<SPAN name="8c"></SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
<p>ON THE TRACK OF ULYSSES.</p>
<p>"We are going to follow the track of Ulysses," said Katy, with
her eyes<br/>
fixed on the little travelling-map in her guide-book. "Do you
realize<br/>
that, Polly dear? He and his companions sailed these very seas
before<br/>
us, and we shall see the sights they saw,—Circe's Cape and the
Isles of<br/>
the Sirens, and Polyphemus himself, perhaps, who knows?"</p>
<p>The "Marco Polo" had just cast off her moorings, and was
slowly steaming<br/>
out of the crowded port of Genoa into the heart of a still rosy
sunset.<br/>
The water was perfectly smooth; no motion could be felt but the
engine's<br/>
throb. The trembling foam of the long wake showed glancing points
of<br/>
phosphorescence here and there, while low on the eastern sky a
great<br/>
silver planet burned like a signal lamp.</p>
<p>"Polyphemus was a horrible giant. I read about him once, and I
don't<br/>
want to see him," observed Amy, from her safe protected perch in
her<br/>
mother's lap.</p>
<p>"He may not be so bad now as he was in those old times. Some
missionary<br/>
may have come across him and converted him. If he were good,
you<br/>
wouldn't mind his being big, would you?" suggested Katy.</p>
<p>"N-o," replied Amy, doubtfully; "but it would take a great lot
of<br/>
missionaries to make <i>him</i> good, I should think. One all
alone would be<br/>
afraid to speak to him. We shan't really see him, shall we?"</p>
<p>"I don't believe we shall; and if we stuff cotton in our ears
and look<br/>
the other way, we need not hear the sirens sing," said Katy, who
was in<br/>
the highest spirits.—"And oh, Polly dear, there is one
delightful thing<br/>
I forgot to tell you about. The captain says he shall stay in
Leghorn<br/>
all day to-morrow taking on freight, and we shall have plenty of
time to<br/>
run up to Pisa and see the Cathedral and the Leaning Tower
and<br/>
everything else. Now, that is something Ulysses didn't do! I am
so glad<br/>
I didn't die of measles when I was little, as Rose Red used to
say." She<br/>
gave her book a toss into the air as she spoke, and caught it
again as<br/>
it fell, very much as the Katy Carr of twelve years ago might
have done.</p>
<p>"What a child you are!" said Mrs. Ashe, approvingly; "you
never seem out<br/>
of sorts or tired of things."</p>
<p>"Out of sorts? I should think not! And pray why should I
be,<br/>
Polly dear?"</p>
<p>Katy had taken to calling her friend "Polly dear" of late,—a
trick<br/>
picked up half unconsciously from Lieutenant Ned. Mrs. Ashe liked
it;<br/>
it was sisterly and intimate, she said, and made her feel
nearer<br/>
Katy's age.</p>
<p>"Does the tower really lean?" questioned Amy,—"far over, I
mean, so<br/>
that we can see it?"</p>
<p>"We shall know to-morrow," replied Katy. "If it doesn't, I
shall lose<br/>
all my confidence in human nature."</p>
<p>Katy's confidence in human nature was not doomed to be
impaired. There<br/>
stood the famous tower, when they reached the Place del Duomo in
Pisa,<br/>
next morning, looking all aslant, exactly as it does in the
pictures and<br/>
the alabaster models, and seeming as if in another moment it must
topple<br/>
over, from its own weight, upon their heads. Mrs. Ashe declared
that it<br/>
was so unnatural that it made her flesh creep; and when she was
coaxed<br/>
up the winding staircase to the top, she turned so giddy that
they were<br/>
all thankful to get her safely down to firm ground again. She
turned her<br/>
back upon the tower, as they crossed the grassy space to the
majestic<br/>
old Cathedral, saying that if she thought about it any more, she
should<br/>
become a disbeliever in the attraction of gravitation, which she
had<br/>
always been told all respectable people <i>must</i> believe
in.</p>
<p>The guide showed them the lamp swinging by a long slender
chain, before<br/>
which Galileo is said to have sat and pondered while he worked
out his<br/>
theory of the pendulum. This lamp seemed a sort of own cousin to
the<br/>
attraction of gravitation, and they gazed upon it with respect.
