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Marble Faun, The
VOLUME II   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXXIII - PICTURED WINDOWS
Nathaniel Hawthorne
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       _ After wide wanderings through the valley, the two travellers directed
       their course towards its boundary of hills. Here, the natural scenery
       and men's modifications of it immediately took a different aspect from
       that of the fertile and smiling plain. Not unfrequently there was a
       convent on the hillside; or, on some insulated promontory, a mined
       castle, once the den of a robber chieftain, who was accustomed to dash
       down from his commanding height upon the road that wound below. For
       ages back, the old fortress had been flinging down its crumbling
       ramparts, stone by stone, towards the grimy village at its foot.
       Their road wound onward among the hills, which rose steep and lofty
       from the scanty level space that lay between them. They continually
       thrust their great bulks before the wayfarers, as if grimly resolute
       to forbid their passage, or closed abruptly behind them, when they
       still dared to proceed. A gigantic hill would set its foot right down
       before them, and only at the last moment would grudgingly withdraw it,
       just far enough to let them creep towards another obstacle. Adown
       these rough heights were visible the dry tracks of many a mountain
       torrent that had lived a life too fierce and passionate to be a long
       one. Or, perhaps, a stream was yet hurrying shyly along the edge of a
       far wider bed of pebbles and shelving rock than it seemed to need,
       though not too wide for the swollen rage of which this shy rivulet was
       capable. A stone bridge bestrode it, the ponderous arches of which
       were upheld and rendered indestructible by the weight of the very
       stones that threatened to crush them down. Old Roman toil was
       perceptible in the foundations of that massive bridge; the first
       weight that it ever bore was that of an army of the Republic.
       Threading these defiles, they would arrive at some immemorial city,
       crowning the high summit of a hill with its cathedral, its many
       churches, and public edifices, all of Gothic architecture. With no
       more level ground than a single piazza in the midst, the ancient town
       tumbled its crooked and narrow streets down the mountainside, through
       arched passages and by steps of stone. The aspect of everything was
       awfully old; older, indeed, in its effect on the imagination than Rome
       itself, because history does not lay its finger on these forgotten
       edifices and tell us all about their origin. Etruscan princes may
       have dwelt in them. A thousand years, at all events, would seem but a
       middle age for these structures. They are built of such huge, square
       stones, that their appearance of ponderous durability distresses the
       beholder with the idea that they can never fall,--never crumble away,
       --never be less fit than now for human habitation. Many of them may
       once have been palaces, and still retain a squalid grandeur. But,
       gazing at them, we recognize how undesirable it is to build the
       tabernacle of our brief lifetime out of permanent materials, and with
       a view to their being occupied by future 'generations.
       All towns should be made capable of purification by fire, or of decay,
       within each half-century. Otherwise, they become the hereditary
       haunts of vermin and noisomeness, besides standing apart from the
       possibility of such improvements as are constantly introduced into the
       rest of man's contrivances and accommodations. It is beautiful, no
       doubt, and exceedingly satisfactory to some of our natural instincts,
       to imagine our far posterity dwelling under the same roof-tree as
       ourselves. Still, when people insist on building indestructible
       houses, they incur, or their children do, a misfortune analogous to
       that of the Sibyl, when she obtained the grievous boon of immortality.
       So we may build almost immortal habitations, it is true; but we
       cannot keep them from growing old, musty, unwholesome, dreary,--full
       of death scents, ghosts, and murder stains; in short, such habitations
       as one sees everywhere in Italy, be they hovels or palaces.
       "You should go with me to my native country," observed the sculptor to
       Donatello. "In that fortunate land, each generation has only its own
       sins and sorrows to bear. Here, it seems as if all the weary and
       dreary Past were piled upon the back of the Present. If I were to
       lose my spirits in this country,--if I were to suffer any heavy
       misfortune here,--methinks it would be impossible to stand up against
       it, under such adverse influences."
       "The sky itself is an old roof, now," answered the Count; "and, no
       doubt, the sins of mankind have made it gloomier than it used to be."
       "O, my poor Faun," thought Kenyon to himself, "how art thou changed!"
