A Roman father of the olden
time.
Ms. Play.
In a small street, not far from the
Sacred Way and the Roman Forum, there was a large
house, occupying the whole of one insula, as
the space contained between four intersecting streets
was called by the ancients.
But, although by its great size and
a certain rude magnificence, arising from the massy
stone-work of its walls, and the solemn antiquity of
the old Oscan columns which adorned its entrance,
it might be recognised at once as the abode of some
Patrician family; it was as different in many respects
from the abodes of the aristocracy of that day, as
if it had been erected in a different age and country.
It had no stately colonnades of foreign
marbles, no tesselated pavement to the vestibule,
no glowing frescoes on the walls, no long lines of
exterior windows, glittering with the new luxury of
glass. All was decorous, it is true; but all,
at the same time, was stern, and grave, and singular
for its antique simplicity.
On either hand of the entrance, there
was, in accordance with the custom of centuries long
past, when Rome's Consulars were tillers of
the ground, a large shop with an open front, devoted
to the sale of the produce of the owner's farm.
And, strange to say, although the custom had been long
disused in these degenerate times, it seemed that the
owner of this time-honored mansion adhered sturdily
to the ancient usage of his race.
For, in one of these large cold unadorned
vaults, a tall grayheaded slave, a rural laborer,
as it required no second glance to perceive, was presiding
over piles of cheese, stone-jars of honey, baskets
of autumn fruits, and sacks of grain, by the red light
of a large smoky flambeau; while a younger man, who
from his resemblance to the other might safely be
pronounced his son, was keeping an account of the sales
by a somewhat complicated system of tallies.
In the other apartment, two youths,
slaves likewise from the suburban or rustic farm,
were giving samples, to such as wished to buy, of different
qualities of wine from several amphora or earthen pitchers,
which stood on a stone counter forming the sill of
the low-browed window.
It was late in the evening already,
and the streets were rapidly growing dark; yet there
were many passengers abroad, more perhaps than was
usual at that hour; and now and then, a little group
would form about one or the other of the windows,
cheapening and purchasing provisions, and chatting
for a few minutes, after their business was finished,
with their gossips.
These groups were composed altogether
of the lowest order of the free citizens of Rome,
artizans, and small shop keepers, and here and there
a woman of low origin, or perhaps a slave, the house
steward of some noble family, mingling half reluctantly
with his superiors. For the time had not arrived,
when the soft eunuchs of the East, and the bold bravoes
of the heroic North, favorites and tools of some licentious
lord, dared to insult the freeborn men of Rome, or
gloried in the badges of their servitude.
The conversation ran, as it was natural
to expect, on the probable results of the next day's
election; and it was a little remarkable, that among
these, who should have been the supporters of the democratic
faction, there appeared to be far more of alarm and
of suspicion, concerning the objects of Catiline,
than of enthusiasm for the popular cause.
“He a man of the people, or
the people's friend!” said an old grave-looking
mechanic; “No, by the Gods! no more than the
wolf is the friend of the sheepfold!”
“He may hate the nobles,”
said another, “or envy the great rich houses;
but he loves nothing of the people, unless it be their
purses, if he can get a chance to squeeze them
“Or their daughters,”
interrupted a third, “if they be fair and willing
“Little cares he for their good-will,”
cried yet a fourth, “so they are young and handsome.
It is but eight days since, that some of his gang
carried off Marcus', the butcher's, bride, Icilia,
on the night of her bridal. They kept her three
days; and on the fourth sent her home dishonored,
with a scroll, 'that she was now a fit wife
for a butcher'!”
“By the Gods!” exclaimed
one or two of the younger men, “who was it did
this thing?”
“One of the people's friends!”
answered the other, with a sneer.
“The people have no friends,
since Caius Marius died,” said the deep voice
of Fulvius Flaccus, as he passed casually through the
crowd.
“But what befel the poor Icilia?”
asked an old matron, who had been listening with greedy
sympathy to the dark tale.
“Why, Marcus would yet have
taken her to his bosom, seeing she had no share in
the guilt; but she bore a heart too Roman to bring
disgrace upon one she loved, or to survive her honor.
Icilia is no longer.”
“She died like Lucretia!”
said an old man, who stood near, with a clouded brow,
which flashed into stormy light, as the same deep voice
asked aloud,
“Shall she be so avenged?”
But the transient gleam faded instantly
away, and the sad face was again blank and rayless,
as he replied
“No for who should avenge her?”
“The people! the people!”
shouted several voices, for the mob was gathering,
and growing angry
“The Roman People should avenge her!”
“Tush!” answered Fulvius Flaccus.
“There is no Roman people!”
“And who are you,” exclaimed
two or three of the younger men, “that dare
tell us so?”
“The grandson,” answered
the republican, “of one, who, while there yet
was a people, loved it
“His name? his name?” shouted many voices.
“He hath no name replied Fulvius. “He
lost that, and his life together.”
“Lost them for the people?”
inquired the old man, whom he had first addressed,
and who had been scrutinizing him narrowly.
“And by the people,”
answered the other. “For the people's
cause; and by the people's treason! as is the
case,” he added, half scornfully, half sadly,
“with all who love the people.”
