Vergilius - A Tale of the Coming of Christ by Irving Bacheller
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page 9 of 177 (05%)
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put my hope in him, and so shall Rome. A lucky girl is she, for has he
not riches, talent, honor, temperance, courage, and the beauty of a god? And was I not his teacher?" "My brave Vergilius," the matron answered, "you are like the knights of old I have heard my father tell of. They had such a way with them--never a smile and a melancholy look in their faces when they spoke of love. I give you the crown of gallantry, and, if she be willing, you shall walk with her in the garden. That is your reward." Vergilius, advancing, took the girl's hand and kissed it. "Will you go with me?" said he. "On one condition," she answered, looking down at the folds of her tunic. "And it is?" "That you will entertain me with philosophy and the poets," she answered, with a smile. "And with no talk of love," the matron added, as Arria took his arm. They walked through the long hall of the palace, over soft rugs and great mosaics, and between walls aglow with tints of sky and garden. These two bore with them a tender feeling as they passed the figures of embattled horse and host in carven wood, and mural painting and colored mosaic and wrought metal--symbols of the martial spirit of the empire now oddly in contrast with their own. They came out upon a peristyle |
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