At least we'll die with harness
on our back.
MACBETH.
It was indeed time that the last arrangements
of the traitor were completed; for, long since, from
the gates of the Consular camp the great army of the
enemy had been filing out, and falling into order,
not a mile distant.
One third, at least, superior to the
rebel host in numbers, the loyal soldiers were as
high in spirit, as firm in resolution; were better
armed, better officered, and, above all, strong in
a better cause.
Nor if those had the incentive of
despair to spur them to great deeds, did these lack
a yet stronger stimulus to action. There were
bright eyes, and fair forms in their camp, dependent
on their victory for life, and, yet dearer, honor.
So great was the terror spread through those regions
by the name of Catiline, and by the outrages committed
already by his barbarous banditti, that all the female
nobility of the provinces, wherein the war was waging,
had fled to the Roman camp, as to their only place
of safety.
For all that district was ripe for
insurrection; the borough towns awaited only the first
sunshine of success, to join the rebellion; the rural
slaves were, to a man, false at heart; and it was evident
to all that the slightest check of the Consular forces
would be the signal for tumult, massacre, and conflagration
in the provincial towns, for all the horrors of a
servile rising in the champaign.
Flight to Rome was impossible, since
all the villainy and desperate crime of the land was
afloat, and every where, beyond the outposts of Antonius'
head quarters, the roads were infested with banditti,
runaway slaves, and rustic robbers.
To the camp, therefore, had all the
patricians of the district flocked, the men as volunteers,
with such of their clients as they could trust, and
such of their wealth as was portable; the women as
suppliants, tearful and terrified, for Rome's powerful
protection.
Meanwhile, for leagues around, by
day the open country was seen blackened by numberless
columns of smoke, by night flashing with numberless
pyres of flame, the blaze of country seats and villas;
and terror was on all sides, murder and rape, havoc
and desolation.
The minds of the Roman soldiery were
inflamed, therefore, to the utmost; the sight of the
ravaged country, the charms, the tears, the terrors
of the suppliant ladies, had kindled all that was
patriotic, all that was generous, all that was manly
in their nature; and it was with deep-recorded vows
of vengeance that they had buckled on their armor,
and grinded their thirsty swords for the conflict.
But throughout all that ardent host
there was not one so determined, so calm in his resolved
ire, so deadly bent on vengeance, as Paullus Arvina.
Julia was in the camp; for no means
had occurred of sending her to Rome in safety, and
her high counsels, her noble feminine courage, would
have given birth alone to contagious valor in her
lover's spirit, had he been weak and faltering as
of old between his principles and his passions.
But it was not so. The stern
trials to which his constancy had been subjected,
the fearful strife of the hottest passions which had
raged so long in his bosom, had hardened him like
steel thrice tempered in the furnace, and he was now
no longer the impulsive, enthusiastic, changeful stripling,
in whom to-day's imagination swept away yesterday's
resolve, but a cool, resolute, thoughtful man.
It is events, not years, which make
men old or young. It is adversity and trial,
not ease and prosperity, which make men, from dwarfs,
giants.
And events had so crowded on the boy
in the last few months, that those months had matured
his wisdom more than all the years of his previous
life. Adversity and trial had so swelled his mental
stature, that aged men might have been proud to cope
with him in counsel, strong men to rival him in execution.
The sun was already high in heaven,
when the cavalry of the seventh legion, which had
been selected to act as the general's escort, in
addition to the Praetorian cohort of infantry, swept
forth from the gates, following Petreius, who, although
holding the second rank only in the army, was actually
in command; Antonius, on the pretext of a fit of the
gout, having declined to lead that day.
The men were already marshalled at
the base of the ascent, leading to the narrow plain
on which, as in the amphitheatre, the fight was to
be fought out hand to hand, with little room for generalship,
or intricate manoeuvring, but every opportunity for
the display of mortal strength and desperate gallantry.
Here they had halted, on the verge
of the broken ground, awaiting the arrival of their
general in chief to reform their array, and complete
their preparations, before advancing to the attack.
