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names will be foremost on the lips of posterity, | ument to me-it is not just that my labor should because they sought patronage and found it; bear the name of another man. It is but little because they had tongues that could flatter, and to ask," the old man went on, bitterly, "that blood that was used to be nourished from the my name should be over the door-that men client's basket. I have a right to be remem- should own themselves debtors to the Bardi bered." Library in Florence. They will speak coldly of me, perhaps: a diligent collector and transcriber,' they will say, 'and also of some critical ingenuity, but one who could hardly be conspieuous in an age so fruitful in illustrious scholYet he merits our pity, for in the latter years of his life he was blind, and his only son, to whose education he had devoted his best Nevertheless my name will be re

The old man's voice had become at once loud and tremulous, and a pink flush overspread his proud, delicately-cut features, while the habitually raised attitude of his head gave the idea that behind the curtain of his blindness he saw some imaginary high tribunal to which he was appealing against the injustice of Fame.

ars.

Romola was moved with sympathetic indig-years-' nation, for in her nature too there lay the same membered, and men will honor me; not with large claims, and the same spirit of struggle against their denial. She tried to calm her father by a still prouder word than his.

"Nevertheless, father, it is a great gift of the gods to be born with a hatred and contempt of all injustice and meanness. Yours is a higher lot, never to have lied and truckled, than to have shared honors won by dishonor. There is strength in scorn, as there was in the martial fury by which men became insensible to wounds."

"It is well said, Romola. It is a Promethean word thou hast uttered," answered Bardo, after a little interval, in which he had begun to lean on his stick again, and to walk on. "And I indeed am not to be pierced by the shafts of Fortune. My armor is the as triplex of a clear conscience, and a mind nourished by the precepts of philosophy. "For men,' says Epictetus, 'are disturbed not by things themselves, but by their opinions or thoughts concerning those things.' And again, 'whosoever will be free, let him not desire or dread that which it is in the power of others either to deny or inflict; otherwise, he is a slave.' And of all such gifts as are dependent on the caprice of fortune or of men, I have long ago learned to say, with Horace-who, however, is too wavering in his philosophy, vacillating between the precepts of Zeno and the less worthy maxims of Epicurus, and attempting, as we say, 'duabus sellis sedere'-concerning such accidents, I say, with the pregnant brevity of the poet,

'Sunt qui non habeant, est qui non curat habere.' He is referring to gems, and purple, and other insignia of wealth; but I may apply his words not less justly to the tributes men pay us with their lips and their pens, which are also matters of purchase, and often with base coin. Yes, ' inanis'-hollow, empty-is the epithet justly bestowed on Fame."

They made the tour of the room in silence after this; but Bardo's lip-born maxims were as powerless over the passion which had been moving him as if they had been written on parchment and hung round his neck in a sealed bag; and he presently broke forth again in a new tone of insistence.

"Inanis? yes, if it is a lying fame; but not if it is the just meed of labor and a great purpose. I claim my right: it is not fair that the work of my brain and my hands should not be a mon

the breath of flattery, purchased by mean bribes, but because I have labored, and because my labor will remain. Debts! I know there are debts; and there is thy dowry, Romola, to be paid. But there must be enough—or, at least, there can lack but a small sum, such as the Signoria might well provide. And if Lorenzo had not died, all would have been secured and settled. But now......"

At this moment Maso opened the door, and advancing to his master, announced that Nello, the barber, has desired him to say that he was come with the Greek scholar whom he had asked leave to introduce.

"It is well," said the old man. "Bring them in."

Bardo, conscious that he looked more dependent when he was walking, liked always to be seated in the presence of strangers, and Romola, without needing to be told, conducted him to his chair. She was standing by him at her full height, in quiet, majestic self-possession when the visitors entered; and the most penetrating observer would hardly have divined that this proud pale face, at the slightest touch on the fibres of affection or pity, could become passionate with tenderness, or that this woman, who imposed a certain awe on those who approached her, was in a state of girlish simplicity and ignorance concerning the world outside her father's books.

CHAPTER VI.

DAWNING HOPES.

WHEN Maso opened the door again, and ushered in the two visitors, Nello, first making a deep reverence to Romola, gently pushed Tito before him, and advanced with him toward her father.

"Messer Bardo," he said, in a more measured and respectful tone than was usual with him, "I have the honor of presenting to you the Greek scholar, who has been eager to have speech of you, not less from the report I made to him of your learning and your priceless collections, than because of the furtherance your patronage may give him under the transient need to which he has been reduced by shipwreck. His name is Tito Melema, at your service."

shy woman, and is perhaps the only atonement a man can make for being too handsome. The finished fascination of his air came chiefly from the absence of demand and assumption. It was that of a fleet, soft-coated, dark-eyed animal that delights you by not bounding away in indifference from you, and unexpectedly pillows its chin on your palm, and looks up at you desiring to be stroked-as if it loved you.

