So rang forth the supplication, echoing
from rock and fell, as the people of Claudiodunum
streamed forth in the May sunshine to invoke a blessing
on the cornlands, olives, and vineyards that won vantage-ground
on the terraces carefully kept up on the slopes of
the wonderful needle-shaped hills of Auvergne.
Very recently had the Church of Gaul
commenced the custom of going forth, on the days preceding
the Ascension feast, to chant Litanies, calling down
the Divine protection on field and fold, corn and wine,
basket and store. It had been begun in a time
of deadly peril from famine and earthquake, wild beast
and wilder foes, and it had been adopted in the neighbouring
diocèses as a regular habit, as indeed it continued
throughout the Western Church during the fourteen
subsequent centuries.
One great procession was formed by
different bands. The children were in two troops,
a motley collection of all shades; the deep olive
and the rolling black eye betraying Ethiopian or Moorish
slave ancestry, the soft dark complexion and deep
brown eye showing the Roman, and the rufous hair and
freckled skin the lower grade of Cymric Kelt, while
a few had the more stately pose, violet eye, and black
hair of the Gael. The boys were marshalled with
extreme difficulty by two or three young monks; their
sisters walked far more orderly, under the care of
some consecrated virgin of mature age. The men
formed another troop, the hardy mountaineers still
wearing the Gallic trousers and plaid, though the artisans
and mechanics from the town were clad in the tunic
and cloak that were the later Roman dress, and such
as could claim the right folded over them the white,
purple-edged scarf to which the toga had dwindled.
Among the women there was the same
scale of decreasing nationality of costume according
to rank, though the culmination was in resemblance
to the graceful classic robe of Rome instead of the
last Parisian mode. The poorer women wore bright,
dark crimson, or blue in gown or wrapping veil; the
ladies were mostly in white or black, as were also
the clergy, excepting such as had officiated at the
previous Eucharist, and who wore their brilliant priestly
vestments, heavy with gold and embroidery.
Beautiful alike to eye and ear was
the procession, above all from a distance, now filing
round a delicate young green wheatfield, now lost
behind a rising hill, now glancing through a vineyard,
or contrasting with the gray tints of the olive, all
that was incongruous or disorderly unseen, and all
that was discordant unheard, as only the harmonious
cadence of the united response was wafted fitfully
on the breeze to the two elderly men who, unable to
scale the wild mountain paths in the procession, had,
after the previous service in the basilica and the
blessing of the nearer lands, returned to the villa,
where they sat watching its progress.
It was as entirely a Roman villa as
the form of the ground and the need of security would
permit. Lying on the slope of a steep hill,
which ran up above into a fantastic column or needle
piercing the sky, the courts of the villa were necessarily
a succession of terraces, levelled and paved with
steps of stone or marble leading from one to the other.
A strong stone wall enclosed the whole, cloistered,
as a protection from sun and storm. The lowest
court had a gateway strongly protected, and thence
a broad walk with box-trees on either side, trimmed
into fantastic shapes, led through a lawn laid out
in regular flower-beds to the second court, which was
paved with polished marble, and had a fountain in the
midst, with vases of flowers, and seats around.
Above was another broad flight of stone steps, leading
to a portico running along the whole front of the
house, with the principal chambers opening into it.
Behind lay another court, serving as stables for
the horses and mules, as farmyard, and with the quarters
of the slaves around it, and higher up there stretched
a dense pine forest protecting the whole establishment
from avalanches and torrents of stones from the mountain
peak above.
Under the portico, whose pillars were
cut from the richly-coloured native marbles, reposed
the two friends on low couches.
One was a fine-looking man, with a
grand bald forehead, encircled with a wreath of oak,
showing that in his time he had rescued a Roman’s
life. He also wore a richly-embroidered purple
toga, the token of high civic rank, for he had put
on his full insignia as a senator and of consular
rank to do honour to the ceremonial. Indeed
he would not have abstained from accompanying the procession,
but that his guest, though no more aged than himself,
was manifestly unequal to the rugged expedition, begun
fasting in the morning chill and concluded, likewise
fasting, in the noonday heat. Still, it would
scarcely have distressed those sturdy limbs, well developed
and preserved by Roman training, never permitted by
him to degenerate into effeminacy. And as his
fine countenance and well-knit frame testified, Marcus
AEmilius Victorinus inherited no small share of genuine
Roman blood. His noble name might be derived
through clientela, and his lineage had a Gallic
intermixture; but the true Quirite predominated
in his character and temperament. The citizenship
of his family dated back beyond the first establishment
of the colony, and rank, property, and personal qualities
alike rendered him the first man in the district,
its chief magistrate, and protector from the Visigoths,
who claimed it as part of their kingdom of Aquitania.
So much of the spirit of Vercingetorix
survived among the remnant of his tribe that Arvernia
had never been overrun and conquered, but had held
out until actually ceded by one of the degenerate Augusti
at Ravenna, and then favourable terms had been negotiated,
partly by AEmilius the Senator, as he was commonly
called, and partly by the honoured friend who sat
beside him, another relic of the good old times when
Southern Gaul enjoyed perfect peace as a favoured
province of the Empire. This guest was a man
of less personal beauty than the Senator, and more
bowed and aged, but with care and ill-health more
than years, for the two had been comrades in school,
fellow-soldiers and magistrates, working simultaneously,
and with firm, mutual trust all their days.
