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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Marius the Epicurean, Volume One, by Walter Pater</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Marius the Epicurean,<br />
+Volume One</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Walter Horatio Pater</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 25, 2001 [eBook #4057]<br />
+[Most recently updated: September 1, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Alfred J. Drake. HTML version by Al Haines.</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARIUS THE EPICUREAN, VOLUME ONE ***</div>
+
+<h1>Marius the Epicurean</h1>
+
+<h3>HIS SENSATIONS AND IDEAS</h3>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by WALTER PATER</h2>
+
+<h4>VOLUME ONE</h4>
+
+<h4>London: 1910.<br />
+(The Library Edition.)</h4>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#part01"><b>PART THE FIRST</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">1. &ldquo;The Religion of Numa&rdquo;</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">2. White-Nights</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">3. Change of Air</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">4. The Tree of Knowledge</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">5. The Golden Book</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">6. Euphuism</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">7. A Pagan End</a><br /><br /></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#part02"><b>PART THE SECOND</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">8. Animula Vagula</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">9. New Cyrenaicism</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">10. On the Way</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">11. &ldquo;The Most Religious City in the World&rdquo;</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">12. &ldquo;The Divinity that Doth Hedge a King&rdquo;</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap13">13. The &ldquo;Mistress and Mother&rdquo; of Palaces</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap14">14. Manly Amusement</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<h3>NOTES BY THE E-TEXT EDITOR:</h3>
+
+<p>
+Notes: I have placed an asterisk immediately after each of Pater&rsquo;s
+footnotes and a + sign after my own notes, and have listed each of my notes at
+that chapter&rsquo;s end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Greek typeface: For this full-text edition, I have transliterated Pater&rsquo;s
+Greek quotations. If there is a need for the original Greek, it can be viewed
+at my site, http://www.ajdrake.com/etexts, a Victorianist archive that contains
+the complete works of Walter Pater and many other nineteenth-century texts,
+mostly in first editions.
+</p>
+
+<h2>MARIUS THE EPICUREAN,<br/>
+VOLUME ONE <br/>
+WALTER PATER</h2>
+
+<p class="center">
+&#935;&#949;&#953;&#956;&#949;&#961;&#953;&#957;&#8056;&#962;
+&#8004;&#957;&#949;&#953;&#961;&#959;&#962;, &#8005;&#964;&#949;
+&#956;&#8053;&#954;&#953;&#963;&#964;&#945;&#953; &#945;&#7985;
+&#957;&#8059;&#954;&#964;&#949;&#962;+
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
++&ldquo;A winter&rsquo;s dream, when nights are longest.&rdquo;<br/>
+Lucian, The Dream, Vol. 3.
+</p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>MARIUS THE EPICUREAN, VOLUME ONE</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="part01"></a>PART THE FIRST</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>CHAPTER I.<br/>
+&ldquo;THE RELIGION OF NUMA&rdquo;</h2>
+
+<p>
+As, in the triumph of Christianity, the old religion lingered latest in the
+country, and died out at last as but paganism&mdash;the religion of the
+villagers, before the advance of the Christian Church; so, in an earlier
+century, it was in places remote from town-life that the older and purer forms
+of paganism itself had survived the longest. While, in Rome, new religions had
+arisen with bewildering complexity around the dying old one, the earlier and
+simpler patriarchal religion, &ldquo;the religion of Numa,&rdquo; as people
+loved to fancy, lingered on with little change amid the pastoral life, out of
+the habits and sentiment of which so much of it had grown. Glimpses of such a
+survival we may catch below the merely artificial attitudes of Latin pastoral
+poetry; in Tibullus especially, who has preserved for us many poetic details of
+old Roman religious usage.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+At mihi contingat patrios celebrare Penates,<br/>
+Reddereque antiquo menstrua thura Lari:
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+&mdash;he prays, with unaffected seriousness. Something liturgical, with
+repetitions of a consecrated form of words, is traceable in one of his elegies,
+as part of the order of a birthday sacrifice. The hearth, from a spark of
+which, as one form of old legend related, the child Romulus had been
+miraculously born, was still indeed an altar; and the worthiest sacrifice to
+the gods the perfect physical sanity of the young men and women, which the
+scrupulous ways of that religion of the hearth had tended to maintain. A
+religion of usages and sentiment rather than of facts and belief, and attached
+to very definite things and places&mdash;the oak of immemorial age, the rock on
+the heath fashioned by weather as if by some dim human art, the shadowy grove
+of ilex, passing into which one exclaimed involuntarily, in consecrated phrase,
+Deity is in this Place! Numen Inest!&mdash;it was in natural harmony with the
+temper of a quiet people amid the spectacle of rural life, like that simpler
+faith between man and man, which Tibullus expressly connects with the period
+when, with an inexpensive worship, the old wooden gods had been still pressed
+for room in their homely little shrines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And about the time when the dying Antoninus Pius ordered his golden image of
+Fortune to be carried into the chamber of his successor (now about to test the
+truth of the old Platonic contention, that the world would at last find itself
+happy, could it detach some reluctant philosophic student from the more
+desirable life of celestial contemplation, and compel him to rule it), there
+was a boy living in an old country-house, half farm, half villa, who, for
+himself, recruited that body of antique traditions by a spontaneous force of
+religious veneration such as had originally called them into being. More than a
+century and a half had past since Tibullus had written; but the restoration of
+religious usages, and their retention where they still survived, was meantime
+come to be the fashion through the influence of imperial example; and what had
+been in the main a matter of family pride with his father, was sustained by a
+native instinct of devotion in the young Marius. A sense of conscious powers
+external to ourselves, pleased or displeased by the right or wrong conduct of
+every circumstance of daily life&mdash;that conscience, of which the old Roman
+religion was a formal, habitual recognition, was become in him a powerful
+current of feeling and observance. The old-fashioned, partly puritanic awe, the
+power of which Wordsworth noted and valued so highly in a northern peasantry,
+had its counterpart in the feeling of the Roman lad, as he passed the spot,
+&ldquo;touched of heaven,&rdquo; where the lightning had struck dead an aged
+labourer in the field: an upright stone, still with mouldering garlands about
+it, marked the place. He brought to that system of symbolic usages, and they in
+turn developed in him further, a great seriousness&mdash;an impressibility to
+the sacredness of time, of life and its events, and the circumstances of family
+fellowship; of such gifts to men as fire, water, the earth, from labour on
+which they live, really understood by him as gifts&mdash;a sense of religious
+responsibility in the reception of them. It was a religion for the most part of
+fear, of multitudinous scruples, of a year-long burden of forms; yet rarely (on
+clear summer mornings, for instance) the thought of those heavenly powers
+afforded a welcome channel for the almost stifling sense of health and delight
+in him, and relieved it as gratitude to the gods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The day of the &ldquo;little&rdquo; or private Ambarvalia was come, to be
+celebrated by a single family for the welfare of all belonging to it, as the
+great college of the Arval Brothers officiated at Rome in the interest of the
+whole state. At the appointed time all work ceases; the instruments of labour
+lie untouched, hung with wreaths of flowers, while masters and servants
+together go in solemn procession along the dry paths of vineyard and cornfield,
+conducting the victims whose blood is presently to be shed for the purification
+from all natural or supernatural taint of the lands they have &ldquo;gone
+about.&rdquo; The old Latin words of the liturgy, to be said as the procession
+moved on its way, though their precise meaning was long since become
+unintelligible, were recited from an ancient illuminated roll, kept in the
+painted chest in the hall, together with the family records. Early on that day
+the girls of the farm had been busy in the great portico, filling large baskets
+with flowers plucked short from branches of apple and cherry, then in spacious
+bloom, to strew before the quaint images of the gods&mdash;Ceres and Bacchus
+and the yet more mysterious Dea Dia&mdash;as they passed through the fields,
+carried in their little houses on the shoulders of white-clad youths, who were
+understood to proceed to this office in perfect temperance, as pure in soul and
+body as the air they breathed in the firm weather of that early summer-time.
+The clean lustral water and the full incense-box were carried after them. The
+altars were gay with garlands of wool and the more sumptuous sort of blossom
+and green herbs to be thrown into the sacrificial fire, fresh-gathered this
+morning from a particular plot in the old garden, set apart for the purpose.
+Just then the young leaves were almost as fragrant as flowers, and the scent of
+the bean-fields mingled pleasantly with the cloud of incense. But for the
+monotonous intonation of the liturgy by the priests, clad in their strange,
+stiff, antique vestments, and bearing ears of green corn upon their heads,
+secured by flowing bands of white, the procession moved in absolute stillness,
+all persons, even the children, abstaining from speech after the utterance of
+the pontifical formula, Favete linguis!&mdash;Silence! Propitious
+Silence!&mdash;lest any words save those proper to the occasion should hinder
+the religious efficacy of the rite.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the lad Marius, who, as the head of his house, took a leading part in the
+ceremonies of the day, there was a devout effort to complete this impressive
+outward silence by that inward tacitness of mind, esteemed so important by
+religious Romans in the performance of these sacred functions. To him the
+sustained stillness without seemed really but to be waiting upon that interior,
+mental condition of preparation or expectancy, for which he was just then
+intently striving. The persons about him, certainly, had never been challenged
+by those prayers and ceremonies to any ponderings on the divine nature: they
+conceived them rather to be the appointed means of setting such troublesome
+movements at rest. By them, &ldquo;the religion of Numa,&rdquo; so staid, ideal
+and comely, the object of so much jealous conservatism, though of direct
+service as lending sanction to a sort of high scrupulosity, especially in the
+chief points of domestic conduct, was mainly prized as being, through its
+hereditary character, something like a personal distinction&mdash;as
+contributing, among the other accessories of an ancient house, to the
+production of that aristocratic atmosphere which separated them from newly-made
+people. But in the young Marius, the very absence from those venerable usages
+of all definite history and dogmatic interpretation, had already awakened much
+speculative activity; and to-day, starting from the actual details of the
+divine service, some very lively surmises, though scarcely distinct enough to
+be thoughts, were moving backwards and forwards in his mind, as the stirring
+wind had done all day among the trees, and were like the passing of some
+mysterious influence over all the elements of his nature and experience. One
+thing only distracted him&mdash;a certain pity at the bottom of his heart, and
+almost on his lips, for the sacrificial victims and their looks of terror,
+rising almost to disgust at the central act of the sacrifice itself, a piece of
+everyday butcher&rsquo;s work, such as we decorously hide out of sight; though
+some then present certainly displayed a frank curiosity in the spectacle thus
+permitted them on a religious pretext. The old sculptors of the great
+procession on the frieze of the Parthenon at Athens, have delineated the placid
+heads of the victims led in it to sacrifice, with a perfect feeling for animals
+in forcible contrast with any indifference as to their sufferings. It was this
+contrast that distracted Marius now in the blessing of his fields, and
+qualified his devout absorption upon the scrupulous fulfilment of all the
+details of the ceremonial, as the procession approached the altars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The names of that great populace of &ldquo;little gods,&rdquo; dear to the
+Roman home, which the pontiffs had placed on the sacred list of the
+Indigitamenta, to be invoked, because they can help, on special occasions, were
+not forgotten in the long litany&mdash;Vatican who causes the infant to utter
+his first cry, Fabulinus who prompts his first word, Cuba who keeps him quiet
+in his cot, Domiduca especially, for whom Marius had through life a particular
+memory and devotion, the goddess who watches over one&rsquo;s safe coming home.
+The urns of the dead in the family chapel received their due service. They also
+were now become something divine, a goodly company of friendly and protecting
+spirits, encamped about the place of their former abode&mdash;above all others,
+the father, dead ten years before, of whom, remembering but a tall, grave
+figure above him in early childhood, Marius habitually thought as a genius a
+little cold and severe.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Candidus insuetum miratur limen Olympi,<br/>
+Sub pedibusque videt nubes et sidera.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Perhaps!&mdash;but certainly needs his altar here below, and garlands to-day
+upon his urn. But the dead genii were satisfied with little&mdash;a few
+violets, a cake dipped in wine, or a morsel of honeycomb. Daily, from the time
+when his childish footsteps were still uncertain, had Marius taken them their
+portion of the family meal, at the second course, amidst the silence of the
+company. They loved those who brought them their sustenance; but, deprived of
+these services, would be heard wandering through the house, crying sorrowfully
+in the stillness of the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And those simple gifts, like other objects as trivial&mdash;bread, oil, wine,
+milk&mdash;had regained for him, by their use in such religious service, that
+poetic and as it were moral significance, which surely belongs to all the means
+of daily life, could we but break through the veil of our familiarity with
+things by no means vulgar in themselves. A hymn followed, while the whole
+assembly stood with veiled faces. The fire rose up readily from the altars, in
+clean, bright flame&mdash;a favourable omen, making it a duty to render the
+mirth of the evening complete. Old wine was poured out freely for the servants
+at supper in the great kitchen, where they had worked in the imperfect light
+through the long evenings of winter. The young Marius himself took but a very
+sober part in the noisy feasting. A devout, regretful after-taste of what had
+been really beautiful in the ritual he had accomplished took him early away,
+that he might the better recall in reverie all the circumstances of the
+celebration of the day. As he sank into a sleep, pleasant with all the
+influences of long hours in the open air, he seemed still to be moving in
+procession through the fields, with a kind of pleasurable awe. That feeling was
+still upon him as he awoke amid the beating of violent rain on the shutters, in
+the first storm of the season. The thunder which startled him from sleep seemed
+to make the solitude of his chamber almost painfully complete, as if the
+nearness of those angry clouds shut him up in a close place alone in the world.
+Then he thought of the sort of protection which that day&rsquo;s ceremonies
+assured. To procure an agreement with the gods&mdash;Pacem deorum exposcere:
+that was the meaning of what they had all day been busy upon. In a faith,
+sincere but half-suspicious, he would fain have those Powers at least not
+against him. His own nearer household gods were all around his bed. The spell
+of his religion as a part of the very essence of home, its intimacy, its
+dignity and security, was forcible at that moment; only, it seemed to involve
+certain heavy demands upon him.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>CHAPTER II.<br/>
+WHITE-NIGHTS</h2>
+
+<p>
+To an instinctive seriousness, the material abode in which the childhood of
+Marius was passed had largely added. Nothing, you felt, as you first caught
+sight of that coy, retired place,&mdash;surely nothing could happen there,
+without its full accompaniment of thought or reverie. White-nights! so you
+might interpret its old Latin name.* &ldquo;The red rose came first,&rdquo;
+says a quaint German mystic, speaking of &ldquo;the mystery of so-called white
+things,&rdquo; as being &ldquo;ever an after-thought&mdash;the doubles, or
+seconds, of real things, and themselves but half-real, half-material&mdash;the
+white queen, the white witch, the white mass, which, as the black mass is a
+travesty of the true mass turned to evil by horrible old witches, is celebrated
+by young candidates for the priesthood with an unconsecrated host, by way of
+rehearsal.&rdquo; So, white-nights, I suppose, after something like the same
+analogy, should be nights not of quite blank forgetfulness, but passed in
+continuous dreaming, only half veiled by sleep. Certainly the place was, in
+such case, true to its fanciful name in this, that you might very well
+conceive, in face of it, that dreaming even in the daytime might come to much
+there.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+* <i>Ad Vigilias Albas</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young Marius represented an ancient family whose estate had come down to
+him much curtailed through the extravagance of a certain Marcellus two
+generations before, a favourite in his day of the fashionable world at Rome,
+where he had at least spent his substance with a correctness of taste Marius
+might seem to have inherited from him; as he was believed also to resemble him
+in a singularly pleasant smile, consistent however, in the younger face, with
+some degree of sombre expression when the mind within was but slightly moved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the means of life decreased, the farm had crept nearer and nearer to the
+dwelling-house, about which there was therefore a trace of workday negligence
+or homeliness, not without its picturesque charm for some, for the young master
+himself among them. The more observant passer-by would note, curious as to the
+inmates, a certain amount of dainty care amid that neglect, as if it came in
+part, perhaps, from a reluctance to disturb old associations. It was
+significant of the national character, that a sort of elegant gentleman
+farming, as we say, had been much affected by some of the most cultivated
+Romans. But it became something more than an elegant diversion, something of a
+serious business, with the household of Marius; and his actual interest in the
+cultivation of the earth and the care of flocks had brought him, at least,
+intimately near to those elementary conditions of life, a reverence for which,
+the great Roman poet, as he has shown by his own half-mystic pre-occupation
+with them, held to be the ground of primitive Roman religion, as of primitive
+morals. But then, farm-life in Italy, including the culture of the olive and
+the vine, has a grace of its own, and might well contribute to the production
+of an ideal dignity of character, like that of nature itself in this gifted
+region. Vulgarity seemed impossible. The place, though impoverished, was still
+deservedly dear, full of venerable memories, and with a living sweetness of its
+own for to-day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To hold by such ceremonial traditions had been a part of the struggling family
+pride of the lad&rsquo;s father, to which the example of the head of the state,
+old Antoninus Pius&mdash;an example to be still further enforced by his
+successor&mdash;had given a fresh though perhaps somewhat artificial
+popularity. It had been consistent with many another homely and old-fashioned
+trait in him, not to undervalue the charm of exclusiveness and immemorial
+authority, which membership in a local priestly college, hereditary in his
+house, conferred upon him. To set a real value on these things was but one
+element in that pious concern for his home and all that belonged to it, which,
+as Marius afterwards discovered, had been a strong motive with his father. The
+ancient hymn&mdash;Fana Novella!&mdash;was still sung by his people, as the new
+moon grew bright in the west, and even their wild custom of leaping through
+heaps of blazing straw on a certain night in summer was not discouraged. The
+privilege of augury itself, according to tradition, had at one time belonged to
+his race; and if you can imagine how, once in a way, an impressible boy might
+have an inkling, an inward mystic intimation, of the meaning and consequences
+of all that, what was implied in it becoming explicit for him, you conceive
+aright the mind of Marius, in whose house the auspices were still carefully
+consulted before every undertaking of moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The devotion of the father then had handed on loyally&mdash;and that is all
+many not unimportant persons ever find to do&mdash;a certain tradition of life,
+which came to mean much for the young Marius. The feeling with which he thought
+of his dead father was almost exclusively that of awe; though crossed at times
+by a not unpleasant sense of liberty, as he could but confess to himself,
+pondering, in the actual absence of so weighty and continual a restraint, upon
+the arbitrary power which Roman religion and Roman law gave to the parent over
+the son. On the part of his mother, on the other hand, entertaining the
+husband&rsquo;s memory, there was a sustained freshness of regret, together
+with the recognition, as Marius fancied, of some costly self-sacrifice to be
+credited to the dead. The life of the widow, languid and shadowy enough but for
+the poignancy of that regret, was like one long service to the departed soul;
+its many annual observances centering about the funeral urn&mdash;a tiny,
+delicately carved marble house, still white and fair, in the family-chapel,
+wreathed always with the richest flowers from the garden. To the dead, in fact,
+was conceded in such places a somewhat closer neighbourhood to the old homes
+they were thought still to protect, than is usual with us, or was usual in Rome
+itself&mdash;a closeness which the living welcomed, so diverse are the ways of
+our human sentiment, and in which the more wealthy, at least in the country,
+might indulge themselves. All this Marius followed with a devout interest,
+sincerely touched and awed by his mother&rsquo;s sorrow. After the deification
+of the emperors, we are told, it was considered impious so much as to use any
+coarse expression in the presence of their images. To Marius the whole of life
+seemed full of sacred presences, demanding of him a similar collectedness. The
+severe and archaic religion of the villa, as he conceived it, begot in him a
+sort of devout circumspection lest he should fall short at any point of the
+demand upon him of anything in which deity was concerned. He must satisfy with
+a kind of sacred equity, he must be very cautious lest he be found wanting to,
+the claims of others, in their joys and calamities&mdash;the happiness which
+deity sanctioned, or the blows in which it made itself felt. And from habit,
+this feeling of a responsibility towards the world of men and things, towards a
+claim for due sentiment concerning them on his side, came to be a part of his
+nature not to be put off. It kept him serious and dignified amid the Epicurean
+speculations which in after years much engrossed him, and when he had learned
+to think of all religions as indifferent, serious amid many fopperies and
+through many languid days, and made him anticipate all his life long as a thing
+towards which he must carefully train himself, some great occasion of
+self-devotion, such as really came, that should consecrate his life, and, it
+might be, its memory with others, as the early Christian looked forward to
+martyrdom at the end of his course, as a seal of worth upon it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The traveller, descending from the slopes of Luna, even as he got his first
+view of the Port-of-Venus, would pause by the way, to read the face, as it
+were, of so beautiful a dwelling-place, lying away from the white road, at the
+point where it began to decline somewhat steeply to the marsh-land below. The
+building of pale red and yellow marble, mellowed by age, which he saw beyond
+the gates, was indeed but the exquisite fragment of a once large and sumptuous
+villa. Two centuries of the play of the sea-wind were in the velvet of the
+mosses which lay along its inaccessible ledges and angles. Here and there the
+marble plates had slipped from their places, where the delicate weeds had
+forced their way. The graceful wildness which prevailed in garden and farm gave
+place to a singular nicety about the actual habitation, and a still more
+scrupulous sweetness and order reigned within. The old Roman architects seem to
+have well understood the decorative value of the floor&mdash;the real economy
+there was, in the production of rich interior effect, of a somewhat lavish
+expenditure upon the surface they trod on. The pavement of the hall had lost
+something of its evenness; but, though a little rough to the foot, polished and
+cared for like a piece of silver, looked, as mosaic-work is apt to do, its best
+in old age. Most noticeable among the ancestral masks, each in its little
+cedarn chest below the cornice, was that of the wasteful but elegant Marcellus,
+with the quaint resemblance in its yellow waxen features to Marius, just then
+so full of animation and country colour. A chamber, curved ingeniously into
+oval form, which he had added to the mansion, still contained his collection of
+works of art; above all, that head of Medusa, for which the villa was famous.
+The spoilers of one of the old Greek towns on the coast had flung away or lost
+the thing, as it seemed, in some rapid flight across the river below, from the
+sands of which it was drawn up in a fisherman&rsquo;s net, with the fine golden
+laminae still clinging here and there to the bronze. It was Marcellus also who
+had contrived the prospect-tower of two storeys with the white pigeon-house
+above, so characteristic of the place. The little glazed windows in the
+uppermost chamber framed each its dainty landscape&mdash;the pallid crags of
+Carrara, like wildly twisted snow-drifts above the purple heath; the distant
+harbour with its freight of white marble going to sea; the lighthouse temple of
+Venus Speciosa on its dark headland, amid the long-drawn curves of white
+breakers. Even on summer nights the air there had always a motion in it, and
+drove the scent of the new-mown hay along all the passages of the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something pensive, spell-bound, and but half real, something cloistral or
+monastic, as we should say, united to this exquisite order, made the whole
+place seem to Marius, as it were, sacellum, the peculiar sanctuary, of his
+mother, who, still in real widowhood, provided the deceased Marius the elder
+with that secondary sort of life which we can give to the dead, in our
+intensely realised memory of them&mdash;the &ldquo;subjective
+immortality,&rdquo; to use a modern phrase, for which many a Roman epitaph
+cries out plaintively to widow or sister or daughter, still in the land of the
+living. Certainly, if any such considerations regarding them do reach the
+shadowy people, he enjoyed that secondary existence, that warm place still
+left, in thought at least, beside the living, the desire for which is actually,
+in various forms, so great a motive with most of us. And Marius the younger,
+even thus early, came to think of women&rsquo;s tears, of women&rsquo;s hands
+to lay one to rest, in death as in the sleep of childhood, as a sort of natural
+want. The soft lines of the white hands and face, set among the many folds of
+the veil and stole of the Roman widow, busy upon her needlework, or with music
+sometimes, defined themselves for him as the typical expression of maternity.
+Helping her with her white and purple wools, and caring for her musical
+instruments, he won, as if from the handling of such things, an urbane and
+feminine refinement, qualifying duly his country-grown habits&mdash;the sense
+of a certain delicate blandness, which he relished, above all, on returning to
+the &ldquo;chapel&rdquo; of his mother, after long days of open-air exercise,
+in winter or stormy summer. For poetic souls in old Italy felt, hardly less
+strongly than the English, the pleasures of winter, of the hearth, with the
+very dead warm in its generous heat, keeping the young myrtles in flower,
+though the hail is beating hard without. One important principle, of fruit
+afterwards in his Roman life, that relish for the country fixed deeply in him;
+in the winters especially, when the sufferings of the animal world became so
+palpable even to the least observant. It fixed in him a sympathy for all
+creatures, for the almost human troubles and sicknesses of the flocks, for
+instance. It was a feeling which had in it something of religious veneration
+for life as such&mdash;for that mysterious essence which man is powerless to
+create in even the feeblest degree. One by one, at the desire of his mother,
+the lad broke down his cherished traps and springes for the hungry wild birds
+on the salt marsh. A white bird, she told him once, looking at him gravely, a
+bird which he must carry in his bosom across a crowded public place&mdash;his
+own soul was like that! Would it reach the hands of his good genius on the
+opposite side, unruffled and unsoiled? And as his mother became to him the very
+type of maternity in things, its unfailing pity and protectiveness, and
+maternity itself the central type of all love;&mdash;so, that beautiful
+dwelling-place lent the reality of concrete outline to a peculiar ideal of
+home, which throughout the rest of his life he seemed, amid many distractions
+of spirit, to be ever seeking to regain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And a certain vague fear of evil, constitutional in him, enhanced still further
+this sentiment of home as a place of tried security. His religion, that old
+Italian religion, in contrast with the really light-hearted religion of Greece,
+had its deep undercurrent of gloom, its sad, haunting imageries, not
+exclusively confined to the walls of Etruscan tombs. The function of the
+conscience, not always as the prompter of gratitude for benefits received, but
+oftenest as his accuser before those angry heavenly masters, had a large part
+in it; and the sense of some unexplored evil, ever dogging his footsteps, made
+him oddly suspicious of particular places and persons. Though his liking for
+animals was so strong, yet one fierce day in early summer, as he walked along a
+narrow road, he had seen the snakes breeding, and ever afterwards avoided that
+place and its ugly associations, for there was something in the incident which
+made food distasteful and his sleep uneasy for many days afterwards. The memory
+of it however had almost passed away, when at the corner of a street in Pisa,
+he came upon an African showman exhibiting a great serpent: once more, as the
+reptile writhed, the former painful impression revived: it was like a peep into
+the lower side of the real world, and again for many days took all sweetness
+from food and sleep. He wondered at himself indeed, trying to puzzle out the
+secret of that repugnance, having no particular dread of a snake&rsquo;s bite,
+like one of his companions, who had put his hand into the mouth of an old
+garden-god and roused there a sluggish viper. A kind of pity even mingled with
+his aversion, and he could hardly have killed or injured the animals, which
+seemed already to suffer by the very circumstance of their life, being what
+they were. It was something like a fear of the supernatural, or perhaps rather
+a moral feeling, for the face of a great serpent, with no grace of fur or
+feathers, so different from quadruped or bird, has a sort of humanity of aspect
+in its spotted and clouded nakedness. There was a humanity, dusty and sordid
+and as if far gone in corruption, in the sluggish coil, as it awoke suddenly
+into one metallic spring of pure enmity against him. Long afterwards, when it
+happened that at Rome he saw, a second time, a showman with his serpents, he
+remembered the night which had then followed, thinking, in Saint
+Augustine&rsquo;s vein, on the real greatness of those little troubles of
+children, of which older people make light; but with a sudden gratitude also,
+as he reflected how richly possessed his life had actually been by beautiful
+aspects and imageries, seeing how greatly what was repugnant to the eye
+disturbed his peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus the boyhood of Marius passed; on the whole, more given to contemplation
+than to action. Less prosperous in fortune than at an earlier day there had
+been reason to expect, and animating his solitude, as he read eagerly and
+intelligently, with the traditions of the past, already he lived much in the
+realm of the imagination, and became betimes, as he was to continue all through
+life, something of an idealist, constructing the world for himself in great
+measure from within, by the exercise of meditative power. A vein of subjective
+philosophy, with the individual for its standard of all things, there would be
+always in his intellectual scheme of the world and of conduct, with a certain
+incapacity wholly to accept other men&rsquo;s valuations. And the generation of
+this peculiar element in his temper he could trace up to the days when his life
+had been so like the reading of a romance to him. Had the Romans a word for
+unworldly? The beautiful word umbratilis perhaps comes nearest to it; and, with
+that precise sense, might describe the spirit in which he prepared himself for
+the sacerdotal function hereditary in his family&mdash;the sort of mystic
+enjoyment he had in the abstinence, the strenuous self-control and ascêsis,
+which such preparation involved. Like the young Ion in the beautiful opening of
+the play of Euripides, who every morning sweeps the temple floor with such a
+fund of cheerfulness in his service, he was apt to be happy in sacred places,
+with a susceptibility to their peculiar influences which he never outgrew; so
+that often in after-times, quite unexpectedly, this feeling would revive in him
+with undiminished freshness. That first, early, boyish ideal of priesthood, the
+sense of dedication, survived through all the distractions of the world, and
+when all thought of such vocation had finally passed from him, as a ministry,
+in spirit at least, towards a sort of hieratic beauty and order in the conduct
+of life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now what relieved in part this over-tension of soul was the lad&rsquo;s
+pleasure in the country and the open air; above all, the ramble to the coast,
+over the marsh with its dwarf roses and wild lavender, and delightful signs,
+one after another&mdash;the abandoned boat, the ruined flood-gates, the flock
+of wild birds&mdash;that one was approaching the sea; the long summer-day of
+idleness among its vague scents and sounds. And it was characteristic of him
+that he relished especially the grave, subdued, northern notes in all
+that&mdash;the charm of the French or English notes, as we might term
+them&mdash;in the luxuriant Italian landscape.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>CHAPTER III.<br/>
+CHANGE OF AIR</h2>
+
+<p class="intro">
+Dilexi decorem domus tuae.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That almost morbid religious idealism, and his healthful love of the country,
+were both alike developed by the circumstances of a journey, which happened
+about this time, when Marius was taken to a certain temple of Aesculapius,
+among the hills of Etruria, as was then usual in such cases, for the cure of
+some boyish sickness. The religion of Aesculapius, though borrowed from Greece,
+had been naturalised in Rome in the old republican times; but had reached under
+the Antonines the height of its popularity throughout the Roman world. That was
+an age of valetudinarians, in many instances of imaginary ones; but below its
+various crazes concerning health and disease, largely multiplied a few years
+after the time of which I am speaking by the miseries of a great pestilence,
+lay a valuable, because partly practicable, belief that all the maladies of the
+soul might be reached through the subtle gateways of the body.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Salus, salvation, for the Romans, had come to mean bodily sanity. The religion
+of the god of bodily health, Salvator, as they called him absolutely, had a
+chance just then of becoming the one religion; that mild and philanthropic son
+of Apollo surviving, or absorbing, all other pagan godhead. The apparatus of
+the medical art, the salutary mineral or herb, diet or abstinence, and all the
+varieties of the bath, came to have a kind of sacramental character, so deep
+was the feeling, in more serious minds, of a moral or spiritual profit in
+physical health, beyond the obvious bodily advantages one had of it; the body
+becoming truly, in that case, but a quiet handmaid of the soul. The priesthood
+or &ldquo;family&rdquo; of Aesculapius, a vast college, believed to be in
+possession of certain precious medical secrets, came nearest perhaps, of all
+the institutions of the pagan world, to the Christian priesthood; the temples
+of the god, rich in some instances with the accumulated thank-offerings of
+centuries of a tasteful devotion, being really also a kind of hospitals for the
+sick, administered in a full conviction of the religiousness, the refined and
+sacred happiness, of a life spent in the relieving of pain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Elements of a really experimental and progressive knowledge there were
+doubtless amid this devout enthusiasm, bent so faithfully on the reception of
+health as a direct gift from God; but for the most part his care was held to
+take effect through a machinery easily capable of misuse for purposes of
+religious fraud. Through dreams, above all, inspired by Aesculapius himself,
+information as to the cause and cure of a malady was supposed to come to the
+sufferer, in a belief based on the truth that dreams do sometimes, for those
+who watch them carefully, give many hints concerning the conditions of the
+body&mdash;those latent weak points at which disease or death may most easily
+break into it. In the time of Marcus Aurelius these medical dreams had become
+more than ever a fashionable caprice. Aristeides, the &ldquo;Orator,&rdquo; a
+man of undoubted intellectual power, has devoted six discourses to their
+interpretation; the really scientific Galen has recorded how beneficently they
+had intervened in his own case, at certain turning-points of life; and a belief
+in them was one of the frailties of the wise emperor himself. Partly for the
+sake of these dreams, living ministers of the god, more likely to come to one
+in his actual dwelling-place than elsewhere, it was almost a necessity that the
+patient should sleep one or more nights within the precincts of a temple
+consecrated to his service, during which time he must observe certain rules
+prescribed by the priests.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For this purpose, after devoutly saluting the Lares, as was customary before
+starting on a journey, Marius set forth one summer morning on his way to the
+famous temple which lay among the hills beyond the valley of the Arnus. It was
+his greatest adventure hitherto; and he had much pleasure in all its details,
+in spite of his feverishness. Starting early, under the guidance of an old
+serving-man who drove the mules, with his wife who took all that was needful
+for their refreshment on the way and for the offering at the shrine, they went,
+under the genial heat, halting now and then to pluck certain flowers seen for
+the first time on these high places, upwards, through a long day of sunshine,
+while cliffs and woods sank gradually below their path. The evening came as
+they passed along a steep white road with many windings among the pines, and it
+was night when they reached the temple, the lights of which shone out upon them
+pausing before the gates of the sacred enclosure, while Marius became alive to
+a singular purity in the air. A rippling of water about the place was the only
+thing audible, as they waited till two priestly figures, speaking Greek to one
+another, admitted them into a large, white-walled and clearly lighted
+guest-chamber, in which, while he partook of a simple but wholesomely prepared
+supper, Marius still seemed to feel pleasantly the height they had attained to
+among the hills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The agreeable sense of all this was spoiled by one thing only, his old fear of
+serpents; for it was under the form of a serpent that Aesculapius had come to
+Rome, and the last definite thought of his weary head before he fell asleep had
+been a dread either that the god might appear, as he was said sometimes to do,
+under this hideous aspect, or perhaps one of those great sallow-hued snakes
+themselves, kept in the sacred place, as he had also heard was usual.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And after an hour&rsquo;s feverish dreaming he awoke&mdash;with a cry, it would
+seem, for some one had entered the room bearing a light. The footsteps of the
+youthful figure which approached and sat by his bedside were certainly real.