66 Messere, I give you welcome," said Bardo, with some condescension; "misfortune wedded to learning, and especially to Greek learning, is a letter of credit that should win the ear of every instructed Florentine; for, as you are doubtless aware, since the period when your countryman, Manuello Crisolora, diffused the light of his teaching in the chief cities of Italy, now nearly a century ago, no man is held worthy of the name of scholar who has acquired merely the transplanted and derivative literature of the Latins; rather, such inert students are stigmatized as opici or barbarians, according to the phrase of the Romans themselves, who frankly replenished their urns at the fountain-head. I am, as you perceive, and as Nello has doubtless forewarned you, totally blind-a calamity to which we Florentines are held especially liable, whether owing to the cold winds which rush upon us in spring from the passes of the Apennines, or to that sudden transition from the cool gloom of our houses to the dazzling brightness of our summer sun, by which the lippi are said to have been made so numerous among the ancient Romans; or, in fine, to some occult cause which eludes our superficial surmises. But I pray you! be seated: Nello, my friend, be seated."

Bardo paused until his fine ear had assured

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and that Romola was taking her usual chair at his right hand. Then he said:

"From what part of Greece do you come, Messere? I had thought that your unhappy country had been almost exhausted of those sons who could cherish in their minds any image of her original glory, though indeed the barbarous Sultans have of late shown themselves not indisposed to ingraft on their wild stock the precious vine which their own fierce bands have hewn down and trampled under foot. From what part of Greece do you come ?"

Romola's astonishment could hardly have been greater if the stranger had worn a panther-skin and carried a thyrsus; for the cunning barber had said nothing of the Greek's age or appearance; and among her father's scholarly visitors she had hardly ever seen any but middle-aged or gray-headed men. There was only one masculine face, at once youthful and beautiful, the image of which remained deeply impressed on her mind: it was that of her brother, who long years ago had taken her on his knee, kissed her, and never come back again: a fair face, with sun-him that the visitors were seating themselves, ny hair like her own. But the habitual attitude of her mind toward strangers-a proud self-dependence and determination to ask for nothing even by a smile-confirmed in her by her father's complaints against the world's injustice, was like a snowy embankment hemming in the rush of admiring surprise. Tito's bright face showed its rich-tinted beauty without any rivalry of color above his black sajo or tunic reaching to the knees. It seemed like a wreath of spring, dropped suddenly into Romola's young but wintry life, which had inherited nothing but memories-memories of a dead mother, of a lost brother, of a blind father's happier time-memories of far-off light, love, and beauty, that lay imbedded in dark mines of books, and could hardly give out their brightness again until they were kindled for her by the torch of some known joy. Nevertheless, she returned Tito's bow, made to her on entering, with the same pale, proud face as ever; but as he approached the snow melted, and when he ventured to look toward her again, while Nello was speaking, a pink flush overspread her face, to vanish again almost immediately, as if her imperious will had recalled it. Tito's glance, on the contrary, had that gentle, beseeching admiration in it which is the most propitiating of appeals to a proud,

"I sailed last from Nauplia," said Tito; "but I have resided both at Constantinople and Thessalonica, and have traveled in various parts little visited by Western Christians since the triumph of the Turkish arms. I should tell you, however, Messere, that I was not born in Greece, but at Bari. I spent the first sixteen years of my life in Southern Italy and Sicily."

While Tito was speaking some emotion passed, like a breath on the waters, across Bardo's delicate features; he leaned forward, put out his right hand toward Romola, and turned his head as if about to speak to her; but then, correcting himself, turned away again, and said, in a subdued voice,

"Excuse me; is it not true-you are young ?"

"I am three-and-twenty," said Tito.

"Ah," said Bardo, still in a tone of subdued excitement, "and you had, doubtless, a father who cared for your early instruction-who, perhaps, was himself a scholar?”

There was a slight pause before Tito's answer came to the ear of Bardo; but for Romola and Nello it commenced with a slight shock that seemed to pass through him, and cause a momentary quivering of the lip; doubtless at the revival of a supremely painful remembrance.

"Yes," he replied; "at least a father by adoption. He was a Neapolitan, and of accomplished scholarship both Latin and Greek. But," added Tito, åfter another slight pause, "he is lost to me-was lost on a voyage he too rashly undertook to Delos."

