Daphne, an Autumn Pastoral
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Margaret Sherwood >> Daphne, an Autumn Pastoral
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6 By PG volunteer: Stephanie L. Johnson, sljhnsn@ma.ultranet.com
DAPHNE, AN AUTUMN PASTORAL
by Margaret Sherwood
CHAPTER I
"Her Excellency,--will she have the politeness," said Daphne
slowly, reading from a tiny Italian-English phrase-book, "the
politeness to"--She stopped helpless. Old Giacomo gazed at her
with questioning eyes. The girl turned the pages swiftly and
chose another phrase.
"I go," she announced, "I go to make a walk."
Light flashed into Giacomo's face.
"Si, si, Signorina; yes, yes," he assented with voice and
shoulders and a flourish of the spoon he was polishing.
"Capisco; I understand."
Daphne consulted her dictionary.
"Down there," she said gravely, pointing toward the top of the
great hiII on whose side the villa stood.
"Certainly," answered Giacomo with a bow, too much pleased by
understanding when there was no reason for it to be captious in
regard to the girl's speech. "The Signorina non ha paura, not
'fraid?"
"I'm not afraid of anything," was the answer in English. The
Italian version of it was a shaking of the head. Then both
dictionary and phrase-book were consulted.
"To return," she stated finally, "to return to eat at six hours."
Then she looked expectantly about.
"Assunta?" she said inquiringly, with a slight shrug of her
shoulders, for other means of expression had failed.
"Capisco, capisco," shouted Giacomo in his excitement, trailing
on the marble floor the chamois skin with which he had been
polishing the silver, and speaking in what seemed to his listener
one word of a thousand
syllables.
"The-Signorina-goes-to-walk-upon-the-hills-above-the-villa-becaus
e-it-is-a-most-beautiful-day.-She-returns-to-dine-at-six-and-wish
es-Assunta-to-have-dinner-prepared.-Perhaps-the-Signorina-would-
tell-what-she-would-like-for-her-dinner?-A-roast-chicken,-yes?-
A-salad,-yes?"
Daphne looked dubiously at him, though he had stated the case
with entire accuracy, and had suggested for her solitary meal
what she most liked. There was a slight pucker in her white
forehead, and she vouchsafed no answer to what she did not
understand.
"Addio, addio," she said earnestly.
"A rivederla!" answered Giacomo, with a courtly sweep of the
chamois skin.
The girl climbed steadily up the moist, steep path leading to the
deep shadow of a group of ilex trees on the hill. At her side a
stream of water trickled past drooping maidenhair fern and over
immemorial moss. Here and there it fell in little cascades,
making a sleepy murmur in the warm air of afternoon.
Halfway up the hill Daphne paused and looked back. Below the
yellow walls of the Villa Accolanti, standing in a wide garden
with encompassing poplars and cypresses, sketched great grassy
slopes and gray-green olive orchards. The water from the stream,
gathered in a stone basin at the foot of the hill, flowed in a
marble conduit through the open hall. As she looked she was
aware of two old brown faces anxiously gazing after her. Giacomo
and Assunta were chattering eagerly in the doorway, the black of
his butler's dress and the white of his protecting apron making
his wife's purple calico skirt and red shoulder shawl look more
gay. They caught the last flutter of the girl's blue linen gown
as it disappeared among the ilexes.
"E molto bello, very beautiful, the Signorina," remarked Assunta.
"What gray eyes she has, and how she walks!"
"But she knows no speech," responded her husband.
"Ma che!" shouted Assunta scornfully, "she talks American. You
couldn't expect them to speak like us over there. They are not
Romans in America."
"My brother Giovanni is there," remarked Giacomo. "She could
have learned of him."
"She is like the Contessa," said Assunta. "You would know they
are sisters, only this one is younger and has something more
sweet."
"This one is grave," objected Giacomo as he polished. "She does
not smile so much. The Contessa is gay. She laughs and sings
and her cheeks grow red when she drinks red wine, and her hair is
more yellow."
"She makes it so!" snapped Assunta.
"I have heard they all do in Rome," said Giacomo. "Some day I
would like to go to see."
"To go away, to leave this girl here alone with us when she had
just arrived!" interrupted Assunta. "I have no patience with
the Contessa."
"But wasn't his Highness's father sick? And didn't she have to
go? Else they wouldn't get his money, and all would go to the
younger brother. You don't understand these things, you women."
Giacomo's defense of his lady got into his fingers, and added
much to the brightness of the spoons. The two talked together
now, as fast as human tongues could go.
Assunta. She could have taken the Signorina.