The lines of the enemy were concealed
from them by the abrupt acclivity, and the level space
on the top of the plateau, which intervened between
the hosts; and it seemed probable that an officer of
Catiline's intuitive eye and rapid resource, would
not fail to profit by the difficulties of the ground,
in order to assail the consular troops while struggling
among the rocks and thickets which encumbered the
ascent. It behoved, therefore, to hold the men
well in hand, to fortify the heads of the advancing
columns with the best soldiers, and to be ready with
reinforcements at all points; and to this end Petreius
had ordered a brief halt, before attacking.
So eager were the spirits of the men,
however, and so hot for the encounter, that they were
murmuring already almost angrily, and calling on their
centurions and tribunes to lead them at once to
the shock.
The fierce acclamations of the
rebels, consequent on the address of Catiline, had
kindled not daunted the brave indignation which possessed
them; and stung, as it were, by some personal insult,
each soldier of the array burned to be at it.
So stood the case, when, escorted
by the magnificent array of the legionary horse, Petreius
gallopped through the ranks. A military man, by
habit as by nature, who had served for more than thirty
years as tribune, praefect of allies, commander of
a legion, and lastly praetor, all with exceeding great
distinction, he knew nearly all the men in his ranks
by sight, was acquainted with their services and honors,
had led them oftentimes to glory, and was their especial
favorite.
He made no set speech, therefore,
to his legions, but as he gallopped through the lines
called to this man or that by name, bidding him recollect
this skirmish, or think upon that storm, fight, as
he did in this pitched battle, or win a civic crown
as in that sally, and finally shouted to them all
in a high voice, entreating them to remember that they
were Roman soldiers, fighting against a rabble of unarmed
banditti, for their country, their wives, their children,
their hearths and their altars.
One full-mouthed shout replied to his brief address.
“Lead on! Petreius, we will conquer!”
He waved his hand toward the trumpeters,
and nodded his high crested helmet; and instant there
pealed forth that thrilling brazen clangor, “that
bids the Romans close.”
Nor less sonorously did the war music
of the rebels make reply, ringing among the hills
their bold defiance.
Then onward rolled that bright array,
with a long steady sweep, like that of an unbroken
line of billows rushing in grand and majestical upon
some sandy cape.
In vain did the sinuosities of the
broken ground, in vain did crag and thicket, ravine
and torrents' bed impede their passage; closing their files or serrying them, as
the nature of the ascent required, now wheeling into solid column, deploying now
into extended line, still they rolled onward, unchecked, irresistible
A long array of helmets bright,
A long array of spears.
The glorious eagles glittered above
them in the unclouded sunshine, the proud initials,
which had gleamed from their crimson banners over one
half the world, shone out conspicuous, SPQR,
as the broad folds streamed to their length upon the
frosty air.
A solitary trumpet spoke at times,
to order their slow terrible advance; there was no
hum of voices, no shout, no confusion; only the solemn
and continuous tramp of their majestic march, shaking
the earth like an incessant roll of thunder only
the clang of their brazen harness, as buckler clashed
with buckler.
All the stern discipline, all the
composed and orderly manœuvres, all the cold steadiness
of modern war was there, combined with all the gorgeousness
and glitter of the chivalric ages.
Contrary to all expectation, no opposition
met them as they scaled that abrupt hill side.
Fearful of exposing his flanks, Catiline wisely held
his men back, collecting all their energies for the
dread onset.
In superb order, regular and even,
Petreius' infantry advanced upon the plateau, their
solid front filling the whole space with a mass of
brazen bucklers, ten deep, and thrice ten hundred
wide, without an interval, or break, or bend in that
vast line.
Behind these came the cavalry, about
a thousand strong, and the Praetorian cohort, with
the general in person, forming a powerful reserve,
whereby he proposed to decide the day, so soon as
the traitors should be shaken by his first onset.