Bardo sank backward again, too delicate to ask another question that might probe a sorrow which he divined to be recent. Romola, who knew well what were the fibres that Tito's voice had stirred in her father, felt that this new acquaintance had with wonderful suddenness got within the barrier that lay between them and the alien world. Nello, thinking that the evident check given to the conversation offered a graceful opportunity for relieving himself from silence, said

plication of these babbling, lawless productions, albeit countenanced by the patronage, and in some degree the example of Lorenzo himself, otherwise a friend to true learning, as a sign that the glorious hopes of this century are to be quenched in gloom; nay, that they have been the delusive prologue to an age worse than that of iron-the age of tinsel and gossamer, in which no thought has substance enough to be moulded into consistent and lasting form."

"Once more, pardon," said Nello, opening his palms outward, and shrugging his shoulders, "I find myself knowing so many things in good Tuscan before I have time to think of the Latin for them; and Messer Luigi's rhymes are always slipping off the lips of my customers:—that is what corrupts me. And, indeed, talking of customers, I have left my shop and my reputation too long in the custody of my slow Sandro, who does not deserve even to be called a tonsor inequalis, but rather to be pronounced simply a bungler in the vulgar tongue. So with your permission, Messer Bardo, I will take my leavewell understood that I am at your service whenever Maso calls upon me. It seems a thousand years till I dress and perfume the damigella's hair, which deserves to shine in the heavens as a constellation, though indeed it were a pity for it ever to go so far out of reach."

"In truth, it is as clear as Venetian glass that this bel giovane has had the finest training; Three voices made a fugue of friendly farefor the two Cennini have set him to work at their wells to Nello, as he retreated with a bow to Greek sheets already, and they are not men to Romola and a beck to Tito. The acute barber begin cutting before they have felt the edge of saw that the pretty youngster, who had crept their tools, mi pare; they tested him well before-into his liking by some strong magic, was well hand, we may be sure, and if there are two things not to be hidden-love and a cough-I say there is a third, and that is ignorance, when once a man is obliged to do something besides wagging his head. The tonsor inequalis is inevitably betrayed when he takes the shears in his hand; is it not true, Messer Bardo? I speak after the fashion of a barber, but, as Luigi Pulci says

"Perdonimi s'io fallo: chi m'ascolta

Intenda il mio volgar col suo latino.'" "Nay, my good Nello," said Bardo, with an air of friendly severity, "you are not altogether illiterate, and might doubtless have made a more respectable progress in learning if you had abstained somewhat from the cicalata and gossip of the street-corner, to which our Florentines are excessively addicted; but still more if you had not clogged your memory with those frivolous productions of which Luigi Pulci has furnished the most peccant exemplar—a compendium of extravagances and incongruities the farthest removed from the models of a pure age, and resembling rather the grylli, or conceits of a period when mystic meaning was held a warrant for monstrosity of form; with this difference, that while the monstrosity is retained, the mystic meaning is absent; in contemptible contrast with the great poem of Virgil, who, as I long held with Filelfo, before Landino had taken upon him to expound the same opinion, embodied the deepest lessons of philosophy in a graceful and wellknit fable. And I can not but regard the multi

launched in Bardo's favorable regard; and satisfied that his introduction had not miscarried so far, he felt the propriety of retiring.

The little burst of wrath, called forth by Nello's unlucky quotation, had diverted Bardo's mind from the feelings which had just before been hemming in further speech, and he now addressed Tito again with his ordinary calmness.

"Ah! young man, you are happy in having been able to unite the advantages of travel with those of study, and you will be welcome among us as a bringer of fresh tidings from a land which has become sadly strange to us, except through the agents of a now restricted commerce and the reports of hasty pilgrims. For those days are in the far distance which I myself witnessed, when men like Aurispa and Guarino went out to Greece as to a store-house, and came back laden with manuscripts which every scholar was eager to borrow-and, be it owned with shame, not always willing to restore; nay, even the days when erudite Greeks flocked to our shores for a refuge seem far off now-farther off than the oncoming of my blindness. But, doubtless, young man, research after the treasures of antiquity was not alien to the purpose of your travels ?"

"Assuredly not," said Tito. "On the contrary, my companion-my father-was willing to risk his life in his zeal for the discovery of inscriptions and other traces of ancient civilization."

