Last Days of Pompeii eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 565 pages of information about Last Days of Pompeii.

Last Days of Pompeii eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 565 pages of information about Last Days of Pompeii.

Quickly, even ere this thought occurred to him, he had withdrawn on one side of the chapel, and concealed himself amongst the boughs; from that lurking place he watched, as a tiger in his lair, the advance of his second victim.  He noted the wandering and restless fire in the bright and beautiful eyes of the Athenian; the convulsions that distorted his statue-like features, and writhed his hueless lip.  He saw that the Greek was utterly deprived of reason.  Nevertheless, as Glaucus came up to the dead body of Apaecides, from which the dark red stream flowed slowly over the grass, so strange and ghastly a spectacle could not fail to arrest him, benighted and erring as was his glimmering sense.  He paused, placed his hand to his brow, as if to collect himself, and then saying: 

’What ho!  Endymion, sleepest thou so soundly?  What has the moon said to thee?  Thou makest me jealous; it is time to wake’—­he stooped down with the intention of lifting up the body.

Forgetting—­feeling not—­his own debility, the Egyptian sprung from his hiding-place, and, as the Greek bent, struck him forcibly to the ground, over the very body of the Christian; then, raising his powerful voice to its highest pitch, he shouted: 

’Ho, citizens—­oh! help me!—­run hither—­hither!—­A murder—­a murder before your very fane!  Help, or the murderer escapes!’ As he spoke, he placed his foot on the breast of Glaucus:  an idle and superfluous precaution; for the potion operating with the fall, the Greek lay there motionless and insensible, save that now and then his lips gave vent to some vague and raving sounds.

As he there stood awaiting the coming of those his voice still continued to summons, perhaps some remorse, some compunctious visitings—­for despite his crimes he was human—­haunted the breast of the Egyptian; the defenceless state of Glaucus—­his wandering words—­his shattered reason, smote him even more than the death of Apaecides, and he said, half audibly, to himself: 

’Poor clay!—­poor human reason; where is the soul now?  I could spare thee, O my rival—­rival never more!  But destiny must be obeyed—­my safety demands thy sacrifice.’  With that, as if to drown compunction, he shouted yet more loudly; and drawing from the girdle of Glaucus the stilus it contained, he steeped it in the blood of the murdered man, and laid it beside the corpse.

And now, fast and breathless, several of the citizens came thronging to the place, some with torches, which the moon rendered unnecessary, but which flared red and tremulously against the darkness of the trees; they surrounded the spot.  ‘Lift up yon corpse,’ said the Egyptian, ’and guard well the murderer.’

They raised the body, and great was their horror and sacred indignation to discover in that lifeless clay a priest of the adored and venerable Isis; but still greater, perhaps, was their surprise, when they found the accused in the brilliant and admired Athenian.

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Last Days of Pompeii from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.