BOOK THE FOURTH
17. Chapter XVII
(continued)
Hark, the trumpet of thunder!
Lo, earth rent asunder!
And, forth, on His Angel-throne,
He comes through the gloom,
The Judge of the Tomb,
To summon and save His own!
Oh, joy to Care, and woe to Crime,
He comes to save His own!
Woe to the proud ones who defy Him!
Woe to the dreamers who deny Him!
Woe to the wicked, woe!
A sudden silence from the startled hall of revel succeeded these ominous
words: the Christians swept on, and were soon hidden from the sight of the
gladiator. Awed, he scarce knew why, by the mystic denunciations of the
Christians, Lydon, after a short pause, now rose to pursue his way homeward.
Before him, how serenely slept the starlight on that lovely city! how
breathlessly its pillared streets reposed in their security!--how softly
rippled the dark-green waves beyond!--how cloudless spread, aloft and blue,
the dreaming Campanian skies! Yet this was the last night for the gay
Pompeii! the colony of the hoar Chaldean! the fabled city of Hercules! the
delight of the voluptuous Roman! Age after age had rolled, indestructive,
unheeded, over its head; and now the last ray quivered on the dial-plate of
its doom! The gladiator heard some light steps behind--a group of females
were wending homeward from their visit to the amphitheatre. As he turned,
his eye was arrested by a strange and sudden apparition. From the summit of
Vesuvius, darkly visible at the distance, there shot a pale, meteoric, livid
light--it trembled an instant and was gone. And at the same moment that his
eye caught it, the voice of one of the youngest of the women broke out
hilariously and shrill:-
TRAMP! TRAMP! HOW GAILY THEY GO!
HO, HO! FOR THE MORROW'S MERRY SHOW!
|