It is one of the special excellences of such a saloon of polished and

richly colored marble, that decay can never tarnish it. Until the house

crumbles down upon it, it shines indestructibly, and, with a little

dusting, looks just as brilliant in its three hundredth year as the day

after the final slab of giallo antico was fitted into the wall. To the

sculptor, at this first View of it, it seemed a hall where the sun was

magically imprisoned, and must always shine. He anticipated Miriam's

entrance, arrayed in queenly robes, and beaming with even more than the

singular beauty that had heretofore distinguished her.

While this thought was passing through his mind, the pillared door, at

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the upper end of the saloon, was partly opened, and Miriam appeared. She

was very pale, and dressed in deep mourning. As she advanced towards the

sculptor, the feebleness of her step was so apparent that he made haste

to meet her, apprehending that she might sink down on the marble floor,

without the instant support of his arm.

But, with a gleam of her natural self-reliance, she declined his aid,

and, after touching her cold hand to his, went and sat down on one of

the cushioned divans that were ranged against the wall.

"You are very ill, Miriam!" said Kenyon, much shocked at her appearance.

"I had not thought of this."

"No; not so ill as I seem to you," she answered; adding despondently,

"yet I am ill enough, I believe, to die, unless some change speedily

occurs."

"What, then, is your disorder?" asked the sculptor; "and what the

remedy?"

"The disorder!" repeated Miriam. "There is none that I know of save too

much life and strength, without a purpose for one or the other. It is

my too redundant energy that is slowly--or perhaps rapidly--wearing me

away, because I can apply it to no use. The object, which I am bound to

consider my only one on earth, fails me utterly. The sacrifice which I

yearn to make of myself, my hopes, my everything, is coldly put aside.

Nothing is left for me but to brood, brood, brood, all day, all night,

in unprofitable longings and repinings."

"This is very sad, Miriam," said Kenyon.

"Ay, indeed; I fancy so," she replied, with a short, unnatural laugh.

"With all your activity of mind," resumed he, "so fertile in plans as

I have known you, can you imagine no method of bringing your resources

into play?"

"My mind is not active any longer," answered Miriam, in a cold,

indifferent tone. "It deals with one thought and no more. One

recollection paralyzes it. It is not remorse; do not think it! I put

myself out of the question, and feel neither regret nor penitence on

my own behalf. But what benumbs me, what robs me of all power,-it is

no secret for a woman to tell a man, yet I care not though you know it,

--is the certainty that I am, and must ever be, an object of horror in

Donatello's sight."




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