+Ever afterwards, when the thought arose in his mind of some unhoped-for but
+entire relief from distress, like blue sky in a storm at sea, would come back
+the memory of that gracious countenance which, amid all the kindness of its
+gaze, had yet a certain air of predominance over him, so that he seemed now for
+the first time to have found the master of his spirit. It would have been sweet
+to be the servant of him who now sat beside him speaking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He caught a lesson from what was then said, still somewhat beyond his years, a
+lesson in the skilled cultivation of life, of experience, of opportunity, which
+seemed to be the aim of the young priest&rsquo;s recommendations. The sum of
+them, through various forgotten intervals of argument, as might really have
+happened in a dream, was the precept, repeated many times under slightly varied
+aspects, of a diligent promotion of the capacity of the eye, inasmuch as in the
+eye would lie for him the determining influence of life: he was of the number
+of those who, in the words of a poet who came long after, must be &ldquo;made
+perfect by the love of visible beauty.&rdquo; The discourse was conceived from
+the point of view of a theory Marius found afterwards in Plato&rsquo;s
+Phaedrus, which supposes men&rsquo;s spirits susceptible to certain influences,
+diffused, after the manner of streams or currents, by fair things or persons
+visibly present&mdash;green fields, for instance, or children&rsquo;s
+faces&mdash;into the air around them, acting, in the case of some peculiar
+natures, like potent material essences, and conforming the seer to themselves
+as with some cunning physical necessity. This theory,* in itself so fantastic,
+had however determined in a range of methodical suggestions, altogether quaint
+here and there from their circumstantial minuteness. And throughout, the
+possibility of some vision, as of a new city coming down &ldquo;like a bride
+out of heaven,&rdquo; a vision still indeed, it might seem, a long way off, but
+to be granted perhaps one day to the eyes thus trained, was presented as the
+motive of this laboriously practical direction.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+* [Transliteration:] Ê aporroê tou kallous. +Translation: &ldquo;Emanation
+from a thing of beauty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If thou wouldst have all about thee like the colours of some fresh
+picture, in a clear light,&rdquo; so the discourse recommenced after a pause,
+&ldquo;be temperate in thy religious notions, in love, in wine, in all things,
+and of a peaceful heart with thy fellows.&rdquo; To keep the eye clear by a
+sort of exquisite personal alacrity and cleanliness, extending even to his
+dwelling-place; to discriminate, ever more and more fastidiously, select form
+and colour in things from what was less select; to meditate much on beautiful
+visible objects, on objects, more especially, connected with the period of
+youth&mdash;on children at play in the morning, the trees in early spring, on
+young animals, on the fashions and amusements of young men; to keep ever by him
+if it were but a single choice flower, a graceful animal or sea-shell, as a
+token and representative of the whole kingdom of such things; to avoid
+jealously, in his way through the world, everything repugnant to sight; and,
+should any circumstance tempt him to a general converse in the range of such
+objects, to disentangle himself from that circumstance at any cost of place,
+money, or opportunity; such were in brief outline the duties recognised, the
+rights demanded, in this new formula of life. And it was delivered with
+conviction; as if the speaker verily saw into the recesses of the mental and
+physical being of the listener, while his own expression of perfect temperance
+had in it a fascinating power&mdash;the merely negative element of purity, the
+mere freedom from taint or flaw, in exercise as a positive influence. Long
+afterwards, when Marius read the Charmides&mdash;that other dialogue of Plato,
+into which he seems to have expressed the very genius of old Greek
+temperance&mdash;the image of this speaker came back vividly before him, to
+take the chief part in the conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was as a weighty sanction of such temperance, in almost visible symbolism
+(an outward imagery identifying itself with unseen moralities) that the memory
+of that night&rsquo;s double experience, the dream of the great sallow snake
+and the utterance of the young priest, always returned to him, and the contrast
+therein involved made him revolt with unfaltering instinct from the bare
+thought of an excess in sleep, or diet, or even in matters of taste, still more
+from any excess of a coarser kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he awoke again, still in the exceeding freshness he had felt on his
+arrival, and now in full sunlight, it was as if his sickness had really
+departed with the terror of the night: a confusion had passed from the brain, a
+painful dryness from his hands. Simply to be alive and there was a delight; and
+as he bathed in the fresh water set ready for his use, the air of the room
+about him seemed like pure gold, the very shadows rich with colour. Summoned at
+length by one of the white-robed brethren, he went out to walk in the temple
+garden. At a distance, on either side, his guide pointed out to him the Houses
+of Birth and Death, erected for the reception respectively of women about to
+become mothers, and of persons about to die; neither of those incidents being
+allowed to defile, as was thought, the actual precincts of the shrine. His
+visitor of the previous night he saw nowhere again. But among the official
+ministers of the place there was one, already marked as of great celebrity,
+whom Marius saw often in later days at Rome, the physician Galen, now about
+thirty years old. He was standing, the hood partly drawn over his face, beside
+the holy well, as Marius and his guide approached it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This famous well or conduit, primary cause of the temple and its surrounding
+institutions, was supplied by the water of a spring flowing directly out of the
+rocky foundations of the shrine. From the rim of its basin rose a circle of
+trim columns to support a cupola of singular lightness and grace, itself full
+of reflected light from the rippling surface, through which might be traced the
+wavy figure-work of the marble lining below as the stream of water rushed in.
+Legend told of a visit of Aesculapius to this place, earlier and happier than
+his first coming to Rome: an inscription around the cupola recorded it in
+letters of gold. &ldquo;Being come unto this place the son of God loved it
+exceedingly:&rdquo;&mdash;Huc profectus filius Dei maxime amavit hunc
+locum;&mdash;and it was then that that most intimately human of the gods had
+given men the well, with all its salutary properties. The element itself when
+received into the mouth, in consequence of its entire freedom from adhering
+organic matter, was more like a draught of wonderfully pure air than water; and
+after tasting, Marius was told many mysterious circumstances concerning it, by
+one and another of the bystanders:&mdash;he who drank often thereof might well
+think he had tasted of the Homeric lotus, so great became his desire to remain
+always on that spot: carried to other places, it was almost indefinitely
+conservative of its fine qualities: nay! a few drops of it would amend other
+water; and it flowed not only with unvarying abundance but with a volume so
+oddly rhythmical that the well stood always full to the brim, whatever quantity
+might be drawn from it, seeming to answer with strange alacrity of service to
+human needs, like a true creature and pupil of the philanthropic god. Certainly
+the little crowd around seemed to find singular refreshment in gazing on it.
+The whole place appeared sensibly influenced by the amiable and healthful
+spirit of the thing. All the objects of the country were there at their
+freshest. In the great park-like enclosure for the maintenance of the sacred
+animals offered by the convalescent, grass and trees were allowed to grow with
+a kind of graceful wildness; otherwise, all was wonderfully nice. And that
+freshness seemed to have something moral in its influence, as if it acted upon
+the body and the merely bodily powers of apprehension, through the
+intelligence; and to the end of his visit Marius saw no more serpents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A lad was just then drawing water for ritual uses, and Marius followed him as
+he returned from the well, more and more impressed by the religiousness of all
+he saw, on his way through a long cloister or corridor, the walls well-nigh
+hidden under votive inscriptions recording favours from the son of Apollo, and
+with a distant fragrance of incense in the air, explained when he turned aside
+through an open doorway into the temple itself. His heart bounded as the
+refined and dainty magnificence of the place came upon him suddenly, in the
+flood of early sunshine, with the ceremonial lights burning here and there, and
+withal a singular expression of sacred order, a surprising cleanliness and
+simplicity. Certain priests, men whose countenances bore a deep impression of
+cultivated mind, each with his little group of assistants, were gliding round
+silently to perform their morning salutation to the god, raising the closed
+thumb and finger of the right hand with a kiss in the air, as they came and
+went on their sacred business, bearing their frankincense and lustral water.
+Around the walls, at such a level that the worshippers might read, as in a
+book, the story of the god and his sons, the brotherhood of the Asclepiadae,
+ran a series of imageries, in low relief, their delicate light and shade being
+heightened, here and there, with gold. Fullest of inspired and sacred
+expression, as if in this place the chisel of the artist had indeed dealt not
+with marble but with the very breath of feeling and thought, was the scene in
+which the earliest generation of the sons of Aesculapius were transformed into
+healing dreams; for &ldquo;grown now too glorious to abide longer among men, by
+the aid of their sire they put away their mortal bodies, and came into another
+country, yet not indeed into Elysium nor into the Islands of the Blest. But
+being made like to the immortal gods, they began to pass about through the
+world, changed thus far from their first form that they appear eternally young,
+as many persons have seen them in many places&mdash;ministers and heralds of
+their father, passing to and fro over the earth, like gliding stars. Which
+thing is, indeed, the most wonderful concerning them!&rdquo; And in this scene,
+as throughout the series, with all its crowded personages, Marius noted on the
+carved faces the same peculiar union of unction, almost of hilarity, with a
+certain self-possession and reserve, which was conspicuous in the living
+ministrants around him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the central space, upon a pillar or pedestal, hung, ex voto, with the
+richest personal ornaments, stood the image of Aesculapius himself, surrounded
+by choice flowering plants. It presented the type, still with something of the
+severity of the earlier art of Greece about it, not of an aged and crafty
+physician, but of a youth, earnest and strong of aspect, carrying an ampulla or
+bottle in one hand, and in the other a traveller&rsquo;s staff, a pilgrim among
+his pilgrim worshippers; and one of the ministers explained to Marius this
+pilgrim guise.&mdash;One chief source of the master&rsquo;s knowledge of
+healing had been observation of the remedies resorted to by animals labouring
+under disease or pain&mdash;what leaf or berry the lizard or dormouse lay upon
+its wounded fellow; to which purpose for long years he had led the life of a
+wanderer, in wild places. The boy took his place as the last comer, a little
+way behind the group of worshippers who stood in front of the image. There,
+with uplifted face, the palms of his two hands raised and open before him, and
+taught by the priest, he said his collect of thanksgiving and prayer
+(Aristeides has recorded it at the end of his Asclepiadae) to the Inspired
+Dreams:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O ye children of Apollo! who in time past have stilled the waves of
+sorrow for many people, lighting up a lamp of safety before those who travel by
+sea and land, be pleased, in your great condescension, though ye be equal in
+glory with your elder brethren the Dioscuri, and your lot in immortal youth be
+as theirs, to accept this prayer, which in sleep and vision ye have inspired.
+Order it aright, I pray you, according to your loving-kindness to men. Preserve
+me from sickness; and endue my body with such a measure of health as may
+suffice it for the obeying of the spirit, that I may pass my days unhindered
+and in quietness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the last morning of his visit Marius entered the shrine again, and just
+before his departure the priest, who had been his special director during his
+stay at the place, lifting a cunningly contrived panel, which formed the back
+of one of the carved seats, bade him look through. What he saw was like the
+vision of a new world, by the opening of some unsuspected window in a familiar
+dwelling-place. He looked out upon a long-drawn valley of singularly cheerful
+aspect, hidden, by the peculiar conformation of the locality, from all points
+of observation but this. In a green meadow at the foot of the steep olive-clad
+rocks below, the novices were taking their exercise. The softly sloping sides
+of the vale lay alike in full sunlight; and its distant opening was closed by a
+beautifully formed mountain, from which the last wreaths of morning mist were
+rising under the heat. It might have seemed the very presentment of a land of
+hope, its hollows brimful of a shadow of blue flowers; and lo! on the one level
+space of the horizon, in a long dark line, were towers and a dome: and that was
+Pisa.&mdash;Or Rome, was it? asked Marius, ready to believe the utmost, in his
+excitement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this served, as he understood afterwards in retrospect, at once to
+strengthen and to purify a certain vein of character in him. Developing the
+ideal, pre-existent there, of a religious beauty, associated for the future
+with the exquisite splendour of the temple of Aesculapius, as it dawned upon
+him on that morning of his first visit&mdash;it developed that ideal in
+connexion with a vivid sense of the value of mental and bodily sanity. And this
+recognition of the beauty, even for the aesthetic sense, of mere bodily health,
+now acquired, operated afterwards as an influence morally salutary,
+counteracting the less desirable or hazardous tendencies of some phases of
+thought, through which he was to pass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came home brown with health to find the health of his mother failing; and
+about her death, which occurred not long afterwards, there was a circumstance
+which rested with him as the cruellest touch of all, in an event which for a
+time seemed to have taken the light out of the sunshine. She died away from
+home, but sent for him at the last, with a painful effort on her part, but to
+his great gratitude, pondering, as he always believed, that he might chance
+otherwise to look back all his life long upon a single fault with something
+like remorse, and find the burden a great one. For it happened that, through
+some sudden, incomprehensible petulance there had been an angry childish
+gesture, and a slighting word, at the very moment of her departure, actually
+for the last time. Remembering this he would ever afterwards pray to be saved
+from offences against his own affections; the thought of that marred parting
+having peculiar bitterness for one, who set so much store, both by principle
+and habit, on the sentiment of home.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>CHAPTER IV.<br/>
+THE TREE OF KNOWLEDGE</h2>
+
+<p class="poem">
+O mare! O littus! verum secretumque Mouseion,+<br/>
+quam multa invenitis, quam multa dictatis!<br/>
+Pliny&rsquo;s Letters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It would hardly have been possible to feel more seriously than did Marius in
+those grave years of his early life. But the death of his mother turned
+seriousness of feeling into a matter of the intelligence: it made him a
+questioner; and, by bringing into full evidence to him the force of his
+affections and the probable importance of their place in his future, developed
+in him generally the more human and earthly elements of character. A singularly
+virile consciousness of the realities of life pronounced itself in him; still
+however as in the main a poetic apprehension, though united already with
+something of personal ambition and the instinct of self-assertion. There were
+days when he could suspect, though it was a suspicion he was careful at first
+to put from him, that that early, much cherished religion of the villa might
+come to count with him as but one form of poetic beauty, or of the ideal, in
+things; as but one voice, in a world where there were many voices it would be a
+moral weakness not to listen to. And yet this voice, through its forcible
+pre-occupation of his childish conscience, still seemed to make a claim of a
+quite exclusive character, defining itself as essentially one of but two
+possible leaders of his spirit, the other proposing to him unlimited
+self-expansion in a world of various sunshine. The contrast was so pronounced
+as to make the easy, light-hearted, unsuspecting exercise of himself, among the
+temptations of the new phase of life which had now begun, seem nothing less
+than a rival religion, a rival religious service. The temptations, the various
+sunshine, were those of the old town of Pisa, where Marius was now a tall
+schoolboy. Pisa was a place lying just far enough from home to make his rare
+visits to it in childhood seem like adventures, such as had never failed to
+supply new and refreshing impulses to the imagination. The partly decayed
+pensive town, which still had its commerce by sea, and its fashion at the
+bathing-season, had lent, at one time the vivid memory of its fair streets of
+marble, at another the solemn outline of the dark hills of Luna on its
+background, at another the living glances of its men and women, to the thickly
+gathering crowd of impressions, out of which his notion of the world was then
+forming. And while he learned that the object, the experience, as it will be
+known to memory, is really from first to last the chief point for consideration
+in the conduct of life, these things were feeding also the idealism
+constitutional with him&mdash;his innate and habitual longing for a world
+altogether fairer than that he saw. The child could find his way in thought
+along those streets of the old town, expecting duly the shrines at their
+corners, and their recurrent intervals of garden-courts, or side-views of
+distant sea. The great temple of the place, as he could remember it, on turning
+back once for a last look from an angle of his homeward road, counting its tall
+gray columns between the blue of the bay and the blue fields of blossoming flax
+beyond; the harbour and its lights; the foreign ships lying there; the
+sailors&rsquo; chapel of Venus, and her gilded image, hung with votive gifts;
+the seamen themselves, their women and children, who had a whole peculiar
+colour-world of their own&mdash;the boy&rsquo;s superficial delight in the
+broad light and shadow of all that was mingled with the sense of power, of
+unknown distance, of the danger of storm and possible death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To this place, then, Marius came down now from White-nights, to live in the
+house of his guardian or tutor, that he might attend the school of a famous
+rhetorician, and learn, among other things, Greek. The school, one of many
+imitations of Plato&rsquo;s Academy in the old Athenian garden, lay in a quiet
+suburb of Pisa, and had its grove of cypresses, its porticoes, a house for the
+master, its chapel and images. For the memory of Marius in after-days, a clear
+morning sunlight seemed to lie perpetually on that severe picture in old gray
+and green. The lad went to this school daily betimes, in state at first, with a
+young slave to carry the books, and certainly with no reluctance, for the sight
+of his fellow-scholars, and their petulant activity, coming upon the sadder
+sentimental moods of his childhood, awoke at once that instinct of emulation
+which is but the other side of sympathy; and he was not aware, of course, how
+completely the difference of his previous training had made him, even in his
+most enthusiastic participation in the ways of that little world, still
+essentially but a spectator. While all their heart was in their limited boyish
+race, and its transitory prizes, he was already entertaining himself, very
+pleasurably meditative, with the tiny drama in action before him, as but the
+mimic, preliminary exercise for a larger contest, and already with an implicit
+epicureanism. Watching all the gallant effects of their small rivalries&mdash;a
+scene in the main of fresh delightful sunshine&mdash;he entered at once into
+the sensations of a rivalry beyond them, into the passion of men, and had
+already recognised a certain appetite for fame, for distinction among his
+fellows, as his dominant motive to be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fame he conceived for himself at this time was, as the reader will have
+anticipated, of the intellectual order, that of a poet perhaps. And as, in that
+gray monastic tranquillity of the villa, inward voices from the reality of
+unseen things had come abundantly; so here, with the sounds and aspects of the
+shore, and amid the urbanities, the graceful follies, of a bathing-place, it
+was the reality, the tyrannous reality, of things visible that was borne in
+upon him. The real world around&mdash;a present humanity not less comely, it
+might seem, than that of the old heroic days&mdash;endowing everything it
+touched upon, however remotely, down to its little passing tricks of fashion
+even, with a kind of fleeting beauty, exercised over him just then a great
+fascination.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That sense had come upon him in all its power one exceptionally fine summer,
+the summer when, at a somewhat earlier age than was usual, he had formally
+assumed the dress of manhood, going into the Forum for that purpose,
+accompanied by his friends in festal array. At night, after the full measure of
+those cloudless days, he would feel well-nigh wearied out, as if with a long
+succession of pictures and music. As he wandered through the gay streets or on
+the sea-shore, the real world seemed indeed boundless, and himself almost
+absolutely free in it, with a boundless appetite for experience, for adventure,
+whether physical or of the spirit. His entire rearing hitherto had lent itself
+to an imaginative exaltation of the past; but now the spectacle actually
+afforded to his untired and freely open senses, suggested the reflection that
+the present had, it might be, really advanced beyond the past, and he was ready
+to boast in the very fact that it was modern. If, in a voluntary archaism, the
+polite world of that day went back to a choicer generation, as it fancied, for
+the purpose of a fastidious self-correction, in matters of art, of literature,
+and even, as we have seen, of religion, at least it improved, by a shade or two
+of more scrupulous finish, on the old pattern; and the new era, like the
+Neu-zeit of the German enthusiasts at the beginning of our own century, might
+perhaps be discerned, awaiting one just a single step onward&mdash;the
+perfected new manner, in the consummation of time, alike as regards the things
+of the imagination and the actual conduct of life. Only, while the pursuit of
+an ideal like this demanded entire liberty of heart and brain, that old, staid,
+conservative religion of his childhood certainly had its being in a world of
+somewhat narrow restrictions. But then, the one was absolutely real, with
+nothing less than the reality of seeing and hearing&mdash;the other, how vague,
+shadowy, problematical! Could its so limited probabilities be worth taking into
+account in any practical question as to the rejecting or receiving of what was
+indeed so real, and, on the face of it, so desirable?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, dating from the time of his first coming to school, a great friendship had
+grown up for him, in that life of so few attachments&mdash;the pure and
+disinterested friendship of schoolmates. He had seen Flavian for the first time
+the day on which he had come to Pisa, at the moment when his mind was full of
+wistful thoughts regarding the new life to begin for him to-morrow, and he
+gazed curiously at the crowd of bustling scholars as they came from their
+classes. There was something in Flavian a shade disdainful, as he stood
+isolated from the others for a moment, explained in part by his stature and the
+distinction of the low, broad forehead; though there was pleasantness also for
+the newcomer in the roving blue eyes which seemed somehow to take a fuller hold
+upon things around than is usual with boys. Marius knew that those proud
+glances made kindly note of him for a moment, and felt something like
+friendship at first sight. There was a tone of reserve or gravity there, amid
+perfectly disciplined health, which, to his fancy, seemed to carry forward the
+expression of the austere sky and the clear song of the blackbird on that gray
+March evening. Flavian indeed was a creature who changed much with the changes
+of the passing light and shade about him, and was brilliant enough under the
+early sunshine in school next morning. Of all that little world of more or less
+gifted youth, surely the centre was this lad of servile birth. Prince of the
+school, he had gained an easy dominion over the old Greek master by the
+fascination of his parts, and over his fellow-scholars by the figure he bore.
+He wore already the manly dress; and standing there in class, as he displayed
+his wonderful quickness in reckoning, or his taste in declaiming Homer, he was
+like a carved figure in motion, thought Marius, but with that indescribable
+gleam upon it which the words of Homer actually suggested, as perceptible on
+the visible forms of the gods&mdash;hoia theous epenênothen aien eontas.+
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A story hung by him, a story which his comrades acutely connected with his
+habitual air of somewhat peevish pride. Two points were held to be clear amid
+its general vagueness&mdash;a rich stranger paid his schooling, and he was
+himself very poor, though there was an attractive piquancy in the poverty of
+Flavian which in a scholar of another figure might have been despised. Over
+Marius too his dominion was entire. Three years older than he, Flavian was
+appointed to help the younger boy in his studies, and Marius thus became
+virtually his servant in many things, taking his humours with a sort of
+grateful pride in being noticed at all, and, thinking over all this afterwards,
+found that the fascination experienced by him had been a sentimental one,
+dependent on the concession to himself of an intimacy, a certain tolerance of
+his company, granted to none beside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was in the earliest days; and then, as their intimacy grew, the genius,
+the intellectual power of Flavian began its sway over him. The brilliant youth
+who loved dress, and dainty food, and flowers, and seemed to have a natural
+alliance with, and claim upon, everything else which was physically select and
+bright, cultivated also that foppery of words, of choice diction which was
+common among the élite spirits of that day; and Marius, early an expert and
+elegant penman, transcribed his verses (the euphuism of which, amid a genuine
+original power, was then so delightful to him) in beautiful ink, receiving in
+return the profit of Flavian&rsquo;s really great intellectual capacities,
+developed and accomplished under the ambitious desire to make his way
+effectively in life. Among other things he introduced him to the writings of a
+sprightly wit, then very busy with the pen, one Lucian&mdash;writings seeming
+to overflow with that intellectual light turned upon dim places, which, at
+least in seasons of mental fair weather, can make people laugh where they have
+been wont, perhaps, to pray. And, surely, the sunlight which filled those
+well-remembered early mornings in school, had had more than the usual measure
+of gold in it! Marius, at least, would lie awake before the time, thinking with
+delight of the long coming hours of hard work in the presence of Flavian, as
+other boys dream of a holiday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was almost by accident at last, so wayward and capricious was he, that
+reserve gave way, and Flavian told the story of his father&mdash;a freedman,
+presented late in life, and almost against his will, with the liberty so fondly
+desired in youth, but on condition of the sacrifice of part of his
+peculium&mdash;the slave&rsquo;s diminutive hoard&mdash;amassed by many a
+self-denial, in an existence necessarily hard. The rich man, interested in the
+promise of the fair child born on his estate, had sent him to school. The
+meanness and dejection, nevertheless, of that unoccupied old age defined the
+leading memory of Flavian, revived sometimes, after this first confidence, with
+a burst of angry tears amid the sunshine. But nature had had her economy in
+nursing the strength of that one natural affection; for, save his half-selfish
+care for Marius, it was the single, really generous part, the one piety, in the
+lad&rsquo;s character. In him Marius saw the spirit of unbelief, achieved as if
+at one step. The much-admired freedman&rsquo;s son, as with the privilege of a
+natural aristocracy, believed only in himself, in the brilliant, and mainly
+sensuous gifts, he had, or meant to acquire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then, he had certainly yielded himself, though still with untouched health,
+in a world where manhood comes early, to the seductions of that luxurious town,
+and Marius wondered sometimes, in the freer revelation of himself by
+conversation, at the extent of his early corruption. How often, afterwards, did
+evil things present themselves in malign association with the memory of that
+beautiful head, and with a kind of borrowed sanction and charm in its natural
+grace! To Marius, at a later time, he counted for as it were an epitome of the
+whole pagan world, the depth of its corruption, and its perfection of form. And
+still, in his mobility, his animation, in his eager capacity for various life,
+he was so real an object, after that visionary idealism of the villa. His
+voice, his glance, were like the breaking in of the solid world upon one, amid
+the flimsy fictions of a dream. A shadow, handling all things as shadows, had
+felt a sudden real and poignant heat in them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime, under his guidance, Marius was learning quickly and abundantly,
+because with a good will. There was that in the actual effectiveness of his
+figure which stimulated the younger lad to make the most of opportunity; and he
+had experience already that education largely increased one&rsquo;s capacity
+for enjoyment. He was acquiring what it is the chief function of all higher
+education to impart, the art, namely, of so relieving the ideal or poetic
+traits, the elements of distinction, in our everyday life&mdash;of so
+exclusively living in them&mdash;that the unadorned remainder of it, the mere
+drift or débris of our days, comes to be as though it were not. And the
+consciousness of this aim came with the reading of one particular book, then
+fresh in the world, with which he fell in about this time&mdash;a book which
+awakened the poetic or romantic capacity as perhaps some other book might have
+done, but was peculiar in giving it a direction emphatically sensuous. It made
+him, in that visionary reception of every-day life, the seer, more especially,
+of a revelation in colour and form. If our modern education, in its better
+efforts, really conveys to any of us that kind of idealising power, it does so
+(though dealing mainly, as its professed instruments, with the most select and
+ideal remains of ancient literature) oftenest by truant reading; and thus it
+happened also, long ago, with Marius and his friend.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+NOTES
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+43. +Transliteration: Mouseion. The word means &ldquo;seat of the muses.&rdquo;
+Translation: &ldquo;O sea! O shore! my own Helicon, / How many things have you
+uncovered to me, how many things suggested!&rdquo; Pliny, Letters, Book I, ix,
+to Minicius Fundanus.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+50. +Transliteration: hoia theous epenênothen aien eontas. Translation:
+&ldquo;such as the gods are endowed with.&rdquo; Homer, Odyssey, 8.365.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>CHAPTER V.<br/>
+THE GOLDEN BOOK</h2>
+
+<p>
+The two lads were lounging together over a book, half-buried in a heap of dry
+corn, in an old granary&mdash;the quiet corner to which they had climbed out of
+the way of their noisier companions on one of their blandest holiday
+afternoons. They looked round: the western sun smote through the broad chinks
+of the shutters. How like a picture! and it was precisely the scene described
+in what they were reading, with just that added poetic touch in the book which
+made it delightful and select, and, in the actual place, the ray of sunlight
+transforming the rough grain among the cool brown shadows into heaps of gold.
+What they were intent on was, indeed, the book of books, the
+&ldquo;golden&rdquo; book of that day, a gift to Flavian, as was shown by the
+purple writing on the handsome yellow wrapper, following the title
+Flaviane!&mdash;it said,
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Flaviane! lege Felicitur!<br/>
+Flaviane! Vivas! Fioreas!<br/>
+Flaviane! Vivas! Gaudeas!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was perfumed with oil of sandal-wood, and decorated with carved and gilt
+ivory bosses at the ends of the roller.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the inside was something not less dainty and fine, full of the archaisms
+and curious felicities in which that generation delighted, quaint terms and
+images picked fresh from the early dramatists, the lifelike phrases of some
+lost poet preserved by an old grammarian, racy morsels of the vernacular and
+studied prettinesses:&mdash;all alike, mere playthings for the genuine power
+and natural eloquence of the erudite artist, unsuppressed by his erudition,
+which, however, made some people angry, chiefly less well &ldquo;got-up&rdquo;
+people, and especially those who were untidy from indolence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No! it was certainly not that old-fashioned, unconscious ease of the early
+literature, which could never come again; which, after all, had had more in
+common with the &ldquo;infinite patience&rdquo; of Apuleius than with the
+hack-work readiness of his detractors, who might so well have been
+&ldquo;self-conscious&rdquo; of going slip-shod. And at least his success was
+unmistakable as to the precise literary effect he had intended, including a
+certain tincture of &ldquo;neology&rdquo; in expression&mdash;nonnihil interdum
+elocutione novella parum signatum&mdash;in the language of Cornelius Fronto,
+the contemporary prince of rhetoricians. What words he had found for conveying,
+with a single touch, the sense of textures, colours, incidents! &ldquo;Like
+jewellers&rsquo; work! Like a myrrhine vase!&rdquo;&mdash;admirers said of his
+writing. &ldquo;The golden fibre in the hair, the gold thread-work in the gown
+marked her as the mistress&rdquo;&mdash;aurum in comis et in tunicis, ibi
+inflexum hic intextum, matronam profecto confitebatur&mdash;he writes, with his
+&ldquo;curious felicity,&rdquo; of one of his heroines. Aurum intextum: gold
+fibre:&mdash;well! there was something of that kind in his own work. And then,
+in an age when people, from the emperor Aurelius downwards, prided themselves
+unwisely on writing in Greek, he had written for Latin people in their own
+tongue; though still, in truth, with all the care of a learned language. Not
+less happily inventive were the incidents recorded&mdash;story within
+story&mdash;stories with the sudden, unlooked-for changes of dreams. He had his
+humorous touches also. And what went to the ordinary boyish taste, in those
+somewhat peculiar readers, what would have charmed boys more purely boyish, was
+the adventure:&mdash;the bear loose in the house at night, the wolves storming
+the farms in winter, the exploits of the robbers, their charming caves, the
+delightful thrill one had at the question&mdash;&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you know
+that these roads are infested by robbers?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The scene of the romance was laid in Thessaly, the original land of witchcraft,
+and took one up and down its mountains, and into its old weird towns, haunts of
+magic and incantation, where all the more genuine appliances of the black art,
+left behind her by Medea when she fled through that country, were still in use.
+In the city of Hypata, indeed, nothing seemed to be its true
+self&mdash;&ldquo;You might think that through the murmuring of some cadaverous
+spell, all things had been changed into forms not their own; that there was
+humanity in the hardness of the stones you stumbled on; that the birds you
+heard singing were feathered men; that the trees around the walls drew their
+leaves from a like source. The statues seemed about to move, the walls to
+speak, the dumb cattle to break out in prophecy; nay! the very sky and the
+sunbeams, as if they might suddenly cry out.&rdquo; Witches are there who can
+draw down the moon, or at least the lunar virus&mdash;that white fluid she
+sheds, to be found, so rarely, &ldquo;on high, heathy places: which is a
+poison. A touch of it will drive men mad.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in one very remote village lives the sorceress Pamphile, who turns her
+neighbours into various animals. What true humour in the scene where, after
+mounting the rickety stairs, Lucius, peeping curiously through a chink in the
+door, is a spectator of the transformation of the old witch herself into a
+bird, that she may take flight to the object of her affections&mdash;into an
+owl! &ldquo;First she stripped off every rag she had. Then opening a certain
+chest she took from it many small boxes, and removing the lid of one of them,
+rubbed herself over for a long time, from head to foot, with an ointment it
+contained, and after much low muttering to her lamp, began to jerk at last and
+shake her limbs. And as her limbs moved to and fro, out burst the soft
+feathers: stout wings came forth to view: the nose grew hard and hooked: her
+nails were crooked into claws; and Pamphile was an owl. She uttered a queasy
+screech; and, leaping little by little from the ground, making trial of
+herself, fled presently, on full wing, out of doors.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By clumsy imitation of this process, Lucius, the hero of the romance,
+transforms himself, not as he had intended into a showy winged creature, but
+into the animal which has given name to the book; for throughout it there runs
+a vein of racy, homely satire on the love of magic then prevalent, curiosity
+concerning which had led Lucius to meddle with the old woman&rsquo;s
+appliances. &ldquo;Be you my Venus,&rdquo; he says to the pretty maid-servant
+who has introduced him to the view of Pamphile, &ldquo;and let me stand by you
+a winged Cupid!&rdquo; and, freely applying the magic ointment, sees himself
+transformed, &ldquo;not into a bird, but into an ass!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well! the proper remedy for his distress is a supper of roses, could such be
+found, and many are his quaintly picturesque attempts to come by them at that
+adverse season; as he contrives to do at last, when, the grotesque procession
+of Isis passing by with a bear and other strange animals in its train, the ass
+following along with the rest suddenly crunches the chaplet of roses carried in
+the High-priest&rsquo;s hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime, however, he must wait for the spring, with more than the outside of
+an ass; &ldquo;though I was not so much a fool, nor so truly an ass,&rdquo; he
+tells us, when he happens to be left alone with a daintily spread table,
+&ldquo;as to neglect this most delicious fare, and feed upon coarse hay.&rdquo;
+For, in truth, all through the book, there is an unmistakably real feeling for
+asses, with bold touches like Swift&rsquo;s, and a genuine animal breadth.
+Lucius was the original ass, who peeping slily from the window of his
+hiding-place forgot all about the big shade he cast just above him, and gave
+occasion to the joke or proverb about &ldquo;the peeping ass and his
+shadow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the marvellous, delight in which is one of the really serious elements in
+most boys, passed at times, those young readers still feeling its fascination,
+into what French writers call the macabre&mdash;that species of almost insane
+pre-occupation with the materialities of our mouldering flesh, that luxury of
+disgust in gazing on corruption, which was connected, in this writer at least,
+with not a little obvious coarseness. It was a strange notion of the gross lust
+of the actual world, that Marius took from some of these episodes. &ldquo;I am
+told,&rdquo; they read, &ldquo;that when foreigners are interred, the old
+witches are in the habit of out-racing the funeral procession, to ravage the
+corpse&rdquo;&mdash;in order to obtain certain cuttings and remnants from it,
+with which to injure the living&mdash;&ldquo;especially if the witch has
+happened to cast her eye upon some goodly young man.&rdquo; And the scene of
+the night-watching of a dead body lest the witches should come to tear off the
+flesh with their teeth, is worthy of Théophile Gautier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But set as one of the episodes in the main narrative, a true gem amid its
+mockeries, its coarse though genuine humanity, its burlesque horrors, came the
+tale of Cupid and Psyche, full of brilliant, life-like situations, speciosa
+locis, and abounding in lovely visible imagery (one seemed to see and handle
+the golden hair, the fresh flowers, the precious works of art in it!) yet full
+also of a gentle idealism, so that you might take it, if you chose, for an
+allegory. With a concentration of all his finer literary gifts, Apuleius had
+gathered into it the floating star-matter of many a delightful old
+story.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+The Story of Cupid and Psyche.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a certain city lived a king and queen who had three daughters exceeding
+fair. But the beauty of the elder sisters, though pleasant to behold, yet
+passed not the measure of human praise, while such was the loveliness of the
+youngest that men&rsquo;s speech was too poor to commend it worthily and could
+express it not at all. Many of the citizens and of strangers, whom the fame of
+this excellent vision had gathered thither, confounded by that matchless
+beauty, could but kiss the finger-tips of their right hands at sight of her, as
+in adoration to the goddess Venus herself. And soon a rumour passed through the
+country that she whom the blue deep had borne, forbearing her divine dignity,
+was even then moving among men, or that by some fresh germination from the
+stars, not the sea now, but the earth, had put forth a new Venus, endued with
+the flower of virginity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This belief, with the fame of the maiden&rsquo;s loveliness, went daily further
+into distant lands, so that many people were drawn together to behold that
+glorious model of the age. Men sailed no longer to Paphos, to Cnidus or
+Cythera, to the presence of the goddess Venus: her sacred rites were neglected,
+her images stood uncrowned, the cold ashes were left to disfigure her forsaken
+altars. It was to a maiden that men&rsquo;s prayers were offered, to a human
+countenance they looked, in propitiating so great a godhead: when the girl went
+forth in the morning they strewed flowers on her way, and the victims proper to
+that unseen goddess were presented as she passed along. This conveyance of
+divine worship to a mortal kindled meantime the anger of the true Venus.
+&ldquo;Lo! now, the ancient parent of nature,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;the
+fountain of all elements! Behold me, Venus, benign mother of the world, sharing
+my honours with a mortal maiden, while my name, built up in heaven, is profaned
+by the mean things of earth! Shall a perishable woman bear my image about with
+her? In vain did the shepherd of Ida prefer me! Yet shall she have little joy,
+whosoever she be, of her usurped and unlawful loveliness!&rdquo; Thereupon she
+called to her that winged, bold boy, of evil ways, who wanders armed by night
+through men&rsquo;s houses, spoiling their marriages; and stirring yet more by
+her speech his inborn wantonness, she led him to the city, and showed him
+Psyche as she walked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I pray thee,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;give thy mother a full revenge. Let
+this maid become the slave of an unworthy love.&rdquo; Then, embracing him
+closely, she departed to the shore and took her throne upon the crest of the
+wave. And lo! at her unuttered will, her ocean-servants are in waiting: the
+daughters of Nereus are there singing their song, and Portunus, and Salacia,
+and the tiny charioteer of the dolphin, with a host of Tritons leaping through
+the billows. And one blows softly through his sounding sea-shell, another
+spreads a silken web against the sun, a third presents the mirror to the eyes
+of his mistress, while the others swim side by side below, drawing her chariot.
