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<h2> BOOK THE FIFTH </h2>
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<h2> Chapter I </h2>
<p>THE DREAM OF ARBACES. A VISITOR AND A WARNING TO THE EGYPTIAN. THE awful
night preceding the fierce joy of the amphitheatre rolled drearily away,
and greyly broke forth the dawn of THE LAST DAY OF POMPEII! The air was
uncommonly calm and sultry—a thin and dull mist gathered over the
valleys and hollows of the broad Campanian fields. But yet it was remarked
in surprise by the early fishermen, that, despite the exceeding stillness
of the atmosphere, the waves of the sea were agitated, and seemed, as it
were, to run disturbedly back from the shore; while along the blue and
stately Sarnus, whose ancient breadth of channel the traveler now vainly
seeks to discover, there crept a hoarse and sullen murmur, as it glided by
the laughing plains and the gaudy villas of the wealthy citizens. Clear
above the low mist rose the time-worn towers of the immemorial town, the
red-tiled roofs of the bright streets, the solemn columns of many temples,
and the statue-crowned portals of the Forum and the Arch of Triumph. Far
in the distance, the outline of the circling hills soared above the
vapors, and mingled with the changeful hues of the morning sky. The cloud
that had so long rested over the crest of Vesuvius had suddenly vanished,
and its rugged and haughty brow looked without a frown over the beautiful
scenes below.</p>
<p>Despite the earliness of the hour, the gates of the city were already
opened. Horsemen upon horsemen, vehicle after vehicle, poured rapidly in;
and the voices of numerous pedestrian groups, clad in holiday attire, rose
high in joyous and excited merriment; the streets were crowded with
citizens and strangers from the populous neighborhood of Pompeii; and
noisily—fast—confusedly swept the many streams of life towards
the fatal show.</p>
<p>Despite the vast size of the amphitheatre, seemingly so disproportioned to
the extent of the city, and formed to include nearly the whole population
of Pompeii itself, so great, on extraordinary occasions, was the concourse
of strangers from all parts of Campania, that the space before it was
usually crowded for several hours previous to the commencement of the
sports, by such persons as were not entitled by their rank to appointed
and special seats. And the intense curiosity which the trial and sentence
of two criminals so remarkable had occasioned, increased the crowd on this
day to an extent wholly unprecedented.</p>
<p>While the common people, with the lively vehemence of their Campanian
blood, were thus pushing, scrambling, hurrying on—yet, amidst all
their eagerness, preserving, as is now the wont with Italians in such
meetings, a wonderful order and unquarrelsome good humor, a strange
visitor to Arbaces was threading her way to his sequestered mansion. At
the sight of her quaint and primaeval garb—of her wild gait and
gestures—the passengers she encountered touched each other and
smiled; but as they caught a glimpse of her countenance, the mirth was
hushed at once, for the face was as the face of the dead; and, what with
the ghastly features and obsolete robes of the stranger, it seemed as if
one long entombed had risen once more amongst the living. In silence and
awe each group gave way as she passed along, and she soon gained the broad
porch of the Egyptian's palace.</p>
<p>The black porter, like the rest of the world, astir at an unusual hour,
started as he opened the door to her summons.</p>
<p>The sleep of the Egyptian had been usually profound during the night; but,
as the dawn approached, it was disturbed by strange and unquiet dreams,
which impressed him the more as they were colored by the peculiar
philosophy he embraced.</p>
<p>He thought that he was transported to the bowels of the earth, and that he
stood alone in a mighty cavern supported by enormous columns of rough and
primaeval rock, lost, as they ascended, in the vastness of a shadow
athwart whose eternal darkness no beam of day had ever glanced. And in the
space between these columns were huge wheels, that whirled round and round
unceasingly, and with a rushing and roaring noise. Only to the right and
left extremities of the cavern, the space between the pillars was left
bare, and the apertures stretched away into galleries—not wholly
dark, but dimly lighted by wandering and erratic fires, that, meteor-like,
now crept (as the snake creeps) along the rugged and dank soil; and now
leaped fiercely to and fro, darting across the vast gloom in wild gambols—suddenly
disappearing, and as suddenly bursting into tenfold brilliancy and power.
