The Picture of a Ruin
“What face is that?”
Pressed against a shutterless window a wild, haggard face looked out into the darkness. Age had seemed the face with lines, and sorrow had whitened the hair like snow. Long and silky the tangled locks swept around the shoulders just seen above the sill.
“Is it a woman[?]”
“Yes.”
“How sad she looks!”
“Yes,” replied a third voice, “and her life has been as piteous as that sad face.”
“You know her then?”
“Yes.”
And again we looked to the window where defined against the glass the wistful face looked out into the night. The glare of the burning gas made all bright in the room. In the shadow of the clouded night we were unseen. Silently we looked up at the poor lady while our comrade recited the story of her life.
You would hardly think that a face as wild and [wrinkled] as that could once have been beautiful. Yet I knew her when few, indeed, could rival her. Her hair was long and black, and wound in many a rich coil and braid adorned a head small and beautiful. The olive tint of cheek and brow was fresh as the bloom of flowers, and there was a fascination and charm in the wondrous eyes that none might resist. But it was not in personal charms alone she excelled. There was genius in the glance of her eye; the cunning of the limner was in the fair, delicate hands, and many a beautiful thought; many a fair vision seen in dreams, grew into form beneath the delicate touches of her pencil… Read More