“There is a land of dream:
I have trodden its golden ways:
I have seen its amber light
From the heart of its sun-swept days:
I have seen its moonshine white
On its silent waters gleam—
Ah, the strange, sweet, lonely delight
Of the Valleys of Dream!”
Returning by the Pincian Gate, about 5.45 there was a strange sight. Perfectly still in the sombre Via di Mura, with high walls to the right, but the upper pines and cypresses swaying in a sudden rush of wind: to the left a drifting snow-storm: to the right wintry moonshine: vivid sweeping pulsations of lightning from the Campagna, and long low muttering growls of thunder. (The red light from a window in the wall.)
Jan. 19th. After dinner read a good deal of Beddoes to Lill.... How like Poe the first stanza of ‘The Old Ghost’: every now and again there is a gleam of rare moon-white beauty, as in the lovely 3rd stanza of ‘The Ballad of Human Life’—the first quatrain of the 2nd stanza of ‘Dial Thoughts,’ and that beautiful line in the fantastic and ultra-Shelleyian ‘Romance of the Lily,’
‘As Evening feeds the waves with brooks of quiet life.’
Jan. 22nd. In the evening read through Elihu Vedder’s Primitive Folk. There is a definite law in the evolution of sexual morale, I am sure, if one could only get at it. The matter is worth going into, both for Fundamental and Contemporary and Problematical Ethics.
Jan. 27th. Elizabeth and I went to the opening lecture of the Archæological Society, at the Hotel Marini. Lord Dufferin in the Chair. Mr. Porter, U. S. Minister, delivered an address, mainly on Cicero.... Lord Dufferin afterwards told us incidentally that a friend of his had gone into a book shop in the Corso and asked for Max O’Rell: En Amérique. The bookseller said he neither had the book nor had he heard of it: now the visitor persisted and the bookseller in despair exclaimed, ‘Dio mio, Signor, I never even heard of Marc Aurèle having been in America!’
Jan. 30th. After lunch we went for a drive in the Campagna.... Delighting in the warm balmy air, the superb views, the space and freedom, the soft turfy soil under foot, the excited congregation of larks twittering as they wheeled about, soon to pair, and one early songster already trilling his song along the flowing wind high overhead.
Between 9 p.m. and 12 p.m. my ears were full of music. Wrote the Sospiri, ‘The Fountain of the Aqua Paola’; ‘Ruins’; ‘High Noon at Midsummer on the Campagna’; ‘Sussurri’; ‘Breath of the Grass’; ‘Red Poppies’; and the lyric Spring.
Jan. 31st. Wrote to-day. ‘The Mandolin’ (Sospiri di Roma) (115 lines). In afternoon wrote ‘All’ Ora della Stella’ (Vesper Bells), partly from memory of what I have heard, several times, and partly modified by a poem I chanced to see to-day, Fogazzaro’s ‘A Sera.’
February 2nd. Second day of the Carnival. Wrote all forenoon and part of afternoon. Took up and revised ‘The Fountain of the Aqua Paola’ and added so largely to it as to make it a new poem. It ended with ‘Eternal Calm.’ Also wrote ‘The Fallen Goddess’—about 250 lines in length. In the evening wrote ‘Bats’ Wings’ (26 ll) and ‘Thistledown’ (Spring on the Campagna) (71 ll).