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    Chapter 11

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    Somewhat later in the day, they went out for a stroll through the
    town together. To Herminia's great relief, Alan never even noticed
    she had been crying. Man-like, he was absorbed in his own delight.
    She would have felt herself a traitor if Alan had discovered it.

    "Which way shall we go?" she asked listlessly, with a glance to
    right and left, as they passed beneath the sombre Tuscan gate of
    their palazzo.

    And Alan answered, smiling, "Why, what does it matter? Which way
    you like. Every way is a picture."

    And so it was, Herminia herself was fain to admit, in a pure
    painter's sense that didn't at all attract her. Lines grouped
    themselves against the sky in infinite diversity. Whichever way
    they turned quaint old walls met their eyes, and tumble-down
    churches, and mouldering towers, and mediaeval palazzi with carved
    doorways or rich loggias. But whichever way they turned dusty
    roads too confronted them, illimitable stretches of gloomy suburb,
    unwholesome airs, sickening sights and sounds and perfumes. Narrow
    streets swept, darkling, under pointed archways, that framed
    distant vistas of spire or campanile, silhouetted against the solid
    blue sky of Italy. The crystal hardness of that sapphire firmament
    repelled Herminia. They passed beneath the triumphal arch of
    Augustus with its Etruscan mason-work, its Roman decorations, and
    round the antique walls, aglow with tufted gillyflowers, to the
    bare Piazza d'Armi. A cattle fair was going on there; and Alan
    pointed with pleasure to the curious fact that the oxen were all
    cream-colored,--the famous white steers of Clitumnus. Herminia
    knew her Virgil as well as Alan himself, and murmured half aloud
    the sonorous hexameter, "Romanos ad templa deum duxere triumphos."
    But somehow, the knowledge that these were indeed the milk-white
    bullocks of Clitumnus failed amid so much dust to arouse her
    enthusiasm. She would have been better pleased just then with a
    yellow English primrose.

    They clambered down the terraced ravines sometimes, a day or two
    later, to arid banks by a dry torrent's bed where Italian primroses
    really grew, interspersed with tall grape-hyacinths, and scented

    violets, and glossy cleft leaves of winter aconite. But even the
    primroses were not the same thing to Herminia as those she used to
    gather on the dewy slopes of the Redlands; they were so dry and
    dust-grimed, and the path by the torrent's side was so distasteful
    and unsavory. Bare white boughs of twisted fig-trees depressed
    her. Besides, these hills were steep, and Herminia felt the
    climbing. Nothing in city or suburbs attracted her soul. Etruscan
    Volumnii, each lolling in white travertine on the sculptured lid of
    his own sarcophagus urn, and
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