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<h2> Chapter X </h2>
<p>WHAT BECOMES OF NYDIA IN THE HOUSE OF ARBACES. THE EGYPTIAN FEELS
COMPASSION FOR GLAUCUS. COMPASSION IS OFTEN A VERY USELESS VISITOR TO THE
GUILTY.</p>
<p>IT will be remembered that, at the command of Arbaces, Nydia followed the
Egyptian to his home, and conversing there with her, he learned from the
confession of her despair and remorse, that her hand, and not Julia's, had
administered to Glaucus the fatal potion. At another time the Egyptian
might have conceived a philosophical interest in sounding the depths and
origin of the strange and absorbing passion which, in blindness and in
slavery, this singular girl had dared to cherish; but at present he spared
no thought from himself. As, after her confession, the poor Nydia threw
herself on her knees before him, and besought him to restore the health
and save the life of Glaucus—for in her youth and ignorance she
imagined the dark magician all-powerful to effect both—Arbaces, with
unheeding ears, was noting only the new expediency of detaining Nydia a
prisoner until the trial and fate of Glaucus were decided. For if, when he
judged her merely the accomplice of Julia in obtaining the philtre, he had
felt it was dangerous to the full success of his vengeance to allow her to
be at large—to appear, perhaps, as a witness—to avow the
manner in which the sense of Glaucus had been darkened, and thus win
indulgence to the crime of which he was accused—how much more was
she likely to volunteer her testimony when she herself had administered
the draught, and, inspired by love, would be only anxious, at any expense
of shame, to retrieve her error and preserve her beloved? Besides, how
unworthy of the rank and repute of Arbaces to be implicated in the
disgrace of pandering to the passion of Julia, and assisting in the unholy
rites of the Saga of Vesuvius! Nothing less, indeed, than his desire to
induce Glaucus to own the murder of Apaecides, as a policy evidently the
best both for his own permanent safety and his successful suit with Ione,
could ever have led him to contemplate the confession of Julia.</p>
<p>As for Nydia, who was necessarily cut off by her blindness from much of
the knowledge of active life, and who, a slave and a stranger, was
naturally ignorant of the perils of the Roman law, she thought rather of
the illness and delirium of her Athenian, than the crime of which she had
vaguely heard him accused, or the chances of the impending trial. Poor
wretch that she was, whom none addressed, none cared for, what did she
know of the senate and the sentence—the hazard of the law—the
ferocity of the people—the arena and the lion's den? She was
accustomed only to associate with the thought of Glaucus everything that
was prosperous and lofty—she could not imagine that any peril, save
from the madness of her love, could menace that sacred head. He seemed to
her set apart for the blessings of life. She only had disturbed the
current of his felicity; she knew not, she dreamed not that the stream,
once so bright, was dashing on to darkness and to death. It was therefore
to restore the brain that she had marred, to save the life that she had
endangered that she implored the assistance of the great Egyptian.</p>
<p>'Daughter,' said Arbaces, waking from his reverie, 'thou must rest here;
it is not meet for thee to wander along the streets, and be spurned from
the threshold by the rude feet of slaves. I have compassion on thy soft
crime—I will do all to remedy it. Wait here patiently for some days,
and Glaucus shall be restored.' So saying, and without waiting for her
reply, he hastened from the room, drew the bolt across the door, and
consigned the care and wants of his prisoner to the slave who had the
charge of that part of the mansion.</p>
<p>Alone, then, and musingly, he waited the morning light, and with it
repaired, as we have seen, to possess himself of the person of Ione.</p>
<p>His primary object, with respect to the unfortunate Neapolitan, was that
which he had really stated to Clodius, viz., to prevent her interesting
herself actively in the trial of Glaucus, and also to guard against her
accusing him (which she would, doubtless, have done) of his former act of
perfidy and violence towards her, his ward—denouncing his causes for
vengeance against Glaucus—unveiling the hypocrisy of his character—and
casting any doubt upon his veracity in the charge which he had made
against the Athenian. Not till he had encountered her that morning—not
till he had heard her loud denunciations—was he aware that he had
also another danger to apprehend in her suspicion of his crime. He hugged
himself now at the thought that these ends were effected: that one, at
once the object of his passion and his fear, was in his power. He believed
more than ever the flattering promises of the stars; and when he sought
Ione in that chamber in the inmost recesses of his mysterious mansion to
which he had consigned her—when he found her overpowered by blow
