Thorny Path, a — Complete eBook

Georg Ebers
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 769 pages of information about Thorny Path, a — Complete.

Thorny Path, a — Complete eBook

Georg Ebers
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 769 pages of information about Thorny Path, a — Complete.

“For thy sake, Phoebus Apollo, I spare the man.”  Then, pleased with himself, he looked down again.  The restraint he had laid upon himself struck him as in fact a great and noble effort, accustomed as he was to yield to every impulse.  But at the same time he observed that the clouds, which had so often brought him good fortune, were dispersing, and this gave him fresh uneasiness.  Dazzled by the flood of sunshine which poured in at the window, he withdrew discontentedly into the room.  If this bright day were to bring disaster?  If the god disdained his offering?

But was not Apollo, perhaps, like the rest of the immortals, an idol of the fancy, living only in the imagination of men who had devised it?  Stern thinkers and pious folks, like the skeptics and the Christians, laughed the whole tribe of the Olympians to scorn.  Still, the hand of Phoebus Apollo had rested heavily on his shoulders in his dream.  His power, after all, might be great.  The god must have the promised sacrifice, come what might.  Bitter wrath rose up in his soul at this thought, as it had often done before, with the immortals, against whom he, the all-powerful, was impotent.  If only for an hour they could be his subjects, he would make them rue the sufferings by which they spoiled his existence.

“He is called Martialis.  I will remember that name,” he thought, as he cast a last envious look at the centurion.

How long Philostratus was gone!  Solitude weighed on him, and he looked about him wildly, as though seeking some support.  An attendant at this moment announced the philosopher, and Caracalla, much relieved, went into the tablinum to meet him.  There he sat down on a seat in front of the writing-table strewn with tablets and papyrus-rolls, rearranged the end of the purple toga for which he had exchanged his bathing-robe, rested one foot on the lion’s neck and his head on his hand.  He would receive this wonderful girl in the character of an anxious sovereign meditating on the welfare of his people.

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     Galenus—­What I like is bad for me, what I loathe is wholesome

A THORNY PATH

By Georg Ebers

Volume 6.

CHAPTER XVII.

The philosopher announced the visitor to Caesar, and as some little time elapsed before Melissa came in, Caracalla forgot his theatrical assumption, and sat with a drooping head; for, in consequence, no doubt, of the sunshine which beat on the top of his head, the pain had suddenly become almost unendurably violent.

Without vouchsafing a glance at Melissa, he swallowed one of the alleviating pills left him by Galenus, and hid his face in his hands.  The girl came forward, fearless of the lion, for Philostratos had assured her that he was tamed, and most animals were willing to let her touch them.  Nor was she afraid of Caesar himself, for she saw that he was in pain, and the alarm with which she had crossed the threshold gave way to pity.  Philostratus kept at her side, and anxiously watched Caracalla.

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Thorny Path, a — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.