Cleopatra eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about Cleopatra.

Cleopatra eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 378 pages of information about Cleopatra.

We passed on, to find ourselves in a narrow passage, and, leaving the eunuch to bar the door, advanced till we came to a curtain.  Through this entrance we went, and found ourselves in a vaulted chamber, ill-lighted from the roof.  On the further side of this rude chamber was a bed of rugs, and on them crouched the figure of a man, his face hidden in the folds of his toga.

“Most noble Antony,” said Charmion drawing near, “unwrap thy face and hearken to me, for I bring thee tidings.”

Then he lifted up his head.  His face was marred by sorrow; his tangled hair, grizzled with years, hung about his hollow eyes, and white on his chin was the stubble of an unshaven beard.  His robe was squalid, and his aspect more wretched than that of the poorest beggar at the temple gates.  To this, then, had the love of Cleopatra brought the glorious and renowned Antony, aforetime Master of half the World!

“What will ye with me, Lady,” he asked, “who would perish here alone?  And who is this man who comes to gaze on fallen and forsaken Antony?”

“This is Olympus, noble Antony, that wise physician, the skilled in auguries, of whom thou hast heard much, and whom Cleopatra, ever mindful of thy welfare, though but little thou dost think of hers, has sent to minister to thee.”

“And, can thy physician minister to a grief such as my grief?  Can his drugs give me back my galleys, my honour, and my peace?  Nay!  Away with thy physician!  What are thy tidings?—­quick!—­out with it!  Hath Canidius, perchance, conquered Caesar?  Tell me but that, and thou shalt have a province for thy guerdon—­ay! and if Octavianus be dead, twenty thousand sestertia to fill its treasury.  Speak—­nay—­speak not!  I fear the opening of thy lips as never I feared an earthly thing.  Surely the wheel of fortune has gone round and Canidius has conquered?  Is it not so?  Nay—­out with it!  I can no more!”

“O noble Antony,” she said, “steel thy heart to hear that which I needs must tell thee!  Canidius is in Alexandria.  He has fled far and fast, and this is his report.  For seven whole days did the legions wait the coming of Antony, to lead them to victory, as aforetime, putting aside the offers of the envoys of Caesar.  But Antony came not.  And then it was rumoured that Antony had fled to Taenarus, drawn thither by Cleopatra.  The man who first brought that tale to the camp the legionaries cried shame on—­ay, and beat him to the death!  But ever it grew, until at length there was no more room to doubt; and then, O Antony, thy officers slipped one by one away to Caesar, and where the officers go there the men follow.  Nor is this all the story; for thy allies—­Bocchus of Africa, Tarcondimotus of Cilicia, Mithridates of Commagene, Adallas of Thrace, Philadelphus of Paphlagonia, Archelaus of Cappadocia, Herod of Judaea, Amyntas of Galatia, Polemon of Pontus, and Malchus of Arabia—­all, all have fled or bid their generals fly back to whence they came; and already their ambassador’s crave cold Caesar’s clemency.”

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Project Gutenberg
Cleopatra from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.