BOOK THE FIFTH
1. Chapter I
(continued)
While the common people, with the lively vehemence of their Campanian blood,
were thus pushing, scrambling, hurrying on--yet, amidst all their eagerness,
preserving, as is now the wont with Italians in such meetings, a wonderful
order and unquarrelsome good humor, a strange visitor to Arbaces was
threading her way to his sequestered mansion. At the sight of her quaint
and primaeval garb--of her wild gait and gestures--the passengers she
encountered touched each other and smiled; but as they caught a glimpse of
her countenance, the mirth was hushed at once, for the face was as the face
of the dead; and, what with the ghastly features and obsolete robes of the
stranger, it seemed as if one long entombed had risen once more amongst the
living. In silence and awe each group gave way as she passed along, and she
soon gained the broad porch of the Egyptian's palace.
The black porter, like the rest of the world, astir at an unusual hour,
started as he opened the door to her summons.
The sleep of the Egyptian had been usually profound during the night; but,
as the dawn approached, it was disturbed by strange and unquiet dreams,
which impressed him the more as they were colored by the peculiar philosophy
he embraced.
He thought that he was transported to the bowels of the earth, and that he
stood alone in a mighty cavern supported by enormous columns of rough and
primaeval rock, lost, as they ascended, in the vastness of a shadow athwart
whose eternal darkness no beam of day had ever glanced. And in the space
between these columns were huge wheels, that whirled round and round
unceasingly, and with a rushing and roaring noise. Only to the right and
left extremities of the cavern, the space between the pillars was left bare,
and the apertures stretched away into galleries--not wholly dark, but dimly
lighted by wandering and erratic fires, that, meteor-like, now crept (as the
snake creeps) along the rugged and dank soil; and now leaped fiercely to and
fro, darting across the vast gloom in wild gambols--suddenly disappearing,
and as suddenly bursting into tenfold brilliancy and power. And while he
gazed wonderingly upon the gallery to the left, thin, mist-like, aerial
shapes passed slowly up; and when they had gained the hall they seemed to
rise aloft, and to vanish, as the smoke vanishes, in the measureless ascent.
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