In this natural intercourse with a rude and healthy form of animal life,

there was something that wonderfully revived Kenyon's spirits. The warm

rays of the sun, too, were wholesome for him in body and soul; and so

was a breeze that bestirred itself occasionally, as if for the sole

purpose of breathing upon his cheek and dying softly away, when he would

fain have felt a little more decided kiss. This shy but loving breeze

reminded him strangely of what Hilda's deportment had sometimes been

towards himself.

The weather had very much to do, no doubt, with these genial and

delightful sensations, that made the sculptor so happy with mere life,

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in spite of a head and heart full of doleful thoughts, anxieties, and

fears, which ought in all reason to have depressed him. It was like no

weather that exists anywhere, save in Paradise and in Italy; certainly

not in America, where it is always too strenuous on the side either of

heat or cold. Young as the season was, and wintry, as it would have

been under a more rigid sky, it resembled summer rather than what we

New Englanders recognize in our idea of spring. But there was an

indescribable something, sweet, fresh, and remotely affectionate, which

the matronly summer loses, and which thrilled, and, as it were, tickled

Kenyon's heart with a feeling partly of the senses, yet far more a

spiritual delight. In a word, it was as if Hilda's delicate breath were

on his cheek.

After walking at a brisk pace for about half an hour, he reached a

spot where an excavation appeared to have been begun, at some not

very distant period. There was a hollow space in the earth, looking

exceedingly like a deserted cellar, being enclosed within old

subterranean walls, constructed of thin Roman bricks, and made

accessible by a narrow flight of stone steps. A suburban villa had

probably stood over this site, in the imperial days of Rome, and these

might have been the ruins of a bathroom, or some other apartment that

was required to be wholly or partly under ground. A spade can scarcely

be put into that soil, so rich in lost and forgotten things, without

hitting upon some discovery which would attract all eyes, in any other

land. If you dig but a little way, you gather bits of precious marble,

coins, rings, and engraved gems; if you go deeper, you break into

columbaria, or into sculptured and richly frescoed apartments that look

like festive halls, but were only sepulchres.

The sculptor descended into the cellar-like cavity, and sat down on a

block of stone. His eagerness had brought him thither sooner than

the appointed hour. The sunshine fell slantwise into the hollow, and

happened to be resting on what Kenyon at first took to be a shapeless

fragment of stone, possibly marble, which was partly concealed by the

crumbling down of earth.




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