BOOK THE FOURTH
3. Chapter III
(continued)
This apparition, removed but by a cord from one's pericranium, and indulging
the most vehement leaps, apparently with the intention of alighting upon
that cerebral region, would probably be regarded with some terror by a party
in May Fair; but our Pompeian revellers seemed to behold the spectacle with
delighted curiosity, and applauded in proportion as the dancer appeared with
the most difficulty to miss falling upon the head of whatever guest he
particularly selected to dance above. He paid the senator, indeed, the
peculiar compliment of literally falling from the rope, and catching it
again with his hand, just as the whole party imagined the skull of the Roman
was as much fractured as ever that of the poet whom the eagle took for a
tortoise. At length, to the great relief of at least Ione, who had not much
accustomed herself to this entertainment, the dancer suddenly paused as a
strain of music was heard from without. He danced again still more wildly;
the air changed, the dancer paused again; no, it could not dissolve the
charm which was supposed to possess him! He represented one who by a
strange disorder is compelled to dance, and whom only a certain air of music
can cure. At length the musician seemed to hit on the right tune; the
dancer gave one leap, swung himself down from the rope, alighted on the
floor, and vanished.
One art now yielded to another; and the musicians who were stationed without
on the terrace struck up a soft and mellow air, to which were sung the
following words, made almost indistinct by the barrier between and the
exceeding lowness of the minstrelsy:-
FESTIVE MUSIC SHOULD BE LOW
I
Hark! through these flowers our music sends its greeting
To your loved halls, where Psilas shuns the day;
When the young god his Cretan nymph was meeting
He taught Pan's rustic pipe this gliding lay:
Soft as the dews of wine
Shed in this banquet hour,
The rich libation of Sound's stream divine,
O reverent harp, to Aphrodite pour!
II
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