[Quo Vadis by Henryk Sienkiewicz]@TWC D-Link bookQuo Vadis CHAPTER VII 4/55
Among these were not lacking even men who covered with long hair their ears pierced in sign of slavery. The most noted sat directly at the tables; the lesser served to amuse in time of eating, and waited for the moment in which the servants would permit them to rush at the remnants of food and drink.
Guests of this sort were furnished by Tigellinus, Vatinius, and Vitelius; for these guests they were forced more than once to find clothing befitting the chambers of Caesar, who, however, liked their society, through feeling most free in it.
The luxury of the court gilded everything, and covered all things with glitter.
High and low, the descendants of great families, and the needy from the pavements of the city, great artists, and vile scrapings of talent, thronged to the palace to sate their dazzled eyes with a splendor almost surpassing human estimate, and to approach the giver of every favor, wealth, and property,--whose single glance might abase, it is true, but might also exalt beyond measure. That day Lygia too had to take part in such a feast.
Fear, uncertainty, and a dazed feeling, not to be wondered at after the sudden change, were struggling in her with a wish to resist.
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