If it is thy thought that I
might do something for thee with Aulus, I am at thy command."
"I judge that thou hast the power. Thou hast influence over him;
and, besides, thy mind possesses inexhaustible resources. If thou
wert to survey the position and speak with Plautius."
"Thou hast too great an idea of my influence and wit; but if
that is the only question, I will talk with Plautius as soon as
they return to the city."
"They returned two days since."
"In that case let us go to the triclinium, where a meal is now
ready, and when we have refreshed ourselves, let us give command to
bear us to Plautius."
"Thou hast ever been kind to me," answered Vinicius, with
vivacity; "but now I shall give command to rear thy statue among my
lares,—just such a beauty as this one,—and I will place offerings
before it."
Then he turned toward the statues which ornamented one entire
wall of the perfumed chamber, and pointing to the one which
represented Petronius as Hermes with a staff in his hand, he
added,—"By the light of Helios! if the 'godlike' Alexander
resembled thee, I do not wonder at Helen."
And in that exclamation there was as much sincerity as flattery;
for Petronius, though older and less athletic, was more beautiful
than even Vinicius. The women of Rome admired not only his pliant
mind and his taste, which gained for him the title Arbiter
elegantiæ, but also his body. This admiration was evident even on
the faces of those maidens from Kos who were arranging the folds of
his toga; and one of whom, whose name was Eunice, loving him in
secret, looked him in the eyes with submission and rapture. But he
did not even notice this; and, smiling at Vinicius, he quoted in
answer an expression of Seneca about woman,—Animal impudens, etc.
And then, placing an arm on the shoulders of his nephew, he
conducted him to the triclinium.
In the unctorium the two Grecian maidens, the Phrygians, and the
two Ethiopians began to put away the vessels with perfumes. But at
that moment, and beyond the curtain of the frigidarium, appeared
the heads of the balneatores, and a low "Psst!" was heard. At that
call one of the Grecians, the Phrygians, and the Ethiopians sprang
up quickly, and vanished in a twinkle behind the curtain. In the
baths began a moment of license which the inspector did not
prevent, for he took frequent part in such frolics himself.
Petronius suspected that they took place; but, as a prudent man,
and one who did not like to punish, he looked at them through his
fingers.
In the unctorium only Eunice remained. She listened for a short
time to the voices and laughter which retreated in the direction of
the laconicum. At last she took the stool inlaid with amber and
ivory, on which Petronius had been sitting a short time before, and
put it carefully at his statue. The unctorium was full of sunlight
and the hues which came from the many-colored marbles with which
the wall was faced. Eunice stood on the stool, and, finding herself
at the level of the statue, cast her arms suddenly around its neck;
then, throwing back her golden hair, and pressing her rosy body to
the white marble, she pressed her lips with ecstasy to the cold
lips of Petronius.
Chapter II
After a refreshment, which was called the morning meal and to
which the two friends sat down at an hour when common mortals were
already long past their midday prandium, Petronius proposed a light
doze. According to him, it was too early for visits yet. "There
are, it is true," said he, "people who begin to visit their
acquaintances about sunrise, thinking that custom an old Roman one,
but I look on this as barbarous. The afternoon hours are most
proper,—not earlier, however, than that one when the sun passes to
the side of Jove's temple on the Capitol and begins to look
slantwise on the Forum. In autumn it is still hot, and people are
glad to sleep after eating. At the same time it is pleasant to hear
the noise of the fountain in the atrium, and, after the obligatory
thousand steps, to doze in the red light which filters in through
the purple half-drawn velarium."
Vinicius recognized the justice of these words; and the two men
began to walk, speaking in a careless manner of what was to be
heard on the Palatine and in the city, and philosophizing a little
upon life. Petronius withdrew then to the cubiculum, but did not
sleep long. In half an hour he came out, and, having given command
to bring verbena, he inhaled the perfume and rubbed his hands and
temples with it.
"Thou wilt not believe," said he, "how it enlivens and freshens
one. Now I am ready."
The litter was waiting long since; hence they took their places,
and Petronius gave command to bear them to the Vicus Patricius, to
the house of Aulus. Petronius's "insula" lay on the southern slope
of the Palatine, near the so-called Carinæ; their nearest way,
therefore, was below the Forum; but since Petronius wished to step
in on the way to see the jeweller Idomeneus, he gave the direction
to carry them along the Vicus Apollinis and the Forum in the
direction of the Vicus Sceleratus, on the corner of which were many
tabernæ of every kind.
Gigantic Africans bore the litter and moved on, preceded by
slaves called pedisequii. Petronius, after some time, raised to his
nostrils in silence his palm odorous with verbena, and seemed to be
meditating on something.
"It occurs to me," said he after a while, "that if thy forest
goddess is not a slave she might leave the house of Plautius, and
transfer herself to thine. Thou wouldst surround her with love and
cover her with wealth, as I do my adored Chrysothemis, of whom,
speaking between us, I have quite as nearly enough as she has of
me."
Marcus shook his head.
"No?" inquired Petronius. "In the worst event, the case would be
left with Cæsar, and thou mayst be certain that, thanks even to my
influence, our Bronzebeard would be on thy side."
"Thou knowest not Lygia," replied Vinicius.
"Then permit me to ask if thou know her otherwise than by sight?
Hast spoken with her? hast confessed thy love to her?"
"I saw her first at the fountain; since then I have met her
twice. Remember that during my stay in the house of Aulus, I dwelt
in a separate villa, intended for guests, and, having a disjointed
arm, I could not sit at the common table. Only on the eve of the
day for which I announced my departure did I meet Lygia at supper,
but I could not say a word to her. I had to listen to Aulus and his
account of victories gained by him in Britain, and then of the fall
of small states in Italy, which Licinius Stolo strove to prevent.
In general I do not know whether Aulus will be able to speak of
aught else, and do not think that we shall escape this history
unless it be thy wish to hear about the effeminacy of these days.
They have pheasants in their preserves, but they do not eat them,
setting out from the principle that every pheasant eaten brings
nearer the end of Roman power. I met her a second time at the
garden cistern, with a freshly plucked reed in her hand, the top of
which she dipped in the water and sprinkled the irises growing
around. Look at my knees.
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