[The Marble Faun Volume I. by Nathaniel Hawthorne]@TWC D-Link bookThe Marble Faun Volume I. CHAPTER XIX 9/11
And, at Miriam's suggestion, they turned aside, for the sake of treading loftily past the old site of Pompey's Forum. "For there was a great deed done here!" she said,--"a deed of blood like ours! Who knows but we may meet the high and ever-sad fraternity of Caesar's murderers, and exchange a salutation ?" "Are they our brethren, now ?" asked Donatello. "Yes; all of them," said Miriam,--"and many another, whom the world little dreams of, has been made our brother or our sister, by what we have done within this hour!" And at the thought she shivered.
Where then was the seclusion, the remoteness, the strange, lonesome Paradise, into which she and her one companion had been transported by their crime? Was there, indeed, no such refuge, but only a crowded thoroughfare and jostling throng of criminals? And was it true, that whatever hand had a blood-stain on it,--or had poured out poison,--or strangled a babe at its birth,--or clutched a grandsire's throat, he sleeping, and robbed him of his few last breaths,--had now the right to offer itself in fellowship with their two hands? Too certainly, that right existed.
It is a terrible thought, that an individual wrong-doing melts into the great mass of human crime, and makes us, who dreamed only of our own little separate sin,--makes us guilty of the whole.
And thus Miriam and her lover were not an insulated pair, but members of an innumerable confraternity of guilty ones, all shuddering at each other. "But not now; not yet," she murmured to herself.
"To-night, at least, there shall be no remorse!" Wandering without a purpose, it so chanced that they turned into a street, at one extremity of which stood Hilda's tower.
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