And while he gazed wonderingly upon the gallery to the left, thin,
mist-like, aerial shapes passed slowly up; and when they had gained the
hall they seemed to rise aloft, and to vanish, as the smoke vanishes, in
the measureless ascent.</p>
<p>He turned in fear towards the opposite extremity—and behold! there
came swiftly, from the gloom above, similar shadows, which swept hurriedly
along the gallery to the right, as if borne involuntarily adown the sides
of some invisible stream; and the faces of these spectres were more
distinct than those that emerged from the opposite passage; and on some
was joy, and on others sorrow—some were vivid with expectation and
hope, some unutterably dejected by awe and horror. And so they passed,
swift and constantly on, till the eyes of the gazer grew dizzy and blinded
with the whirl of an ever-varying succession of things impelled by a power
apparently not their own.</p>
<p>Arbaces turned away, and, in the recess of the hall, he saw the mighty
form of a giantess seated upon a pile of skulls, and her hands were busy
upon a pale and shadowy woof; and he saw that the woof communicated with
the numberless wheels, as if it guided the machinery of their movements.
He thought his feet, by some secret agency, were impelled towards the
female, and that he was borne onwards till he stood before her, face to
face. The countenance of the giantess was solemn and hushed, and
beautifully serene. It was as the face of some colossal sculpture of his
own ancestral sphinx. No passion—no human emotion, disturbed its
brooding and unwrinkled brow: there was neither sadness, nor joy, nor
memory, nor hope: it was free from all with which the wild human heart can
sympathize. The mystery of mysteries rested on its beauty—it awed,
but terrified not: it was the Incarnation of the sublime. And Arbaces felt
the voice leave his lips, without an impulse of his own; and the voice
asked:</p>
<p>'Who art thou, and what is thy task?'</p>
<p>'I am That which thou hast acknowledged,' answered, without desisting from
its work, the mighty phantom. 'My name is NATURE! These are the wheels of
the world, and my hand guides them for the life of all things.'</p>
<p>'And what,' said the voice of Arbaces, 'are these galleries, that
strangely and fitfully illumined, stretch on either hand into the abyss of
gloom?'</p>
<p>'That,' answered the giant-mother, 'which thou beholdest to the left, is
the gallery of the Unborn. The shadows that flit onward and upward into
the world, are the souls that pass from the long eternity of being to
their destined pilgrimage on earth. That which thou beholdest to thy
right, wherein the shadows descending from above sweep on, equally unknown
and dim, is the gallery of the Dead!'</p>
<p>'And wherefore, said the voice of Arbaces, 'yon wandering lights, that so
wildly break the darkness; but only break, not reveal?'</p>
<p>'Dark fool of the human sciences! dreamer of the stars, and would-be
decipherer of the heart and origin of things! those lights are but the
glimmerings of such knowledge as is vouchsafed to Nature to work her way,
to trace enough of the past and future to give providence to her designs.
Judge, then, puppet as thou art, what lights are reserved for thee!'</p>
<p>Arbaces felt himself tremble as he asked again, 'Wherefore am I here?'</p>
<p>'It is the forecast of thy soul—the prescience of thy rushing doom—the
shadow of thy fate lengthening into eternity as declines from earth.'</p>
<p>Ere he could answer, Arbaces felt a rushing WIND sweep down the cavern, as
the winds of a giant god. Borne aloft from the ground, and whirled on high
as a leaf in the storms of autumn, he beheld himself in the midst of the
Spectres of the Dead, and hurrying with them along the length of gloom. As
in vain and impotent despair he struggled against the impelling power, he
thought the WIND grew into something like a shape—a spectral outline
of the wings and talons of an eagle, with limbs floating far and
indistinctly along the air, and eyes that, alone clearly and vividly seen,
glared stonily and remorselessly on his own.</p>
<p>'What art thou?' again said the voice of the Egyptian.</p>
<p>'I am That which thou hast acknowledged'; and the spectre laughed aloud—'and
my name is NECESSITY.'</p>
<p>'To what dost thou bear me?'</p>
<p>'To the Unknown.'</p>
<p>'To happiness or to woe?'</p>
<p>'As thou hast sown, so shalt thou reap.'</p>
<p>'Dread thing, not so! If thou art the Ruler of Life, thine are my
misdeeds, not mine.'</p>
<p>'I am but the breath of God!' answered the mighty WIND.</p>
<p>'Then is my wisdom vain!' groaned the dreamer.</p>
<p>'The husbandman accuses not fate, when, having sown thistles, he reaps not
corn. Thou hast sown crime, accuse not fate if thou reapest not the
harvest of virtue.'</p>
<p>The scene suddenly changed. Arbaces was in a place of human bones; and lo!
