it, a precipice of two hundred feet down into the
Gorge of Sorrento. A couple of dozen orange-trees,
straight and tall, with healthy, shining bark, here
shot up from the fine black volcanic soil, and made
with their foliage a twilight shadow on the ground,
so deep that no vegetation, save a fine velvet moss,
could dispute their claim to its entire nutritious
offices. These trees were the sole wealth of
the women and the sole ornament of the garden; but,
as they stood there, not only laden with golden fruit,
but fragrant with pearly blossoms, they made the little
rocky platform seem a perfect Garden of the Hesperides.
The stone cottage, as we have said, had an open, whitewashed
arcade in front, from which one could look down into
the gloomy depths of the gorge, as into some mysterious
underworld. Strange and weird it seemed, with
its fathomless shadows and its wild grottoes, over
which hung, silently waving, long pendants of ivy,
while dusky gray aloes uplifted their horned heads
from great rock-rifts, like elfin spirits struggling
upward out of the shade. Nor was wanting the
usual gentle poetry of flowers; for white iris leaned
its fairy pavilion over the black void like a pale-cheeked
princess from the window of some dark enchanted castle,
and scarlet geranium and golden broom and crimson
gladiolus waved and glowed in the shifting beams of
the sunlight. Also there was in this little spot
what forms the charm of Italian gardens always,—the
sweet song and prattle of waters. A clear mountain-spring
burst through the rock on one side of the little cottage,
and fell with a lulling noise into a quaint moss-grown
water-trough, which had been in former times the sarcophagus
of some old Roman sepulchre. Its sides were richly
sculptured with figures and leafy scrolls and arabesques,
into which the sly-footed lichens with quiet growth
had so insinuated themselves as in some places almost
to obliterate the original design; while, round the
place where the water fell, a veil of ferns and maiden’s-hair,
studded with tremulous silver drops, vibrated to its
soothing murmur. The superfluous waters, drained
off by a little channel on one side, were conducted
through the rocky parapet of the garden, whence they
trickled and tinkled from rock to rock, falling with
a continual drip among the swaying ferns and pendent
ivy-wreaths, till they reached the little stream at
the bottom of the gorge. This parapet or garden-wall
was formed of blocks or fragments of what had once
been white marble, the probable remains of the ancient
tomb from which the sarcophagus was taken. Here
and there a marble acanthus-leaf, or the capital of
an old column, or a fragment of sculpture jutted from
under the mosses, ferns, and grasses with which prodigal
Nature had filled every interstice and carpeted the
whole. These sculptured fragments everywhere
in Italy seem to whisper from the dust, of past life
and death, of a cycle of human existence forever gone,
over whose tomb the life of to-day is built.