The gentle reader, we trust, would not thank us for one of those minute

elucidations, which are so tedious, and, after all, so unsatisfactory,

in clearing up the romantic mysteries of a story. He is too wise to

insist upon looking closely at the wrong side of the tapestry, after the

right one has been sufficiently displayed to him, woven with the best of

the artist's skill, and cunningly arranged with a view to the harmonious

exhibition of its colors. If any brilliant, or beautiful, or even

tolerable effect have been produced, this pattern of kindly readers will

accept it at its worth, without tearing its web apart, with the idle

purpose of discovering how the threads have been knit together; for the

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sagacity by which he is distinguished will long ago have taught him that

any narrative of human action and adventure whether we call it history

or romance--is certain to be a fragile handiwork, more easily rent than

mended. The actual experience of even the most ordinary life is full of

events that never explain themselves, either as regards their origin or

their tendency.

It would be easy, from conversations which we have held with the

sculptor, to suggest a clew to the mystery of Hilda's disappearance;

although, as long as she remained in Italy, there was a remarkable

reserve in her communications upon this subject, even to her most

intimate friends. Either a pledge of secrecy had been exacted, or a

prudential motive warned her not to reveal the stratagems of a religious

body, or the secret acts of a despotic government--whichever might be

responsible in the present instance--while still within the scope of

their jurisdiction. Possibly, she might not herself be fully aware what

power had laid its grasp upon her person. What has chiefly perplexed us,

however, among Hilda's adventures, is the mode of her release, in which

some inscrutable tyranny or other seemed to take part in the frolic of

the Carnival. We can only account for it, by supposing that the fitful

and fantastic imagination of a woman--sportive, because she must

otherwise be desperate--had arranged this incident, and made it the

condition of a step which her conscience, or the conscience of another,

required her to take.

A few days after Hilda's reappearance, she and the sculptor were

straying together through the streets of Rome. Being deep in talk, it so

happened that they found themselves near the majestic, pillared portico,

and huge, black rotundity of the Pantheon. It stands almost at the

central point of the labyrinthine intricacies of the modern city, and

often presents itself before the bewildered stranger, when he is in

search of other objects. Hilda, looking up, proposed that they should

enter.

"I never pass it without going in," she said, "to pay my homage at the

tomb of Raphael."

"Nor I," said Kenyon, "without stopping to admire the noblest edifice

which the barbarism of the early ages, and the more barbarous pontiffs

and princes of later ones, have spared to us."




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