in the midst of them was a skull, and the skull, still retaining its
fleshless hollows, assumed slowly, and in the mysterious confusion of a
dream, the face of Apaecides; and forth from the grinning jaws there crept
a small worm, and it crawled to the feet of Arbaces. He attempted to stamp
on it and crush it; but it became longer and larger with that attempt. It
swelled and bloated till it grew into a vast serpent: it coiled itself
round the limbs of Arbaces; it crunched his bones; it raised its glaring
eyes and poisonous jaws to his face. He writhed in vain; he withered—he
gasped—beneath the influence of the blighting breath—he felt
himself blasted into death. And then a voice came from the reptile, which
still bore the face of Apaecides and rang in his reeling ear:</p>
<p>'THY VICTIM IS THY JUDGE! THE WORM THOU WOULDST CRUSH BECOMES THE SERPENT
THAT DEVOURS THEE!'</p>
<p>With a shriek of wrath, and woe, and despairing resistance, Arbaces awoke—his
hair on end—his brow bathed in dew—his eyes glazed and staring—his
mighty frame quivering as an infant's, beneath the agony of that dream. He
awoke—he collected himself—he blessed the gods whom he
disbelieved, that he was in a dream—he turned his eyes from side to
side—he saw the dawning light break through his small but lofty
window—he was in the Precincts of Day—he rejoiced—he
smiled; his eyes fell, and opposite to him he beheld the ghastly features,
the lifeless eye, the livid lip—of the hag of Vesuvius!</p>
<p>'Ha!' he cried, placing his hands before his eyes, as to shut out the
grisly vision, 'do I dream still?—Am I with the dead?'</p>
<p>'Mighty Hermes—no! Thou art with one death-like, but not dead.
Recognize thy friend and slave.'</p>
<p>There was a long silence. Slowly the shudders that passed over the limbs
of the Egyptian chased each other away, faintlier and faintlier dying till
he was himself again.</p>
<p>'It was a dream, then,' said he. 'Well—let me dream no more, or the
day cannot compensate for the pangs of night. Woman, how camest thou here,
and wherefore?'</p>
<p>'I came to warn thee,' answered the sepulchral voice of the saga.</p>
<p>'Warn me! The dream lied not, then? Of what peril?'</p>
<p>'Listen to me. Some evil hangs over this fated city. Fly while it be time.
Thou knowest that I hold my home on that mountain beneath which old
tradition saith there yet burn the fires of the river of Phlegethon; and
in my cavern is a vast abyss, and in that abyss I have of late marked a
red and dull stream creep slowly, slowly on; and heard many and mighty
sounds hissing and roaring through the gloom. But last night, as I looked
thereon, behold the stream was no longer dull, but intensely and fiercely
luminous; and while I gazed, the beast that liveth with me, and was
cowering by my side, uttered a shrill howl, and fell down and died, and
the slaver and froth were round his lips. I crept back to my lair; but I
distinctly heard, all the night, the rock shake and tremble; and, though
the air was heavy and still, there were the hissing of pent winds, and the
grinding as of wheels, beneath the ground. So, when I rose this morning at
the very birth of dawn, I looked again down the abyss, and I saw vast
fragments of stone borne black and floatingly over the lurid stream; and
the stream itself was broader, fiercer, redder than the night before. Then
I went forth, and ascended to the summit of the rock: and in that summit
there appeared a sudden and vast hollow, which I had never perceived
before, from which curled a dim, faint smoke; and the vapor was deathly,
and I gasped, and sickened, and nearly died. I returned home. I took my
gold and my drugs, and left the habitation of many years; for I remembered
the dark Etruscan prophecy which saith, "When the mountain opens, the city
shall fall—when the smoke crowns the Hill of the Parched Fields,
there shall be woe and weeping in the hearths of the Children of the Sea."
