BOOK THE FOURTH
17. Chapter XVII
(continued)
'You gentlemen of the arena have a most disagreeable mode of talking,' said
Sosia; 'let us change the conversation.'
'Vah! vah!' said Lydon, impatiently; 'I am in no humor to converse with
thee!'
'Why, truly,' returned the slave, 'you must have serious thoughts enough to
occupy your mind: to-morrow is, I think, your first essay in the arena.
Well, I am sure you will die bravely!'
'May thy words fall on thine own head!' said Lydon, superstitiously, for he
by no means liked the blessing of Sosia. 'Die! No--I trust my hour is not
yet come.'
'He who plays at dice with death must expect the dog's throw,' replied
Sosia, maliciously. 'But you are a strong fellow, and I wish you all
imaginable luck; and so, vale!'
With that the slave turned on his heel, and took his way homeward.
'I trust the rogue's words are not ominous,' said Lydon, musingly. 'In my
zeal for my father's liberty, and my confidence in my own thews and sinews,
I have not contemplated the possibility of death. My poor father! I am thy
only son!--if I were to fall...'
As the thought crossed him, the gladiator strode on with a more rapid and
restless pace, when suddenly, in an opposite street, he beheld the very
object of his thoughts. Leaning on his stick, his form bent by care and
age, his eyes downcast, and his steps trembling, the grey-haired Medon
slowly approached towards the gladiator. Lydon paused a moment: he divined
at once the cause that brought forth the old man at that late hour.
'Be sure, it is I whom he seeks,' thought he; 'he is horror struck at the
condemnation of Olinthus--he more than ever esteems the arena criminal and
hateful--he comes again to dissuade me from the contest. I must shun him--I
cannot brook his prayers--his tears.'
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