Then<br/>
they went to the Baptistery to see Niccolo Pisano's magnificent
pulpit<br/>
of creamy marble, a mass of sculpture supported on the backs of
lions,<br/>
and the equally lovely font, and to admire the extraordinary
sound<br/>
which their guide evoked from a mysterious echo, with which he
seemed<br/>
to be on intimate terms, for he made it say whatever he would
and<br/>
almost "answer back."</p>
<p>It was in coming out of the Baptistery that they met with an
adventure<br/>
which Amy could never quite forget. Pisa is the mendicant city of
Italy,<br/>
and her streets are infested with a band of religious beggars who
call<br/>
themselves the Brethren of the Order of Mercy. They wear loose
black<br/>
gowns, sandals laced over their bare feet, and black cambric
masks with<br/>
holes, through which their eyes glare awfully; and they carry tin
cups<br/>
for the reception of offerings, which they thrust into the faces
of all<br/>
strangers visiting the city, whom they look upon as their lawful
prey.</p>
<p>As our party emerged from the Baptistery, two of these
Brethren espied<br/>
them, and like great human bats came swooping down upon them with
long<br/>
strides, their black garments flying in the wind, their eyes
rolling<br/>
strangely behind their masks, and brandishing their alms-cups,
which had<br/>
"Pour les Pauvres" lettered upon them, and gave forth a clapping
sound<br/>
like a watchman's rattle. There was something terrible in
their<br/>
appearance and the rushing speed of their movements. Amy screamed
and<br/>
ran behind her mother, who visibly shrank. Katy stood her ground;
but<br/>
the bat-winged fiends in Doré's illustrations to Dante
occurred to her,<br/>
and her fingers trembled as she dropped some money in the
cups.</p>
<p>Even mendicant friars are human. Katy ceased to tremble as she
observed<br/>
that one of them, as he retreated, walked backward for some
distance in<br/>
order to gaze longer at Mrs. Ashe, whose cheeks were flushed with
bright<br/>
pink and who was looking particularly handsome. She began to
laugh<br/>
instead, and Mrs. Ashe laughed too; but Amy could not get over
the<br/>
impression of having been attacked by demons, and often
afterward<br/>
recurred with a shudder to the time when those awful black
<i>things</i> flew<br/>
at her and she hid behind mamma. The ghastly pictures of the
Triumph of<br/>
Death, which were presently exhibited to them on the walls of the
Campo<br/>
Santo, did not tend to reassure her, and it was with quite a
pale,<br/>
scared little face that she walked toward the hotel where they
were to<br/>
lunch, and she held fast to Katy's hand.</p>
<p>Their way led them through a narrow street inhabited by the
poorer<br/>
classes,—a dusty street with high shabby buildings on either
side and<br/>
wide doorways giving glimpses of interior courtyards, where
empty<br/>
hogsheads and barrels and rusty caldrons lay, and great wooden
trays of<br/>
macaroni were spread out in the sun to dry. Some of the macaroni
was<br/>
gray, some white, some yellow; none of it looked at all desirable
to<br/>
eat, as it lay exposed to the dust, with long lines of
ill-washed<br/>
clothes flapping above on wires stretched from one house to
another. As<br/>
is usual in poor streets, there were swarms of children; and
the<br/>
appearance of little Amy with her long bright hair falling over
her<br/>
shoulders and Mabel clasped in her arms created a great
sensation. The<br/>
children in the street shouted and exclaimed, and other children
within<br/>
the houses heard the sounds and came trooping out, while mothers
and<br/>
older sisters peeped from the doorways. The very air seemed full
of<br/>
eager faces and little brown and curly heads bobbing up and down
with<br/>
excitement, and black eyes all fixed upon big beautiful Mabel,
who with<br/>
her thick wig of flaxen hair, her blue velvet dress and
jacket,<br/>
feathered hat, and little muff, seemed to them like some strange
small<br/>
marvel from another world. They could not decide whether she was
a<br/>
living child or a make-believe one, and they dared not come near
enough<br/>
to find out; so they clustered at a little distance, pointed with
their<br/>
fingers, and whispered and giggled, while Amy, much pleased with
the<br/>
admiration shown for her darling, lifted Mabel up to view.</p>
<p>At last one droll little girl with a white cap on her round
head seemed<br/>
to make up <i>her</i> mind, and darting indoors returned with her
doll,—a<br/>
poor little image of wood, its only garment a coarse shirt of
red<br/>
cotton. This she held out for Amy to see. Amy smiled for the
first time<br/>
since her encounter with the bat-like friars; and Katy, taking
Mabel<br/>
from her, made signs that the two dolls should kiss each other.
