BecausebecauseO God! Nonever mind! You shall have all back. Spirit of Elias! where is the black agate? Why is it not among these?The broken half of the black agate talisman!
Raphael turned pale. How did you know that I have a black agate?
How did I? How did I not? cried she, clutching him by the arm. Where is it? All depends on that! Fool! she went on, throwing him off from her at arms length, as a sudden suspicion stung heryou have not given it to the heathen woman?
By the soul of my fathers, then, you mysterious old witch, who seem to know everything, that is exactly what I have done.
Miriam clapped her hands together wildly. Lost! lost! lost! Not I will have it, if I tear it out of her heart! I will be avenged of herthe strange woman who flatters with her words, to whom the simple go in, and know not that the dead are there, and that her guests are in the depths of hell! God do so to me, and more also, if she and her sorceries be on earth a twelvemonth hence!
Silence, Jezebel! Heathen or none, she is as pure as the sunlight! I only gave it her because she fancied the talisman upon it.
To enchant you with it, to your ruin!
Brute of a slave-dealer! you fancy every one as base as the poor wretches whom you buy and sell to shame, that you may make them as much the children of hell, if that be possible, as yourself!
Miriam looked at him, her large black eyes widening and kindling. For an instant she felt for her poniardand then burst into an agony of tears, hid her face in her withered hands, and rushed from the room, as a crash and shout below announced the bursting of the door.
There she goes with my jewels. And here come my guests, with the young monk at their head.One rising when the other sets. A worthy pair of Dioscuri! Come, Bran!Boys! Slaves! Where are you? Steal every one what he can lay his hands on, and run for your lives through the back gate.
The slaves had obeyed him already. He walked smiling downstairs through utter solitude, and in the front passage met face to face the mob of monks, costermongers and dock-workers, fishwives and beggars, who were thronging up the narrow entry, and bursting into the doors right and left; and at their head, alas! the young monk who had just trampled the necklace into the mudno other, in fact, than Philammon.
Welcome, my worthy guests! Enter, I beseech you, and fulfil, in your own peculiar way, the precepts which bid you not be over anxious for the good things of this life..For eating and drinking, my kitchen and cellar are at your service. For clothing, if any illustrious personage will do me the honour to change his holy rags with me, here are an Indian shawl-pelisse and a pair of silk trousers at his service. Perhaps you will accommodate me, my handsome young captain, choragus of this new school of the prophets?
Philammon, who was the person addressed, tried to push by him contemptuously.
Allow me, sir. I lead the way. This dagger is poisoned,-a scratch and you are dead. This dog is of the true British breed; if she seizes you, red-hot iron will not loose her, till she hears the bone crack. If any one will change clothes with me, all I have is at your service. If not, the first that stirs is a dead man.
There was no mistaking the quiet, high-bred determination of the speaker. Had he raged and blustered, Philammon could have met him on his own ground: but there was an easy self-possessed disdain about him, which utterly abashed the young monk, and abashed, too, the whole crowd of rascals at his heels.
Ill change clothes with you, you Jewish dog! roared a dirty fellow out of the mob.
I am your eternal debtor. Let us step into this side room. Walk upstairs, my friends. Take care there, sir!That porcelain, whole, is worth three thousand gold pieces: broken, it is not worth three pence. I leave it to your good sense to treat it accordingly. Now then, my friend! And in the midst of the raging vortex of plunderers, who were snatching up everything which they could carry away, and breaking everything which they could not, lie quietly divested himself of his finery, and put on the ragged cotton tunic, and battered straw hat, which the fellow handed over to him.
Philammon, who had had from the first no mind to plunder, stood watching Raphael with dumb wonder; and a shudder of regret, he knew not why, passed through him, as he Saw the mob tearing down pictures, and dashing statues to the ground. Heathen they were, doubtless; but still, the Nymphs and Venuses looked too lovely to be so brutally destroyed There was something almost humanly pitiful in their poor broken arms and legs, as they lay about upon the pavement.... He laughed at himself for the notion; but he could not laugh it away.
Raphael seemed to think that he ought not to laugh it away; for he pointed to the fragments, and with a quaint look at the young monk
Our nurses used to tell us, If you cant make it, You ought not to break it.
I had no nurse, said Philammon.
