A Struggle for Rome, v. 3

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A Struggle for Rome, v. 3 Page 12

by Felix Dahn


  CHAPTER VIII.

  And meanwhile the suffering and exhaustion of the citizens in Romereached its highest point.

  Hunger thinned the ranks, never very full, of the defenders on thewalls.

  The Prefect in vain did his utmost. In vain he had recourse to allpossible measures of persuasion or despotism. In vain he lavishlyopened his coffers to provide the means of existence for the people.

  For the stores of grain which he had procured from Sicily and garneredin the Capitol were exhausted.

  He promised incredible rewards to any boat which should succeed inrunning the blockade of the King's ships and bring provisions to thecity; to every mercenary who ventured to creep through the gates andthe tents of the besiegers and bring back food.

  But Totila's watchfulness was not to be deceived.

  At first the promised reward had tempted a few avaricious and daringmen to venture out at night. But when Earl Teja, next morning, causedtheir heads to be thrown over the walls at the Flaminian Gate, even themost venturesome lost all desire to follow their example.

  The dung of animals was sold at a high price.

  Hungry women fought for the weeds and nettles which they found on theheaps of rubbish.

  Long since had hunger taught the populace to eat greedily unheard-ofthings.

  And countless deserters fled from the city to the Goths.

  Teja would have forced them to return, in order the sooner to obligethe city to surrender; but Totila gave orders that they should bereceived and fed, and that care should be taken that they did notinjure themselves by the too sudden gratification of their ravenousappetites.

  Cethegus now spent his nights upon the walls. At various hours hehimself, spear and shield in hand, went the round of the patrols, andsometimes took the place of a sentinel who was overcome with hunger orthe want of sleep. His example certainly had the greatest effect on thebrave. The two Licinii, Piso, and Salvius Julianus stood by the Prefectand his blindly-devoted Isaurians with enthusiasm.

  But not so all Romans; not Balbus, the gormandiser.

  "No, Piso," said Balbus one day, "I cannot endure it any longer. It isnot in a man's power, at least not in mine. Holy Lucullus! who wouldhave thought that I should ever give my last and largest diamonds forhalf a rock-marten!"

  "I remember the time," answered Piso, laughing, "when you would haveput your cook in irons if he had let a lobster boil a minute too long."

  "A lobster! Mercy on us! How can you recall such a picture to my mind!I would give my immortal soul for one claw of a lobster, or even forthe tail. And never to sleep one's fill! To be awakened, if not byhunger, by the trumpets of the patrol!"

  "Look at the Prefect! For the last fourteen days he has not sleptfourteen hours. He lies upon his hard shield, and drinks rain-water outof his helmet."

  "The Prefect! He need not eat. He lives upon his pride, like the bearon his fat, and sucks his own gall. He is made of nothing but sinewsand muscles, pride and hatred! But I--who had accumulated such softwhite flesh, that the mice nibbled at me when I slept, thinking that Iwas a Spanish ham!--Do you know the latest news? A whole herd of fatoxen was driven into the Gothic camp this morning--all from Apulia;darlings of gods and men!"

  The next day early Piso, with Salvius Julianus, came to wake thePrefect, who had lain down on the wall by the Porta Portuensis, closeto the most important point of defence, the bolt across the river.

  "Forgive me for disturbing your rare slumbers."

  "I was not asleep; I was awake. Tell me your news, tribune."

  "Last night Balbus deserted his post with twenty citizens. They letthemselves down from the Porta Latina by ropes. Outside there had beenheard all night long the lowing of Apulian herds. It seems that theirbellowing was irresistible."

  But the smile of the satirist faded away when he looked at thePrefect's face.

  "Let a cross thirty feet high be erected before the house of Balbus inthe Via Sacra. Every deserter who falls into our hands shall becrucified thereon."

  "General--Constantinus abolished the punishment of crucifixion in thename of our Saviour," said Salvius Julianus reprovingly.

  "Then I re-introduce the practice in honour of Rome. That Emperor nodoubt held it to be impossible that a Roman noble and tribune coulddesert his post for the sake of roast meat."

  "I have other news. I can no longer set the watch on the tower of thePorta Pinciana. Of the sixteen mercenaries nine are either dead orsick."

