These sketches had a most disagreeable effect on Donatello's peculiar

temperament. He gave a shudder; his face assumed a look of trouble,

fear, and disgust; he snatched up one sketch after another, as if about

to tear it in pieces. Finally, shoving away the pile of drawings, he

shrank back from the table and clasped his hands over his eyes.

"What is the matter, Donatello?" asked Miriam, looking up from a

letter which she was now writing. "Ah! I did not mean you to see those

drawings. They are ugly phantoms that stole out of my mind; not things

that I created, but things that haunt me. See! here are some trifles

that perhaps will please you better."

She gave him a portfolio, the sketches in which indicated a happier mood

of mind, and one, it is to be hoped, more truly characteristic of the

artist. Supposing neither of these classes of subject to show anything

of her own individuality, Miriam had evidently a great scope of fancy,

and a singular faculty of putting what looked like heart into her

productions. The latter sketches were domestic and common scenes, so

finely and subtilely idealized that they seemed such as we may see

at any moment, and eye, where; while still there was the indefinable

something added, or taken away, which makes all the difference between

sordid life and an earthly paradise. The feeling and sympathy in all of

them were deep and true. There was the scene, that comes once in every

life, of the lover winning the soft and pure avowal of bashful affection

from the maiden whose slender form half leans towards his arm, half

shrinks from it, we know not which. There was wedded affection in its

successive stages, represented in a series of delicately conceived

designs, touched with a holy fire, that burned from youth to age in

those two hearts, and gave one identical beauty to the faces throughout

all the changes of feature.

There was a drawing of an infant's shoe, half worn out, with the airy

print of the blessed foot within; a thing that would make a mother smile

or weep out of the very depths of her heart; and yet an actual mother

would not have been likely to appreciate the poetry of the little shoe,

until Miriam revealed it to her. It was wonderful, the depth and force

with which the above, and other kindred subjects, were depicted, and the

profound significance which they often acquired. The artist, still in

her fresh youth, could not probably have drawn any of these dear and

rich experiences from her own life; unless, perchance, that first sketch

of all, the avowal of maiden affection, were a remembered incident, and

not a prophecy. But it is more delightful to believe that, from first to

last, they were the productions of a beautiful imagination, dealing with

the warm and pure suggestions of a woman's heart, and thus idealizing

a truer and lovelier picture of the life that belongs to woman, than

an actual acquaintance with some of its hard and dusty facts could have

inspired. So considered, the sketches intimated such a force and variety

of imaginative sympathies as would enable Miriam to fill her life richly

with the bliss and suffering of womanhood, however barren it might

individually be.




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