Marcellus and Jacob were seated side by side. Marcellus described the
happiness he had felt under the
baptism of Mithra, and Jacob made him
promise to become a
follower of Jesus.
The wines of the palm and the tamarisk, those of Safed and of Byblos,
ran from the amphoras into the crateras, from the crateras into the
cups, and from the cups down the guests' throats. Every one talked,
all hearts expanding under the good cheer. Jacim, although a Jew, did
not
hesitate to express his
admiration of the planets. A merchant from
Aphaka amazed the nomads with his
description of the marvels in the
temple of Hierapolis; and they wished to know the cost of a pilgrimage
to that place. Others held fast to the principles of their native
religion. A German, who was nearly blind, sang a hymn celebrating that
promontory in Scandinavia where the gods were wont to appear with
halos around their heads. The people from Sichem declined to eat
turtles, out of deference to the dove Azima.
Several groups stood talking near the middle of the banqueting-hall,
and the vapour of their
breath, mingled with the smoke from the
candles, formed a light mist. Presently Phanuel slipped quietly into
the room, keeping close to the wall. He had been out in the open
courtyard, to make another
survey of the heavens. He stopped when he
reached the
pavilion of the tetrarch, fearing he would be splashed
with drops of oil if he approached the other tables, which, to an
Essene, would be a great defilement.
Suddenly
violent blows resounded upon the castle gates. The news of
the
imprisonment of Iaokanann had spread rapidly, and now it appeared
that the whole
surrounding population was flocking to the castle. Men
with torches were hastening along the roads in all directions; a black
mass of people swarmed in the
ravine; and from all throats came the
cry: "Iaokanann! Iaokanann!"
"That man will ruin everything," said Jonathas.
"We shall have no more money if this continues," said the Pharisees.
Accusations, recriminations, and pleadings were heard on all sides.
"Protect us!"
"Compel them to cease!"
"Thou didst
abandon thy religion!"
"Impious as all the Herods!"
"Less
impious than thou!" Antipas retorted. "Was it not my father that
erected thy Temple?"
Then the Pharisees, children of the proscribed tribes, partisans of
Mattathias, accused the tetrarch of all the crimes committed by his
family.
The Pharisees had
pointed skulls, bristling beards,
feeble hands, snub
noses, great round eyes, and their countenances bore a
resemblance to
that of a bull-dog. A dozen of these people, scribes and attendants
upon the priests, who picked up their living from the refuse of
holocausts, rushed to the foot of the
pavilion and threatened Antipas
with their
knives. He attempted to speak to them, being only slightly
protected by some of the Sadducees. Suddenly he perceived Mannaeus at
a distance and made him a sign to approach. The expression on the face
of Vitellius indicated that he regarded all this
turmoil as no concern
of his.
The Pharisees, leaning against the
pavilion, were now beside
themselves with demoniac fury. They broke plates and dashed them upon
the floor. The attendants had served them with a ragout
composed of
the flesh of the wild ass, an
unclean animal, and their anger knew no
bounds. Aulus rallied them jeeringly apropos of the ass's head, which
he declared they honoured. He flung other sarcasms at them, regarding
their antipathy to the flesh of swine, intimating that no doubt their
hatred arose from the fact that that beast had killed their beloved
Bacchus, and
saying it was to be feared they were too fond of wine,
since a golden vine had been discovered in the Temple.
The priests did not understand his sneers, and Phineas, of Galilean
origin, refused to
translate them. Aulus suddenly became angry, the
more so because the little Asiatic, frightened at the
tumult, had
disappeared. The feast no longer pleased the noble glutton; the dishes
were
vulgar, and not
sufficiently disguised with
delicate flavourings.
After a time his
displeasure abated, as he caught sight of a dish of
Syrian lambs' tails, dressed with spices, a favourite
dainty.
To Vitellius the
character of the Jews seemed
frightful. Their God was
like Moloch, several altars to whom he had passed upon his route; and
he recalled the stories he had heard of the
mysterious Jew who
fattened small children and offered them as a sacrifice. His Latin
nature was filled with
disgust at their intolerance, their
iconoclastic rage, their
brutal, stumbling
bearing. The proconsul
wished to depart, but Aulus refused to accompany him.
The exaltation of the people increased. They
abandoned themselves to
dreams of
independence. They recalled the glory of Israel, and a
Syrian spoke of all the great conquerors they had vanquished,--
Antigone, Crassus, Varus.
"Miserable creatures!" cried the enraged proconsul, who had overheard
the Syrian's words.
In the midst of the
uproar Antipas remembered the medallion of the
emperor that Herodias had given to him; he drew it forth and looked at
it a moment, trembling, then held it up with its face turned towards
the throng.
At the same moment, the panels of the gold-railed
balcony were folded
back, and, accompanied by slaves
bearing wax tapers, Herodias
appeared, her coiffure crowned with an Assyrian mitre, which was held
in place by a band passing under the chin. Her dark hair fell in
ringlets over a
scarlet peplum with slashed sleeves. On either side of
the door through which one stepped into the
gallery, stood a huge
stone
monster, like those of Atrides; and as Herodias appeared between
them, she looked like Cybele supported by her lions. In her hands she
carried a patera, a
shallowvessel of silver used by the Romans in
pouring libations; and, advancing to the front of the
balcony and
pausing just above the tetrarch's chair, she cried:
"Long live Caesar!"
This
homage was
repeated by Vitellius, Antipas, and the priests.
But now,
beginning at the
farthest end of the banqueting-hall, a
murmur of surprise and
admiration swept through the
multitude. A
beautiful young girl had just entered the
apartment, and stood
motionless for an
instant, while all eyes were turned upon her.
Through a
drapery of filmy blue gauze that veiled her head and throat,
her
arched eyebrows, tiny ears, and ivory-white skin could be
distinguished. A scarf of shot-silk fell from her shoulders, and was
caught up at the waist by a
girdle of fretted silver. Her full
trousers, of black silk, were embroidered in a pattern of silver
mandragoras, and as she moved forward with indolent grace, her little
feet were seen to be shod with slippers made of the feathers of
humming-birds.
When she arrived in front of the
pavilion she removed her veil.
Behold! she seemed to be Herodias herself, as she had appeared in the
days of her
blooming youth.
Immediately the
damsel began to dance before the tetrarch. Her slender
feet took
dainty steps to the
rhythm of a flute and a pair of Indian
bells. Her round white arms seemed ever beckoning and striving to
entice to her side some youth who was fleeing from her allurements.
She appeared to
pursue him, with
movements light as a
butterfly; her
whole mien was like that of an
inquisitive Psyche, or a floating
spirit that might at any moment
dissolve and disappear.
Presently the
plaintive notes of the gingras, a small flute of
Phoenician
origin, replaced the tinkling bells. The attitudes of the
dancing nymph now denoted overpowering lassitude. Her bosom heaved
with sighs, and her whole being expressed
profound languor, although
it was not clear whether she sighed for an
absent swain or was
expiring of love in his
embrace. With half-closed eyes and quivering
form, she caused
mysterious undulations to flow
downward over her
whole body, like rippling waves, while her face remained impassive and
her twinkling feet still moved in their
intricate steps.
Vitellius compared her to Mnester, the famous pantomimist. Aulus was
overcome with faintness. The tetrarch watched her, lost in a
voluptuous reverie, and thought no more of the real Herodias. In fancy
he saw her again as she appeared when she had dwelt among the
Sadducees. Then the
vision faded.