Once more the line was halted; once
more Petreius gallopped to the van; and passed from
left to right across the front, reconnoitering the
dispositions of the enemy. Then taking post, at
the right, he unsheathed his broadsword, and waved
it slowly in the air, pointing to the impassive ranks
of Catiline.
Then the shrill trumpets flourished
once again, and the dense mass bore onward, steady
and slow, the enemy still motionless and silent, until
scarce sixty yards intervened between the steadfast
ranks, and every man might distinguish the features
and expression of his personal antagonist.
There was a pause. No word was
given. No halt ordered. But intuitively,
as if by instinct, every man stopped, and drew a deep
breath, unconscious that he did so, collecting himself
for the dread struggle.
The point was reached, from which
it was customary to hurl the tremendous volley of
ponderous steel-headed pila, which invariably
preceded the sword charge of the legions, and for
the most part threw the first rank of the enemy into
confusion, and left them an easy conquest to the short
stabbing sword, and sturdy buckler.
But now not a javelin was raised on
either side the long stern swell of the trumpets,
ordering the charge, was drowned by a deep solemn shout,
which pealed wilder and higher yet into a terrible
soul-stirring cheer; and casting down their heavy
missiles, both fronts rushed forward simultaneously,
with their stout shields advanced, and their short
broadswords levelled to the charge.
From flank to flank, they met simultaneous,
with a roar louder than that of the most deafening
thunder, a shock that made the earth tremble, the
banners flap upon their staves, the streams stand still,
as if an earthquake had reeled under them.
Then rose the clang of blades on helm
and buckler, clear, keen, incessant; and charging
shouts and dying cries, and patriotic acclamations,
and mad blasphemies; and ever and anon the piercing
clangor of the screaming brass, lending fresh frenzy
to the frantic tumult.
From right to left, the plain was
one vast arena full of single combats the whole
first ranks on both sides had gone down at the first
shock; the second and the third had come successively
to hand to hand encounter; and still, as each man
fell, stabbed to death by the pitiless sword, another
leaped into his place; and still the lines, though
bent on each side and waving like a bow, were steadfast
and unbroken; and still the clang of brazen bucklers
and steel blades rang to the skies, rendering all
commands, all words, inaudible.
Officers fought like privates; skirmishers,
hand to hand, like legionaries. Blood flowed
like water; and so fierce was the hatred of the combatants,
so deadly the nature of the tremendous stabbing broadswords
of the Romans, that few wounds were inflicted, and
few men went down 'till they were slain outright.
The dust stood in a solid mass over
the reeling lines; nor could the wind, though it blew
freshly, disperse the dense wreaths, so constantly
did they surge upward from the trampling feet of those
inveterate gladiators. At times, the waving of
a banner would be seen, at times a gleamy brazen radiance,
as some rank wheeled forward, or was forced back in
some desperate charge; but, for the most part, all
was dim and dark, and the battle still hung balanced.
Wherever the fight was the fiercest,
there rang the warshout “Catiline! Catiline!”
to the darkened skies; and there ever would the Roman
army waver, so furiously did he set on with his best
soldiers, still bringing up reserves to the weakest
points of his army, still stabbing down the fiercest
of the consular host, fearless, unwearied, and unwounded.
But his reserves were now all engaged,
and not one point of the Roman line was broken; Manlius
had fallen in the front rank, playing a captain's
and a soldier's part. The Florentine had fallen
in the front rank, battling with gallantry worthy
a better cause. All the most valiant officers,
all the best veterans had fallen, in the first rank,
all with their faces to the foe, all with their wounds
in front, all lying on the spot which they had held
living, grim-visaged, and still terrible in death.
“Paullus Arvina!” exclaimed
Petreius, at this juncture, after having observed
the equal strife long and intently, and having discerned
with the eagle eye of a general's instinct what
had escaped all those around him, that Catiline's
last reserves were engaged. “The time is
come; ride to the tribune of the horse, and bid him
dismount his men. Horse cannot charge here! command
the tribune of the Praetorian cohort to advance!
We will strike full at the centre!”
