<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0041" id="link2HCH0041"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XIII </h2>
<p>THE SLAVE CONSULTS THE ORACLE. THEY WHO BLIND THEMSELVES THE BLIND MAY
FOOL. TWO NEW PRISONERS MADE IN ONE NIGHT.</p>
<p>IMPATIENTLY Nydia awaited the arrival of the no less anxious Sosia.
Fortifying his courage by plentiful potations of a better liquor than that
provided for the demon, the credulous ministrant stole into the blind
girl's chamber.</p>
<p>'Well, Sosia, and art thou prepared? Hast thou the bowl of pure water?'</p>
<p>'Verily, yes: but I tremble a little. You are sure I shall not see the
demon? I have heard that those gentlemen are by no means of a handsome
person or a civil demeanor.'</p>
<p>'Be assured! And hast thou left the garden-gate gently open?'</p>
<p>'Yes; and placed some beautiful nuts and apples on a little table close
by?'</p>
<p>'That's well. And the gate is open now, so that the demon may pass through
it?'</p>
<p>'Surely it is.'</p>
<p>'Well, then, open this door; there—leave it just ajar. And now,
Sosia, give me the lamp.'</p>
<p>'What, you will not extinguish it?'</p>
<p>'No; but I must breathe my spell over its ray. There is a spirit in fire.
Seat thyself.'</p>
<p>The slave obeyed; and Nydia, after bending for some moments silently over
the lamp, rose, and in a low voice chanted the following rude:—</p>
<p>INVOCATION TO THE SPECTRE OF THE AIR<br/>
<br/>
Loved alike by Air and Water<br/>
Aye must be Thessalia's daughter;<br/>
To us, Olympian hearts, are given<br/>
Spells that draw the moon from heaven.<br/>
All that Egypt's learning wrought—<br/>
All that Persia's Magian taught—<br/>
Won from song, or wrung from flowers,<br/>
Or whisper'd low by fiend—are ours.<br/>
<br/>
Spectre of the viewless air!<br/>
Hear the blind Thessalian's prayer!<br/>
By Erictho's art, that shed<br/>
Dews of life when life was fled—<br/>
By lone Ithaca's wise king,<br/>
<br/>
Who could wake the crystal spring<br/>
To the voice of prophecy?<br/>
By the lost Eurydice,<br/>
Summon'd from the shadowy throng,<br/>
As the muse-son's magic song—<br/>
By the Colchian's awful charms,<br/>
When fair-haired Jason left her arms—<br/>
<br/>
Spectre of the airy halls,<br/>
One who owns thee duly calls!<br/>
Breathe along the brimming bowl,<br/>
And instruct the fearful soul<br/>
In the shadowy things that lie<br/>
Dark in dim futurity.<br/>
Come, wild demon of the air,<br/>
Answer to thy votary's prayer!<br/>
Come! oh, come!<br/>
<br/>
And no god on heaven or earth—<br/>
Not the Paphian Queen of Mirth,<br/>
Not the vivid Lord of Light,<br/>
Nor the triple Maid of Night,<br/>
Nor the Thunderer's self shall be<br/>
Blest and honour'd more than thee!<br/>
Come! oh, come!<br/></p>
<p>'The spectre is certainly coming,' said Sosia. 'I feel him running along
my hair!'</p>
<p>'Place thy bowl of water on the ground. Now, then, give me thy napkin, and
let me fold up thy face and eyes.'</p>
<p>'Ay! that's always the custom with these charms. Not so tight, though:
gently—gently!'</p>
<p>'There—thou canst not see?'</p>
<p>'See, by Jupiter! No! nothing but darkness.'</p>
<p>'Address, then, to the spectre whatever question thou wouldst ask him, in
a low-whispered voice, three times. If thy question is answered in the
affirmative, thou wilt hear the water ferment and bubble before the demon
breathes upon it; if in the negative, the water will be quite silent.'</p>
<p>'But you will not play any trick with the water, eh?'</p>
<p>'Let me place the bowl under thy feet—so. Now thou wilt perceive
that I cannot touch it without thy knowledge.'</p>
<p>'Very fair. Now, then, O Bacchus! befriend me. Thou knowest that I have
always loved thee better than all the other gods, and I will dedicate to
thee that silver cup I stole last year from the burly carptor (butler), if
thou wilt but befriend me with this water-loving demon. And thou, O
Spirit! listen and hear me. Shall I be enabled to purchase my freedom next
year? Thou knowest; for, as thou livest in the air, the birds have
doubtless acquainted thee with every secret of this house,—thou
knowest that I have filched and pilfered all that I honestly—that
is, safely—could lay finger upon for the last three years, and I yet
want two thousand sesterces of the full sum. Shall I be able, O good
Spirit! to make up the deficiency in the course of this year? Speak—Ha!
