Hugh Crichton's Romance
“The light that never was on sea or land.”
Elle était pâle et pourtant rose, Petite, avec de grands cheveux, Elle disait souvent, “Je n’ose,” Et ne disait jamais, “Je veux.”
The sunshine of a summer evening was bathing Civita Bella with an intensity of beauty rare even in that fair Italian town. When the shadows are sharp, and the lights clear, and the sky a serene and perfect blue, even fustian and broadcloth have a sort of picturesqueness, slates and bricks show unexpected colours, and chance tree tops tell with effect even in London squares and suburbs. Then harsh tints harmonise and homely faces look fair, while fair ones catch the eye more quickly; every flower basket in the streets shows whiter pinks and redder roses than those which were passed unseen in yesterday’s rain, the street gutters catch a sparkle of distant streamlets, and the street children at their play group into pictures. For the sun is a great enchanter, and nothing in nature but sad human hearts can resist his brightness. Civita Bella needed no adventitious aid to enhance its beauty. The fretted spires and carved balconies, quaint gables and decorated walls, were the inheritance of centuries of successful art, and their varied hues were only harmonised by the years that had passed since some master spirit had given them to the world, or since they had grown up in obedience to the inspiring influence of an art-loving generation. Down a side street, apart from the chief centres of modern life, stood an old ducal palace. The very name of its princely owners had long ago faded out of the land, and no one alive bore on his shield the strange devices carved over its portico. It lay asleep in the sunshine, lifting its broken pinnacles and mutilated carvings to the blue sky, still beautiful with the pathetic beauty of “the days that are no more.”
The old palace was let in flats, and on one of the upper stories flower-pots and muslin curtains peeped gaily out of the dim, broken marbles with a kind of pleasant incongruity, like a child in a convent.
Christabel R. Coleridge
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Part 1, Chapter I.
Part 1, Chapter II.
Part 1, Chapter III.
Part 1, Chapter IV.
Part 1, Chapter V.
Part 1, Chapter VI.
Part 1, Chapter VII.
Part 1, Chapter VIII.
Part 2, Chapter IX.
Part 2, Chapter X.
Part 2, Chapter XI.
Part 2, Chapter XII.
Part 2, Chapter XIII.
Part 2, Chapter XIV.
Part 3, Chapter XV.
Part 3, Chapter XVI.
Part 3, Chapter XVII.
Part 3, Chapter XVIII.
Part 3, Chapter XIX.
Part 3, Chapter XX.
Part 3, Chapter XXI.
Part 3, Chapter XXII.
Part 3, Chapter XXIII.
Part 4, Chapter XXIV.
Part 4, Chapter XXV.
Part 4, Chapter XXVI.
Part 4, Chapter XXVII.
Part 4, Chapter XXVIII.
Part 4, Chapter XXIX.
Part 4, Chapter XXX.
Part 4, Chapter XXXI.
Part 4, Chapter XXXII.
Part 5, Chapter XXXIII.
Part 5, Chapter XXXIV.
Part 5, Chapter XXXV.
Part 5, Chapter XXXVI.
Part 5, Chapter XXXVII.
Part 5, Chapter XXXVIII.
Part 5, Chapter XXXIX.
Part 5, Chapter XL.
Part 5, Chapter XLI.
Part 6, Chapter XLII.
Part 6, Chapter XLIII.
Part 6, Chapter XLIV.
Part 6, Chapter XLV.
Part 6, Chapter XLVI.
Part 6, Chapter XLVII.
Part 6, Chapter XLVIII.
Part 6, Chapter XLIX.
Part 6, Chapter L.