the faun and nymph
mirian's sadder mood, it might be, had at first an effect on donatello s spirits.it checked the joyous ebullition into which they would otherwise have effervesced when he found himself in her society, not, as heretofore, in the old gloom of rome, but under that bright soft sky and in those arcadian woods.he was silent for a while; it being, indeed, seldom donatello's impulse to express himself copiously in words.his usual modes of demonstration were by the natural language of gesture, the instinctive movement of his agile frame, and the unconscious play of his features, which, within a limited range of thought and emotion, would speak volumes in a moment.
by and by, his own mood seemed to brighten miriam's, and was reflected back upon himself.he began inevitably, as it were, to dance along the wood-path; flinging himself into attitudes of strange comic grace.often, too, he ran a little way in advance of his companion, and then stood to watch her as she approached along the shadowy and sun-fleckered path.with every step she took, he expressed his joy at her nearer and nearer presence by what might be thought an extravagance of gesticulation, but which doubtless was the language of the natural man, though laid aside and forgotten by other men, now that words have been feebly substituted in the place of signs and symbols.he gave miriam the idea of a being not precisely man, nor yet a child, but, in a high and beautiful sense, an animal, a creature in a state of development less than what mankind has attained, yet the more perfect within itself for that very deficiency.this idea filled her mobile imagination with agreeable fantasies, which, after smiling at them herself, she tried to cofivey to the young man.