<SPAN name="chap0109"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER IX </h3>
<h3> IN THE DEAD CITY </h3>
<p>Through it was Sunday, Cecily resolved to go and spend the afternoon
with Miriam. She was restless, and could not take pleasure in Mrs.
Lessingham's conversation. Possibly her arrival at the villa would be
anything but welcome; but she must see Miriam.</p>
<p>She drove up by herself, and first of all saw the Spences. From them
she learnt that Miriam, as usual on Sunday, was keeping her own room.</p>
<p>"Do you think I may venture, Mrs. Spence?"</p>
<p>"Go and announce yourself, my dear. If you are bidden avaunt, come back
and cheer us old people with your brightness."</p>
<p>So Cecily went with light step along the corridor, and with light
fingers tapped at Miriam's room. The familiar voice bade her enter.
Miriam was sitting near the window, on her lap a closed book.</p>
<p>"May I—?"</p>
<p>"Of course you may," was the quiet answer.</p>
<p>Cecily closed the door, came forward, and bent to kiss her friend. Then
she glanced at the "St. Cecilia;" then examined herself for a moment in
one of the mirrors; then took off her hat, mantle, and gloves.</p>
<p>"I want to stay as long as your patience will suffer me."</p>
<p>"Do so."</p>
<p>"You avoid saying how long that is likely to be."</p>
<p>"How can I tell?"</p>
<p>"Oh, you have experience of me. You know how trying you find me in
certain moods. To-day I am in a very strange mood indeed; very
malicious, very wicked. And it is Sunday."</p>
<p>Miriam did not seem to resent this. She looked away at the window, but
smiled. Could Cecily have been aware how her face had changed when the
door opened, she would not have doubted whether she was truly welcome.</p>
<p>"What book is that, Miriam?"</p>
<p>Cecily had been half afraid to ask; to her surprise it proved to be
Dante.</p>
<p>"Do you read this on Sunday?"</p>
<p>Miriam deigned no reply. The other, sitting just in front of her, took
up the volume and rustled its leaves.</p>
<p>"How far have you got? This pencil mark? 'Amor ch'a null' amato amar
perdona.'"</p>
<p>She read the line in an undertone, slowly towards the close. Miriam's
face showed a sudden and curious emotion. Glancing at the book, she
said abruptly:</p>
<p>"No; that's an old mark—a difficulty I had. I'm long past that."</p>
<p>"So am I. 'Amor ch'a null'—'"</p>
<p>Miriam stretched out her hand and took the volume with impatience.</p>
<p>"I'm at the end of this canto," she said, pointing. "Never mind it now.
I should have thought you would have gone somewhere such a fine
afternoon."</p>
<p>"That sounds remarkably like a hint that patience is near its end."</p>
<p>"I didn't mean it for that."</p>
<p>"Then let us get a carriage and drive somewhere together, we two alone."</p>
<p>Miriam shook her head.</p>
<p>"Because it is Sunday?" asked Cecily, with a mischievous smile, leaning
her head aside.</p>
<p>"There is an understanding between us, Cecily. Don't break it."</p>
<p>"But I told you my mood was wicked. I feel disposed to break any and
every undertaking. I should like to fret and torment and offend you. I
should like to ask you why <i>I</i> am allowed to enjoy the sunshine, and
you not? <i>Oggi e festa</i>! What a dreadful sound that must have in your
ears Miriam!"</p>
<p>"But they don't apply it to Sunday," returned the other, who seemed to
resign herself to this teasing.</p>
<p>"Indeed they do!" With a sudden change of subject, Cecily added, "Your
brother came to see us yesterday, to say good-bye."</p>
<p>"Did he?"</p>
<p>"It doesn't interest you. You care nothing where he goes, or what he
does—nothing whatever, Miriam. He told me so; but I knew it already."</p>
<p>"He told you so?" Miriam asked, with cold surprise.</p>
<p>"Yes. You are unkind; you are unnatural."</p>
<p>"And you, Cecily, are childish. I never knew you so childish as to-day."</p>
<p>"I warned you. He and I had a long talk before aunt came home."</p>
<p>"I'm sorry he should have thought it necessary to talk about himself."</p>
<p>"What more natural, when he is beginning a new portion of life? Never
mind; we won't speak of it. May I play you a new piece I have learnt?"</p>
<p>"Do you mean, of sacred music?"</p>
<p>"Sacred? Why, all music is sacred. There are tunes and jinglings that I
shouldn't call so; but neither do I call them music, just as I
distinguish between bad or foolish verse, and poetry. Everything worthy
of being called art is sacred. I shall keep telling you that till in
self-defence you are forced to think about it. And now I shall play the
piece whether you like it or not."</p>
<p>She opened the piano. What she had in mind was one of the "Moments
Musicaux" of Schubert—a strain of exquisite melody, which ceased too
soon. Cecily sat for a few moments at the key-board after she had