The dress of the visitor was shaped
like that of the senator, but of somewhat richer and
finer texture. He too wore the toga praetextata,
but he had a large gold cross hanging on his breast
and an episcopal ring on his finger; and instead of
the wreath of bay he might have worn, and which encircled
his bust in the Capitol, the scanty hair on his finely-moulded
head showed the marks of the tonsure. His brow
was a grand and expansive one; his gray eyes were
full of varied expression, keen humour, and sagacity;
a lofty devotion sometimes changing his countenance
in a wonderful manner, even in the present wreck of
his former self, when the cheeks showed furrows worn
by care and suffering, and the once flexible and resolute
mouth had fallen in from loss of teeth. For this
was the scholar, soldier, poet, gentleman, letter-writer,
statesman, Sidonius Apollinaris, who had stood on
the steps of the Imperial throne of the West, had
been crowned as an orator in the Capitol, and then
had been called by the exigences of his country
to give up his learned ease and become the protector
of the Arvernii as a patriot Bishop, where he had
well and nobly served his God and his country, and
had won the respect, not only of the Catholic Gauls
but of the Arian Goths. Jealousy and evil tongues
had, however, prevailed to cause his banishment from
his beloved hills, and when he repaired to the court
of King Euric to solicit permission to return, he
was long detained there, and had only just obtained
license to go back to his See. He had arrived
only a day or two previously at the villa, exhausted
by his journey, and though declaring that his dear
mountain breezes must needs restore him, and that
it was a joy to inhale them, yet, as he heard of the
oppressions that were coming on his people, the
mountain gales could only ‘a momentary bliss
bestow,’ and AEmilius justly feared that the
decay of his health had gone too far for even the breezes
and baths of Arvernia to reinvigorate him.
His own mountain estate, where dwelt
his son, was of difficult access early in the year,
and AEmilius hoped to persuade him to rest in the
villa till after Pentecost, and then to bless the nuptials
of Columba AEmilia, the last unwedded daughter of
the house, with Titus Julius Verronax, a young Arvernian
chief of the lineage of Vercingetorix, highly educated
in all Latin and Greek culture, and a Roman citizen
much as a Highland chieftain is an Englishman.
His home was on an almost inaccessible peak, or puy,
which the Senator pointed out to the Bishop, saying
“I would fain secure such a
refuge for my family in case the tyranny of the barbarians
should increase.”
“Are there any within the city?”
asked the Bishop. “I rejoice to see that
thou art free from the indignity of having any quartered
upon thee.”
“For which I thank Heaven,”
responded the Senator. “The nearest are
on the farm of Deodatus, in the valley. There
is a stout old warrior named Meinhard who calls himself
of the King’s Trust; not a bad old fellow in
himself to deal with, but with endless sons, followers,
and guests, whom poor Deodatus and Julitta have to
keep supplied with whatever they choose to call for,
being forced to witness their riotous orgies night
after night.”
“Even so, we are far better
off than our countrymen who have the heathen Franks
for their lords.”
“That Heaven forbid!”
said AEmilius. “These Goths are at least
Christians, though heretics, yet I shall be heartily
glad when the circuit of Deodatus’s fields is
over. The good man would not have them left
unblest, but the heretical barbarians make it a point
of honour not to hear the Blessed Name invoked without
mockery, such as our youths may hardly brook.”
“They are unarmed,” said the Bishop.
“True; but, as none knows better
than thou dost, dear father and friend, the Arvernian
blood has not cooled since the days of Caius Julius
Cæsar, and offences are frequent among the young men.
So often has our community had to pay ‘wehrgeld,’
as the barbarians call the price they lay upon blood,
that I swore at last that I would never pay it again,
were my own son the culprit.”
“Such oaths are perilous,”
said Sidonius. “Hast thou never had cause
to regret this?”
“My father, thou wouldst have
thought it time to take strong measures to check the
swaggering of our young men and the foolish provocations
that cost more than one life. One would stick
a peacock’s feather in his cap and go strutting
along with folded arms and swelling breast, and when
the Goths scowled at him and called him by well-deserved
names, a challenge would lead to a deadly combat.
Another such fight was caused by no greater offence
than the treading on a dog’s tail; but in that
it was the Roman, or more truly the Gaul, who was
slain, and I must say the ‘wehrgeld’ was
honourably paid. It is time, however, that such
groundless conflicts should cease; and, in truth,
only a barbarian could be satisfied to let gold atone
for life.”
“It is certainly neither Divine
law nor human equity,” said the Bishop.
“Yet where no distinction can be made between
the deliberate murder and the hasty blow, I have seen
cause to be thankful for the means of escaping the
utmost penalty. Has this oath had the desired
effect?”
“There has been only one case
since it was taken,” replied AEmilius.
“That was a veritable murder. A vicious,
dissolute lad stabbed a wounded Goth in a lonely place,
out of vengeful spite. I readily delivered him
up to the kinsfolk for justice, and as this proved
me to be in earnest, these wanton outrages have become
much more rare. Unfortunately, however, the fellow
was son to one of the widows of the Church a
holy woman, and a favourite of my little Columba, who
daily feeds and tends the poor thing, and thinks her
old father very cruel.”
“Alas! from the beginning the
doom of the guilty has struck the innocent,”
said the Bishop.
“In due retribution, as even
the heathen knew.” Perfect familiarity
with the great Greek tragedians was still the mark
of a gentleman, and then Sidonius quoted from Sophocles
Compass’d with dazzling light,
Throned on Olympus’s height,
His front the Eternal God uprears
By toils unwearied, and unaged by years;
Far back, through ages past,
Far on, through
time to come,
Hath been, and still must last,
Sin’s never-changing
doom.
AEmilius capped it from AEschylus
But Justice holds her equal scales
With ever-waking eye;
O’er some her vengeful might prevails
When their life’s sun is high;
On some her vigorous judgments light
In that dread pause ’twixt
day and night,
Life’s closing,
twilight hour.
But soon as once the genial plain
Has drunk the life-blood of the slain,
Indelible the spots remain,
And aye for vengeance
call.
“Yea,” said the Bishop,
“such was the universal law given to Noah ere
the parting of the nations blood for blood!
And yet, where should we be did not Mercy rejoice
against Justice, and the Blood of Sprinkling speak
better things than the blood of Abel? Nay, think
not that I blame thee, my dear brother. Thou
art the judge of thy people, and well do I know that
one act of stern justice often, as in this instance,
prevents innumerable deeds of senseless violence.”
