Antonina; Or, The Fall of Rome
by a visit to its shady walks, and by breathing its fragrant breezes? Amid the solemn mournfulness that reigns over declining Rome, this delightful elevation rises light, airy, and inv
es the mind as a place set apart by common consent for the presence of the innocent and the
restored them in all their pristine loveliness. The old Romans called it 'The Mount of Gardens'. Throughout the disasters of the Empire and the conv
s and its theatres, such a glowing prospect of artificial splendour, aided by natural beauty, might be spread before the reader as would tax his credulity, while it excited his astonishment. This task, however, it
mall but elegantly built house, surrounded by a little garden of its own, and protected at the back by the lofty groves and outbuildings of the pa
n determined to abandon his inheritance, and to sell it to another; but, at the repeated entreaties of his daughter, he at length consented to change his purpose, and sacrifice his antipathy to his luxurious neighbours to his child's youthful attachment to the beauties of Nature as displayed in his legacy on the Pincian Mount. In this instance only did the natural affec
ount. From the garden of Numerian the irregular buildings of the great suburbs of Rome, the rich undulating country beyond, and the long ranges of mountains in the distance, are now all visible in the soft and luxurious light. Near the spot which command
inate other objects. First they display a small, white arm; then a light, simple robe; then a fair, graceful neck; and finall
roduced, she glances anxiously around her, apparently fearful of being overheard. Her large, dark, lustrous eyes have in them an expression of apprehension; her delicate lips are half parted; a sudden flush rises in her soft, olive complexion as she examines every corner of the garden. Having completed her survey without discovering any cause for the suspicions she seems to entertain, she again employs herself over her instrument. Once more she strikes the chords, and now with a bolder hand. The notes she produces resolve themselves into a wild, plaintive, irregular melody, alternatel
IGIN O
hose domi
's thrilli
be thy di
empted the
listen:
ion's ea
mid the st
sic of th
hin the real
is mortal p
owards they
filled my
had watche
igh to sin
gression ne
my nativ
ternly ba
to the wo
I
re, I kne
darkness rou
heard me in
isteners wh
of the Sprin
ng round me,
mphs sported
ng Echo le
oe and wri
at my gen
y, with foo
estle at
used, deli
ss'd me f
I
e years of
ill to eart
ugh each di
come, ev
'd, my sola
st hopes are
et gift!-to c
ts other joy
withers a
ast me lov
at mortals
shake my g
mine all he
rnity
her, dwelling tenderly upon the fragrant flower-beds that were the work of her own hands, and looking forth with an expression half reverential, half ecstatic over the long, smooth, shining plains, and the still, glorious mountains, that had so long been the inspiration of her most cherished thoughts, and that now glowed before her eyes, soft and beautiful as her dreams on he
nce was to be one long acquaintance with mortal woe, one unvaried refusal of mortal pleasure, whose thoughts were to be only of sermons and fasts, whose action were to be confined to the bindi
, poetry, painting, and music, gold, silver, and precious stones, which the ancient fathers had composed for the benefit of the submissive congregations of former days; vainly did she imagine, during those long hours of theological instruction, that her heart's forbidden longings were banished and destroyed-that her patient and childlike disposition was bowed in complete subserviency to the most rigorous of her father's commands. No sooner were her interviews with Numerian concluded than the prompt
affections from pining in the solitude imposed on them, and which occupied her lei
an Mount, and received its rapturous gratification in the first audible sounds from the Roman senator's lute. How her possession of an instrument, and her skill in playing, were subsequently gained, the reader already knows from Vetranio's narrative at Ravenna. Could the frivolous senator have discovered the real intensity of the emotions his art was raising in his pupil's bosom while he taught her; could he have imagined how incessantly, during their lessons, her sense of duty struggled with her love for music-how completely she was absorbed, one moment by an agony of doubt and fear, another by an ecstasy of enjoyment and hope-he would have felt little of that astonishment at her coldness towards himself which he so warmly expressed at his interview with Julia in the gardens of the Court. In
hened-such is the creative power of human emotion-by that inestimable possession. She could speak to it, smile on it, caress it, and believe, in the ecstasy of her delight, in the carelessness of her self-delusion, that it sympathised with her joy. During her long solitudes, when she was silently watched in her father's absence by the brooding, melancholy stranger whom he had set over her, it became a companion dearer than the flower-garden, dearer even that the plains and mountains which formed her favourite view. When her father ret
uter world of passing interests and events by the appearances of another figure on the scene. We left Antonina in
s shrivelled cheeks. His dry, matted hair has been burnt by the sun into a strange tawny brown. His expression is one of fixed, stern, mournful thought. As he steps stealthily along, advancing towards Antonina, he mutters to himself, and clutches mechanica
to regain his accustomed post before his master's return, for he was the same individual mentioned by
few paces of the girl he stopped,
y-Numerian is
into her cheeks; she hastily covered the lute with her robe; paused an instant, as if
r in the hall. There was now no chance o
y, upon his beautiful daughter as she stood by his side. 'But what affects you?' he added, notici
ck eye discovered it immediately. He snatched the instrument from her feeble grasp. His astonishment on beholding it was too great f
libertines in my house-in my daughter's possession!'
of all her happiest expectations for future days. Then, as she began to estimate the reality of her depri
g convulsively, over those hapless fragments. 'To your cham
room that no lute was henceforth to occupy, as she thought on the morrow that no lute was henceforth to enliven, her grief almost overpowered h
terated sternly. 'Am I to
nstantly retired. As soon as she was out of sight, Ulpiu
I have so carefully cherished, whom I intended for
nfortunate lute; but Ulpius did not address to
l interrogate my disobedient child. In the meantime, do not imagine, Ulpius, that I connect you in any way wi
have remarked that a faint sinister smile was breaking forth upon his haggard countenance. But Numerian's indignation was s
my exhortations-on this night I am doomed to find her a player on a pagan lute, a possessor of the most wanton of the world's vanities! God give me patience to
k with a sudden recollection, he stopped abru
riend, over my house; for even now, on my return, I thought that two strangers were following my steps, and I forebode some evil in store f
e outrage that had been offered to his gloomy fanaticism, as the weak, ti
staircase near him which led to some subterranean apartments. He had not gone far when a slight noise became audible at an extremity of the corridor above. As he listened
rful of being overheard) until she gained the part of the floor still strewn with the ruins of the broken lute. Here she knelt down, and pressed each fragment that
gazing after her from his concealment as she disappeared; '