finished, her head bent; then she came and stood before Miriam.</p>
<p>"Do you like it?"</p>
<p>There was no answer. She looked steadily at the troubled face, and, as
it still kept averted from her, she laid her arms softly, half
playfully, about Miriam's neck.</p>
<p>"Why must there always be such a distance between us, Miriam dear? Even
when I seem so near to you as this, what a deep black gulf really
separates us!"</p>
<p>"You were once on my side of it" said Miriam, her voice softened. "How
did you pass to the other?"</p>
<p>"How could I tell you? No one read me lectures, or taught me hard
arguments. The change came insensibly, like passing out of a dream into
the light of morning. I followed where my nature led, and my thoughts
about everything altered. I don't know how it might have been if I had
lived on with you. But my happiness was not there."</p>
<p>"Happiness!" murmured the other, scornfully.</p>
<p>"A word you don't, won't understand. Yet to me it means much. Who
knows? Perhaps there may come a day when I shall look back upon it, and
see it as empty of satisfaction as it now seems to you. But more likely
that I shall live to look back in sorrow for its loss."</p>
<p>The dialogue became such as they had held more than once of late,
fruitless it seemed, only saddening to both. And Cecily was to-day
saddened by it beyond her wont; her excessive gaiety yielded to a
dejection which passed indeed, but for a while made her very unlike
herself, silent, with troubled eyes.</p>
<p>"I had one valid excuse for coming to see you to-day," she said, when
gaiety and dejection had both gone by. "Mr. and Mrs. Bradshaw seriously
think of going to Rome at the end of next week, and they wish to have
another day at Pompeii. They would like it so much if you would go with
them. If you do, I also will; we shall make four for a carriage, and
drive there, and come back by train."</p>
<p>"What day?"</p>
<p>"To-morrow, if it be fine. Let me take them your assent."</p>
<p>Miriam agreed.</p>
<p>On Monday morning, as arranged, she was driving down to the Mergellina,
when, with astonishment, she saw her brother standing by the roadside,
beckoning to her. The carriage stopped, and he came up to speak.</p>
<p>"Where are you off to?" he asked.</p>
<p>"You are still here?"</p>
<p>"I haven't been well. Didn't feel able to go yesterday. I was just
coming to see you."</p>
<p>"Not well, Reuben? Why didn't you come before?"</p>
<p>"I couldn't. I want to speak to you. Where are you going?"</p>
<p>She told him the plan for the day. Elgar turned aside, and meditated.</p>
<p>"I'll see you there—at Pompeii somewhere. It'll be on my way."</p>
<p>"I had rather not go at all. I'll ask them to excuse me; Mrs.
Lessingham will perhaps take my place, and—"</p>
<p>"No! I'll see you at Pompeii. I shall have no difficulty you."</p>
<p>Miriam looked at him anxiously.</p>
<p>"I don't wish you to meet us there, Reuben."</p>
<p>"And I <i>do</i> wish! Let me have my way, Miriam. Say nothing about me, and
let the meeting seem by chance."</p>
<p>"I can't do that. You make yourself ridiculous, after—"</p>
<p>"Let me judge for myself. Go on, or you'll be late."</p>
<p>She half rose, as if about to descend from the carriage. Elgar laid his
hand on her arm, and clutched it so strongly that she sank back and
regarded him with a look of anger.</p>
<p>"Miriam! Do as I wish, dear. Be kind to me for this once. If you
refuse, it will make no difference. Have some feeling for me. This one
day, Miriam."</p>
<p>Again she looked at him, and reflected. On account of the driver,
though of course he could not understand them, they had subdued their
voices, and Reuben's sudden action had not been noticeable.</p>
<p>"This one piece of sisterly kindness," he pleaded.</p>
<p>"It shall be as you wish," Miriam replied, her face cast down.</p>
<p>"Thank you, a thousand times. Avanti, cocchiere!"</p>
<p>Scrutiny less keen than Miriam's could perceive that Cecily had not her
usual pleasure in to-day's expedition. Even Mrs. Bradshaw, sitting over
against her in the carriage, noticed that the girl's countenance lacked
its natural animation, wore now and then a tired look; the lids hung a
little heavily over the beautiful eyes, and the cheeks were a thought
pale. When she forgot herself in conversation, Cecily was the same as
ever; mirthful, brightly laughing, fervent in expressing delight; but
her thoughts too often made her silent, and then one saw that she was
not heart and soul in the present. It was another Cecily than on that
day at Baiae. "She has been over-exciting herself since she came here,"
was Mrs. Bradshaw's mental remark. Miriam, anxiously observant, made a
different interpretation, and was harassed with a painful conflict of
thoughts.</p>
<p>Jacob Bush Bradshaw had no eyes for these trivialities. He sat in the
