BOOK THE FOURTH
3. Chapter III
(continued)
'Pardon me, O senator!' said Sallust; 'I see you flinch; your purple hem
cannot save you--drink!'
'By the gods,' said the senator, coughing, 'my lungs are already on fire;
you proceed with so miraculous a swiftness, that Phaeton himself was nothing
to you. I am infirm, O pleasant Sallust: you must exonerate me.'
'Not I, by Vesta! I am an impartial monarch--drink.'
The poor senator, compelled by the laws of the table, was forced to comply.
Alas! every cup was bringing him nearer and nearer to the Stygian pool.
'Gently! gently! my king,' groaned Diomed; 'we already begin to...'
'Treason!' interrupted Sallust; 'no stern Brutus here!--no interference with
royalty!'
'But our female guests...'
'Love a toper! Did not Ariadne dote upon Bacchus?'
The feast proceeded; the guests grew more talkative and noisy; the dessert
or last course was already on the table; and the slaves bore round water
with myrrh and hyssop for the finishing lavation. At the same time, a small
circular table that had been placed in the space opposite the guests
suddenly, and as by magic, seemed to open in the centre, and cast up a
fragrant shower, sprinkling the table and the guests; while as it ceased the
awning above them was drawn aside, and the guests perceived that a rope had
been stretched across the ceiling, and that one of those nimble dancers for
which Pompeii was so celebrated, and whose descendants add so charming a
grace to the festivities of Astley's or Vauxhall, was now treading his airy
measures right over their heads.
|