Our
gracious Augusta, Poppæa, understands this to perfection."
"Alas! such are the times," answered Aulus. "I lack two front
teeth, knocked out by a stone from the hand of a Briton, I speak
with a hiss; still my happiest days were passed in Britain."
"Because they were days of victory," added Vinicius.
But Petronius, alarmed lest the old general might begin a
narrative of his former wars, changed the conversation.
"See," said he, "in the neighborhood of Præneste country people
found a dead wolf whelp with two heads; and during a storm about
that time lightning struck off an angle of the temple of Luna,—a
thing unparalleled, because of the late autumn. A certain Cotta,
too, who had told this, added, while telling it, that the priests
of that temple prophesied the fall of the city or, at least, the
ruin of a great house,—ruin to be averted only by uncommon
sacrifices."
Aulus, when he had heard the narrative, expressed the opinion
that such signs should not be neglected; that the gods might be
angered by an over-measure of wickedness. In this there was nothing
wonderful; and in such an event expiatory sacrifices were perfectly
in order.
"Thy house, Plautius, is not too large," answered Petronius,
"though a great man lives in it. Mine is indeed too large for such
a wretched owner, though equally small. But if it is a question of
the ruin of something as great, for example, as the domus
transitoria, would it be worth while for us to bring offerings to
avert that ruin?"
Plautius did not answer that question,—a carefulness which
touched even Petronius somewhat, for, with all his inability to
feel the difference between good and evil, he had never been an
informer; and it was possible to talk with him in perfect safety.
He changed the conversation again, therefore, and began to praise
Plautius's dwelling and the good taste which reigned in the
house.
"It is an ancient seat," said Plautius, "in which nothing has
been changed since I inherited it."
After the curtain was pushed aside which divided the atrium from
the tablinum, the house was open from end to end, so that through
the tablinum and the following peristyle and the hall lying beyond
it which was called the oecus, the glance extended to the garden,
which seemed from a distance like a bright image set in a dark
frame. Joyous, childlike laughter came from it to the atrium.
"Oh, general!" said Petronius, "permit us to listen from near by
to that glad laughter which is of a kind heard so rarely in these
days."
"Willingly," answered Plautius, rising; "that is my little Aulus
and Lygia, playing ball. But as to laughter, I think, Petronius,
that our whole life is spent in it."
"Life deserves laughter, hence people laugh at it," answered
Petronius, "but laughter here has another sound."
"Petronius does not laugh for days in succession," said
Vinicius; "but then he laughs entire nights."
Thus conversing, they passed through the length of the house and
reached the garden, where Lygia and little Aulus were playing with
balls, which slaves, appointed to that game exclusively and called
spheristæ, picked up and placed in their hands. Petronius cast a
quick passing glance at Lygia; little Aulus, seeing Vinicius, ran
to greet him; but the young tribune, going forward, bent his head
before the beautiful maiden, who stood with a ball in her hand, her
hair blown apart a little. She was somewhat out of breath, and
flushed.
In the garden triclinium, shaded by ivy, grapes, and woodbine,
sat Pomponia Græcina; hence they went to salute her. She was known
to Petronius, though he did not visit Plautius, for he had seen her
at the house of Antistia, the daughter of Rubelius Plautus, and
besides at the house of Seneca and Polion. He could not resist a
certain admiration with which he was filled by her face, pensive
but mild, by the dignity of her bearing, by her movements, by her
words. Pomponia disturbed his understanding of women to such a
degree that that man, corrupted to the marrow of his bones, and
self-confident as no one in Rome, not only felt for her a kind of
esteem, but even lost his previous self-confidence. And now,
thanking her for her care of Vinicius, he thrust in, as it were
involuntarily, "domina," which never occurred to him when speaking,
for example, to Calvia Crispinilla, Scribonia, Veleria, Solina, and
other women of high society. After he had greeted her and returned
thanks, he began to complain that he saw her so rarely, that it was
not possible to meet her either in the Circus or the Amphitheatre;
to which she answered calmly, laying her hand on the hand of her
husband:
"We are growing old, and love our domestic quiet more and more,
both of us."