“Moreover,” returned the
Senator, “it was by the relaxing of the ancient
Roman sternness of discipline and resolution that the
horrors of the Triumvirate began, and that, later on,
spirit decayed and brought us to our present fallen
state.”
By this time the procession, which
had long since passed from their sight, was beginning
to break up and disperse. A flock of little
children first appeared, all of whom went aside to
the slaves’ quarters except one, who came running
up the path between the box-trees. He was the
eldest grandson and namesake of the Senator, a dark-eyed,
brown-haired boy of seven, with the golden bulla hanging
round his neck. Up he came to the old man’s
knee, proud to tell how he had scaled every rock,
and never needed any help from the pedagogue slave
who had watched over him.
“Sawest thou any barbarians,
my Victorinus?” asked his grandfather.
“They stood thickly about Deodatus’s
door, and Publius said they were going to mock; but
we looked so bold and sang so loud that they durst
not. And Verronax is come down, papa, with Celer;
and Celer wanted to sing too, but they would
not let him, and he was so good that he was silent
the moment his master showed him the leash.”
“Then is Celer a hound?” asked the
Bishop, amused.
“A hound of the old stock that
used to fight battles for Bituitus,” returned
the child. “Oh, papa, I am so hungry.”
He really did say ‘papa,’
the fond domestic name which passed from the patriarch
of the household to the Father of the Roman Church.
“Thy mother is watching for
thee. Run to her, and she will give thee a cake aye,
and a bath before thy dinner. So Verronax is
come. I am glad thou wilt see him, my father.
The youth has grown up with my own children, and
is as dear to me as my own son. Ah, here comes
my Columba!”
For the maidens were by this time
returning, and Columba, robed in white, with a black
veil, worn mantilla fashion over her raven hair, so
as to shade her soft, liquid, dark eyes, came up the
steps, and with a graceful obeisance to her father
and the Bishop, took the seat to which the former
drew her beside them.
“Has all gone well, my little
dove?” asked her father.
“Perfectly well so far, my father,”
she replied; but there was anxiety in her eyes until
the gate again opened and admitted the male contingent
of the procession. No sooner had she seen them
safely advancing up the box avenue than she murmured
something about preparing for the meal, and, desiring
a dismissal from her father, disappeared into the
women’s apartments, while the old man smiled
at her pretty maidenly modesty.
Of the three men who were advancing,
one, Marcus AEmilius, about seven or eight and twenty
years of age, was much what the Senator must have
been at his age sturdy, resolute, with keen
eyes, and crisp, curled, short black hair. His
younger brother, Lucius, was taller, slighter, more
delicately made, with the same pensive Italian eyes
as his sister, and a gentle, thoughtful countenance.
The tonsure had not yet touched his soft, dark brown
locks; but it was the last time he would march among
the laity, for, both by his own desire and that of
his dead mother, he was destined to the priesthood.
Beside these two brothers came a much taller figure.
The Arvernii seem to have been Gael rather than Cymri,
and the mountain chief, Titus Julius Verronax, as
the Romans rendered his name of Fearnagh, was of the
purest descent. He had thick, wavy chestnut
hair, not cut so short as that of the Romans, though
kept with the same care. His eyebrows were dark,
his eyes, both in hue and brightness, like a hawk’s,
his features nobly moulded, and his tall form, though
large and stately, was in perfect symmetry, and had
the free bearing and light springiness befitting a
mountaineer. He wore the toga as an official
scarf, but was in his national garb of the loose trousers
and short coat, and the gold torq round his neck had
come to him from prehistoric ages. He had the
short Roman sword in his belt, and carried in his
hand a long hunting-spear, without which he seldom
stirred abroad, as it served him both as alpenstock
and as defence against the wolves and bears of the
mountains. Behind him stalked a magnificent dog,
of a kind approaching the Irish wolfhound, a perfect
picture of graceful outline and of strength, swiftness,
and dignity, slightly shaggy, and of tawny colouring in
all respects curiously like his master.
In language, learning, and manners
Verronax the Arvernian was, however, a highly cultivated
Roman, as Sidonius perceived in the first word of
respectful welcome that he spoke when presented to
the Bishop.
All had gone off well. Old Meinhard
had been on the watch, and had restrained any insult,
if such had been intended, by the other Goths, who
had stood watching in silence the blessing of the fields
and vineyards of Deodatus.
The peril over, the AEmilian household
partook cheerfully of the social meal. Marina,
the wife of Marcus, and Columba sat on carved chairs,
the men of the family reclining on the couches constructed
to hold three. The bright wit of Sidonius, an
eminent conversationalist, shone the more brightly
for his rejoicing at his return to his beloved country
and flock, and to the friend of his youth. There
were such gleams in the storms that were overwhelming
the tottering Empire, to which indeed these men belonged
only in heart and in name.
The meal was for a fast day, and consisted
of preparations of eggs, milk, flour, and fish from
the mountain streams, but daintily cooked, for the
traditions of the old Roman gastronomy survived, and
Marina, though half a Gaul, was anxious that her housekeeping
should shine in the eyes of the Bishop, who in his
secular days had been known to have a full appreciation
of the refinements of the table.
When the family rose and the benediction
had been pronounced, Columba was seen collecting some
of the remnants in a basket.
“Thou surely dost not intend
going to that widow of thine to-day,” exclaimed
her sister-in-law, Marina, “after such a walk
on the mountain?”
“Indeed I must, sister,”
replied Columba; “she was in much pain and weakness
yesterday, and needs me more than usual.”
“And it is close to the farm
of Deodatus,” Marina continued to object, “where,
the slaves tell me, there are I know not how many
fresh barbarian guests!”
“I shall of course take Stentor
and Athenais,” said Columba.
“A pair of slaves can be of
no use. Marcus, dost thou hear? Forbid
thy sister’s folly.”
“I will guard my sister,”
said Lucius, becoming aware of what was passing.