  "Almost the same thing is reported by Marcus Licinius, at the PortaTiburtina," said Julianus. "Who can ward off the danger which threatensus on all sides?"

  "I! and the courage of the Romans. Go! Let the heralds summon all thecitizens, who may yet be in the houses, to the Forum Romanum."

  "Sir, there are only women, children, and sick people----"

  "Obey, tribune!"

  And with a dark expression on his face the Prefect descended from thewalls, mounted his noble Spanish charger, and, followed by a troop ofmounted Isaurians, made a long round through the city, everywhereassuring himself that the sentinels were on the alert, and examiningthe troops; thus giving the herald time to summon the people, and thelatter to obey. He advanced, very slowly, along the right bank of theTiber. A few ragged people crept out of their huts to stare in dulldespair at the passing horsemen. Only at the Bridge of Cestius did thethrong become thicker.

  Cethegus stopped his horse in order to muster the guard on the bridge.

  Suddenly, from the door of a low hut, there rushed a woman withdishevelled hair, holding a child in her arms. Another pulled at herragged skirt.

  "Bread? bread?" she asked; "can stones be softened by tears until theybecome bread? Oh no! They remain as hard--as hard as that man. Look,children, that is the Prefect of Rome. He upon the black horse, withthe crimson crest and the terrible eyes! But I fear him no longer.Look, children! that man forced your father to keep watch on the wallsday and night, until he fell dead. Curses on the Prefect of Rome!"

  And she shook her fist at the immovable horseman.

  "Bread, mother! Give us something to eat," howled the children.

  "I have nothing more for you to eat, but plenty to drink! Come!"screamed the woman, and, clasping the elder child round the waist withher right arm, and pressing the younger more firmly to her bosom, shecast herself over the wall into the river.

  A cry of horror, followed by curses, ran through the crowd.

  "She was mad!" said the Prefect in a loud voice, and rode on.

  "No, she was the wisest of us all!" cried a voice from the crowd.

  "Silence! Legionaries, sound the trumpets! Forwards! To the Forum!"commanded Cethegus, and the troop of horsemen galloped away.

  Across the Fabrician Bridge and through the Carmentalian Gate, thePrefect arrived in the Forum Romanum at the foot of the CapitolineHill.

  The wide space appeared almost empty; the few thousand people who, cladin miserable garments, crouched upon the steps of the temple and halls,or supported themselves on their staffs or spears, made littleimpression.

  "What does the Prefect want?"--"What can he want? we have nothing leftbut our lives."--"And those he will--" "Do you know that the day beforeyesterday the coast town Centumcellae surrendered to the Goths?"--"Yes;the citizens overpowered the Prefect's Isaurians and opened thegates."--"Would that we could follow their example!"--"We must do itsoon, or it will be too late."--"Yesterday my brother fell down dead,some boiled nettles still in his mouth. He was too weak to swallow themess."---"Yesterday in the Forum Boarium a mouse was sold for itsweight in gold!"--"For a week I got roasted meat from a butcher--hewould not sell the flesh raw."--"You were lucky! They storm all houseswhere they smell roast meat!"--"But the day before yesterday he wastorn to pieces by the mob, for he had enticed beggar-children into hishouse--and that was the flesh he had sold us!"--"But do you know whatthe Gothic King does with his prisoners? He treats them as a fathertreats his helpless children; and most of them enter his army atonce."
--"Yes, and those who will not he provides with money for thejourney."--"Yes, and with clothes and shoes and provisions. Thesick and wounded are nursed."--"And he gives them guides to thecoast towns."--"And sometimes he even pays for their passage inmerchant-ships to the East."--"Look, the Prefect dismounts!"

  "He looks like Pluto!"

  "He is no longer Princeps Senatus, but Princeps Inferorum."

  "Look at his eyes! As cold as ice, and yet like red-hot arrows."

  "Yes, my godmother is right; she says that only those who have no heartcan look like that."

  "That is an old tale. Spectres and Lemures have eaten his heart in thenight."