Giacomo. She couldn't. It's fever.
Assunta. She could have left her maid.
Giacomo. Thank the holy father she didn't!
Assunta. And without a word of language to make herself
understood.
Giacomo. She can learn, can't she?
Assunta. And with the cook gone, too! It's a great task for us.
Giacomo. You'd better be about it!... Going walking alone in
the hills! And calling me "Excellency." There's no telling what
Americans will do.
Assunta. She didn't know any better. When she has been here a
week she won't call you Excellency"! I must make macaroni for
dinner.
Giacomo. Ma che! Macaroni? Roast chicken and salad.
Assunta. Niente! Macaroni!
Giacomo. Roast chicken! You are a pretty one to take the place
of the cook!
Assunta. Roast chicken then! But what are you standing here for
in the hall polishing spoons? If the Contessa could see you!
Assunta dragged her husband by the hem of his white apron through
the great marble-paved dining-room out into the smoke-browned
kitchen in the rear.
"Now where's Tommaso, and how am I going to get my chicken?" she
demanded. "And why, in the name of all the saints, should an
American signorina's illustrious name be Daphne?"
CHAPTER II
An hour later it was four o'clock. High, high up among the
sloping hills Daphne sat on a great gray stone. Below her, out
beyond olive orchards and lines of cypress, beyond the distant
stone pines, stretched the Campagna, rolling in, like the sea
that it used to be, wave upon wave of color, green here, but
purple in the distance, and changing every moment with the
shifting shadows of the floating clouds. Dome and tower there,
near the line of shining sea, meant Rome.
Full sense of the enchantment of it all looked out of the girl's
face. Wonder sat on her forehead, and on her parted lips. It
was a face serious, either with persistent purpose or with some
momentary trouble, yet full of an exquisite hunger for life and
light and space. Eyes and hair and curving cheek,--all the
girl's sensitive being seemed struggling to accept the gift of
beauty before her, almost too great to grasp.
"After this," she said half aloud, her far glance resting on Rome
in the hazy distance, "anything is possible."
"I don't seem real," she added, touching her left hand with the
forefinger of her right. "It is Italy, ITALY, and that is Rome.
Can all this exist within two weeks of the rush and jangle of
Broadway?"
There was no answer, and she half closed her eyes, intoxicated
with beauty.
A live thing darted across her foot, and she looked down to catch
a glimpse of something like a slender green flame licking its way
through the grass.
"Lizards crawling over me unrebuked," she said smiling. "Perhaps
the millenium has come."
She picked two grass blades and a single fern.
They aren't real, you know," she said, addressing herself. "This
is all too good to be true. It will fold up in a minute and move
away for the next act, and that will be full of tragedy, with an
ugly background."
The heights still invited. She rose, and wandered on and up. Her
step had the quick movement of a dweller in cities, not the slow
pace of those who linger along country roads, keeping step with
nature. In the cut and fashion of her gown was evinced a
sophistication, and a high seriousness, possibly not her own.
She watched the deep imprint that her footsteps made in the soft
grass.
"I'm half afraid to step on the earth here," she murmured to
herself. "It seems to be quivering with old life."
The sun hung lower in the west. Of its level golden beams were
born a thousand shades of color on the heights and in the hollows
of the hills. Over all the great Campagna blue, yellow, and
purple blended in an autumn haze.
"Oh!" cried the girl, throwing out her arms to take in the new
sense of life that came flooding in upon her. "I cannot take it
in. It is too great."
As she climbed, a strength springing from sheer delight in the
wide beauty before her came into her face.
"It was selfish, and I am going to take it back. To-night I will
write and say so. I could face anything now."
This hill, and then the side of that; one more gate, then Daphne
turned for another look at Rome and the sea. Rome and the sea
were gone. Here was a great olive orchard, there a pasture
touching the sky, but where was anything belonging to her?
Somewhere on the hills a lamb was bleating, and near the crickets
chirped. Yes, it was safe, perfectly safe, yet the blue gown
moved where the heart thumped beneath it.
A whistle came floating down the valley to her. It was merry and
quick, but it struck terror to the girl's breast. That meant a
man. She stood and watched, with terrified gray eyes, and
presently she saw him: he was crashing through a heavy
undergrowth of bush and fern not far away. Daphne gathered her
skirts in one hand and fled. She ran as only an athletic girl
can run, swiftly, gracefully. Her skirt fluttered behind her; her
soft dark hair fell and floated on the wind.
