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    Ch. 2 - The Court - Page 2

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    of fierce brightness--stretched out to the cloudless horizon that closed
    the sunbright view.

    Within the town, in those streets where the tall houses cast a deep
    shadow on the flagstones of the road, the figures of a few slaves might
    here and there be seen sleeping against the walls, or gossiping
    languidly on the faults of their respective lords. Sometimes an old
    beggar might be observed hunting on the well-stocked preserves of his
    own body the lively vermin of the South. Sometimes a restless child
    crawled from a doorstep to paddle in the stagnant waters of a kennel;
    but, with the exception of these doubtful evidences of human industry,
    the prevailing characteristic of the few groups of the lowest orders of
    the people which appeared in the streets was the most listless and utter
    indolence. All that gave splendour to the city at other hours of the
    day was at this period hidden from the eye. The elegant courtiers
    reclined in their lofty chambers; the guards on duty ensconced
    themselves in angles of walls and recesses of porticoes; the graceful
    ladies slumbered on perfumed couches in darkened rooms; the gilded
    chariots were shut into the carriage-houses; the prancing horses were
    confined in the stables; and even the wares in the market-places were
    removed from exposure to the sun. It was clear that the luxurious
    inhabitants of Ravenna recognised no duties of sufficient importance,
    and no pleasures of sufficient attraction, to necessitate the exposure
    of their susceptible bodies to the noontide heat.

    To give the reader some idea of the manner in which the indolent
    patricians of the Court loitered away their noon, and to satisfy, at the
    same time, the exigencies attaching to the conduct of this story, it is
    requisite to quit the lounging-places of the plebeians in the streets
    for the couches of the nobles in the Emperor's palace.

    Passing through the massive entrance gates, crossing the vast hall of
    the Imperial abode, with its statues, its marbles, and its guards in
    attendance, and thence ascending the noble staircase, the first object
    that might on this occasion have attracted the observer, when he gained
    the approaches to the private apartments, was a door at an extremity of

    the corridor, richly carved and standing half open. At this spot were
    grouped some fifteen or twenty individuals, who conversed by signs, and
    maintained in all their movements the most decorous and complete
    silence. Sometimes one of the party stole on tiptoe to the door, and
    looked cautiously through, returning almost instantaneously, and
    expressing to his next neighbour, by various grimaces, his immense
    interest in the sight he had just beheld. Occasionally there came from
    this mysterious chamber sounds resembling the
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