“Who should escort her save
myself?” said the graceful Verronax, turning
at the same moment from replying to some inquiries
from the Bishop.
“I doubt whether his escort
be not the most perilous thing of all,” sighed
Marina.
“Come, Marina,” said her
husband good-humouredly, “be not always a boder
of ill. Thou deemest a Goth worse than a gorgon
or hydra, whereas, I assure you, they are very good
fellows after all, if you stand up to them like a
man, and trust their word. Old Meinhard is a
capital hunting comrade.”
Wherewith the worthy Marcus went off
with his little son at his heels to inspect the doings
of the slaves in the farm-court in the rear, having
no taste for the occupation of his father and the
Bishop, who composed themselves to listen to a Ms.
of the letters of S. Gregory Nazianzen, which Sidonius
had lately acquired, and which was read aloud to them
by a secretary slave.
Some time had thus passed when a confused
sound made the Senator start up. He beheld his
daughter and her escort within the lower court, but
the slaves were hastily barring the gates behind them,
and loud cries of “Justice! Vengeance!”
in the Gothic tongue, struck his only too well-accustomed
ears.
Columba flung herself before him, crying
“O father, have pity! It was for our holy
faith.”
“He blasphemed,” was all
that was uttered by Verronax, on whose dress there
was blood.
“Open the gates,” called
out the Senator, as the cry outside waxed louder.
“None shall cry for justice in vain at the gate
of an AEmilius. Go, Marcus, admit such as have
a right to enter and be heard. Rise, my daughter,
show thyself a true Roman and Christian maiden before
these barbarians. And thou, my son, alas, what
hast thou done?” he added, turning to Verronax,
and taking his arm while walking towards the tribunal,
where he did justice as chief magistrate of the Roman
settlement.
A few words told all. While
Columba was engaged with her sick widow, a young stranger
Goth strolled up, one who had stood combing his long
fair hair, and making contemptuous gestures as the
Rogation procession passed in the morning. He
and his comrades began offensively to scoff at the
two young men for having taken part in the procession,
uttering the blasphemies which the invocation of our
Blessed Lord was wont to call forth.
Verronax turned wrathfully round,
a hasty challenge passed, a rapid exchange of blows;
and while the Arvernian received only a slight scratch,
the Goth fell slain before the hovel. His comrades
were unarmed and intimidated. They rushed back
to fetch weapons from the house of Deodatus, and there
had been full time to take Columba safely home, Verronax
and his dog stalking statelily in the rear as her
guardians.
“Thou shouldst have sought thine
impregnable crag, my son,” said the Senator
sadly.
“To bring the barbarian vengeance
upon this house?” responded Verronax.
“Alas, my son, thou know’st mine oath.”
“I know it, my father.”
“It forbids not thy ransoming thyself.”
Verronax smiled slightly, and touched the collar at
his throat.
“This is all the gold that I possess.”
The Senator rapidly appraised it with
his eye. There was a regular tariff on the lives
of free Romans, free Goths, guests, and trusted men
of the King; and if the deceased were merely a lite,
or freeman of the lowest rank, it was just possible
that the gold collar might purchase its master’s
life, provided he were not too proud to part with
the ancestral badge.
By this time the tribunal had been
reached a special portion of the peristyle,
with a curule chair, inlaid with ivory, placed on a
tesselated pavement, as in the old days of the Republic,
and a servant on each side held the lictor’s
axe and bundle of rods, which betokened stern Roman
justice, wellnigh a mockery now. The forum of
the city would have been the regular place, but since
an earthquake had done much damage there, and some
tumults had taken place among the citizens, the seat
of judgment had by general consent been placed in
the AEmilian household as the place of chief security,
and as he was the accredited magistrate with their
Gothic masters, as Sidonius had been before his banishment.
As Sidonius looked at the grave face
of the Senator, set like a rock, but deadly pale,
he thought it was no unworthy representative of Brutus
or Manlius of old who sat on that seat.
Alas! would he not be bound by his
fatal oath to be only too true a representative of
their relentless justice?
On one side of the judgment-seat stood
Verronax, towering above all around; behind him Marina
and Columba, clinging together, trembling and tearful,
but their weeping restrained by the looks of the Senator,
and by a certain remnant of hope.
To the other side advanced the Goths,
all much larger and taller men than any one except
the young Gaulish chieftain. The foremost was
a rugged-looking veteran, with grizzled locks and
beard, and a sunburnt face. This was Meinhard,
the head of the garrison on Deodatus’s farm,
a man well known to AEmilius, and able to speak Latin
enough to hold communication with the Romans.
Several younger men pressed rudely behind him, but
they were evidently impressed by the dignity of the
tribunal, though it was with a loud and fierce shout
that they recognised Verronax standing so still and
unmoved.
“Silence!” exclaimed the
Senator, lifting his ivory staff.
Meinhard likewise made gestures to
hush them, and they ceased, while the Senator, greeting
Meinhard and inviting him to share his seat of authority,
demanded what they asked.
“Right!” was their cry.
“Right on the slayer of Odorik, the son of
Odo, of the lineage of Odin, our guest, and of the
King’s trust.”
“Right shall ye have, O Goths,”
returned AEmilius. “A Roman never flinches
from justice. Who are witnesses to the deed?
Didst thou behold it, O Meinhard, son of Thorulf?”
“No, noble AEmilius. It
had not been wrought had I been present; but here
are those who can avouch it. Stand forth, Egilulf,
son of Amalrik.”
“It needs not,” said Verronax.
“I acknowledge the deed. The Goth scoffed
at us for invoking a created Man. I could not
stand by to hear my Master insulted, and I smote him,
but in open fight, whereof I bear the token.”
“That is true,” said Meinhard.
“I know that Verronax, the Arvernian, would
strike no coward blow. Therefore did I withhold
these comrades of Odorik from rushing on thee in their
fury; but none the less art thou in feud with Odo,
the father of Odorik, who will require of thee either
thy blood or the wehrgeld.”
