</b> Translations from the Book of Indian Love.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'><i>Cloth, $4.50 net</i> <i>Postage 35 cents</i> <i>Half morocco,
-$12.00</i> <i>Postage 50 cents</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“The comparison of Laurence Hope to Sappho readily suggested
-itself to the admiring reviewers of her first book of poems....
-The compliment was fully deserved.... As a singer of the
-melancholy of love and passion, Laurence Hope surpasses Swinburne
-in intensity of feeling and beauty of thought.” —<i>New York Evening
-Mail.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>The Poems of Arthur Symons</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>A Collected Edition of the Poet’s works issued in two volumes
-with a Photogravure Portrait as Frontispiece.</p>
-<p class='c018'><i>8vo</i> <i>$3.00 net</i> <i>Half morocco, $10.00</i>
-<i>Postage 24 cents</i></p>
-<p class='c015'><b>The Fool of the World, and Other Poems</b></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>By <span class='sc'>Arthur Symons</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'><i>12mo</i> <i>$1.50 net</i> <i>Half morocco, $5.00</i>
-<i>Postage 15 cents</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Stands at the head of all British poets of his generation.”—<i>New
-York Evening Post.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>The Poems of William Watson</b></p>
-<p class='c018'>Edited and arranged with an introduction by <span class='sc'>J. A. Spender</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'><i>In 2 volumes</i> <i>12mo</i> <i>cloth, $2.50 net</i> <i>Half morocco,
-$7.50 net</i> <i>Photogravure Portrait</i> <i>Postage 20 cents</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“The lover of poetry cannot fail to rejoice in this handsome
-edition.”—<i>Philadelphia Press.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Work which will live, one may venture to say, as long as the
-language.”—<i>Philadelphia Public Ledger.</i></p>
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span><b>VERNON LEE</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'>Uniform sets boxed. <i>8 vols. Cloth. $12.00 net. Express
-extra. $1.50 net each. Postage 10 cents.</i></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div>Limbo and Other Essays: “Ariadne in Mantua”</div>
- <div>Pope Jacynth, and Other Fantastic Tales</div>
- <div>Hortus Vitæ, or the Hanging Gardens</div>
- <div>The Sentimental Traveller</div>
- <div>The Enchanted Woods</div>
- <div>The Spirit of Rome</div>
- <div>Genius Loci</div>
- <div>Hauntings</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'>⸪ “If we were asked to name the three authors writing in English
-to-day to whom the highest rank of cleverness and brilliancy
-might be accorded, we would not hesitate to place among them
-<span class='sc'>Vernon Lee</span>.”—<i>Baltimore Sun.</i></p>
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><b>ELIZABETH BISLAND</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>The Secret Life. Being the Book of a Heretic.</b></p>
-<p class='c018'><i>12mo. $1.50 net. Postage 10 cents.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“A book of untrammelled thought on living topics ... extraordinarily
-interesting.”—<i>Philadelphia Press.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Excellent style, quaint humor, and shrewd philosophy.”—<i>Review
-of Reviews.</i></p>
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div><b>W. COMPTON LEITH</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>Apologia Diffidentis</b>. An intimate personal book.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Cloth. 8vo. $2.50 net. Postage 15 cents.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'>⸪ “Mr. <span class='sc'>Leith</span> formulates the anatomy of diffidence as Burton
-did of melancholy; and it might almost be said that he has done
-it with equal charm. The book surpasses in beauty and distinction
-of style any other prose work of the past few years. Its
-charm is akin to that of Mr. A. C. Benson’s earlier books, yet
-Mr. Benson at his best has never equalled this.... A human
-document as striking as it is unusual.... The impress of
-truth and wisdom lies deep upon every page.”—<i>The Dial.</i></p>
-<hr class='c017' />
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span><b>GILBERT K. CHESTERTON</b></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>Heretics</b>. Essays. <i>12mo. $1.50 net. Postage 12 cents.</i></p>
-<p class='c018'>“Always entertaining.”—<i>New York Evening Sun.</i></p>
-<p class='c018'>“Always original.”—<i>Chicago Tribune.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>Orthodoxy</b>. Uniform with “Heretics.”</p>
-<p class='c018'><i>12mo. $1.50 net. Postage 12 cents.</i></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'>“Here is a man with something to say.”—<i>Brooklyn Life.</i></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>All Things Considered</b>. Essays on various subjects, such as:</p>
-<p class='c021'>Conceit and Caricature; Spiritualism; Science and Religion; Woman, etc.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c022'>
- <div><span class='small'><i>12mo. $1.50 net. Postage 12 cents.</i></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>The Napoleon of Notting Hill</b>. <i>12mo. $1.50.</i></p>
-<p class='c018'>“A brilliant piece of satire, gemmed with ingenious paradox.”—<i>Boston
-Herald.</i></p>
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div><b>CHARLES H. SHERRILL</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'><b>Stained Glass Tours in France</b>. How to reach the
-examples of XIIIth, XIVth, XVth and XVIth Century
-Stained Glass in France (with maps and itineraries) and
-what they are. <i>Ornamental cloth. 12mo. Profusely
-illustrated. $1.50 net. Postage 14 cents.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'>⸪ “The author wastes no time on technicalities, and it will be
-hard for the reader not to share the author’s enthusiasm.”—<i>New
-York Sun.</i></p>
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><b>FRANK RUTTER</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c023'><b>The Path to Paris</b>. The Record of a Riverside Journey
-from Le Havre to Paris. 62 Illustrations. <i>Cloth. 8vo.
