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<h2> CHAPTER VI. </h2>
<p>Hermon rose from his couch the next morning alert and ready for new
pleasures.</p>
<p>He had scarcely left the bath when envoys from the Ephebi and the younger
artists invited him to the festivities which they had arranged in his
honour. He joyously accepted, and also promised messengers from many of
Archias's friends, who wished to have the famous blind sculptor among
their guests, to be present at their banquets.</p>
<p>He still felt as if he were intoxicated, and found neither disposition nor
time for quiet reflection. His great strength, fettered as it were by his
loss of sight, now also began to stir. Fate itself withheld him from the
labour which he loved, yet in return it offered him a wealth of varying
pleasure, whose stimulating power he had learned the day before. He still
relished the draught from the beaker of homage proffered by his
fellow-citizens; nay, it seemed as if it could not lose its sweetness for
a long time.</p>
<p>He joined the ladies before noon, and his newly awakened feeling of joy
beamed upon them scarcely less radiantly than yesterday. Though Thyone
might wonder that a man pursued by Nemesis could allow himself to be borne
along so thoughtlessly by the stream of pleasure, Daphne certainly did not
grudge him the festal season which, when it had passed, could never return
to the blind artist. When it was over, he would yearn for the quiet
happiness at her side, which gazed at him like the calm eyes of the woman
he loved. With her he would cast anchor for the remainder of his life; but
first must come the period when he enjoyed the compensation now awarded to
him for such severe sufferings.</p>
<p>His heart was full of joy as he greeted Daphne and the Lady Thyone, whom
he found with her; but his warm description of the happy emotion which had
overpowered him at the abundant honours lavished upon him was interrupted
by Archias.</p>
<p>In his usual quick, brisk manner, he asked whether Hermon wished to occupy
the beautiful villa with the magnificent garden on Lake Mareotis,
inherited from Myrtilus, which could scarcely be reached in a vehicle from
the Brucheium in less than an hour, or the house situated in the centre of
the city, and Hermon promptly decided in favour of the latter.</p>
<p>His uncle, and probably the ladies also, had expected the contrary. Their
silence showed this plainly enough, and Hermon therefore added in a tone
of explanation that later the villa would perhaps suit his condition
better, but now he thought it would be a mistake to retire to the quiet
which half the city was conspiring to disturb. No one contradicted him,
and he left the women's apartment with a slight feeling of vexation,
which, however, was soon jested away by the gay friends who sought him.</p>
<p>When he removed to the city house the next day, he had not yet found time
for a serious talk with Daphne. His uncle, who had managed the estate of
Myrtilus, and wished to give Hermon an account of his inheritance, was
refused by the blind artist, who assured him that he knew Archias had
greatly increased rather than diminished his property, and thanked him
sincerely and warmly. In the convenient and spacious city house the young
sculptor very soon thought he had good reason to be satisfied with his
choice.</p>
<p>Most of his friends were busy artists, and what loss of time every visit
to the remote villa would have imposed upon them, what haste he himself
would have been obliged to use to reach home from the bath, where he often
spent many hours, from the wrestling school, from the meetings of
fashionable people in the Paneum gardens, and at sunset by the seashore on
the royal highway in the Brucheium. All these places were very far from
the villa. It would have required whole hours, too, to reach a famous
cookshop in the Canopus, at whose table he liked to assemble beloved
guests or revel with his friends. The theatre, the Odeum, most of the
public buildings, as well as the houses of his best friends, and
especially the beautiful Glycera, were easily reached from his city home,
and, among the temples, that of Demeter, which he often visited to pray,
offer sacrifices, and rejoice in the power of attraction which his statue
of the goddess exerted upon the multitude. It stood at the back of the
cella in a place accessible to the priesthood alone, visible only through
the open doors, upon a pedestal which his fellow-artists pronounced rather
too high. Yet his offer to have it made smaller was not accepted, because
had it been lower the devout supplicants who stood there to pray could not
have raised their eyes to it.</p>
<p>It was not only at the festivals of the dead that he went to the Greek
cemetery, where he had had a magnificent monument erected for his dead
mother. If his head ached after a nocturnal carouse, or the disagreeable
alarming chill stole over him which he had felt for the first time when he
falsely answered Thyone that he was still under the ban of Nemesis, he
went to the family monuments, supplied them with gifts, had sacrifices
offered to the souls of the beloved dead, and in this way sometimes
regained a portion of his lost peace of mind.</p>
<p>The banquet in the evening always dispelled whatever still oppressed him
