[The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Volume II by Elizabeth Barrett Browning]@TWC D-Link book
The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Volume II

CHAPTER VIII
150/268

A most exquisite journey of eight days we had from Florence to Rome, seeing the great monastery and triple church of Assisi and the wonderful Terni by the way--that passion of the waters which makes the human heart seem so still.

In the highest spirits we entered Rome, Robert and Penini singing actually; for the child was radiant and flushed with the continual change of air and scene, and he had an excellent scheme about 'tissing the Pope's foot,' to prevent his taking away 'mine gun,' somebody having told him that such dangerous weapons were not allowed by the Roman police.

You remember my telling you of our friends the Storys--how they and their two children helped to make the summer go pleasantly at the baths of Lucca?
They had taken an apartment for us in Rome, so that we arrived in comfort to lighted fires and lamps as if coming home, and we had a glimpse of their smiling faces that evening.
In the morning, before breakfast, little Edith was brought over to us by the manservant with a message--'The boy was in convulsions; there was danger.' We hurried to the house, of course, leaving Edith with Wilson.
Too true! All that first day was spent beside a death-bed; for the child never rallied, never opened his eyes in consciousness, and by eight in the evening he was gone.

In the meanwhile, Edith was taken ill at our house--could not be moved, said the physicians.

We had no room for her, but a friend of the Storys on the floor immediately below--Mr.Page, the artist--took her in and put her to bed.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books