How often had Marius looked forward
to that first, free wandering through Rome, to which
he now went forth with a heat in the town sunshine
(like a mist of fine gold-dust spread through the air)
to the height of his desire, making the dun coolness
of the narrow streets welcome enough at intervals.
He almost feared, descending the stair hastily, lest
some unforeseen accident should snatch the little cup
of enjoyment from him ere he passed the door.
In such morning rambles in places new to him,
life had always seemed to come at its fullest:
it was then he could feel his youth, that youth the
days of which he had already begun to count jealously,
in entire possession. So the grave, pensive
figure, a figure, be it said nevertheless, fresher
far than often came across it now, moved through the
old city towards the lodgings of Cornelius, certainly
not by the most direct course, however eager to rejoin
the friend of yesterday.
Bent as keenly on seeing as if his
first day in Rome were to be also his last, the two
friends descended along the Vicus Tuscus, with
its rows of incense-stalls, into the Via Nova, where
the fashionable people were busy shopping; and Marius
saw with much amusement the frizzled heads, then a
la mode. A glimpse of the Marmorata, the
haven at the river-side, where specimens of all the
precious marbles of the world were lying amid great
white blocks from the quarries of Luna, took his thoughts
for a moment to his distant home. They visited
the flower-market, lingering where the coronarii
pressed on them the newest species, and purchased
zinias, now in blossom (like painted flowers, thought
Marius), to decorate the folds of their togas.
Loitering to the other side of the Forum, past the
great Galen’s drug-shop, after a glance at the
announcements of new poems on sale attached to the
doorpost of a famous bookseller, they entered the curious
library of the Temple of Peace, then a favourite
resort of literary men, and read, fixed there for
all to see, the Diurnal or Gazette of the day, which
announced, together with births and deaths, prodigies
and accidents, and much mere matter of business, the
date and manner of the philosophic emperor’s
joyful return to his people; and, thereafter, with
eminent names faintly disguised, what would carry that
day’s news, in many copies, over the provinces — a
certain matter concerning the great lady, known to
be dear to him, whom he had left at home. It
was a story, with the development of which “society”
had indeed for some time past edified or amused itself,
rallying sufficiently from the panic of a year ago,
not only to welcome back its ruler, but also to relish
a chronique scandaleuse; and thus, when soon
after Marius saw the world’s wonder, he was
already acquainted with the suspicions which have
ever since hung about her name. Twelve o’clock
was come before they left the Forum, waiting in a
little crowd to hear the Accensus, according
to old custom, proclaim the hour of noonday, at the
moment when, from the steps of the Senate-house, the
sun could be seen standing between the Rostra and
the Graecostasis. He exerted for this function
a strength of voice, which confirmed in Marius a judgment
the modern visitor may share with him, that Roman
throats and Roman chests, namely, must, in some peculiar
way, be differently constructed from those of
other people. Such judgment indeed he had formed
in part the evening before, noting, as a religious
procession passed him, how much noise a man and a
boy could make, though not without a great deal of
real music, of which in truth the Romans were then
as ever passionately fond.
Hence the two friends took their way
through the Via Flaminia, almost along the line of
the modern Corso, already bordered with handsome villas,
turning presently to the left, into the Field-of-Mars,
still the playground of Rome. But the vast public
edifices were grown to be almost continuous over the
grassy expanse, represented now only by occasional
open spaces of verdure and wild-flowers. In one
of these a crowd was standing, to watch a party of
athletes stripped for exercise. Marius had been
surprised at the luxurious variety of the litters borne
through Rome, where no carriage horses were allowed;
and just then one far more sumptuous than the rest,
with dainty appointments of ivory and gold, was carried
by, all the town pressing with eagerness to get a
glimpse of its most beautiful woman, as she passed
rapidly. Yes! there, was the wonder of the world — the
empress Faustina herself: Marius could distinguish,
could distinguish clearly, the well-known profile,
between the floating purple curtains.