“Wehrgeld I have none to pay,”
returned Verronax, in the same calm voice.
“I have sworn!” said AEmilius
in a clear low voice, steady but full of suppressed
anguish. A shriek was heard among the women,
and Sidonius stepped forth and demanded the amount
of wehrgeld.
“That must be for King Euric
to decide,” returned Meinhard. “He
will fix the amount, and it will be for Odo to choose
whether he will accept it. The mulct will be
high, for the youth was of high Baltic blood, and
had but lately arrived with his father from the north!”
“Enough,” said Verronax.
“Listen, Meinhard. Thou knowest me, and
the Arvernian faith. Leave me this night to make
my peace with Heaven and my parting with man.
At the hour of six to-morrow morning, I swear that
I will surrender myself into thine hands to be dealt
with as it may please the father of this young man.”
“So let it be, Meinhard,”
said AEmilius, in a stifled voice.
“I know AEmilius, and I know
Verronax,” returned the Goth.
They grasped hands, and then Meinhard
drew off his followers, leaving two, at the request
of Marcus, to act as sentinels at the gate.
The Senator sat with his hands clasped
over his face in unutterable grief, Columba threw
herself into the arms of her betrothed, Marina tore
her hair, and shrieked out
“I will not hold my peace!
It is cruel! It is wicked! It is barbarous!”
“Silence, Marina,” said
Verronax. “It is just! I am no ignorant
child. I knew the penalty when I incurred it!
My Columba, remember, though it was a hasty blow,
it was in defence of our Master’s Name.”
The thought might comfort her by and
by; as yet it could not.
The Senator rose and took his hand.
“Thou dost forgive me, my son?” he said.
“I should find it hard to forgive
one who lessened my respect for the AEmilian constancy,”
returned Verronax.
Then he led Marcus aside to make arrangements
with him respecting his small mountain estate and
the remnant of his tribe, since Marina was his nearest
relative, and her little son would, if he were cut
off, be the sole heir to the ancestral glories of Vercingetorix.
“And I cannot stir to save such
a youth as that!” cried the Senator in a tone
of agony as he wrung the hand of Sidonius. “I
have bound mine own hands, when I would sell all I
have to save him. O my friend and father, well
mightest thou blame my rashness, and doubt the justice
that could be stern where the heart was not touched.”
“But I am not bound by thine
oath, my friend,” said Sidonius. “True
it is that the Master would not be served by the temporal
sword, yet such zeal as that of this youth merits
that we should strive to deliver him. Utmost
justice would here be utmost wrong. May I send
one of your slaves as a messenger to my son to see
what he can raise? Though I fear me gold and
silver is more scarce than it was in our younger days.”
This was done, and young Lucius also
took a summons from the Bishop to the deacons of the
Church in the town, authorising the use of the sacred
vessels to raise the ransom, but almost all of these
had been already parted with in the time of a terrible
famine which had ravaged Arvernia a few years previously,
and had denuded all the wealthy and charitable families
of their plate and jewels. Indeed Verronax shrank
from the treasure of the Church being thus applied.
Columba might indeed weep for him exultingly as a martyr,
but, as he well knew, martyrs do not begin as murderers,
and passion, pugnacity, and national hatred had been
uppermost with him. It was the hap of war, and
he was ready to take it patiently, and prepare himself
for death as a brave Christian man, but not a hero
or a martyr; and there was little hope either that
a ransom so considerable as the rank of the parties
would require could be raised without the aid of the
AEmilii, or that, even if it were, the fierce old
father would accept it. The more civilised Goths,
whose families had ranged Italy, Spain, and Aquitaine
for two or three generations, made murder the matter
of bargain that had shocked AEmilius; but this was
an old man from the mountain cradle of the race, unsophisticated,
and but lately converted.
In the dawn of the summer morning
Bishop Sidonius celebrated the Holy Eucharist for
the mournful family in the oratory, a vaulted chamber
underground, which had served the same purpose in the
days of persecution, and had the ashes of two tortured
martyrs of the AEmilian household, mistress and slave,
enshrined together beneath the altar, which had since
been richly inlaid with coloured marble.
Afterwards a morning meal was served
for Verronax and for the elder AEmilius, who intended
to accompany him on his sad journey to Bordigala,
where the King and the father of Odorik were known
to be at the time. Sidonius, who knew himself
to have some interest with Euric, would fain have
gone with them, but his broken health rendered a rapid
journey impossible, and he hoped to serve the friends
better by remaining to console the two women, and to
endeavour to collect the wehrgeld in case it should
be accepted.
The farewells, owing to the Roman
dignity of AEmilius and the proud self-respect of
the Arvernian, were more calm than had been feared.
Even thus, thought Sidonius, must Vercingetorix have
looked when he mounted his horse and rode from his
lines at Alesia to save his people, by swelling Caesar’s
triumph and dying beneath the Capitol. Oh,
absit Omen! Columba was borne up by
hopes which Verronax would not dash to the ground,
and she received his embrace with steadfast, though
brimming eyes, and an assurance that she would pray
without ceasing.
Lucius was not to be found, having
no doubt gone forward, intending to direct his friend
on his journey, and there part with him; but the saddest
part of the whole was the passionate wailings and
bemoanings of the remnants of his clan. One of
his attendants had carried the tidings; wild Keltic
men and women had come down for one last sight of
their Fearnagh MacFearccadorigh, as they called him
by his true Gaulish name passionately kissing
his hands and the hem of his mantle, beating their
breasts amid howls of lamentation, and throwing themselves
in his path, as, with the high spirit which could
not brook to be fetched as a criminal, he made his
way to the gate.
Mounted on two strong mules, the only
animals serviceable in the mountain paths, the Senator
and Verronax passed the gate, Marcus walking beside
them.
“We are beforehand with the
Goth,” said Verronax, as he came out.
