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rus--pleading for her life with all the intensity of agonising pity. To her, mercy was a stranger within those living walls, yet with meekly bended head in steadfast trust she stood, bearing her awful cross in the footprints of the Nazarene. CHAPTER X. THE LION. The great iron gate was opened up. Into the arena proudly leaped a glowing-eyed gigantic brute, with tawny coat and heavy mane, the hungry king of the forest. All eyes were directed towards him, but Pathema moved not. "Now may her God help her!" exclaimed Myrtis, bending her head and burying her face in her hands; but unable to bear the strain, she rose up and left, leaving her companion absorbed and pained, and her husband down on the _podium_, transfixed yet ashamed. No wild-beast fighter having appeared--no one to gratify the craving for excitement--a great hum of disappointment soon ascended and rolled round the amphitheatre. The lion raised his massive head as if in defiance, and uttered a mighty, vibrant roar. The hum of voices stopped. Pathema's heart trembled in the balance, as a topmast twig before the first breath of darkening storm. The mere finite fabric would surely have given way. But if the tremor lasted in varying degree, hesitation had perched for a moment only. Prolonged habit, woven in as metal cord, called forth the virtue told in the oft-read words--"What time I am afraid, I will trust in thee." Strengthened from above, she calmly turned her head and, as if also in defiance, fixed her eyes full upon the distant savage brute. The hungry lion saw the human form--ah! this was strange choice game. He trod forward with swaying tail--he crept--he crouched low--he would soon spring--and that fair image of the divine would be struck down, torn asunder, bled and crunched in pieces! Was there no eye to pity, none to save? "Oh that I were a soldier, a gladiator,--no, just a man, a man!" said Coryna from the depth of a throbbing heart, "then would I rush to the rescue and save her or die!" The shepherd could not stand the sight, and as he rose to go away his face was ghastly white. As he turned with vacant eyes to walk up the _scalaria_ or steps to the door in the _balteus_ or wall behind, a voice at his elbow said in the Greek language-- "Here! take this true dagger, friend." "Why?" replied the shepherd, looking bewildered. "Dost thou not know the terms?" answered the Greek. "I am a stranger. What te
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