       A city, like this of which we speak, seems a sort of stony growth out
       of the hillside, or a fossilized town; so ancient and strange it looks,
       without enough of life and juiciness in it to be any longer
       susceptible of decay. An earthquake would afford it the only chance
       of being ruined, beyond its present ruin.
       Yet, though dead to all the purposes for which we live to-day, the
       place has its glorious recollections, and not merely rude and warlike
       ones, but those of brighter and milder triumphs, the fruits of which
       we still enjoy. Italy can count several of these lifeless towns which,
       four or five hundred years ago, were each the birthplace of its own
       school of art; nor have they yet forgotten to be proud of the dark old
       pictures, and the faded frescos, the pristine beauty of which was a
       light and gladness to the world. But now, unless one happens to be a
       painter, these famous works make us miserably desperate. They are
       poor, dim ghosts of what, when Giotto or Cimabue first created them,
       threw a splendor along the stately aisles; so far gone towards
       nothingness, in our day, that scarcely a hint of design or expression
       can glimmer through the dusk. Those early artists did well to paint
       their frescos. Glowing on the church-walls, they might be looked upon
       as symbols of the living spirit that made Catholicism a true religion,
       and that glorified it as long as it retained a genuine life; they
       filled the transepts with a radiant throng of saints and angels, and
       threw around the high altar a faint reflection--as much as mortals
       could see, or bear--of a Diviner Presence. But now that the colors
       are so wretchedly bedimmed,--now that blotches of plastered wall dot
       the frescos all over, like a mean reality thrusting itself through
       life's brightest illusions,--the next best artist to Cimabue or Giotto
       or Ghirlandaio or Pinturicchio will be he that shall reverently cover
       their ruined masterpieces with whitewash!
       Kenyon, however, being an earnest student and critic of Art, lingered
       long before these pathetic relics; and Donatello, in his present phase
       of penitence, thought no time spent amiss while he could be kneeling
       before an altar. Whenever they found a cathedral, therefore, or a
       Gothic church, the two travellers were of one mind to enter it. In
       some of these holy edifices they saw pictures that time had not dimmed
       nor injured in the least, though they perhaps belonged to as old a
       school of Art as any that were perishing around them. These were the
       painted windows; and as often as he gazed at them the sculptor blessed
       the medieval time, and its gorgeous contrivances of splendor; for
       surely the skill of man has never accomplished, nor his mind imagined,
       any other beauty or glory worthy to be compared with these.
       It is the special excellence of pictured glass, that the light, which
       falls merely on the outside of other pictures, is here interfused
       throughout the work; it illuminates the design, and invests it with a
       living radiance; and in requital the unfading colors transmute the
       common daylight into a miracle of richness and glory in its passage
       through the heavenly substance of the blessed and angelic shapes which
       throng the high-arched window.
       "It is a woeful thing," cried Kenyon, while one of these frail yet
       enduring and fadeless pictures threw its hues on his face, and on the
       pavement of the church around him,--"a sad necessity that any
       Christian soul should pass from earth without once seeing an antique
       painted window, with the bright Italian sunshine glowing through it!
       There is no other such true symbol of the glories of the better world,
       where a celestial radiance will be inherent in all things and persons,
       and render each continually transparent to the sight of all."
       "But what a horror it would be," said Donatello sadly, "if there were
       a soul among them through which the light could not be transfused!"
       "Yes; and perhaps this is to be the punishment of sin," replied the
       sculptor; "not that it shall be made evident to the universe, which
       can profit nothing by such knowledge, but that it shall insulate the
       sinner from all sweet sodety by rendering him impermeable to light,
       and, therefore, unrecognizable in the abode of heavenly simplicity and
       truth. Then, what remains for him, but the dreariness of infinite and
       eternal solitude?"
       "That would be a horrible destiny, indeed!" said Donatello.
       His voice as he spoke the words had a hollow and dreary cadence, as if
       he anticipated some such frozen solitude for himself. A figure in a
       dark robe was lurking in the obscurity of a side chapel close by, and
       made an impulsive movement forward, but hesitated as Donatello spoke
       again.
       "But there might be a more miserable torture than to be solitary
       forever," said he. "Think of having a single companion in eternity,
       and instead of finding any consolation, or at all events variety of
       torture, to see your own weary, weary sin repeated in that inseparable
       soul."
