"Come," said Arphaxad, "he will help us to pa.s.s the time."
"Forward, comrades," said Selpha, "we must guard him till morning."
Thereupon they all went out.
Peter, when he had left the hall of the high priest, went out into the street weeping bitterly and suffering anguish of soul. "Oh, my Master," he cried, "how deeply have I fallen! Oh, woe unto me, weak and wretched man! I have three times denied my dearest friend and teacher. I cannot understand how I could so forget myself. A curse upon my shameful faithlessness! How my heart will repent of it--this contemptible cowardice. My dearest Lord, hast thou still grace for me--grace for a faithless, one--oh! send it me! This once more hear the voice of my repentant heart. Alas! the sin is committed. I cannot undo it, but ever, ever, will I weep for it and repent of it--and now nevermore will I leave thee! Oh, thou most loving one! Thou wilt surely not cast me off! Thou wilt not despise my bitter, repentance.
No! the gentle pitying look which thou didst cast upon thy deeply fallen disciple promises it--thou wilt forgive me. I have this hope from thee, best of teachers, and the whole love of my heart shall from this moment be given to thee. I will cling closely to thee and nothing, nothing shall ever be able to separate thee from me again!"
And with a face beaming with hope of forgiveness, even for his threefold denial, he went away.
Hardly had he gone, when John entered at the other end of the street, asking anxiously, looking on either side, "Where, then, can Peter have gone? In vain my eyes have sought him in the crowd. Surely nothing evil can have befallen him. Perhaps I still may meet him upon the road. I will now go to Bethany. Dearest mother, if I bring thee the tidings of these terrible things which have happened--the innocent one ill-treated and condemned by sinners, what wilt thy heart feel? O, Judas, Judas, what hast thou done?"
Now it came to pa.s.s that the soldiers having taken Jesus into the guardroom of Caiaphas" palace, mocked him and despitefully used him until it was day. They seated him on a stool with a bandage over his eyes, and surrounded him mockingly, saying, "Is not this throne too mean for thee, great king? Hail to thee, thou new-born sovereign! But sit more firmly," said one, seizing Jesus from behind and pressing him down on his chair. "Thou mightest otherwise fall down. Thou art verily also a prophet. So say, O great Elias, say who it is who has struck thee," and with that he dealt Jesus a blow on the face.
Others came in and also struck him, saying, "Was it I?" but Jesus answered nothing.
Then one of the band went up to him and shouted, "Hearest thou nothing?" and shook him violently by the shoulders. "Art thou asleep?"
Then turning to his comrades he exclaimed, "He is deaf and dumb; a fine prophet indeed." And thereupon he roughly pushed Jesus forward so that he fell from the stool upon the ground upon his face.
"Alas! alas!" they cried. "Our king has fallen from his throne. What is to be done now? We have no longer any king. Thou art to be pitied, such a great magician and now so weak and weary! Come, help us to put him again upon his throne."
And then they seized him where he lay on the ground with his eyes bandaged and his hands tied, and lifted him again upon his seat.
"Raise thyself, O mighty king; receive anew our homage."
As they were kneeling around him in scorn a messenger of Caiaphas entered saying, "How goes it now with the king?" and the band shouted, "He speaks and prophesies not; we can do nothing with him."
"Then," said the messenger, "the high priest and Pilate will soon make him speak. Caiaphas sends me to bring him."
"Up, comrades," said Selpha.
Thereupon, taking Jesus again by the cords which bound his hands, they led him off, saying, "Stand up; thou hast been king long enough." And all shouted, "Away with thee. Thy kingdom has come to an end."
CHAPTER VI.
JUDAS HANGS HIMSELF.
The guilty deed fails not to win its wages, The guiltless blood he sold cries from the ground; Driven to madness by the worm that rages And scourged by furies, Judas ranges round Wildly, and finds no rest From the fire in his breast, Till swept away by bitterest despair He flings away in reckless haste The load of life he can no longer bear.
When Jesus was being mocked and ill-treated by the soldiers in the guardroom of Caiaphas" palace, Judas wandered to and fro in despair.