“Hear him, my countrymen,”
said the old man. “Hear him. If there
be any one can save you, it is he. It is Fulvius,
the son of Caius, the son of Marcus Flaccus.
Hear him, I say, if he will only lead you.”
“Lead us! speak to us! lead
us!” shouted the fickle crowd. “Love
us, good Fulvius, as your fathers did of old.”
“And die, for you, as they died!”
replied the other, in a tone of melancholy sarcasm.
“Hark you, my masters,” he added, “there
are none now against whom to lead you; and if there
were, I think there would be none to follow.
Keep your palms unsoiled by the base bribes of the
nobles! Keep your ears closed to the base lies
of the demagogues! Keep your hearts true and
honest! Keep your eyes open and watchful!
Brawl not, one with the other; but be faithful, as
brethren should. Be grave, laborious, sober,
and above all things humble, as men who once were free
and great, and now, by their own fault, are fallen
and degraded. Make yourselves fit to be led gloriously;
and, when the time shall come, there will be no lack
of glorious leaders!”
“But to-morrow? what shall we
do to-morrow?” cried several voices; but this
time it was the elder men, who asked the question,
“for whom shall we vote to-morrow?”
“For the friend of the people!” answered
Flaccus.
“Where shall we find him?” was the cry;
“who is the friend of the people?”
“Not he who would arm them,
one against the other,” he replied. “Not
he, who would burn their workshops, and destroy their
means of daily sustenance! Not he, by all the
Gods! who sports with the honor of their wives, the
virtue
But he was interrupted here, by a
stern sullen hum among his audience, increasing gradually
to a fierce savage outcry. The mob swayed to and
fro; and it was evident that something was occurring
in the midst, by which it was tremendously excited.
Breaking off suddenly in his speech,
the democrat leaped on a large block of stone, standing
at the corner of the large house in front of which
the multitude was gathered, and looked out anxiously,
if he might descry the cause of the tumult.
Nor was it long ere he succeeded.
A young man, tall and of a slender
frame, with features singularly handsome, was making
his way, as best he could, with unsteady steps, and
a face haggard and pale with debauchery, through the
tumultuous and angry concourse.
His head, which had no other covering
than its long curled and perfumed locks, was crowned
with a myrtle wreath; he wore a long loose saffron-colored
tunic richly embroidered, but ungirt, and flowing nearly
to his ankles; and from the dress, and the torch-bearers,
who preceded him, as well as from his wild eye and
reeling gait, it was evident that he was returning
from some riotous banquet.
Fulvius instantly recognised him.
It was a kinsman of his own, Aulus, the son of Aulus
Fulvius, the noblest of the survivors of his house,
a senator of the old school, a man of stern and rigid
virtue, the owner of that grand simple mansion, beside
the door of which he stood.
But, though he recognised his cousin,
he was at a loss for a while to discover the cause
of the tumult; 'till, suddenly, a word, a female
name, angrily murmured through the crowd, gave a clue
to its meaning.
“Icilia! Icilia!”
Still, though the crowd swayed to
and fro, and jostled, and shouted, becoming evidently
more angry every moment, it made way for the young
noble, who advanced fearlessly, with a sort of calm
and scornful insolence, contemning the rage which
his own vile deed had awakened.
At length one of the mob, bolder than
the rest, thrust himself in between the torch bearers
and their lord, and meeting the latter face to face,
cried out, so that all the crowd might hear,
“Lo! Aulus Fulvius! the
violator of Icilia! the friend of the people!”
A loud roar of savage laughter followed;
and then, encouraged by the applause of his fellows,
the man added,
“Vote for Aulus Fulvius, the
friend of the people! vote for good Aulus, and his
virtuous friend Catiline!”
The hot blood flashed to the brow
of the young noble, at the undisguised scorn of the
plebeian's speech. Insolence he could have borne,
but contempt! and contempt from a plebeian!
He raised his hand; and slight and
unmuscular as he appeared, indignation lent such vigor
to that effeminate arm, that the blow which he dealt
him on the face, cast the burly mechanic headlong,
with the blood spouting from his mouth and nostrils.
A fearful roar of the mob, and a furious
rush against the oppressor, followed.
The torch-bearers fought for their
master gallantly, with their tough oaken staves; and
the young man showed his patrician blood by his patrician
courage in the fray. Flaccus, too, wished and
endeavored to interpose, not so much that he cared
to shield his unworthy kinsman, as that he sought
to preserve the energies of the people for a more noble
trial. The multitude, moreover, impeded one another
by their own violent impetuosity; and to this it was
owing, more than to the defence of his followers,
or the intercession of the popular Flaccus, that the
young libertine was not torn to pieces, on the threshold
of his own father's house.
The matter, however, was growing very
serious stones, staves, and torches flew fast through
the air the crash of windows in the neighboring houses
was answered by the roar of the increasing mob, and
every thing seemed to portend a very dangerous tumult;
when, at the same moment, the door of the Fulvian
House was thrown open, and the high-crested helmets
of a cohort were seen approaching, in a serried line,
above the bare heads of the multitude.