The whistle did not cease, though the man was motionless now. It
changed from its melody of sheer joy to wonder, amazement,
suspense. It took on soothing tones; it begged, it wheedled. So
a mother would whistle, if mothers whistled, over the cradle of a
crying child, but the girl did not stop. She was running up a
hill, and at the top she stood, outlined in blue, against a bluer
sky. A moment later she was gone.
Half an hour passed. Cautiously above the top of the hill
appeared a girl's head. She saw what she was looking for: the
dreaded man was sitting on the stump of a felled birch tree,
gazing down the valley, his cheeks resting on his hands. Daphne,
stealing behind a giant ilex, studied him. He wore something
that looked like a golf suit of brownish shade; a soft felt hat
drooped over his face. The girl peered out from her hiding place
cautiously, holding her skirts together to make herself slim and
small. It was a choice of evils. On this side of the hill was a
man; on that, the whole wide world, pathless. She was hopelessly
lost.
"No bad man could whistle like that," thought Daphne, caressingly
touching with her cheek the tree that protected her.
Once she ventured from her refuge, then swiftly retreated.
Courage returning, she stepped out on tiptoe and crept softly
toward the intruder. She was rehearsing the Italian phrases she
meant to use.
"Where is Rome?" she asked pleadingly, in the Roman tongue.
The stranger rose, with no sign of being startled, and removed
his hat. Then Daphne sighed a great sigh of relief, feeling that
she was safe.
"Rome," he answered, in a voice both strong and sweet, "Rome has
perished, and Athens too."
"Oh"--said the girl. "You speak English. If you are not a
stranger here, perhaps you can tell me where the Villa Accolanti
is."
"I can," he replied, preparing to lead the way.
Daphne looked at him now. He was different from any person she
had ever seen. Face and head belonged to some antique type of
virile beauty; eyes, hair, and skin seemed all of one golden
brown. He walked as if his very steps were joyous, and his whole
personality seemed to radiate an atmosphere of firm content. The
girl's face was puzzled as she studied him. This look of simple
happiness was not familiar in New York.
They strode on side by side, over the slopes where the girl had
lost her way. Every moment added to her sense of trust.
"I am afraid I startled you," she said, "coming up so
softly."
"No," he answered smiling. "I knew that you were behind the
ilex."
"You couldn't see!"
"I have ways of knowing."
He helped her courteously over the one stone wall they had to
climb, but, though she knew that he was watching her, he made no
attempt to talk. At last they reached the ilex grove above the
villa, and Daphne recognized home.
"I am grateful to you," she said, wondering at this unwonted
sense of being embarrassed. "Perhaps, if you will come some day
to the villa for my sister to thank you"-- The sentence broke
off. "I am Daphne Willis," she said abruptly, and waited.
"And I am Apollo," said the stranger gravely.
"Apollo--what?" asked the girl. Did they use the old names over
here?
"Phoebus Apollo," he answered, unsmiling. "Is America so modern
that you do not know the older gods?"
"Why do you call me an American?"
A smile flickered across Apollo's lips.
"A certain insight goes with being a god."
Daphne started back and looked at him, but the puzzled scrutiny
did not deepen the color of his brown cheek. Suddenly she was
aware that the sunlight had faded, leaving shadow under the
ilexes and about the fountain on the hill.
"I must say good-night," she said, turning to descend.
He stood watching every motion that she made until she
disappeared within the yellow walls of the villa.
CHAPTER III
Through the great open windows of the room night with all her
stars was shining. Daphne sat by a carved table in the salon,
the clear light of a four-flamed Roman lamp falling on her hair
and hands. She was writing a letter, and, judging by her
expression, letter writing was a matter of life and death.
"I am afraid that I was brutal," the wet ink ran. "Every day on
the sea told me that. I was cowardly too."
She stopped to listen to the silence, broken only by the murmur
of insects calling to each other in the dark. Suddenly she
laughed aloud.
"I ought never to have gone so far away," she remarked to the
night. "What would Aunt Alice say? Anyway he is a gentleman,
even if he is a god!"
"For I thought only of myself," the pen continued, "and ignored
the obligations I had accepted. It is for you to choose whether
you wish the words of that afternoon unsaid."
The letter signed and sealed, she rose with a great sigh of
relief, and walked out upon the balcony. Overhead was the deep
blue sky of a Roman night, broken by the splendor of the stars.
She leaned over the stone railing of the balcony, feeling beneath
her, beyond the shadow of the cypress trees, the distance and
darkness of the Campagna. There was a murmur of water from the
fountain in the garden, and from the cascades on the hill.