+Such was the escort of Venus as she went upon the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Psyche meantime, aware of her loveliness, had no fruit thereof. All people
+regarded and admired, but none sought her in marriage. It was but as on the
+finished work of the craftsman that they gazed upon that divine likeness. Her
+sisters, less fair than she, were happily wedded. She, even as a widow, sitting
+at home, wept over her desolation, hating in her heart the beauty in which all
+men were pleased.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the king, supposing the gods were angry, inquired of the oracle of Apollo,
+and Apollo answered him thus: &ldquo;Let the damsel be placed on the top of a
+certain mountain, adorned as for the bed of marriage and of death. Look not for
+a son-in-law of mortal birth; but for that evil serpent-thing, by reason of
+whom even the gods tremble and the shadows of Styx are afraid.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the king returned home and made known the oracle to his wife. For many days
+she lamented, but at last the fulfilment of the divine precept is urgent upon
+her, and the company make ready to conduct the maiden to her deadly bridal. And
+now the nuptial torch gathers dark smoke and ashes: the pleasant sound of the
+pipe is changed into a cry: the marriage hymn concludes in a sorrowful wailing:
+below her yellow wedding-veil the bride shook away her tears; insomuch that the
+whole city was afflicted together at the ill-luck of the stricken house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the mandate of the god impelled the hapless Psyche to her fate, and, these
+solemnities being ended, the funeral of the living soul goes forth, all the
+people following. Psyche, bitterly weeping, assists not at her marriage but at
+her own obsequies, and while the parents hesitate to accomplish a thing so
+unholy the daughter cries to them: &ldquo;Wherefore torment your luckless age
+by long weeping? This was the prize of my extraordinary beauty! When all people
+celebrated us with divine honours, and in one voice named the New Venus, it was
+then ye should have wept for me as one dead. Now at last I understand that that
+one name of Venus has been my ruin. Lead me and set me upon the appointed
+place. I am in haste to submit to that well-omened marriage, to behold that
+goodly spouse. Why delay the coming of him who was born for the destruction of
+the whole world?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was silent, and with firm step went on the way. And they proceeded to the
+appointed place on a steep mountain, and left there the maiden alone, and took
+their way homewards dejectedly. The wretched parents, in their close-shut
+house, yielded themselves to perpetual night; while to Psyche, fearful and
+trembling and weeping sore upon the mountain-top, comes the gentle Zephyrus. He
+lifts her mildly, and, with vesture afloat on either side, bears her by his own
+soft breathing over the windings of the hills, and sets her lightly among the
+flowers in the bosom of a valley below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Psyche, in those delicate grassy places, lying sweetly on her dewy bed, rested
+from the agitation of her soul and arose in peace. And lo! a grove of mighty
+trees, with a fount of water, clear as glass, in the midst; and hard by the
+water, a dwelling-place, built not by human hands but by some divine cunning.
+One recognised, even at the entering, the delightful hostelry of a god. Golden
+pillars sustained the roof, arched most curiously in cedar-wood and ivory. The
+walls were hidden under wrought silver:&mdash;all tame and woodland creatures
+leaping forward to the visitor&rsquo;s gaze. Wonderful indeed was the
+craftsman, divine or half-divine, who by the subtlety of his art had breathed
+so wild a soul into the silver! The very pavement was distinct with pictures in
+goodly stones. In the glow of its precious metal the house is its own daylight,
+having no need of the sun. Well might it seem a place fashioned for the
+conversation of gods with men!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Psyche, drawn forward by the delight of it, came near, and, her courage
+growing, stood within the doorway. One by one, she admired the beautiful things
+she saw; and, most wonderful of all! no lock, no chain, nor living guardian
+protected that great treasure house. But as she gazed there came a
+voice&mdash;a voice, as it were unclothed of bodily
+vesture&mdash;&ldquo;Mistress!&rdquo; it said, &ldquo;all these things are
+thine. Lie down, and relieve thy weariness, and rise again for the bath when
+thou wilt. We thy servants, whose voice thou hearest, will be beforehand with
+our service, and a royal feast shall be ready.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Psyche understood that some divine care was providing, and, refreshed with
+sleep and the Bath, sat down to the feast. Still she saw no one: only she heard
+words falling here and there, and had voices alone to serve her. And the feast
+being ended, one entered the chamber and sang to her unseen, while another
+struck the chords of a harp, invisible with him who played on it. Afterwards
+the sound of a company singing together came to her, but still so that none
+were present to sight; yet it appeared that a great multitude of singers was
+there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the hour of evening inviting her, she climbed into the bed; and as the
+night was far advanced, behold a sound of a certain clemency approaches her.
+Then, fearing for her maidenhood in so great solitude, she trembled, and more
+than any evil she knew dreaded that she knew not. And now the husband, that
+unknown husband, drew near, and ascended the couch, and made her his wife; and
+lo! before the rise of dawn he had departed hastily. And the attendant voices
+ministered to the needs of the newly married. And so it happened with her for a
+long season. And as nature has willed, this new thing, by continual use, became
+a delight to her: the sound of the voice grew to be her solace in that
+condition of loneliness and uncertainty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One night the bridegroom spoke thus to his beloved, &ldquo;O Psyche, most
+pleasant bride! Fortune is grown stern with us, and threatens thee with mortal
+peril. Thy sisters, troubled at the report of thy death and seeking some trace
+of thee, will come to the mountain&rsquo;s top. But if by chance their cries
+reach thee, answer not, neither look forth at all, lest thou bring sorrow upon
+me and destruction upon thyself.&rdquo; Then Psyche promised that she would do
+according to his will. But the bridegroom was fled away again with the night.
+And all that day she spent in tears, repeating that she was now dead indeed,
+shut up in that golden prison, powerless to console her sisters sorrowing after
+her, or to see their faces; and so went to rest weeping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And after a while came the bridegroom again, and lay down beside her, and
+embracing her as she wept, complained, &ldquo;Was this thy promise, my Psyche?
+What have I to hope from thee? Even in the arms of thy husband thou ceasest not
+from pain. Do now as thou wilt. Indulge thine own desire, though it seeks what
+will ruin thee. Yet wilt thou remember my warning, repentant too late.&rdquo;
+Then, protesting that she is like to die, she obtains from him that he suffer
+her to see her sisters, and present to them moreover what gifts she would of
+golden ornaments; but therewith he ofttimes advised her never at any time,
+yielding to pernicious counsel, to enquire concerning his bodily form, lest she
+fall, through unholy curiosity, from so great a height of fortune, nor feel
+ever his embrace again. &ldquo;I would die a hundred times,&rdquo; she said,
+cheerful at last, &ldquo;rather than be deprived of thy most sweet usage. I
+love thee as my own soul, beyond comparison even with Love himself. Only bid
+thy servant Zephyrus bring hither my sisters, as he brought me. My honeycomb!
+My husband! Thy Psyche&rsquo;s breath of life!&rdquo; So he promised; and after
+the embraces of the night, ere the light appeared, vanished from the hands of
+his bride.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the sisters, coming to the place where Psyche was abandoned, wept loudly
+among the rocks, and called upon her by name, so that the sound came down to
+her, and running out of the palace distraught, she cried, &ldquo;Wherefore
+afflict your souls with lamentation? I whom you mourn am here.&rdquo; Then,
+summoning Zephyrus, she reminded him of her husband&rsquo;s bidding; and he
+bare them down with a gentle blast. &ldquo;Enter now,&rdquo; she said,
+&ldquo;into my house, and relieve your sorrow in the company of Psyche your
+sister.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Psyche displayed to them all the treasures of the golden house, and its
+great family of ministering voices, nursing in them the malice which was
+already at their hearts. And at last one of them asks curiously who the lord of
+that celestial array may be, and what manner of man her husband? And Psyche
+answered dissemblingly, &ldquo;A young man, handsome and mannerly, with a
+goodly beard. For the most part he hunts upon the mountains.&rdquo; And lest
+the secret should slip from her in the way of further speech, loading her
+sisters with gold and gems, she commanded Zephyrus to bear them away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And they returned home, on fire with envy. &ldquo;See now the injustice of
+fortune!&rdquo; cried one. &ldquo;We, the elder children, are given like
+servants to be the wives of strangers, while the youngest is possessed of so
+great riches, who scarcely knows how to use them. You saw, Sister! what a hoard
+of wealth lies in the house; what glittering gowns; what splendour of precious
+gems, besides all that gold trodden under foot. If she indeed hath, as she
+said, a bridegroom so goodly, then no one in all the world is happier. And it
+may be that this husband, being of divine nature, will make her too a goddess.
+Nay! so in truth it is. It was even thus she bore herself. Already she looks
+aloft and breathes divinity, who, though but a woman, has voices for her
+handmaidens, and can command the winds.&rdquo; &ldquo;Think,&rdquo; answered
+the other, &ldquo;how arrogantly she dealt with us, grudging us these trifling
+gifts out of all that store, and when our company became a burden, causing us
+to be hissed and driven away from her through the air! But I am no woman if she
+keep her hold on this great fortune; and if the insult done us has touched thee
+too, take we counsel together. Meanwhile let us hold our peace, and know naught
+of her, alive or dead. For they are not truly happy of whose happiness other
+folk are unaware.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the bridegroom, whom still she knows not, warns her thus a second time, as
+he talks with her by night: &ldquo;Seest thou what peril besets thee? Those
+cunning wolves have made ready for thee their snares, of which the sum is that
+they persuade thee to search into the fashion of my countenance, the seeing of
+which, as I have told thee often, will be the seeing of it no more for ever.
+But do thou neither listen nor make answer to aught regarding thy husband.
+Besides, we have sown also the seed of our race. Even now this bosom grows with
+a child to be born to us, a child, if thou but keep our secret, of divine
+quality; if thou profane it, subject to death.&rdquo; And Psyche was glad at
+the tidings, rejoicing in that solace of a divine seed, and in the glory of
+that pledge of love to be, and the dignity of the name of mother. Anxiously she
+notes the increase of the days, the waning months. And again, as he tarries
+briefly beside her, the bridegroom repeats his warning:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Even now the sword is drawn with which thy sisters seek thy life. Have
+pity on thyself, sweet wife, and upon our child, and see not those evil women
+again.&rdquo; But the sisters make their way into the palace once more, crying
+to her in wily tones, &ldquo;O Psyche! and thou too wilt be a mother! How great
+will be the joy at home! Happy indeed shall we be to have the nursing of the
+golden child. Truly if he be answerable to the beauty of his parents, it will
+be a birth of Cupid himself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, little by little, they stole upon the heart of their sister. She,
+meanwhile, bids the lyre to sound for their delight, and the playing is heard:
+she bids the pipes to move, the quire to sing, and the music and the singing
+come invisibly, soothing the mind of the listener with sweetest modulation. Yet
+not even thereby was their malice put to sleep: once more they seek to know
+what manner of husband she has, and whence that seed. And Psyche, simple
+over-much, forgetful of her first story, answers, &ldquo;My husband comes from
+a far country, trading for great sums. He is already of middle age, with
+whitening locks.&rdquo; And therewith she dismisses them again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And returning home upon the soft breath of Zephyrus one cried to the other,
+&ldquo;What shall be said of so ugly a lie? He who was a young man with goodly
+beard is now in middle life. It must be that she told a false tale: else is she
+in very truth ignorant what manner of man he is. Howsoever it be, let us
+destroy her quickly. For if she indeed knows not, be sure that her bridegroom
+is one of the gods: it is a god she bears in her womb. And let that be far from
+us! If she be called mother of a god, then will life be more than I can
+bear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, full of rage against her, they returned to Psyche, and said to her
+craftily, &ldquo;Thou livest in an ignorant bliss, all incurious of thy real
+danger. It is a deadly serpent, as we certainly know, that comes to sleep at
+thy side. Remember the words of the oracle, which declared thee destined to a
+cruel beast. There are those who have seen it at nightfall, coming back from
+its feeding. In no long time, they say, it will end its blandishments. It but
+waits for the babe to be formed in thee, that it may devour thee by so much the
+richer. If indeed the solitude of this musical place, or it may be the
+loathsome commerce of a hidden love, delight thee, we at least in sisterly
+piety have done our part.&rdquo; And at last the unhappy Psyche, simple and
+frail of soul, carried away by the terror of their words, losing memory of her
+husband&rsquo;s precepts and her own promise, brought upon herself a great
+calamity. Trembling and turning pale, she answers them, &ldquo;And they who
+tell those things, it may be, speak the truth. For in very deed never have I
+seen the face of my husband, nor know I at all what manner of man he is. Always
+he frights me diligently from the sight of him, threatening some great evil
+should I too curiously look upon his face. Do ye, if ye can help your sister in
+her great peril, stand by her now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her sisters answered her, &ldquo;The way of safety we have well considered, and
+will teach thee. Take a sharp knife, and hide it in that part of the couch
+where thou art wont to lie: take also a lamp filled with oil, and set it
+privily behind the curtain. And when he shall have drawn up his coils into the
+accustomed place, and thou hearest him breathe in sleep, slip then from his
+side and discover the lamp, and, knife in hand, put forth thy strength, and
+strike off the serpent&rsquo;s head.&rdquo; And so they departed in haste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Psyche left alone (alone but for the furies which beset her) is tossed up
+and down in her distress, like a wave of the sea; and though her will is firm,
+yet, in the moment of putting hand to the deed, she falters, and is torn
+asunder by various apprehension of the great calamity upon her. She hastens and
+anon delays, now full of distrust, and now of angry courage: under one bodily
+form she loathes the monster and loves the bridegroom. But twilight ushers in
+the night; and at length in haste she makes ready for the terrible deed.
+Darkness came, and the bridegroom; and he first, after some faint essay of
+love, falls into a deep sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And she, erewhile of no strength, the hard purpose of destiny assisting her, is
+confirmed in force. With lamp plucked forth, knife in hand, she put by her sex;
+and lo! as the secrets of the bed became manifest, the sweetest and most gentle
+of all creatures, Love himself, reclined there, in his own proper loveliness!
+At sight of him the very flame of the lamp kindled more gladly! But Psyche was
+afraid at the vision, and, faint of soul, trembled back upon her knees, and
+would have hidden the steel in her own bosom. But the knife slipped from her
+hand; and now, undone, yet ofttimes looking upon the beauty of that divine
+countenance, she lives again. She sees the locks of that golden head, pleasant
+with the unction of the gods, shed down in graceful entanglement behind and
+before, about the ruddy cheeks and white throat. The pinions of the winged god,
+yet fresh with the dew, are spotless upon his shoulders, the delicate plumage
+wavering over them as they lie at rest. Smooth he was, and, touched with light,
+worthy of Venus his mother. At the foot of the couch lay his bow and arrows,
+the instruments of his power, propitious to men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Psyche, gazing hungrily thereon, draws an arrow from the quiver, and trying
+the point upon her thumb, tremulous still, drave in the barb, so that a drop of
+blood came forth. Thus fell she, by her own act, and unaware, into the love of
+Love. Falling upon the bridegroom, with indrawn breath, in a hurry of kisses
+from eager and open lips, she shuddered as she thought how brief that sleep
+might be. And it chanced that a drop of burning oil fell from the lamp upon the
+god&rsquo;s shoulder. Ah! maladroit minister of love, thus to wound him from
+whom all fire comes; though &rsquo;twas a lover, I trow, first devised thee, to
+have the fruit of his desire even in the darkness! At the touch of the fire the
+god started up, and beholding the overthrow of her faith, quietly took flight
+from her embraces.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Psyche, as he rose upon the wing, laid hold on him with her two hands,
+hanging upon him in his passage through the air, till she sinks to the earth
+through weariness. And as she lay there, the divine lover, tarrying still,
+lighted upon a cypress tree which grew near, and, from the top of it, spake
+thus to her, in great emotion. &ldquo;Foolish one! unmindful of the command of
+Venus, my mother, who had devoted thee to one of base degree, I fled to thee in
+his stead. Now know I that this was vainly done. Into mine own flesh pierced
+mine arrow, and I made thee my wife, only that I might seem a monster beside
+thee&mdash;that thou shouldst seek to wound the head wherein lay the eyes so
+full of love to thee! Again and again, I thought to put thee on thy guard
+concerning these things, and warned thee in loving-kindness. Now I would but
+punish thee by my flight hence.&rdquo; And therewith he winged his way into the
+deep sky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Psyche, prostrate upon the earth, and following far as sight might reach the
+flight of the bridegroom, wept and lamented; and when the breadth of space had
+parted him wholly from her, cast herself down from the bank of a river which
+was nigh. But the stream, turning gentle in honour of the god, put her forth
+again unhurt upon its margin. And as it happened, Pan, the rustic god, was
+sitting just then by the waterside, embracing, in the body of a reed, the
+goddess Canna; teaching her to respond to him in all varieties of slender
+sound. Hard by, his flock of goats browsed at will. And the shaggy god called
+her, wounded and outworn, kindly to him and said, &ldquo;I am but a rustic
+herdsman, pretty maiden, yet wise, by favour of my great age and long
+experience; and if I guess truly by those faltering steps, by thy sorrowful
+eyes and continual sighing, thou labourest with excess of love. Listen then to
+me, and seek not death again, in the stream or otherwise. Put aside thy woe,
+and turn thy prayers to Cupid. He is in truth a delicate youth: win him by the
+delicacy of thy service.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the shepherd-god spoke, and Psyche, answering nothing, but with a reverence
+to his serviceable deity, went on her way. And while she, in her search after
+Cupid, wandered through many lands, he was lying in the chamber of his mother,
+heart-sick. And the white bird which floats over the waves plunged in haste
+into the sea, and approaching Venus, as she bathed, made known to her that her
+son lies afflicted with some grievous hurt, doubtful of life. And Venus cried,
+angrily, &ldquo;My son, then, has a mistress! And it is Psyche, who witched
+away my beauty and was the rival of my godhead, whom he loves!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Therewith she issued from the sea, and returning to her golden chamber, found
+there the lad, sick, as she had heard, and cried from the doorway, &ldquo;Well
+done, truly! to trample thy mother&rsquo;s precepts under foot, to spare my
+enemy that cross of an unworthy love; nay, unite her to thyself, child as thou
+art, that I might have a daughter-in-law who hates me! I will make thee repent
+of thy sport, and the savour of thy marriage bitter. There is one who shall
+chasten this body of thine, put out thy torch and unstring thy bow. Not till
+she has plucked forth that hair, into which so oft these hands have smoothed
+the golden light, and sheared away thy wings, shall I feel the injury done me
+avenged.&rdquo; And with this she hastened in anger from the doors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Ceres and Juno met her, and sought to know the meaning of her troubled
+countenance. &ldquo;Ye come in season,&rdquo; she cried; &ldquo;I pray you,
+find for me Psyche. It must needs be that ye have heard the disgrace of my
+house.&rdquo; And they, ignorant of what was done, would have soothed her
+anger, saying, &ldquo;What fault, Mistress, hath thy son committed, that thou
+wouldst destroy the girl he loves? Knowest thou not that he is now of age?
+Because he wears his years so lightly must he seem to thee ever but a child?
+Wilt thou for ever thus pry into the pastimes of thy son, always accusing his
+wantonness, and blaming in him those delicate wiles which are all thine
+own?&rdquo; Thus, in secret fear of the boy&rsquo;s bow, did they seek to
+please him with their gracious patronage. But Venus, angry at their light
+taking of her wrongs, turned her back upon them, and with hasty steps made her
+way once more to the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Psyche, tost in soul, wandering hither and thither, rested not night
+or day in the pursuit of her husband, desiring, if she might not soothe his
+anger by the endearments of a wife, at the least to propitiate him with the
+prayers of a handmaid. And seeing a certain temple on the top of a high
+mountain, she said, &ldquo;Who knows whether yonder place be not the abode of
+my lord?&rdquo; Thither, therefore, she turned her steps, hastening now the
+more because desire and hope pressed her on, weary as she was with the labours
+of the way, and so, painfully measuring out the highest ridges of the mountain,
+drew near to the sacred couches. She sees ears of wheat, in heaps or twisted
+into chaplets; ears of barley also, with sickles and all the instruments of
+harvest, lying there in disorder, thrown at random from the hands of the
+labourers in the great heat. These she curiously sets apart, one by one, duly
+ordering them; for she said within herself, &ldquo;I may not neglect the
+shrines, nor the holy service, of any god there be, but must rather win by
+supplication the kindly mercy of them all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Ceres found her bending sadly upon her task, and cried aloud, &ldquo;Alas,
+Psyche! Venus, in the furiousness of her anger, tracks thy footsteps through
+the world, seeking for thee to pay her the utmost penalty; and thou, thinking
+of anything rather than thine own safety, hast taken on thee the care of what
+belongs to me!&rdquo; Then Psyche fell down at her feet, and sweeping the floor
+with her hair, washing the footsteps of the goddess in her tears, besought her
+mercy, with many prayers:&mdash;&ldquo;By the gladdening rites of harvest, by
+the lighted lamps and mystic marches of the Marriage and mysterious Invention
+of thy daughter Proserpine, and by all beside that the holy place of Attica
+veils in silence, minister, I pray thee, to the sorrowful heart of Psyche!
+Suffer me to hide myself but for a few days among the heaps of corn, till time
+have softened the anger of the goddess, and my strength, out-worn in my long
+travail, be recovered by a little rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Ceres answered her, &ldquo;Truly thy tears move me, and I would fain help
+thee; only I dare not incur the ill-will of my kinswoman. Depart hence as
+quickly as may be.&rdquo; And Psyche, repelled against hope, afflicted now with
+twofold sorrow, making her way back again, beheld among the half-lighted woods
+of the valley below a sanctuary builded with cunning art. And that she might
+lose no way of hope, howsoever doubtful, she drew near to the sacred doors. She
+sees there gifts of price, and garments fixed upon the door-posts and to the
+branches of the trees, wrought with letters of gold which told the name of the
+goddess to whom they were dedicated, with thanksgiving for that she had done.
+So, with bent knee and hands laid about the glowing altar, she prayed saying,
+&ldquo;Sister and spouse of Jupiter! be thou to these my desperate
+fortune&rsquo;s Juno the Auspicious! I know that thou dost willingly help those
+in travail with child; deliver me from the peril that is upon me.&rdquo; And as
+she prayed thus, Juno in the majesty of her godhead, was straightway present,
+and answered, &ldquo;Would that I might incline favourably to thee; but against
+the will of Venus, whom I have ever loved as a daughter, I may not, for very
+shame, grant thy prayer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Psyche, dismayed by this new shipwreck of her hope, communed thus with
+herself, &ldquo;Whither, from the midst of the snares that beset me, shall I
+take my way once more? In what dark solitude shall I hide me from the
+all-seeing eye of Venus? What if I put on at length a man&rsquo;s courage, and
+yielding myself unto her as my mistress, soften by a humility not yet too late
+the fierceness of her purpose? Who knows but that I may find him also whom my
+soul seeketh after, in the abode of his mother?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Venus, renouncing all earthly aid in her search, prepared to return to
+heaven. She ordered the chariot to be made ready, wrought for her by Vulcan as
+a marriage-gift, with a cunning of hand which had left his work so much the
+richer by the weight of gold it lost under his tool. From the multitude which
+housed about the bed-chamber of their mistress, white doves came forth, and
+with joyful motions bent their painted necks beneath the yoke. Behind it, with
+playful riot, the sparrows sped onward, and other birds sweet of song, making
+known by their soft notes the approach of the goddess. Eagle and cruel hawk
+alarmed not the quireful family of Venus. And the clouds broke away, as the
+uttermost ether opened to receive her, daughter and goddess, with great joy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Venus passed straightway to the house of Jupiter to beg from him the
+service of Mercury, the god of speech. And Jupiter refused not her prayer. And
+Venus and Mercury descended from heaven together; and as they went, the former
+said to the latter, &ldquo;Thou knowest, my brother of Arcady, that never at
+any time have I done anything without thy help; for how long time, moreover, I
+have sought a certain maiden in vain. And now naught remains but that, by thy
+heraldry, I proclaim a reward for whomsoever shall find her. Do thou my bidding
+quickly.&rdquo; And therewith she conveyed to him a little scrip, in the which
+was written the name of Psyche, with other things; and so returned home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Mercury failed not in his office; but departing into all lands, proclaimed
+that whosoever delivered up to Venus the fugitive girl, should receive from
+herself seven kisses&mdash;one thereof full of the inmost honey of her throat.
+With that the doubt of Psyche was ended. And now, as she came near to the doors
+of Venus, one of the household, whose name was Use-and-Wont, ran out to her,
+crying, &ldquo;Hast thou learned, Wicked Maid! now at last! that thou hast a
+mistress?&rdquo; And seizing her roughly by the hair, drew her into the
+presence of Venus. And when Venus saw her, she cried out, saying, &ldquo;Thou
+hast deigned then to make thy salutations to thy mother-in-law. Now will I in
+turn treat thee as becometh a dutiful daughter-in-law!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And she took barley and millet and poppy-seed, every kind of grain and seed,
+and mixed them together, and laughed, and said to her: &ldquo;Methinks so plain
+a maiden can earn lovers only by industrious ministry: now will I also make
+trial of thy service. Sort me this heap of seed, the one kind from the others,
+grain by grain; and get thy task done before the evening.&rdquo; And Psyche,
+stunned by the cruelty of her bidding, was silent, and moved not her hand to
+the inextricable heap. And there came forth a little ant, which had
+understanding of the difficulty of her task, and took pity upon the consort of
+the god of Love; and he ran deftly hither and thither, and called together the
+whole army of his fellows. &ldquo;Have pity,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;nimble
+scholars of the Earth, Mother of all things!&mdash;have pity upon the wife of
+Love, and hasten to help her in her perilous effort.&rdquo; Then, one upon the
+other, the hosts of the insect people hurried together; and they sorted asunder
+the whole heap of seed, separating every grain after its kind, and so departed
+quickly out of sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And at nightfall Venus returned, and seeing that task finished with so
+wonderful diligence, she cried, &ldquo;The work is not thine, thou naughty
+maid, but his in whose eyes thou hast found favour.&rdquo; And calling her
+again in the morning, &ldquo;See now the grove,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;beyond
+yonder torrent. Certain sheep feed there, whose fleeces shine with gold. Fetch
+me straightway a lock of that precious stuff, having gotten it as thou
+mayst.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Psyche went forth willingly, not to obey the command of Venus, but even to
+seek a rest from her labour in the depths of the river. But from the river, the
+green reed, lowly mother of music, spake to her: &ldquo;O Psyche! pollute not
+these waters by self-destruction, nor approach that terrible flock; for, as the
+heat groweth, they wax fierce. Lie down under yon plane-tree, till the quiet of
+the river&rsquo;s breath have soothed them. Thereafter thou mayst shake down
+the fleecy gold from the trees of the grove, for it holdeth by the
+leaves.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Psyche, instructed thus by the simple reed, in the humanity of its heart,
+filled her bosom with the soft golden stuff, and returned to Venus. But the
+goddess smiled bitterly, and said to her, &ldquo;Well know I who was the author
+of this thing also. I will make further trial of thy discretion, and the
+boldness of thy heart. Seest thou the utmost peak of yonder steep mountain? The
+dark stream which flows down thence waters the Stygian fields, and swells the
+flood of Cocytus. Bring me now, in this little urn, a draught from its
+innermost source.&rdquo; And therewith she put into her hands a vessel of
+wrought crystal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Psyche set forth in haste on her way to the mountain, looking there at last
+to find the end of her hapless life. But when she came to the region which
+borders on the cliff that was showed to her, she understood the deadly nature
+of her task. From a great rock, steep and slippery, a horrible river of water
+poured forth, falling straightway by a channel exceeding narrow into the unseen
+gulf below. And lo! creeping from the rocks on either hand, angry serpents,
+with their long necks and sleepless eyes. The very waters found a voice and
+bade her depart, in smothered cries of, Depart hence! and What doest thou here?
+Look around thee! and Destruction is upon thee! And then sense left her, in the
+immensity of her peril, as one changed to stone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet not even then did the distress of this innocent soul escape the steady eye
+of a gentle providence. For the bird of Jupiter spread his wings and took
+flight to her, and asked her, &ldquo;Didst thou think, simple one, even thou!
+that thou couldst steal one drop of that relentless stream, the holy river of
+Styx, terrible even to the gods? But give me thine urn.&rdquo; And the bird
+took the urn, and filled it at the source, and returned to her quickly from
+among the teeth of the serpents, bringing with him of the waters, all
+unwilling&mdash;nay! warning him to depart away and not molest them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And she, receiving the urn with great joy, ran back quickly that she might
+deliver it to Venus, and yet again satisfied not the angry goddess. &ldquo;My
+child!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;in this one thing further must thou serve me.
+Take now this tiny casket, and get thee down even unto hell, and deliver it to
+Proserpine. Tell her that Venus would have of her beauty so much at least as
+may suffice for but one day&rsquo;s use, that beauty she possessed erewhile
+being foreworn and spoiled, through her tendance upon the sick-bed of her son;
+and be not slow in returning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Psyche perceived there the last ebbing of her fortune&mdash;that she was
+now thrust openly upon death, who must go down, of her own motion, to Hades and
+the Shades. And straightway she climbed to the top of an exceeding high tower,
+thinking within herself, &ldquo;I will cast myself down thence: so shall I
+descend most quickly into the kingdom of the dead.&rdquo; And the tower again,
+broke forth into speech: &ldquo;Wretched Maid! Wretched Maid! Wilt thou destroy
+thyself? If the breath quit thy body, then wilt thou indeed go down into Hades,
+but by no means return hither. Listen to me. Among the pathless wilds not far
+from this place lies a certain mountain, and therein one of hell&rsquo;s
+vent-holes. Through the breach a rough way lies open, following which thou wilt
+come, by straight course, to the castle of Orcus. And thou must not go
+empty-handed. Take in each hand a morsel of barley-bread, soaked in hydromel;
+and in thy mouth two pieces of money. And when thou shalt be now well onward in
+the way of death, then wilt thou overtake a lame ass laden with wood, and a
+lame driver, who will pray thee reach him certain cords to fasten the burden
+which is falling from the ass: but be thou cautious to pass on in silence. And
+soon as thou comest to the river of the dead, Charon, in that crazy bark he
+hath, will put thee over upon the further side. There is greed even among the
+dead: and thou shalt deliver to him, for the ferrying, one of those two pieces
+of money, in such wise that he take it with his hand from between thy lips. And
+as thou passest over the stream, a dead old man, rising on the water, will put
+up to thee his mouldering hands, and pray thee draw him into the ferry-boat.
+But beware thou yield not to unlawful pity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When thou shalt be come over, and art upon the causeway, certain aged
+women, spinning, will cry to thee to lend thy hand to their work; and beware
+again that thou take no part therein; for this also is the snare of Venus,
+whereby she would cause thee to cast away one at least of those cakes thou
+bearest in thy hands. And think not that a slight matter; for the loss of
+either one of them will be to thee the losing of the light of day. For a
+watch-dog exceeding fierce lies ever before the threshold of that lonely house
+of Proserpine. Close his mouth with one of thy cakes; so shalt thou pass by
+him, and enter straightway into the presence of Proserpine herself. Then do
+thou deliver thy message, and taking what she shall give thee, return back
+again; offering to the watch-dog the other cake, and to the ferryman that other
+piece of money thou hast in thy mouth. After this manner mayst thou return
+again beneath the stars. But withal, I charge thee, think not to look into, nor
+open, the casket thou bearest, with that treasure of the beauty of the divine
+countenance hidden therein.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So spake the stones of the tower; and Psyche delayed not, but proceeding
+diligently after the manner enjoined, entered into the house of Proserpine, at
+whose feet she sat down humbly, and would neither the delicate couch nor that
+divine food the goddess offered her, but did straightway the business of Venus.
+And Proserpine filled the casket secretly and shut the lid, and delivered it to
+Psyche, who fled therewith from Hades with new strength. But coming back into
+the light of day, even as she hasted now to the ending of her service, she was
+seized by a rash curiosity. &ldquo;Lo! now,&rdquo; she said within herself,
+&ldquo;my simpleness! who bearing in my hands the divine loveliness, heed not
+to touch myself with a particle at least therefrom, that I may please the more,
+by the favour of it, my fair one, my beloved.&rdquo; Even as she spoke, she
+lifted the lid; and behold! within, neither beauty, nor anything beside, save
+sleep only, the sleep of the dead, which took hold upon her, filling all her
+members with its drowsy vapour, so that she lay down in the way and moved not,
+as in the slumber of death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Cupid being healed of his wound, because he would endure no longer the
+absence of her he loved, gliding through the narrow window of the chamber
+wherein he was holden, his pinions being now repaired by a little rest, fled
+forth swiftly upon them, and coming to the place where Psyche was, shook that
+sleep away from her, and set him in his prison again, awaking her with the
+innocent point of his arrow. &ldquo;Lo! thine old error again,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;which had like once more to have destroyed thee! But do thou now what is
+lacking of the command of my mother: the rest shall be my care.&rdquo; With
+these words, the lover rose upon the air; and being consumed inwardly with the
+greatness of his love, penetrated with vehement wing into the highest place of
+heaven, to lay his cause before the father of the gods. And the father of gods
+took his hand in his, and kissed his face and said to him, &ldquo;At no time,
+my son, hast thou regarded me with due honour. Often hast thou vexed my bosom,
+wherein lies the disposition of the stars, with those busy darts of thine.
+Nevertheless, because thou hast grown up between these mine hands, I will
+accomplish thy desire.&rdquo; And straightway he bade Mercury call the gods
+together; and, the council-chamber being filled, sitting upon a high throne,
+&ldquo;Ye gods,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;all ye whose names are in the white book
+of the Muses, ye know yonder lad. It seems good to me that his youthful heats
+should by some means be restrained. And that all occasion may be taken from
+him, I would even confine him in the bonds of marriage. He has chosen and
+embraced a mortal maiden. Let him have fruit of his love, and possess her for
+ever.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereupon he bade Mercury produce Psyche in heaven; and holding out to her his
+ambrosial cup, &ldquo;Take it,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and live for ever; nor
+shall Cupid ever depart from thee.&rdquo; And the gods sat down together to the
+marriage-feast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the first couch lay the bridegroom, and Psyche in his bosom. His rustic
+serving-boy bare the wine to Jupiter; and Bacchus to the rest. The Seasons
+crimsoned all things with their roses. Apollo sang to the lyre, while a little
+Pan prattled on his reeds, and Venus danced very sweetly to the soft music.
+Thus, with due rites, did Psyche pass into the power of Cupid; and from them
+was born the daughter whom men call Voluptas.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>CHAPTER VI.<br/>
+EUPHUISM</h2>
+
+<p>
+So the famous story composed itself in the memory of Marius, with an expression
+changed in some ways from the original and on the whole graver. The petulant,
+boyish Cupid of Apuleius was become more like that &ldquo;Lord, of terrible
+aspect,&rdquo; who stood at Dante&rsquo;s bedside and wept, or had at least
+grown to the manly earnestness of the Erôs of Praxiteles. Set in relief amid
+the coarser matter of the book, this episode of Cupid and Psyche served to
+combine many lines of meditation, already familiar to Marius, into the ideal of
+a perfect imaginative love, centered upon a type of beauty entirely flawless
+and clean&mdash;an ideal which never wholly faded from his thoughts, though he
+valued it at various times in different degrees. The human body in its beauty,
+as the highest potency of all the beauty of material objects, seemed to him
+just then to be matter no longer, but, having taken celestial fire, to assert
+itself as indeed the true, though visible, soul or spirit in things. In
+contrast with that ideal, in all the pure brilliancy, and as it were in the
+happy light, of youth and morning and the springtide, men&rsquo;s actual loves,
+with which at many points the book brings one into close contact, might appear
+to him, like the general tenor of their lives, to be somewhat mean and sordid.
