BOOK THE FIFTH
11. Chapter the Last
(continued)
In the garden was found a skeleton with a key by its bony hand, and near it
a bag of coins. This is believed to have been the master of the house--the
unfortunate Diomed, who had probably sought to escape by the garden, and
been destroyed either by the vapors or some fragment of stone. Beside some
silver vases lay another skeleton, probably of a slave.
The houses of Sallust and of Pansa, the Temple of Isis, with the juggling
concealments behind the statues--the lurking-place of its holy oracles--are
now bared to the gaze of the curious. In one of the chambers of that temple
was found a huge skeleton with an axe beside it: two walls had been pierced
by the axe--the victim could penetrate no farther. In the midst of the city
was found another skeleton, by the side of which was a heap of coins, and
many of the mystic ornaments of the fane of Isis. Death had fallen upon him
in his avarice, and Calenus perished simultaneously with Burbo! As the
excavators cleared on through the mass of ruin, they found the skeleton of a
man literally severed in two by a prostrate column; the skull was of so
striking a conformation, so boldly marked in its intellectual as well as its
worse physical developments, that it has excited the constant speculation of
every itinerant believer in the theories of Spurzheim who has gazed upon
that ruined palace of the mind. Still, after the lapse of ages, the
traveler may survey that airy hall within whose cunning galleries and
elaborate chambers once thought, reasoned, dreamed, and sinned, the soul
of Arbaces the Egyptian.
Viewing the various witnesses of a social system which has passed
from the world for ever---a stranger, from that remote and barbarian
Isle which the Imperial Roman shivered when he named, paused amidst
the delights of the soft Campania and composed this history!
THE END
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