BOOK THE FIFTH
1. Chapter I
(continued)
Left alone, Arbaces stepped into his chamber of study, and thence upon the
portico without. He saw the dense masses of men pouring fast into the
amphitheatre, and heard the cry of the assistants, and the cracking of the
cordage, as they were straining aloft the huge awning under which the
citizens, molested by no discomforting ray, were to behold, at luxurious
ease, the agonies of their fellow creatures. Suddenly a wild strange sound
went forth, and as suddenly died away--it was the roar of the lion. There
was a silence in the distant crowd; but the silence was followed by joyous
laughter--they were making merry at the hungry impatience of the royal
beast.
'Brutes!' muttered the disdainful Arbaces are ye less homicides than I am?
I slay but in self-defence--ye make murder pastime.'
He turned with a restless and curious eye, towards Vesuvius. Beautifully
glowed the green vineyards round its breast, and tranquil as eternity lay in
the breathless skies the form of the mighty hill.
'We have time yet, if the earthquake be nursing,' thought Arbaces; and he
turned from the spot. He passed by the table which bore his mystic scrolls
and Chaldean calculations.
'August art!' he thought, 'I have not consulted thy decrees since I passed
the danger and the crisis they foretold. What matter?--I know that
henceforth all in my path is bright and smooth. Have not events already
proved it? Away, doubt--away, pity! Reflect O my heart--reflect, for the
future, but two images--Empire and Ione!'
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