Rienzi, the Last of the Roman Tribunes by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton (distant reading .txt) đ
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âIt is tomorrow,â answered Adrian. âYes, assuredly; I will be there.â
âAnd, harkye, my son,â said the Bishop, resting his hand affectionately on Adrianâs shoulder, âI have reason to hope that he will remind our poor citizens of the Jubilee for the year Fifty, and stir them towards clearing the road of the brigands: a necessary injunction, and one to be heeded timeously; for who will come here for absolution when he stands a chance of rushing unannealed upon purgatory by the way? You have heard Rienzi,âay? quite a Ciceroâquite! Well, Heaven bless you, my son! You will not fail?â
âNay, not I.â
âYet, stayâa word with you: just suggest to all whom you may meet the advisability of a full meeting; it looks well for the city to show respect to letters.â
âTo say nothing of the Jubilee,â added Adrian, smiling.
âAh, to say nothing of the Jubileeâvery good! Adieu for the present!â And the Bishop, resettling himself on his saddle, ambled solemnly on to visit his various friends, and press them to the meeting.
Meanwhile, Adrian continued his course till he had passed the Capitol, the Arch of Severus, the crumbling columns of the fane of Jupiter, and found himself amidst the long grass, the whispering reeds, and the neglected vines, that wave over the now-vanished pomp of the Golden House of Nero. Seating himself on a fallen pillarâby that spot where the traveller descends to the (so called) Baths of Liviaâhe looked impatiently to the sun, as to blame it for the slowness of its march.
Not long, however, had he to wait before a light step was heard crushing the fragrant grass; and presently through the arching vines gleamed a face that might well have seemed the nymph, the goddess of the scene.
âMy beautiful! my Irene!âhow shall I thank thee!â
It was long before the delighted lover suffered himself to observe upon Ireneâs face a sadness that did not usually cloud it in his presence. Her voice, too, trembled; her words seemed constrained and cold.
âHave I offended thee?â he asked; âor what less misfortune hath occurred?â
Irene raised her eyes to her loverâs, and said, looking at him earnestly, âTell me, my Lord, in sober and simple truth, tell me, would it grieve thee much were this to be our last meeting?â
Paler than the marble at his feet grew the dark cheek of Adrian. It was some moments ere he could reply, and he did so then with a forced smile and a quivering lip.
âJest not so, Irene! Last!âthat is not a word for us!â
âBut hear me, my Lordââ
âWhy so cold?âcall me Adrian!âfriend!âlover! or be dumb!â
âWell, then, my soulâs soul! my all of hope! my lifeâs life!â exclaimed Irene, passionately, âhear me! I fear that we stand at this moment upon some gulf whose depth I see not, but which may divide us for ever! Thou knowest the real nature of my brother, and dost not misread him as many do. Long has he planned, and schemed, and communed with himself, and, feeling his way amidst the people, prepared the path to some great design. But nowâ(thou wilt not betrayâthou wilt not injure him?âhe is thy friend!)â
âAnd thy brother! I would give my life for his! Say on!â
âBut now, then,â resumed Irene, âthe time for that enterprise, whatever it be, is coming fast. I know not of its exact nature, but I know that it is against the noblesâagainst thy orderâagainst thy house itself! If it succeedâoh, Adrian! thou thyself mayst not be free from danger; and my name, at least, will be coupled with the name of thy foes. If it fail,âmy brother, my bold brother, is swept away! He will fall a victim to revenge or justice, call it as you will. Your kinsman may be his judgeâhis executioner; and Iâeven if I should yet live to mourn over the boast and glory of my humble lineâcould I permit myself to love, to see, one in whose veins flowed the blood of his destroyer? Oh! I am wretchedâwretched! these thoughts make me well-nigh mad!â and, wringing her hands bitterly, Irene sobbed aloud.
Adrian himself was struck forcibly by the picture thus presented to him, although the alternative it embraced had often before forced itself dimly on his mind. It was true, however, that, not seeing the schemes of Rienzi backed by any physical power, and never yet having witnessed the mighty force of a moral revolution, he did not conceive that any rise to which he might instigate the people could be permanently successful: and, as for his punishment, in that city, where all justice was the slave of interest, Adrian knew himself powerful enough to obtain forgiveness even for the greatest of all crimesâarmed insurrection against the nobles. As these thoughts recurred to him, he gained the courage to console and cheer Irene. But his efforts were only partially successful. Awakened by her fears to that consideration of the future which hitherto she had forgotten, Irene, for the first time, seemed deaf to the charmerâs voice.
âAlas!â said she, sadly, âeven at the best, what can this love, that we have so blindly encouragedâwhat can it end in? Thou must not wed with one like me; and I! how foolish I have been!â
âRecall thy senses then, Irene,â said Adrian, proudly, partly perhaps in anger, partly in his experience of the sex. âLove another, and more wisely, if thou wilt; cancel thy vows with me, and continue to think it a crime to love, and a folly to be true!â
âCruel!â said Irene, falteringly, and in her turn alarmed. âDost thou speak in earnest?â
âTell me, ere I answer you, tell me this: come death, come anguish, come a whole life of sorrow, as the end of this love, wouldst thou yet repent that thou hast loved? If so, thou knowest not the love that I feel for thee.â
âNever! never can I repent!â said Irene, falling upon Adrianâs neck; âforgive me!â
âBut is there, in truth,â said Adrian, a little while after this lover-like quarrel and reconciliation, âis there, in truth, so marked a difference between thy brotherâs past and his present bearing? How knowest thou that the time for action is so near?â
âBecause now he sits closeted whole nights with all ranks of men; he shuts up his books,âhe reads no more,âbut, when alone, walks to and fro his chamber, muttering to himself. Sometimes he pauses before the calendar, which of late he has fixed with his own hand against the wall, and passes his finger over the letters, till he comes to some chosen date, and then he plays with his sword and smiles. But two nights since, arms, too, in great number were brought to the house; and I heard the chief of the men who brought them, a grim giant, known well amongst the people, say, as
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