“Lazy hounds!” said Marcus.
“Their sentinels have vanished. It would
serve them right if thou didst speed over the border
to the Burgundians!”
“I shall have a laugh at old
Meinhard,” said Verronax. “Little
he knows of discipline.”
“No doubt they have had a great
lyke wake, as they barbarously call their obsequies,”
said the Senator, “and are sleeping off their
liquor.”
“We will rouse them,”
said the Arvernian; “it will be better than
startling poor Columba.”
So on they moved, the wildly-clad,
barefooted Gauls, with locks streaming in the
wind, still keeping in the rear. They reached
the long, low farm-buildings belonging to Deodatus,
a half-bred Roman Gaul, with a large vineyard and
numerous herds of cattle. The place was wonderfully
quiet. The Goths seemed to be indulging in very
sound slumbers after their carouse, for nothing was
to be seen but the slaves coming in with bowls of
milk from the cattle. Some of them must have
given notice of the approach of the Senator, for Deodatus
came to his door with the salutation, “Ave
clarissime!” and then stood staring at
Verronax, apparently petrified with wonder; and as
the young chief demanded where was Meinhard, he broke
forth
“Does his nobility ask me?
It is two hours since every Goth quitted the place,
except the dead man in the house of the widow Dubhina,
and we are breathing freely for once in our lives.
Up they went towards the AEmilian villa with clamour
and threats enough to make one’s blood run cold,
and they must be far on their way to Bordigala Gergovia
by this time.”
“His nobility must have passed
through their midst unseen and unheard!” cried
old Julitta, a hardworking, dried-up woman, clasping
her sinewy, wrinkled hands; “a miracle, and no
wonder, since our holy Bishop has returned.”
The excitable household was on the
point of breaking out into acclamation, but Verronax
exclaimed: “Silence, children! Miracles
are not for the bloodguilty. If it be, as I fear,
they have met Lucius and seized him in my stead, we
must push on at once to save him.”
“Meinhard could not mistake
your persons,” returned AEmilius; but while
he was speaking, a messenger came up and put into his
hand one of the waxen tablets on which notes were
written
L. AEM. Vic. To
M. AEM. Vic. S. Q., Pardon
and bless thy son. Meinhard assures me that I
shall be accepted as equal in birth and accessory
to the deed. Remember Columba and the value of
Verronax’s life, and let me save him.
Consent and hold him back. Greet all the dear
ones. Vale.
The little tablet could hold no more
than this almost every word curtailed.
The Senator’s firm lip quivered at last as he
exclaimed, “My brave son. Thus does he
redeem his father’s rash oath!”
Verronax, whose Roman breeding had
held his impulsive Keltic nature in check as long
as it was only himself that was in danger, now broke
into loud weeping
“My Lucius! my brother beloved!
and didst thou deem Arvernian honour fallen so low
that I could brook such a sacrifice? Let us hasten
on instantly, my father, while yet it is time!”
It would have been impossible to withhold
him, and Marcus returned with the strange tidings,
while his father and Verronax set forth with a few
servants, mounted like themselves on mules, to reach
the broad Roman road that led from Gergovia to
Bordigala. Three wild, barefooted Gauls
of Verronax’s clan shook their heads at all his
attempts to send them home, and went running along
after him with the same fidelity as poor Celer,
whom he had left tied up at the villa as his parting
gift to little Victorinus, but who had broken loose,
and came bounding to his master, caressing him with
nose and tongue at their first halt.
There had been, as in all Roman roads,
regular posting stations at intervals along the way,
where horses and mules could be hired, but the troubles
of the Empire, invasion, and scarcity had greatly
disturbed the system. Many of the stations were
deserted, and at others either the whole of the animals,
or all the fleeter ones, had been taken up by Meinhard
and his convoy. Indeed it almost seemed that
not only Lucius was anxious not to be overtaken, but
that Meinhard was forwarding his endeavours to consummate
his sacrifice before the Arvernian could prevent it.
Hotly did Verronax chafe at each hindrance.
He would have dashed onwards with feverish head-long
speed, using his own fleet limbs when he could not
obtain a horse, but AEmilius feared to trust him alone,
lest, coming too late to rescue Lucius, he should bring
on himself the fury of the Goths, strike perhaps in
revenge, and not only lose his own life and render
the sacrifice vain, but imperil many more.
So, while making all possible speed,
he bound the young Arvernian, by all the ties of paternal
guardianship and authority, to give his word not to
use his lighter weight and youthful vigour to outstrip
the rest of the party.
The Senator himself hardly knew what
was his own wish, for if his fatherly affection yearned
over his gentle, dutiful, studious Lucius, yet Columba’s
desolation, and the importance of Verronax as a protector
for his family, so weighed down the other scale, that
he could only take refuge in ‘committing his
way unto the Lord.’
The last halting-place was at a villa
belonging to a Roman, where they heard that an assembly
was being held in the fields near Bordigala for judgment
on the slaughter of a young Goth of high rank.
On learning how deeply they were concerned, their
host lent them two horses, and rode with them himself,
as they hastened on in speechless anxiety.
These early Teutonic nations all had
their solemn assemblies in the open air, and the Goths
had not yet abandoned the custom, so that as the Senator
and the chieftain turned the summit of the last low
hill they could see the plain beneath swarming like
an ant-hill with people, and as they pressed onward
they could see a glittering tent, woven with cloth
of gold, a throne erected in front, and around it a
space cleared and guarded by a huge circle of warriors
(lites), whose shields joined so as to form a
wall.
Near the throne stood the men of higher
degree, all alike to join the King in his judgment,
like the Homeric warriors of old, as indeed Sidonius
had often said that there was no better comment on
the Iliad than the meetings of the barbarians.
