The nations were at peace, but not the souls of men. A universal and
mighty war of the spirit was near at hand. The skirmishers were
busy--patrician and plebeian, master and slave, oppressor and
oppressed. Soon all were to see the line of battle, the immortal
captains, the children of darkness, the children of light, the
beginning of a great revolution.
Rome was like a weary child whose toys are gods and men, and who, being
weary of them, has yet a curiosity in their destruction.
CHAPTER 2
Those days it was near twelve o'clock by the great dial of history.
One day, about mid-afternoon, the old capital lay glowing in the
sunlight. Its hills were white with marble and green with gardens, and
traced and spotted and flecked with gold; its thoroughfares were bright
with color--white, purple, yellow, scarlet--like a field of roses and
amarantus.
The fashionable day had begun; knight and lady were now making and
receiving visits.
Five litters and some forty slaves, who bore and followed them, were
waiting in the court of the palace of the Lady Lucia.
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