Petronius wished to oppose; but Aulus Plautius added in his
hissing voice,—"And we feel stranger and stranger among people who
give Greek names to our Roman divinities."
"The gods have become for some time mere figures of rhetoric,"
replied Petronius, carelessly. "But since Greek rhetoricians taught
us, it is easier for me even to say Hera than Juno."
He turned his eyes then to Pomponia, as if to signify that in
presence of her no other divinity could come to his mind: and then
he began to contradict what she had said touching old age.
"People grow old quickly, it is true; but there are some who
live another life entirely, and there are faces moreover which
Saturn seems to forget."
Petronius said this with a certain sincerity even, for Pomponia
Græcina, though descending from the midday of life, had preserved
an uncommon freshness of face; and since she had a small head and
delicate features, she produced at times, despite her dark robes,
despite her solemnity and sadness, the impression of a woman quite
young.
Meanwhile little Aulus, who had become uncommonly friendly with
Vinicius during his former stay in the house, approached the young
man and entreated him to play ball. Lygia herself entered the
triclinium after the little boy. Under the climbing ivy, with the
light quivering on her face, she seemed to Petronius more beautiful
than at the first glance, and really like some nymph. As he had not
spoken to her thus far, he rose, inclined his head, and, instead of
the usual expressions of greeting, quoted the words with which
Ulysses greeted Nausikaa,—
"I supplicate thee, O queen, whether thou art some goddess or a
mortal! If thou art one of the daughters of men who dwell on earth,
thrice blessed are thy father and thy lady mother, and thrice
blessed thy brethren."
The exquisite politeness of this man of the world pleased even
Pomponia. As to Lygia, she listened, confused and flushed, without
boldness to raise her eyes. But a wayward smile began to quiver at
the corners of her lips, and on her face a struggle was evident
between the timidity of a maiden and the wish to answer; but
clearly the wish was victorious, for, looking quickly at Petronius,
she answered him all at once with the words of that same Nausikaa,
quoting them at one breath, and a little like a lesson
learned,—
"Stranger, thou seemest no evil man nor foolish."
Then she turned and ran out as a frightened bird runs.
This time the turn for astonishment came to Petronius, for he
had not expected to hear verses of Homer from the lips of a maiden
of whose barbarian extraction he had heard previously from
Vinicius. Hence he looked with an inquiring glance at Pomponia; but
she could not give him an answer, for she was looking at that
moment, with a smile, at the pride reflected on the face of her
husband.
He was not able to conceal that pride. First, he had become
attached to Lygia as to his own daughter; and second, in spite of
his old Roman prejudices, which commanded him to thunder against
Greek and the spread of the language, he considered it as the
summit of social polish. He himself had never been able to learn it
well; over this he suffered in secret. He was glad, therefore, that
an answer was given in the language and poetry of Homer to this
exquisite man both of fashion and letters, who was ready to
consider Plautius's house as barbarian.
"We have in the house a pedagogue, a Greek," said he, turning to
Petronius, "who teaches our boy, and the maiden overhears the
lessons. She is a wagtail yet, but a dear one, to which we have
both grown attached."
Petronius looked through the branches of woodbine into the
garden, and at the three persons who were playing there. Vinicius
had thrown aside his toga, and, wearing only his tunic, was
striking the ball, which Lygia, standing opposite, with raised arms
was trying to catch. The maiden did not make a great impression on
Petronius at the first glance; she seemed to him too slender. But
from the moment when he saw her more nearly in the triclinium he
thought to himself that Aurora might look like her; and as a judge
he understood that in her there was something uncommon. He
considered everything and estimated everything; hence her face,
rosy and clear, her fresh lips, as if set for a kiss, her eyes blue
as the azure of the sea, the alabaster whiteness of her forehead,
the wealth of her dark hair, with the reflection of amber or
Corinthian bronze gleaming in its folds, her slender neck, the
divine slope of her shoulders, the whole posture, flexible,
slender, young with the youth of May and of freshly opened flowers.
The artist was roused in him, and the worshipper of beauty, who
felt that beneath a statue of that maiden one might write "Spring."
All at once he remembered Chrysothemis, and pure laughter seized
him.
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