does the water bubble? No; all is as still as a tomb.—Well, then, if
not this year, in two years?—Ah! I hear something; the demon is
scratching at the door; he'll be here presently.—In two years, my
good fellow: come now, two; that's a very reasonable time. What! dumb
still! Two years and a half—three—four? ill fortune to you,
friend demon! You are not a lady, that's clear, or you would not keep
silence so long. Five—six—sixty years? and may Pluto seize
you! I'll ask no more.' And Sosia, in a rage, kicked down the water over
his legs. He then, after much fumbling and more cursing, managed to
extricate his head from the napkin in which it was completely folded—stared
round—and discovered that he was in the dark.</p>
<p>'What, ho! Nydia; the lamp is gone. Ah, traitress; and thou art gone too;
but I'll catch thee—thou shalt smart for this!' The slave groped his
way to the door; it was bolted from without: he was a prisoner instead of
Nydia. What could he do? He did not dare to knock loud—to call out—lest
Arbaces should overhear him, and discover how he had been duped; and
Nydia, meanwhile, had probably already gained the garden-gate, and was
fast on her escape.</p>
<p>'But,' thought he, 'she will go home, or, at least, be somewhere in the
city. To-morrow, at dawn, when the slaves are at work in the peristyle, I
can make myself heard; then I can go forth and seek her. I shall be sure
to find and bring her back, before Arbaces knows a word of the matter. Ah!
that's the best plan. Little traitress, my fingers itch at thee: and to
leave only a bowl of water, too! Had it been wine, it would have been some
comfort.'</p>
<p>While Sosia, thus entrapped, was lamenting his fate, and revolving his
schemes to repossess himself of Nydia, the blind girl, with that singular
precision and dexterous rapidity of motion, which, we have before
observed, was peculiar to her, had passed lightly along the peristyle,
threaded the opposite passage that led into the garden, and, with a
beating heart, was about to proceed towards the gate, when she suddenly
heard the sound of approaching steps, and distinguished the dreaded voice
of Arbaces himself. She paused for a moment in doubt and terror; then
suddenly it flashed across her recollection that there was another passage
which was little used except for the admission of the fair partakers of
the Egyptian's secret revels, and which wound along the basement of that
massive fabric towards a door which also communicated with the garden. By
good fortune it might be open. At that thought, she hastily retraced her
steps, descended the narrow stairs at the right, and was soon at the
entrance of the passage. Alas! the door at the entrance was closed and
secured. While she was yet assuring herself that it was indeed locked, she
heard behind her the voice of Calenus, and, a moment after, that of
Arbaces in low reply. She could not stay there; they were probably passing
to that very door. She sprang onward, and felt herself in unknown ground.
The air grew damp and chill; this reassured her. She thought she might be
among the cellars of the luxurious mansion, or, at least, in some rude
spot not likely to be visited by its haughty lord, when again her quick
ear caught steps and the sound of voices. On, on, she hurried, extending
her arms, which now frequently encountered pillars of thick and massive
form. With a tact, doubled in acuteness by her fear, she escaped these
perils, and continued her way, the air growing more and more damp as she
proceeded; yet, still, as she ever and anon paused for breath, she heard
the advancing steps and the indistinct murmur of voices. At length she was
abruptly stopped by a wall that seemed the limit of her path. Was there no
spot in which she could hide? No aperture? no cavity? There was none! She
stopped, and wrung her hands in despair; then again, nerved as the voices
neared upon her, she hurried on by the side of the wall; and coming
suddenly against one of the sharp buttresses that here and there jutted
boldly forth, she fell to the ground. Though much bruised, her senses did
not leave her; she uttered no cry; nay, she hailed the accident that had
led her to something like a screen; and creeping close up to the angle
formed by the buttress, so that on one side at least she was sheltered
from view, she gathered her slight and small form into its smallest
compass, and breathlessly awaited her fate.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Arbaces and the priest were taking their way to that secret
chamber whose stores were so vaunted by the Egyptian. They were in a vast
subterranean atrium, or hall; the low roof was supported by short, thick
pillars of an architecture far remote from the Grecian graces of that
luxuriant period. The single and pale lamp, which Arbaces bore, shed but
an imperfect ray over the bare and rugged walls, in which the huge stones,