By the time AEmilius and Verronax
had reached the spot, and gained an entrance in virtue
of their rank and concern in the matter, Euric sat
enthroned in the midst of the assembly. He was
far removed from being a savage, though he had won
his crown by the murder of his brother. He and
the counts (comrades) around him wore the Roman garb,
and used by preference the Latin speech, learning,
arms, and habits, just as European civilisation is
adopted by the Egyptian or Japanese of the present
day. He understood Roman jurisprudence, and
was the author of a code for the Goths, but in a case
like this he was obliged to conform to national customs.
There he sat, a small, light-complexioned
man, of slighter make than those around him, holding
in his hand a scroll. It was a letter from Sidonius,
sent beforehand by a swift-footed mountaineer, and
containing a guarantee for 1200 soldi, twice the price
for a Goth of ordinary rank. On the one side
stood, unbound and unguarded, the slender form of
Lucius; on the other a gigantic old Visigoth, blind,
and with long streaming snowy hair and beard, his face
stern with grief and passion, and both his knotted
hands crossed upon the handle of a mighty battle-axe.
The King had evidently been explaining
to him the terms of the Bishop’s letter, for
the first words that met the ear of AEmilius were
“Nay, I say nay, King Euric.
Were I to receive treble the weight of gold, how
should that enable me to face my son in the halls of
Odin, with his blood unavenged?”
There was a murmur, and the King exclaimed
“Now, now, Odo, we know no more of Odin.”
“Odin knows us no more,”
retorted the old man, “since we have washed
ourselves in the Name of another than the mighty Thor,
and taken up the weakly worship of the conquered.
So my son would have it! He talked of a new
Valhal of the Christian; but let him meet me where
he will, he shall not reproach me that he only of all
his brethren died unavenged. Where is the slayer?
Set him before me that I may strike him dead with
one blow!”
Lucius crossed himself, looked upwards,
and was stepping forwards, when Verronax with a shout
of ‘Hold!’ leapt into the midst, full
before the avenger’s uplifted weapon, crying
“Slay me, old man! It
was I who killed thy son, I, Fearnagh the Arvernian!”
“Ho!” said Odo.
“Give me thine hand. Let me feel thee.
Yea, these be sinews! It is well. I marvelled
how my Odorik should have fallen by the soft Roman
hand of yonder stripling; but thou art a worthy foe.
What made the priestling thrust himself between me
and my prey?”
“His generous love,” returned
Verronax, as Lucius flung himself on his neck, crying
“O my Verronax, why hast thou
come? The bitterness of death was past!
The gates were opening.”
Meanwhile AEmilius had reached Euric,
and had made him understand the substitution.
Old Odo knew no Latin, and it was the King, an able
orator in both tongues, who expounded all in Gothic,
showing how Lucius AEmilius had offered his life in
the stead of his friend, and how Verronax had hurried
to prevent the sacrifice, reiterating, almost in a
tone of command, the alternative of the wehrgeld.
The lites all burst into acclamations
at the nobility of the two young men, and some muttered
that they had not thought these Romans had so much
spirit.
Euric made no decision. He did
full justice to the courage and friendship of the
youths, and likewise to the fact that Odorik had provoked
the quarrel, and had been slain in fair fight; but
the choice lay with the father, and perhaps in his
heart the politic Visigoth could not regret that Arvernia
should lose a champion sure to stand up for Roman
or national claims.
Odo listened in silence, leaning on
his axe. Then he turned his face to the bystanders,
and demanded of them
“Which of them is the bolder?
Which of them flinched at my axe?”
The spectators were unanimous that
neither had blenched. The slender lad had presented
himself as resolutely as the stately warrior.
“It is well,” said Odo.
“Either way my son will be worthily avenged.
I leave the choice to you, young men.”
A brief debate ended in an appeal
to the Senator, who, in spite of all his fortitude,
could not restrain himself from groaning aloud, hiding
his face in his hands, and hoarsely saying, “Draw
lots.”
“Yes,” said Euric; “commit the judgment
to Heaven.”
It was hailed as a relief; but Lucius
stipulated that the lots should be blessed by a Catholic
priest, and Verronax muttered impatiently
“What matters it? Let
us make an end as quickly as may be!”
He had scarcely spoken when shouts
were heard, the throng made way, the circle of lites
opened, as, waving an olive branch, a wearied, exhausted
rider and horse appeared, and staggering to the foot
of the throne, there went down entirely spent, the
words being just audible, “He lives! Odorik
lives!”
It was Marcus AEmilius, covered with
dust, and at first unable to utter another word, as
he sat on the ground, supported by his brother, while
his father made haste to administer the wine handed
to him by an attendant.
“Am I in time?” he asked.
“In time, my son,” replied
his father, repeating his announcement in Gothic.
“Odorik lives!”
“He lives, he will live,”
repeated Marcus, reviving. “I came not
away till his life was secure.”
“Is it truth?” demanded
the old Goth. “Romans have slippery ways.”
Meinhard was quick to bear testimony
that no man in Arvernia doubted the word of an AEmilius;
but Marcus, taking a small dagger from his belt, held
it out, saying
“His son said that he would know this token.”
Odo felt it. “It is my
son’s knife,” he said, still cautiously;
“but it cannot speak to say how it was taken
from him.”
“The old barbarian heathen,”
quoth Verronax, under his breath; “he would
rather lose his son than his vengeance.”
Marcus had gathered breath and memory
to add, “Tell him Odorik said he would know
the token of the red-breast that nested in the winged
helm of Helgund.”
“I own the token,” said
Odo. “My son lives. He needs no
vengeance.” He turned the handle of his
axe downwards, passed it to his left hand, and stretched
the right to Verronax, saying, “Young man, thou
art brave. There is no blood feud between us.
Odo, son of Helgund, would swear friendship with
you, though ye be Romans.”
“Compensation is still due according
to the amount of the injury,” said the Senator
scrupulously. “Is it not so, O King?”
Euric assented, but Odo exclaimed
“No gold for me! When
Odo, son of Helgund, forgives, he forgives outright.
Where is my son?”