Order was restored very rapidly; for
a pacific party had been rallying around Fulvius Flaccus,
and their efforts, added to the advance of the levelled
pila of the cohort, were almost instantly successful.
Nor did the sight, which was presented
by the opening door of the Fulvian mansion, lack its
peculiar influence on the people.
An old man issued forth, alone, from the unfolded
portals.
He was indeed extremely old; with
hair as white as snow, and a long venerable beard
falling in waves of silver far down upon his chest.
Yet his eyebrows were black as night, and these, with
the proud arch of his Roman nose, and the glance of
his eagle eyes, untamed by time or hardship, almost
denied the inference drawn from the white head and
reverend chin.
His frame, which must once have been
unusually powerful and athletic, was now lean and
emaciated; yet he held himself erect as a centennial
pine on Mount Algidus, and stood as firmly on
his threshold, looking down on the tumultuous concourse,
which waved and fluctuated, like the smaller trees
of the mountain side, beneath him.
His dress was of the plain and narrow
cut, peculiar to the good olden time; yet it had the
distinctive marks of the senatorial rank.
It was the virtuous, severe, old senator the
noblest, alas! soon to be the last, of his noble race.
“What means this tumult?”
he said in a deep firm sonorous voice, “Wherefore
is it, that ye shout thus, and hurl stones about a
friendly door! For shame! for shame! What
is it that ye lack? Bread? Ye have had it
ever at my hands, without seeking it thus rudely.”
“It is not bread, most noble
Aulus, that we would have,” cried the old man,
who had made himself somewhat conspicuous before, “but
vengeance!”
“Vengeance, on whom, and for
what?” exclaimed the noble Roman.
But ere his question could be answered,
the crowd opened before him, and his son stood revealed,
sobered indeed by the danger he had run, but pale,
haggard, bleeding, covered with mud and filth, and
supported by one of his wounded slaves.
“Ah!” cried the old man,
starting back aghast, “What is this? What
fresh crime? What recent infamy? What new
pollution of our name?”
“Icilia! Icilia! vengeance
for poor Icilia!” cried the mob once again; but
they now made no effort to inflict the punishment,
for which they clamored; so perfect was their confidence
in the old man's justice, even against his own flesh
and blood.
At the next moment a voice was heard,
loud and clear as a silver trumpet, calling upon the
people to disperse.
It was the voice of Paullus, who now
strode into the gap, left by the opening concourse,
glittering in the full panoply of a decurion of the
horse, thirty dismounted troopers arranging themselves
in a glittering line behind him.
At the sight of the soldiery, led
by one whose face was familiar to him, the audacity
of the young man revived; and turning round with a
light laugh toward Arvina,
“Here is a precious coil,”
he said, “my Paullus, about a poor plebeian
harlot!”
“I never heard that Icilia was
such,” replied the young soldier sternly, for
the dark tale was but too well known; “nor must
you look to me, Aulus Fulvius, for countenance in
deeds like these, although it be my duty to protect
you from violence! Come my friends,” he
continued, turning to the multitude, “You must
disperse, at once, to your several homes; if any have
been wronged by this man, he can have justice at the
tribunal of the Praetor! But there must be no
violence!”
“Is this thing true, Aulus?”
asked the old man, in tones so stern and solemn, that
the youth hung his head and was silent.
“Is this thing true?” the Senator repeated.
“Why, hath he not confessed
it?” asked the old man, who had spoken so many
times before; and who had lingered with Fulvius Flaccus,
and a few others of the crowd. “It is true.”
“Who art thou?” asked
the old Patrician, a terrible suspicion crossing his
mind.
“The father of that daughter,
whom thy son forcibly dishonored!”
“Enter!” replied the senator,
throwing the door, in front of which he stood, wide
open, “thou shalt have justice!”
Then, casting a glance full of sad
but resolute determination upon the culprit, all whose
audacity had passed away, he said in a graver tone,
“Enter thou likewise; thou shalt have punishment!”
“Punishment!” answered
the proud youth, his eye flashing, “Punishment!
and from whom?”
“Punishment from thy father!
wilt thou question it? Punishment, even unto
death, if thou shalt be found worthy to die! the
law is not dead, if it have slept awhile! Enter!”
He dared not to reply he dared not
to refuse. Slow, sullen, and crest-fallen, he
crossed his father's threshhold; but, as he did so,
he glared terribly on Paullus, and shook his hand
at him, and cried in tones of deadly hatred,
“This is thy doing! curses curses
upon thee! thou shalt rue it!”
Arvina smiled in calm contempt of his impotent resentment.
The culprit, the accuser, and the
judge passed inward; the door closed heavily behind
them; the crowd dispersed; the soldiery marched onward;
and the street, in front of the Fulvian House, was
left dark and silent.
An hour perhaps had passed, when the
door was again opened, and the aged plebeian, Icilia's
father, issued into the dark street.
“Scourged!” he cried,
with a wild triumphant laugh, “Scourged, like
a slave, at his own father's bidding! Rejoice,
exult, Icilia! thy shame is half avenged!”