Ah!that accountsfor this and other things. Well, he went on, with the most provoking good-nature, you are in a fair road, my handsome youth; I wish you joy of your fellow-workmen, and of your apprenticeship in the noble art of monkery. Riot and pillage, shrieking women and houseless children in your twentieth summer, are the sure path to a Saint-ship, such as Paul of Tarsus, who, with all his eccentricities, was a gentleman, certainly never contemplated. I have heard of Phoebus Apollo under many disguises, but this is the first time I ever saw him in the wolfs hide.
Or in the lions, said Philammon, trying in his shame to make a fine speech.
Like the Ass in the Fable. Farewell! Stand out of the way, friends! Ware teeth and poison!
And he disappeared among the crowd, who made way respectfully enough for his dagger and his brindled companion.
CHAPTER VII: THOSE BY WHOM OFFENCES COME
Philammons heart smote him all that day, whenever he thought of his mornings work. Till then all Christians, monks above all, had been infallible in his eyes: all Jews and heathens insane and accursed. Moreover, meekness under insult, fortitude in calamity, the contempt of worldly comfort, the worship of poverty as a noble estate, were virtues which the Church Catholic boasted as her peculiar heritage: on which side had the balance of those qualities inclined that morning? The figure of Raphael, stalking out ragged and penniless into the wide world, haunted him, with its quiet self-assured smile. And there haunted him, too, another peculiarity in the man, which he had never before remarked in any one but Arseniusthat ease and grace, that courtesy and self-restraint, which made Raphaels rebukes rankle all the more keenly, because he felt that the rebuker was in some mysterious way superior to him, and saw through him, and could have won him Over, Or crushed him in argument, or in intrigueor in anything, perhaps, except mere brute force. Strangethat Raphael, of all men, should in those few moments have reminded him so much of Arsenius; and that the very same qualities which gave a peculiar charm to the latter should give a peculiar unloveliness to the former, and yet be, without a doubt, the same. What was it? Was it rank which gave it Arsenius had been a great man, he knewthe companion of kings. And Raphael seemed rich. He had heard the mob crying out against the prefect for favouring him. Was it then familiarity with the great ones of the world which produced this manner and tone? It was a real strength, whether in Arsenius or in Raphael. He felt humbled before itenvied it. If it made Arsenius a more complete and more captivating person, why should it not do the same for him? Why should not he, too, have his share of it?
Bringing with it such thoughts as these, the time ran on till noon, and the mid-day meal, and the afternoons work, to which Philammon looked forward joyfully, as a refuge from his own thoughts.
He was sitting on his sheepskin upon a step, basking, like a true son of the desert, in a blaze of fiery sunshine, which made the black stone-work too hot to touch with the bare hand, watching the swallows, as they threaded the columns of the Serapeium, and thinking how often he had delighted in their air-dance, as they turned and hawked up and down the dear old glen at Scetis. A crowd of citizens with causes, appeals, and petitions, were passing in and out from the patriarchs audience-room. Peter and the archdeacon were waiting in the shade close by for the gathering of the parabolani, and talking over the mornings work in an earnest whisper, in which the names of Hypatia and Orestes were now and then audible.
An old priest came up, and bowing reverently enough to the archdeacon, requested the help of one of the parabolani. He had a sailors family, all fever-stricken, who must be removed to the hospital at once.
The archdeacon looked at him, answered an off-hand Very well, and went on with his talk.
The priest, bowing lower than before, re-presented the immediate necessity for help.
It is very odd, said Peter to the swallows in the Serapeium, that some people cannot obtain influence enough in their own parishes to get the simplest good works performed without tormenting his holiness the patriarch.
The old priest mumbled some sort of excuse, and the archdeacon, without deigning a second look at him, saidFind him a man, brother Peter. Anybody will do. What is that boyPhilammondoing there? Let him go with Master Hieracas.
Peter seemed not to receive the proposition favourably, and whispered something to the archdeacon....
No. I can spare none of the rest. Importunate persons must take their chance of being well served. Comehere are our brethren; we will all go together.
The farther together the better for the boys sake, grumbled Peter, loud enough for Philammonperhaps for the old priestto overhear him.
So Philammon went out with them, and as he went questioned his companions meekly enough as to who Raphael was.
A friend of Hypatia!that name, too, haunted him; and he began, as stealthily and indirectly as he could, to obtain information about her. There was no need for his caution; for the very mention of her name roused the whole party into a fury of execration.