“I go, Petreius!” and
bowing his head, till his crimson crest mingled with
his charger's mane, he spurred furiously to the rear,
and had delivered his message and returned, while
the shouts, with which the reserve had greeted the
command to charge, were yet ringing in the air.
When he returned, the general had
dismounted, and one of his freedmen was unbuckling
the spurs from his steel greaves. His sword was
out, and it was evident that he was about to lead
the last onset in person.
A boon, noble Petreius! cried the youth, leaping from his horse By all
the Gods! By all your hopes of glory! grant me
one boon, Petreius.”
Ha! what? returned the general quickly Speak out, be brief what boon?”
“Be it mine to head the charge!”
“Art thou so greedy of fame, boy; or so athirst
to die!”
“So greedy of Revenge, Petreius.
I have a vow in Heaven, and in Hell, to slay that
parricide. If he should die by any hand but mine,
I am forsworn and infamous!”
“Thou, boy, and to slay Catiline!”
“Even I, Petreius.”
“Thou art mad to say it.”
“Not mad, not mad, indeed, Petreius .”
“He will slay him, Petreius,” cried
an old veteran of Arvina's troop.
“The Gods thundered when he swore it. We
all heard it. Grant his prayer,
General; we will back him to the death. But be
sure, he will slay him.”
“Be it so,” said Petreius,
struck despite himself by the confidence of the youth,
and the conviction of the veterans. “Be
it so, if ye will. But, remember, when we have
broken through the centre, wheel to the right with
the dismounted horse the Praetorians must charge
to the left. Ho! we are all in line. Forward!
Ho! Victory, and Rome!
And with the word, he rushed forward,
himself a spear's length in front of his best men,
who, with a long triumphant shout, dashed after him.
Passing right through the wearied
troops, who had sustained the shock and brunt of the
whole day, and who now opened their ranks gladly to
admit the reinforcement, these fresh and splendid
soldiers fell like a thunderbolt upon the centre of
Catiline's army, weakened already by the loss of
its best men; and clove their way clean through it,
solid and unbroken, trampling the dead and dying under
foot, and hurling a small body of the rebels, still
combating in desperation, into the trenches of their
camp, wherein they perished to a man refusing to surrender,
and undaunted.
Then, wheeling to the left and right,
they fell on the naked flanks of the reeling and disordered
mass, while the troops whom they had relieved, re-forming
themselves rapidly, pressed forward with tremendous
shouts of victory, eager to share the triumph which
their invincible steadiness had done so much to win.
It was a battle no longer; but a route;
but a carnage. Yet still not one of the rebels
turned to fly; not one laid down his arms, or cried
for quarter.
Broken, pierced through, surrounded,
overwhelmed by numbers, they fought in single lines,
in scattered groups, in twos or threes, back to back,
intrepid to the last, and giving mortal wounds in their
extreme agony.
More of the consular troops fell,
after the field was won, than during all the previous
combat. No lances, no long weapons, no missiles
were at hand, wherewith to overwhelm the desperadoes;
no horse wherewith to tread them under foot; hand
to hand, man to man, it was fought out, with those
short stabbing blades, against which the stoutest
corslet was but as parchment, the hardest shield of
brass-bound bull's hide, but as a stripling's wicker
target.
Still in the front, abreast still
with the bravest veterans shouting himself hoarse
with cries of “To me! to me, Catiline, to me,
Paul Arvina!” The young man had gone through
the whole of that dreadful melee; striking down a
man at every blow, and filling the soldiers' mouths
with wonder at the boy's exploits he had gone
through it all, without a scratch, unwounded.
More than once had his mortal enemy
been almost within arm's length of him; their eyes
had glared mutual hatred on each other, their blades
had crossed once, but still the throng and rush of
combatants and flyers had forced them asunder; and
now the strife was almost ended, the tide of slaughter
had receded toward the rebel camp, the ramparts of
which the legionaries were already storming.