without cement, were fitted curiously and uncouthly into each other. The
disturbed reptiles glared dully on the intruders, and then crept into the
shadow of the walls.</p>
<p>Calenus shivered as he looked around and breathed the damp, unwholesome
air.</p>
<p>'Yet,' said Arbaces, with a smile, perceiving his shudder, 'it is these
rude abodes that furnish the luxuries of the halls above. They are like
the laborers of the world—we despise their ruggedness, yet they feed
the very pride that disdains them.'</p>
<p>'And whither goes yon dim gallery to the left asked Calenus; 'in this
depth of gloom it seems without limit, as if winding into Hades.'</p>
<p>'On the contrary, it does but conduct to the upper rooms,' answered
Arbaces, carelessly: 'it is to the right that we steer to our bourn.'</p>
<p>The hall, like many in the more habitable regions of Pompeii, branched off
at the extremity into two wings or passages; the length of which, not
really great, was to the eye considerably exaggerated by the sudden gloom
against which the lamp so faintly struggled. To the right of these alae,
the two comrades now directed their steps.</p>
<p>'The gay Glaucus will be lodged to-morrow in apartments not much drier,
and far less spacious than this,' said Calenus, as they passed by the very
spot where, completely wrapped in the shadow of the broad, projecting
buttress, cowered the Thessalian.</p>
<p>'Ay, but then he will have dry room, and ample enough, in the arena on the
following day. And to think,' continued Arbaces, slowly, and very
deliberately—'to think that a word of thine could save him, and
consign Arbaces to his doom!'</p>
<p>'That word shall never be spoken,' said Calenus.</p>
<p>'Right, my Calenus! it never shall,' returned Arbaces, familiarly leaning
his arm on the priest's shoulder: 'and now, halt—we are at the
door.'</p>
<p>The light trembled against a small door deep set in the wall, and guarded
strongly by many plates and bindings of iron, that intersected the rough
and dark wood. From his girdle Arbaces now drew a small ring, holding
three or four short but strong keys. Oh, how beat the griping heart of
Calenus, as he heard the rusty wards growl, as if resenting the admission
to the treasures they guarded!</p>
<p>'Enter, my friend,' said Arbaces, 'while I hold the lamp on high, that
thou mayst glut thine eyes on the yellow heaps.'</p>
<p>The impatient Calenus did not wait to be twice invited; he hastened
towards the aperture.</p>
<p>Scarce had he crossed the threshold, when the strong hand of Arbaces
plunged him forwards.</p>
<p>'The word shall never be spoken!' said the Egyptian, with a loud exultant
laugh, and closed the door upon the priest.</p>
<p>Calenus had been precipitated down several steps, but not feeling at the
moment the pain of his fall, he sprung up again to the door, and beating
at it fiercely with his clenched fist, he cried aloud in what seemed more
a beast's howl than a human voice, so keen was his agony and despair: 'Oh,
release me, release me, and I will ask no gold!'</p>
<p>The words but imperfectly penetrated the massive door, and Arbaces again
laughed. Then, stamping his foot violently, rejoined, perhaps to give vent
to his long-stifled passions:</p>
<p>'All the gold of Dalmatia,' cried he, 'will not buy thee a crust of bread.
Starve, wretch! thy dying groans will never wake even the echo of these
vast halls; nor will the air ever reveal, as thou gnawest, in thy
desperate famine, thy flesh from thy bones, that so perishes the man who
threatened, and could have undone, Arbaces! Farewell!'</p>
<p>'Oh, pity—mercy! Inhuman villain; was it for this...'</p>
<p>The rest of the sentence was lost to the ear of Arbaces as he passed
backward along the dim hall. A toad, plump and bloated, lay unmoving
before his path; the rays of the lamp fell upon its unshaped hideousness
and red upward eye. Arbaces turned aside that he might not harm it.</p>
<p>'Thou art loathsome and obscene,' he muttered, 'but thou canst not injure
me; therefore thou art safe in my path.'</p>
<p>The cries of Calenus, dulled and choked by the barrier that confined him,
yet faintly reached the ear of the Egyptian. He paused and listened
intently.</p>
<p>'This is unfortunate,' thought he; 'for I cannot sail till that voice is
dumb for ever. My stores and treasures lie, not in yon dungeon it is true,
but in the opposite wing. My slaves, as they move them, must not hear his
voice. But what fear of that? In three days, if he still survive, his
accents, by my father's beard, must be weak enough, then!—no, they
could not pierce even through his tomb. By Isis, it is cold!—I long
for a deep draught of the spiced Falernian.'</p>
<p>With that the remorseless Egyptian drew his gown closer round him, and
resought the upper air.</p>
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