Quo Vadis by Henryk Sienkiewicz (ebook reader macos TXT) 📕
"By the cloud-scattering Zeus!" said Marcus Vinicius, "what a choice thou hast!"
"I prefer choice to numbers," answered Petronius. "My whole 'familia' [household servants] in Rome does not exceed four hundred, and I judge that for personal attendance only upstarts need a greater number of people."
"More beautiful bodies even Bronzebeard does not possess," said Vinicius, distending his nostrils.
"Thou art my relative," answered Petronius, with a certain friend
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and the hem of his mantle; mothers held out their children to him; some
knelt in the dark, long passage, and, holding up tapers, begged a
blessing; others, going alongside, sang: so there was no chance for
question or answer. Thus it was in the narrow passage. Only when they
came out to broader spaces, from which the burning city was in view, did
the Apostle bless them three times, and say, turning to Vinicius,—
“Fear not. The hut of the quarryman is near; in it we shall find Linus,
and Lygia, with her faithful servant. Christ, who predestined her to
thee, has preserved her.”
Vinicius tottered, and placed his hand against the cliff. The road from
Antium, the events at the wall, the search for Lygia amidst burning
houses, sleeplessness, and his terrible alarm had exhausted him; and the
news that the dearest person in the world was near by, and that soon he
would see her, took the remnant of his strength from him. So great a
weakness possessed him on a sudden that he dropped to the Apostle’s
feet, and, embracing his knees, remained thus, without power to say a
word.
“Not to me, not to me, but to Christ,” said the Apostle, who warded off
thanks and honor.
“What a good God!” said the voice of Chilo from behind, “but what shall
I do with the mules that are waiting down here?”
“Rise and come with me,” said Peter to the young man.
Vinicius rose. By the light of the burning, tears were visible on his
face, which was pale from emotion. His lips moved, as if in prayer.
“Let us go,” said he.
But Chilo repeated again: “Lord, what shall I do with the mules that are
waiting? Perhaps this worthy prophet prefers riding to walking.”
Vinicius did not know himself what to answer; but hearing from Peter
that the quarryman’s hut was near by, he said,—
“Take the mules to Macrinus.”
“Pardon me, lord, if I mention the house in Ameriola. In view of such
an awful fire, it is easy to forget a thing so paltry.”
“Thou wilt get it.”
“O grandson of Numa Pompilius, I have always been sure, but now, when
this magnanimous prophet also has heard the promise, I will not remind
thee even of this, that thou hast promised me a vineyard. Pax vobiscum.
I shall find thee, lord. Pax vobiscum.”
They answered, “And peace with thee.”
Then both turned to the right toward the hills. Along the road Vinicius
said,
“Lord, wash me with the water of baptism, so that I may call myself a
real confessor of Christ, for I love Him with all the power of my soul.
Wash me quickly, for I am ready in heart. And what thou commandest I
will do, but tell me, so that I may do it in addition.”
“Love men as thy own brothers,” answered the Apostle, “for only with
love mayst thou serve Him.”
“Yes, I understand and feel that. When a child I believed in the Roman
gods, though I did not love them. But I so love Him the One God that I
would give my life for Him gladly.” And he looked toward the sky,
repeating with exaltation: “For He is one, for He alone is kind and
merciful; hence, let not only this city perish, but the whole world, Him
alone will I confess and recognize.”
“And He will bless thee and thy house,” concluded the Apostle.
Meanwhile they turned into another ravine, at the end of which a faint
light was visible. Peter pointed to it and said,—
“There is the hut of the quarryman who gave us a refuge when, on the way
from Ostrianum with the sick Linus, we could not go to the Trans-Tiber.”
After a while they arrived. The hut was rather a cave rounded Out in an
indentation of the hill, and was faced outside with a wall made of
reeds. The door was closed, but through an opening, which served for a
window, the interior was visible, lighted by a fire. Some dark giant
figure rose up to meet them, and inquired,—“Who are ye?”
“Servants of Christ,” answered Peter. “Peace be with thee, Ursus.”
Ursus bent to the Apostle’s feet; then, recognizing Vinicius, seized his
hand by the wrist, and raised it to his lips.
“And thou, lord,” said he. “Blessed be the name of the Lamb, for the
joy which thou wilt bring to Callina.”
He opened the door then, and entered. Linus was lying on a bundle of
straw, with an emaciated face and a forehead as yellow as ivory. Near
the fire sat Lygia with a string of small fish, intended evidently for
supper. Occupied in removing the fish from the string, and thinking
that it was Ursus who had entered, she did not raise her eyes. But
Vinicius approached, and, pronouncing her name, stretched his hand to
her. She sprang up quickly then; a flash of astonishment and delight
shot across her face. Without a word, like a child who after days of
fear and sorrow had found father or mother, she threw herself into his
open arms.
He embraced her, pressed her to his bosom for some time with such
ecstasy as if she had been saved by a miracle. Then, withdrawing his
arms, he took her temples between his hands, kissed her forehead and her
eyes, embraced her again, repeated her name, bent to her knees, to her
palms, greeted her, did her homage, honored her. His delight had no
bounds; neither had his love and happiness.