  "Ah, bah! There are no Lemures. But there is a devil, for it says so inthe Bible. And the Prefect has sold himself to the devil. The Numidianwho is holding his black horse by the bridle is an imp from hell, whoalways accompanies him. Nothing can hurt the Prefect. He feels neitherhunger nor thirst nor the want of sleep. But he can never smile, for hehas sold his soul!"

  "How do you know?"

  "The deacon of St. Paul's has explained it all. And it is a sin toserve such a man any longer. Did he not betray our Bishop, Silverius,to the Emperor, and send him over the sea in chains?"

  "And lately he accused sixty priests, Orthodox and Arian, of treason,and banished them from the city."

  "That is true!"

  "And he must have promised the devil that he would torment the Romans."

  "But we will endure it no longer. We are free! He himself has oftentold us so. I will ask him by what right----"

  But the bold speaker stopped short, for the Prefect glanced at themurmuring group as he mounted the rostrum.

  "Quirites," he began, "I call upon you all to become legionaries.Famine and treachery--a shameful thing to say of Romans!--have thinnedthe ranks of our defenders. Do you hear the sound of hammers? Acrucifix is being erected to punish all deserters. Rome demands stillgreater sacrifices from her citizens, for _they_ have no choice. Thecitizens of other towns choose between surrender or destruction. We,who have grown up in the shadow of the Capitol, have no choice; formore than a thousand years of heroism sanctify this place. Here nocoward thought dare arise. You cannot again endure to see thebarbarians tie their horses to the columns of Trajan. We must make alast effort. The marrow of heroism ripens early in the descendants ofRomulus and Caesar; and late is spent the strength of the men who drinkof the waters of the Tiber. I call upon all boys from their twelfth,all men until their eightieth year, to help to man the walls. Silence!Do not murmur. I shall send my tribunes and the lance-bearers intoevery house--only to prevent boys of too tender years and too aged menfrom volunteering their services--then why do you murmur? Does any oneknow of something better? Let him speak out boldly; from this place,which I now vacate in his favour."

  At this, the group at which the Prefect looked became perfectly silent.

  But behind him, amid those whom his eye could not intimidate, therearose a threatening cry:

  "Bread!" "Surrender!" "Bread!"

  Cethegus turned.

  "Are you not ashamed? You, worthy of your great name, have borne somuch, and now, when it is only necessary to hold out a little longer,you would succumb? In a few days Belisarius will bring relief."

  "You told us so seven times already!"

  "And after the seventh time Belisarius lost almost all his ships.

  "Which now aid in blocking our harbour!"

  "You should name a term; a limit to this misery. My heart bleeds forthis people!"

  "Who are you?" the Prefect asked the invisible speaker of the lastsentence; "you can be no Roman!"

  "I am Pelagius the deacon, a Christian and a priest of the Lord. And Ifear not man but God. The King of the Goths, although a heretic, haspromised to restore to the orthodox the churches of which hisfellow-heretics, the Arians, have deprived them, in every town whichsurrenders. Three times already has he sent a herald to the citizens ofRome with the most lenient proposals--they have never been permitted tospeak to us."

  "Be silent, priest! You have no fatherland but heaven; no people butthe communion of saints; no army but that of the angels. Manage yourheavenly kingdom, but leave to men the kingdom of the Romans."

  "But the man of God is right!"

  "Set us a term."

  "A short one!"

  "Till then we will still hold out."

  "But if it elapse without relief----"

  "Then we will surrender!"

  "We will open the gates."

  But Cethegus shunned this thought. Not having received news from theouter world for weeks, he had no idea when Belisarius could possiblyarrive at the mouth of the Tiber.

  "What!" he cried. "Shall I fix a term during which you will remainRomans, and after which you will become cowards and slaves! Honourknows no term!"

  "You speak thus, because you do not believe in the reinforcements."

  "I speak thus, because I believe in _you_!"

  "But we will have a term. We are resolved. You speak of Roman freedom!Are we free, or are we bound to obey you like your slaves? We demand aterm, and we will have it."

  "We will have it!" repeated a chorus of voices.

  Before Cethegus could reply, the sound of trumpets was heard from thesouth-eastern corner of the Forum.

  From the Via Sacra advanced a crowd of people, citizens and soldiers;in their midst were two horsemen in foreign armour.

 

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