"If he were Apollo," she announced to the listening stars, "it
would not be a bit more wonderful than the rest of it. This is
just a different world, that is all, and who knows whom I shall
meet next? Maybe, if I haunt the hills, Diana will come and
invite me to go a-hunting. Perhaps if Anna had stayed at home
this world would seem nearer."
She came back into the salon, but before she knew it, her feet
were moving to a half-remembered measure, and she found herself
dancing about the great room in the dim light, the cream-colored
draperies of her dinner gown moving rhythmically after her.
Suddenly she stopped short, realizing that her feet were keeping
pace with the whistling of this afternoon, the very notes that
had terrified her while the stranger was unseen. She turned her
attention to a piece of tapestry on the wall, tracing the faded
pattern with slim fingers. For the twentieth time her eyes
wandered to the mosaic floor, to the splendid, tarnished mirrors
on the walls, to the carved chairs and table legs, wrought into
cunning patterns of leaf and stem.
"Oh, it is all perfect! and I've got it all to myself!" she
exclaimed.
Then she seated herself at the table again and began another
letter.
Padre mio,--It is an enchanted country! You never saw such
beauty of sky and grass and trees. These cypresses and poplars
seem to have been standing against the blue sky from all
eternity; time is annihilated, and the gods of Greece and Rome
are wandering about the hills.
Anna has gone away. Her father-in-law is very ill, and naturally
Count Accolanti is gone too. Even the cook has departed, because
of a family crisis of his own. I am here with the butler and his
wife to take care of me, and I am perfectly safe. Don't be
alarmed, and don't tell Aunt Alice that the elaborate new gowns
will have no spectators save two Roman peasants and possibly a
few sheep. Anna wanted to send me an English maid from Rome, but
l begged with tears, and she let me off. Assunta is all I need.
She and Giacomo are the real thing, peasants, and absolutely
unspoiled. They have never been five miles away from the estate,
and I know they have all kinds of superstitions and beliefs that
go with the soil. I shall find them out when I can understand.
At present we converse with eyes and fingers, for our six weeks'
study of Italian has not brought me knowledge enough to order my
dinner.
Padre carissimo, I've written to Eustace to take it all back. I
am afraid you won't like it, for you seemed pleased when it was
broken off, but I was unkind and I am sorry, and I want to make
amends. You really oughtn't to disapprove of a man, you know,
just because he wants altar candles and intones the service. And
I think his single-minded devotion is beautiful. You do not know
what a refuge it has been to me through all Aunt Alice's
receptions and teas.
Do leave New York, and come and live with me near ancient Rome.
We can easily slip back two thousand years.
I am your spoiled daughter, Daphne
There was a knock at the door.
"Avanti," called the girl.
Assunta entered, with a saffron-colored night-cap on. In her
hand she held Giacomo's great brass watch, and she pointed in
silence to the face, which said twelve o'clock. She put watch
and candle on the table, marched to the windows, and closed and
bolted them all.
"The candles are lighted in the Signorina's bedroom," she
remarked.
"Thank you," said Daphne, who did not understand a word.
"The bed is prepared, and the night things are put out."
"Yes?" answered Daphne, smiling.
"The hot water will be at the door at eight in the morning."
"So many thanks!" murmured Daphne, not knowing what favor was
bestowed, but knowing that if it came from Assunta it was good.
"Good-night, Signorina."
The girl's face lighted. She understood that.
"Good-night," she answered, in the Roman tongue.
Assunta muttered to herself as she lighted her way with her
candle down the long hall.
"Molto intelligente, la Signorina! Only here three days, and
already understands all."
"You don't need speech here," said Daphne, pulling aside the
curtains of her tapestried bed a little later. "The Italians can
infer all you mean from a single smile."
Down the road a peasant was merrily beating his donkey to the
measure of the tune on his lips. Listening, and turning over
many questions in her mind, Daphne fell asleep. A flood of
sunshine awakened her in the morning, and she realized that
Assunta was drawing the window curtains.
"Assunta," asked the girl, sitting up in bed and rubbing her
eyes, "are there many Americans here?"
"Si," answered Assunta, "very many."
"And many English?"
"Too many," said Assunta.
"Young ones?" asked the girl.
Assunta shrugged her shoulders.
"Young men?" inquired Daphne.
The peasant woman looked sharply at her, then smiled.
"I saw one man yesterday," said Daphne, her forehead puckered
painfully in what Assunta mistook for a look of fear. Her
carefully prepared phrases could get no nearer the problem she
wished solved.