-$5.00 net. Postage 20 cents.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c018'><span class='small'>⸪ A delightful account of a journey along the banks of the
-Seine. Impressions and adventures. Descriptions of historic
-and artistic associations. Of special value are the remarkable
-illustrations by Hanslip Fletcher.</span></p>
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span><b>ANATOLE FRANCE</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'><span class='small'>“Anatole France is a writer whose personality is very strongly
-reflected in his works.... To reproduce his evanescent grace and charm
-is not to be lightly achieved, but the translators have done their work
-with care, distinction, and a very happy sense of the value of
-words.”—<i>Daily Graphic.</i></span></p>
-
-<p class='c018'><span class='small'>“We must now all read all of Anatole France. The offer is too good to
-be shirked. He is just Anatole France, the greatest living writer of
-French.—<i>Daily Chronicle.</i></span>”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div><i>Complete Limited Edition in English</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'><span class='small'>Under the general editorship of Frederic Chapman. 8vo., special
-light-weight paper, wide margins, Caslon type, bound in red and gold,
-gilt top, and papers from designs by Beardsley, initials by Ospovat.
-<i>$2.00 per volume</i> (except Joan of Arc), <i>postpaid</i>.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>The Red Lily</b>. Translated by <span class='sc'>Winifred Stephens</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>The Well of Saint Clare</b>. Translated by <span class='sc'>Alfred Allinson</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>Mother of Pearl</b>. Translated by <span class='sc'>Frederic Chapman</span>,</p>
-<p class='c018'>Containing:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c020'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The Procurator of Judea</div>
- <div class='line'>Our Lady’s Juggler</div>
- <div class='line'>Amycus and Celestine</div>
- <div class='line'>Madam de Luzy, etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'><b>The Garden of Epicurus</b>. Translated by <span class='sc'>Alfred R.
-Allinson</span>, Containing:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c020'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>In the Elysian Fields</div>
- <div class='line'>Card Houses</div>
- <div class='line'>Careers for Women</div>
- <div class='line'>The Priory, etc.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'><b>The Crime of Sylvestre Bonnard</b>. Translated by <span class='sc'>Lafcadio
-Hearn</span>.</p>
-<p class='c018'><span class='small'>This novel was “crowned” by the French Academy in 1881, the
-author being received into membership in 1896.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c018'><span class='small'>“The highest presentation of France’s many qualities and gifts is to
-be found in this exquisite book.”</span></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><b>Joan of Arc</b>. Translated by <span class='sc'>Winifred Stephens</span>. 2 volumes.
-<i>$8.00 net per set. Postage extra.</i></p>
-<p class='c018'><span class='small'><span class='sc'>“This is an epoch-making book.... Beneath the simplicity of the
-mediæval narrative there may still be discerned the delicious irony and
-the delicate subtle humor of the novels.” Stephens</span> in “<i>French
-Novelists of Today</i>.”</span></p>
-<div class='pbb'>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-</div>
- <ul class='ul_1 c002'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Note:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Unbalanced quotation marks were left as the author intended.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling was made consistent when a predominant form was found in this
- book; otherwise it was not changed.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SEEKERS IN SICILY***</p>
-<p>******* This file should be named 55840-h.htm or 55840-h.zip *******</p>
-<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
-<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/5/5/8/4/55840">http://www.gutenberg.org/5/5/8/4/55840</a></p>
-<p>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.</p>
-
-<p>Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</p>
-
-<h2 class="pg">START: FULL LICENSE<br />
-<br />
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE<br />
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</h2>
-
-<p>To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.</p>
-
-<h3>Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works</h3>
-
-<p>1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.</p>
-
-<p>1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.</p>
-
-<p>1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.</p>
-
-<p>1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.</p>
-
-<p>1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:</p>
-
-<p>1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:</p>
-
-<blockquote><p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United
- States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost
- no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use
- it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with
- this eBook or online
- at <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
- are not located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws
- of the country where you are located before using this
- ebook.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.</p>
-
-<p>1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."</li>
-
-<li>You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.</li>
-
-<li>You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.</li>
-
-<li>You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.</p>
-
-<p>1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause. </p>
-
-<h3>Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm</h3>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.</p>
-
-<p>Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org.</p>
-
-<h3>Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation</h3>
-
-<p>The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.</p>
-
-<p>The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact</p>
-
-<p>For additional contact information:</p>
-
-<p> Dr. Gregory B. Newby<br />
- Chief Executive and Director<br />
- gbnewby@pglaf.org</p>
-
-<h3>Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation</h3>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.</p>
-
-<p>The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/donate">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.</p>
-
-<p>While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.</p>
-
-<p>International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.</p>
-
-<p>Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate</p>
-
-<h3>Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.</h3>
-
-<p>Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.</p>
-
-<p>Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.</p>
-
-<p>Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org</p>
-
-<p>This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.</p>
-
-</body>
-</html>
-
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index fccfbde..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_004.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_004.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 306d580..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_004.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_007.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_007.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index b9d84c2..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_007.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_009.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_009.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 55e96ca..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_009.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_011.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_011.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 4cd0473..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_011.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_017.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_017.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 560150b..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_017.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_047.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_047.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 93217c1..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_047.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_071.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_071.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 4695c67..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_071.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_130.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_130.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index fbb984a..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_130.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_137.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_137.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 951fb1d..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_137.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_184.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_184.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 5b0d167..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_184.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_193.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_193.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 262d285..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_193.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_200.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_200.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index bc07a0c..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_200.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_207.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_207.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index acc7e1b..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_207.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_229.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_229.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d7ef9cd..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_229.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_241.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_241.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 5fae854..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_241.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_247.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_247.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 657ed4f..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_247.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/55840-h/images/illus_263.jpg b/old/55840-h/images/illus_263.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index bd605bf..0000000
--- a/old/55840-h/images/illus_263.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