May God confound her, siren, enchantress, dealer in spells and sorceress! She is the strange woman of whom Solomon prophesied.
It is my opinion, said another, that she is the forerunner of Antichrist.
Perhaps the virgin of whom it is prophesied that he will be born, suggested another.
Not that, Ill warrant her, said Peter, with a savage sneer.
And is Raphael Aben-Ezra her pupil in philosophy? asked Philammon.
Her pupil in whatsoever she can find where-with to delude mens souls, said the old priest.
The reality of philosophy has died long ago, but the great ones find it still worth their while to worship its shadow.
Some of them worship more than a shadow, when they haunt her house, said Peter. Do you think Orestes goes thither only for philosophy?
We must not judge harsh judgments, said the old priest; Synesius of Cyrene is a holy man, and yet he loves Hypatia well.
He a holy man?and keeps a wife! One who had the insolence to tell the blessed Theophilus himself that he would not be made bishop unless he were allowed to remain with her; and despised the gift of the Holy Ghost in comparison of the carnal joys of wedlock, not knowing the Scriptures, which saith that those who are in the flesh cannot please God! Well said Siricius of Rome of such menCan the Holy Spirit of God dwell in other than holy bodies? No wonder that such a one as Synesius grovels at the feet of Orestes mistress!
Then she is profligate? asked Philammon.
She must be. Has a heathen faith and grace? And without faith and grace, are not all our righteousnesses as filthy rags? What says St. Paul?That God has given them over to a reprobate mind, full of all injustice, uncleanness, covetousness, maliciousness, you know the cataloguewhy do you ask me?
Alas! and is she this?
Alas! And why alas? How would the Gospel be glorified if heathens were holier than Christians? It ought to be so, therefore it is so. If she seems to have virtues, they, being done without the grace of Christ, are only bedizened vices, cunning shams, the devil transformed into an angel of light. And as for chastity, the flower and crown of all virtueswhosoever says that she, being yet a heathen, has that, blasphemes the Holy Spirit, whose peculiar and highest gift it is, and is anathema maranatha for ever! Amen! And Peter, devoutly crossing himself, turned angrily and contemptuously away from his young companion.
Philammon was quite shrewd enough to see that assertion was not identical with proof. But Peters argument of it ought to be, therefore it is, is one which saves a great deal of troubleand no doubt he had very good sources of information. So Philammon walked on, sad, he knew not why, at the new notion which he had formed of Hypatia, as a sort of awful sorceressMessalina, whose den was foul with magic rites and ruined souls of men. And yet if that was all she had to teach, whence had her pupil Raphael learned that fortitude of his? If philosophy had, as they said, utterly died out, then what was Raphael?
Just then, Peter and the rest turned up a side street, and Philammon and Hieracas were left to go on their joint errand together. They paced on for some way in silence, up one street and down another, till Philammon, for want of anything better to say, asked where they were going.
Where I choose, at all events. No, young man! If I, a priest, am to be insulted by archdeacons and readers, I wont be insulted by you.
I assure you I meant no harm.
Of course not; you all learn the same trick, and the young ones catch it of the old ones fast enough. Words smoother than butter, yet very swords.
You do not mean to complain of the archdeacon and his companions? said Philammon, who of course was boiling over with pugnacious respect for the body to which he belonged.
No answer.
Why, sir, are they not among the most holy and devoted of men?
Ahyes, said his companion, in a tone which sounded very like Ahno.
You do not think so? asked Philammon bluntly.
You are young, you are young. Wait a while till you have seen as much as I have. A degenerate age this, my son; not like the good old times, when men dare suffer and die for the faith. We are too prosperous nowadays; and fine ladies walk about with Magdalens embroidered on their silks, and gospels hanging round their necks. When I was young they died for that with which they now bedizen themselves.
But I was speaking of the parabolani.
Ah, there are a great many among them who have not much business where they are. Dont say I said so. But many a rich man puts his name on the list of the guild just to get his exemption from taxes, and leaves the work to poor men like you. Rotten, rotten! my son, and you will find it out. The preachers, nowpeople used to sayI know Abbot Isidore didthat I had as good a gift for expounding as any man in Pelusium; but since I came here, eleven years since, if you will believe it, I have never been asked to preach in my own parish church.