"Ma che! agnellina mia, my little lamb!" cried the peasant
woman, grasping Daphne's hand in order to kiss her fingers, "you
are safe, safe with us. No Americans nor English shall dare to
look at the Signorina in the presence of Giacomo and me."
CHAPTER IV
lt was not a high wall, that is, not very high. Many a time in
the country Daphne had climbed more formidable ones, and there
was no reason why she should not try this. No one was in sight
except a shepherd, watching a great flock of sheep. There was a
forgotten rose garden over in that field; had Caesar planted it,
or Tiberius, centuries ago? Certainly no one had tended it for a
thousand years or two, and the late pink roses grew unchecked.
Daphne slowly worked her way to the top of the wall; this close
masonry made the proceeding more difficult than it usually was at
home. She stood for a moment on the summit, glorying in the
widened view, then sprang, with the lightness of a kitten, to the
other side. There was a skurry of frightened sheep, and then a
silence.
She knew that she was sitting on the grass, and that her left
wrist pained. Some one was coming toward her.
"Are you hurt?" asked Apollo anxiously.
"Not at all," she answered, continuing to sit on the grass.
"lf you were hurt, where would it be?"
"In my wrist," said the girl, with a little groan.
The questioner kneeled beside her, and Daphne gave a start of
surprise that was touched with fear.
"It isn't you?" she stammered. "You aren't the shepherd?"
A sheepskin coat disguised him. The rough hat was of soft
drooping felt, like that of any shepherd watching on the hills,
and in his hand he held a crook. An anxious mother-sheep was
sniffing eagerly at his pockets, remembering gifts of
salt.
"Apollo was a shepherd," said Daphne slowly, with wonder in her
face. "He kept the flocks of King Admetus."
"You seem to be well read in the classical dictionary," remarked
the stranger, with twinkling eyes. "You have them in America
then?"
He was examining her wrist with practiced fingers, touching it
firmly here and there.
"We have everything in America," said the girl, eyeing him
dubiously.
"But no gods except money, I have heard."
"Yes, gods, and impostors too," she answered significantly.
"So I have heard," said Apollo, with composure.
The maddening thing was that she could not look away from him--
some radiance of life in his face compelled her eyes. He had
thrown his hat upon the grass, and the girl could see strength
and sweetness and repose in every line of forehead, lip, and
chin. There was pride there, too, and with it a slight leaning
forward of the head.
"I presume that comes from listening to beseeching prayers," she
was thinking to herself.
"Ow!" she remarked suddenly.
"That is the place, is it?"
He drew from one of the pockets of the grotesque coat a piece of
sheepskin, which he proceeded to cut into two strips with his
knife.
"It seems to be a very slight sprain," remarked Apollo. "I must
bandage it. Have you any pins about you?"
"Can the gods lack pins?" asked the girl, smiling. She searched,
and found two in her belt, and handed them to him.
"The gods do not explain themselves," he answered, binding the
sheepskin tightly about her wrist.
"So I observe," she remarked dryly.
"Is that right?" he asked. "Now, when you reach home, you must
remove the bandage and hold your hand and wrist first in very hot
water, then in cold. Is there some one who can put the bandage
back as I have it? See, it simply goes about the wrist, and is
rather tight. You must pardon my taking possession of the case,
but no one else was near. Apollo has always been something of a
physician, you know."
"You apparently used the same classical dictionary that I did,"
retorted Daphne. "I remember the statement there."
Then she became uncomfortable, and wished her words unsaid, for
awe had come upon her. After all, nothing could be more unreal
than she was to herself in these days of wonder. Her mind was
full of dreams as they sat and watched white clouds drifting over
the deep blue of the sky. Near them the sheep were cropping
grass, and all the rest was silence.
"You look anxious," said the physician. "Is it the
wrist?"
"No," answered the girl, facing him bravely, under the momentary
inspiration of a wave of common sense, "I am wondering why you
make this ridiculous assumption about yourself. Tell me who you
really are."
If he had defended himself she would have argued, but he was
silent and she half believed.
"But you look like a mortal," she protested, answering her own
thoughts. "And you wear conventional clothing. I don't mean
this sheepskin, but the other day."
"It is a realistic age," he answered, smiling. "People no longer
believe what they do not see. We are forced to adopt modern
methods and modern costume to show that we exist."
"You do not look like the statue of Apollo," ventured
Daphne.
"Did people ever dare tell the truth about the gods? Never!
They made up a notion of what a divine nose should be and
bestowed it upon all the gods impartially. So with the forehead,
so with the hair. I assure you, Miss Willis, we are much more
individual than Greek art would lead you to expect."
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