       "I think, my dear Count, you have never read Dante," observed Kenyon.
       "That idea is somewhat in his style, but I cannot help regretting that
       it came into your mind just then."
       The dark-robed figure had shrunk back, and was quite lost to sight
       among the shadows of the chapel.
       "There was an English poet," resumed Kenyon, turning again towards the
       window, "who speaks of the 'dim, religious light,' transmitted through
       painted glass. I always admired this richly descriptive phrase; but,
       though he was once in Italy, I question whether Milton ever saw any
       but the dingy pictures in the dusty windows of English cathedrals,
       imperfectly shown by the gray English daylight. He would else have
       illuminated that word 'dim' with some epithet that should not chase
       away the dimness, yet should make it glow like a million of rubies,
       sapphires, emeralds, and topazes. Is it not so with yonder window?
       The pictures are most brilliant in themselves, yet dim with tenderness
       and reverence, because God himself is shining through them."
       "The pictures fill me with emotion, but not such as you seem to
       experience," said Donatello. "I tremble at those awful saints; and,
       most of all, at the figure above them. He glows with Divine wrath!"
       "My dear friend," said Kenyon, "how strangely your eyes have
       transmuted the expression of the figure! It is divine love, not wrath!"
       "To my eyes," said Donatello stubbornly, "it is wrath, not love! Each
       must interpret for himself."
       The friends left the church, and looking up, from the exterior, at the
       window which they had just been contemplating within, nothing; was
       visible but the merest outline of dusky shapes, Neither the individual
       likeness of saint, angel, nor Saviour, and far less the combined
       scheme and purport of the picture, could anywise be made out. That
       miracle of radiant art, thus viewed, was nothing better than an
       incomprehensible obscurity, without a gleam of beauty to induce the
       beholder to attempt unravelling it.
       "All this," thought the sculptor, "is a most forcible emblem of the
       different aspect of religious truth and sacred story, as viewed from
       the warm interior of belief, or from its cold and dreary outside.
       Christian faith is a grand cathedral, with divinely pictured windows.
       Standing without, you see no glory, nor can possibly imagine any;
       standing within, every ray of light reveals a harmony of unspeakable
       splendors."
       After Kenyon and Donatello emerged from the church, however, they had
       better opportunity for acts of charity and mercy than for religious
       contemplation; being immediately surrounded by a swarm of beggars, who
       are the present possessors of Italy, and share the spoil of the
       stranger with the fleas and mosquitoes, their formidable allies.
       These pests--the human ones--had hunted the two travellers at every
       stage of their journey. From village to village, ragged boys and
       girls kept almost under the horses' feet; hoary grandsires and
       grandames caught glimpses of their approach, and hobbled to intercept
       them at some point of vantage; blind men stared them out of
       countenance with their sightless orbs; women held up their unwashed
       babies; cripples displayed their wooden legs, their grievous scars,
       their dangling, boneless arms, their broken backs, their burden of a
       hump, or whatever infirmity or deformity Providence had assigned them
       for an inheritance. On the highest mountain summit--in the most
       shadowy ravine--there was a beggar waiting for them. In one small
       village, Kenyon had the curiosity to count merely how many children
       were crying, whining, and bellowing ail at once for alms. They proved
       to be more than forty of as ragged and dirty little imps as any in the
       world; besides whom, all the wrinkled matrons, and most of the village
       maids, and not a few stalwart men, held out their hands grimly,
       piteously, or smilingly in the forlorn hope of whatever trifle of coin
       might remain in pockets already so fearfully taxed. Had they been
       permitted, they would gladly have knelt down and worshipped the
       travellers, and have cursed them, without rising from their knees, if
       the expected boon failed to be awarded.
       Yet they were not so miserably poor but that the grown people kept
       houses over their heads.
       In the way of food, they had, at least, vegetables in their little
       gardens, pigs and chickens to kill, eggs to fry into omelets with oil,
       wine to drink, and many other things to make life comfortable. As for
       the children, when no more small coin appeared to be forthcoming, they
       began to laugh and play, and turn heels over head, showing themselves
       jolly and vivacious brats, and evidently as well fed as needs be. The
       truth is, the Italian peasantry look upon strangers as the almoners of
       Providence, and therefore feel no more shame in asking and receiving
       alms, than in availing themselves of providential bounties in whatever
       other form.