But<br/>
though the little Italian screamed with laughter at the idea of
a<br/>
<i>bacio</i> between two dolls, she would by no means allow it,
and hid her<br/>
treasure behind her back, blushing and giggling, and saying
something<br/>
very fast which none of them understood, while she waved two
fingers at<br/>
them with a curious gesture.</p>
<p>"I do believe she is afraid Mabel will cast the evil eye on
her doll,"<br/>
said Katy at last, with a sudden understanding as to what
this<br/>
pantomime meant.</p>
<p>"Why, you silly thing!" cried the outraged Amy; "do you
suppose for one<br/>
moment that my child could hurt your dirty old dolly? You ought
to be<br/>
glad to have her noticed at all by anybody that's clean."</p>
<p>The sound of the foreign tongue completed the discomfiture of
the<br/>
little Italian. With a shriek she fled, and all the other
children<br/>
after her; pausing at a distance to look back at the alarming
creatures<br/>
who didn't speak the familiar language. Katy, wishing to leave
a<br/>
pleasant impression, made Mabel kiss her waxen fingers toward
them.<br/>
This sent the children off into another fit of laughter and
chatter,<br/>
and they followed our friends for quite a distance as they
proceeded on<br/>
their way to the hotel.</p>
<p>All that night, over a sea as smooth as glass, the "Marco
Polo" slipped<br/>
along the coasts past which the ships of Ulysses sailed in those
old<br/>
legendary days which wear so charmed a light to our modern eyes.
Katy<br/>
roused at three in the morning, and looking from her cabin window
had a<br/>
glimpse of an island, which her map showed her must be Elba,
where that<br/>
war-eagle Napoleon was chained for a while. Then she fell asleep
again,<br/>
and when she roused in full daylight the steamer was off the
coast of<br/>
Ostia and nearing the mouth of the Tiber. Dreamy mountain-shapes
rose<br/>
beyond the far-away Campagna, and every curve and indentation of
the<br/>
coast bore a name which recalled some interesting thing.</p>
<p>About eleven a dim-drawn bubble appeared on the horizon, which
the<br/>
captain assured them was the dome of St. Peter's, nearly thirty
miles<br/>
distant. This was one of the "moments" which Clover had been fond
of<br/>
speculating about; and Katy, contrasting the real with the
imaginary<br/>
moment, could not help smiling. Neither she nor Clover had ever
supposed<br/>
that her first glimpse of the great dome was to be so little
impressive.</p>
<p>On and on they went till the air-hung bubble disappeared; and
Amy, grown<br/>
very tired of scenery with which she had no associations, and
grown-up<br/>
raptures which she did not comprehend, squeezed herself into the
end of<br/>
the long wooden settee on which Katy sat, and began to beg for
another<br/>
story concerning Violet and Emma.</p>
<p>"Just a little tiny CHAPTER, you know, Miss Katy, about what
they did on<br/>
New Year's Day or something. It's so dull to keep sailing and
sailing<br/>
all day and have nothing to do, and it's ever so long since you
told me<br/>
anything about them, really and truly it is!"</p>
<p>Now, Violet and Emma, if the truth is to be told, had grown to
be the<br/>
bane of Katy's existence. She had rung the changes on their
uneventful<br/>
adventures, and racked her brains to invent more and more
details, till<br/>
her imagination felt like a dry sponge from which every possible
drop of<br/>
moisture had been squeezed. Amy was insatiable. Her interest in
the tale<br/>
never flagged; and when her exhausted friend explained that she
really<br/>
could not think of another word to say on the subject, she would
turn<br/>
the tables by asking, "Then, Miss Katy, mayn't I tell <i>you</i>
a CHAPTER?"<br/>
whereupon she would proceed somewhat in this fashion:—</p>
<p>"It was the day before Christmas—no, we won't have it the day
before<br/>
Christmas; it shall be three days before Thanksgiving. Violet and
Emma<br/>
got up in the morning, and—well, they didn't do anything in
particular<br/>
