"that hour i speak of may never come," said miriam."so farewell-- farewell forever.""farewell," said donatello.
his voice hardly made its way through the environment of unaccustomed thoughts and emotions which had settled over him like a dense and dark cloud.not improbably, he beheld miriam through so dim a medium that she looked visionary; heard her speak only in a thin, faintecho.
she turned from the young man, and, much as her heart yearned towards him, she would not profane that heavy parting by an embrace, or even a pressure of the hand.so soon after the semblance of such mighty love, and after it had been the impulse to so terrible a deed, they parted, in all outward , as coldly as people part whose whole mutual intercourse has been encircled within a single hour.
and donatello, when miriam had departed, stretched himself at full length on the stone bench, and drew his hat over his eyes, as the idle and light-hearted youths of dreamy italy are accustomed to do, when they lie down in the first convenient shade, and snatch a noonday slumber.a stupor was upon him, which he mistook for such drowsiness as he had known in his innocent past life.but, by and by, he raised himself slowly and left the garden.sometimes poor donatello started, as if he heard a shriek; sometimes he shrank back, as if a face, fearful to behold, were thrust close to his own.in this dismal mood, bewildered with the novelty of sin and grief, he had little left of that singular resemblance, on account of which, and for their sport, his three friends had fantastically recognized him as the veritable faun of praxiteles.