on his return home from these visits, for, though months had elapsed since
his brilliant reception, he was still numbered, especially in artist
circles, with the most honoured men; he, the blind man, no longer stood in
any one's way; conversation gained energy and meaning through the vivacity
of his fervid intellect, which seemed actually deepened by his blindness
when questions concerning art were at issue, and from a modest
fellow-struggler he had become a patron bestowing orders.</p>
<p>The sculptor Soteles, who had followed his footsteps since the
apprenticeship in Rhodes, was intrusted with the erection of the monument
to Myrtilus in Tennis, and another highly gifted young sculptor, who
pursued his former course, with the execution of the one to his mother.</p>
<p>From a third he ordered a large new mixing vessel of chased silver for the
society of Ephebi, whose members had lauded him, at the magnificent
festival given in his honour, with genuine youthful fervour.</p>
<p>In the designs for these works his rich and bold gift of invention and the
power of his imagination proved their full value, and even his older
fellow-artists followed him with sincere admiration when, in spite of his
darkened eyes, he brought before them distinctly, and often even with the
charcoal or wax tablet in his hand, what he had in mind. What magnificent
things might not this man have created had he retained his sight, what
masterpieces might not have been expected! and his former works, which had
been condemned as unlovely, offensive, and exaggerated, were now loudly
admired; nay, the furious Maenads struggling on the ground and the Street
Boy Eating Figs, which were no longer his property, were sold at high
prices. No meeting of artists was complete without Hermon, and the great
self-possession which success and wealth bestowed, besides his remarkable
talent and the energy peculiar to him, soon aided him to great influence
among the members of his profession; nay, he would speedily have reached
the head of their leaders had not the passionate impetuosity of his
warlike nature led the more cautious to seek to restrain the powerful
enthusiast.</p>
<p>Archias's wealthy friends had no such apprehension. To them the lauded
blind artist was not much more than a costly dish certain to please their
guests; yet this, too, was no trifle in social circles which spent small
fortunes for a rare fish.</p>
<p>At the banquets of these princes of commerce he often met Daphne, still
more frequently the beautiful Glycera, whose husband, an old ship-owner of
regal wealth, was pleased to see famous men harnessed to his young wife's
chariot of victory. Hermon's heart had little to do with the flirtation to
which Glycera encouraged him at every new meeting, and the Thracian Althea
only served to train his intellect to sharp debates. But in this manner he
so admirably fulfilled her desire to attract attention that she more than
once pointed out to the Queen, her relative, the remarkably handsome blind
man whose acquaintance she had made on a night of mad revel during the
last Dionysia but one. Althea even thought it necessary to win him, in
whom she saw the future son-in-law of the wealthy Archias, for through the
graminateus Proclus the merchant had been persuaded to advance the King's
wife hundreds of talents, and Arsinoe cherished plans which threatened to
consume other large sums.</p>
<p>Thyrone watched Hermon's conduct with increasing indignation, while Daphne
perceived that these women had no more power to estrange her lover from
her than the bedizened beauties who were never absent from the artists'
festivals. How totally different was his intercourse with her! His love
and respect were hers alone; yet she saw in him a soul-sick man, and
persistently rejected Philotas, who wooed her with the same zeal as
before, and the other suitors who were striving to win the wealthy
heiress. She had confessed her feelings to her father, her best friend,
and persuaded him to have patience a little longer, and wait for the
change which he himself expected in his nephew.</p>
<p>This had not been difficult, for Archias loved Hermon, in spite of the
many anxieties he had caused him, as if he were his own son and, knowing
his daughter, he was aware that she could be happy with the man who
possessed her heart though he was deprived of sight.</p>
<p>The fame which Hermon had won by great genius and ability had gratified
him more than he expressed, and he could not contradict Daphne when she
asserted that, in spite of the aimless life of pleasure to which he
devoted himself, he had remained the kind-hearted, noble man he had always
been.</p>
<p>In fact, he used, unasked and secretly, a considerable portion of his
large revenues to relieve the distress of the poor and suffering. Archias
learned this as the steward of his nephew's property, and when to do good
he made new demands upon him, he gladly fulfilled them; only he constantly
admonished the blind man to think of his own severe sufferings and his
cure. Daphne did the same, and he willingly obeyed her advice; for, loudly
and recklessly as he pursued pleasure in social circles, he showed himself
tenderly devoted to her when he found her alone in her father's house.