that day. They just had their breakfasts and dinners, and played
and<br/>
studied a little, and went to bed early, you know, and the next
morning<br/>
—well, there didn't much happen that day, either; they just had
their<br/>
breakfasts and dinners, and played."</p>
<p>Listening to Amy's stories was so much worse than telling them
to her,<br/>
that Katy in self-defence was driven to recommence her
narrations, but<br/>
she had grown to hate Violet and Emma with a deadly hatred. So
when Amy<br/>
made this appeal on the steamer's deck, a sudden resolution
took<br/>
possession of her, and she decided to put an end to these
dreadful<br/>
children once for all.</p>
<p>"Yes, Amy," she said, "I will tell you one more story about
Violet and<br/>
Emma; but this is positively the last."</p>
<p>So Amy cuddled close to her friend, and listened with rapt
attention as<br/>
Katy told how on a certain day just before the New Year, Violet
and Emma<br/>
started by themselves in a little sleigh drawn by a pony, to
carry to a<br/>
poor woman who lived in a lonely house high up on a mountain
slope a<br/>
basket containing a turkey, a mould of cranberry jelly, a bunch
of<br/>
celery, and a mince-pie.</p>
<p>"They were so pleased at having all these nice things to take
to poor<br/>
widow Simpson and in thinking how glad she would be to see
them,"<br/>
proceeded the naughty Katy, "that they never noticed how black
the sky<br/>
was getting to be, or how the wind howled through the bare boughs
of the<br/>
trees. They had to go slowly, for the road was up hill all the
way, and<br/>
it was hard work for the poor pony. But he was a stout little
fellow,<br/>
and tugged away up the slippery track, and Violet and Emma talked
and<br/>
laughed, and never thought what was going to happen. Just
half-way up<br/>
the mountain there was a rocky cliff which overhung the road, and
on<br/>
this cliff grew an enormous hemlock tree. The branches were
loaded with<br/>
snow, which made them much heavier than usual. Just as the sleigh
passed<br/>
slowly underneath the cliff, a violent blast of wind blew up from
the<br/>
ravine, struck the hemlock and tore it out of the ground, roots
and all.<br/>
It fell directly across the sleigh, and Violet and Emma and the
pony and<br/>
the basket with the turkey and the other things in it were all
crushed<br/>
as flat as pancakes!"</p>
<p>"Well," said Amy, as Katy stopped, "go on! what happened
then?"</p>
<p>"Nothing happened then," replied Katy, in a tone of awful
solemnity;<br/>
"nothing could happen! Violet and Emma were dead, the pony was
dead, the<br/>
things in the basket were broken all to little bits, and a
great<br/>
snowstorm began and covered them up, and no one knew where they
were or<br/>
what had become of them till the snow melted in the spring."</p>
<p>With a loud shriek Amy jumped up from the bench.</p>
<p>"No! no! no!" she cried; "they aren't dead! I won't let them
be dead!"<br/>
Then she burst into tears, ran down the stairs, locked herself
into her<br/>
mother's stateroom, and did not appear again for several
hours.</p>
<p>Katy laughed heartily at first over this outburst, but
presently she<br/>
began to repent and to think that she had treated her pet
unkindly. She<br/>
went down and knocked at the stateroom door; but Amy would not
answer.<br/>
She called her softly through the key-hole, and coaxed and
pleaded, but<br/>
it was all in vain. Amy remained invisible till late in the
afternoon;<br/>
and when she finally crept up again to the deck, her eyes were
red with<br/>
crying, and her little face as pale and miserable as if she had
been<br/>
attending the funeral of her dearest friend.</p>
<p>Katy's heart smote her.</p>
<p>"Come here, my darling," she said, holding out her hand; "come
and sit<br/>
in my lap and forgive me. Violet and Emma shall not be dead. They
shall<br/>
go on living, since you care so much for them, and I will tell
stories<br/>
about them to the end of the CHAPTER."</p>
<p>"No," said Amy, shaking her head mournfully; "you can't.