For indeed all Rome was ready to burst
into gaiety again, as it awaited with much real
affection, hopeful and animated, the return of its
emperor, for whose ovation various adornments were
preparing along the streets through which the imperial
procession would pass. He had left Rome just
twelve months before, amid immense gloom. The
alarm of a barbarian insurrection along the whole
line of the Danube had happened at the moment when
Rome was panic-stricken by the great pestilence.
In fifty years of peace, broken only
by that conflict in the East from which Lucius
Verus, among other curiosities, brought back the
plague, war had come to seem a merely romantic, superannuated
incident of bygone history. And now it was almost
upon Italian soil. Terrible were the reports
of the numbers and audacity of the assailants.
Aurelius, as yet untried in war, and understood by
a few only in the whole scope of a really great character,
was known to the majority of his subjects as but a
careful administrator, though a student of philosophy,
perhaps, as we say, a dilettante. But he was
also the visible centre of government, towards whom
the hearts of a whole people turned, grateful for
fifty years of public happiness — its good
genius, its “Antonine” — whose
fragile person might be foreseen speedily giving way
under the trials of military life, with a disaster
like that of the slaughter of the legions by Arminius.
Prophecies of the world’s impending conflagration
were easily credited: “the secular fire”
would descend from heaven: superstitious
fear had even demanded the sacrifice of a human victim.
Marcus Aurelius, always philosophically
considerate of the humours of other people, exercising
also that devout appreciation of every religious claim
which was one of his characteristic habits, had invoked,
in aid of the commonwealth, not only all native gods,
but all foreign deities as well, however strange. — “Help!
Help! in the ocean space!” A multitude of
foreign priests had been welcomed to Rome, with their
various peculiar religious rites. The sacrifices
made on this occasion were remembered for centuries;
and the starving poor, at least, found some satisfaction
in the flesh of those herds of “white bulls,”
which came into the city, day after day, to yield the
savour of their blood to the gods.
In spite of all this, the legions
had but followed their standards despondently.
But prestige, personal prestige, the name of “Emperor,”
still had its magic power over the nations. The
mere approach of the Roman army made an impression
on the barbarians. Aurelius and his colleague
had scarcely reached Aquileia when a deputation arrived
to ask for peace. And now the two imperial “brothers”
were returning home at leisure; were waiting, indeed,
at a villa outside the walls, till the capital had
made ready to receive them. But although Rome
was thus in genial reaction, with much relief,
and hopefulness against the winter, facing itself
industriously in damask of red and gold, those two
enemies were still unmistakably extant: the barbarian
army of the Danube was but over-awed for a season;
and the plague, as we saw when Marius was on his way
to Rome, was not to depart till it had done a large
part in the formation of the melancholy picturesque
of modern Italy — till it had made, or prepared
for the making of the Roman Campagna. The old,
unaffected, really pagan, peace or gaiety, of Antoninus
Pius — that genuine though unconscious humanist — was
gone for ever. And again and again, throughout
this day of varied observation, Marius had been reminded,
above all else, that he was not merely in “the
most religious city of the world,” as one had
said, but that Rome was become the romantic home of
the wildest superstition. Such superstition
presented itself almost as religious mania in many
an incident of his long ramble, — incidents
to which he gave his full attention, though contending
in some measure with a reluctance on the part of his
companion, the motive of which he did not understand
till long afterwards. Marius certainly did not
allow this reluctance to deter his own curiosity.
Had he not come to Rome partly under poetic vocation,
to receive all those things, the very impress of life
itself, upon the visual, the imaginative, organ, as
upon a mirror; to reflect them; to transmute them
into golden words? He must observe that
strange medley of superstition, that centuries’
growth, layer upon layer, of the curiosities of religion
(one faith jostling another out of place) at least
for its picturesque interest, and as an indifferent
outsider might, not too deeply concerned in the question
which, if any of them, was to be the survivor.