Food had by this time been brought
by the King’s order, and after swallowing a
few mouthfuls Marcus could stand and speak.
Odorik, apparently dead, had been
dragged by the Goths into the hut of the widow Dubhina
to await his father’s decision as to the burial,
and the poor woman had been sheltered by her neighbour,
Julitta, leaving the hovel deserted.
Columba, not allowing her grief and
suspense to interfere with her visits of mercy to
the poor woman, had come down as usual on the evening
of the day on which her father and her betrothed had
started on their sad journey. Groans, not likely
to be emitted by her regular patient, had startled
her, and she had found the floor occupied by the huge
figure of a young Goth, his face and hair covered
with blood from a deep wound on his head, insensible,
but his moans and the motion of his limbs betraying
life.
Knowing the bitter hatred in Claudiodunum
for everything Gothic, the brave girl would not seek
for aid nearer than the villa. Thither she despatched
her male slave, while with her old nurse she did all
in her power for the relief of the wounded man, with
no inconsiderable skill. Marcus had brought
the Greek physician of the place, but he had done
nothing but declare the patient a dead man by all
the laws of Galen and Hippocrates. However, the
skull and constitution of a vigorous young Goth, fresh
from the mountains, were tougher than could be imagined
by a member of one of the exhausted races of the Levant.
Bishop Sidonius had brought his science and sagacity
to the rescue, and under his treatment Odorik had
been restored to his senses, and was on the fair way
to recovery.
On the first gleam of hope, Marcus
had sent off a messenger, but so many of his household
and dependents were absent that he had no great choice;
so that as soon as hope had become security, he had
set forth himself; and it was well he had done so,
for he had overtaken the messenger at what was reckoned
as three days’ journey from Bordigala.
He had ridden ever since without rest, only dismounting
to change his steed, scarcely snatching even then a
morsel of food, and that morning neither he nor the
horse he rode had relaxed for a moment the desperate
speed with which he rode against time; so that he
had no cause for the shame and vexation that he felt
at his utter collapse before the barbarians.
King Euric himself declared that he wished he had
a Goth who could perform such a feat of endurance.
While Marcus slept, AEmilius and the
two young men offered their heartfelt thanks in the
Catholic church of Bordigala, and then Euric would
not be refused their presence at a great feast of
reconciliation on the following day, two of Verronax’s
speedy-footed followers having been sent off at once
to bear home tidings that his intelligence had been
in time.
The feast was served in the old proconsular
house, with the Roman paraphernalia, arranged with
the amount of correct imitation that is to be found
at an English dinner-party in the abode of an Indian
Rajah. It began with Roman etiquette, but ended
in a Gothic revel, which the sober and refined AEmilii
could hardly endure.
They were to set off on their return
early on the morrow, Meinhard and Odo with them; but
when they at length escaped from the barbarian orgies,
they had little expectation that their companions
would join them in the morning.
However, the two Goths and their followers
were on the alert as soon as they, and as cool-headed
as if they had touched no drop of wine.
Old Odo disdained a mule, and would
let no hand save his own guide his horse. Verronax
and Lucius constituted themselves his guides, and
whenever he permitted the slightest assistance, it
was always from the Arvernian, whom he seemed to regard
as a sort of adopted son.
He felt over his weapons, and told
him long stories, of which Verronax understood only
a word or two here and there, though the old man seemed
little concerned thereat. Now and then he rode
along chanting to himself an extemporary song, which
ran somewhat thus
Maids who choose the slain,
Disappointed now.
The Hawk of the Mountain,
The Wolf of the West,
Meet in fierce combat.
Sinks the bold Wolf-cub,
Folds his wing the Falcon!
Shall the soft priestling
Step before him to Valhal,
Cheating Lok’s daughter
Of weak-hearted prey?
Lo! the Wolf wakens.
Valkyr relaxes,
Waits for a battlefield,
Wolf-cub to claim.
Friendly the Falcon,
Friendly the Gray-Wolf.
So it ran on, to the great scandal
of Lucius, who longed for better knowledge of the
Gothic tongue to convince the old man of the folly
of his heathen dreams. Meinhard, who was likewise
rather shocked, explained that the father and son
had been recent arrivals, who had been baptized because
Euric required his followers to embrace his faith,
but with little real knowledge or acceptance on the
part of the father. Young Odorik had been a
far more ardent convert; and, after the fashion of
many a believer, had taken up the distinctions of
sect rather than of religion, and, zealous in the faith
he knew, had thought it incumbent on him to insult
the Catholics where they seemed to him idolatrous.
A message on the road informed the
travellers that they would find Odorik at the villa.
Thither then they went, and soon saw the whole household
on the steps in eager anticipation. A tall young
figure, with a bandage still round his fair flowing
locks, came down the steps as Verronax helped the
blind man to dismount; and Odo, with a cry of ‘My
son!’ with a ring of ecstasy in the sound, held
the youth to his breast and felt him all over.
“Are we friends?” said
Odorik, turning to Verronax, when his father released
him.
“That is as thou wiliest,”
returned the Arvernian gravely.
“Know then,” said Odorik,
“that I know that I erred. I knew not thy
Lord when I mocked thine honour to Him. Father,
we had but half learnt the Christian’s God.
I have seen it now. It was not thy blow, O
Arvernian! that taught me; but the Master who inspired
yonder youth to offer his life, and who sent the maiden
there to wait upon her foe. He is more than
man. I own in him the Eternal Creator, Redeemer,
and Lord!”
“Yea,” said Sidonius to
his friend AEmilius, “a great work hath been
wrought out. Thus hath the parable of actual
life led this zealous but half-taught youth to enter
into the higher truth. Lucius will be none the
worse priest for having trodden in the steps of Him
who was High-priest and Victim. Who may abide
strict Divine Justice, had not One stood between the
sinner and the Judge? Thus ’Mercy and
Truth have met together; Righteousness and Peace have
kissed each other.’”