"And I trust there is a record of his re

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searches and their results," said Bardo, eagerly, | supplement to the Isolario of Cristoforo Buon"since they must be even more precious than delmonte, and which may take rank with the those of Ciriaco, which I have diligently availed Itineraria of Ciriaco and the admirable Ammyself of, though they are not always illumin-brogio Traversari. But we must prepare ourated by adequate learning." selves for calumny, young man," Bardo went on "There was such a record," said Tito, "but with energy, as if the work were already growit was lost, like every thing else, in the ship-ing so fast that the time of trial was near; if wreck I suffered below Ancona. The only rec- your book contains novelties you will be charged ord left is such as remains in our-in my mem- with forgery; if my elucidations should clash ory." with any principles of interpretation adopted by "You must lose no time in committing it to another scholar our personal characters will be paper, young man," said Bardo, with growing attacked, we shall be impeached with foul acinterest. "Doubtless you remember much, if tions; you must prepare yourself to be told that you aided in transcription; for when I was your your mother was a fish-woman, and that your age words wrought themselves into my mind as father was a renegade priest or a hanged maleif they had been fixed by the tool of the graver; factor. I myself, for having shown error in a wherefore I constantly marvel at the capricious-single preposition, had an invective written ness of my daughter's memory, which grasps against me wherein I was taxed with treachcertain objects with tenacity, and lets fall allery, fraud, indecency, and 'even hideous crimes. those minutia whereon depends accuracy, the very soul of scholarship. But I apprehend no such danger with you, young man, if your will has seconded the advantages of your training."

When Bardo made this reference to his daughter Tito ventured to turn his eyes toward her, and at the accusation against her memory his | face broke into its brightest smile, which was reflected as inevitably as sudden sunbeams in Romola's. Conceive the soothing delight of that smile to her! Romola had never dreamed that there was a scholar in the world who would smile at her for a deficiency for which she was constantly made to feel herself a culprit. It was like the dawn of a new sense to her-the sense of comradeship. They did not look away from each other immediately, as if the smile had been a stolen one; they looked and smiled with frank enjoyment.

"She is not really so cold and proud," thought Tito.

"Does he forget, too, I wonder?" thought Romola. "But I hope not, else he will vex my father."

Such, my young friend, such are the flowers with which the glorious path of scholarship is strewed! But tell me, then: I have learned much concerning Byzantium and Thessalonica long ago from Demetrio Calcondila, who has but lately departed from Florence; but you, it seems, have visited less familiar scenes ?"

"Yes; we made what I may call a pilgrimage full of danger, for the sake of visiting places which have almost died out of the memory of the West, for they lie away from the track of pilgrims; and my father used to say that scholars themselves hardly imagine them to have any existence out of books. He was of opinion that a new and more glorious era would open for learning when men should begin to look for their commentaries on the ancient writers in the remains of cities and temples-nay, in the paths of the rivers, and on the face of the valleys and mountains."

"Ah!" said Bardo, fervidly, "your father, then, was not a common man. Was he fortunate, may I ask? Had he many friends?" These last words were uttered in a tone charged

But Tito was obliged to turn away and an- with meaning. swer Bardo's question.

"I have had much practice in transcription," he said; "but in the case of inscriptions copied in memorable scenes, rendered doubly impressive by the sense of risk and adventure, it may have happened that my retention of written characters has been weakened. On the plain of the Eurotas, or among the gigantic stones of Mycena and Tyrins-especially when the fear of the Turk hovers over one like a vulture-the mind wanders, even though the hand writes faithfully what the eye dictates. But something doubtless I have retained," added Tito, with a modesty which was not false, though he was conscious that it was politic; "something that might be of service if illustrated and corrected by a wider learning than my own.”

"That is well spoken, young man," said Bardo, delighted. "And I will not withhold from you such aid as I can give, if you like to communicate with me concerning your recollections. I foresee a work which will be a useful

"No; he made enemies-chiefly, I believe, by a certain impetuous candor; and they hindered his advancement, so that he lived in obscurity. And he would never stoop to conciliate: he could never forget an injury.”

"Ah!" said Bardo again, with a long, deep intonation.

"Among our hazardous expeditions," continued Tito, willing to prevent further questions on a point so personal, "I remember with particular vividness a visit we snatched to Athens. Our haste, and the double danger of being seized as prisoners by the Turks, and of our galley raising anchor before we could return, made it seem like a fevered vision of the night-the wide plain, the girdling mountains, the ruined porticoes and columns, either standing far aloof, as if receding from our hurried footsteps, or else jammed in confusedly among the dwellings of Christians degraded into servitude, or among the forts and turrets of their Moslem conquerors, who have their strong-hold on the Acropolis."

"You fill me with surprise," said Bardo. | scribed: you will take those great writers as "Athens, then, is not utterly destroyed and swept away, as I had imagined ?"

