[Antonina by Wilkie Collins]@TWC D-Link book
Antonina

CHAPTER 26
9/19

This strange procession was preceded by two men, who were considerably in advance of it--a priest and soldier.

An expression of impatience and exultation appeared on their pale, famine-wasted countenances, as they approached the temple with rapid steps.
Ulpius never moved from his position, but fixed his piercing eyes on them as they advanced.

Not vainly did he now stand, watchful and menacing, before the entrance of his gloomy shrine.

He had seen the first degradations heaped on fallen Paganism, and he was now to see the last.

He had immolated all his affections and all his hopes, all his faculties of body and mind, his happiness in boyhood, his enthusiasm in youth, his courage in manhood, his reason in old age, at the altar of his gods; and now they were to exact from him, in their defence, lonely criminal, maddened, as he already was in their cause, more than all this! The decree had gone forth from the Senate which devoted to legalised pillage the treasures in the temples of Rome.
Rulers of a people impoverished by former exactions, and comptrollers only of an exhausted treasury, the government of the city had searched vainly among all ordinary resources for the means of paying the heavy ransom exacted by Alaric as the price of peace.


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