登陆注册
5570200000021

第21章

'No--I have thrown thee into the abyss of disbelief; I will lead thee now to the eminence of faith. Thou hast seen the false types: thou shalt learn now the realities they represent. There is no shadow, Apaecides, without its substance. Come to me this night. Your hand.'

Impressed, excited, bewildered by the language of the Egyptian, Apaecides gave him his hand, and master and pupil parted.

It was true that for Apaecides there was no retreat. He had taken the vows of celibacy: he had devoted himself to a life that at present seemed to possess all the austerities of fanaticism, without any of the consolations of belief It was natural that he should yet cling to a yearning desire to reconcile himself to an irrevocable career. The powerful and profound mind of the Egyptian yet claimed an empire over his young imagination; excited him with vague conjecture, and kept him alternately vibrating between hope and fear.

Meanwhile Arbaces pursued his slow and stately way to the house of Ione. As he entered the tablinum, he heard a voice from the porticoes of the peristyle beyond, which, musical as it was, sounded displeasingly on his ear--it was the voice of the young and beautiful Glaucus, and for the first time an involuntary thrill of jealousy shot through the breast of the Egyptian. On entering the peristyle, he found Glaucus seated by the side of Ione. The fountain in the odorous garden cast up its silver spray in the air, and kept a delicious coolness in the midst of the sultry noon. The handmaids, almost invariably attendant on Ione, who with her freedom of life preserved the most delicate modesty, sat at a little distance; by the feet of Glaucus lay the lyre on which he had been playing to Ione one of the Lesbian airs. The scene--the group before Arbaces, was stamped by that peculiar and refined ideality of poesy which we yet, not erroneously, imagine to be the distinction of the ancients--the marble columns, the vases of flowers, the statue, white and tranquil, closing every vista; and, above all, the two living forms, from which a sculptor might have caught either inspiration or despair!

Arbaces, pausing for a moment, gazed on the pair with a brow from which all the usual stern serenity had fled; he recovered himself by an effort, and slowly approached them, but with a step so soft and echoless, that even the attendants heard him not; much less Ione and her lover.

'And yet,' said Glaucus, 'it is only before we love that we imagine that our poets have truly described the passion; the instant the sun rises, all the stars that had shone in his absence vanish into air. The poets exist only in the night of the heart; they are nothing to us when we feel the full glory of the god.'

'A gentle and most glowing image, noble Glaucus.'

Both started, and recognized behind the seat of Ione the cold and sarcastic face of the Egyptian.

'You are a sudden guest,' said Glaucus, rising, and with a forced smile.

'So ought all to be who know they are welcome,' returned Arbaces, seating himself, and motioning to Glaucus to do the same.

'I am glad,' said Ione, 'to see you at length together; for you are suited to each other, and you are formed to be friends.'

'Give me back some fifteen years of life,' replied the Egyptian, 'before you can place me on an equality with Glaucus. Happy should I be to receive his friendship; but what can I give him in return? Can I make to him the same confidences that he would repose in me--of banquets and garlands--of Parthian steeds, and the chances of the dice? these pleasures suit his age, his nature, his career: they are not for mine.'

So saying, the artful Egyptian looked down and sighed; but from the corner of his eye he stole a glance towards Ione, to see how she received these insinuations of the pursuits of her visitor. Her countenance did not satisfy him. Glaucus, slightly coloring, hastened gaily to reply. Nor was he, perhaps, without the wish in his turn to disconcert and abash the Egyptian.

'You are right, wise Arbaces,' said he; 'we can esteem each other, but we cannot be friends. My banquets lack the secret salt which, according to rumor, gives such zest to your own. And, by Hercules! when I have reached your age, if I, like you, may think it wise to pursue the pleasures of manhood, like you, I shall be doubtless sarcastic on the gallantries of youth.'

The Egyptian raised his eyes to Glaucus with a sudden and piercing glance.

'I do not understand you,' said he, coldly; 'but it is the custom to consider that wit lies in obscurity.' He turned from Glaucus as he spoke, with a scarcely perceptible sneer of contempt, and after a moment's pause addressed himself to Ione.

'I have not, beautiful Ione,' said he, 'been fortunate enough to find you within doors the last two or three times that I have visited your vestibule.'

'The smoothness of the sea has tempted me much from home,' replied Ione, with a little embarrassment.

The embarrassment did not escape Arbaces; but without seeming to heed it, he replied with a smile: 'You know the old poet says, that "Women should keep within doors, and there converse."'

'The poet was a cynic,' said Glaucus, 'and hated women.'

'He spoke according to the customs of his country, and that country is your boasted Greece.'

'To different periods different customs. Had our forefathers known Ione, they had made a different law.'

'Did you learn these pretty gallantries at Rome?' said Arbaces, with ill-suppressed emotion.

'One certainly would not go for gallantries to Egypt,' retorted Glaucus, playing carelessly with his chain.

