Saturday, 8 June 1861
Quite cloudy & gray early, & a little rain; fine at noon.
Rose at 5.30. Got out paper & brushes, & divided luggage till 8. Breakfast.
Straw hatted women of Florence. ― Carriage to Villa Albrizzi, where Galileo lived. Very grand view of Florence, but wanting the River. On to the Certosa d’Ema: much like other Convents. ― Drove back by Poggio Imperiale, & left a letter for Mr. Lever ― home by 12.
Wrote to C. Fortescue ― badly ― & to T. Cooper & read the Woman in White.
4. Table d’Hôte ― Mr. Kearney ― & lo! Πέντε κυρίαι ποῦ ὀμιλήσουν Ἑλλενικήν!1 ― Mr. Barff of Zante & his family. Pleasant enough.
Cloudy ― & thundering rain; was ever such Italian weather?
At 5.30 walked out solo ― up nearly to the Albrizzi & ˇ[then] to the Badia Oliveto: no very perfect view. The quiet & courtesy & intelligence of these people is everywhere delightful.
Then, crossing the bridge of chains, I walked all down to the end of the Cascine ― lovely Nightingales! & back ― fireflies & frogs ― by 8.30. ―
Mr. Lever asks me to dine tomorrow.
Some rain.
Out of the day & night,
A joy hath taken flight!2
X2
[Transcribed by Marco Graziosi from Houghton Library, Harvard University, MS Eng. 797.3.]
- Five ladies that spoke Greek (NB). [↩]
-
P.B. Shelley’s lines from “A Lament” (1821) had become almost proverbial:
I.
Oh, world! oh, life! oh, time!
On whose last steps I climb
Trembling at that where I had stood before;
When will return the glory of your prime?
No more―O never more!II.
Out of the day and night
A joy has taken flight;
Fresh spring, and summer, and winter hoar,
Move my faint heart with grief, but with delight
No more―O never more! [↩]