+The hiddenness of perfect things: a shrinking mysticism, a sentiment of
+diffidence like that expressed in Psyche&rsquo;s so tremulous hope concerning
+the child to be born of the husband she had never yet seen&mdash;&ldquo;in the
+face of this little child, at the least, shall I apprehend
+thine&rdquo;&mdash;in hoc saltem parvulo cognoscam faciem tuam: the fatality
+which seems to haunt any signal+ beauty, whether moral or physical, as if it
+were in itself something illicit and isolating: the suspicion and hatred it so
+often excites in the vulgar:&mdash;these were some of the impressions, forming,
+as they do, a constant tradition of somewhat cynical pagan experience, from
+Medusa and Helen downwards, which the old story enforced on him. A book, like a
+person, has its fortunes with one; is lucky or unlucky in the precise moment of
+its falling in our way, and often by some happy accident counts with us for
+something more than its independent value. The Metamorphoses of Apuleius,
+coming to Marius just then, figured for him as indeed The Golden Book: he felt
+a sort of personal gratitude to its writer, and saw in it doubtless far more
+than was really there for any other reader. It occupied always a peculiar place
+in his remembrance, never quite losing its power in frequent return to it for
+the revival of that first glowing impression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Its effect upon the elder youth was a more practical one: it stimulated the
+literary ambition, already so strong a motive with him, by a signal example of
+success, and made him more than ever an ardent, indefatigable student of words,
+of the means or instrument of the literary art. The secrets of utterance, of
+expression itself, of that through which alone any intellectual or spiritual
+power within one can actually take effect upon others, to over-awe or charm
+them to one&rsquo;s side, presented themselves to this ambitious lad in
+immediate connexion with that desire for predominance, for the satisfaction of
+which another might have relied on the acquisition and display of brilliant
+military qualities. In him, a fine instinctive sentiment of the exact value and
+power of words was connate with the eager longing for sway over his fellows. He
+saw himself already a gallant and effective leader, innovating or conservative
+as occasion might require, in the rehabilitation of the mother-tongue, then
+fallen so tarnished and languid; yet the sole object, as he mused within
+himself, of the only sort of patriotic feeling proper, or possible, for one
+born of slaves. The popular speech was gradually departing from the form and
+rule of literary language, a language always and increasingly artificial. While
+the learned dialect was yearly becoming more and more barbarously pedantic, the
+colloquial idiom, on the other hand, offered a thousand chance-tost gems of
+racy or picturesque expression, rejected or at least ungathered by what claimed
+to be classical Latin. The time was coming when neither the pedants nor the
+people would really understand Cicero; though there were some indeed, like this
+new writer, Apuleius, who, departing from the custom of writing in Greek, which
+had been a fashionable affectation among the sprightlier wits since the days of
+Hadrian, had written in the vernacular.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The literary programme which Flavian had already designed for himself would be
+a work, then, partly conservative or reactionary, in its dealing with the
+instrument of the literary art; partly popular and revolutionary, asserting, so
+to term them, the rights of the proletariate of speech. More than fifty years
+before, the younger Pliny, himself an effective witness for the delicate power
+of the Latin tongue, had said,&mdash;&ldquo;I am one of those who admire the
+ancients, yet I do not, like some others, underrate certain instances of genius
+which our own times afford. For it is not true that nature, as if weary and
+effete, no longer produces what is admirable.&rdquo; And he, Flavian, would
+prove himself the true master of the opportunity thus indicated. In his
+eagerness for a not too distant fame, he dreamed over all that, as the young
+Caesar may have dreamed of campaigns. Others might brutalise or neglect the
+native speech, that true &ldquo;open field&rdquo; for charm and sway over men.
+He would make of it a serious study, weighing the precise power of every phrase
+and word, as though it were precious metal, disentangling the later
+associations and going back to the original and native sense of
+each,&mdash;restoring to full significance all its wealth of latent figurative
+expression, reviving or replacing its outworn or tarnished images. Latin
+literature and the Latin tongue were dying of routine and languor; and what was
+necessary, first of all, was to re-establish the natural and direct
+relationship between thought and expression, between the sensation and the
+term, and restore to words their primitive power.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For words, after all, words manipulated with all his delicate force, were to be
+the apparatus of a war for himself. To be forcibly impressed, in the first
+place; and in the next, to find the means of making visible to others that
+which was vividly apparent, delightful, of lively interest to himself, to the
+exclusion of all that was but middling, tame, or only half-true even to
+him&mdash;this scrupulousness of literary art actually awoke in Flavian, for
+the first time, a sort of chivalrous conscience. What care for style! what
+patience of execution! what research for the significant tones of ancient
+idiom&mdash;sonantia verba et antiqua! What stately and regular
+word-building&mdash;gravis et decora constructio! He felt the whole meaning of
+the sceptical Pliny&rsquo;s somewhat melancholy advice to one of his friends,
+that he should seek in literature deliverance from mortality&mdash;ut studiis
+se literarum a mortalitate vindicet. And there was everything in the nature and
+the training of Marius to make him a full participator in the hopes of such a
+new literary school, with Flavian for its leader. In the refinements of that
+curious spirit, in its horror of profanities, its fastidious sense of a
+correctness in external form, there was something which ministered to the old
+ritual interest, still surviving in him; as if here indeed were involved a kind
+of sacred service to the mother-tongue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, then, was the theory of Euphuism, as manifested in every age in which the
+literary conscience has been awakened to forgotten duties towards language,
+towards the instrument of expression: in fact it does but modify a little the
+principles of all effective expression at all times. &rsquo;Tis art&rsquo;s
+function to conceal itself: ars est celare artem:&mdash;is a saying, which,
+exaggerated by inexact quotation, has perhaps been oftenest and most
+confidently quoted by those who have had little literary or other art to
+conceal; and from the very beginning of professional literature, the
+&ldquo;labour of the file&rdquo;&mdash;a labour in the case of Plato, for
+instance, or Virgil, like that of the oldest of goldsmiths as described by
+Apuleius, enriching the work by far more than the weight of precious metal it
+removed&mdash;has always had its function. Sometimes, doubtless, as in later
+examples of it, this Roman Euphuism, determined at any cost to attain beauty in
+writing&mdash;es kallos graphein+&mdash;might lapse into its characteristic
+fopperies or mannerisms, into the &ldquo;defects of its qualities,&rdquo; in
+truth, not wholly unpleasing perhaps, or at least excusable, when looked at as
+but the toys (so Cicero calls them), the strictly congenial and appropriate
+toys, of an assiduously cultivated age, which could not help being polite,
+critical, self-conscious. The mere love of novelty also had, of course, its
+part there: as with the Euphuism of the Elizabethan age, and of the modern
+French romanticists, its neologies were the ground of one of the favourite
+charges against it; though indeed, as regards these tricks of taste also, there
+is nothing new, but a quaint family likeness rather, between the Euphuists of
+successive ages. Here, as elsewhere, the power of &ldquo;fashion,&rdquo; as it
+is called, is but one minor form, slight enough, it may be, yet distinctly
+symptomatic, of that deeper yearning of human nature towards ideal perfection,
+which is a continuous force in it; and since in this direction too human nature
+is limited, such fashions must necessarily reproduce themselves. Among other
+resemblances to later growths of Euphuism, its archaisms on the one hand, and
+its neologies on the other, the Euphuism of the days of Marcus Aurelius had, in
+the composition of verse, its fancy for the refrain. It was a snatch from a
+popular chorus, something he had heard sounding all over the town of Pisa one
+April night, one of the first bland and summer-like nights of the year, that
+Flavian had chosen for the refrain of a poem he was then pondering&mdash;the
+Pervigilium Veneris&mdash;the vigil, or &ldquo;nocturn,&rdquo; of Venus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Certain elderly counsellors, filling what may be thought a constant part in the
+little tragi-comedy which literature and its votaries are playing in all ages,
+would ask, suspecting some affectation or unreality in that minute culture of
+form:&mdash;Cannot those who have a thing to say, say it directly? Why not be
+simple and broad, like the old writers of Greece? And this challenge had at
+least the effect of setting his thoughts at work on the intellectual situation
+as it lay between the children of the present and those earliest masters.
+Certainly, the most wonderful, the unique, point, about the Greek genius, in
+literature as in everything else, was the entire absence of imitation in its
+productions. How had the burden of precedent, laid upon every artist, increased
+since then! It was all around one:&mdash;that smoothly built world of old
+classical taste, an accomplished fact, with overwhelming authority on every
+detail of the conduct of one&rsquo;s work. With no fardel on its own back, yet
+so imperious towards those who came labouring after it, Hellas, in its early
+freshness, looked as distant from him even then as it does from ourselves.
+There might seem to be no place left for novelty or originality,&mdash;place
+only for a patient, an infinite, faultlessness. On this question too Flavian
+passed through a world of curious art-casuistries, of self-tormenting, at the
+threshold of his work. Was poetic beauty a thing ever one and the same, a type
+absolute; or, changing always with the soul of time itself, did it depend upon
+the taste, the peculiar trick of apprehension, the fashion, as we say, of each
+successive age? Might one recover that old, earlier sense of it, that earlier
+manner, in a masterly effort to recall all the complexities of the life, moral
+and intellectual, of the earlier age to which it had belonged? Had there been
+really bad ages in art or literature? Were all ages, even those earliest,
+adventurous, matutinal days, in themselves equally poetical or unpoetical; and
+poetry, the literary beauty, the poetic ideal, always but a borrowed light upon
+men&rsquo;s actual life?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Homer had said&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Hoi d&rsquo; hote dê limenos polybentheos entos hikonto,<br/>
+Histia men steilanto, thesan d&rsquo; en nêi melainê...<br/>
+Ek de kai autoi bainon epi phêgmini thalassês.+
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+And how poetic the simple incident seemed, told just thus! Homer was always
+telling things after this manner. And one might think there had been no effort
+in it: that here was but the almost mechanical transcript of a time, naturally,
+intrinsically, poetic, a time in which one could hardly have spoken at all
+without ideal effect, or, the sailors pulled down their boat without making a
+picture in &ldquo;the great style,&rdquo; against a sky charged with marvels.
+Must not the mere prose of an age, itself thus ideal, have counted for more
+than half of Homer&rsquo;s poetry? Or might the closer student discover even
+here, even in Homer, the really mediatorial function of the poet, as between
+the reader and the actual matter of his experience; the poet waiting, so to
+speak, in an age which had felt itself trite and commonplace enough, on his
+opportunity for the touch of &ldquo;golden alchemy,&rdquo; or at least for the
+pleasantly lighted side of things themselves? Might not another, in one&rsquo;s
+own prosaic and used-up time, so uneventful as it had been through the long
+reign of these quiet Antonines, in like manner, discover his ideal, by a due
+waiting upon it? Would not a future generation, looking back upon this, under
+the power of the enchanted-distance fallacy, find it ideal to view, in contrast
+with its own languor&mdash;the languor that for some reason (concerning which
+Augustine will one day have his view) seemed to haunt men always? Had Homer,
+even, appeared unreal and affected in his poetic flight, to some of the people
+of his own age, as seemed to happen with every new literature in turn? In any
+case, the intellectual conditions of early Greece had been&mdash;how different
+from these! And a true literary tact would accept that difference in forming
+the primary conception of the literary function at a later time. Perhaps the
+utmost one could get by conscious effort, in the way of a reaction or return to
+the conditions of an earlier and fresher age, would be but novitas, artificial
+artlessness, naïveté; and this quality too might have its measure of euphuistic
+charm, direct and sensible enough, though it must count, in comparison with
+that genuine early Greek newness at the beginning, not as the freshness of the
+open fields, but only of a bunch of field-flowers in a heated room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was, meantime, all this:&mdash;on one side, the old pagan culture, for us
+but a fragment, for him an accomplished yet present fact, still a living,
+united, organic whole, in the entirety of its art, its thought, its religions,
+its sagacious forms of polity, that so weighty authority it exercised on every
+point, being in reality only the measure of its charm for every one: on the
+other side, the actual world in all its eager self-assertion, with Flavian
+himself, in his boundless animation, there, at the centre of the situation.
+From the natural defects, from the pettiness, of his euphuism, his assiduous
+cultivation of manner, he was saved by the consciousness that he had a matter
+to present, very real, at least to him. That preoccupation of the dilettante
+with what might seem mere details of form, after all, did but serve the purpose
+of bringing to the surface, sincerely and in their integrity, certain strong
+personal intuitions, a certain vision or apprehension of things as really
+being, with important results, thus, rather than thus,&mdash;intuitions which
+the artistic or literary faculty was called upon to follow, with the exactness
+of wax or clay, clothing the model within. Flavian too, with his fine clear
+mastery of the practically effective, had early laid hold of the principle, as
+axiomatic in literature: that to know when one&rsquo;s self is interested, is
+the first condition of interesting other people. It was a principle, the
+forcible apprehension of which made him jealous and fastidious in the selection
+of his intellectual food; often listless while others read or gazed diligently;
+never pretending to be moved out of mere complaisance to people&rsquo;s
+emotions: it served to foster in him a very scrupulous literary sincerity with
+himself. And it was this uncompromising demand for a matter, in all art,
+derived immediately from lively personal intuition, this constant appeal to
+individual judgment, which saved his euphuism, even at its weakest, from
+lapsing into mere artifice.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+Was the magnificent exordium of Lucretius, addressed to the goddess Venus, the
+work of his earlier manhood, and designed originally to open an argument less
+persistently sombre than that protest against the whole pagan heaven which
+actually follows it? It is certainly the most typical expression of a mood,
+still incident to the young poet, as a thing peculiar to his youth, when he
+feels the sentimental current setting forcibly along his veins, and so much as
+a matter of purely physical excitement, that he can hardly distinguish it from
+the animation of external nature, the upswelling of the seed in the earth, and
+of the sap through the trees. Flavian, to whom, again, as to his later
+euphuistic kinsmen, old mythology seemed as full of untried, unexpressed
+motives and interest as human life itself, had long been occupied with a kind
+of mystic hymn to the vernal principle of life in things; a composition shaping
+itself, little by little, out of a thousand dim perceptions, into singularly
+definite form (definite and firm as fine-art in metal, thought Marius) for
+which, as I said, he had caught his &ldquo;refrain,&rdquo; from the lips of the
+young men, singing because they could not help it, in the streets of Pisa. And
+as oftenest happens also, with natures of genuinely poetic quality, those
+piecemeal beginnings came suddenly to harmonious completeness among the
+fortunate incidents, the physical heat and light, of one singularly happy day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was one of the first hot days of March&mdash;&ldquo;the sacred
+day&rdquo;&mdash;on which, from Pisa, as from many another harbour on the
+Mediterranean, the Ship of Isis went to sea, and every one walked down to the
+shore-side to witness the freighting of the vessel, its launching and final
+abandonment among the waves, as an object really devoted to the Great Goddess,
+that new rival, or &ldquo;double,&rdquo; of ancient Venus, and like her a
+favourite patroness of sailors. On the evening next before, all the world had
+been abroad to view the illumination of the river; the stately lines of
+building being wreathed with hundreds of many-coloured lamps. The young men had
+poured forth their chorus&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Cras amet qui nunquam amavit,<br/>
+Quique amavit cras amet&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+as they bore their torches through the yielding crowd, or rowed their lanterned
+boats up and down the stream, till far into the night, when heavy rain-drops
+had driven the last lingerers home. Morning broke, however, smiling and serene;
+and the long procession started betimes. The river, curving slightly, with the
+smoothly paved streets on either side, between its low marble parapet and the
+fair dwelling-houses, formed the main highway of the city; and the pageant,
+accompanied throughout by innumerable lanterns and wax tapers, took its course
+up one of these streets, crossing the water by a bridge up-stream, and down the
+other, to the haven, every possible standing-place, out of doors and within,
+being crowded with sight-seers, of whom Marius was one of the most eager,
+deeply interested in finding the spectacle much as Apuleius had described it in
+his famous book.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the head of the procession, the master of ceremonies, quietly waving back
+the assistants, made way for a number of women, scattering perfumes. They were
+succeeded by a company of musicians, piping and twanging, on instruments the
+strangest Marius had ever beheld, the notes of a hymn, narrating the first
+origin of this votive rite to a choir of youths, who marched behind them
+singing it. The tire-women and other personal attendants of the great goddess
+came next, bearing the instruments of their ministry, and various articles from
+the sacred wardrobe, wrought of the most precious material; some of them with
+long ivory combs, plying their hands in wild yet graceful concert of movement
+as they went, in devout mimicry of the toilet. Placed in their rear were the
+mirror-bearers of the goddess, carrying large mirrors of beaten brass or
+silver, turned in such a way as to reflect to the great body of worshippers who
+followed, the face of the mysterious image, as it moved on its way, and their
+faces to it, as though they were in fact advancing to meet the heavenly
+visitor. They comprehended a multitude of both sexes and of all ages, already
+initiated into the divine secret, clad in fair linen, the females veiled, the
+males with shining tonsures, and every one carrying a sistrum&mdash;the richer
+sort of silver, a few very dainty persons of fine gold&mdash;rattling the
+reeds, with a noise like the jargon of innumerable birds and insects awakened
+from torpor and abroad in the spring sun. Then, borne upon a kind of platform,
+came the goddess herself, undulating above the heads of the multitude as the
+bearers walked, in mystic robe embroidered with the moon and stars, bordered
+gracefully with a fringe of real fruit and flowers, and with a glittering crown
+upon the head. The train of the procession consisted of the priests in long
+white vestments, close from head to foot, distributed into various groups, each
+bearing, exposed aloft, one of the sacred symbols of Isis&mdash;the corn-fan,
+the golden asp, the ivory hand of equity, and among them the votive ship
+itself, carved and gilt, and adorned bravely with flags flying. Last of all
+walked the high priest; the people kneeling as he passed to kiss his hand, in
+which were those well-remembered roses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marius followed with the rest to the harbour, where the mystic ship, lowered
+from the shoulders of the priests, was loaded with as much as it could carry of
+the rich spices and other costly gifts, offered in great profusion by the
+worshippers, and thus, launched at last upon the water, left the shore,
+crossing the harbour-bar in the wake of a much stouter vessel than itself with
+a crew of white-robed mariners, whose function it was, at the appointed moment,
+finally to desert it on the open sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The remainder of the day was spent by most in parties on the water. Flavian and
+Marius sailed further than they had ever done before to a wild spot on the bay,
+the traditional site of a little Greek colony, which, having had its eager,
+stirring life at the time when Etruria was still a power in Italy, had perished
+in the age of the civil wars. In the absolute transparency of the air on this
+gracious day, an infinitude of detail from sea and shore reached the eye with
+sparkling clearness, as the two lads sped rapidly over the waves&mdash;Flavian
+at work suddenly, from time to time, with his tablets. They reached land at
+last. The coral fishers had spread their nets on the sands, with a tumble-down
+of quaint, many-hued treasures, below a little shrine of Venus, fluttering and
+gay with the scarves and napkins and gilded shells which these people had
+offered to the image. Flavian and Marius sat down under the shadow of a mass of
+gray rock or ruin, where the sea-gate of the Greek town had been, and talked of
+life in those old Greek colonies. Of this place, all that remained, besides
+those rude stones, was&mdash;a handful of silver coins, each with a head of
+pure and archaic beauty, though a little cruel perhaps, supposed to represent
+the Siren Ligeia, whose tomb was formerly shown here&mdash;only these, and an
+ancient song, the very strain which Flavian had recovered in those last months.
+They were records which spoke, certainly, of the charm of life within those
+walls. How strong must have been the tide of men&rsquo;s existence in that
+little republican town, so small that this circle of gray stones, of service
+now only by the moisture they gathered for the blue-flowering gentians among
+them, had been the line of its rampart! An epitome of all that was liveliest,
+most animated and adventurous, in the old Greek people of which it was an
+offshoot, it had enhanced the effect of these gifts by concentration within
+narrow limits. The band of &ldquo;devoted youth,&rdquo;&mdash;hiera
+neotês.+&mdash;of the younger brothers, devoted to the gods and whatever luck
+the gods might afford, because there was no room for them at home&mdash;went
+forth, bearing the sacred flame from the mother hearth; itself a flame, of
+power to consume the whole material of existence in clear light and heat, with
+no smouldering residue. The life of those vanished townsmen, so brilliant and
+revolutionary, applying so abundantly the personal qualities which alone just
+then Marius seemed to value, associated itself with the actual figure of his
+companion, standing there before him, his face enthusiastic with the sudden
+thought of all that; and struck him vividly as precisely the fitting
+opportunity for a nature like his, so hungry for control, for ascendency over
+men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marius noticed also, however, as high spirits flagged at last, on the way home
+through the heavy dew of the evening, more than physical fatigue in Flavian,
+who seemed to find no refreshment in the coolness. There had been something
+feverish, perhaps, and like the beginning of sickness, about his almost forced
+gaiety, in this sudden spasm of spring; and by the evening of the next day he
+was lying with a burning spot on his forehead, stricken, as was thought from
+the first, by the terrible new disease.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+NOTES
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+93. +Corrected from the Macmillan edition misprint &ldquo;singal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+98. +Transliteration: es kallos graphein. Translation: &ldquo;To write
+beautifully.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+100. +Iliad 1.432-33, 437. Transliteration:
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+Hoi d&rsquo; hote dê limenos polybentheos entos hikonto,<br/>
+Histia men steilanto, thesan d&rsquo; en nêi melainê...<br/>
+Ek de kai autoi bainon epi phêgmini thalassês.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+Etext editor&rsquo;s translation:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+When they had safely made deep harbor<br/>
+They took in the sail, laid it in their black ship...<br/>
+And went ashore just past the breakers.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+109. +Transliteration: hiera neotês. Pater translates the phrase,
+&ldquo;devoted youth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>CHAPTER VII.<br/>
+A PAGAN END</h2>
+
+<p>
+For the fantastical colleague of the philosophic emperor Marcus Aurelius,
+returning in triumph from the East, had brought in his train, among the enemies
+of Rome, one by no means a captive. People actually sickened at a sudden touch
+of the unsuspected foe, as they watched in dense crowds the pathetic or
+grotesque imagery of failure or success in the triumphal procession. And, as
+usual, the plague brought with it a power to develop all pre-existent germs of
+superstition. It was by dishonour done to Apollo himself, said popular
+rumour&mdash;to Apollo, the old titular divinity of pestilence, that the
+poisonous thing had come abroad. Pent up in a golden coffer consecrated to the
+god, it had escaped in the sacrilegious plundering of his temple at Seleucia by
+the soldiers of Lucius Verus, after a traitorous surprise of that town and a
+cruel massacre. Certainly there was something which baffled all imaginable
+precautions and all medical science, in the suddenness with which the disease
+broke out simultaneously, here and there, among both soldiers and citizens,
+even in places far remote from the main line of its march in the rear of the
+victorious army. It seemed to have invaded the whole empire, and some have even
+thought that, in a mitigated form, it permanently remained there. In Rome
+itself many thousands perished; and old authorities tell of farmsteads, whole
+towns, and even entire neighbourhoods, which from that time continued without
+inhabitants and lapsed into wildness or ruin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Flavian lay at the open window of his lodging, with a fiery pang in the brain,
+fancying no covering thin or light enough to be applied to his body. His head
+being relieved after a while, there was distress at the chest. It was but the
+fatal course of the strange new sickness, under many disguises; travelling from
+the brain to the feet, like a material resident, weakening one after another of
+the organic centres; often, when it did not kill, depositing various degrees of
+lifelong infirmity in this member or that; and after such descent, returning
+upwards again, now as a mortal coldness, leaving the entrenchments of the
+fortress of life overturned, one by one, behind it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Flavian lay there, with the enemy at his breast now in a painful cough, but
+relieved from that burning fever in the head, amid the rich-scented
+flowers&mdash;rare Paestum roses, and the like &mdash;procured by Marius for
+his solace, in a fancied convalescence; and would, at intervals, return to
+labour at his verses, with a great eagerness to complete and transcribe the
+work, while Marius sat and wrote at his dictation, one of the latest but not
+the poorest specimens of genuine Latin poetry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was in fact a kind of nuptial hymn, which, taking its start from the thought
+of nature as the universal mother, celebrated the preliminary pairing and
+mating together of all fresh things, in the hot and genial
+spring-time&mdash;the immemorial nuptials of the soul of spring itself and the
+brown earth; and was full of a delighted, mystic sense of what passed between
+them in that fantastic marriage. That mystic burden was relieved, at intervals,
+by the familiar playfulness of the Latin verse-writer in dealing with
+mythology, which, though coming at so late a day, had still a wonderful
+freshness in its old age.&mdash;&ldquo;Amor has put his weapons by and will
+keep holiday. He was bidden go without apparel, that none might be wounded by
+his bow and arrows. But take care! In truth he is none the less armed than
+usual, though he be all unclad.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the expression of all this Flavian seemed, while making it his chief aim to
+retain the opulent, many-syllabled vocabulary of the Latin genius, at some
+points even to have advanced beyond it, in anticipation of wholly new laws of
+taste as regards sound, a new range of sound itself. The peculiar resultant
+note, associating itself with certain other experiences of his, was to Marius
+like the foretaste of an entirely novel world of poetic beauty to come. Flavian
+had caught, indeed, something of the rhyming cadence, the sonorous organ-music
+of the medieval Latin, and therewithal something of its unction and mysticity
+of spirit. There was in his work, along with the last splendour of the
+classical language, a touch, almost prophetic, of that transformed life it was
+to have in the rhyming middle age, just about to dawn. The impression thus
+forced upon Marius connected itself with a feeling, the exact inverse of that,
+known to every one, which seems to say, You have been just here, just thus,
+before!&mdash;a feeling, in his case, not reminiscent but prescient of the
+future, which passed over him afterwards many times, as he came across certain
+places and people. It was as if he detected there the process of actual change
+to a wholly undreamed-of and renewed condition of human body and soul: as if he
+saw the heavy yet decrepit old Roman architecture about him, rebuilding on an
+intrinsically better pattern. Could it have been actually on a new musical
+instrument that Flavian had first heard the novel accents of his verse? And
+still Marius noticed there, amid all its richness of expression and imagery,
+that firmness of outline he had always relished so much in the composition of
+Flavian. Yes! a firmness like that of some master of noble metal-work,
+manipulating tenacious bronze or gold. Even now that haunting refrain, with its
+impromptu variations, from the throats of those strong young men, came floating
+through the window.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Cras amet qui nunquam amavit,<br/>
+Quique amavit cras amet!
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+&mdash;repeated Flavian, tremulously, dictating yet one stanza more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What he was losing, his freehold of a soul and body so fortunately endowed, the
+mere liberty of life above-ground, &ldquo;those sunny mornings in the
+cornfields by the sea,&rdquo; as he recollected them one day, when the window
+was thrown open upon the early freshness&mdash;his sense of all this, was from
+the first singularly near and distinct, yet rather as of something he was but
+debarred the use of for a time than finally bidding farewell to. That was while
+he was still with no very grave misgivings as to the issue of his sickness, and
+felt the sources of life still springing essentially unadulterate within him.
+From time to time, indeed, Marius, labouring eagerly at the poem from his
+dictation, was haunted by a feeling of the triviality of such work just then.
+The recurrent sense of some obscure danger beyond the mere danger of death,
+vaguer than that and by so much the more terrible, like the menace of some
+shadowy adversary in the dark with whose mode of attack they had no
+acquaintance, disturbed him now and again through those hours of excited
+attention to his manuscript, and to the purely physical wants of Flavian.
+Still, during these three days there was much hope and cheerfulness, and even
+jesting. Half-consciously Marius tried to prolong one or another relieving
+circumstance of the day, the preparations for rest and morning refreshment, for
+instance; sadly making the most of the little luxury of this or that, with
+something of the feigned cheer of the mother who sets her last morsels before
+her famished child as for a feast, but really that he &ldquo;may eat it and
+die.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the afternoon of the seventh day he allowed Marius finally to put aside the
+unfinished manuscript. For the enemy, leaving the chest quiet at length though
+much exhausted, had made itself felt with full power again in a painful
+vomiting, which seemed to shake his body asunder, with great consequent
+prostration. From that time the distress increased rapidly downwards. Omnia tum
+vero vitai claustra lababant;+ and soon the cold was mounting with sure pace
+from the dead feet to the head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now Marius began more than to suspect what the issue must be, and
+henceforward could but watch with a sort of agonised fascination the rapid but
+systematic work of the destroyer, faintly relieving a little the mere accidents
+of the sharper forms of suffering. Flavian himself appeared, in full
+consciousness at last&mdash;in clear-sighted, deliberate estimate of the actual
+crisis&mdash;to be doing battle with his adversary. His mind surveyed, with
+great distinctness, the various suggested modes of relief. He must without fail
+get better, he would fancy, might he be removed to a certain place on the hills
+where as a child he had once recovered from sickness, but found that he could
+scarcely raise his head from the pillow without giddiness. As if now surely
+foreseeing the end, he would set himself, with an eager effort, and with that
+eager and angry look, which is noted as one of the premonitions of death in
+this disease, to fashion out, without formal dictation, still a few more broken
+verses of his unfinished work, in hard-set determination, defiant of pain, to
+arrest this or that little drop at least from the river of sensuous imagery
+rushing so quickly past him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But at length delirium&mdash;symptom that the work of the plague was done, and
+the last resort of life yielding to the enemy&mdash;broke the coherent order of
+words and thoughts; and Marius, intent on the coming agony, found his best hope
+in the increasing dimness of the patient&rsquo;s mind. In intervals of clearer
+consciousness the visible signs of cold, of sorrow and desolation, were very
+painful. No longer battling with the disease, he seemed as it were to place
+himself at the disposal of the victorious foe, dying passively, like some dumb
+creature, in hopeless acquiescence at last. That old, half-pleading petulance,
+unamiable, yet, as it might seem, only needing conditions of life a little
+happier than they had actually been, to become refinement of affection, a
+delicate grace in its demand on the sympathy of others, had changed in those
+moments of full intelligence to a clinging and tremulous gentleness, as he
+lay&mdash;&ldquo;on the very threshold of death&rdquo;&mdash;with a sharply
+contracted hand in the hand of Marius, to his almost surprised joy, winning him
+now to an absolutely self-forgetful devotion. There was a new sort of pleading
+in the misty eyes, just because they took such unsteady note of him, which made
+Marius feel as if guilty; anticipating thus a form of self-reproach with which
+even the tenderest ministrant may be sometimes surprised, when, at death,
+affectionate labour suddenly ceasing leaves room for the suspicion of some
+failure of love perhaps, at one or another minute point in it. Marius almost
+longed to take his share in the suffering, that he might understand so the
+better how to relieve it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed that the light of the lamp distressed the patient, and Marius
+extinguished it. The thunder which had sounded all day among the hills, with a
+heat not unwelcome to Flavian, had given way at nightfall to steady rain; and
+in the darkness Marius lay down beside him, faintly shivering now in the sudden
+cold, to lend him his own warmth, undeterred by the fear of contagion which had
+kept other people from passing near the house. At length about day-break he
+perceived that the last effort had come with a revival of mental clearness, as
+Marius understood by the contact, light as it was, in recognition of him there.
+&ldquo;Is it a comfort,&rdquo; he whispered then, &ldquo;that I shall often
+come and weep over you?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Not unless I be aware, and hear you
+weeping!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sun shone out on the people going to work for a long hot day, and Marius
+was standing by the dead, watching, with deliberate purpose to fix in his
+memory every detail, that he might have this picture in reserve, should any
+hour of forgetfulness hereafter come to him with the temptation to feel
+completely happy again. A feeling of outrage, of resentment against nature
+itself, mingled with an agony of pity, as he noted on the now placid features a
+certain look of humility, almost abject, like the expression of a smitten child
+or animal, as of one, fallen at last, after bewildering struggle, wholly under
+the power of a merciless adversary. From mere tenderness of soul he would not
+forget one circumstance in all that; as a man might piously stamp on his memory
+the death-scene of a brother wrongfully condemned to die, against a time that
+may come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fear of the corpse, which surprised him in his effort to watch by it
+through the darkness, was a hint of his own failing strength, just in time. The
+first night after the washing of the body, he bore stoutly enough the tax which
+affection seemed to demand, throwing the incense from time to time on the
+little altar placed beside the bier. It was the recurrence of the
+thing&mdash;that unchanged outline below the coverlet, amid a silence in which
+the faintest rustle seemed to speak&mdash;that finally overcame his
+determination. Surely, here, in this alienation, this sense of distance between
+them, which had come over him before though in minor degree when the mind of
+Flavian had wandered in his sickness, was another of the pains of death. Yet he
+was able to make all due preparations, and go through the ceremonies, shortened
+a little because of the infection, when, on a cloudless evening, the funeral
+procession went forth; himself, the flames of the pyre having done their work,
+carrying away the urn of the deceased, in the folds of his toga, to its last
+resting-place in the cemetery beside the highway, and so turning home to sleep
+in his own desolate lodging.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Quis desiderio sit pudor aut modus<br/>
+    Tam cari capitis?&mdash;+
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What thought of others&rsquo; thoughts about one could there be with the regret
+for &ldquo;so dear a head&rdquo; fresh at one&rsquo;s heart?