They're dead,<br/>
and they won't come to life again ever. It's all over, and I'm
so<br/>
so-o-rry."</p>
<p>All Katy's apologies and efforts to resuscitate the story were
useless.<br/>
Violet and Emma were dead to Amy's imagination, and she could not
make<br/>
herself believe in them any more.</p>
<p>She was too woe-begone to care for the fables of Circe and her
swine<br/>
which Katy told as they rounded the magnificent Cape Circello,
and the<br/>
isles where the sirens used to sing appealed to her in vain. The
sun<br/>
set, the stars came out; and under the beams of their countless
lamps<br/>
and the beckonings of a slender new moon, the "Marco Polo" sailed
into<br/>
the Bay of Naples, past Vesuvius, whose dusky curl of smoke could
be<br/>
seen outlined against the luminous sky, and brought her
passengers to<br/>
their landing-place.</p>
<p>They woke next morning to a summer atmosphere full of yellow
sunshine<br/>
and true July warmth. Flower-vendors stood on every corner, and
pursued<br/>
each newcomer with their fragrant wares. Katy could not stop
exclaiming<br/>
over the cheapness of the flowers, which were thrust in at the
carriage<br/>
windows as they drove slowly up and down the streets. They were
tied<br/>
into flat nosegays, whose centre was a white camellia, encircled
with<br/>
concentric rows of pink tea rosebuds, ring after ring, till the
whole<br/>
was the size of an ordinary milk-pan; all to be had for the sum
of ten<br/>
cents! But after they had bought two or three of these
enormous<br/>
bouquets, and had discovered that not a single rose boasted an
inch of<br/>
stem, and that all were pierced with long wires through their
very<br/>
hearts, she ceased to care for them.</p>
<p>"I would rather have one Souvenir or General Jacqueminot, with
a long<br/>
stem and plenty of leaves, than a dozen of these stiff platters
of<br/>
bouquets," Katy told Mrs. Ashe. But when they drove beyond the
city<br/>
gates, and the coachman came to anchor beneath walls overhung
with the<br/>
same roses, and she found that she might stand on the seat and
pull down<br/>
as many branches of the lovely flowers as she desired, and
gather<br/>
wallflowers for herself out of the clefts in the masonry, she
was<br/>
entirely satisfied.</p>
<p>"This is the Italy of my dreams," she said.</p>
<p>With all its beauty there was an underlying sense of danger
about<br/>
Naples, which interfered with their enjoyment of it. Evil smells
came<br/>
in at the windows, or confronted them as they went about the
city.<br/>
There seemed something deadly in the air. Whispered reports met
their<br/>
ears of cases of fever, which the landlords of the hotels were
doing<br/>
their best to hush up. An American gentleman was said to be lying
very<br/>
ill at one house. A lady had died the week before at another.