Then, as in better days, he opened his heart to her naturally and modestly
and, though he refrained from vows of love, he showed her that he did not
cease to seek with her, and her alone, what his noisy pleasures denied.
Then he also found the old tone of affection, and of late he came more
frequently, and what he confided to no one else implied to her, at least
by hints.</p>
<p>Satiety and dissatisfaction were beginning to appear, and what he had
attempted to do for the cure of his eyes had hitherto been futile. The
remedies of the oculists to whom he had been directed by Daphne herself
had proved ineffectual. The great physician Erasistratus, from whom he
first sought help, had refrained, at her entreaty and her father's, from
refusing to aid him, but indignantly sent him away when he persisted in
the declaration that it would be impossible for him to remain for months
secluded from all society and subsist for weeks on scanty fare.</p>
<p>He would submit even to that, he assured Daphne, after she represented to
him what he was losing by such lack of resignation, when the time of rest
had come for which he longed, but from which many things still withheld
him. Yesterday the King had invited him to the palace for the first time,
and to decline such an honour was impossible.</p>
<p>In fact, he had long wished for this summons, because he had been informed
that no representative of the sovereign had been present at his reception.
Only his wife Arsinoe had honoured him by a wreath and congratulations.
This lack of interest on the part of the King had wounded him, and the
absence of an invitation from the royal connoisseur had cast a shadow into
the midst of many a mirthful hour. He had doubtless been aware what great
and important affairs of state were claiming the conscientious sovereign
just at this time, and how almost unbearable his restless, unloving spouse
was rendering his domestic life; yet Hermon thought Ptolemy might have
spared a short time for an event in the art life of the city, as his
Demeter had been called hundreds of times.</p>
<p>Now the long-desired command to appear before the sovereign had finally
reached him, and, in the secure belief that it would bring fresh
recognition and rare honours, he entered the royal palace.</p>
<p>Proclus, who neglected no opportunity of serving the nephew of the rich
man whose aid he constantly required for the Queen's finances, was his
guide, and described the decoration of the inner apartments of the royal
residence. Their unostentatious simplicity showed the refined taste of
their royal occupant. There was no lack of marble and other rare kinds of
stone, and the numerous bas-reliefs which covered the walls like the most
superb tapestry were worthy of special attention. In the oblong apartment
through which the blind man was guided these marble pictures represented
in magnificent work scenes from the campaigns in which Ptolemy, the King's
father, had participated as Alexander's general. Others showed Athene,
Apollo, the Muses, and Hermes, surrounding or hastening toward the throne
of the same monarch, and others again Greek poets and philosophers.
Magnificent coloured mosaic pictures covered the floor and many flat
spaces above door and windows, but gold and silver had been sparingly
used.</p>
<p>Masterpieces of painting and sculpture were the ornaments of the room. In
the antechamber, where Hermon waited for the King, Proclus mentioned one
of the finest statues of Alexander by Lysippus, and an exquisite Eros by
Praxiteles.</p>
<p>The period of waiting, however, became so long to the spoiled artist that
he anticipated the monarch's appearance with painful discomfort, and the
result of the few minutes which Ptolemy II devoted to his reception was
far behind the hopes he had fixed upon them.</p>
<p>In former days he had often seen the narrow-shouldered man of barely
medium height who, to secure his own safety, had had two brothers killed
and sent another into exile, but now ruled Egypt shrewdly and prudently,
and developed the prosperity of Alexandria with equal energy and
foresight.</p>
<p>Now, for the first time, Hermon heard him speak. He could not deny that
his voice was unusually pleasant in tone, yet it unmistakably issued from
the lips of a sufferer.</p>
<p>The brief questions with which he received the blind artist were kindly,
and as natural as though addressing an equal, and every remark made in
connection with Hermon's answers revealed a very quick and keen intellect.</p>
<p>He had seen the Demeter, and praised the conception of the goddess because
it corresponded with her nature. The sanctity which, as it were, pervaded
the figure of the divine woman pleased him, because it made the
supplicants in the temple feel that they were in the presence of a being
who was elevated far above them in superhuman majesty.</p>
<p>"True," he added, "your Demeter is by no means a powerful helper in time
of need. She is a goddess such as Epicurus imagines the immortals. Without
interfering with human destiny, she stands above it in sublime grandeur
and typical dignity. You belong, if I see correctly, to the Epicureans?"</p>