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+NOTES
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+116. +Lucretius, Book VI.1153.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+120. +Horace, Odes I.xxiv.1-2.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="part02"></a>PART THE SECOND</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>CHAPTER VIII.<br/>
+ANIMULA VAGULA</h2>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Animula, vagula, blandula<br/>
+Hospes comesque corporis,<br/>
+Quae nunc abibis in loca?<br/>
+Pallidula, rigida, nudula.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+The Emperor Hadrian to his Soul
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Flavian was no more. The little marble chest with its dust and tears lay cold
+among the faded flowers. For most people the actual spectacle of death brings
+out into greater reality, at least for the imagination, whatever confidence
+they may entertain of the soul&rsquo;s survival in another life. To Marius,
+greatly agitated by that event, the earthly end of Flavian came like a final
+revelation of nothing less than the soul&rsquo;s extinction. Flavian had gone
+out as utterly as the fire among those still beloved ashes. Even that wistful
+suspense of judgment expressed by the dying Hadrian, regarding further stages
+of being still possible for the soul in some dim journey hence, seemed wholly
+untenable, and, with it, almost all that remained of the religion of his
+childhood. Future extinction seemed just then to be what the unforced witness
+of his own nature pointed to. On the other hand, there came a novel curiosity
+as to what the various schools of ancient philosophy had had to say concerning
+that strange, fluttering creature; and that curiosity impelled him to certain
+severe studies, in which his earlier religious conscience seemed still to
+survive, as a principle of hieratic scrupulousness or integrity of thought,
+regarding this new service to intellectual light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this time, by his poetic and inward temper, he might have fallen a prey to
+the enervating mysticism, then in wait for ardent souls in many a melodramatic
+revival of old religion or theosophy. From all this, fascinating as it might
+actually be to one side of his character, he was kept by a genuine virility
+there, effective in him, among other results, as a hatred of what was
+theatrical, and the instinctive recognition that in vigorous intelligence,
+after all, divinity was most likely to be found a resident. With this was
+connected the feeling, increasing with his advance to manhood, of a poetic
+beauty in mere clearness of thought, the actually aesthetic charm of a cold
+austerity of mind; as if the kinship of that to the clearness of physical light
+were something more than a figure of speech. Of all those various religious
+fantasies, as so many forms of enthusiasm, he could well appreciate the
+picturesque; that was made easy by his natural Epicureanism, already prompting
+him to conceive of himself as but the passive spectator of the world around
+him. But it was to the severer reasoning, of which such matters as Epicurean
+theory are born, that, in effect, he now betook himself. Instinctively
+suspicious of those mechanical arcana, those pretended &ldquo;secrets
+unveiled&rdquo; of the professional mystic, which really bring great and little
+souls to one level, for Marius the only possible dilemma lay between that old,
+ancestral Roman religion, now become so incredible to him and the honest action
+of his own untroubled, unassisted intelligence. Even the Arcana Celestia of
+Platonism&mdash;what the sons of Plato had had to say regarding the essential
+indifference of pure soul to its bodily house and merely occasional
+dwelling-place&mdash;seemed to him while his heart was there in the urn with
+the material ashes of Flavian, or still lingering in memory over his last
+agony, wholly inhuman or morose, as tending to alleviate his resentment at
+nature&rsquo;s wrong. It was to the sentiment of the body, and the affections
+it defined&mdash;the flesh, of whose force and colour that wandering Platonic
+soul was but so frail a residue or abstract&mdash;he must cling. The various
+pathetic traits of the beloved, suffering, perished body of Flavian, so deeply
+pondered, had made him a materialist, but with something of the temper of a
+devotee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As a consequence it might have seemed at first that his care for poetry had
+passed away, to be replaced by the literature of thought. His much-pondered
+manuscript verses were laid aside; and what happened now to one, who was
+certainly to be something of a poet from first to last, looked at the moment
+like a change from poetry to prose. He came of age about this time, his own
+master though with beardless face; and at eighteen, an age at which, then as
+now, many youths of capacity, who fancied themselves poets, secluded themselves
+from others chiefly in affectation and vague dreaming, he secluded himself
+indeed from others, but in a severe intellectual meditation, that salt of
+poetry, without which all the more serious charm is lacking to the imaginative
+world. Still with something of the old religious earnestness of his childhood,
+he set himself&mdash;Sich im Denken zu orientiren&mdash;to determine his
+bearings, as by compass, in the world of thought&mdash;to get that precise
+acquaintance with the creative intelligence itself, its structure and
+capacities, its relation to other parts of himself and to other things, without
+which, certainly, no poetry can be masterly. Like a young man rich in this
+world&rsquo;s goods coming of age, he must go into affairs, and ascertain his
+outlook. There must be no disguises. An exact estimate of realities, as towards
+himself, he must have&mdash;a delicately measured gradation of certainty in
+things&mdash;from the distant, haunted horizon of mere surmise or imagination,
+to the actual feeling of sorrow in his heart, as he reclined one morning, alone
+instead of in pleasant company, to ponder the hard sayings of an imperfect old
+Greek manuscript, unrolled beside him. His former gay companions, meeting him
+in the streets of the old Italian town, and noting the graver lines coming into
+the face of the sombre but enthusiastic student of intellectual structure, who
+could hold his own so well in the society of accomplished older men, were half
+afraid of him, though proud to have him of their company. Why this
+reserve?&mdash;they asked, concerning the orderly, self-possessed youth, whose
+speech and carriage seemed so carefully measured, who was surely no poet like
+the rapt, dishevelled Lupus. Was he secretly in love, perhaps, whose toga was
+so daintily folded, and who was always as fresh as the flowers he wore; or bent
+on his own line of ambition: or even on riches?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marius, meantime, was reading freely, in early morning for the most part, those
+writers chiefly who had made it their business to know what might be thought
+concerning that strange, enigmatic, personal essence, which had seemed to go
+out altogether, along with the funeral fires. And the old Greek who more than
+any other was now giving form to his thoughts was a very hard master. From
+Epicurus, from the thunder and lightning of Lucretius&mdash;like thunder and
+lightning some distance off, one might recline to enjoy, in a garden of
+roses&mdash;he had gone back to the writer who was in a certain sense the
+teacher of both, Heraclitus of Ionia. His difficult book &ldquo;Concerning
+Nature&rdquo; was even then rare, for people had long since satisfied
+themselves by the quotation of certain brilliant, isolated, oracles only, out
+of what was at best a taxing kind of lore. But the difficulty of the early
+Greek prose did but spur the curiosity of Marius; the writer, the superior
+clearness of whose intellectual view had so sequestered him from other men, who
+had had so little joy of that superiority, being avowedly exacting as to the
+amount of devout attention he required from the student. &ldquo;The
+many,&rdquo; he said, always thus emphasising the difference between the many
+and the few, are &ldquo;like people heavy with wine,&rdquo; &ldquo;led by
+children,&rdquo; &ldquo;knowing not whither they go;&rdquo; and yet,
+&ldquo;much learning doth not make wise;&rdquo; and again, &ldquo;the ass,
+after all, would have his thistles rather than fine gold.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Heraclitus, indeed, had not under-rated the difficulty for &ldquo;the
+many&rdquo; of the paradox with which his doctrine begins, and the due
+reception of which must involve a denial of habitual impressions, as the
+necessary first step in the way of truth. His philosophy had been developed in
+conscious, outspoken opposition to the current mode of thought, as a matter
+requiring some exceptional loyalty to pure reason and its &ldquo;dry
+light.&rdquo; Men are subject to an illusion, he protests, regarding matters
+apparent to sense. What the uncorrected sense gives was a false impression of
+permanence or fixity in things, which have really changed their nature in the
+very moment in which we see and touch them. And the radical flaw in the current
+mode of thinking would lie herein: that, reflecting this false or uncorrected
+sensation, it attributes to the phenomena of experience a durability which does
+not really belong to them. Imaging forth from those fluid impressions a world
+of firmly out-lined objects, it leads one to regard as a thing stark and dead
+what is in reality full of animation, of vigour, of the fire of life&mdash;that
+eternal process of nature, of which at a later time Goethe spoke as the
+&ldquo;Living Garment,&rdquo; whereby God is seen of us, ever in weaving at the
+&ldquo;Loom of Time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the appeal which the old Greek thinker made was, in the first instance,
+from confused to unconfused sensation; with a sort of prophetic seriousness, a
+great claim and assumption, such as we may understand, if we anticipate in this
+preliminary scepticism the ulterior scope of his speculation, according to
+which the universal movement of all natural things is but one particular stage,
+or measure, of that ceaseless activity wherein the divine reason consists. The
+one true being&mdash;that constant subject of all early thought&mdash;it was
+his merit to have conceived, not as sterile and stagnant inaction, but as a
+perpetual energy, from the restless stream of which, at certain points, some
+elements detach themselves, and harden into non-entity and death,
+corresponding, as outward objects, to man&rsquo;s inward condition of
+ignorance: that is, to the slowness of his faculties. It is with this paradox
+of a subtle, perpetual change in all visible things, that the high speculation
+of Heraclitus begins. Hence the scorn he expresses for anything like a
+careless, half-conscious, &ldquo;use-and-wont&rdquo; reception of our
+experience, which took so strong a hold on men&rsquo;s memories! Hence those
+many precepts towards a strenuous self-consciousness in all we think and do,
+that loyalty to cool and candid reason, which makes strict attentiveness of
+mind a kind of religious duty and service.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The negative doctrine, then, that the objects of our ordinary experience, fixed
+as they seem, are really in perpetual change, had been, as originally
+conceived, but the preliminary step towards a large positive system of almost
+religious philosophy. Then as now, the illuminated philosophic mind might
+apprehend, in what seemed a mass of lifeless matter, the movement of that
+universal life, in which things, and men&rsquo;s impressions of them, were ever
+&ldquo;coming to be,&rdquo; alternately consumed and renewed. That continual
+change, to be discovered by the attentive understanding where common opinion
+found fixed objects, was but the indicator of a subtler but all-pervading
+motion&mdash;the sleepless, ever-sustained, inexhaustible energy of the divine
+reason itself, proceeding always by its own rhythmical logic, and lending to
+all mind and matter, in turn, what life they had. In this &ldquo;perpetual
+flux&rdquo; of things and of souls, there was, as Heraclitus conceived, a
+continuance, if not of their material or spiritual elements, yet of orderly
+intelligible relationships, like the harmony of musical notes, wrought out in
+and through the series of their mutations&mdash;ordinances of the divine
+reason, maintained throughout the changes of the phenomenal world; and this
+harmony in their mutation and opposition, was, after all, a principle of
+sanity, of reality, there. But it happened, that, of all this, the first,
+merely sceptical or negative step, that easiest step on the threshold, had
+alone remained in general memory; and the &ldquo;doctrine of motion&rdquo;
+seemed to those who had felt its seduction to make all fixed knowledge
+impossible. The swift passage of things, the still swifter passage of those
+modes of our conscious being which seemed to reflect them, might indeed be the
+burning of the divine fire: but what was ascertained was that they did pass
+away like a devouring flame, or like the race of water in the
+mid-stream&mdash;too swiftly for any real knowledge of them to be attainable.
+Heracliteanism had grown to be almost identical with the famous doctrine of the
+sophist Protagoras, that the momentary, sensible apprehension of the individual
+was the only standard of what is or is not, and each one the measure of all
+things to himself. The impressive name of Heraclitus had become but an
+authority for a philosophy of the despair of knowledge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And as it had been with his original followers in Greece, so it happened now
+with the later Roman disciple. He, too, paused at the apprehension of that
+constant motion of things&mdash;the drift of flowers, of little or great souls,
+of ambitious systems, in the stream around him, the first source, the ultimate
+issue, of which, in regions out of sight, must count with him as but a dim
+problem. The bold mental flight of the old Greek master from the fleeting,
+competing objects of experience to that one universal life, in which the whole
+sphere of physical change might be reckoned as but a single pulsation, remained
+by him as hypothesis only&mdash;the hypothesis he actually preferred, as in
+itself most credible, however scantily realisable even by the
+imagination&mdash;yet still as but one unverified hypothesis, among many
+others, concerning the first principle of things. He might reserve it as a
+fine, high, visionary consideration, very remote upon the intellectual ladder,
+just at the point, indeed, where that ladder seemed to pass into the clouds,
+but for which there was certainly no time left just now by his eager interest
+in the real objects so close to him, on the lowlier earthy steps nearest the
+ground. And those childish days of reverie, when he played at priests, played
+in many another day-dream, working his way from the actual present, as far as
+he might, with a delightful sense of escape in replacing the outer world of
+other people by an inward world as himself really cared to have it, had made
+him a kind of &ldquo;idealist.&rdquo; He was become aware of the possibility of
+a large dissidence between an inward and somewhat exclusive world of vivid
+personal apprehension, and the unimproved, unheightened reality of the life of
+those about him. As a consequence, he was ready now to concede, somewhat more
+easily than others, the first point of his new lesson, that the individual is
+to himself the measure of all things, and to rely on the exclusive certainty to
+himself of his own impressions. To move afterwards in that outer world of other
+people, as though taking it at their estimate, would be possible henceforth
+only as a kind of irony. And as with the Vicaire Savoyard, after reflecting on
+the variations of philosophy, &ldquo;the first fruit he drew from that
+reflection was the lesson of a limitation of his researches to what immediately
+interested him; to rest peacefully in a profound ignorance as to all beside; to
+disquiet himself only concerning those things which it was of import for him to
+know.&rdquo; At least he would entertain no theory of conduct which did not
+allow its due weight to this primary element of incertitude or negation, in the
+conditions of man&rsquo;s life. Just here he joined company, retracing in his
+individual mental pilgrimage the historic order of human thought, with another
+wayfarer on the journey, another ancient Greek master, the founder of the
+Cyrenaic philosophy, whose weighty traditional utterances (for he had left no
+writing) served in turn to give effective outline to the contemplations of
+Marius. There was something in the doctrine itself congruous with the place
+wherein it had its birth; and for a time Marius lived much, mentally, in the
+brilliant Greek colony which had given a dubious name to the philosophy of
+pleasure. It hung, for his fancy, between the mountains and the sea, among
+richer than Italian gardens, on a certain breezy table-land projecting from the
+African coast, some hundreds of miles southward from Greece. There, in a
+delightful climate, with something of transalpine temperance amid its luxury,
+and withal in an inward atmosphere of temperance which did but further enhance
+the brilliancy of human life, the school of Cyrene had maintained itself as
+almost one with the family of its founder; certainly as nothing coarse or
+unclean, and under the influence of accomplished women.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Aristippus of Cyrene too had left off in suspense of judgment as to what might
+really lie behind&mdash;flammantia moenia mundi: the flaming ramparts of the
+world. Those strange, bold, sceptical surmises, which had haunted the minds of
+the first Greek enquirers as merely abstract doubt, which had been present to
+the mind of Heraclitus as one element only in a system of abstract philosophy,
+became with Aristippus a very subtly practical worldly-wisdom. The difference
+between him and those obscure earlier thinkers is almost like that between an
+ancient thinker generally, and a modern man of the world: it was the difference
+between the mystic in his cell, or the prophet in the desert, and the expert,
+cosmopolitan, administrator of his dark sayings, translating the abstract
+thoughts of the master into terms, first of all, of sentiment. It has been
+sometimes seen, in the history of the human mind, that when thus translated
+into terms of sentiment&mdash;of sentiment, as lying already half-way towards
+practice&mdash;the abstract ideas of metaphysics for the first time reveal
+their true significance. The metaphysical principle, in itself, as it were,
+without hands or feet, becomes impressive, fascinating, of effect, when
+translated into a precept as to how it were best to feel and act; in other
+words, under its sentimental or ethical equivalent. The leading idea of the
+great master of Cyrene, his theory that things are but shadows, and that we,
+even as they, never continue in one stay, might indeed have taken effect as a
+languid, enervating, consumptive nihilism, as a precept of
+&ldquo;renunciation,&rdquo; which would touch and handle and busy itself with
+nothing. But in the reception of metaphysical formulae, all depends, as regards
+their actual and ulterior result, on the pre-existent qualities of that soil of
+human nature into which they fall&mdash;the company they find already present
+there, on their admission into the house of thought; there being at least so
+much truth as this involves in the theological maxim, that the reception of
+this or that speculative conclusion is really a matter of will. The persuasion
+that all is vanity, with this happily constituted Greek, who had been a genuine
+disciple of Socrates and reflected, presumably, something of his blitheness in
+the face of the world, his happy way of taking all chances, generated neither
+frivolity nor sourness, but induced, rather, an impression, just serious
+enough, of the call upon men&rsquo;s attention of the crisis in which they find
+themselves. It became the stimulus towards every kind of activity, and prompted
+a perpetual, inextinguishable thirst after experience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With Marius, then, the influence of the philosopher of pleasure depended on
+this, that in him an abstract doctrine, originally somewhat acrid, had fallen
+upon a rich and genial nature, well fitted to transform it into a theory of
+practice, of considerable stimulative power towards a fair life. What Marius
+saw in him was the spectacle of one of the happiest temperaments coming, so to
+speak, to an understanding with the most depressing of theories; accepting the
+results of a metaphysical system which seemed to concentrate into itself all
+the weakening trains of thought in earlier Greek speculation, and making the
+best of it; turning its hard, bare truths, with wonderful tact, into precepts
+of grace, and delicate wisdom, and a delicate sense of honour. Given the
+hardest terms, supposing our days are indeed but a shadow, even so, we may well
+adorn and beautify, in scrupulous self-respect, our souls, and whatever our
+souls touch upon&mdash;these wonderful bodies, these material dwelling-places
+through which the shadows pass together for a while, the very raiment we wear,
+our very pastimes and the intercourse of society. The most discerning judges
+saw in him something like the graceful &ldquo;humanities&rdquo; of the later
+Roman, and our modern &ldquo;culture,&rdquo; as it is termed; while Horace
+recalled his sayings as expressing best his own consummate amenity in the
+reception of life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this way, for Marius, under the guidance of that old master of decorous
+living, those eternal doubts as to the criteria of truth reduced themselves to
+a scepticism almost drily practical, a scepticism which developed the
+opposition between things as they are and our impressions and thoughts
+concerning them&mdash;the possibility, if an outward world does really exist,
+of some faultiness in our apprehension of it&mdash;the doctrine, in short, of
+what is termed &ldquo;the subjectivity of knowledge.&rdquo; That is a
+consideration, indeed, which lies as an element of weakness, like some admitted
+fault or flaw, at the very foundation of every philosophical account of the
+universe; which confronts all philosophies at their starting, but with which
+none have really dealt conclusively, some perhaps not quite sincerely; which
+those who are not philosophers dissipate by &ldquo;common,&rdquo; but
+unphilosophical, sense, or by religious faith. The peculiar strength of Marius
+was, to have apprehended this weakness on the threshold of human knowledge, in
+the whole range of its consequences. Our knowledge is limited to what we feel,
+he reflected: we need no proof that we feel. But can we be sure that things are
+at all like our feelings? Mere peculiarities in the instruments of our
+cognition, like the little knots and waves on the surface of a mirror, may
+distort the matter they seem but to represent. Of other people we cannot truly
+know even the feelings, nor how far they would indicate the same modifications,
+each one of a personality really unique, in using the same terms as ourselves;
+that &ldquo;common experience,&rdquo; which is sometimes proposed as a
+satisfactory basis of certainty, being after all only a fixity of language. But
+our own impressions!&mdash;The light and heat of that blue veil over our heads,
+the heavens spread out, perhaps not like a curtain over anything!&mdash;How
+reassuring, after so long a debate about the rival criteria of truth, to fall
+back upon direct sensation, to limit one&rsquo;s aspirations after knowledge to
+that! In an age still materially so brilliant, so expert in the artistic
+handling of material things, with sensible capacities still in undiminished
+vigour, with the whole world of classic art and poetry outspread before it, and
+where there was more than eye or ear could well take in&mdash;how natural the
+determination to rely exclusively upon the phenomena of the senses, which
+certainly never deceive us about themselves, about which alone we can never
+deceive ourselves!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so the abstract apprehension that the little point of this present moment
+alone really is, between a past which has just ceased to be and a future which
+may never come, became practical with Marius, under the form of a resolve, as
+far as possible, to exclude regret and desire, and yield himself to the
+improvement of the present with an absolutely disengaged mind. America is here
+and now&mdash;here, or nowhere: as Wilhelm Meister finds out one day, just not
+too late, after so long looking vaguely across the ocean for the opportunity of
+the development of his capacities. It was as if, recognising in perpetual
+motion the law of nature, Marius identified his own way of life cordially with
+it, &ldquo;throwing himself into the stream,&rdquo; so to speak. He too must
+maintain a harmony with that soul of motion in things, by constantly renewed
+mobility of character.
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Omnis Aristippum decuit color et status et res.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Thus Horace had summed up that perfect manner in the reception of life attained
+by his old Cyrenaic master; and the first practical consequence of the
+metaphysic which lay behind that perfect manner, had been a strict limitation,
+almost the renunciation, of metaphysical enquiry itself. Metaphysic&mdash;that
+art, as it has so often proved, in the words of Michelet, <i>de s&rsquo;égarer
+avec méthode</i>, of bewildering oneself methodically:&mdash;one must spend
+little time upon that! In the school of Cyrene, great as was its mental
+incisiveness, logical and physical speculation, theoretic interests generally,
+had been valued only so far as they served to give a groundwork, an
+intellectual justification, to that exclusive concern with practical ethics
+which was a note of the Cyrenaic philosophy. How earnest and enthusiastic, how
+true to itself, under how many varieties of character, had been the effort of
+the Greeks after Theory&mdash;Theôria&mdash;that vision of a wholly reasonable
+world, which, according to the greatest of them, literally makes man like God:
+how loyally they had still persisted in the quest after that, in spite of how
+many disappointments! In the Gospel of Saint John, perhaps, some of them might
+have found the kind of vision they were seeking for; but not in &ldquo;doubtful
+disputations&rdquo; concerning &ldquo;being&rdquo; and &ldquo;not being,&rdquo;
+knowledge and appearance. Men&rsquo;s minds, even young men&rsquo;s minds, at
+that late day, might well seem oppressed by the weariness of systems which had
+so far outrun positive knowledge; and in the mind of Marius, as in that old
+school of Cyrene, this sense of ennui, combined with appetites so youthfully
+vigorous, brought about reaction, a sort of suicide (instances of the like have
+been seen since) by which a great metaphysical acumen was devoted to the
+function of proving metaphysical speculation impossible, or useless. Abstract
+theory was to be valued only just so far as it might serve to clear the tablet
+of the mind from suppositions no more than half realisable, or wholly
+visionary, leaving it in flawless evenness of surface to the impressions of an
+experience, concrete and direct.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To be absolutely virgin towards such experience, by ridding ourselves of such
+abstractions as are but the ghosts of bygone impressions&mdash;to be rid of the
+notions we have made for ourselves, and that so often only misrepresent the
+experience of which they profess to be the representation&mdash;<i>idola</i>,
+idols, false appearances, as Bacon calls them later&mdash;to neutralise the
+distorting influence of metaphysical system by an all-accomplished metaphysic
+skill: it is this bold, hard, sober recognition, under a very &ldquo;dry
+light,&rdquo; of its own proper aim, in union with a habit of feeling which on
+the practical side may perhaps open a wide doorway to human weakness, that
+gives to the Cyrenaic doctrine, to reproductions of this doctrine in the time
+of Marius or in our own, their gravity and importance. It was a school to which
+the young man might come, eager for truth, expecting much from philosophy, in
+no ignoble curiosity, aspiring after nothing less than an
+&ldquo;initiation.&rdquo; He would be sent back, sooner or later, to
+experience, to the world of concrete impressions, to things as they may be
+seen, heard, felt by him; but with a wonderful machinery of observation, and
+free from the tyranny of mere theories.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, in intervals of repose, after the agitation which followed the death of
+Flavian, the thoughts of Marius ran, while he felt himself as if returned to
+the fine, clear, peaceful light of that pleasant school of healthfully sensuous
+wisdom, in the brilliant old Greek colony, on its fresh upland by the sea. Not
+pleasure, but a general completeness of life, was the practical ideal to which
+this anti-metaphysical metaphysic really pointed. And towards such a full or
+complete life, a life of various yet select sensation, the most direct and
+effective auxiliary must be, in a word, Insight. Liberty of soul, freedom from
+all partial and misrepresentative doctrine which does but relieve one element
+in our experience at the cost of another, freedom from all embarrassment alike
+of regret for the past and of calculation on the future: this would be but
+preliminary to the real business of education&mdash;insight, insight through
+culture, into all that the present moment holds in trust for us, as we stand so
+briefly in its presence. From that maxim of Life as the end of life, followed,
+as a practical consequence, the desirableness of refining all the instruments
+of inward and outward intuition, of developing all their capacities, of testing
+and exercising one&rsquo;s self in them, till one&rsquo;s whole nature became
+one complex medium of reception, towards the vision&mdash;the &ldquo;beatific
+vision,&rdquo; if we really cared to make it such&mdash;of our actual
+experience in the world. Not the conveyance of an abstract body of truths or
+principles, would be the aim of the right education of one&rsquo;s self, or of
+another, but the conveyance of an art&mdash;an art in some degree peculiar to
+each individual character; with the modifications, that is, due to its special
+constitution, and the peculiar circumstances of its growth, inasmuch as no one
+of us is &ldquo;like another, all in all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>CHAPTER IX.<br/>
+NEW CYRENAICISM</h2>
+
+<p>
+Such were the practical conclusions drawn for himself by Marius, when somewhat
+later he had outgrown the mastery of others, from the principle that &ldquo;all
+is vanity.&rdquo; If he could but count upon the present, if a life brief at
+best could not certainly be shown to conduct one anywhere beyond itself, if
+men&rsquo;s highest curiosity was indeed so persistently baffled&mdash;then,
+with the Cyrenaics of all ages, he would at least fill up the measure of that
+present with vivid sensations, and such intellectual apprehensions, as, in
+strength and directness and their immediately realised values at the bar of an
+actual experience, are most like sensations. So some have spoken in every age;
+for, like all theories which really express a strong natural tendency of the
+human mind or even one of its characteristic modes of weakness, this vein of
+reflection is a constant tradition in philosophy. Every age of European thought
+has had its Cyrenaics or Epicureans, under many disguises: even under the hood
+of the monk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But&mdash;Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die!&mdash;is a proposal, the
+real import of which differs immensely, according to the natural taste, and the
+acquired judgment, of the guests who sit at the table. It may express nothing
+better than the instinct of Dante&rsquo;s Ciacco, the accomplished glutton, in
+the mud of the Inferno;+ or, since on no hypothesis does man &ldquo;live by
+bread alone,&rdquo; may come to be identical with&mdash;&ldquo;My meat is to do
+what is just and kind;&rdquo; while the soul, which can make no sincere claim
+to have apprehended anything beyond the veil of immediate experience, yet never
+loses a sense of happiness in conforming to the highest moral ideal it can
+clearly define for itself; and actually, though but with so faint hope, does
+the &ldquo;Father&rsquo;s business.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In that age of Marcus Aurelius, so completely disabused of the metaphysical
+ambition to pass beyond &ldquo;the flaming ramparts of the world,&rdquo; but,
+on the other hand, possessed of so vast an accumulation of intellectual
+treasure, with so wide a view before it over all varieties of what is powerful
+or attractive in man and his works, the thoughts of Marius did but follow the
+line taken by the majority of educated persons, though to a different issue.
+Pitched to a really high and serious key, the precept&mdash;Be perfect in
+regard to what is here and now: the precept of &ldquo;culture,&rdquo; as it is
+called, or of a complete education&mdash;might at least save him from the
+vulgarity and heaviness of a generation, certainly of no general fineness of
+temper, though with a material well-being abundant enough. Conceded that what
+is secure in our existence is but the sharp apex of the present moment between
+two hypothetical eternities, and all that is real in our experience but a
+series of fleeting impressions:&mdash;so Marius continued the sceptical
+argument he had condensed, as the matter to hold by, from his various
+philosophical reading:&mdash;given, that we are never to get beyond the walls
+of the closely shut cell of one&rsquo;s own personality; that the ideas we are
+somehow impelled to form of an outer world, and of other minds akin to our own,
+are, it may be, but a day-dream, and the thought of any world beyond, a
+day-dream perhaps idler still: then, he, at least, in whom those fleeting
+impressions&mdash;faces, voices, material sunshine&mdash;were very real and
+imperious, might well set himself to the consideration, how such actual moments
+as they passed might be made to yield their utmost, by the most dexterous
+training of capacity. Amid abstract metaphysical doubts, as to what might lie
+one step only beyond that experience, reinforcing the deep original materialism
+or earthliness of human nature itself, bound so intimately to the sensuous
+world, let him at least make the most of what was &ldquo;here and now.&rdquo;
+In the actual dimness of ways from means to ends&mdash;ends in themselves
+desirable, yet for the most part distant and for him, certainly, below the
+visible horizon&mdash;he would at all events be sure that the means, to use the
+well-worn terminology, should have something of finality or perfection about
+them, and themselves partake, in a measure, of the more excellent nature of
+ends&mdash;that the means should justify the end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With this view he would demand culture, paideia,+ as the Cyrenaics said, or, in
+other words, a wide, a complete, education&mdash;an education partly negative,
+as ascertaining the true limits of man&rsquo;s capacities, but for the most
+part positive, and directed especially to the expansion and refinement of the
+power of reception; of those powers, above all, which are immediately relative
+to fleeting phenomena, the powers of emotion and sense. In such an education,
+an &ldquo;aesthetic&rdquo; education, as it might now be termed, and certainly
+occupied very largely with those aspects of things which affect us pleasurably
+through sensation, art, of course, including all the finer sorts of literature,
+would have a great part to play. The study of music, in that wider Platonic
+sense, according to which, music comprehends all those matters over which the
+Muses of Greek mythology preside, would conduct one to an exquisite
+appreciation of all the finer traits of nature and of man. Nay! the products of
+the imagination must themselves be held to present the most perfect forms of
+life&mdash;spirit and matter alike under their purest and most perfect
+conditions&mdash;the most strictly appropriate objects of that impassioned
+contemplation, which, in the world of intellectual discipline, as in the
+highest forms of morality and religion, must be held to be the essential
+function of the &ldquo;perfect.&rdquo; Such manner of life might come even to
+seem a kind of religion&mdash;an inward, visionary, mystic piety, or religion,
+by virtue of its effort to live days &ldquo;lovely and pleasant&rdquo; in
+themselves, here and now, and with an all-sufficiency of well-being in the
+immediate sense of the object contemplated, independently of any faith, or hope
+that might be entertained as to their ulterior tendency. In this way, the true
+aesthetic culture would be realisable as a new form of the contemplative life,
+founding its claim on the intrinsic &ldquo;blessedness&rdquo; of
+&ldquo;vision&rdquo;&mdash;the vision of perfect men and things. One&rsquo;s
+human nature, indeed, would fain reckon on an assured and endless future,
+pleasing itself with the dream of a final home, to be attained at some still
+remote date, yet with a conscious, delightful home-coming at last, as depicted
+in many an old poetic Elysium. On the other hand, the world of perfected
+sensation, intelligence, emotion, is so close to us, and so attractive, that
+the most visionary of spirits must needs represent the world unseen in colours,
+and under a form really borrowed from it. Let me be sure then&mdash;might he
+not plausibly say?&mdash;that I miss no detail of this life of realised
+consciousness in the present! Here at least is a vision, a theory, theôria,+
+which reposes on no basis of unverified hypothesis, which makes no call upon a
+future after all somewhat problematic; as it would be unaffected by any
+discovery of an Empedocles (improving on the old story of Prometheus) as to
+what had really been the origin, and course of development, of man&rsquo;s
+actually attained faculties and that seemingly divine particle of reason or
+spirit in him. Such a doctrine, at more leisurable moments, would of course
+have its precepts to deliver on the embellishment, generally, of what is near
+at hand, on the adornment of life, till, in a not impracticable rule of
+conduct, one&rsquo;s existence, from day to day, came to be like a
+well-executed piece of music; that &ldquo;perpetual motion&rdquo; in things (so
+Marius figured the matter to himself, under the old Greek imageries) according
+itself to a kind of cadence or harmony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was intelligible that this &ldquo;aesthetic&rdquo; philosophy might find
+itself (theoretically, at least, and by way of a curious question in casuistry,
+legitimate from its own point of view) weighing the claims of that eager,
+concentrated, impassioned realisation of experience, against those of the
+received morality. Conceiving its own function in a somewhat desperate temper,
+and becoming, as every high-strung form of sentiment, as the religious
+sentiment itself, may become, somewhat antinomian, when, in its effort towards
+the order of experiences it prefers, it is confronted with the traditional and
+popular morality, at points where that morality may look very like a
+convention, or a mere stage-property of the world, it would be found, from time
+to time, breaking beyond the limits of the actual moral order; perhaps not
+without some pleasurable excitement in so bold a venture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the possibility of some such hazard as this, in thought or even in
+practice&mdash;that it might be, though refining, or tonic even, in the case of
+those strong and in health, yet, as Pascal says of the kindly and temperate
+wisdom of Montaigne, &ldquo;pernicious for those who have any natural tendency
+to impiety or vice,&rdquo; the line of reflection traced out above, was fairly
+chargeable.&mdash;Not, however, with &ldquo;hedonism&rdquo; and its supposed
+consequences. The blood, the heart, of Marius were still pure. He knew that his
+carefully considered theory of practice braced him, with the effect of a moral
+principle duly recurring to mind every morning, towards the work of a student,
+for which he might seem intended. Yet there were some among his acquaintance
+who jumped to the conclusion that, with the &ldquo;Epicurean stye,&rdquo; he
+was making pleasure&mdash;pleasure, as they so poorly conceived it&mdash;the
+sole motive of life; and they precluded any exacter estimate of the situation
+by covering it with a high-sounding general term, through the vagueness of
+which they were enabled to see the severe and laborious youth in the vulgar
+company of Lais. Words like &ldquo;hedonism&rdquo;&mdash; terms of large and
+vague comprehension&mdash;above all when used for a purpose avowedly
+controversial, have ever been the worst examples of what are called
+&ldquo;question-begging terms;&rdquo; and in that late age in which Marius
+lived, amid the dust of so many centuries of philosophical debate, the air was
+full of them. Yet those who used that reproachful Greek term for the philosophy
+of pleasure, were hardly more likely than the old Greeks themselves (on whom
+regarding this very subject of the theory of pleasure, their masters in the art
+of thinking had so emphatically to impress the necessity of &ldquo;making
+distinctions&rdquo;) to come to any very delicately correct ethical conclusions
+by a reasoning, which began with a general term, comprehensive enough to cover
+pleasures so different in quality, in their causes and effects, as the
+pleasures of wine and love, of art and science, of religious enthusiasm and
+political enterprise, and of that taste or curiosity which satisfied itself
+with long days of serious study. Yet, in truth, each of those pleasurable modes
+of activity, may, in its turn, fairly become the ideal of the
+&ldquo;hedonistic&rdquo; doctrine. Really, to the phase of reflection through
+which Marius was then passing, the charge of &ldquo;hedonism,&rdquo; whatever
+its true weight might be, was not properly applicable at all. Not pleasure, but
+fulness of life, and &ldquo;insight&rdquo; as conducting to that
+fulness&mdash;energy, variety, and choice of experience, including noble pain
+and sorrow even, loves such as those in the exquisite old story of Apuleius,
+sincere and strenuous forms of the moral life, such as Seneca and
+Epictetus&mdash;whatever form of human life, in short, might be heroic,
+impassioned, ideal: from these the &ldquo;new Cyrenaicism&rdquo; of Marius took
+its criterion of values. It was a theory, indeed, which might properly be
+regarded as in great degree coincident with the main principle of the Stoics
+themselves, and an older version of the precept &ldquo;Whatsoever thy hand
+findeth to do, do it with thy might&rdquo;&mdash;a doctrine so widely
+acceptable among the nobler spirits of that time. And, as with that, its
+mistaken tendency would lie in the direction of a kind of idolatry of mere
+life, or natural gift, or strength&mdash;l&rsquo;idôlatrie des talents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To understand the various forms of ancient art and thought, the various forms
+of actual human feeling (the only new thing, in a world almost too opulent in
+what was old) to satisfy, with a kind of scrupulous equity, the claims of these
+concrete and actual objects on his sympathy, his intelligence, his
+senses&mdash;to &ldquo;pluck out the heart of their mystery,&rdquo; and in turn
+become the interpreter of them to others: this had now defined itself for
+Marius as a very narrowly practical design: it determined his choice of a
+vocation to live by. It was the era of the rhetoricians, or sophists, as they
+were sometimes called; of men who came in some instances to great fame and
+fortune, by way of a literary cultivation of &ldquo;science.&rdquo; That
+science, it has been often said, must have been wholly an affair of words. But
+in a world, confessedly so opulent in what was old, the work, even of genius,
+must necessarily consist very much in criticism; and, in the case of the more
+excellent specimens of his class, the rhetorician was, after all, the eloquent
+and effective interpreter, for the delighted ears of others, of what
+understanding himself had come by, in years of travel and study, of the
+beautiful house of art and thought which was the inheritance of the age. The
+emperor Marcus Aurelius, to whose service Marius had now been called, was
+himself, more or less openly, a &ldquo;lecturer.&rdquo; That late world, amid
+many curiously vivid modern traits, had this spectacle, so familiar to
+ourselves, of the public lecturer or essayist; in some cases adding to his
+other gifts that of the Christian preacher, who knows how to touch
+people&rsquo;s sensibilities on behalf of the suffering. To follow in the way
+of these successes, was the natural instinct of youthful ambition; and it was
+with no vulgar egotism that Marius, at the age of nineteen, determined, like
+many another young man of parts, to enter as a student of rhetoric at Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though the manner of his work was changed formally from poetry to prose, he
+remained, and must always be, of the poetic temper: by which, I mean, among
+other things, that quite independently of the general habit of that pensive age
+he lived much, and as it were by system, in reminiscence. Amid his eager
+grasping at the sensation, the consciousness, of the present, he had come to
+see that, after all, the main point of economy in the conduct of the present,
+was the question:&mdash;How will it look to me, at what shall I value it, this
+day next year?&mdash;that in any given day or month one&rsquo;s main concern
+was its impression for the memory. A strange trick memory sometimes played him;
+for, with no natural gradation, what was of last month, or of yesterday, of
+to-day even, would seem as far off, as entirely detached from him, as things of
+ten years ago. Detached from him, yet very real, there lay certain spaces of
+his life, in delicate perspective, under a favourable light; and, somehow, all
+the less fortunate detail and circumstance had parted from them. Such hours
+were oftenest those in which he had been helped by work of others to the
+pleasurable apprehension of art, of nature, or of life. &ldquo;Not what I do,
+but what I am, under the power of this vision&rdquo;&mdash;he would say to
+himself&mdash;&ldquo;is what were indeed pleasing to the gods!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet, with a kind of inconsistency in one who had taken for his philosophic
+ideal the monochronos hêdonê+ of Aristippus&mdash;the pleasure of the ideal
+present, of the mystic now&mdash;there would come, together with that
+precipitate sinking of things into the past, a desire, after all, to retain
+&ldquo;what was so transitive.&rdquo; Could he but arrest, for others also,
+certain clauses of experience, as the imaginative memory presented them to
+himself! In those grand, hot summers, he would have imprisoned the very perfume
+of the flowers. To create, to live, perhaps, a little while beyond the allotted
+hours, if it were but in a fragment of perfect expression:&mdash;it was thus
+his longing defined itself for something to hold by amid the &ldquo;perpetual
+flux.&rdquo; With men of his vocation, people were apt to say, words were
+things. Well! with him, words should be indeed things,&mdash;the word, the
+phrase, valuable in exact proportion to the transparency with which it conveyed
+to others the apprehension, the emotion, the mood, so vividly real within
+himself. Verbaque provisam rem non invita sequentur:+ Virile apprehension of
+the true nature of things, of the true nature of one&rsquo;s own impression,
+first of all!&mdash;words would follow that naturally, a true understanding of
+one&rsquo;s self being ever the first condition of genuine style. Language
+delicate and measured, the delicate Attic phrase, for instance, in which the
+eminent Aristeides could speak, was then a power to which people&rsquo;s
+hearts, and sometimes even their purses, readily responded. And there were many
+points, as Marius thought, on which the heart of that age greatly needed to be
+touched. He hardly knew how strong that old religious sense of responsibility,
+the conscience, as we call it, still was within him&mdash;a body of inward
+impressions, as real as those so highly valued outward ones&mdash;to offend
+against which, brought with it a strange feeling of disloyalty, as to a person.