Dread master, ere I leave these walls for some more distant dwelling, I
come to thee. As thou livest, know I in my heart that the earthquake that
sixteen years ago shook this city to its solid base, was but the
forerunner of more deadly doom. The walls of Pompeii are built above the
fields of the Dead, and the rivers of the sleepless Hell. Be warned and
fly!'</p>
<p>'Witch, I thank thee for thy care of one not ungrateful. On yon table
stands a cup of gold; take it, it is thine. I dreamt not that there lived
one, out of the priesthood of Isis, who would have saved Arbaces from
destruction. The signs thou hast seen in the bed of the extinct volcano,'
continued the Egyptian, musingly, 'surely tell of some coming danger to
the city; perhaps another earthquake—fiercer than the last. Be that
as it may, there is a new reason for my hastening from these walls. After
this day I will prepare my departure. Daughter of Etruria, whither wendest
thou?'</p>
<p>'I shall cross over to Herculaneum this day, and, wandering thence along
the coast, shall seek out a new home. I am friendless: my two companions,
the fox and the snake, are dead. Great Hermes, thou hast promised me
twenty additional years of life!'</p>
<p>'Aye,' said the Egyptian, 'I have promised thee. But, woman,' he added,
lifting himself upon his arm, and gazing curiously on her face, 'tell me,
I pray thee, wherefore thou wishest to live? What sweets dost thou
discover in existence?'</p>
<p>'It is not life that is sweet, but death that is awful,' replied the hag,
in a sharp, impressive tone, that struck forcibly upon the heart of the
vain star-seer. He winced at the truth of the reply; and no longer anxious
to retain so uninviting a companion, he said, 'Time wanes; I must prepare
for the solemn spectacle of this day. Sister, farewell! enjoy thyself as
thou canst over the ashes of life.'</p>
<p>The hag, who had placed the costly gift of Arbaces in the loose folds of
her vest, now rose to depart. When she had gained the door she paused,
turned back, and said, 'This may be the last time we meet on earth; but
whither flieth the flame when it leaves the ashes?—Wandering to and
fro, up and down, as an exhalation on the morass, the flame may be seen in
the marshes of the lake below; and the witch and the Magian, the pupil and
the master, the great one and the accursed one, may meet again. Farewell!'</p>
<p>'Out, croaker!' muttered Arbaces, as the door closed on the hag's tattered
robes; and, impatient of his own thoughts, not yet recovered from the past
dream, he hastily summoned his slaves.</p>
<p>It was the custom to attend the ceremonials of the amphitheatre in festive
robes, and Arbaces arrayed himself that day with more than usual care. His
tunic was of the most dazzling white: his many fibulae were formed from
the most precious stones: over his tunic flowed a loose eastern robe,
half-gown, half-mantle, glowing in the richest hues of the Tyrian dye; and
the sandals, that reached half way up the knee, were studded with gems,
and inlaid with gold. In the quackeries that belonged to his priestly
genius, Arbaces never neglected, on great occasions, the arts which dazzle
and impose upon the vulgar; and on this day, that was for ever to release
him, by the sacrifice of Glaucus, from the fear of a rival and the chance
of detection, he felt that he was arraying himself as for a triumph or a
nuptial feast.</p>
<p>It was customary for men of rank to be accompanied to the shows of the
amphitheatre by a procession of their slaves and freedmen; and the long
'family' of Arbaces were already arranged in order, to attend the litter
of their lord.</p>
<p>Only, to their great chagrin, the slaves in attendance on Ione, and the
worthy Sosia, as gaoler to Nydia, were condemned to remain at home.</p>
<p>'Callias,' said Arbaces, apart to his freedman, who was buckling on his
girdle, 'I am weary of Pompeii; I propose to quit it in three days, should
the wind favor. Thou knowest the vessel that lies in the harbor which
belonged to Narses, of Alexandria; I have purchased it of him. The day
after tomorrow we shall begin to remove my stores.'</p>
<p>'So soon! 'Tis well. Arbaces shall be obeyed—and his ward, Ione?'</p>
<p>'Accompanies me. Enough!—Is the morning fair?'</p>
<p>'Dim and oppressive; it will probably be intensely hot in the forenoon.'</p>
<p>'The poor gladiators, and more wretched criminals! Descend, and see that
the slaves are marshalled.'</p>
<p>Left alone, Arbaces stepped into his chamber of study, and thence upon the
portico without. He saw the dense masses of men pouring fast into the
amphitheatre, and heard the cry of the assistants, and the cracking of the
cordage, as they were straining aloft the huge awning under which the
citizens, molested by no discomforting ray, were to behold, at luxurious
ease, the agonies of their fellow creatures. Suddenly a wild strange sound
went forth, and as suddenly died away—it was the roar of the lion.
There was a silence in the distant crowd; but the silence was followed by
joyous laughter—they were making merry at the hungry impatience of
the royal beast.</p>
<p>'Brutes!' muttered the disdainful Arbaces are ye less homicides than I am?
I slay but in self-defence—ye make murder pastime.'</p>
<p>He turned with a restless and curious eye, towards Vesuvius. Beautifully
glowed the green vineyards round its breast, and tranquil as eternity lay
in the breathless skies the form of the mighty hill.</p>
<p>'We have time yet, if the earthquake be nursing,' thought Arbaces; and he
turned from the spot. He passed by the table which bore his mystic scrolls
and Chaldean calculations.</p>
<p>'August art!' he thought, 'I have not consulted thy decrees since I passed
the danger and the crisis they foretold. What matter?—I know that
henceforth all in my path is bright and smooth. Have not events already
proved it? Away, doubt—away, pity! Reflect O my heart—
reflect, for the future, but two images—Empire and Ione!'</p>
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