FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1757   1758   1759   1760   1761   1762   1763   1764   1765   1766   1767   1768   1769   1770   1771   1772   1773   1774   1775   1776   1777   1778   1779   1780   1781  
1782   1783   1784   1785   1786   1787   1788   1789   1790   1791   1792   1793   1794   1795   1796   1797   1798   1799   1800   1801   1802   1803   1804   1805   1806   >>   >|  
ried out, Pontius was ready with his arrangements, and could assure the Emperor that to-night he would find a good bed and very tolerable quarters, and that by to-morrow he should have a really elegantly-furnished room. "Charming, quite delightful," cried the Emperor, as he entered his room. "One might fancy you had some industrious demons at your command. Pour some water over my hands, Mastor, and then to supper! I am as hungry as a beggar's clog." "I think we shall find all you need," replied Titianus, while Hadrian washed his hands and his bearded face. "Have you eaten all that I sent down to Lochias to-day, my dear Pontius?" "Alas! we have," sighed Pontius. "But I gave orders that a supper for five should be sent." "It sufficed for six hungry artists," answered the architect, "if only I could have guessed for whom the food was intended! And now what is to be done? There are wine and bread still in the hall of the Muses, meanwhile" "That must satisfy us," said the Emperor, as he wiped his face. "In the Dacian war, in Numidia, and often when out hunting, I have been glad if only one or the other was to be obtained." Antinous, who was very hungry and tired, made a melancholy face at these words of his master, and Hadrian perceiving it, added with a smile: "But youth needs something more to live upon than bread and wine. You pointed out to me just now the residence of the palace-steward. Might we not find there a morsel of meat or cheese, or something of the kind?" "Hardly," replied Pontius. "For the man stuffs his fat stomach and his eight children with bread and porridge. But an attempt will at any rate be worth making." "Then send to him; but conduct us at once to the hall where the Muses have preserved some bread and wine for me and these good fellows, though they do not always provide them for their disciples." Pontius at once conducted the Emperor into the hall. On the way thither, Hadrian asked: "Is the steward so miserably paid that he is forced to content himself with such meagre fare?" "He has a residence rent free, and two hundred drachmae a month." "That is not so very little. What is the man's name, and of what kith and kin is he?" "He is called Keraunus, and is of ancient Macedonian descent. His ancestors from time immemorial have held the office he now fills, and he even supposes himself to be related to the extinct royal dynasty through the mistress of some one of the L
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1757   1758   1759   1760   1761   1762   1763   1764   1765   1766   1767   1768   1769   1770   1771   1772   1773   1774   1775   1776   1777   1778   1779   1780   1781  
1782   1783   1784   1785   1786   1787   1788   1789   1790   1791   1792   1793   1794   1795   1796   1797   1798   1799   1800   1801   1802   1803   1804   1805   1806   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
Pontius
 

Emperor

 
hungry
 

Hadrian

 

supper

 

replied

 

residence

 
steward
 
conduct
 
extinct

mistress
 

making

 

dynasty

 

children

 

morsel

 

cheese

 

palace

 

pointed

 
Hardly
 

porridge


attempt
 

stuffs

 

stomach

 
provide
 
drachmae
 

office

 

hundred

 

descent

 

immemorial

 
ancestors

Macedonian

 

ancient

 

called

 

Keraunus

 

supposes

 

disciples

 
conducted
 

related

 

fellows

 

forced


content

 

meagre

 
miserably
 
thither
 

preserved

 
Dacian
 

beggar

 

Mastor

 

command

 

Lochias