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It was apparent that Alroy was no stranger in the scene of his flight. He had never hesitated as to his course, and now, after having rested for a short time on the summit, he descended towards the left by a natural but intricate path, until his progress was arrested by a black ravine. Scarcely half a dozen yards divided him from the opposite precipice by which it was formed, but the gulf beneath no one could shoot a glance at its invisible termination without drawing back with a cold shudder.

The prince knelt down and examined the surrounding ground with great care. At length he raised a small square stone which covered a metallic plate, and taking from his vest a cornelian talisman covered with strange characters(9), he knocked thrice upon the plate with the signet. A low solemn murmur sounded around. Presently the plate flew off, and Alroy pulled forth several yards of an iron chain, which he threw over to the opposite precipice. The chain fastened without difficulty to the rock, and was evidently constrained by some magnetic influence. The prince, seizing the chain with both his hands, now swung across the ravine. As he landed, the chain parted from the rock, swiftly disappeared down the opposite aperture, and its covering closed with the same low, solemn murmur as before.

VI.

Alroy proceeded for about a hundred paces through a natural cloister of basalt until he arrived at a large uncovered court of the same formation,

which a stranger might easily have been excused for believing to have been formed and smoothed by art. In its centre bubbled up a perpetual spring, icy cold; the stream had worn a channel through the pavement, and might be traced for some time wandering among the rocks, until it at length leaped from a precipice, into a gorge below, in a gauzy shower of variegated spray. Crossing the court, Alroy now entered a vast cavern.

The cavern was nearly circular in form, lighted from a large aperture in the top. Yet a burning lamp in a distant and murkey corner indicated that its inhabitant did not trust merely to this natural source of the great blessing of existence. In the centre of the cave was a circular and brazen table, sculptured with strange characters and mysterious figures near it was a couch on which lie several volumes(10). Suspended from the walls were a shield, some bows and arrows, and other arms.

As the prince of the captivity knelt down and kissed the vacant couch, a figure advanced from the extremity of the cavern into the light. He was a man of middle age, considerably above the common height, with a remarkably athletic frame, and a strongly marked, but majestic countenance. His black beard descended to his waist, over a dark red robe, encircled by a black girdle embroidered with yellow characters, like those sculptured on the brazen table. Black also was his turban, and black his large and luminous eyes.

The stranger advanced so softly, that Alroy did not perceive him, until the prince again rose up. "Jabaster!" exclaimed the prince.

"Sacred seed of David," answered the cabalist, "thou art expected. I read of thee in the stars last night. They spoke of trouble."

"Trouble or triumph, time must prove which it is, great master. At present I am a fugitive and exhausted. The blood-hounds track me, but methinks I have baffled them now. I have slain an Ishmaelite."

PART III.

I.

Ir was midnight. Alroy slept upon the couch : his sleep was troubled. Jabaster stood by his side motionless, and gazing intently upon his slumbering guest.

The only hope of Israel," murmured the cabalist, "my pupil and my prince! I have long perceived in his young mind the seed of mighty deeds, and o'er his future life have often mused with a prophetic hope. The blood of David, the sacred offspring of a solemn race. There is a magic in his flowing veins my science cannot reach.

"When in my youth I raised our standard by my native Tigris, and called our nation to restore their ark, why we were numerous, wealthy, potent; we were a people then, and they flocked to it boldly. Did we lack counsel ? did we need a leader? Who can aver Jabaster's brain or arm was ever wanting? And yet the dream dissolved, the glorious vision. Oh! when I struck down Marvan, and the caliph's camp flung its blazing shadow o'er the bloody river-ah! then indeed I lived. Twenty years of vigil may gain a pardon that I then forgot we lacked the chief ingredient in the spell, the blood that sleeps beside me.

E

"I recall the glorious rapture of that sacred strife amid the rocks of Caucasus. A fugitive, a proscribed and outlawed wretch, whose life is common sport, and whom the vilest hind may slay without a bidding. I who would have been Messiah!

"Burn thy books Jabaster; break thy brazen tables; forget thy lofty science, cabalist, and read the stars no longer(11). But last night I stood upon the gulf which girds my dwelling in one hand, I held my sacred talisman, that bears the name ineffable; in the other, the mystic record of our holy race. I remembered that I had evoked spirits, that I had communed with the great departed, and that the glowing heavens were to me a natural language. I recalled, as consolation to my gloomy soul, that never had my science e'er been exercised but for a sacred or a noble purpose.

And I remembered Israel, my brave, my chosen and my antique race,-slaves, wretched slaves. I was strongly tempted to fling me down this perilous abyss, and end my learning and my life together.

"But as I gazed upon the star of David, a sudden halo rose around its rays, and ever and anon a meteor shot from out the silver veil. I read that there was trouble in the holy seed; and now comes this boy, who has done a deed which-"

"The ark, the ark! I gaze upon the ark!" "The slumberer speaks; the words of sleep are sacred."

"Salvation only from the house of David." "A mighty truth; my life too well has proved it. "He is more calm. It is the holy hour. I'll steal into the court, and gaze upon the star that sways the fortunes of his royal house."

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