+And the determination, adhered to with no misgiving, to add nothing, not so
+much as a transient sigh, to the great total of men&rsquo;s unhappiness, in his
+way through the world:&mdash;that too was something to rest on, in the drift of
+mere &ldquo;appearances.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this would involve a life of industry, of industrious study, only possible
+through healthy rule, keeping clear the eye alike of body and soul. For the
+male element, the logical conscience asserted itself now, with opening
+manhood&mdash;asserted itself, even in his literary style, by a certain
+firmness of outline, that touch of the worker in metal, amid its richness.
+Already he blamed instinctively alike in his work and in himself, as youth so
+seldom does, all that had not passed a long and liberal process of erasure. The
+happy phrase or sentence was really modelled upon a cleanly finished structure
+of scrupulous thought. The suggestive force of the one master of his
+development, who had battled so hard with imaginative prose; the utterance, the
+golden utterance, of the other, so content with its living power of persuasion
+that he had never written at all,&mdash;in the commixture of these two
+qualities he set up his literary ideal, and this rare blending of grace with an
+intellectual rigour or astringency, was the secret of a singular expressiveness
+in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He acquired at this time a certain bookish air, the somewhat sombre habitude of
+the avowed scholar, which though it never interfered with the perfect tone,
+&ldquo;fresh and serenely disposed,&rdquo; of the Roman gentleman, yet
+qualified it as by an interesting oblique trait, and frightened away some of
+his equals in age and rank. The sober discretion of his thoughts, his sustained
+habit of meditation, the sense of those negative conclusions enabling him to
+concentrate himself, with an absorption so entire, upon what is immediately
+here and now, gave him a peculiar manner of intellectual confidence, as of one
+who had indeed been initiated into a great secret.&mdash;Though with an air so
+disengaged, he seemed to be living so intently in the visible world! And now,
+in revolt against that pre-occupation with other persons, which had so often
+perturbed his spirit, his wistful speculations as to what the real, the
+greater, experience might be, determined in him, not as the longing for
+love&mdash;to be with Cynthia, or Aspasia&mdash;but as a thirst for existence
+in exquisite places. The veil that was to be lifted for him lay over the works
+of the old masters of art, in places where nature also had used her mastery.
+And it was just at this moment that a summons to Rome reached him.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+NOTES
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+145. +Canto VI.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+147. +Transliteration: paideia. Definition &ldquo;rearing, education.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+149. +Transliteration: theôria. Definition &ldquo;a looking at ... observing
+... contemplation.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+154. +Transliteration: monochronos hêdonê. Pater&rsquo;s definition &ldquo;the
+pleasure of the ideal present, of the mystic now.&rdquo; The definition is
+fitting; the unusual adjective monokhronos means, literally, &ldquo;single or
+unitary time.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+155. +Horace, Ars Poetica 311. +Etext editor&rsquo;s translation: &ldquo;The
+subject once foreknown, the words will follow easily.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>CHAPTER X.<br/>
+ON THE WAY</h2>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Mirum est ut animus agitatione motuque corporis excitetur.<br/>
+Pliny&rsquo;s Letters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many points in that train of thought, its harder and more energetic practical
+details especially, at first surmised but vaguely in the intervals of his
+visits to the tomb of Flavian, attained the coherence of formal principle amid
+the stirring incidents of the journey, which took him, still in all the
+buoyancy of his nineteen years and greatly expectant, to Rome. That summons had
+come from one of the former friends of his father in the capital, who had kept
+himself acquainted with the lad&rsquo;s progress, and, assured of his parts,
+his courtly ways, above all of his beautiful penmanship, now offered him a
+place, virtually that of an amanuensis, near the person of the philosophic
+emperor. The old town-house of his family on the Caelian hill, so long
+neglected, might well require his personal care; and Marius, relieved a little
+by his preparations for travelling from a certain over-tension of spirit in
+which he had lived of late, was presently on his way, to await introduction to
+Aurelius, on his expected return home, after a first success, illusive enough
+as it was soon to appear, against the invaders from beyond the Danube.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The opening stage of his journey, through the firm, golden weather, for which
+he had lingered three days beyond the appointed time of starting&mdash;days
+brown with the first rains of autumn&mdash;brought him, by the byways among the
+lower slopes of the Apennines of Luna, to the town of Luca, a station on the
+Cassian Way; travelling so far mainly on foot, while the baggage followed under
+the care of his attendants. He wore a broad felt hat, in fashion not unlike a
+more modern pilgrim&rsquo;s, the neat head projecting from the collar of his
+gray paenula, or travelling mantle, sewed closely together over the breast, but
+with its two sides folded up upon the shoulders, to leave the arms free in
+walking, and was altogether so trim and fresh, that, as he climbed the hill
+from Pisa, by the long steep lane through the olive-yards, and turned to gaze
+where he could just discern the cypresses of the old school garden, like two
+black lines down the yellow walls, a little child took possession of his hand,
+and, looking up at him with entire confidence, paced on bravely at his side,
+for the mere pleasure of his company, to the spot where the road declined again
+into the valley beyond. From this point, leaving the servants behind, he
+surrendered himself, a willing subject, as he walked, to the impressions of the
+road, and was almost surprised, both at the suddenness with which evening came
+on, and the distance from his old home at which it found him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And at the little town of Luca, he felt that indescribable sense of a welcoming
+in the mere outward appearance of things, which seems to mark out certain
+places for the special purpose of evening rest, and gives them always a
+peculiar amiability in retrospect. Under the deepening twilight, the
+rough-tiled roofs seem to huddle together side by side, like one continuous
+shelter over the whole township, spread low and broad above the snug
+sleeping-rooms within; and the place one sees for the first time, and must
+tarry in but for a night, breathes the very spirit of home. The cottagers
+lingered at their doors for a few minutes as the shadows grew larger, and went
+to rest early; though there was still a glow along the road through the shorn
+corn-fields, and the birds were still awake about the crumbling gray heights of
+an old temple. So quiet and air-swept was the place, you could hardly tell
+where the country left off in it, and the field-paths became its streets. Next
+morning he must needs change the manner of his journey. The light baggage-wagon
+returned, and he proceeded now more quickly, travelling a stage or two by post,
+along the Cassian Way, where the figures and incidents of the great high-road
+seemed already to tell of the capital, the one centre to which all were
+hastening, or had lately bidden adieu. That Way lay through the heart of the
+old, mysterious and visionary country of Etruria; and what he knew of its
+strange religion of the dead, reinforced by the actual sight of the funeral
+houses scattered so plentifully among the dwelling-places of the living,
+revived in him for a while, in all its strength, his old instinctive yearning
+towards those inhabitants of the shadowy land he had known in life. It seemed
+to him that he could half divine how time passed in those painted houses on the
+hillsides, among the gold and silver ornaments, the wrought armour and
+vestments, the drowsy and dead attendants; and the close consciousness of that
+vast population gave him no fear, but rather a sense of companionship, as he
+climbed the hills on foot behind the horses, through the genial afternoon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The road, next day, passed below a town not less primitive, it might seem, than
+its rocky perch&mdash;white rocks, that had long been glistening before him in
+the distance. Down the dewy paths the people were descending from it, to keep a
+holiday, high and low alike in rough, white-linen smocks. A homely old play was
+just begun in an open-air theatre, with seats hollowed out of the turf-grown
+slope. Marius caught the terrified expression of a child in its mother&rsquo;s
+arms, as it turned from the yawning mouth of a great mask, for refuge in her
+bosom. The way mounted, and descended again, down the steep street of another
+place, all resounding with the noise of metal under the hammer; for every house
+had its brazier&rsquo;s workshop, the bright objects of brass and copper
+gleaming, like lights in a cave, out of their dark roofs and corners. Around
+the anvils the children were watching the work, or ran to fetch water to the
+hissing, red-hot metal; and Marius too watched, as he took his hasty mid-day
+refreshment, a mess of chestnut-meal and cheese, while the swelling surface of
+a great copper water-vessel grew flowered all over with tiny petals under the
+skilful strokes. Towards dusk, a frantic woman at the roadside, stood and cried
+out the words of some philter, or malison, in verse, with weird motion of her
+hands, as the travellers passed, like a wild picture drawn from Virgil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But all along, accompanying the superficial grace of these incidents of the
+way, Marius noted, more and more as he drew nearer to Rome, marks of the great
+plague. Under Hadrian and his successors, there had been many enactments to
+improve the condition of the slave. The ergastula+ were abolished. But no
+system of free labour had as yet succeeded. A whole mendicant population,
+artfully exaggerating every symptom and circumstance of misery, still hung
+around, or sheltered themselves within, the vast walls of their old,
+half-ruined task-houses. And for the most part they had been variously stricken
+by the pestilence. For once, the heroic level had been reached in rags,
+squints, scars&mdash;every caricature of the human type&mdash;ravaged beyond
+what could have been thought possible if it were to survive at all. Meantime,
+the farms were less carefully tended than of old: here and there they were
+lapsing into their natural wildness: some villas also were partly fallen into
+ruin. The picturesque, romantic Italy of a later time&mdash;the Italy of Claude
+and Salvator Rosa&mdash;was already forming, for the delight of the modern
+romantic traveller.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And again Marius was aware of a real change in things, on crossing the Tiber,
+as if some magic effect lay in that; though here, in truth, the Tiber was but a
+modest enough stream of turbid water. Nature, under the richer sky, seemed
+readier and more affluent, and man fitter to the conditions around him: even in
+people hard at work there appeared to be a less burdensome sense of the mere
+business of life. How dreamily the women were passing up through the broad
+light and shadow of the steep streets with the great water-pots resting on
+their heads, like women of Caryae, set free from slavery in old Greek temples.
+With what a fresh, primeval poetry was daily existence here impressed&mdash;all
+the details of the threshing-floor and the vineyard; the common farm-life even;
+the great bakers&rsquo; fires aglow upon the road in the evening. In the
+presence of all this Marius felt for a moment like those old, early,
+unconscious poets, who created the famous Greek myths of Dionysus, and the
+Great Mother, out of the imagery of the wine-press and the ploughshare. And
+still the motion of the journey was bringing his thoughts to systematic form.
+He seemed to have grown to the fulness of intellectual manhood, on his way
+hither. The formative and literary stimulus, so to call it, of peaceful
+exercise which he had always observed in himself, doing its utmost now, the
+form and the matter of thought alike detached themselves clearly and with
+readiness from the healthfully excited brain.&mdash;&ldquo;It is
+wonderful,&rdquo; says Pliny, &ldquo;how the mind is stirred to activity by
+brisk bodily exercise.&rdquo; The presentable aspects of inmost thought and
+feeling became evident to him: the structure of all he meant, its order and
+outline, defined itself: his general sense of a fitness and beauty in words
+became effective in daintily pliant sentences, with all sorts of felicitous
+linking of figure to abstraction. It seemed just then as if the desire of the
+artist in him&mdash;that old longing to produce&mdash;might be satisfied by the
+exact and literal transcript of what was then passing around him, in simple
+prose, arresting the desirable moment as it passed, and prolonging its life a
+little.&mdash;To live in the concrete! To be sure, at least, of one&rsquo;s
+hold upon that!&mdash;Again, his philosophic scheme was but the reflection of
+the data of sense, and chiefly of sight, a reduction to the abstract, of the
+brilliant road he travelled on, through the sunshine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But on the seventh evening there came a reaction in the cheerful flow of our
+traveller&rsquo;s thoughts, a reaction with which mere bodily fatigue,
+asserting itself at last over his curiosity, had much to do; and he fell into a
+mood, known to all passably sentimental wayfarers, as night deepens again and
+again over their path, in which all journeying, from the known to the unknown,
+comes suddenly to figure as a mere foolish truancy&mdash;like a child&rsquo;s
+running away from home&mdash;with the feeling that one had best return at once,
+even through the darkness. He had chosen to climb on foot, at his leisure, the
+long windings by which the road ascended to the place where that day&rsquo;s
+stage was to end, and found himself alone in the twilight, far behind the rest
+of his travelling-companions. Would the last zigzag, round and round those dark
+masses, half natural rock, half artificial substructure, ever bring him within
+the circuit of the walls above? It was now that a startling incident turned
+those misgivings almost into actual fear. From the steep slope a heavy mass of
+stone was detached, after some whisperings among the trees above his head, and
+rushing down through the stillness fell to pieces in a cloud of dust across the
+road just behind him, so that he felt the touch upon his heel. That was
+sufficient, just then, to rouse out of its hiding-place his old vague fear of
+evil&mdash;of one&rsquo;s &ldquo;enemies&rdquo;&mdash;a distress, so much a
+matter of constitution with him, that at times it would seem that the best
+pleasures of life could but be snatched, as it were hastily, in one
+moment&rsquo;s forgetfulness of its dark, besetting influence. A sudden
+suspicion of hatred against him, of the nearness of &ldquo;enemies,&rdquo;
+seemed all at once to alter the visible form of things, as with the
+child&rsquo;s hero, when he found the footprint on the sand of his peaceful,
+dreamy island. His elaborate philosophy had not put beneath his feet the terror
+of mere bodily evil; much less of &ldquo;inexorable fate, and the noise of
+greedy Acheron.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The resting-place to which he presently came, in the keen, wholesome air of the
+market-place of the little hill-town, was a pleasant contrast to that last
+effort of his journey. The room in which he sat down to supper, unlike the
+ordinary Roman inns at that day, was trim and sweet. The firelight danced
+cheerfully upon the polished, three-wicked lucernae burning cleanly with the
+best oil, upon the white-washed walls, and the bunches of scarlet carnations
+set in glass goblets. The white wine of the place put before him, of the true
+colour and flavour of the grape, and with a ring of delicate foam as it mounted
+in the cup, had a reviving edge or freshness he had found in no other wine.
+These things had relieved a little the melancholy of the hour before; and it
+was just then that he heard the voice of one, newly arrived at the inn, making
+his way to the upper floor&mdash;a youthful voice, with a reassuring clearness
+of note, which completed his cure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He seemed to hear that voice again in dreams, uttering his name: then, awake in
+the full morning light and gazing from the window, saw the guest of the night
+before, a very honourable-looking youth, in the rich habit of a military
+knight, standing beside his horse, and already making preparations to depart.
+It happened that Marius, too, was to take that day&rsquo;s journey on
+horseback. Riding presently from the inn, he overtook Cornelius&mdash;of the
+Twelfth Legion&mdash;advancing carefully down the steep street; and before they
+had issued from the gates of Urbs-vetus, the two young men had broken into talk
+together. They were passing along the street of the goldsmiths; and Cornelius
+must needs enter one of the workshops for the repair of some button or link of
+his knightly trappings. Standing in the doorway, Marius watched the work, as he
+had watched the brazier&rsquo;s business a few days before, wondering most at
+the simplicity of its processes, a simplicity, however, on which only genius in
+that craft could have lighted.&mdash;By what unguessed-at stroke of hand, for
+instance, had the grains of precious metal associated themselves with so
+daintily regular a roughness, over the surface of the little casket yonder? And
+the conversation which followed, hence arising, left the two travellers with
+sufficient interest in each other to insure an easy companionship for the
+remainder of their journey. In time to come, Marius was to depend very much on
+the preferences, the personal judgments, of the comrade who now laid his hand
+so brotherly on his shoulder, as they left the workshop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Itineris matutini gratiam capimus,+&mdash;observes one of our scholarly
+travellers; and their road that day lay through a country, well-fitted, by the
+peculiarity of its landscape, to ripen a first acquaintance into intimacy; its
+superficial ugliness throwing the wayfarers back upon each other&rsquo;s
+entertainment in a real exchange of ideas, the tension of which, however, it
+would relieve, ever and anon, by the unexpected assertion of something
+singularly attractive. The immediate aspect of the land was, indeed, in spite
+of abundant olive and ilex, unpleasing enough. A river of clay seemed,
+&ldquo;in some old night of time,&rdquo; to have burst up over valley and hill,
+and hardened there into fantastic shelves and slides and angles of cadaverous
+rock, up and down among the contorted vegetation; the hoary roots and trunks
+seeming to confess some weird kinship with them. But that was long ago; and
+these pallid hillsides needed only the declining sun, touching the rock with
+purple, and throwing deeper shadow into the immemorial foliage, to put on a
+peculiar, because a very grave and austere, kind of beauty; while the graceful
+outlines common to volcanic hills asserted themselves in the broader prospect.
+And, for sentimental Marius, all this was associated, by some perhaps fantastic
+affinity, with a peculiar trait of severity, beyond his guesses as to the
+secret of it, which mingled with the blitheness of his new companion.
+Concurring, indeed, with the condition of a Roman soldier, it was certainly
+something far more than the expression of military hardness, or ascêsis; and
+what was earnest, or even austere, in the landscape they had traversed
+together, seemed to have been waiting for the passage of this figure to
+interpret or inform it. Again, as in his early days with Flavian, a vivid
+personal presence broke through the dreamy idealism, which had almost come to
+doubt of other men&rsquo;s reality: reassuringly, indeed, yet not without some
+sense of a constraining tyranny over him from without.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Cornelius, returning from the campaign, to take up his quarters on the
+Palatine, in the imperial guard, seemed to carry about with him, in that
+privileged world of comely usage to which he belonged, the atmosphere of some
+still more jealously exclusive circle. They halted on the morrow at noon, not
+at an inn, but at the house of one of the young soldier&rsquo;s friends, whom
+they found absent, indeed, in consequence of the plague in those parts, so that
+after a mid-day rest only, they proceeded again on their journey. The great
+room of the villa, to which they were admitted, had lain long untouched; and
+the dust rose, as they entered, into the slanting bars of sunlight, that fell
+through the half-closed shutters. It was here, to while away the time, that
+Cornelius bethought himself of displaying to his new friend the various
+articles and ornaments of his knightly array&mdash;the breastplate, the sandals
+and cuirass, lacing them on, one by one, with the assistance of Marius, and
+finally the great golden bracelet on the right arm, conferred on him by his
+general for an act of valour. And as he gleamed there, amid that odd
+interchange of light and shade, with the staff of a silken standard firm in his
+hand, Marius felt as if he were face to face, for the first time, with some new
+knighthood or chivalry, just then coming into the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was soon after they left this place, journeying now by carriage, that Rome
+was seen at last, with much excitement on the part of our travellers;
+Cornelius, and some others of whom the party then consisted, agreeing, chiefly
+for the sake of Marius, to hasten forward, that it might be reached by
+daylight, with a cheerful noise of rapid wheels as they passed over the
+flagstones. But the highest light upon the mausoleum of Hadrian was quite gone
+out, and it was dark, before they reached the Flaminian Gate. The abundant
+sound of water was the one thing that impressed Marius, as they passed down a
+long street, with many open spaces on either hand: Cornelius to his military
+quarters, and Marius to the old dwelling-place of his fathers.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+NOTES
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+162. +E-text editor&rsquo;s note: ergastula were the Roman agrarian equivalent
+of prison-workhouses.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+168. +Apuleius, The Golden Ass, I.17.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap11"></a>CHAPTER XI.<br/>
+&ldquo;THE MOST RELIGIOUS CITY IN THE WORLD&rdquo;</h2>
+
+<p>
+Marius awoke early and passed curiously from room to room, noting for more
+careful inspection by and by the rolls of manuscripts. Even greater than his
+curiosity in gazing for the first time on this ancient possession, was his
+eagerness to look out upon Rome itself, as he pushed back curtain and shutter,
+and stepped forth in the fresh morning upon one of the many balconies, with an
+oft-repeated dream realised at last. He was certainly fortunate in the time of
+his coming to Rome. That old pagan world, of which Rome was the flower, had
+reached its perfection in the things of poetry and art&mdash;a perfection which
+indicated only too surely the eve of decline. As in some vast intellectual
+museum, all its manifold products were intact and in their places, and with
+custodians also still extant, duly qualified to appreciate and explain them.
+And at no period of history had the material Rome itself been better worth
+seeing&mdash;lying there not less consummate than that world of pagan intellect
+which it represented in every phase of its darkness and light. The various work
+of many ages fell here harmoniously together, as yet untouched save by time,
+adding the final grace of a rich softness to its complex expression. Much which
+spoke of ages earlier than Nero, the great re-builder, lingered on, antique,
+quaint, immeasurably venerable, like the relics of the medieval city in the
+Paris of Lewis the Fourteenth: the work of Nero&rsquo;s own time had come to
+have that sort of old world and picturesque interest which the work of Lewis
+has for ourselves; while without stretching a parallel too far we might perhaps
+liken the architectural finesses of the archaic Hadrian to the more excellent
+products of our own Gothic revival. The temple of Antoninus and Faustina was
+still fresh in all the majesty of its closely arrayed columns of cipollino;
+but, on the whole, little had been added under the late and present emperors,
+and during fifty years of public quiet, a sober brown and gray had grown apace
+on things. The gilding on the roof of many a temple had lost its garishness:
+cornice and capital of polished marble shone out with all the crisp freshness
+of real flowers, amid the already mouldering travertine and brickwork, though
+the birds had built freely among them. What Marius then saw was in many
+respects, after all deduction of difference, more like the modern Rome than the
+enumeration of particular losses might lead us to suppose; the Renaissance, in
+its most ambitious mood and with amplest resources, having resumed the ancient
+classical tradition there, with no break or obstruction, as it had happened, in
+any very considerable work of the middle age. Immediately before him, on the
+square, steep height, where the earliest little old Rome had huddled itself
+together, arose the palace of the Caesars. Half-veiling the vast substruction
+of rough, brown stone&mdash;line upon line of successive ages of
+builders&mdash;the trim, old-fashioned garden walks, under their closely-woven
+walls of dark glossy foliage, test of long and careful cultivation, wound
+gradually, among choice trees, statues and fountains, distinct and sparkling in
+the full morning sunlight, to the richly tinted mass of pavilions and corridors
+above, centering in the lofty, white-marble dwelling-place of Apollo himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How often had Marius looked forward to that first, free wandering through Rome,
+to which he now went forth with a heat in the town sunshine (like a mist of
+fine gold-dust spread through the air) to the height of his desire, making the
+dun coolness of the narrow streets welcome enough at intervals. He almost
+feared, descending the stair hastily, lest some unforeseen accident should
+snatch the little cup of enjoyment from him ere he passed the door. In such
+morning rambles in places new to him, life had always seemed to come at its
+fullest: it was then he could feel his youth, that youth the days of which he
+had already begun to count jealously, in entire possession. So the grave,
+pensive figure, a figure, be it said nevertheless, fresher far than often came
+across it now, moved through the old city towards the lodgings of Cornelius,
+certainly not by the most direct course, however eager to rejoin the friend of
+yesterday.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bent as keenly on seeing as if his first day in Rome were to be also his last,
+the two friends descended along the <i>Vicus Tuscus</i>, with its rows of
+incense-stalls, into the <i>Via Nova</i>, where the fashionable people were
+busy shopping; and Marius saw with much amusement the frizzled heads, then <i>à
+la mode</i>. A glimpse of the <i>Marmorata</i>, the haven at the river-side,
+where specimens of all the precious marbles of the world were lying amid great
+white blocks from the quarries of Luna, took his thoughts for a moment to his
+distant home. They visited the flower-market, lingering where the
+<i>coronarii</i> pressed on them the newest species, and purchased zinias, now
+in blossom (like painted flowers, thought Marius), to decorate the folds of
+their togas. Loitering to the other side of the Forum, past the great
+Galen&rsquo;s drug-shop, after a glance at the announcements of new poems on
+sale attached to the doorpost of a famous bookseller, they entered the curious
+library of the Temple of Peace, then a favourite resort of literary men, and
+read, fixed there for all to see, the <i>Diurnal</i> or Gazette of the day,
+which announced, together with births and deaths, prodigies and accidents, and
+much mere matter of business, the date and manner of the philosophic
+emperor&rsquo;s joyful return to his people; and, thereafter, with eminent
+names faintly disguised, what would carry that day&rsquo;s news, in many
+copies, over the provinces&mdash;a certain matter concerning the great lady,
+known to be dear to him, whom he had left at home. It was a story, with the
+development of which &ldquo;society&rdquo; had indeed for some time past
+edified or amused itself, rallying sufficiently from the panic of a year ago,
+not only to welcome back its ruler, but also to relish a <i>chronique
+scandaleuse;</i> and thus, when soon after Marius saw the world&rsquo;s wonder,
+he was already acquainted with the suspicions which have ever since hung about
+her name. Twelve o&rsquo;clock was come before they left the Forum, waiting in
+a little crowd to hear the <i>Accensus</i>, according to old custom, proclaim
+the hour of noonday, at the moment when, from the steps of the Senate-house,
+the sun could be seen standing between the <i>Rostra</i> and the
+<i>Græcostasis</i>. He exerted for this function a strength of voice, which
+confirmed in Marius a judgment the modern visitor may share with him, that
+Roman throats and Roman chests, namely, must, in some peculiar way, be
+differently constructed from those of other people. Such judgment indeed he had
+formed in part the evening before, noting, as a religious procession passed
+him, how much noise a man and a boy could make, though not without a great deal
+of real music, of which in truth the Romans were then as ever passionately
+fond.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hence the two friends took their way through the Via Flaminia, almost along the
+line of the modern Corso, already bordered with handsome villas, turning
+presently to the left, into the Field-of-Mars, still the playground of Rome.
+But the vast public edifices were grown to be almost continuous over the grassy
+expanse, represented now only by occasional open spaces of verdure and
+wild-flowers. In one of these a crowd was standing, to watch a party of
+athletes stripped for exercise. Marius had been surprised at the luxurious
+variety of the litters borne through Rome, where no carriage horses were
+allowed; and just then one far more sumptuous than the rest, with dainty
+appointments of ivory and gold, was carried by, all the town pressing with
+eagerness to get a glimpse of its most beautiful woman, as she passed rapidly.
+Yes! there, was the wonder of the world&mdash;the empress Faustina herself:
+Marius could distinguish, could distinguish clearly, the well-known profile,
+between the floating purple curtains.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For indeed all Rome was ready to burst into gaiety again, as it awaited with
+much real affection, hopeful and animated, the return of its emperor, for whose
+ovation various adornments were preparing along the streets through which the
+imperial procession would pass. He had left Rome just twelve months before,
+amid immense gloom. The alarm of a barbarian insurrection along the whole line
+of the Danube had happened at the moment when Rome was panic-stricken by the
+great pestilence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In fifty years of peace, broken only by that conflict in the East from which
+Lucius Verus, among other curiosities, brought back the plague, war had come to
+seem a merely romantic, superannuated incident of bygone history. And now it
+was almost upon Italian soil. Terrible were the reports of the numbers and
+audacity of the assailants. Aurelius, as yet untried in war, and understood by
+a few only in the whole scope of a really great character, was known to the
+majority of his subjects as but a careful administrator, though a student of
+philosophy, perhaps, as we say, a dilettante. But he was also the visible
+centre of government, towards whom the hearts of a whole people turned,
+grateful for fifty years of public happiness&mdash;its good genius, its
+&ldquo;Antonine&rdquo;&mdash;whose fragile person might be foreseen speedily
+giving way under the trials of military life, with a disaster like that of the
+slaughter of the legions by Arminius. Prophecies of the world&rsquo;s impending
+conflagration were easily credited: &ldquo;the secular fire&rdquo; would
+descend from heaven: superstitious fear had even demanded the sacrifice of a
+human victim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marcus Aurelius, always philosophically considerate of the humours of other
+people, exercising also that devout appreciation of every religious claim which
+was one of his characteristic habits, had invoked, in aid of the commonwealth,
+not only all native gods, but all foreign deities as well, however
+strange.&mdash;&ldquo;Help! Help! in the ocean space!&rdquo; A multitude of
+foreign priests had been welcomed to Rome, with their various peculiar
+religious rites. The sacrifices made on this occasion were remembered for
+centuries; and the starving poor, at least, found some satisfaction in the
+flesh of those herds of &ldquo;white bulls,&rdquo; which came into the city,
+day after day, to yield the savour of their blood to the gods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In spite of all this, the legions had but followed their standards
+despondently. But prestige, personal prestige, the name of
+&ldquo;Emperor,&rdquo; still had its magic power over the nations. The mere
+approach of the Roman army made an impression on the barbarians. Aurelius and
+his colleague had scarcely reached Aquileia when a deputation arrived to ask
+for peace. And now the two imperial &ldquo;brothers&rdquo; were returning home
+at leisure; were waiting, indeed, at a villa outside the walls, till the
+capital had made ready to receive them. But although Rome was thus in genial
+reaction, with much relief, and hopefulness against the winter, facing itself
+industriously in damask of red and gold, those two enemies were still
+unmistakably extant: the barbarian army of the Danube was but over-awed for a
+season; and the plague, as we saw when Marius was on his way to Rome, was not
+to depart till it had done a large part in the formation of the melancholy
+picturesque of modern Italy&mdash;till it had made, or prepared for the making
+of the Roman Campagna. The old, unaffected, really pagan, peace or gaiety, of
+Antoninus Pius&mdash;that genuine though unconscious humanist&mdash;was gone
+for ever. And again and again, throughout this day of varied observation,
+Marius had been reminded, above all else, that he was not merely in &ldquo;the
+most religious city of the world,&rdquo; as one had said, but that Rome was
+become the romantic home of the wildest superstition. Such superstition
+presented itself almost as religious mania in many an incident of his long
+ramble,&mdash;incidents to which he gave his full attention, though contending
+in some measure with a reluctance on the part of his companion, the motive of
+which he did not understand till long afterwards. Marius certainly did not
+allow this reluctance to deter his own curiosity. Had he not come to Rome
+partly under poetic vocation, to receive all those things, the very impress of
+life itself, upon the visual, the imaginative, organ, as upon a mirror; to
+reflect them; to transmute them into golden words? He must observe that strange
+medley of superstition, that centuries&rsquo; growth, layer upon layer, of the
+curiosities of religion (one faith jostling another out of place) at least for
+its picturesque interest, and as an indifferent outsider might, not too deeply
+concerned in the question which, if any of them, was to be the survivor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Superficially, at least, the Roman religion, allying itself with much
+diplomatic economy to possible rivals, was in possession, as a vast and complex
+system of usage, intertwining itself with every detail of public and private
+life, attractively enough for those who had but &ldquo;the historic
+temper,&rdquo; and a taste for the past, however much a Lucian might depreciate
+it. Roman religion, as Marius knew, had, indeed, been always something to be
+done, rather than something to be thought, or believed, or loved; something to
+be done in minutely detailed manner, at a particular time and place,
+correctness in which had long been a matter of laborious learning with a whole
+school of ritualists&mdash;as also, now and again, a matter of heroic sacrifice
+with certain exceptionally devout souls, as when Caius Fabius Dorso, with his
+life in his hand, succeeded in passing the sentinels of the invading Gauls to
+perform a sacrifice on the Quirinal, and, thanks to the divine protection, had
+returned in safety. So jealous was the distinction between sacred and profane,
+that, in the matter of the &ldquo;regarding of days,&rdquo; it had made more
+than half the year a holiday. Aurelius had, indeed, ordained that there should
+be no more than a hundred and thirty-five festival days in the year; but in
+other respects he had followed in the steps of his predecessor, Antoninus
+Pius&mdash;commended especially for his &ldquo;religion,&rdquo; his conspicuous
+devotion to its public ceremonies&mdash;and whose coins are remarkable for
+their reference to the oldest and most hieratic types of Roman mythology.
+Aurelius had succeeded in more than healing the old feud between philosophy and
+religion, displaying himself, in singular combination, as at once the most
+zealous of philosophers and the most devout of polytheists, and lending
+himself, with an air of conviction, to all the pageantries of public worship.
+To his pious recognition of that one orderly spirit, which, according to the
+doctrine of the Stoics, diffuses itself through the world, and animates
+it&mdash;a recognition taking the form, with him, of a constant effort towards
+inward likeness thereto, in the harmonious order of his own soul&mdash;he had
+added a warm personal devotion towards the whole multitude of the old national
+gods, and a great many new foreign ones besides, by him, at least, not ignobly
+conceived. If the comparison may be reverently made, there was something here
+of the method by which the catholic church has added the cultus of the saints
+to its worship of the one Divine Being.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And to the view of the majority, though the emperor, as the personal centre of
+religion, entertained the hope of converting his people to philosophic faith,
+and had even pronounced certain public discourses for their instruction in it,
+that polytheistic devotion was his most striking feature. Philosophers, indeed,
+had, for the most part, thought with Seneca, &ldquo;that a man need not lift
+his hands to heaven, nor ask the sacristan&rsquo;s leave to put his mouth to
+the ear of an image, that his prayers might be heard the
+better.&rdquo;&mdash;Marcus Aurelius, &ldquo;a master in Israel,&rdquo; knew
+all that well enough. Yet his outward devotion was much more than a concession
+to popular sentiment, or a mere result of that sense of fellow-citizenship with
+others, which had made him again and again, under most difficult circumstances,
+an excellent comrade. Those others, too!&mdash;amid all their ignorances, what
+were they but instruments in the administration of the Divine Reason,
+&ldquo;from end to end sweetly and strongly disposing all things&rdquo;?
+Meantime &ldquo;Philosophy&rdquo; itself had assumed much of what we conceive
+to be the religious character. It had even cultivated the habit, the power, of
+&ldquo;spiritual direction&rdquo;; the troubled soul making recourse in its
+hour of destitution, or amid the distractions of the world, to this or that
+director&mdash;philosopho suo&mdash;who could really best understand it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And it had been in vain that the old, grave and discreet religion of Rome had
+set itself, according to its proper genius, to prevent or subdue all trouble
+and disturbance in men&rsquo;s souls. In religion, as in other matters,
+plebeians, as such, had a taste for movement, for revolution; and it had been
+ever in the most populous quarters that religious changes began. To the
+apparatus of foreign religion, above all, recourse had been made in times of
+public disquietude or sudden terror; and in those great religious celebrations,
+before his proceeding against the barbarians, Aurelius had even restored the
+solemnities of Isis, prohibited in the capital since the time of Augustus,
+making no secret of his worship of that goddess, though her temple had been
+actually destroyed by authority in the reign of Tiberius. Her singular and in
+many ways beautiful ritual was now popular in Rome. And then&mdash;what the
+enthusiasm of the swarming plebeian quarters had initiated, was sure to be
+adopted, sooner or later, by women of fashion. A blending of all the religions
+of the ancient world had been accomplished. The new gods had arrived, had been
+welcomed, and found their places; though, certainly, with no real security, in
+any adequate ideal of the divine nature itself in the background of men&rsquo;s
+minds, that the presence of the new-comer should be edifying, or even refining.