Mrs. Ashe<br/>
grew nervous.</p>
<p>"We will just take a rapid look at a few of the principal
things," she<br/>
told Katy, "and then get away as fast as we can. Amy is so on my
mind<br/>
that I have no peace of my life. I keep feeling her pulse and
imagining<br/>
that she does not look right; and though I know it is all my
fancy, I am<br/>
impatient to be off. You won't mind, will you, Katy?"</p>
<p>After that everything they did was done in a hurry. Katy felt
as if she<br/>
were being driven about by a cyclone, as they rushed from one
sight to<br/>
another, filling up all the chinks between with shopping, which
was<br/>
irresistible where everything was so pretty and so wonderfully
cheap.<br/>
She herself purchased a tortoise-shell fan and chain for Rose
Red, and<br/>
had her monogram carved upon it; a coral locket for Elsie; some
studs<br/>
for Dorry; and for her father a small, beautiful vase of bronze,
copied<br/>
from one of the Pompeian antiques.</p>
<p>"How charming it is to have money to spend in such a place as
this!" she<br/>
said to herself with a sigh of satisfaction as she surveyed
these<br/>
delightful buyings. "I only wish I could get ten times as many
things<br/>
and take them to ten times as many people. Papa was so wise about
it. I<br/>
can't think how it is that he always knows beforehand exactly how
people<br/>
are going to feel, and what they will want!"</p>
<p>Mrs. Ashe also bought a great many things for herself and Amy,
and to<br/>
take home as presents; and it was all very pleasant and
satisfactory<br/>
except for that subtle sense of danger from which they could not
escape<br/>
and which made them glad to go. "See Naples and die," says the
old<br/>
adage; and the saying has proved sadly true in the case of many
an<br/>
American traveller.</p>
<p>Beside the talk of fever there was also a good deal of gossip
about<br/>
brigands going about, as is generally the case in Naples and
its<br/>
vicinity. Something was said to have happened to a party on one
of the<br/>
heights above Sorrento; and though nobody knew exactly what
the<br/>
something was, or was willing to vouch for the story, Mrs. Ashe
and<br/>
Katy felt a good deal of trepidation as they entered the carriage
which<br/>
was to take them to the neighborhood where the mysterious
"something"<br/>
had occurred.</p>
<p>The drive between Castellamare and Sorrento is in reality as
safe as<br/>
that between Boston and Brookline; but as our party did not know
this<br/>
fact till afterward, it did them no good. It is also one of the
most<br/>
beautiful drives in the world, following the windings of the
exquisite<br/>
coast mile after mile, in long links of perfectly made road,
carved on<br/>
the face of sharp cliffs, with groves of oranges and lemons and
olive<br/>
orchards above, and the Bay of Naples beneath, stretching away
like a<br/>
solid sheet of lapis-lazuli, and gemmed with islands of the
most<br/>
picturesque form.</p>
<p>It is a pity that so much beauty should have been wasted on
Mrs. Ashe<br/>
and Katy, but they were too frightened to half enjoy it. Their
carriage<br/>
was driven by a shaggy young savage, who looked quite wild enough
to be<br/>
a bandit himself. He cracked his whip loudly as they rolled
along, and<br/>
every now and then gave a long shrill whistle. Mrs. Ashe was sure
that<br/>
these were signals to his band, who were lurking somewhere on
the<br/>
olive-hung hillsides. She thought she detected him once or twice
making<br/>
signs to certain questionable-looking characters as they passed;
and she<br/>
fancied that the people they met gazed at them with an air of<br/>
commiseration, as upon victims who were being carried to
execution. Her<br/>
fears affected Katy; so, though they talked and laughed, and made
jokes<br/>
to amuse Amy, who must not be scared or led to suppose that
anything was<br/>
amiss, and to the outward view seemed a very merry party, they
were<br/>
privately quaking in their shoes all the way, and enjoying a deal
of<br/>
highly superfluous misery. And after all they reached Sorrento
in<br/>
perfect safety; and the driver, who looked so dangerous, turned
out to<br/>
be a respectable young man enough, with a wife and family to
support,<br/>
who considered a plateful of macaroni and a glass of sour red
wine as<br/>
the height of luxury, and was grateful for a small gratuity of
thirty<br/>
cents or so, which would enable him to purchase these dainties.