Weary and out of breath and disappointed,
Paullus Arvina halted alone, among piles of the dying
and the dead, with groans and imprecations in his
ears, and bitterness and vexation at his heart.
His comrades had rushed away on the
track of the retreating rebels; and their shouts,
as they stormed the palisades, reached him, but failed
to awake any respondent note of triumph in his spirit.
He had no share in the vulgar victory,
he cared not to strike down and slaughter the commoners
of the rebellion. Catiline was the quarry at which
he flew, and with no game less noble could he rest
contented. Catiline, it would seem, had escaped
him for the moment; and he stood leaning on his red
sword, doubtful.
Instinctively he felt assured that
his enemy had not retreated. Almost he feared
that his death had crowned some other hand with glory.
When suddenly, a mighty clatter arose
in the rear, toward the Roman camp, and turning swiftly
toward the sound, he perceived a desperate knot of
rebels still charging frantically onward, although
surrounded by thrice their numbers of inveterate and
ruthless victors.
“By the Gods! he is there!”
and with the speed of the hunted deer, he rushed toward
the spot, bounding in desperate haste over the dying
and the dead, blaspheming or unconscious.
He reached the meleè. He dashed
headlong into the thick of it. The Romans were
giving way before the fury of a gory madman, as he
seemed, who bore down all that met him at the sword's
point.
“Catiline! Catiline!”
and at the cry, the boldest of the consular army recoiled.
“Ho! Romans! Ho! who will slay Sergius
Catiline? Ho! Romans! Ho! His
head is worth the winning! Who will slay Sergius
Catiline?”
And, still at every shout, he struck
down, and stabbed, and maimed, and trampled, even
amid defeat and ruin victorious, unsubdued, a terror
to his victors.
“Who will slay Sergius Catiline?”
And, as Arvina rushed upon the scene,
the veteran who had so confidently announced his coming
triumph, crossed swords with the traitor, and went
down in a moment, stabbed a full span deep in his thigh.
“Ho! Romans! Ho! who will slay Sergius
Catiline?
“Paullus Arvina! cried the
youth, springing forward, and dealing him with the
word a downright blow upon the head, which cleft his
massive casque asunder.
“I will! I, even I, Paullus Arvina!
But he shouted too soon; and soon
rued the imprudence of raising his arm to strike,
when at sword's point with such a soldier.
As his own blow fell on the casque
of the traitor, his shortened blade, aimed
with a deadly thrust tore through the sturdy shield,
tore through the strong cuirass, and pierced his side
with a ghastly wound.
Arvina staggered he thought he had
received his death blow; and had not the blade of
Catiline, bent by the violence of his own effort, stuck
in the cloven shield, resisting every attempt to withdraw
it, the next blow must have found him unprepared,
must have destroyed him.
But ere the desperado could recover
his weapon, Arvina rallied and closed with him, grasping
him by the throat, and shouting “Lucia!
Vengeance!
Brave as he was and strong, not for
a single moment could Arvina have maintained that
death-grapple, had his foe been unwounded.
But the arch traitor was bleeding
at every pore; gashed in every limb of his body; he
had received three mortal wounds already; he was fast
failing when Arvina grappled him, and at the name
of his injured child, his conscience conquered.
His sword at length came away, extricated when too
late from the tough bull-hide; but, ere he could nerve
his arm to strike again, Arvina's point had torn
his thigh, had gored his breast, had pierced his naked
throat, with three wounds, the least of them mortal.
But even in that agony he struck home!
He could not even curse, but he struck home, and a
fierce joyous smile illuminated his wan face, as he
saw his slayer stumble forward, and fall beside him
on the bloody greensward.
In a moment, however, Paullus rallied,
recovered his feet, drew from his bosom the long black
ringlet of poor Lucia, and bathed it in the life blood
of her slayer.
“Lucia! Ho! Lucia!
Rejoice! my vow, my vow is kept! Thou art avenged,
avenged! Ah! Lucia! Julia!
And he fell sick and swooning upon
the yet living bleeding body of his mortal foeman.