upon blow, and passing from fit to fit, from violence to torpor, in all
the alternations of hysterical disease—he thought more of the
loveliness which no frenzy could distort than of the woe which he had
brought upon her. In that sanguine vanity common to men who through life
have been invariably successful, whether in fortune or love, he flattered
himself that when Glaucus had perished—when his name was solemnly
blackened by the award of a legal judgment, his title to her love for ever
forfeited by condemnation to death for the murder of her own brother—her
affection would be changed to horror; and that his tenderness and his
passion, assisted by all the arts with which he well knew how to dazzle
woman's imagination, might elect him to that throne in her heart from
which his rival would be so awfully expelled. This was his hope: but
should it fail, his unholy and fervid passion whispered, 'At the worst,
now she is in my power.'</p>
<p>Yet, withal, he felt that uneasiness and apprehension which attended upon
the chance of detection, even when the criminal is insensible to the voice
of conscience—that vague terror of the consequences of crime, which
is often mistaken for remorse at the crime itself. The buoyant air of
Campania weighed heavily upon his breast; he longed to hurry from a scene
where danger might not sleep eternally with the dead; and, having Ione now
in his possession, he secretly resolved, as soon as he had witnessed the
last agony of his rival, to transport his wealth—and her, the
costliest treasure of all, to some distant shore.</p>
<p>'Yes,' said he, striding to and fro his solitary chamber—'yes, the
law that gave me the person of my ward gives me the possession of my
bride. Far across the broad main will we sweep on our search after novel
luxuries and inexperienced pleasures. Cheered by my stars, supported by
the omens of my soul, we will penetrate to those vast and glorious worlds
which my wisdom tells me lie yet untracked in the recesses of the circling
sea. There may this heart, possessed of love, grow once more alive to
ambition—there, amongst nations uncrushed by the Roman yoke, and to
whose ear the name of Rome has not yet been wafted, I may found an empire,
and transplant my ancestral creed; renewing the ashes of the dead Theban
rule; continuing in yet grander shores the dynasty of my crowned fathers,
and waking in the noble heart of Ione the grateful consciousness that she
shares the lot of one who, far from the aged rottenness of this slavish
civilization, restores the primal elements of greatness, and unites in one
mighty soul the attributes of the prophet and the king.' From this
exultant soliloquy, Arbaces was awakened to attend the trial of the
Athenian.</p>
<p>The worn and pallid cheek of his victim touched him less than the firmness
of his nerves and the dauntlessness of his brow; for Arbaces was one who
had little pity for what was unfortunate, but a strong sympathy for what
was bold. The congenialities that bind us to others ever assimilate to the
qualities of our own nature. The hero weeps less at the reverses of his
enemy than at the fortitude with which he bears them. All of us are human,
and Arbaces, criminal as he was, had his share of our common feelings and
our mother clay. Had he but obtained from Glaucus the written confession
of his crime, which would, better than even the judgment of others, have
lost him with Ione, and removed from Arbaces the chance of future
detection, the Egyptian would have strained every nerve to save his rival.
Even now his hatred was over—his desire of revenge was slaked: he
crushed his prey, not in enmity, but as an obstacle in his path. Yet was
he not the less resolved, the less crafty and persevering, in the course
he pursued, for the destruction of one whose doom was become necessary to
the attainment of his objects: and while, with apparent reluctance and
compassion, he gave against Glaucus the evidence which condemned him, he
secretly, and through the medium of the priesthood, fomented that popular
indignation which made an effectual obstacle to the pity of the senate. He
had sought Julia; he had detailed to her the confession of Nydia; he had
easily, therefore, lulled any scruple of conscience which might have led
her to extenuate the offence of Glaucus by avowing her share in his
frenzy: and the more readily, for her vain heart had loved the fame and
the prosperity of Glaucus—not Glaucus himself, she felt no affection
for a disgraced man—nay, she almost rejoiced in the disgrace that
humbled the hated Ione. If Glaucus could not be her slave, neither could
he be the adorer of her rival. This was sufficient consolation for any
regret at his fate. Volatile and fickle, she began again to be moved by
the sudden and earnest suit of Clodius, and was not willing to hazard the
loss of an alliance with that base but high-born noble by any public
exposure of her past weakness and immodest passion for another. All things
then smiled upon Arbaces—all things frowned upon the Athenian.</p>
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