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    Chapter 11

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    The July sun enclosed in a ring of fire the ilex grove of a villa in the
    hills near Siena.

    Below, by the roadside, the long yellow house seemed to waver and
    palpitate in the glare; but steep by steep, behind it, the cool
    ilex-dusk mounted to the ledge where Ralph Marvell, stretched on his
    back in the grass, lay gazing up at a black reticulation of branches
    between which bits of sky gleamed with the hardness and brilliancy of
    blue enamel.

    Up there too the air was thick with heat; but compared with the white
    fire below it was a dim and tempered warmth, like that of the churches
    in which he and Undine sometimes took refuge at the height of the torrid
    days.

    Ralph loved the heavy Italian summer, as he had loved the light spring
    days leading up to it: the long line of dancing days that had drawn them
    on and on ever since they had left their ship at Naples four months
    earlier. Four months of beauty, changeful, inexhaustible, weaving itself
    about him in shapes of softness and strength; and beside him, hand in
    hand with him, embodying that spirit of shifting magic, the radiant
    creature through whose eyes he saw it. This was what their hastened
    marriage had blessed them with, giving them leisure, before summer came,
    to penetrate to remote folds of the southern mountains, to linger in the
    shade of Sicilian orange-groves, and finally, travelling by slow stages
    to the Adriatic, to reach the central hill-country where even in July
    they might hope for a breathable air.

    To Ralph the Sienese air was not only breathable but intoxicating. The
    sun, treading the earth like a vintager, drew from it heady fragrances,
    crushed out of it new colours. All the values of the temperate landscape
    were reversed: the noon high-lights were whiter but the shadows had
    unimagined colour. On the blackness of cork and ilex and cypress lay the
    green and purple lustres, the coppery iridescences, of old bronze; and
    night after night the skies were wine-blue and bubbling with stars.
    Ralph said to himself that no one who had not seen Italy thus prostrate
    beneath the sun knew what secret treasures she could yield.

    As he lay there, fragments of past states of emotion, fugitive
    felicities of thought and sensation, rose and floated on the surface
    of his thoughts. It was one of those moments when the accumulated
    impressions of life converge on heart and brain, elucidating, enlacing
    each other, in a mysterious confusion of beauty. He had had glimpses of
    such a state before, of such mergings of the personal with the general
    life that one felt one's self a mere wave on the wild stream of being,
    yet thrilled with a sharper sense of individuality than can be known
    within the mere bounds of the actual. But now he knew the sensation
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