<p>"No," replied Hermon. "Like my lord and King, I, too, number myself among
the pupils of the wise Straton."</p>
<p>"Indeed?" asked Ptolemy in a drawling tone, at the same time casting a
glance of astonishment at the blind man's powerful figure and well-formed,
intellectual face. Then he went on eagerly: "I shall scarcely be wrong in
the inference that you, the creator of the Fig-eater, had experienced a
far-reaching mental change before your unfortunate loss of sight?"</p>
<p>"I had to struggle hard," replied Hermon, "but I probably owe the success
of the Demeter to the circumstance that I found a model whose mind and
nature correspond with those of the goddess to a rare degree."</p>
<p>The monarch shook his fair head, and protested in a tone of positive
superior knowledge: "As to the model, however well selected it may be, it
was not well chosen for this work, far less for you. I have watched your
battle against beauty in behalf of truth, and rejoiced, though I often saw
you and your little band of young disciples shoot beyond the mark. You
brought something new, whose foundation seemed to me sound, and on which
further additions might be erected. When the excrescences fell off, I
thought, this Hermon, his shadow Soteles, and the others who follow him
will perhaps open new paths to the declining art which is constantly going
back to former days. Our time will become the point of departure of a new
art. But for that very reason, let me confess it, I regret to see you fall
back from your bold advance. You now claim for your work that it cleaves
strictly to Nature, because the model is taken from life itself. It does
not become me to doubt this, yet the stamp of divinity which your Demeter
bears is found in no mortal woman. Understand me correctly! This is
certainly no departure from the truth, for the ideal often deserves this
lofty name better than anything the visible world offers to the eye; but
hitherto you have done honour to another truth. If I comprehend your art
aright, its essence is opposed to the addition of superhuman dignity and
beauty, with which you, or the model you used, strove to ennoble and deify
your Demeter. Admirably as you succeeded in doing so, it forces your work
out of the sphere of reality, whose boundary I never before saw you cross
by a single inch. Whether this occurred unconsciously to you in an hour of
mental ecstasy, or whether you felt that you still lacked the means to
represent the divine, and therefore returned to the older methods, I do
not venture to decide. But at the first examination of your work I was
conscious of one thing: It means for you a revolution, a rupture with your
former aspirations; and as—I willingly confess it—you had been
marvellously successful, it would have driven you, had your sight been
spared, out of your own course and into the arms of the ancients, perhaps
to your material profit, but scarcely to the advantage of art, which needs
a renewal of its vital energies."</p>
<p>"Let me assure you, my lord," Hermon protested, "that had I remained able
to continue to create, the success of the Demeter would never, never have
rendered me faithless to the conviction and method of creation which I
believed right; nay, before losing my sight, my whole soul was absorbed in
a new work which would have permitted me to remain wholly and completely
within the bounds of reality."</p>
<p>"The Arachne?" asked the King.</p>
<p>"Yes, my lord," cried Hermon ardently. "With its completion I expected to
render the greatest service, not only to myself, but to the cause of
truth."</p>
<p>Here Ptolemy interrupted with icy coldness: "Yet you were certainly wrong;
at least, if the Thracian Althea, who is the personification of falsehood,
had continued to be the model." Then he changed his tone, and with the
exclamation: "You are protected from the needs of life, unless your rich
uncle throws his property into the most insatiable of gulfs. May Straton's
philosophy help you better to sustain your courage in the darkness which
surrounds you than it has aided me to bear other trials!" he left the
room.</p>
<p>Thus ended the artist's conversation with the King, from which Hermon had
expected such great results and, deeply agitated, he ordered the driver of
his horses to take him to Daphne. She was the only person to whom he could
confide what disappointment this interview had caused him.</p>
<p>Others had previously reproached him, as the King had just done, with
having, in the Demeter, become faithless to his artistic past. How false
and foolish this was! Many a remark from the critics would have been
better suited to Myrtilus's work than to his. Yet his fear in Tennis had
not been true. Only Daphne's sweet face did not suit his more vigorous
method of emphasizing distinctions.</p>
<p>What a many-hued chameleon was the verdict upon works of plastic art! Once—on
his return to the capital—thousands had united in the same one, and
now how widely they differed again!</p>
<p>His earlier works, which were now lauded to the skies, had formerly
invited censure and vehement attacks.</p>
