BOOK THE FOURTH
17. Chapter XVII
(continued)
'I have seen no fiercer beast than yon lion even in the amphitheatre of
Rome,' said a gigantic and sinewy fellow who stood at the right hand of
Sosia.
'I feel humbled when I look at his limbs,' replied, at the left of Sosia, a
slighter and younger figure, with his arms folded on his breast.
The slave looked first at one, and then at the other. 'Virtus in
medio!--virtue is ever in the middle!' muttered he to himself; 'a goodly
neighborhood for thee, Sosia--a gladiator on each side!'
'That is well said, Lydon,' returned the huger gladiator; 'I feel the same.'
'And to think,' observed Lydon, in a tone of deep feeling, to think that the
noble Greek, he whom we saw but a day or two since before us, so full of
youth, and health, and joyousness, is to feast yon monster!'
'Why not?' growled Niger, savagely: 'many an honest gladiator has been
compelled to a like combat by the emperor--why not a wealthy murderer by the
law?'
Lydon sighed, shrugged his shoulders, and remained silent. Meanwhile the
common gazers listened with staring eyes and lips apart: the gladiators were
objects of interest as well as the beasts--they were animals of the same
species; so the crowd glanced from one to the other--the men and the
brutes--whispering their comments and anticipating the morrow.
'Well!' said Lydon, turning away, 'I thank the gods that it is not the lion
or the tiger I am to contend with; even you, Niger, are a gentler combatant
than they.'
'But equally dangerous,' said the gladiator, with a fierce laugh; and the
bystanders, admiring his vast limbs and ferocious countenance, laughed too.
'That as it may be,' answered Lydon, carelessly, as he pressed through the
throng and quitted the den.
'I may as well take advantage of his shoulders,' thought the prudent Sosia,
hastening to follow him: 'the crowd always give way to a gladiator, so I
will keep close behind, and come in for a share of his consequence.'
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