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<h2> Chapter IV </h2>
<h3> THE STORY HALTS FOR A MOMENT AT AN EPISODE. </h3>
<p>RESTLESS and anxious, Apaecides consumed the day in wandering through the
most sequestered walks in the vicinity of the city. The sun was slowly
setting as he paused beside a lonely part of the Sarnus, ere yet it wound
amidst the evidences of luxury and power. Only through openings in the
woods and vines were caught glimpses of the white and gleaming city, in
which was heard in the distance no din, no sound, nor 'busiest hum of
men'. Amidst the green banks crept the lizard and the grasshopper, and
here and there in the brake some solitary bird burst into sudden song, as
suddenly stifled. There was deep calm around, but not the calm of night;
the air still breathed of the freshness and life of day; the grass still
moved to the stir of the insect horde; and on the opposite bank the
graceful and white capella passed browsing through the herbage, and paused
at the wave to drink.</p>
<p>As Apaecides stood musingly gazing upon the waters, he heard beside him
the low bark of a dog.</p>
<p>'Be still, poor friend,' said a voice at hand; 'the stranger's step harms
not thy master.' The convert recognized the voice, and, turning, he beheld
the old mysterious man whom he had seen in the congregation of the
Nazarenes.</p>
<p>The old man was sitting upon a fragment of stone covered with ancient
mosses; beside him were his staff and scrip; at his feet lay a small
shaggy dog, the companion in how many a pilgrimage perilous and strange.</p>
<p>The face of the old man was as balm to the excited spirit of the neophyte:
he approached, and craving his blessing, sat down beside him.</p>
<p>'Thou art provided as for a journey, father,' said he: 'wilt thou leave us
yet?'</p>
<p>'My son,' replied the old man, 'the days in store for me on earth are few
and scanty; I employ them as becomes me travelling from place to place,
comforting those whom God has gathered together in His name, and
proclaiming the glory of His Son, as testified to His servant.'</p>
<p>'Thou hast looked, they tell me, on the face of Christ?'</p>
<p>'And the face revived me from the dead. Know, young proselyte to the true
faith, that I am he of whom thou readest in the scroll of the Apostle. In
the far Judea, and in the city of Nain, there dwelt a widow, humble of
spirit and sad of heart; for of all the ties of life one son alone was
spared to her. And she loved him with a melancholy love, for he was the
likeness of the lost. And the son died. The reed on which she leaned was
broken, the oil was dried up in the widow's cruse. They bore the dead upon
his bier; and near the gate of the city, where the crowd were gathered,
there came a silence over the sounds of woe, for the Son of God was
passing by. The mother, who followed the bier, wept—not noisily, but
all who looked upon her saw that her heart was crushed. And the Lord
pitied her, and he touched the bier, and said, "I SAY UNTO THEE, ARISE,"
And the dead man woke and looked upon the face of the Lord. Oh, that calm
and solemn brow, that unutterable smile, that careworn and sorrowful face,
lighted up with a God's benignity—it chased away the shadows of the
grave! I rose, I spoke, I was living, and in my mother's arms—yes, I
am the dead revived! The people shouted, the funeral horns rung forth
merrily: there was a cry, "God has visited His people!" I heard them not—I
felt—I saw—nothing but the face of the Redeemer!'</p>
<p>The old man paused, deeply moved; and the youth felt his blood creep, and
his hair stir. He was in the presence of one who had known the Mystery of
Death!</p>
<p>'Till that time,' renewed the widow's son, 'I had been as other men:
thoughtless, not abandoned; taking no heed, but of the things of love and
life; nay, I had inclined to the gloomy faith of the earthly Sadducee!
But, raised from the dead, from awful and desert dreams that these lips
never dare reveal—recalled upon earth, to testify the powers of
Heaven—once more mortal, the witness of immortality; I drew a new
being from the grave. O faded—O lost Jerusalem!—Him from whom
came my life, I beheld adjudged to the agonized and parching death! Far in
the mighty crowd I saw the light rest and glimmer over the cross; I heard
the hooting mob, I cried aloud, I raved, I threatened—none heeded me—I
was lost in the whirl and the roar of thousands! But even then, in my
agony and His own, methought the glazing eye of the Son of Man sought me
out—His lip smiled, as when it conquered death—it hushed me,
and I became calm. He who had defied the grave for another—what was
the grave to him? The sun shone aslant the pale and powerful features, and
then died away! Darkness fell over the earth; how long it endured, I know
not. A loud cry came through the gloom—a sharp and bitter cry!—and
all was silent.</p>
<p>'But who shall tell the terrors of the night?' I walked along the city—the
earth reeled to and fro, and the houses trembled to their base—theliving
had deserted the streets, but not the Dead: through the gloom I saw them
glide—the dim and ghastly shapes, in the cerements of the grave—with
horror, and woe, and warning on their unmoving lips and lightless eyes!—they
swept by me, as I passed—they glared upon me—I had been their
brother; and they bowed their heads in recognition; they had risen to tell
the living that the dead can rise!'</p>
<p>Again the old man paused, and, when he resumed, it was in a calmer tone.</p>
<p>'From that night I resigned all earthly thought but that of serving HIM. A
preacher and a pilgrim, I have traversed the remotest corners of the
earth, proclaiming His Divinity, and bringing new converts to His fold. I
come as the wind, and as the wind depart; sowing, as the wind sows, the
seeds that enrich the world.</p>
<p>'Son, on earth we shall meet no more. Forget not this hour,—what are
the pleasures and the pomps of life? As the lamp shines, so life glitters
for an hour; but the soul's light is the star that burns for ever, in the
heart of inimitable space.'</p>
<p>It was then that their conversation fell upon the general and sublime
doctrines of immortality; it soothed and elevated the young mind of the
convert, which yet clung to many of the damps and shadows of that cell of
faith which he had so lately left—it was the air of heaven breathing
on the prisoner released at last. There was a strong and marked
distinction between the Christianity of the old man and that of Olinthus;
that of the first was more soft, more gentle, more divine. The heroism of
Olinthus had something in it fierce and intolerant—it was necessary
to the part he was destined to play—it had in it more of the courage
of the martyr than the charity of the saint. It aroused, it excited, it
nerved, rather than subdued and softened. But the whole heart of that
divine old man was bathed in love; the smile of the Deity had burned away
from it the leaven of earthlier and coarser passions, and left to the
energy of the hero all the meekness of the child.</p>
<p>'And now,' said he, rising at length, as the sun's last ray died in the
west; 'now, in the cool of twilight, I pursue my way towards the Imperial
Rome. There yet dwell some holy men, who like me have beheld the face of
Christ; and them would I see before I die.'</p>
<p>'But the night is chill for thine age, my father, and the way is long, and
the robber haunts it; rest thee till to-morrow.'</p>
<p>'Kind son, what is there in this scrip to tempt the robber? And the Night
and the Solitude!—these make the ladder round which angels cluster,
and beneath which my spirit can dream of God. Oh! none can know what the
pilgrim feels as he walks on his holy course; nursing no fear, and
dreading no danger—for God is with him! He hears the winds murmur
glad tidings; the woods sleep in the shadow of Almighty wings—the
stars are the Scriptures of Heaven, the tokens of love, and the witnesses
of immortality. Night is the Pilgrim's day.' With these words the old man
pressed Apaecides to his breast, and taking up his staff and scrip, the
dog bounded cheerily before him, and with slow steps and downcast eyes he
went his way.</p>
<p>The convert stood watching his bended form, till the trees shut the last
glimpse from his view; and then, as the stars broke forth, he woke from
the musings with a start, reminded of his appointment with Olinthus.</p>
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