Mrs.<br/>
Ashe had a very bad headache next day, to pay for her fright; but
she<br/>
and Katy agreed that they had been very foolish, and resolved to
pay no<br/>
more attention to unaccredited rumors or allow them to spoil
their<br/>
enjoyment, which was a sensible resolution to make.</p>
<p>Their hotel was perched directly over the sea. From the
balcony of their<br/>
sitting-room they looked down a sheer cliff some sixty feet high,
into<br/>
the water; their bedrooms opened on a garden of roses, with an
orange<br/>
grove beyond. Not far from them was the great gorge which cuts
the<br/>
little town of Sorrento almost in two, and whose seaward end
makes the<br/>
harbor of the place. Katy was never tired of peering down into
this<br/>
strange and beautiful cleft, whose sides, two hundred feet in
depth, are<br/>
hung with vines and trailing growths of all sorts, and seem
all<br/>
a-tremble with the fairy fronds of maiden-hair ferns growing out
of<br/>
every chink and crevice. She and Amy took walks along the coast
toward<br/>
Massa, to look off at the lovely island shapes in the bay, and
admire<br/>
the great clumps of cactus and Spanish bayonet which grew by
the<br/>
roadside; and they always came back loaded with orange-flowers,
which<br/>
could be picked as freely as apple-blossoms from New England
orchards in<br/>
the spring. The oranges themselves at that time of the year were
very<br/>
sour, but they answered as well for a romantic date, "From an
orange<br/>
grove," as if they had been the sweetest in the world.</p>
<p>They made two different excursions to Pompeii, which is within
easy<br/>
distance of Sorrento. They scrambled on donkeys over the hills,
and had<br/>
glimpses of the far-away Calabrian shore, of the natural arch,
and the<br/>
temples of Pæstum shining in the sun many miles distant. On
Katy's<br/>
birthday, which fell toward the end of January, Mrs. Ashe let her
have<br/>
her choice of a treat; and she elected to go to the Island of
Capri,<br/>
which none of them had seen. It turned out a perfect day, with
sea and<br/>
wind exactly right for the sail, and to allow of getting into the
famous<br/>
"Blue Grotto," which can only be entered under particular
conditions of<br/>
tide and weather. And they climbed the great cliff-rise at the
island's<br/>
end, and saw the ruins of the villa built by the wicked
emperor<br/>
Tiberius, and the awful place known as his "Leap," down which, it
is<br/>
said, he made his victims throw themselves; and they lunched at a
hotel<br/>
which bore his name, and just at sunset pushed off again for the
row<br/>
home over the charmed sea. This return voyage was almost the
pleasantest<br/>
thing of all the day. The water was smooth, the moon at its full.
It was<br/>
larger and more brilliant than American moons are, and seemed to
possess<br/>
an actual warmth and color. The boatmen timed their oar-strokes
to the<br/>
cadence of Neapolitan <i>barcaroles</i> and folk-songs, full of
rhythmic<br/>
movement, which seemed caught from the pulsing tides. And when at
last<br/>
the bow grated on the sands of the Sorrento landing-place, Katy
drew a<br/>
long, regretful breath, and declared that this was her best<br/>
birthday-gift of all, better than Amy's flowers, or the
pretty<br/>
tortoise-shell locket that Mrs. Ashe had given her, better even
than the<br/>
letter from home, which, timed by happy accident, had arrived by
the<br/>
morning's post to make a bright opening for the day.</p>
<p>All pleasant things must come to an ending.</p>
<p>"Katy," said Mrs. Ashe, one afternoon in early February, "I
heard some<br/>
ladies talking just now in the <i>salon</i>, and they said that
Rome is<br/>
filling up very fast. The Carnival begins in less than two weeks,
and<br/>
everybody wants to be there then. If we don't make haste, we
shall not<br/>
be able to get any rooms."</p>
<p>"Oh dear!" said Katy, "it is very trying not to be able to be
in two<br/>
places at once. I want to see Rome dreadfully, and yet I cannot
bear to<br/>
leave Sorrento. We have been very happy here, haven't we?"</p>
<p>So they took up their wandering staves again, and departed for
Rome,<br/>
like the Apostle, "not knowing what should befall them
there."</p>
<br/><br/>
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