+High and low addressed themselves to all deities alike without scruple;
+confusing them together when they prayed, and in the old, authorised, threefold
+veneration of their visible images, by flowers, incense, and ceremonial
+lights&mdash;those beautiful usages, which the church, in her way through the
+world, ever making spoil of the world&rsquo;s goods for the better uses of the
+human spirit, took up and sanctified in her service.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And certainly &ldquo;the most religious city in the world&rdquo; took no care
+to veil its devotion, however fantastic. The humblest house had its little
+chapel or shrine, its image and lamp; while almost every one seemed to exercise
+some religious function and responsibility. Colleges, composed for the most
+part of slaves and of the poor, provided for the service of the Compitalian
+Lares&mdash;the gods who presided, respectively, over the several quarters of
+the city. In one street, Marius witnessed an incident of the festival of the
+patron deity of that neighbourhood, the way being strewn with box, the houses
+tricked out gaily in such poor finery as they possessed, while the ancient idol
+was borne through it in procession, arrayed in gaudy attire the worse for wear.
+Numerous religious clubs had their stated anniversaries, on which the members
+issued with much ceremony from their guild-hall, or schola, and traversed the
+thoroughfares of Rome, preceded, like the confraternities of the present day,
+by their sacred banners, to offer sacrifice before some famous image. Black
+with the perpetual smoke of lamps and incense, oftenest old and ugly, perhaps
+on that account the more likely to listen to the desires of the
+suffering&mdash;had not those sacred effigies sometimes given sensible tokens
+that they were aware? The image of the Fortune of Women&mdash;Fortuna
+Muliebris, in the Latin Way, had spoken (not once only) and declared; Bene me,
+Matronae! vidistis riteque dedicastis! The Apollo of Cumae had wept during
+three whole nights and days. The images in the temple of Juno Sospita had been
+seen to sweat. Nay! there was blood&mdash;divine blood&mdash;in the hearts of
+some of them: the images in the Grove of Feronia had sweated blood!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From one and all Cornelius had turned away: like the &ldquo;atheist&rdquo; of
+whom Apuleius tells he had never once raised hand to lip in passing image or
+sanctuary, and had parted from Marius finally when the latter determined to
+enter the crowded doorway of a temple, on their return into the Forum, below
+the Palatine hill, where the mothers were pressing in, with a multitude of
+every sort of children, to touch the lightning-struck image of the wolf-nurse
+of Romulus&mdash;so tender to little ones!&mdash;just discernible in its dark
+shrine, amid a blaze of lights. Marius gazed after his companion of the day, as
+he mounted the steps to his lodging, singing to himself, as it seemed. Marius
+failed precisely to catch the words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, as the rich, fresh evening came on, there was heard all over Rome, far
+above a whisper, the whole town seeming hushed to catch it distinctly, the
+lively, reckless call to &ldquo;play,&rdquo; from the sons and daughters of
+foolishness, to those in whom their life was still green&mdash;Donec virenti
+canities abest!&mdash;Donec virenti canities abest!+ Marius could hardly doubt
+how Cornelius would have taken the call. And as for himself, slight as was the
+burden of positive moral obligation with which he had entered Rome, it was to
+no wasteful and vagrant affections, such as these, that his Epicureanism had
+committed him.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+NOTES
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+187. +Horace, Odes I.ix.17. Translation: &ldquo;So long as youth is fresh and
+age is far away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap12"></a>CHAPTER XII.<br/>
+THE DIVINITY THAT DOTH HEDGE A KING</h2>
+
+<p class="poem">
+But ah! Maecenas is yclad in claye,<br/>
+And great Augustus long ygoe is dead,<br/>
+And all the worthies liggen wrapt in lead,<br/>
+That matter made for poets on to playe.+
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marcus Aurelius who, though he had little relish for them himself, had ever
+been willing to humour the taste of his people for magnificent spectacles, was
+received back to Rome with the lesser honours of the Ovation, conceded by the
+Senate (so great was the public sense of deliverance) with even more than the
+laxity which had become its habit under imperial rule, for there had been no
+actual bloodshed in the late achievement. Clad in the civic dress of the chief
+Roman magistrate, and with a crown of myrtle upon his head, his colleague
+similarly attired walking beside him, he passed up to the Capitol on foot,
+though in solemn procession along the Sacred Way, to offer sacrifice to the
+national gods. The victim, a goodly sheep, whose image we may still see between
+the pig and the ox of the Suovetaurilia, filleted and stoled almost like some
+ancient canon of the church, on a sculptured fragment in the Forum, was
+conducted by the priests, clad in rich white vestments, and bearing their
+sacred utensils of massive gold, immediately behind a company of flute-players,
+led by the great choir-master, or conductor, of the day, visibly tetchy or
+delighted, according as the instruments he ruled with his tuning-rod, rose,
+more or less adequately amid the difficulties of the way, to the dream of
+perfect music in the soul within him. The vast crowd, including the soldiers of
+the triumphant army, now restored to wives and children, all alike in holiday
+whiteness, had left their houses early in the fine, dry morning, in a real
+affection for &ldquo;the father of his country,&rdquo; to await the procession,
+the two princes having spent the preceding night outside the walls, at the old
+Villa of the Republic. Marius, full of curiosity, had taken his position with
+much care; and stood to see the world&rsquo;s masters pass by, at an angle from
+which he could command the view of a great part of the processional route,
+sprinkled with fine yellow sand, and punctiliously guarded from profane
+footsteps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The coming of the pageant was announced by the clear sound of the flutes, heard
+at length above the acclamations of the people&mdash;Salve Imperator!&mdash;Dii
+te servent!&mdash;shouted in regular time, over the hills. It was on the
+central figure, of course, that the whole attention of Marius was fixed from
+the moment when the procession came in sight, preceded by the lictors with
+gilded fasces, the imperial image-bearers, and the pages carrying lighted
+torches; a band of knights, among whom was Cornelius in complete military,
+array, following. Amply swathed about in the folds of a richly worked toga,
+after a manner now long since become obsolete with meaner persons, Marius
+beheld a man of about five-and-forty years of age, with prominent
+eyes&mdash;eyes, which although demurely downcast during this essentially
+religious ceremony, were by nature broadly and benignantly observant. He was
+still, in the main, as we see him in the busts which represent his gracious and
+courtly youth, when Hadrian had playfully called him, not Verus, after the name
+of his father, but Verissimus, for his candour of gaze, and the bland capacity
+of the brow, which, below the brown hair, clustering thickly as of old, shone
+out low, broad, and clear, and still without a trace of the trouble of his
+lips. You saw the brow of one who, amid the blindness or perplexity of the
+people about him, understood all things clearly; the dilemma, to which his
+experience so far had brought him, between Chance with meek resignation, and a
+Providence with boundless possibilities and hope, being for him at least
+distinctly defined.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That outward serenity, which he valued so highly as a point of manner or
+expression not unworthy the care of a public minister&mdash;outward symbol, it
+might be thought, of the inward religious serenity it had been his constant
+purpose to maintain&mdash;was increased to-day by his sense of the gratitude of
+his people; that his life had been one of such gifts and blessings as made his
+person seem in very deed divine to them. Yet the cloud of some reserved
+internal sorrow, passing from time to time into an expression of fatigue and
+effort, of loneliness amid the shouting multitude, might have been detected
+there by the more observant&mdash;as if the sagacious hint of one of his
+officers, &ldquo;The soldiers can&rsquo;t understand you, they don&rsquo;t know
+Greek,&rdquo; were applicable always to his relationships with other people.
+The nostrils and mouth seemed capable almost of peevishness; and Marius noted
+in them, as in the hands, and in the spare body generally, what was new to his
+experience&mdash;something of asceticism, as we say, of a bodily gymnastic, by
+which, although it told pleasantly in the clear blue humours of the eye, the
+flesh had scarcely been an equal gainer with the spirit. It was hardly the
+expression of &ldquo;the healthy mind in the healthy body,&rdquo; but rather of
+a sacrifice of the body to the soul, its needs and aspirations, that Marius
+seemed to divine in this assiduous student of the Greek sages&mdash;a
+sacrifice, in truth, far beyond the demands of their very saddest philosophy of
+life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dignify thyself with modesty and simplicity for thine ornaments!&mdash;had been
+ever a maxim with this dainty and high-bred Stoic, who still thought manners a
+true part of morals, according to the old sense of the term, and who regrets
+now and again that he cannot control his thoughts equally well with his
+countenance. That outward composure was deepened during the solemnities of this
+day by an air of pontifical abstraction; which, though very far from being
+pride&mdash;nay, a sort of humility rather&mdash;yet gave, to himself, an air
+of unapproachableness, and to his whole proceeding, in which every minutest act
+was considered, the character of a ritual. Certainly, there was no haughtiness,
+social, moral, or even philosophic, in Aurelius, who had realised, under more
+trying conditions perhaps than any one before, that no element of humanity
+could be alien from him. Yet, as he walked to-day, the centre of ten thousand
+observers, with eyes discreetly fixed on the ground, veiling his head at times
+and muttering very rapidly the words of the &ldquo;supplications,&rdquo; there
+was something many spectators may have noted as a thing new in their
+experience, for Aurelius, unlike his predecessors, took all this with absolute
+seriousness. The doctrine of the sanctity of kings, that, in the words of
+Tacitus, Princes are as Gods&mdash;Principes instar deorum esse&mdash;seemed to
+have taken a novel, because a literal, sense. For Aurelius, indeed, the old
+legend of his descent from Numa, from Numa who had talked with the gods, meant
+much. Attached in very early years to the service of the altars, like many
+another noble youth, he was &ldquo;observed to perform all his sacerdotal
+functions with a constancy and exactness unusual at that age; was soon a master
+of the sacred music; and had all the forms and ceremonies by heart.&rdquo; And
+now, as the emperor, who had not only a vague divinity about his person, but
+was actually the chief religious functionary of the state, recited from time to
+time the forms of invocation, he needed not the help of the prompter, or
+ceremoniarius, who then approached, to assist him by whispering the appointed
+words in his ear. It was that pontifical abstraction which then impressed
+itself on Marius as the leading outward characteristic of Aurelius; though to
+him alone, perhaps, in that vast crowd of observers, it was no strange thing,
+but a matter he had understood from of old.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some fanciful writers have assigned the origin of these triumphal processions
+to the mythic pomps of Dionysus, after his conquests in the East; the very word
+Triumph being, according to this supposition, only Thriambos-the Dionysiac
+Hymn. And certainly the younger of the two imperial &ldquo;brothers,&rdquo;
+who, with the effect of a strong contrast, walked beside Aurelius, and shared
+the honours of the day, might well have reminded people of the delicate Greek
+god of flowers and wine. This new conqueror of the East was now about
+thirty-six years old, but with his scrupulous care for all the advantages of
+his person, and a soft curling beard powdered with gold, looked many years
+younger. One result of the more genial element in the wisdom of Aurelius had
+been that, amid most difficult circumstances, he had known throughout life how
+to act in union with persons of character very alien from his own; to be more
+than loyal to the colleague, the younger brother in empire, he had too lightly
+taken to himself, five years before, then an uncorrupt youth, &ldquo;skilled in
+manly exercises and fitted for war.&rdquo; When Aurelius thanks the gods that a
+brother had fallen to his lot, whose character was a stimulus to the proper
+care of his own, one sees that this could only have happened in the way of an
+example, putting him on his guard against insidious faults. But it is with
+sincere amiability that the imperial writer, who was indeed little used to be
+ironical, adds that the lively respect and affection of the junior had often
+&ldquo;gladdened&rdquo; him. To be able to make his use of the flower, when the
+fruit perhaps was useless or poisonous:&mdash;that was one of the practical
+successes of his philosophy; and his people noted, with a blessing, &ldquo;the
+concord of the two Augusti.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The younger, certainly, possessed in full measure that charm of a
+constitutional freshness of aspect which may defy for a long time extravagant
+or erring habits of life; a physiognomy, healthy-looking, cleanly, and firm,
+which seemed unassociable with any form of self-torment, and made one think of
+the muzzle of some young hound or roe, such as human beings invariably like to
+stroke&mdash;a physiognomy, in effect, with all the goodliness of animalism of
+the finer sort, though still wholly animal. The charm was that of the blond
+head, the unshrinking gaze, the warm tints: neither more nor less than one may
+see every English summer, in youth, manly enough, and with the stuff which
+makes brave soldiers, in spite of the natural kinship it seems to have with
+playthings and gay flowers. But innate in Lucius Verus there was that more than
+womanly fondness for fond things, which had made the atmosphere of the old city
+of Antioch, heavy with centuries of voluptuousness, a poison to him: he had
+come to love his delicacies best out of season, and would have gilded the very
+flowers. But with a wonderful power of self-obliteration, the elder brother at
+the capital had directed his procedure successfully, and allowed him, become
+now also the husband of his daughter Lucilla, the credit of a
+&ldquo;Conquest,&rdquo; though Verus had certainly not returned a conqueror
+over himself. He had returned, as we know, with the plague in his company,
+along with many another strange creature of his folly; and when the people saw
+him publicly feeding his favourite horse Fleet with almonds and sweet grapes,
+wearing the animal&rsquo;s image in gold, and finally building it a tomb, they
+felt, with some un-sentimental misgiving, that he might revive the manners of
+Nero.&mdash;What if, in the chances of war, he should survive the protecting
+genius of that elder brother?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was all himself to-day: and it was with much wistful curiosity that Marius
+regarded him. For Lucius Verus was, indeed, but the highly expressive type of a
+class,&mdash;the true son of his father, adopted by Hadrian. Lucius Verus the
+elder, also, had had the like strange capacity for misusing the adornments of
+life, with a masterly grace; as if such misusing were, in truth, the quite
+adequate occupation of an intelligence, powerful, but distorted by cynical
+philosophy or some disappointment of the heart. It was almost a sort of genius,
+of which there had been instances in the imperial purple: it was to ascend the
+throne, a few years later, in the person of one, now a hopeful little lad at
+home in the palace; and it had its following, of course, among the wealthy
+youth at Rome, who concentrated no inconsiderable force of shrewdness and tact
+upon minute details of attire and manner, as upon the one thing needful.
+Certainly, flowers were pleasant to the eye. Such things had even their sober
+use, as making the outside of human life superficially attractive, and thereby
+promoting the first steps towards friendship and social amity. But what precise
+place could there be for Verus and his peculiar charm, in that Wisdom, that
+Order of divine Reason &ldquo;reaching from end to end, strongly and sweetly
+disposing all things,&rdquo; from the vision of which Aurelius came down, so
+tolerant of persons like him? Into such vision Marius too was certainly
+well-fitted to enter, yet, noting the actual perfection of Lucius Verus after
+his kind, his undeniable achievement of the select, in all minor things, felt,
+though with some suspicion of himself, that he entered into, and could
+understand, this other so dubious sort of character also. There was a voice in
+the theory he had brought to Rome with him which whispered &ldquo;nothing is
+either great nor small;&rdquo; as there were times when he could have thought
+that, as the &ldquo;grammarian&rsquo;s&rdquo; or the artist&rsquo;s ardour of
+soul may be satisfied by the perfecting of the theory of a sentence, or the
+adjustment of two colours, so his own life also might have been fulfilled by an
+enthusiastic quest after perfection&mdash;say, in the flowering and folding of
+a toga.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The emperors had burned incense before the image of Jupiter, arrayed in its
+most gorgeous apparel, amid sudden shouts from the people of Salve Imperator!
+turned now from the living princes to the deity, as they discerned his
+countenance through the great open doors. The imperial brothers had deposited
+their crowns of myrtle on the richly embroidered lapcloth of the god; and, with
+their chosen guests, sat down to a public feast in the temple itself. There
+followed what was, after all, the great event of the day:&mdash;an appropriate
+discourse, a discourse almost wholly de contemptu mundi, delivered in the
+presence of the assembled Senate, by the emperor Aurelius, who had thus, on
+certain rare occasions, condescended to instruct his people, with the double
+authority of a chief pontiff and a laborious student of philosophy. In those
+lesser honours of the ovation, there had been no attendant slave behind the
+emperors, to make mock of their effulgence as they went; and it was as if with
+the discretion proper to a philosopher, and in fear of a jealous Nemesis, he
+had determined himself to protest in time against the vanity of all outward
+success.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Senate was assembled to hear the emperor&rsquo;s discourse in the vast hall
+of the Curia Julia. A crowd of high-bred youths idled around, or on the steps
+before the doors, with the marvellous toilets Marius had noticed in the Via
+Nova; in attendance, as usual, to learn by observation the minute points of
+senatorial procedure. Marius had already some acquaintance with them, and
+passing on found himself suddenly in the presence of what was still the most
+august assembly the world had seen. Under Aurelius, ever full of veneration for
+this ancient traditional guardian of public religion, the Senate had recovered
+all its old dignity and independence. Among its members many hundreds in
+number, visibly the most distinguished of them all, Marius noted the great
+sophists or rhetoricians of the day, in all their magnificence. The antique
+character of their attire, and the ancient mode of wearing it, still surviving
+with them, added to the imposing character of their persons, while they sat,
+with their staves of ivory in their hands, on their curule chairs&mdash;almost
+the exact pattern of the chair still in use in the Roman church when a Bishop
+pontificates at the divine offices&mdash;&ldquo;tranquil and unmoved, with a
+majesty that seemed divine,&rdquo; as Marius thought, like the old Gaul of the
+Invasion. The rays of the early November sunset slanted full upon the audience,
+and made it necessary for the officers of the Court to draw the purple curtains
+over the windows, adding to the solemnity of the scene. In the depth of those
+warm shadows, surrounded by her ladies, the empress Faustina was seated to
+listen. The beautiful Greek statue of Victory, which since the days of Augustus
+had presided over the assemblies of the Senate, had been brought into the hall,
+and placed near the chair of the emperor; who, after rising to perform a brief
+sacrificial service in its honour, bowing reverently to the assembled fathers
+left and right, took his seat and began to speak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a certain melancholy grandeur in the very simplicity or triteness of
+the theme: as it were the very quintessence of all the old Roman epitaphs, of
+all that was monumental in that city of tombs, layer upon layer of dead things
+and people. As if in the very fervour of disillusion, he seemed to be
+composing&mdash;Hôsper epigraphas chronôn kai holôn ethnôn+&mdash;the
+sepulchral titles of ages and whole peoples; nay! the very epitaph of the
+living Rome itself. The grandeur of the ruins of Rome,&mdash;heroism in ruin:
+it was under the influence of an imaginative anticipation of this, that he
+appeared to be speaking. And though the impression of the actual greatness of
+Rome on that day was but enhanced by the strain of contempt, falling with an
+accent of pathetic conviction from the emperor himself, and gaining from his
+pontifical pretensions the authority of a religious intimation, yet the curious
+interest of the discourse lay in this, that Marius, for one, as he listened,
+seemed to forsee a grass-grown Forum, the broken ways of the Capitol, and the
+Palatine hill itself in humble occupation. That impression connected itself
+with what he had already noted of an actual change even then coming over
+Italian scenery. Throughout, he could trace something of a humour into which
+Stoicism at all times tends to fall, the tendency to cry, Abase yourselves!
+There was here the almost inhuman impassibility of one who had thought too
+closely on the paradoxical aspect of the love of posthumous fame. With the
+ascetic pride which lurks under all Platonism, resultant from its opposition of
+the seen to the unseen, as falsehood to truth&mdash;the imperial Stoic, like
+his true descendant, the hermit of the middle age, was ready, in no friendly
+humour, to mock, there in its narrow bed, the corpse which had made so much of
+itself in life. Marius could but contrast all that with his own Cyrenaic
+eagerness, just then, to taste and see and touch; reflecting on the opposite
+issues deducible from the same text. &ldquo;The world, within me and without,
+flows away like a river,&rdquo; he had said; &ldquo;therefore let me make the
+most of what is here and now.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;The world and the thinker
+upon it, are consumed like a flame,&rdquo; said Aurelius, &ldquo;therefore will
+I turn away my eyes from vanity: renounce: withdraw myself alike from all
+affections.&rdquo; He seemed tacitly to claim as a sort of personal dignity,
+that he was very familiarly versed in this view of things, and could discern a
+death&rsquo;s-head everywhere. Now and again Marius was reminded of the saying
+that &ldquo;with the Stoics all people are the vulgar save themselves;&rdquo;
+and at times the orator seemed to have forgotten his audience, and to be
+speaking only to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art thou in love with men&rsquo;s praises, get thee into the very soul
+of them, and see!&mdash;see what judges they be, even in those matters which
+concern themselves. Wouldst thou have their praise after death, bethink thee,
+that they who shall come hereafter, and with whom thou wouldst survive by thy
+great name, will be but as these, whom here thou hast found so hard to live
+with. For of a truth, the soul of him who is aflutter upon renown after death,
+presents not this aright to itself, that of all whose memory he would have each
+one will likewise very quickly depart, until memory herself be put out, as she
+journeys on by means of such as are themselves on the wing but for a while, and
+are extinguished in their turn.&mdash;Making so much of those thou wilt never
+see! It is as if thou wouldst have had those who were before thee discourse
+fair things concerning thee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To him, indeed, whose wit hath been whetted by true doctrine, that
+well-worn sentence of Homer sufficeth, to guard him against regret and
+fear.&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+          Like the race of leaves<br/>
+The race of man is:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+          The wind in autumn strows<br/>
+The earth with old leaves: then the spring<br/>
+    the woods with new endows.+
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leaves! little leaves!&mdash;thy children, thy flatterers, thine enemies!
+Leaves in the wind, those who would devote thee to darkness, who scorn or
+miscall thee here, even as they also whose great fame shall outlast them. For
+all these, and the like of them, are born indeed in the spring
+season&mdash;Earos epigignetai hôrê+: and soon a wind hath scattered them, and
+thereafter the wood peopleth itself again with another generation of leaves.
+And what is common to all of them is but the littleness of their lives: and yet
+wouldst thou love and hate, as if these things should continue for ever. In a
+little while thine eyes also will be closed, and he on whom thou perchance hast
+leaned thyself be himself a burden upon another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bethink thee often of the swiftness with which the things that are, or
+are even now coming to be, are swept past thee: that the very substance of them
+is but the perpetual motion of water: that there is almost nothing which
+continueth: of that bottomless depth of time, so close at thy side. Folly! to
+be lifted up, or sorrowful, or anxious, by reason of things like these! Think
+of infinite matter, and thy portion&mdash;how tiny a particle, of it! of
+infinite time, and thine own brief point there; of destiny, and the jot thou
+art in it; and yield thyself readily to the wheel of Clotho, to spin of thee
+what web she will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As one casting a ball from his hand, the nature of things hath had its
+aim with every man, not as to the ending only, but the first beginning of his
+course, and passage thither. And hath the ball any profit of its rising, or
+loss as it descendeth again, or in its fall? or the bubble, as it groweth or
+breaketh on the air? or the flame of the lamp, from the beginning to the end of
+its brief story?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All but at this present that future is, in which nature, who disposeth
+all things in order, will transform whatsoever thou now seest, fashioning from
+its substance somewhat else, and therefrom somewhat else in its turn, lest the
+world grow old. We are such stuff as dreams are made of&mdash;disturbing
+dreams. Awake, then! and see thy dream as it is, in comparison with that
+erewhile it seemed to thee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And for me, especially, it were well to mind those many mutations of
+empire in time past; therein peeping also upon the future, which must needs be
+of like species with what hath been, continuing ever within the rhythm and
+number of things which really are; so that in forty years one may note of man
+and of his ways little less than in a thousand. Ah! from this higher place,
+look we down upon the ship-wrecks and the calm! Consider, for example, how the
+world went, under the emperor Vespasian. They are married and given in
+marriage, they breed children; love hath its way with them; they heap up riches
+for others or for themselves; they are murmuring at things as then they are;
+they are seeking for great place; crafty, flattering, suspicious, waiting upon
+the death of others:&mdash;festivals, business, war, sickness, dissolution: and
+now their whole life is no longer anywhere at all. Pass on to the reign of
+Trajan: all things continue the same: and that life also is no longer anywhere
+at all. Ah! but look again, and consider, one after another, as it were the
+sepulchral inscriptions of all peoples and times, according to one
+pattern.&mdash;What multitudes, after their utmost striving&mdash;a little
+afterwards! were dissolved again into their dust.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Think again of life as it was far off in the ancient world; as it must
+be when we shall be gone; as it is now among the wild heathen. How many have
+never heard your names and mine, or will soon forget them! How soon may those
+who shout my name to-day begin to revile it, because glory, and the memory of
+men, and all things beside, are but vanity&mdash;a sand-heap under the
+senseless wind, the barking of dogs, the quarrelling of children, weeping
+incontinently upon their laughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This hasteth to be; that other to have been: of that which now cometh to
+be, even now somewhat hath been extinguished. And wilt thou make thy treasure
+of any one of these things? It were as if one set his love upon the swallow, as
+it passeth out of sight through the air!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Bethink thee often, in all contentions public and private, of those whom
+men have remembered by reason of their anger and vehement spirit&mdash;those
+famous rages, and the occasions of them&mdash;the great fortunes, and
+misfortunes, of men&rsquo;s strife of old. What are they all now, and the dust
+of their battles? Dust and ashes indeed; a fable, a mythus, or not so much as
+that. Yes! keep those before thine eyes who took this or that, the like of
+which happeneth to thee, so hardly; were so querulous, so agitated. And where
+again are they? Wouldst thou have it not otherwise with thee?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Consider how quickly all things vanish away&mdash;their bodily structure into
+the general substance; the very memory of them into that great gulf and abysm
+of past thoughts. Ah! &rsquo;tis on a tiny space of earth thou art creeping
+through life&mdash;a pigmy soul carrying a dead body to its grave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let death put thee upon the consideration both of thy body and thy soul:
+what an atom of all matter hath been distributed to thee; what a little
+particle of the universal mind. Turn thy body about, and consider what thing it
+is, and that which old age, and lust, and the languor of disease can make of
+it. Or come to its substantial and causal qualities, its very type: contemplate
+that in itself, apart from the accidents of matter, and then measure also the
+span of time for which the nature of things, at the longest, will maintain that
+special type. Nay! in the very principles and first constituents of things
+corruption hath its part&mdash;so much dust, humour, stench, and scraps of
+bone! Consider that thy marbles are but the earth&rsquo;s callosities, thy gold
+and silver its faeces; this silken robe but a worm&rsquo;s bedding, and thy
+purple an unclean fish. Ah! and thy life&rsquo;s breath is not otherwise, as it
+passeth out of matters like these, into the like of them again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For the one soul in things, taking matter like wax in the hands, moulds
+and remoulds&mdash;how hastily!&mdash;beast, and plant, and the babe, in turn:
+and that which dieth hath not slipped out of the order of nature, but,
+remaining therein, hath also its changes there, disparting into those elements
+of which nature herself, and thou too, art compacted. She changes without
+murmuring. The oaken chest falls to pieces with no more complaining than when
+the carpenter fitted it together. If one told thee certainly that on the morrow
+thou shouldst die, or at the furthest on the day after, it would be no great
+matter to thee to die on the day after to-morrow, rather than to-morrow. Strive
+to think it a thing no greater that thou wilt die&mdash;not to-morrow, but a
+year, or two years, or ten years from to-day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I find that all things are now as they were in the days of our buried
+ancestors&mdash;all things sordid in their elements, trite by long usage, and
+yet ephemeral. How ridiculous, then, how like a countryman in town, is he, who
+wonders at aught. Doth the sameness, the repetition of the public shows, weary
+thee? Even so doth that likeness of events in the spectacle of the world. And
+so must it be with thee to the end. For the wheel of the world hath ever the
+same motion, upward and downward, from generation to generation. When, when,
+shall time give place to eternity?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If there be things which trouble thee thou canst put them away, inasmuch
+as they have their being but in thine own notion concerning them. Consider what
+death is, and how, if one does but detach from it the appearances, the notions,
+that hang about it, resting the eye upon it as in itself it really is, it must
+be thought of but as an effect of nature, and that man but a child whom an
+effect of nature shall affright. Nay! not function and effect of nature, only;
+but a thing profitable also to herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To cease from action&mdash;the ending of thine effort to think and do:
+there is no evil in that. Turn thy thought to the ages of man&rsquo;s life,
+boyhood, youth, maturity, old age: the change in every one of these also is a
+dying, but evil nowhere. Thou climbedst into the ship, thou hast made thy
+voyage and touched the shore. Go forth now! Be it into some other life: the
+divine breath is everywhere, even there. Be it into forgetfulness for ever; at
+least thou wilt rest from the beating of sensible images upon thee, from the
+passions which pluck thee this way and that like an unfeeling toy, from those
+long marches of the intellect, from thy toilsome ministry to the flesh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art thou yet more than dust and ashes and bare bone&mdash;a name only,
+or not so much as that, which, also, is but whispering and a resonance, kept
+alive from mouth to mouth of dying abjects who have hardly known themselves;
+how much less thee, dead so long ago!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When thou lookest upon a wise man, a lawyer, a captain of war, think
+upon another gone. When thou seest thine own face in the glass, call up there
+before thee one of thine ancestors&mdash;one of those old Caesars. Lo!
+everywhere, thy double before thee! Thereon, let the thought occur to thee: And
+where are they? anywhere at all, for ever? And thou, thyself&mdash;how long?
+Art thou blind to that thou art&mdash;thy matter, how temporal; and thy
+function, the nature of thy business? Yet tarry, at least, till thou hast
+assimilated even these things to thine own proper essence, as a quick fire
+turneth into heat and light whatsoever be cast upon it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As words once in use are antiquated to us, so is it with the names that
+were once on all men&rsquo;s lips: Camillus, Volesus, Leonnatus: then, in a
+little while, Scipio and Cato, and then Augustus, and then Hadrian, and then
+Antoninus Pius. How many great physicians who lifted wise brows at other
+men&rsquo;s sick-beds, have sickened and died! Those wise Chaldeans, who
+foretold, as a great matter, another man&rsquo;s last hour, have themselves
+been taken by surprise. Ay! and all those others, in their pleasant places:
+those who doated on a Capreae like Tiberius, on their gardens, on the baths:
+Pythagoras and Socrates, who reasoned so closely upon immortality: Alexander,
+who used the lives of others as though his own should last for ever&mdash;he
+and his mule-driver alike now!&mdash;one upon another. Well-nigh the whole
+court of Antoninus is extinct. Panthea and Pergamus sit no longer beside the
+sepulchre of their lord. The watchers over Hadrian&rsquo;s dust have slipped
+from his sepulchre.&mdash;It were jesting to stay longer. Did they sit there
+still, would the dead feel it? or feeling it, be glad? or glad, hold those
+watchers for ever? The time must come when they too shall be aged men and aged
+women, and decease, and fail from their places; and what shift were there then
+for imperial service? This too is but the breath of the tomb, and a skinful of
+dead men&rsquo;s blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Think again of those inscriptions, which belong not to one soul only,
+but to whole families: Eschatos tou idiou genous:+ He was the last of his race.
+Nay! of the burial of whole cities: Helice, Pompeii: of others, whose very
+burial place is unknown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou hast been a citizen in this wide city. Count not for how long, nor
+repine; since that which sends thee hence is no unrighteous judge, no tyrant,
+but Nature, who brought thee hither; as when a player leaves the stage at the
+bidding of the conductor who hired him. Sayest thou, &lsquo;I have not played
+five acts&rsquo;? True! but in human life, three acts only make sometimes an
+entire play. That is the composer&rsquo;s business, not thine. Withdraw thyself
+with a good will; for that too hath, perchance, a good will which dismisseth
+thee from thy part.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The discourse ended almost in darkness, the evening having set in somewhat
+suddenly, with a heavy fall of snow. The torches, made ready to do him a
+useless honour, were of real service now, as the emperor was solemnly conducted
+home; one man rapidly catching light from another&mdash;a long stream of moving
+lights across the white Forum, up the great stairs, to the palace. And, in
+effect, that night winter began, the hardest that had been known for a
+lifetime. The wolves came from the mountains; and, led by the carrion scent,
+devoured the dead bodies which had been hastily buried during the plague, and,
+emboldened by their meal, crept, before the short day was well past, over the
+walls of the farmyards of the Campagna. The eagles were seen driving the flocks
+of smaller birds across the dusky sky. Only, in the city itself the winter was
+all the brighter for the contrast, among those who could pay for light and
+warmth. The habit-makers made a great sale of the spoil of all such furry
+creatures as had escaped wolves and eagles, for presents at the Saturnalia; and
+at no time had the winter roses from Carthage seemed more lustrously yellow and
+red.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+NOTES
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+188. +Spenser, Shepheardes Calendar, October, 61-66.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+200. +Transliteration: Hôsper epigraphas chronôn kai holôn ethnôn.
+Pater&rsquo;s Translation: &ldquo;the sepulchral titles of ages and whole
+peoples.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+202. +Homer, Iliad VI.146-48.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+202. +Transliteration: Earos epigignetai hôrê. Translation: &ldquo;born in
+springtime.&rdquo; Homer, Iliad VI.147.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+210. +Transliteration: Eschatos tou idiou genous. Translation: &ldquo;He was
+the last of his race.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap13"></a>CHAPTER XIII.<br/>
+THE &ldquo;MISTRESS AND MOTHER&rdquo; OF PALACES</h2>
+
+<p>
+After that sharp, brief winter, the sun was already at work, softening leaf and
+bud, as you might feel by a faint sweetness in the air; but he did his work
+behind an evenly white sky, against which the abode of the Caesars, its
+cypresses and bronze roofs, seemed like a picture in beautiful but melancholy
+colour, as Marius climbed the long flights of steps to be introduced to the
+emperor Aurelius. Attired in the newest mode, his legs wound in dainty fasciae
+of white leather, with the heavy gold ring of the ingenuus, and in his toga of
+ceremony, he still retained all his country freshness of complexion. The eyes
+of the &ldquo;golden youth&rdquo; of Rome were upon him as the chosen friend of
+Cornelius, and the destined servant of the emperor; but not jealously. In spite
+of, perhaps partly because of, his habitual reserve of manner, he had become
+&ldquo;the fashion,&rdquo; even among those who felt instinctively the irony
+which lay beneath that remarkable self-possession, as of one taking all things
+with a difference from other people, perceptible in voice, in expression, and
+even in his dress. It was, in truth, the air of one who, entering vividly into
+life, and relishing to the full the delicacies of its intercourse, yet feels
+all the while, from the point of view of an ideal philosophy, that he is but
+conceding reality to suppositions, choosing of his own will to walk in a
+day-dream, of the illusiveness of which he at least is aware.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the house of the chief chamberlain Marius waited for the due moment of
+admission to the emperor&rsquo;s presence. He was admiring the peculiar
+decoration of the walls, coloured like rich old red leather. In the midst of
+one of them was depicted, under a trellis of fruit you might have gathered, the
+figure of a woman knocking at a door with wonderful reality of perspective.
