Miscellaneous Essays by Thomas De Quincey
page 53 of 204 (25%)
page 53 of 204 (25%)
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The next toast was--_The Jewish Sicarii_.
Upon which I made the following explanation to the company:--"Gentlemen, I am sure it will interest you all to hear that the assassins, ancient as they were, had a race of predecessors in the very same country. All over Syria, but particularly in Palestine, during the early years of the Emperor Nero, there was a band of murderers, who prosecuted their studies in a very novel manner. They did not practise in the night-time, or in lonely places; but justly considering that great crowds are in themselves a sort of darkness by means of the dense pressure and the impossibility of finding out who it was that gave the blow, they mingled with mobs everywhere; particularly at the great paschal feast in Jerusalem; where they actually had the audacity, as Josephus assures us, to press into the temple,--and whom should they choose for operating upon but Jonathan himself, the Pontifex Maximus? They murdered him, gentlemen, as beautifully as if they had had him alone on a moonless night in a dark lane. And when it was asked, who was the murderer, and where he was"-- "Why, then, it was answered," interrupted Toad-in-the-hole, "_Non est inventus_." And then, in spite of all I could do or say, the orchestra opened, and the whole company began--"Et interrogatum est à Toad-in-the-hole--Ubi est ille Sicarius? Et responsum est ab omnibus--_Non est inventus_." When the tempestuous chorus had subsided, I began again:--"Gentlemen, you will find a very circumstantial account of the Sicarii in at least three different parts of Josephus; once in Book XX. sect. v. c. 8, of his _Antiquities_; once in Book I. of his _Wars_: but in sect. 10 of the chapter first cited you will find a particular description of their tooling. This is what he says--'They tooled with small scymetars not much |
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