"Now my fearful foreboding has become a terrible certainty. Caiaphas has sentenced the Master to death, and the council has concurred in his sentence. All is over. There is no hope, no way of escape. Had the Master wished to save himself he would have made them feel his might a second time in the garden. As he did not do it then, he will now do so no more. What can I do for him, I, a miserable wretch who have delivered him into their hands? They shall have the money back, that blood money. They must give me my Master back again. I will go at once and make the demand. But, oh, will he be saved by that? Oh, vain, foolish hope. They will mock me, I know it. O cursed synagogue, thou hast tempted me through thy messengers, thou hast hidden from me thy b.l.o.o.d.y designs until thou hadst him in thy clutches. I will torture thee with bitter reproaches, ye unjust judges. I will have nothing to do with your devilish decision. I will have no share in the blood of this innocent. Oh, what tortures, what pains of h.e.l.l, tear my inmost soul!" So saying he departed.
Now within the hall of the Sanhedrin were a.s.sembled the high priests, the scribes and the leaders. Caiaphas and Annas arrayed in their robes, sat in the high place of the council, and all the seats were filled except those of Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus. Caiaphas spoke, saying, "I thought, fathers, that I could not wait till the morning to send the enemy of the synagogue to death."
And Annas said, "I could not get a moment"s rest for eagerness to hear the sentence p.r.o.nounced."
Then cried they all, "It is p.r.o.nounced. He shall and must die."
Caiaphas said, "I did not wish to trouble all the members of the Sanhedrin to come hither in the night time. But there was present the necessary number of judges to p.r.o.nounce as the law prescribes. All as with one mouth declared the accused worthy of death, for all had heard with their own ears how this man blasphemed G.o.d in the most terrible way, and was impious enough to call himself the Son of G.o.d."
The priests and Pharisees who had previously been present answered, "Yea, we bear witness to it. We have ourselves heard the impious blasphemy from his lips."
"Then," said Caiaphas, "I will have the criminal brought before you once more, so that you may be convinced of his being worthy of death.
Then may the whole council p.r.o.nounce the just sentence."
As he was speaking, Judas, looking haggard and distracted, rushed into the midst of the council, crying wildly, "Is it true? Have you condemned my Master to death?"
Then said the rabbi unto him, "Why dost thou force thyself uncalled for in this a.s.sembly? Be off. We will call thee if we have need of thee."
But Judas took no heed. "I must know it," he said. "Have you condemned him?"
Then all in the council cried aloud, "He must die."
"Woe, woe!" said Judas. "I have sinned. I have betrayed innocent blood. Oh, you blood-thirsty judges, to condemn the innocent blood."
"Peace, peace, Judas," cried the council.
"There will never, never more be peace for me," said Judas, bitterly, "and none for you. The blood of the innocent cries aloud for vengeance."
"What has driven you crazy? Speak, but speak with reverence--thou standest before the Sanhedrin," said Caiaphas.
Then said Judas pa.s.sionately: "You are determined to deliver him up to death; him who is free from all guilt. You must not do it. I have a protest to make against it. You have made me a traitor. Your accursed pieces of silver!"
Annas interrupted him, saying, "Thou didst propose it thyself and close the bargain."
Then said the priest unto him, "Recollect thyself, Judas, thou hast received what thou didst desire; and if thou behavest thyself decently thou canst still----"
Judas interrupted him. "I will have nothing more. I tear up your shameful bargain. Let the innocent go."
"Be off, madman," said a rabbi angrily.
But Judas, taking no heed, knelt and stretched his hands toward Caiaphas. "I demand the release of the innocent. My hands shall be free from his blood."
"What," said the rabbi, "thou contemptible traitor, wilt thou dictate to the Sanhedrin? Know this, thy Master must die, and thou hast delivered him to death."
And all the priests and Pharisees cried aloud, "He must die."
And Judas, with staring eyes, as one demented, repeated, "Die? Then I am a traitor. I have given him up to death!" He sank down like a man crushed by a blow, and then springing up and breaking out into wild pa.s.sion, he shouted aloud: "May ten thousand devils from h.e.l.l tear me in pieces! Let them grind me to powder! Here, ye bloodhounds, take your accursed blood money!" And with that he s.n.a.t.c.hed the bag from his girdle and flung it violently before the seat of the high priest.
"Why didst thou let thyself be made the tool for a transaction which thou didst not weigh beforehand?" said Caiaphas.
"Yes," cried several, "it is your own business."
Then shouted Judas wildly, "May my soul be d.a.m.ned, my body burnt asunder, and ye--"
"Silence and out from here," cried all the priests together.