BOOK THE FIFTH
1. Chapter I
(continued)
'Ha!' he cried, placing his hands before his eyes, as to shut out the grisly
vision, 'do I dream still?--Am I with the dead?'
'Mighty Hermes--no! Thou art with one death-like, but not dead. Recognize
thy friend and slave.'
There was a long silence. Slowly the shudders that passed over the limbs of
the Egyptian chased each other away, faintlier and faintlier dying till he
was himself again.
'It was a dream, then,' said he. 'Well--let me dream no more, or the day
cannot compensate for the pangs of night. Woman, how camest thou here, and
wherefore?'
'I came to warn thee,' answered the sepulchral voice of the saga.
'Warn me! The dream lied not, then? Of what peril?'
'Listen to me. Some evil hangs over this fated city. Fly while it be time.
Thou knowest that I hold my home on that mountain beneath which old
tradition saith there yet burn the fires of the river of Phlegethon; and in
my cavern is a vast abyss, and in that abyss I have of late marked a red and
dull stream creep slowly, slowly on; and heard many and mighty sounds
hissing and roaring through the gloom. But last night, as I looked thereon,
behold the stream was no longer dull, but intensely and fiercely luminous;
and while I gazed, the beast that liveth with me, and was cowering by my
side, uttered a shrill howl, and fell down and died, and the slaver and
froth were round his lips. I crept back to my lair; but I distinctly heard,
all the night, the rock shake and tremble; and, though the air was heavy and
still, there were the hissing of pent winds, and the grinding as of wheels,
beneath the ground. So, when I rose this morning at the very birth of dawn,
I looked again down the abyss, and I saw vast fragments of stone borne black
and floatingly over the lurid stream; and the stream itself was broader,
fiercer, redder than the night before. Then I went forth, and ascended to
the summit of the rock: and in that summit there appeared a sudden and vast
hollow, which I had never perceived before, from which curled a dim, faint
smoke; and the vapor was deathly, and I gasped, and sickened, and nearly
died. I returned home. I took my gold and my drugs, and left the
habitation of many years; for I remembered the dark Etruscan prophecy which
saith, "When the mountain opens, the city shall fall--when the smoke crowns
the Hill of the Parched Fields, there shall be woe and weeping in the
hearths of the Children of the Sea." Dread master, ere I leave these walls
for some more distant dwelling, I come to thee. As thou livest, know I in
my heart that the earthquake that sixteen years ago shook this city to its
solid base, was but the forerunner of more deadly doom. The walls of
Pompeii are built above the fields of the Dead, and the rivers of the
sleepless Hell. Be warned and fly!'
|