At Home And Abroad eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 587 pages of information about At Home And Abroad.

At Home And Abroad eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 587 pages of information about At Home And Abroad.
sorry for her that he was able to draw her from the human to the heavenly life; she seems so sad and so worn out by the effort.  But here at Assisi, one cannot help being penetrated by the spirit that flowed from that life.  Here is the room where his father shut up the boy to punish his early severity of devotion.  Here is the picture which represents him despoiled of all outward things, even his garments,—­devoting himself, body and soul, to the service of God in the way he believed most acceptable.  Here is the underground chapel, where rest those weary bones, saluted by the tears of so many weary pilgrims who have come hither to seek strength from his example.  Here are the churches above, full of the works of earlier art, animated by the contagion of a great example.  It is impossible not to bow the head, and feel how mighty an influence flows from a single soul, sincere in its service of truth, in whatever form that truth comes to it.

A troop of neat, pretty school-girls attended us about, going with us into the little chapels adorned with pictures which open at every corner of the streets, smiling on us at a respectful distance.  Some of them were fourteen or fifteen years old.  I found reading, writing, and sewing were all they learned at their school; the first, indeed, they knew well enough, if they could ever get books to use it on.  Tranquil as Assisi was, on every wall was read Viva Pio IX.! and we found the guides and workmen in the shop full of a vague hope from him.  The old love which has made so rich this aerial cradle of St. Francis glows warm as ever in the breasts of men; still, as ever, they long for hero-worship, and shout aloud at the least appearance of an object.

The church at the foot of the hill, Santa Maria degli Angeli, seems tawdry after Assisi.  It also is full of records of St. Francis, his pains and his triumphs.  Here, too, on a little chapel, is the famous picture by Overbeck; too exact a copy, but how different in effect from the early art we had just seen above!  Harmonious but frigid, grave but dull; childhood is beautiful, but not when continued, or rather transplanted, into the period where we look for passion, varied means, and manly force.

Before reaching Perugia, I visited an Etrurian tomb, which is a little way off the road; it is said to be one of the finest in Etruria.  The hill-side is full of them, but excavations are expensive, and not frequent.  The effect of this one was beyond my expectations; in it were several female figures, very dignified and calm, as the dim lamp-light fell on them by turns.  The expression of these figures shows that the position of woman in these states was noble.  Their eagles’ nests cherished well the female eagle who kept watch in the eyrie.

Perugia too is on a noble hill.  What a daily excitement such a view, taken at every step! life is worth ten times as much in a city so situated.  Perugia is full, overflowing, with the treasures of early art.  I saw them so rapidly it seems now as if in a trance, yet certainly with a profit, a manifold gain, such as Mahomet thought he gained from his five minutes’ visits to other spheres.  Here are two portraits of Raphael as a youth:  it is touching to see what effect this angel had upon all that surrounded him from the very first.

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At Home And Abroad from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.