ever he had caught--he could swear to it, for its back fin was split.
A mist came before Caleb's eyes and in it across the years he saw
himself a boy again. There he stood, his rod of reed bent double and the
thin line strained almost to breaking, while on the waters of Jordan a
great fish splashed and rolled.
"I cannot pull him in," he cried. "The line will never bear it and the
bank is steep. Oh! Miriam, we shall lose him!"
Then there was a splash, and, behold! the girl at his side had sprung
into the swiftly running river. Though its waters, reaching to her neck,
washed her down the stream, she hugged to her young breast that great,
slippery fish, yes, and gripped its back fin between her teeth, till
with the aid of his reed rod he drew them both to land.
"I will buy that lamp," said Caleb presently. "The design pleases me.
What artist made it?"
The merchant shrugged his shoulders.
"Sir, I do not know," he answered. "These goods are supplied to us with
many others, such as joinery and carving, by one Septimus, who is a
contractor and, they say, a head priest among the Christians, employing
many hands at his shops in the poor streets yonder. One or more of them
must be designers of taste, since of late we have received from him some
lamps of great beauty."
Then the man was called away to attend to another customer and Caleb
paid for his lamp.
That evening at dusk Caleb, bearing the lamp in his hand, found his
way to the workshop of Septimus, only to discover that the part of the
factory where lamps were moulded was already closed. A girl who had just
shut the door, seeing him stand perplexed before it, asked civilly if
she could help him.
"Maiden," he answered, "I am in trouble who wish to find her who moulded
this lamp, so that I may order others, but am told that she has left her
work for the day."
"Yes," said the maiden, looking at the lamp, which evidently she
recognised. "It is pretty, is it not? Well, cannot you return
to-morrow?"
"Alas! no, I expect to be leaving Rome for a while, so I fear that I
must go elsewhere."
The girl reflected to herself that it would be a pity if the order were
lost, and with it the commission which she might divide with the maker
of the lamp. "It is against the rules, but I will show you where she
lives," she said, "and if she is there, which is probable, for I have
never seen her or her companion go out at night, you can tell her your
wishes."
Cal
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