"No wonder you should be under that mistake, for few even of the Greeks themselves, who live beyond the mountain boundary of Attica, know any thing about the present condition of Athens, or Setine, as the sailors call it. I remember, as we were rounding the promontory of Sunium, the Greek pilot we had on board our Venetian galley pointed to the mighty columns that stand on the summit of the rock-the remains, as you know well, of the great temple erected to the goddess Athena, who looked down from that high shrine with triumph at her conquered rival Poseidon; well, our Greek pilot, pointing to those columns, said, "That was the school of the great philosopher Aristotle.' And at Athens itself; the monk who acted as our guide in the hasty view we snatched, insisted most on showing us the spot where St. Philip baptized the Ethiopian eunuch, or some such legend."

"Talk not of monks and their legends, young man!" said Bardo, interrupting Tito impetuously.

"It is enough to overlay human hope and enterprise with an eternal frost to think that the ground which was trodden by philosophers and poets is crawled over by those insect-swarms of besotted fanatics or howling hypocrites."

your models; and such contribution of criticism and suggestion as my riper mind can supply shall not be wanting to you. There will be much to tell: for you have traveled, you said, in the Peloponnesus?"

"Yes; and in Boeotia also: I have rested in the groves of Helicon, and tasted of the fountain Hippocrene. But on every memorable spot in Greece conquest after conquest has set its seal, till there is a confusion of ownership even in ruins, that only close study and comparison could unravel. High over every fastness, from the plains of Lacedæmon to the Straits of Thermopyla, there towers some huge Frankish fortress, once inhabited by a French or Italian marquis, now either abandoned or held by Turkish bands."

"Stay!" cried Bardo, whose mind was now too thoroughly preoccupied by the idea of the future book to attend to Tito's further narration. "Do you think of writing in Latin or Greek? Doubtless Greek is the more ready clothing for your thoughts, and it is the nobler language. But, on the other hand, Latin is the tongue in which we shall measure ourselves with the larger and more famous number of modern rivals. And if you are less at ease in it, I will aid you—yes, I will spend on you that long-accumulated study which was to have been thrown into the channel of another work—a work in which I myself was to have had a helpmate."

Bardo paused a moment, and then added"But who knows whether that work may not be executed yet? For you, too, young man, have been brought up by a father who poured into your mind all the long-gathered stream of his knowledge and experience. Our aid might

"Perdio, I have no affection for them," said Tito, with a shrug; "servitude agrees well with a religion like theirs, which lies in the renunciation of all that makes life precious to other men. And they carry the yoke that befits them: their matin chant is drowned by the voice of the muezzin, who, from the gallery of the high tower on the Acropolis, calls every Mussulman to his prayers. That tower springs from the Parthe-be mutual.” non itself; and every time we paused and di- Romola, who had watched her father's growrected our eyes toward it our guide set up a wailing excitement, and divined well the invisible that a temple which had once been won from currents of feeling that determined every questhe diabolical uses of the Pagans to become the tion and remark, felt herself in a glow of strange temple of another virgin than Pallas-the Vir-anxiety: she turned her eyes on Tito continualgin-Mother of God—was now again perverted to ly, to watch the impression her father's words the accursed ends of the Moslem. It was the made on him, afraid lest he should be inclined sight of those walls of the Acropolis, which dis- to dispel these visions of co-operation which were closed themselves in the distance as we leaned lighting up her father's face with a new hope. over the side of our galley when it was forced But no! He looked so bright and gentle: he by contrary winds to anchor in the Piræus, that must feel, as she did, that in this eagerness of fired my father's mind with the determination blind age there was piteousness enough to call to see Athens at all risks, and in spite of the forth inexhaustible patience. How much more sailors' warnings that if we lingered till a change strongly he would feel this if he knew about her of wind they would depart without us; but after brother! A girl of eighteen imagines the feelall, it was impossible for us to venture near the ings behind the face that has moved her with its Acropolis, for the sight of men eager in examin- sympathetic youth, as easily as primitive people ing 'old stones' raised the suspicion that we imagined the humors of the gods in fair weathwere Venetian spies, and we had to hurry back er: what is she to believe in, if not in this vito the harbor." sion woven from within?

"We will talk more of these things," said And Tito was really very far from feeling imBardo, eagerly. "You must recall every thing, patient. He delighted in sitting there with the to the minutest trace left in your memory. You sense that Romola's attention was fixed on him, will win the gratitude of after-times by leaving and that he could occasionally look at her. He a record of the aspect Greece bore while yet the was pleased that Bardo should take an interest barbarians had not swept away every trace of in him; and he did not dwell with enough serithe structures that Pausanias and Pliny de-ousness on the prospect of the work in which he

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