       In accordance with his nature, Donatello was always exceedingly
       charitable to these ragged battalions, and appeared to derive a
       certain consolation from the prayers which many of them put up in his
       behalf. In Italy a copper coin of minute value will often make all
       the difference between a vindictive curse--death by apoplexy being the
       favorite one- mumbled in an old witch's toothless jaws, and a prayer
       from the same lips, so earnest that it would seem to reward the
       charitable soul with at least a puff of grateful breath to help him
       heavenward. Good wishes being so cheap, though possibly not very
       efficacious, and anathemas so exceedingly bitter,--even if the greater
       portion of their poison remain in the mouth that utters them,--it may
       be wise to expend some reasonable amount in the purchase of the former.
       Donatello invariably did so; and as he distributed his alms under
       the pictured window, of which we have been speaking, no less than
       seven ancient women lifted their hands and besought blessings on his
       head.
       "Come," said the sculptor, rejoicing at the happier expression which
       he saw in his friend's face. "I think your steed will not stumble
       with you to-day. Each of these old dames looks as much like Horace's
       Atra Cura as can well be conceived; but, though there are seven of
       them, they will make your burden on horseback lighter instead of
       heavier."
       "Are we to ride far?" asked the Count.
       "A tolerable journey betwixt now and to-morrow noon," Kenyon replied;
       "for, at that hour, I purpose to be standing by the Pope's statue in
       the great square of Perugia." _
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本书目录

VOLUME I
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER I - MIRIAM, HILDA, KENYON, DONATELLO
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER II - THE FAUN
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER III - SUBTERRANEAN REMINISCENCES
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER IV - THE SPECTRE OF THE CATACOMB
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER V - MIRIAM'S STUDIO
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER VI - THE VIRGIN'S SHRINE
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER VII - BEATRICE
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER VIII - THE SUBURBAN VILLA
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER IX - THE FAUN AND NYMPH
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER X - THE SYLVAN DANCE
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XI - FRAGMENTARY SENTENCES
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XII - A STROLL ON THE PINCIAN
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XIII - A SCULPTOR'S STUDIO
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XIV - CLEOPATRA
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XV - AN AESTHETIC COMPANY
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XVI - A MOONLIGHT RAMBLE
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XVII - MIRIAM'S TROUBLE
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XVIII - ON THE EDGE OF A PRECIPICE
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XIX - THE FAUN'S TRANSFORMATION
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XX - THE BURIAL CHANT
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XXI - THE DEAD CAPUCHIN
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XXII -THE MEDICI GARDENS
   VOLUME I - CHAPTER XXIII - MIRIAM AND HILDA
VOLUME II
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXIV - THE TOWER AMONG THE APENNINES
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXV - SUNSHINE
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXVI - THE PEDIGREE OF MONTE BENI
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXVII - MYTHS
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXVIII - THE OWL TOWER
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXIX - ON THE BATTLEMENTS
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXX - DONATELLO'S BUST
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXXI - THE MARBLE SALOON
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXXII - SCENES BY THE WAY
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXXIII - PICTURED WINDOWS
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXXIV - MARKET-DAY IN PERUGIA
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXXV - THE BRONZE PONTIFF'S BENEDICTION
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXXVI - HILDA'S TOWER
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXXVII - THE EMPTINESS OF PICTURE GALLERIES
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXXVIII - ALTARS AND INCENSE
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XXXIX - THE WORLD'S CATHEDRAL
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XL - HILDA AND A FRIEND
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XLI - SNOWDROPS AND MAIDENLY DELIGHTS
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XLII - REMINISCENCES OF MIRIAM
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XLIII - THE EXTINCTION OF A LAMP
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XLIV - THE DESERTED SHRINE
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XLV - THE FLIGHT OF HILDA'S DOVES
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XLVI - A WALK ON THE CAMPAGNA
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XLVII - THE PEASANT AND CONTADINA
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XLVIII - A SCENE IN THE CORSO
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER XLIX - A FROLIC OF THE CARNIVAL
   VOLUME II - CHAPTER L - MIRIAM, HILDA, KENYON, DONATELLO
   CONCLUSION