BOOK THE FIFTH
9. Chapter IX
(continued)
The sudden illumination, the bursts of the floods of lava, and the
earthquake, which we have already described, chanced when Sallust and his
party had just gained the direct path leading from the city to the port; and
here they were arrested by an immense crowd, more than half the population
of the city. They spread along the field without the walls, thousands upon
thousands, uncertain whither to fly. The sea had retired far from the
shore; and they who had fled to it had been so terrified by the agitation
and preternatural shrinking of the element, the gasping forms of the uncouth
sea things which the waves had left upon the sand, and by the sound of the
huge stones cast from the mountain into the deep, that they had returned
again to the land, as presenting the less frightful aspect of the two. Thus
the two streams of human beings, the one seaward, the other from the sea,
had met together, feeling a sad comfort in numbers; arrested in despair and
doubt.
'The world is to be destroyed by fire,' said an old man in long loose robes,
a philosopher of the Stoic school: 'Stoic and Epicurean wisdom have alike
agreed in this prediction: and the hour is come!'
'Yea; the hour is come!' cried a loud voice, solemn, but not fearful.
Those around turned in dismay. The voice came from above them. It was the
voice of Olinthus, who, surrounded by his Christian friends, stood upon an
abrupt eminence on which the old Greek colonists had raised a temple to
Apollo, now timeworn and half in ruin.
As he spoke there came that sudden illumination which had heralded the death
of Arbaces, and glowing over that mighty multitude, awed, crouching,
breathless--never on earth had the faces of men seemed so haggard!--never
had meeting of mortal beings been so stamped with the horror and sublimity
of dread!--never till the last trumpet sounds, shall such meeting be seen
again! And above those the form of Olinthus, with outstretched arm and
prophet brow, girt with the living fires. And the crowd knew the face of
him they had doomed to the fangs of the beast--then their victim--now their
warner! and through the stillness again came his ominous voice:
'The hour is come!'
|