BOOK THE FOURTH
3. Chapter III
(continued)
'We love a warrior,' said the wife of Pansa.
'I see it: by Hercules! it is even disagreeable to be too celebrated in
these cities. At Herculaneum they climb the roof of my atrium to catch a
glimpse of me through the compluvium; the admiration of one's citizens is
pleasant at first, but burthensome afterwards.'
'True, true, O Vespius!' cried the poet, joining the group: 'I find it so
myself.'
'You!' said the stately warrior, scanning the small form of the poet with
ineffable disdain. 'in what legion have you served?'
'You may see my spoils, my exuviae, in the forum itself,' returned the poet,
with a significant glance at the women. 'I have been among the
tent-companions, the contubernales, of the great Mantuan himself.'
'I know no general from Mantua, said the warrior, gravely. 'What campaign
have you served?'
'That of Helicon.'
'I never heard of it.'
'Nay, Vespius, he does but joke,' said Julia, laughing.
'Joke! By Mars, am I a man to be joked!'
'Yes; Mars himself was in love with the mother of jokes,' said the poet, a
little alarmed. 'Know, then, O Vespius! that I am the poet Fulvius. It is
I who make warriors immortal!'
'The gods forbid!' whispered Sallust to Julia. 'If Vespius were made
immortal, what a specimen of tiresome braggadocio would be transmitted to
posterity!'
The soldier looked puzzled; when, to the infinite relief of himself and his
companions, the signal for the feast was given.
As we have already witnessed at the house of Glaucus the ordinary routine of
a Pompeian entertainment, the reader is spared any second detail of the
courses, and the manner in which they were introduced.
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