The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 11, No. 67, May, 1863 by Various
page 55 of 276 (19%)
page 55 of 276 (19%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
say, from Vienna and all my gay career there, because Venice, with its
water-breaths, might heal my attainted health,--and sadder when the winter bade me leave night-tides and gondolas and repair to Rome. Now spring has come, and all the hills are blue with these deep violets, the very air is balm, the year is at flood, and life at what seems its height is perfected with you." "But you love that land you left?" I replied, after a while, and lifting her face to meet my gaze. "Love it? Oh, yes! You love your land as you love a person in whose veins and yours kindred blood runs, because it is hardly possible to do otherwise. The land gave me life, that is all; I never knew till lately that it was anything to be thankful for. It is not sufficiently a _country_ to kindle enthusiasm; it has no national life, you know,--is an automaton put through its motions by paid and cunning mechanists. I thought it right to obey orders and serve it. But now _you_ are my country,--I serve only you." It was easy so to pass to my own hopes, to my own life, to my land, the land to which I had vowed the last drop of blood in my gift. Her eyes beamed upon me, smiles rippled over her face, she clasped me now and then and sealed my brow with kisses. Soon I left her side and strode from end to end of the long _salon_, speaking eagerly of the future that opened to Italy. I told her how the beautiful corpse lay waiting its resurrection, and how the Angel of Eternal Life hovered with spreading wings above, ready to sound his general trump. My pulses beat like trip-hammers, and as I passed a mirror I saw myself white with the excitement that fired me. |
|