At last he told her how he had rushed in from Antium; had searched for
her at the walls, in the smoke at the house of Linus; how he had
suffered and was terrified; how much he had endured before the Apostle
had shown him her retreat.
“But now,” said he, “that I have found thee, I will not leave thee near
fire and raging crowds. People are slaying one another under the walls,
slaves are revolting and plundering. God alone knows what miseries may
fall yet on Rome. But I will save thee and all of you. Oh, my dear,
let us go to Antium; we will take a ship there and sail to Sicily. My
land is thy land, my houses are thy houses. Listen to me! In Sicily we
shall find Aulus. I will give thee back to Pomponia, and take thee from
her hands afterward. But, O carissima, have no further fear of me.
Christ has not washed me yet, but ask Peter if on the way hither I have
not told him my wish to be a real confessor of Christ, and begged him to
baptize me, even in this hut of a quarryman. Believe, and let all
believe me.”
Lygia heard these words with radiant face. The Christians formerly,
because of Jewish persecutions, and then because of the fire and
disturbance caused by the disaster, lived in fear and uncertainty. A
journey to quiet Sicily would put an end to all danger, and open a new
epoch of happiness in their lives. If Vinicius had wished to take only
Lygia, she would have resisted the temptation surely, as she did not
wish to leave Peter and Linus; but Vinicius said to them, “Come with me;
my lands are your lands, my houses your houses.” At this Lygia inclined
to kiss his hand, in sign of obedience, and said,—
“Where thou art, Caius, there am I, Caia.”
Then confused that she had spoken words which by Roman custom were
repeated only at marriage, she blushed deeply, and stood in the light of
the fire, with drooping head, in doubt lest he might take them ill of
her. But in his face boundless homage alone was depicted. He turned
then to Peter, and continued,—
“Rome is burning at command of Cæsar. In Antium he complained that he
had never seen a great fire. And if he has not hesitated at such a
crime, think what may happen yet. Who knows that he may not bring in
troops, and command a slaughter? Who knows what proscriptions may come;
who knows whether after the fire, civil war, murder, and famine may not
come?
“Hide yourselves, therefore, and let us hide Lygia. There ye can wait
till the storm passes, and when it is over return to sow your grain
anew.”
Outside, from the direction of the Vatican Field, as if to confirm his
fears, distant cries were heard full of rage and terror. At that moment
the quarryman entered, the master of the hut, and, shutting the door
hastily, he cried,—
“People are killing one another near the Circus of Nero. Slaves and
gladiators have attacked the citizens.”
“Do ye hear?” said Vinicius.
“The measure is full,” said the Apostle; “and disasters will come, like
a boundless sea.” Then he turned, and, pointing to Lygia, said, “Take
the maiden, whom God has predestined to thee, and save her, and let
Linus, who is sick, and Ursus go with you.”
But Vinicius, who had come to love the Apostle with all the power of his
impetuous soul, exclaimed: “I swear, my teacher, that I will not leave
thee here to destruction.”
“The Lord bless thee for thy wish,” answered Peter; “but hast thou not
heard that Christ repeated thrice on the lake to me, ‘Feed my lambs’?”
Vinicius was silent.
“If thou, to whom no one has confided care over me, sayest that thou
wilt not leave me to destruction, how canst thou wish me to leave my
flock in the day of disaster? When there was a storm on the lake, and
we were terrified in heart, He did not desert us; why should I, a
servant, not follow my Master’s example?”
Then Linus raised his emaciated face and inquired,—
“O viceregent of the Lord, why should I not follow thy example?”
Vinicius began to pass his hand over his head, as if struggling with
himself or fighting with his thoughts; then, seizing Lygia by the hand,
he said, in a voice in which the energy of a Roman soldier was
quivering,—
“Hear me, Peter, Linus, and thou, Lygia! I spoke as my human reason
dictated; but ye have another reason, which regards, not your own
danger, but the commands of the Redeemer. True, I did not understand
this, and I erred, for the beam is not taken from my eyes yet, and the
former nature is heard in me. But since I love Christ, and wish to be
His servant, though it is a question for me of something more than my
own life, I kneel here before thee, and swear that I will accomplish the
command of love, and will not leave my brethren in the day of trouble.”
Then he knelt, and enthusiasm possessed him; raising his hands and eyes,
he cried: “Do I understand Thee, O Christ? Am I worthy of Thee?”
His hands trembled; his eyes glistened with tears; his body trembled
with faith and love. Peter took an earthen vessel with water, and,
bringing it near him, said with solemnity,—
“Behold, I baptize thee in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.
Amen.”
Then a religious ecstasy seized all present. They thought that some
light from beyond this world had filled the hut, that they heard some
superhuman music, that the cliffs had opened above their heads, that
choirs of angels were floating down from heaven, and far up there they
saw a cross, and pierced hands blessing them.
Meanwhile the shouts of
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