+Then the summons came; and in a few minutes, the etiquette of the imperial
+household being still a simple matter, he had passed the curtains which divided
+the central hall of the palace into three parts&mdash;three degrees of approach
+to the sacred person&mdash;and was speaking to Aurelius himself; not in Greek,
+in which the emperor oftenest conversed with the learned, but, more familiarly,
+in Latin, adorned however, or disfigured, by many a Greek phrase, as now and
+again French phrases have made the adornment of fashionable English. It was
+with real kindliness that Marcus Aurelius looked upon Marius, as a youth of
+great attainments in Greek letters and philosophy; and he liked also his
+serious expression, being, as we know, a believer in the doctrine of
+physiognomy&mdash;that, as he puts it, not love only, but every other affection
+of man&rsquo;s soul, looks out very plainly from the window of the eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The apartment in which Marius found himself was of ancient aspect, and richly
+decorated with the favourite toys of two or three generations of imperial
+collectors, now finally revised by the high connoisseurship of the Stoic
+emperor himself, though destined not much longer to remain together there. It
+is the repeated boast of Aurelius that he had learned from old Antoninus Pius
+to maintain authority without the constant use of guards, in a robe woven by
+the handmaids of his own consort, with no processional lights or images, and
+&ldquo;that a prince may shrink himself almost into the figure of a private
+gentleman.&rdquo; And yet, again as at his first sight of him, Marius was
+struck by the profound religiousness of the surroundings of the imperial
+presence. The effect might have been due in part to the very simplicity, the
+discreet and scrupulous simplicity, of the central figure in this splendid
+abode; but Marius could not forget that he saw before him not only the head of
+the Roman religion, but one who might actually have claimed something like
+divine worship, had he cared to do so. Though the fantastic pretensions of
+Caligula had brought some contempt on that claim, which had become almost a
+jest under the ungainly Claudius, yet, from Augustus downwards, a vague
+divinity had seemed to surround the Caesars even in this life; and the peculiar
+character of Aurelius, at once a ceremonious polytheist never forgetful of his
+pontifical calling, and a philosopher whose mystic speculation encircled him
+with a sort of saintly halo, had restored to his person, without his intending
+it, something of that divine prerogative, or prestige. Though he would never
+allow the immediate dedication of altars to himself, yet the image of his
+Genius&mdash;his spirituality or celestial counterpart&mdash;was placed among
+those of the deified princes of the past; and his family, including Faustina
+and the young Commodus, was spoken of as the &ldquo;holy&rdquo; or
+&ldquo;divine&rdquo; house. Many a Roman courtier agreed with the barbarian
+chief, who, after contemplating a predecessor of Aurelius, withdrew from his
+presence with the exclamation:&mdash;&ldquo;I have seen a god to-day!&rdquo;
+The very roof of his house, rising into a pediment or gable, like that of the
+sanctuary of a god, the laurels on either side its doorway, the chaplet of
+oak-leaves above, seemed to designate the place for religious veneration. And
+notwithstanding all this, the household of Aurelius was singularly modest, with
+none of the wasteful expense of palaces after the fashion of Lewis the
+Fourteenth; the palatial dignity being felt only in a peculiar sense of order,
+the absence of all that was casual, of vulgarity and discomfort. A merely
+official residence of his predecessors, the Palatine had become the favourite
+dwelling-place of Aurelius; its many-coloured memories suiting, perhaps, his
+pensive character, and the crude splendours of Nero and Hadrian being now
+subdued by time. The window-less Roman abode must have had much of what to a
+modern would be gloom. How did the children, one wonders, endure houses with so
+little escape for the eye into the world outside? Aurelius, who had altered
+little else, choosing to live there, in a genuine homeliness, had shifted and
+made the most of the level lights, and broken out a quite medieval window here
+and there, and the clear daylight, fully appreciated by his youthful visitor,
+made pleasant shadows among the objects of the imperial collection. Some of
+these, indeed, by reason of their Greek simplicity and grace, themselves shone
+out like spaces of a purer, early light, amid the splendours of the Roman
+manufacture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though he looked, thought Marius, like a man who did not sleep enough, he was
+abounding and bright to-day, after one of those pitiless headaches, which since
+boyhood had been the &ldquo;thorn in his side,&rdquo; challenging the
+pretensions of his philosophy to fortify one in humble endurances. At the first
+moment, to Marius, remembering the spectacle of the emperor in ceremony, it was
+almost bewildering to be in private conversation with him. There was much in
+the philosophy of Aurelius&mdash;much consideration of mankind at large, of
+great bodies, aggregates and generalities, after the Stoic manner&mdash;which,
+on a nature less rich than his, might have acted as an inducement to care for
+people in inverse proportion to their nearness to him. That has sometimes been
+the result of the Stoic cosmopolitanism. Aurelius, however, determined to
+beautify by all means, great or little, a doctrine which had in it some
+potential sourness, had brought all the quickness of his intelligence, and long
+years of observation, to bear on the conditions of social intercourse. He had
+early determined &ldquo;not to make business an excuse to decline the offices
+of humanity&mdash;not to pretend to be too much occupied with important affairs
+to concede what life with others may hourly demand;&rdquo; and with such
+success, that, in an age which made much of the finer points of that
+intercourse, it was felt that the mere honesty of his conversation was more
+pleasing than other men&rsquo;s flattery. His agreeableness to his young
+visitor to-day was, in truth, a blossom of the same wisdom which had made of
+Lucius Verus really a brother&mdash;the wisdom of not being exigent with men,
+any more than with fruit-trees (it is his own favourite figure) beyond their
+nature. And there was another person, still nearer to him, regarding whom this
+wisdom became a marvel, of equity&mdash;of charity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The centre of a group of princely children, in the same apartment with
+Aurelius, amid all the refined intimacies of a modern home, sat the empress
+Faustina, warming her hands over a fire. With her long fingers lighted up red
+by the glowing coals of the brazier Marius looked close upon the most beautiful
+woman in the world, who was also the great paradox of the age, among her boys
+and girls. As has been truly said of the numerous representations of her in
+art, so in life, she had the air of one curious, restless, to enter into
+conversation with the first comer. She had certainly the power of stimulating a
+very ambiguous sort of curiosity about herself. And Marius found this enigmatic
+point in her expression, that even after seeing her many times he could never
+precisely recall her features in absence. The lad of six years, looking older,
+who stood beside her, impatiently plucking a rose to pieces over the hearth,
+was, in outward appearance, his father&mdash;the young Verissimus&mdash;over
+again; but with a certain feminine length of feature, and with all his
+mother&rsquo;s alertness, or license, of gaze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet rumour knocked at every door and window of the imperial house regarding the
+adulterers who knocked at them, or quietly left their lovers&rsquo; garlands
+there. Was not that likeness of the husband, in the boy beside her, really the
+effect of a shameful magic, in which the blood of the murdered gladiator, his
+true father, had been an ingredient? Were the tricks for deceiving husbands
+which the Roman poet describes, really hers, and her household an efficient
+school of all the arts of furtive love? Or, was the husband too aware, like
+every one beside? Were certain sudden deaths which happened there, really the
+work of apoplexy, or the plague?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man whose ears, whose soul, those rumours were meant to penetrate, was,
+however, faithful to his sanguine and optimist philosophy, to his determination
+that the world should be to him simply what the higher reason preferred to
+conceive it; and the life&rsquo;s journey Aurelius had made so far, though
+involving much moral and intellectual loneliness, had been ever in affectionate
+and helpful contact with other wayfarers, very unlike himself. Since his days
+of earliest childhood in the Lateran gardens, he seemed to himself, blessing
+the gods for it after deliberate survey, to have been always surrounded by
+kinsmen, friends, servants, of exceptional virtue. From the great Stoic idea,
+that we are all fellow-citizens of one city, he had derived a tenderer, a more
+equitable estimate than was common among Stoics, of the eternal shortcomings of
+men and women. Considerations that might tend to the sweetening of his temper
+it was his daily care to store away, with a kind of philosophic pride in the
+thought that no one took more good-naturedly than he the
+&ldquo;oversights&rdquo; of his neighbours. For had not Plato taught (it was
+not paradox, but simple truth of experience) that if people sin, it is because
+they know no better, and are &ldquo;under the necessity of their own
+ignorance&rdquo;? Hard to himself, he seemed at times, doubtless, to decline
+too softly upon unworthy persons. Actually, he came thereby upon many a useful
+instrument. The empress Faustina he would seem at least to have kept, by a
+constraining affection, from becoming altogether what most people have believed
+her, and won in her (we must take him at his word in the
+&ldquo;Thoughts,&rdquo; abundantly confirmed by letters, on both sides, in his
+correspondence with Cornelius Fronto) a consolation, the more secure, perhaps,
+because misknown of others. Was the secret of her actual blamelessness, after
+all, with him who has at least screened her name? At all events, the one thing
+quite certain about her, besides her extraordinary beauty, is her sweetness to
+himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No! The wise, who had made due observation on the trees of the garden, would
+not expect to gather grapes of thorns or fig-trees: and he was the vine,
+putting forth his genial fruit, by natural law, again and again, after his
+kind, whatever use people might make of it. Certainly, his actual presence
+never lost its power, and Faustina was glad in it to-day, the birthday of one
+of her children, a boy who stood at her knee holding in his fingers tenderly a
+tiny silver trumpet, one of his birthday gifts.&mdash;&ldquo;For my part,
+unless I conceive my hurt to be such, I have no hurt at
+all,&rdquo;&mdash;boasts the would-be apathetic emperor:&mdash;&ldquo;and how I
+care to conceive of the thing rests with me.&rdquo; Yet when his children fall
+sick or die, this pretence breaks down, and he is broken-hearted: and one of
+the charms of certain of his letters still extant, is his reference to those
+childish sicknesses.&mdash;&ldquo;On my return to Lorium,&rdquo; he writes,
+&ldquo;I found my little lady&mdash;domnulam meam&mdash;in a fever;&rdquo; and
+again, in a letter to one of the most serious of men, &ldquo;You will be glad
+to hear that our little one is better, and running about the
+room&mdash;parvolam nostram melius valere et intra cubiculum discurrere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young Commodus had departed from the chamber, anxious to witness the
+exercises of certain gladiators, having a native taste for such company,
+inherited, according to popular rumour, from his true father&mdash;anxious also
+to escape from the too impressive company of the gravest and sweetest specimen
+of old age Marius had ever seen, the tutor of the imperial children, who had
+arrived to offer his birthday congratulations, and now, very familiarly and
+affectionately, made a part of the group, falling on the shoulders of the
+emperor, kissing the empress Faustina on the face, the little ones on the face
+and hands. Marcus Cornelius Fronto, the &ldquo;Orator,&rdquo; favourite teacher
+of the emperor&rsquo;s youth, afterwards his most trusted counsellor, and now
+the undisputed occupant of the sophistic throne, whose equipage, elegantly
+mounted with silver, Marius had seen in the streets of Rome, had certainly
+turned his many personal gifts to account with a good fortune, remarkable even
+in that age, so indulgent to professors or rhetoricians. The gratitude of the
+emperor Aurelius, always generous to his teachers, arranging their very
+quarrels sometimes, for they were not always fair to one another, had helped
+him to a really great place in the world. But his sumptuous appendages,
+including the villa and gardens of Maecenas, had been borne with an air
+perfectly becoming, by the professor of a philosophy which, even in its most
+accomplished and elegant phase, presupposed a gentle contempt for such things.
+With an intimate practical knowledge of manners, physiognomies, smiles,
+disguises, flatteries, and courtly tricks of every kind&mdash;a whole
+accomplished rhetoric of daily life&mdash;he applied them all to the promotion
+of humanity, and especially of men&rsquo;s family affection. Through a long
+life of now eighty years, he had been, as it were, surrounded by the gracious
+and soothing air of his own eloquence&mdash;the fame, the echoes, of
+it&mdash;like warbling birds, or murmuring bees. Setting forth in that fine
+medium the best ideas of matured pagan philosophy, he had become the favourite
+&ldquo;director&rdquo; of noble youth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes! it was the one instance Marius, always eagerly on the look-out for such,
+had yet seen of a perfectly tolerable, perfectly beautiful, old age&mdash;an
+old age in which there seemed, to one who perhaps habitually over-valued the
+expression of youth, nothing to be regretted, nothing really lost, in what
+years had taken away. The wise old man, whose blue eyes and fair skin were so
+delicate, uncontaminate and clear, would seem to have replaced carefully and
+consciously each natural trait of youth, as it departed from him, by an
+equivalent grace of culture; and had the blitheness, the placid cheerfulness,
+as he had also the infirmity, the claim on stronger people, of a delightful
+child. And yet he seemed to be but awaiting his exit from life&mdash;that
+moment with which the Stoics were almost as much preoccupied as the Christians,
+however differently&mdash;and set Marius pondering on the contrast between a
+placidity like this, at eighty years, and the sort of desperateness he was
+aware of in his own manner of entertaining that thought. His infirmities
+nevertheless had been painful and long-continued, with losses of children, of
+pet grandchildren. What with the crowd, and the wretched streets, it was a sign
+of affection which had cost him something, for the old man to leave his own
+house at all that day; and he was glad of the emperor&rsquo;s support, as he
+moved from place to place among the children he protests so often to have loved
+as his own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a strange piece of literary good fortune, at the beginning of the present
+century, has set free the long-buried fragrance of this famous friendship of
+the old world, from below a valueless later manuscript, in a series of letters,
+wherein the two writers exchange, for the most part their evening thoughts,
+especially at family anniversaries, and with entire intimacy, on their
+children, on the art of speech, on all the various subtleties of the
+&ldquo;science of images&rdquo;&mdash;rhetorical images&mdash;above all, of
+course, on sleep and matters of health. They are full of mutual admiration of
+each other&rsquo;s eloquence, restless in absence till they see one another
+again, noting, characteristically, their very dreams of each other, expecting
+the day which will terminate the office, the business or duty, which separates
+them&mdash;&ldquo;as superstitious people watch for the star, at the rising of
+which they may break their fast.&rdquo; To one of the writers, to Aurelius, the
+correspondence was sincerely of value. We see him once reading his letters with
+genuine delight on going to rest. Fronto seeks to deter his pupil from writing
+in Greek.&mdash;Why buy, at great cost, a foreign wine, inferior to that from
+one&rsquo;s own vineyard? Aurelius, on the other hand, with an extraordinary
+innate susceptibility to words&mdash;la parole pour la parole, as the French
+say&mdash;despairs, in presence of Fronto&rsquo;s rhetorical perfection.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like the modern visitor to the Capitoline and some other museums, Fronto had
+been struck, pleasantly struck, by the family likeness among the Antonines; and
+it was part of his friendship to make much of it, in the case of the children
+of Faustina. &ldquo;Well! I have seen the little ones,&rdquo; he writes to
+Aurelius, then, apparently, absent from them: &ldquo;I have seen the little
+ones&mdash;the pleasantest sight of my life; for they are as like yourself as
+could possibly be. It has well repaid me for my journey over that slippery
+road, and up those steep rocks; for I beheld you, not simply face to face
+before me, but, more generously, whichever way I turned, to my right and my
+left. For the rest, I found them, Heaven be thanked! with healthy cheeks and
+lusty voices. One was holding a slice of white bread, like a king&rsquo;s son;
+the other a crust of brown bread, as becomes the offspring of a philosopher. I
+pray the gods to have both the sower and the seed in their keeping; to watch
+over this field wherein the ears of corn are so kindly alike. Ah! I heard too
+their pretty voices, so sweet that in the childish prattle of one and the other
+I seemed somehow to be listening&mdash;yes! in that chirping of your pretty
+chickens&mdash;to the limpid+ and harmonious notes of your own oratory. Take
+care! you will find me growing independent, having those I could love in your
+place:&mdash;love, on the surety of my eyes and ears.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
++&ldquo;Limpid&rdquo; is misprinted &ldquo;Limped.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Magistro meo salutem!&rdquo; replies the Emperor, &ldquo;I too have seen
+my little ones in your sight of them; as, also, I saw yourself in reading your
+letter. It is that charming letter forces me to write thus:&rdquo; with
+reiterations of affection, that is, which are continual in these letters, on
+both sides, and which may strike a modern reader perhaps as fulsome; or, again,
+as having something in common with the old Judaic unction of friendship. They
+were certainly sincere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To one of those children Fronto had now brought the birthday gift of the silver
+trumpet, upon which he ventured to blow softly now and again, turning away with
+eyes delighted at the sound, when he thought the old man was not listening. It
+was the well-worn, valetudinarian subject of sleep, on which Fronto and
+Aurelius were talking together; Aurelius always feeling it a burden, Fronto a
+thing of magic capacities, so that he had written an encomium in its praise,
+and often by ingenious arguments recommends his imperial pupil not to be
+sparing of it. To-day, with his younger listeners in mind, he had a story to
+tell about it:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They say that our father Jupiter, when he ordered the world at the
+beginning, divided time into two parts exactly equal: the one part he clothed
+with light, the other with darkness: he called them Day and Night; and he
+assigned rest to the night and to day the work of life. At that time Sleep was
+not yet born and men passed the whole of their lives awake: only, the quiet of
+the night was ordained for them, instead of sleep. But it came to pass, little
+by little, being that the minds of men are restless, that they carried on their
+business alike by night as by day, and gave no part at all to repose. And
+Jupiter, when he perceived that even in the night-time they ceased not from
+trouble and disputation, and that even the courts of law remained open (it was
+the pride of Aurelius, as Fronto knew, to be assiduous in those courts till far
+into the night) resolved to appoint one of his brothers to be the overseer of
+the night and have authority over man&rsquo;s rest. But Neptune pleaded in
+excuse the gravity of his constant charge of the seas, and Father Dis the
+difficulty of keeping in subjection the spirits below; and Jupiter, having
+taken counsel with the other gods, perceived that the practice of nightly
+vigils was somewhat in favour. It was then, for the most part, that Juno gave
+birth to her children: Minerva, the mistress of all art and craft, loved the
+midnight lamp: Mars delighted in the darkness for his plots and sallies; and
+the favour of Venus and Bacchus was with those who roused by night. Then it was
+that Jupiter formed the design of creating Sleep; and he added him to the
+number of the gods, and gave him the charge over night and rest, putting into
+his hands the keys of human eyes. With his own hands he mingled the juices
+wherewith Sleep should soothe the hearts of mortals&mdash;herb of Enjoyment and
+herb of Safety, gathered from a grove in Heaven; and, from the meadows of
+Acheron, the herb of Death; expressing from it one single drop only, no bigger
+than a tear one might hide. &lsquo;With this juice,&rsquo; he said, &lsquo;pour
+slumber upon the eyelids of mortals. So soon as it hath touched them they will
+lay themselves down motionless, under thy power. But be not afraid: they shall
+revive, and in a while stand up again upon their feet.&rsquo; Thereafter,
+Jupiter gave wings to Sleep, attached, not, like Mercury&rsquo;s, to his heels,
+but to his shoulders, like the wings of Love. For he said, &lsquo;It becomes
+thee not to approach men&rsquo;s eyes as with the noise of chariots, and the
+rushing of a swift courser, but in placid and merciful flight, as upon the
+wings of a swallow&mdash;nay! with not so much as the flutter of the
+dove.&rsquo; Besides all this, that he might be yet pleasanter to men, he
+committed to him also a multitude of blissful dreams, according to every
+man&rsquo;s desire. One watched his favourite actor; another listened to the
+flute, or guided a charioteer in the race: in his dream, the soldier was
+victorious, the general was borne in triumph, the wanderer returned home.
+Yes!&mdash;and sometimes those dreams come true!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just then Aurelius was summoned to make the birthday offerings to his household
+gods. A heavy curtain of tapestry was drawn back; and beyond it Marius gazed
+for a few moments into the Lararium, or imperial chapel. A patrician youth, in
+white habit, was in waiting, with a little chest in his hand containing incense
+for the use of the altar. On richly carved consoles, or side boards, around
+this narrow chamber, were arranged the rich apparatus of worship and the golden
+or gilded images, adorned to-day with fresh flowers, among them that image of
+Fortune from the apartment of Antoninus Pius, and such of the emperor&rsquo;s
+own teachers as were gone to their rest. A dim fresco on the wall commemorated
+the ancient piety of Lucius Albinius, who in flight from Rome on the morrow of
+a great disaster, overtaking certain priests on foot with their sacred
+utensils, descended from the wagon in which he rode and yielded it to the
+ministers of the gods. As he ascended into the chapel the emperor paused, and
+with a grave but friendly look at his young visitor, delivered a parting
+sentence, audible to him alone: <i>Imitation is the most acceptable part of
+worship:&mdash;the gods had much rather mankind should resemble than flatter
+them. Make sure that those to whom you come nearest be the happier by your
+presence!</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the very spirit of the scene and the hour&mdash;the hour Marius had
+spent in the imperial house. How temperate, how tranquillising! what humanity!
+Yet, as he left the eminent company concerning whose ways of life at home he
+had been so youthfully curious, and sought, after his manner, to determine the
+main trait in all this, he had to confess that it was a sentiment of
+mediocrity, though of a mediocrity for once really golden.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap14"></a>CHAPTER XIV.<br/>
+MANLY AMUSEMENT</h2>
+
+<p>
+During the Eastern war there came a moment when schism in the empire had seemed
+possible through the defection of Lucius Verus; when to Aurelius it had also
+seemed possible to confirm his allegiance by no less a gift than his beautiful
+daughter Lucilla, the eldest of his children&mdash;the domnula, probably, of
+those letters. The little lady, grown now to strong and stately maidenhood, had
+been ever something of the good genius, the better soul, to Lucius Verus, by
+the law of contraries, her somewhat cold and apathetic modesty acting as
+counterfoil to the young man&rsquo;s tigrish fervour. Conducted to Ephesus, she
+had become his wife by form of civil marriage, the more solemn wedding rites
+being deferred till their return to Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ceremony of the Confarreation, or religious marriage, in which bride and
+bridegroom partook together of a certain mystic bread, was celebrated
+accordingly, with due pomp, early in the spring; Aurelius himself assisting,
+with much domestic feeling. A crowd of fashionable people filled the space
+before the entrance to the apartments of Lucius on the Palatine hill, richly
+decorated for the occasion, commenting, not always quite delicately, on the
+various details of the rite, which only a favoured few succeeded in actually
+witnessing. &ldquo;She comes!&rdquo; Marius could hear them say,
+&ldquo;escorted by her young brothers: it is the young Commodus who carries the
+torch of white-thornwood, the little basket of work-things, the toys for the
+children:&rdquo;&mdash;and then, after a watchful pause, &ldquo;she is winding
+the woollen thread round the doorposts. Ah! I see the marriage-cake: the
+bridegroom presents the fire and water.&rdquo; Then, in a longer pause, was
+heard the chorus, Thalassie! Thalassie! and for just a few moments, in the
+strange light of many wax tapers at noonday, Marius could see them both, side
+by side, while the bride was lifted over the doorstep: Lucius Verus heated and
+handsome&mdash;the pale, impassive Lucilla looking very long and slender, in
+her closely folded yellow veil, and high nuptial crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Marius turned away, glad to escape from the pressure of the crowd, he found
+himself face to face with Cornelius, an infrequent spectator on occasions such
+as this. It was a relief to depart with him&mdash;so fresh and quiet he looked,
+though in all his splendid equestrian array in honour of the
+ceremony&mdash;from the garish heat of the marriage scene. The reserve which
+had puzzled Marius so much on his first day in Rome, was but an instance of
+many, to him wholly unaccountable, avoidances alike of things and persons,
+which must certainly mean that an intimate companionship would cost him
+something in the way of seemingly indifferent amusements. Some inward standard
+Marius seemed to detect there (though wholly unable to estimate its nature) of
+distinction, selection, refusal, amid the various elements of the fervid and
+corrupt life across which they were moving together:&mdash;some secret,
+constraining motive, ever on the alert at eye and ear, which carried him
+through Rome as under a charm, so that Marius could not but think of that
+figure of the white bird in the market-place as undoubtedly made true of him.
+And Marius was still full of admiration for this companion, who had known how
+to make himself very pleasant to him. Here was the clear, cold corrective,
+which the fever of his present life demanded. Without it, he would have felt
+alternately suffocated and exhausted by an existence, at once so gaudy and
+overdone, and yet so intolerably empty; in which people, even at their best,
+seemed only to be brooding, like the wise emperor himself, over a world&rsquo;s
+disillusion. For with all the severity of Cornelius, there was such a breeze of
+hopefulness&mdash;freshness and hopefulness, as of new morning, about him. For
+the most part, as I said, those refusals, that reserve of his, seemed
+unaccountable. But there were cases where the unknown monitor acted in a
+direction with which the judgment, or instinct, of Marius himself wholly
+concurred; the effective decision of Cornelius strengthening him further
+therein, as by a kind of outwardly embodied conscience. And the entire drift of
+his education determined him, on one point at least, to be wholly of the same
+mind with this peculiar friend (they two, it might be, together, against the
+world!) when, alone of a whole company of brilliant youth, he had withdrawn
+from his appointed place in the amphitheatre, at a grand public show, which
+after an interval of many months, was presented there, in honour of the
+nuptials of Lucius Verus and Lucilla.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And it was still to the eye, through visible movement and aspect, that the
+character, or genius of Cornelius made itself felt by Marius; even as on that
+afternoon when he had girt on his armour, among the expressive lights and
+shades of the dim old villa at the roadside, and every object of his knightly
+array had seemed to be but sign or symbol of some other thing far beyond it.
+For, consistently with his really poetic temper, all influence reached Marius,
+even more exclusively than he was aware, through the medium of sense. From
+Flavian in that brief early summer of his existence, he had derived a powerful
+impression of the &ldquo;perpetual flux&rdquo;: he had caught there, as in
+cipher or symbol, or low whispers more effective than any definite language,
+his own Cyrenaic philosophy, presented thus, for the first time, in an image or
+person, with much attractiveness, touched also, consequently, with a pathetic
+sense of personal sorrow:&mdash;a concrete image, the abstract equivalent of
+which he could recognise afterwards, when the agitating personal influence had
+settled down for him, clearly enough, into a theory of practice. But of what
+possible intellectual formula could this mystic Cornelius be the sensible
+exponent; seeming, as he did, to live ever in close relationship with, and
+recognition of, a mental view, a source of discernment, a light upon his way,
+which had certainly not yet sprung up for Marius? Meantime, the discretion of
+Cornelius, his energetic clearness and purity, were a charm, rather physical
+than moral: his exquisite correctness of spirit, at all events, accorded so
+perfectly with the regular beauty of his person, as to seem to depend upon it.
+And wholly different as was this later friendship, with its exigency, its
+warnings, its restraints, from the feverish attachment to Flavian, which had
+made him at times like an uneasy slave, still, like that, it was a
+reconciliation to the world of sense, the visible world. From the hopefulness
+of this gracious presence, all visible things around him, even the commonest
+objects of everyday life&mdash;if they but stood together to warm their hands
+at the same fire&mdash;took for him a new poetry, a delicate fresh bloom, and
+interest. It was as if his bodily eyes had been indeed mystically washed,
+renewed, strengthened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And how eagerly, with what a light heart, would Flavian have taken his place in
+the amphitheatre, among the youth of his own age! with what an appetite for
+every detail of the entertainment, and its various accessories:&mdash;the
+sunshine, filtered into soft gold by the vela, with their serpentine
+patterning, spread over the more select part of the company; the Vestal
+virgins, taking their privilege of seats near the empress Faustina, who sat
+there in a maze of double-coloured gems, changing, as she moved, like the waves
+of the sea; the cool circle of shadow, in which the wonderful toilets of the
+fashionable told so effectively around the blazing arena, covered again and
+again during the many hours&rsquo; show, with clean sand for the absorption of
+certain great red patches there, by troops of white-shirted boys, for whom the
+good-natured audience provided a scramble of nuts and small coin, flung to them
+over a trellis-work of silver-gilt and amber, precious gift of Nero, while a
+rain of flowers and perfume fell over themselves, as they paused between the
+parts of their long feast upon the spectacle of animal suffering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During his sojourn at Ephesus, Lucius Verus had readily become a patron, patron
+or protégé, of the great goddess of Ephesus, the goddess of hunters; and the
+show, celebrated by way of a compliment to him to-day, was to present some
+incidents of her story, where she figures almost as the genius of madness, in
+animals, or in the humanity which comes in contact with them. The entertainment
+would have an element of old Greek revival in it, welcome to the taste of a
+learned and Hellenising society; and, as Lucius Verus was in some sense a lover
+of animals, was to be a display of animals mainly. There would be real wild and
+domestic creatures, all of rare species; and a real slaughter. On so happy an
+occasion, it was hoped, the elder emperor might even concede a point, and a
+living criminal fall into the jaws of the wild beasts. And the spectacle was,
+certainly, to end in the destruction, by one mighty shower of arrows, of a
+hundred lions, &ldquo;nobly&rdquo; provided by Aurelius himself for the
+amusement of his people.&mdash;Tam magnanimus fuit!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The arena, decked and in order for the first scene, looked delightfully fresh,
+re-inforcing on the spirits of the audience the actual freshness of the
+morning, which at this season still brought the dew. Along the subterranean
+ways that led up to it, the sound of an advancing chorus was heard at last,
+chanting the words of a sacred song, or hymn to Diana; for the spectacle of the
+amphitheatre was, after all, a religious occasion. To its grim acts of
+blood-shedding a kind of sacrificial character still belonged in the view of
+certain religious casuists, tending conveniently to soothe the humane
+sensibilities of so pious an emperor as Aurelius, who, in his fraternal
+complacency, had consented to preside over the shows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Artemis or Diana, as she may be understood in the actual development of her
+worship, was, indeed, the symbolical expression of two allied yet contrasted
+elements of human temper and experience&mdash;man&rsquo;s amity, and also his
+enmity, towards the wild creatures, when they were still, in a certain sense,
+his brothers. She is the complete, and therefore highly complex, representative
+of a state, in which man was still much occupied with animals, not as his
+flock, or as his servants after the pastoral relationship of our later, orderly
+world, but rather as his equals, on friendly terms or the reverse,&mdash;a
+state full of primeval sympathies and antipathies, of rivalries and common
+wants&mdash;while he watched, and could enter into, the humours of those
+&ldquo;younger brothers,&rdquo; with an intimacy, the &ldquo;survivals&rdquo;
+of which in a later age seem often to have had a kind of madness about them.
+Diana represents alike the bright and the dark side of such relationship. But
+the humanities of that relationship were all forgotten to-day in the excitement
+of a show, in which mere cruelty to animals, their useless suffering and death,
+formed the main point of interest. People watched their destruction, batch
+after batch, in a not particularly inventive fashion; though it was expected
+that the animals themselves, as living creatures are apt to do when hard put to
+it, would become inventive, and make up, by the fantastic accidents of their
+agony, for the deficiencies of an age fallen behind in this matter of manly
+amusement. It was as a Deity of Slaughter&mdash;the Taurian goddess who demands
+the sacrifice of the shipwrecked sailors thrown on her coasts&mdash;the cruel,
+moonstruck huntress, who brings not only sudden death, but rabies, among the
+wild creatures that Diana was to be presented, in the person of a famous
+courtesan. The aim at an actual theatrical illusion, after the first
+introductory scene, was frankly surrendered to the display of the animals,
+artificially stimulated and maddened to attack each other. And as Diana was
+also a special protectress of new-born creatures, there would be a certain
+curious interest in the dexterously contrived escape of the young from their
+mother&rsquo;s torn bosoms; as many pregnant animals as possible being
+carefully selected for the purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The time had been, and was to come again, when the pleasures of the
+amphitheatre centered in a similar practical joking upon human beings. What
+more ingenious diversion had stage manager ever contrived than that incident,
+itself a practical epigram never to be forgottten, when a criminal, who, like
+slaves and animals, had no rights, was compelled to present the part of Icarus;
+and, the wings failing him in due course, had fallen into a pack of hungry
+bears? For the long shows of the amphitheatre were, so to speak, the
+novel-reading of that age&mdash;a current help provided for sluggish
+imaginations, in regard, for instance, to grisly accidents, such as might
+happen to one&rsquo;s self; but with every facility for comfortable inspection.
+Scaevola might watch his own hand, consuming, crackling, in the fire, in the
+person of a culprit, willing to redeem his life by an act so delightful to the
+eyes, the very ears, of a curious public. If the part of Marsyas was called
+for, there was a criminal condemned to lose his skin. It might be almost
+edifying to study minutely the expression of his face, while the assistants
+corded and pegged him to the bench, cunningly; the servant of the law waiting
+by, who, after one short cut with his knife, would slip the man&rsquo;s leg
+from his skin, as neatly as if it were a stocking&mdash;a finesse in providing
+the due amount of suffering for wrong-doers only brought to its height in
+Nero&rsquo;s living bonfires. But then, by making his suffering ridiculous, you
+enlist against the sufferer, some real, and all would-be manliness, and do much
+to stifle any false sentiment of compassion. The philosophic emperor, having no
+great taste for sport, and asserting here a personal scruple, had greatly
+changed all that; had provided that nets should be spread under the dancers on
+the tight-rope, and buttons for the swords of the gladiators. But the
+gladiators were still there. Their bloody contests had, under the form of a
+popular amusement, the efficacy of a human sacrifice; as, indeed, the whole
+system of the public shows was understood to possess a religious import. Just
+at this point, certainly, the judgment of Lucretius on pagan religion is
+without reproach&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+Tantum religio potuit suadere malorum.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Marius, weary and indignant, feeling isolated in the great slaughter-house,
+could not but observe that, in his habitual complaisance to Lucius Verus, who,
+with loud shouts of applause from time to time, lounged beside him, Aurelius
+had sat impassibly through all the hours Marius himself had remained there. For
+the most part indeed, the emperor had actually averted his eyes from the show,
+reading, or writing on matters of public business, but had seemed, after all,
+indifferent. He was revolving, perhaps, that old Stoic paradox of the
+Imperceptibility of pain; which might serve as an excuse, should those savage
+popular humours ever again turn against men and women. Marius remembered well
+his very attitude and expression on this day, when, a few years later, certain
+things came to pass in Gaul, under his full authority; and that attitude and
+expression defined already, even thus early in their so friendly intercourse,
+and though he was still full of gratitude for his interest, a permanent point
+of difference between the emperor and himself&mdash;between himself, with all
+the convictions of his life taking centre to-day in his merciful, angry heart,
+and Aurelius, as representing all the light, all the apprehensive power there
+might be in pagan intellect. There was something in a tolerance such as this,
+in the bare fact that he could sit patiently through a scene like this, which
+seemed to Marius to mark Aurelius as his inferior now and for ever on the
+question of righteousness; to set them on opposite sides, in some great
+conflict, of which that difference was but a single presentment. Due, in
+whatever proportions, to the abstract principles he had formulated for himself,
+or in spite of them, there was the loyal conscience within him, deciding,
+judging himself and every one else, with a wonderful sort of
+authority:&mdash;You ought, methinks, to be something quite different from what
+you are; here! and here! Surely Aurelius must be lacking in that decisive
+conscience at first sight, of the intimations of which Marius could entertain
+no doubt&mdash;which he looked for in others. He at least, the humble follower
+of the bodily eye, was aware of a crisis in life, in this brief, obscure
+existence, a fierce opposition of real good and real evil around him, the
+issues of which he must by no means compromise or confuse; of the antagonisms
+of which the &ldquo;wise&rdquo; Marcus Aurelius was unaware.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That long chapter of the cruelty of the Roman public shows may, perhaps, leave
+with the children of the modern world a feeling of self-complacency. Yet it
+might seem well to ask ourselves&mdash;it is always well to do so, when we read
+of the slave-trade, for instance, or of great religious persecutions on this
+side or on that, or of anything else which raises in us the question, &ldquo;Is
+thy servant a dog, that he should do this thing?&rdquo;&mdash;not merely, what
+germs of feeling we may entertain which, under fitting circumstances, would
+induce us to the like; but, even more practically, what thoughts, what sort of
+considerations, may be actually present to our minds such as might have
+furnished us, living in another age, and in the midst of those legal crimes,
+with plausible excuses for them: each age in turn, perhaps, having its own
+peculiar point of blindness, with its consequent peculiar sin&mdash;the
+touch-stone of an unfailing conscience in the select few.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Those cruel amusements were, certainly, the sin of blindness, of deadness and
+stupidity, in the age of Marius; and his light had not failed him regarding it.
+Yes! what was needed was the heart that would make it impossible to witness all
+this; and the future would be with the forces that could beget a heart like
+that. His chosen philosophy had said,&mdash;Trust the eye: Strive to be right
+always in regard to the concrete experience: Beware of falsifying your
+impressions. And its sanction had at least been effective here, in
+protesting&mdash;&ldquo;This, and this, is what you may not look upon!&rdquo;
+Surely evil was a real thing, and the wise man wanting in the sense of it,
+where, not to have been, by instinctive election, on the right side, was to
+have failed in life.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+END OF VOL. I
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
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