squared posture of a hearty Englishman, amusing himself with everything
they passed on the road self-congratulant on the knowledge and
experience he had been storing, joking as often as he spoke.</p>
<p>"The lad Marsh would have uncommonly liked an invitation to come with
us to-day," he said, about midway in the drive. "What precious mischief
we could have made by asking him, Hannah!"</p>
<p>"There's no room for him, fortunately."</p>
<p>"Oh yes; up on the box."</p>
<p>His eye twinkled as he looked at Cecily. She questioned him.</p>
<p>"Where would be the mischief, Mr. Bradshaw?"</p>
<p>"He talks nonsense, my dear," interposed Mrs. Bradshaw. "Pay no
attention to him."</p>
<p>Miriam had heard now and then of Clifford Marsh. She met Jacob's smile,
and involuntarily checked it by her gravity.</p>
<p>"We might have asked the Denyers as well," said Cecily, "and have had
another carriage, or gone by train."</p>
<p>Mr. Bradshaw chuckled for some minutes at this proposal, but his wife
would not allow him to pursue the jest.</p>
<p>They lunched at the Hotel Diomede before entering the precincts of the
ruins. Mr. Bradshaw had invariably a splendid appetite, and was by this
time skilled in ordering the meals that suited him. The few phrases of
Italian which he had appropriated were given forth <i>ore rotundo</i>, with
Anglo-saxon emphasis on the <i>o</i>'s, and accompanied with large gestures.
His mere appearance always sufficed to put landlords and waiters into
their most urbane mood; they never failed to take him for one of the
English nobility—a belief confirmed by the handsomeness of his
gratuities. Mrs. Bradshaw was not, perhaps, the ideal lady of rank, but
the fine self-satisfaction on her matronly visage, the good-natured
disdain with which she allowed herself to be waited upon by foolish
foreigners, her solid disregard of everything beyond the circle of her
own party, were impressive enough, and exacted no little subservience.</p>
<p>Strong in the experience of two former visits, Mr. Bradshaw would have
no guide to-day. Murray in hand, he knew just what he wished to see
again, and where to find it.</p>
<p>As Miriam was at Pompeii for the first time, he took her especially
under his direction, and showed her the city much as he might have led
her over his silk-mill in Manchester. Unimbued with history and
literature, he knew nothing of the scholar's or the poet's enthusiasm;
his gratification lay in exercising his solid intelligence on a lot of
strange and often grotesque facts. Here men had lived two thousand
years ago. There was no mistake about it; you saw the deep ruts of
their wheels along the rugged street; nay, you saw the wearing of their
very feet on the comically narrow pavements. And their life had been as
different as possible from that of men in Manchester. Everything
excited him to merriment.</p>
<p>"Now, this is the house of old Pansa—no doubt an ancestor of friend
Sancho"—with a twinkle in his eye. "We'll go over this carefully, Mrs.
Baske; it's one of the largest and completest in Pompeii. Here we are
in what they called the atrium."</p>
<p>Cecily spoke seldom. Of course, she would have preferred to be alone
here with Miriam; best of all—or nearly so—if they could have made
the same party as at Baiae. At times she lingered a little behind the
others, and seemed deep in contemplation of some object; or she stood
to watch the lizards darting about the sunny old walls. When all were
enjoying the view from the top of Jupiter's Temple, she gazed long
towards the Sorrento promontory, the height of St. Angelo.</p>
<p>"Amalfi is over on the far side," she said to Miriam. "They are both
working there now."</p>
<p>Miriam replied nothing.</p>
<p>When they were in the Street of Tombs, Cecily again paused, by the
sepulchre of the Priestess Mamia, whence there is a clear prospect
across the bay towards the mountains. Turning back again, she heard a
voice that made her tremble with delighted surprise. A wall concealed
the speaker from her; she took a few quick steps, and saw Reuben Elgar
shaking hands with the Bradshaws. He looked at her, and came forward.
She could not say any thing, and was painfully conscious of the blood
that rushed to her face; never yet had she known this stress of
heart-beats that made suffering of joy, and the misery of being unable
to command herself under observant eyes.</p>
<p>It was years since Elgar and the Bradshaws had met. As a boy he had
often visited their house, but from the time of his leaving home at
sixteen to go to a boarding-school, his acquaintance with them, as with
all his other Manchester friends, practically ceased. They had often
heard of him—too often, in their opinion. Aware of his arrival at
Naples, they had expressed no wish to see him. Still, now that he met
them in this unexpected way, they could not but assume friendliness.
