Page:The Portrait of a Lady (1882).djvu/258

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
250
THE PORTRAIT OF A LADY.
250

250 THE PORTRAIT OF A LADY. " I warned yon she was clever." " Fortunately they are very bad ones," said Osmond. " Why is that fortunate T " Dame, if they must be sacrificed ! " Madame Merle leaned back, looking straight before her ; then she spoke to the coachman. But Osmond again detained her. " If I go to Eome, what shall I do with Pansy V " I will go and see her," said Madame Merle. XXVII. I SHALL not undertake to give an account of Isabel's impres- sions of Rome, to analyse her feelings as she trod the ancient pavement of the Forum, or to number her pulsations as she crossed the threshold of St. Peter's. It is enough to say that her perception of the endless interest of the place was such as might have been expected in a young woman of her intelligence and culture. She had always been fond of history, and here was history in the stones of the street and the atoms of the sunshine. She had an imagination that kindled at the mention of great deeds, and wherever she turned some great deed had been acted. These things excited her, but she was quietly excited. It seemed to her companions that she spoke less than usual, and Ralph Touchett, when he appeared to be looking listlessly and awkwardly over her head, was really dropping an eye of observation upon her. To her own knowledge she was very happy ; she would even have been willing to believe that these were to be on the whole the happiest hours of her life. The sense of the mighty human past was heavy upon her, but it was interfused in the strangest, suddenest, most capricious way, with the fresh, cool breath of the future. Her feelings were so mingled that she scarcely knew whither any of them would lead her, and she went about in a kind of repressed ecstasy of contemplation, seeing often in the things she looked at a greal deal more than was there, and yet not seeing many of the items enumerated in " Murray." Rome, as Ralph said, was in capital condition. The herd of re-echoing tourists had departed, and most of the solemn places had relapsed into solemnity. The sky was a blaze 'of blue, and the plash of the fountains, in their mossy niches, had lost its chill and doubled its music. On the corners of the warm, bright streets one stumbled upon bundles of flowers.