同类推荐
  • 炽盛光道场念诵仪

    炽盛光道场念诵仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 王郭两先生崇论

    王郭两先生崇论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 唐诗鉴赏大辞典(上)

    唐诗鉴赏大辞典(上)

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 华严经章

    华严经章

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 灵宝毕法

    灵宝毕法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 封神时光英豪3:时空

    封神时光英豪3:时空

    商朝的少年桑羊无欢,因为幼时的机缘巧合,在石窟中学得了超越商周时代数千年的旷世学问,也在这个绝对的乱世之中,卷入了西歧周族「伐纣」的惨烈战役,并得以和封神传说中的著名人物姜子牙、哪吒等一起与商朝的神人部队展开一场空前绝后的神族战役。
  • 云霄相守

    云霄相守

    “救命啊”一声呼叫划破了早上的宁静,也就是这声呼救从此把程霄和白云的命运紧紧联系在一起。程霄捂着被踢痛的腿,看着远去的这个莫名其妙的女人,帮她祈祷。祈求她不要再出现在自己眼前,否则她会死的很惨。
  • 青萍之末

    青萍之末

    文学是感受心灵创伤最深的艺术门类,而作为人,恐怕女人最能以其细腻的艺术感受去表白心灵创伤的痛苦。然而这种表述在不同的女人那里则有着不同的价值观念与方式方法。综观这几年来的女性小说创作,尤其是长篇小说的创作,我们碰到的是这样一个无可回避的事实:一方面,许多有才华的女性作家以其独语方式彻底解构了作为主流话语的男性文化视阈,举起了鲜明的女权主义旗帜;另一方面,她们处处与这个世界构成一种敌对关系,尤其是对性别的敌视更是成为她们行文的唯一视角。再就是消解一切文本的价值意义,使小说走向极端个人化的写作道路。
  • 贤妻止于礼

    贤妻止于礼

    前世因一时之差,死在对头赐下的一杯鸩酒中。重生归来的黎礼抛弃最后一丝仁慈之心,立誓改变前生之局,救安家于水深火热之中,本以为自己的重生就是最大的作弊器,可是无意之中,她发现了前世的丈夫和死对头同样重生回来……三人行,必有我仇人!死对头还是死对头,但是寡言少语坐怀不乱的丈夫,为何今世如此粘人?还能对她说冷笑话?!安逸臣:“团子。”“呵呵,你全家都是子!“嗯,娘子。”
  • 机战之进击的星球

    机战之进击的星球

    【热血机战\星际大战\精灵\非硬核科幻】公元3016年,太阳系第一次受到外星生物侵略威胁,太阳系第一次联合防御战争打响。真正的威胁并不仅仅如此,北极星、沃尔夫359星相继异常“熄灭”,留给人类的选择会是什么?——————这是一部星际战争幻想小说,把未来战争放到宇宙与外星人之间的战争,微科幻,希望支持!资源,永恒的导火线~
  • 法灵尊

    法灵尊

    落魄贵族子弟项少云经历重生之后再返回那一日被项家赶出家门之时,经历两世前世因果,使得项少云在这一世决定把上一世的东西弥补回来,然而这一世除了上世他发现的阴谋,却又充满了变数……
  • 辟支佛因缘论

    辟支佛因缘论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 生活中的博弈心理学

    生活中的博弈心理学

    弗洛伊德说:“任何人都无法保守他内心的秘密。即使他的嘴巴保持沉默,但他的指尖却喋喋不休,甚至他的每一个毛孔都会背叛他。”显然,任何一个人的内心都是有迹可循的,不管他掩盖得多么严实,只要用心观察,总能发现蛛丝马迹。如果在日常生活中,你还懂得运用一点心理学,那么你不仅能读懂他人内心,更能洞悉人性、利用人性,在人际交往、职场博弈、商务谈判、情绪控制等方面做到事半功倍。本书通过分享大量鲜活、真实案例,将日常行为与许多有趣的心理学知识有机结合,提炼出一系列独特、实用的心理操纵术,帮助读者活学活用心理学智慧。
  • 遇见你时,花满倾城

    遇见你时,花满倾城

    欧阳胜寒与慕容雪分别是花城市两大商业家族的独生子女,两人在一个花满倾城的日子里相遇。那时的他们,天真无邪,无忧无虑。后来,他们在同样的地方再次相遇、相爱,难舍难分。两个深爱的人,在即将携手步人美好的婚姻殿堂时,却遭遇了一场突如其来的车祸。遭遇家变的慕容雪失忆又失明,她还傻傻地沉浸在即将为人之妻的幸福中……当现实被抽丝剥茧般层层揭开,欧阳胜寒才知道,当年的车祸并非偶然,他与慕容雪的分离,是一场他人精心策划的阴谋……
  • 玄灵降

    玄灵降

    一颗流星划破天际,像是开启一道程序的密钥,当卫云辰来到这个人人皆可修道的世界时,他的命运就已经发生了变化,无数场生死博弈,无数个诡谲谜团,且看他如何破局。