<p>What would he not have given for the possibility of seeing his admired
work once more!</p>
<p>As his way led past the Temple of Demeter, he stopped near it and was
guided to the sanctuary.</p>
<p>It was filled with worshippers, and when, in his resolute manner, he told
the curator and the officiating priest that he wished to enter the cella,
and asked for a ladder to feel the goddess, he was most positively
refused.</p>
<p>What he requested seemed a profanation of the sacred image, and it would
not do to disturb the devout throng. His desire to lower the pedestal
could not be gratified.</p>
<p>The high priest who came forward upheld his subordinates and, after a
short dispute, Hermon left the sanctuary with his wish unfulfilled.</p>
<p>Never had he so keenly lamented his lost vision as during the remainder of
the drive, and when Daphne received him he described with passionate
lamentation how terribly blindness embittered his life, and declared
himself ready to submit to the severest suffering to regain his sight.</p>
<p>She earnestly entreated him to apply to the great physician Erasistratus
again, and Hermon willingly consented. He had promised to attend a banquet
given that day by the wealthy ship-owner Archon. The feast lasted until
early morning, but toward noon Hermon again appeared in his uncle's house,
and met Daphne full of joyous confidence, as if he were completely
transformed.</p>
<p>While at Archon's table he had determined to place his cure in the hands
of higher powers. This was the will of Fate; for the guest whose cushion
he shared was Silanus, the host's son, and the first thing he learned from
him was the news that he was going the next day, with several friends, to
the oracle of Amon in the Libyan Desert, to ask it what should be done for
his mother, who had been for several years an invalid whom no physician
could help. He had heard from many quarters that the counsel of the god,
who had greeted Alexander the Great as his son, was infallible.</p>
<p>Then Hermon had been most urgently pressed by the young man to accompany
him. Every comfort would be provided. One of his father's fine ships would
convey them to Paraetonium, where tents, saddle horses, and guides for the
short land journey would be ready.</p>
<p>So he had promised to go with Silanus, and his decision was warmly
approved by his uncle, Daphne, and the gray-haired Pelusinian couple.
Perhaps the god would show the blind man the right path to recovery. He
would always be able to call the skill of the Alexandrian leeches to his
aid.</p>
<p>Soon after Hermon went on board Archon's splendidly equipped vessel and,
instead of a tiresome journey, began a new and riotous period of
festivity.</p>
<p>Lavish provision had been made for gay companions of both sexes, merry
entertainment by means of dancing, music, and song, well filled dishes and
mixing vessels, and life during the ride through the coast and desert
regions was not less jovial and luxurious than on the ship.</p>
<p>It seemed to the blind man like one vast banquet in the dark, interrupted
only by sleep.</p>
<p>The hope of counsel from the gods cheered the depressed mood which had
weighed upon him for several weeks, and rich young Silanus praised the
lucky fate which had enabled him to find a travelling companion whose
intellect and wit charmed him and the others, and often detained them over
the wine until late into the night.</p>
<p>Here, too, Hermon felt himself the most distinguished person, the
animating and attracting power, until it was said that the voyage was
over, and the company pitched their tents in the famous oasis near the
Temple of Amon.</p>
<p>The musicians and dancers, with due regard to propriety, had been left
behind in the seaport of Paraetonium. Yet the young travellers were
sufficiently gay while Silanus and Hermon waited for admission to the
place of the oracle. A week after their arrival it was opened to them, yet
the words repeated to them by the priest satisfied neither Hermon nor
Archon's son, for the oracle advised the latter to bring his mother
herself to the oasis by the land road if she earnestly desired recovery,
while to Hermon was shouted the ambiguous saying:</p>
<p>"Only night and darkness spring from the rank marsh of pleasure;<br/>
Morning and day rise brightly from the starving sand."<br/></p>
<p>Could Silanus's mother, who was unable to move, endure the desert journey?
And what was the meaning of the sand, from which morning and day—which
was probably the fresh enjoyment of the light—were to rise for
Hermon? The sentence of the oracle weighed heavily upon him, as well as on
Archon's son, who loved his mother, and the homeward journey became to the
blind man by no means a cheerful but rather a very troubled dream.</p>
<p>Thoughtful, very disturbed, dissatisfied with himself, and resolved to
turn his back upon the dreary life of pleasure which for so long a time
had allowed him no rest, and now disgusted him, he kept aloof from his
travelling companions, and rejoiced when, at Alexandria, he was led ashore
in the harbour of Eunostus.</p>
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