BOOK THE FOURTH
17. Chapter XVII
(continued)
The streets were thin and empty. He soon gained the house of Sallust. The
porter bade him leave his letter, and be gone; for Sallust was so grieved at
the condemnation of Glaucus, that he could not on any account be disturbed.
'Nevertheless, I have sworn to give this letter into his own hands--do so I
must!' And Sosia, well knowing by experience that Cerberus loves a sop,
thrust some half a dozen sesterces into the hand of the porter.
'Well, well,' said the latter, relenting, 'you may enter if you will; but,
to tell you the truth, Sallust is drinking himself out of his grief. It is
his way when anything disturbs him. He orders a capital supper, the best
wine, and does not give over till everything is out of his head--but the
liquor.'
'An excellent plan--excellent! Ah, what it is to be rich! If I were
Sallust, I would have some grief or another every day. But just say a kind
word for me with the atriensis--I see him coming.'
Sallust was too sad to receive company; he was too sad, also, to drink
alone; so, as was his wont, he admitted his favorite freedman to his
entertainment, and a stranger banquet never was held. For ever and anon,
the kind-hearted epicure sighed, whimpered, wept outright, and then turned
with double zest to some new dish or his refilled goblet.
'My good fellow,' said he to his companion, it was a most awful
judgment--heigho!--it is not bad that kid, eh? Poor, dear Glaucus!--what a
jaw the lion has too! Ah, ah, ah!'
And Sallust sobbed loudly--the fit was stopped by a counteraction of
hiccups.
'Take a cup of wine,' said the freedman.
'A thought too cold: but then how cold Glaucus must be! Shut up the house
to-morrow--not a slave shall stir forth--none of my people shall honour that
cursed arena--No, no!'
'Taste the Falernian--your grief distracts you. By the gods it does--a
piece of that cheesecake.'
|