After his condemnation, Glaucus was admitted no more to the gentle
guardianship of Sallust, the only friend of his distress. He was led along
the forum till the guards stopped at a small door by the side of the temple
of Jupiter. You may see the place still. The door opened in the centre in
a somewhat singular fashion, revolving round on its hinges, as it were, like
a modern turnstile, so as only to leave half the threshold open at the same
time. Through this narrow aperture they thrust the prisoner, placed before
him a loaf and a pitcher of water, and left him to darkness, and, as he
thought, to solitude. So sudden had been that revolution of fortune which
had prostrated him from the palmy height of youthful pleasure and successful
love to the lowest abyss of ignominy, and the horror of a most bloody death,
that he could scarcely convince himself that he was not held in the meshes
of some fearful dream. His elastic and glorious frame had triumphed over a
potion, the greater part of which he had fortunately not drained. He had
recovered sense and consciousness, but still a dim and misty depression
clung to his nerves and darkened his mind. His natural courage, and the
Greek nobility of pride, enabled him to vanquish all unbecoming
apprehension, and, in the judgment-court, to face his awful lot with a
steady mien and unquailing eye. But the consciousness of innocence scarcely
sufficed to support him when the gaze of men no longer excited his haughty
valor, and he was left to loneliness and silence. He felt the damps of the
dungeon sink chillingly into his enfeebled frame. He--the fastidious, the
luxurious, the refined--he who had hitherto braved no hardship and known no
sorrow. Beautiful bird that he was! why had he left his far and sunny
clime--the olive-groves of his native hills--the music of immemorial
streams? Why had he wantoned on his glittering plumage amidst these harsh
and ungenial strangers, dazzling the eyes with his gorgeous hues, charming
the ear with his blithesome song--thus suddenly to be arrested--caged in
darkness--a victim and a prey--his gay flights for ever over--his hymns of
gladness for ever stilled! The poor Athenian! his very faults the
exuberance of a gentle and joyous nature, how little had his past career
fitted him for the trials he was destined to undergo! The hoots of the mob,
amidst whose plaudits he had so often guided his graceful car and bounding
steeds, still rang gratingly in his ear. The cold and stony faces of former
friends (the co-mates of merry revels) still rose before his eye. None now
were by to soothe, to sustain, the admired, the adulated stranger. These
walls opened but on the dread arena of a violent and shameful death. And
Ione! of her, too, he had heard naught; no encouraging word, no pitying
message; she, too, had forsaken him; she believed him guilty--and of what
crime?--the murder of a brother! He ground his teeth--he groaned aloud--and
ever and anon a sharp fear shot across him. In that fell and fierce
delirium which had so unaccountably seized his soul, which had so ravaged
the disordered brain, might he not, indeed, unknowing to himself, have
committed the crime of which he was accused? Yet, as the thought flashed
upon him, it was as suddenly checked; for, amidst all the darkness of the
past, he thought distinctly to recall the dim grove of Cybele, the upward
face of the pale dead, the pause that he had made beside the corpse, and the
sudden shock that felled him to the earth. He felt convinced of his
innocence; and yet who, to the latest time, long after his mangled remains
were mingled with the elements, would believe him guiltless, or uphold his
fame? As he recalled his interview with Arbaces, and the causes of revenge
which had been excited in the heart of that dark and fearful man, he could
not but believe that he was the victim of some deep-laid and mysterious
snare--the clue and train of which he was lost in attempting to discover:
and Ione--Arbaces loved her--might his rival's success be founded upon his
ruin? That thought cut him more deeply than all; and his noble heart was
more stung by jealousy than appalled by fear. Again he groaned aloud.