BOOK THE FOURTH
3. Chapter III
(continued)
Diomed was not a little puzzled as to his election. The invalid senator was
too grave and too infirm for the proper fulfilment of his duty; the aedile
Pansa was adequate enough to the task: but then, to choose the next in
official rank to the senator, was an affront to the senator himself. While
deliberating between the merits of the others, he caught the mirthful glance
of Sallust, and, by a sudden inspiration, named the jovial epicure to the
rank of director, or arbiter bibendi.
Sallust received the appointment with becoming humility.
'I shall be a merciful king,' said he, 'to those who drink deep; to a
recusant, Minos himself shall be less inexorable. Beware!'
The slaves handed round basins of perfumed water, by which lavation the
feast commenced: and now the table groaned under the initiatory course.
The conversation, at first desultory and scattered, allowed Ione and Glaucus
to carry on those sweet whispers, which are worth all the eloquence in the
world. Julia watched them with flashing eyes.
'How soon shall her place be mine!' thought she.
But Clodius, who sat in the centre table, so as to observe well the
countenance of Julia, guessed her pique, and resolved to profit by it. He
addressed her across the table in set phrases of gallantry; and as he was of
high birth and of a showy person, the vain Julia was not so much in love as
to be insensible to his attentions.
The slaves, in the interim, were constantly kept upon the alert by the
vigilant Sallust, who chased one cup by another with a celerity which seemed
as if he were resolved upon exhausting those capacious cellars which the
reader may yet see beneath the house of Diomed. The worthy merchant began to
repent his choice, as amphora after amphora was pierced and emptied. The
slaves, all under the age of manhood (the youngest being about ten years
old--it was they who filled the wine--the eldest, some five years older,
mingled it with water), seemed to share in the zeal of Sallust; and the face
of Diomed began to glow as he watched the provoking complacency with which
they seconded the exertions of the king of the feast.
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