Jacob, not on the whole intolerant, was willing enough to take "the
lad" on his present merits; Reuben had the guise and manners of a
gentleman, and perhaps was grown out of his reprobate habits. Mr.
Bradshaw and his wife could not but notice Cecily's agitation at the
meeting; they exchanged wondering glances, and presently found an
opportunity for a few words apart. What was going on? How had these two
young folks become so intimate? Well, it was no business of theirs.
Lucky that Mrs. Baske was one of the company.</p>
<p>And why should Cecily disguise that now only was her enjoyment of the
day begun—that only now had the sunshine its familiar brightness, the
ancient walls and ways their true enchantment? She did not at once
become more talkative, but the shadow had passed utterly from her face,
and there was no more listlessness in her movements.</p>
<p>"I have stopped here on my way to join Mallard," was all Reuben said,
in explanation of his presence.</p>
<p>All kept together. Mr. Bradshaw resumed his interest in antiquities,
but did not speak so freely about them as before.</p>
<p>"Your brother knows a good deal more about these things than I do, Mrs.
Baske," he remarked. "He shall give us the benefit of his Latin."</p>
<p>Miriam resolutely kept her eyes alike from Reuben and from Cecily.
Hitherto her attention to the ruins had been intermittent, but
occasionally she had forgotten herself so far as to look and ponder;
now she saw nothing. Her mind was gravely troubled; she wished only
that the day were over.</p>
<p>As for Elgar, he seemed to the Bradshaws singularly quiet, modest,
inoffensive. If he ventured a suggestion or a remark, it was in a
subdued voice and with the most pleasant manner possible. He walked for
a time with Mrs. Bradshaw, and accommodated himself with much tact to
her way of regarding foreign things, whether ancient or modern. In a
short time all went smoothly again.</p>
<p>Not since they shook hands had Elgar and Cecily encountered each
other's glance. They looked at each other often, very often, but only
when the look could not be returned; they exchanged not a syllable. Yet
both knew that at some approaching moment, for them the supreme moment
of this day, their eyes must meet. Not yet; not casually, and whilst
others regarded them. The old ruins would be kind.</p>
<p>It was in the house of Meleager. They had walked among the coloured
columns, and had visited the inner chamber, where upon the wall is
painted the Judgment of Paris. Mr. Bradshaw passed out through the
narrow doorway, and his voice was dulled; Miriam passed with him, and,
close after her, Mrs. Bradshaw. Reuben seemed to draw aside for Cecily,
but she saw his hand extended towards her—it held a spray of
maidenhair that he had just gathered. She took it, or would have taken
it, but her hand was closed in his.</p>
<p>"I have stayed only to see you again," came panting from his lips. "I
could not go till I had seen you again!"</p>
<p>And before the winged syllables had ceased, their eyes met; nor their
eyes alone, for upon both was the constraint of passion that leaps like
flame to its desire—mouth to mouth and heart to heart for one instant
that concentrated all the joy of being.</p>
<p>What hand, centuries ago crumbled into indistinguishable dust, painted
that parable of the youth making his award to Love? What eyes gazed
upon it, when this was a home of man and woman warm with life,
listening all day long to the music of uttered thoughts? Dark-buried
whilst so many ages of history went by, thrown open for the sunshine to
rest upon its pallid antiquity, again had this chamber won a place in
human hearts, witnessed the birth of joy and hope, blended itself with
the destiny of mortals. He who pictured Paris dreamt not of these
passionate lips and their unborn language, knew not that he wrought for
a world hidden so far in time. Though his white-limbed goddess fade
ghostlike, the symbol is as valid as ever. Did not her wan beauty smile
youthful again in the eyes of these her latest worshippers?</p>
<p>And they went forth among the painted pillars, once more shunning each
other's look. It was some minutes before Cecily knew that her fingers
still crushed the spray of maidenhair; then she touched it gently, and
secreted it within her glove. It must be dead when she reached home,
but that mattered nothing; would it not remain the sign of something
deathless?</p>
<p>She believed so. In her vision the dead city had a new and wonderful
life; it lay glorious in the light of heaven, its strait ways fit for
the treading of divinities, its barren temples reconsecrate with song
and sacrifice. She believed there was that within her soul which should
survive all change and hazard—survive, it might be, even this warm
flesh that it was hard not to think immortal.</p>
<p>She sought Miriam's side, took her hand, held it playfully as they
walked on together.</p>
<p>"Why do you look at me so sadly, Miriam?"</p>
<p>"I did not mean to."</p>
<p>"Yet you do. Let me see you smile once to-day."</p>
<p>But Miriam's smile was sadder than her grave look.</p>
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