Superficially, at least, the Roman
religion, allying itself with much diplomatic economy
to possible rivals, was in possession, as a vast and
complex system of usage, intertwining itself with every
detail of public and private life, attractively enough
for those who had but “the historic temper,”
and a taste for the past, however much a Lucian might
depreciate it. Roman religion, as Marius knew,
had, indeed, been always something to be done, rather
than something to be thought, or believed, or loved;
something to be done in minutely detailed manner,
at a particular time and place, correctness in which
had long been a matter of laborious learning with
a whole school of ritualists — as also, now
and again, a matter of heroic sacrifice with certain
exceptionally devout souls, as when Caius Fabius Dorso,
with his life in his hand, succeeded in passing the
sentinels of the invading Gauls to perform a
sacrifice on the Quirinal, and, thanks to the divine
protection, had returned in safety. So jealous
was the distinction between sacred and profane, that,
in the matter of the “regarding of days,”
it had made more than half the year a holiday.
Aurelius had, indeed, ordained that there should
be no more than a hundred and thirty-five festival
days in the year; but in other respects he had followed
in the steps of his predecessor, Antoninus Pius — commended
especially for his “religion,” his conspicuous
devotion to its public ceremonies — and whose
coins are remarkable for their reference to the oldest
and most hieratic types of Roman mythology. Aurelius
had succeeded in more than healing the old feud between
philosophy and religion, displaying himself, in singular
combination, as at once the most zealous of philosophers
and the most devout of polytheists, and lending himself,
with an air of conviction, to all the pageantries of
public worship. To his pious recognition of that
one orderly spirit, which, according to the doctrine
of the Stoics, diffuses itself through the world,
and animates it — a recognition taking the
form, with him, of a constant effort towards inward
likeness thereto, in the harmonious order of his own
soul — he had added a warm personal devotion
towards the whole multitude of the old national gods,
and a great many new foreign ones besides, by him,
at least, not ignobly conceived. If the comparison
may be reverently made, there was something here of
the method by which the catholic church has added
the cultus of the saints to its worship of the
one Divine Being.
And it had been in vain that the old,
grave and discreet religion of Rome had set
itself, according to its proper genius, to prevent
or subdue all trouble and disturbance in men’s
souls. In religion, as in other matters, plebeians,
as such, had a taste for movement, for revolution;
and it had been ever in the most populous quarters
that religious changes began. To the apparatus
of foreign religion, above all, recourse had been
made in times of public disquietude or sudden terror;
and in those great religious celebrations, before his
proceeding against the barbarians, Aurelius had even
restored the solemnities of Isis, prohibited in the
capital since the time of Augustus, making no secret
of his worship of that goddess, though her temple
had been actually destroyed by authority in the reign
of Tiberius. Her singular and in many ways beautiful
ritual was now popular in Rome. And then — what
the enthusiasm of the swarming plebeian quarters had
initiated, was sure to be adopted, sooner or later,
by women of fashion. A blending of all the religions
of the ancient world had been accomplished.
The new gods had arrived, had been welcomed, and found
their places; though, certainly, with no real security,
in any adequate ideal of the divine nature itself in
the background of men’s minds, that the presence
of the new-comer should be edifying, or even refining.
High and low addressed themselves to all deities
alike without scruple; confusing them together when
they prayed, and in the old, authorised, threefold
veneration of their visible images, by flowers, incense,
and ceremonial lights — those beautiful usages,
which the church, in her way through the world, ever
making spoil of the world’s goods for the better
uses of the human spirit, took up and sanctified in
her service.
And certainly “the most religious
city in the world” took no care to veil its
devotion, however fantastic. The humblest house
had its little chapel or shrine, its image and lamp;
while almost every one seemed to exercise some religious
function and responsibility. Colleges, composed
for the most part of slaves and of the poor, provided
for the service of the Compitalian Lares — the
gods who presided, respectively, over the several
quarters of the city. In one street, Marius
witnessed an incident of the festival of the patron
deity of that neighbourhood, the way being strewn with
box, the houses tricked out gaily in such poor finery
as they possessed, while the ancient idol was borne
through it in procession, arrayed in gaudy attire
the worse for wear. Numerous religious clubs
had their stated anniversaries, on which the members
issued with much ceremony from their guild-hall, or
schola, and traversed the thoroughfares of Rome, preceded,
like the confraternities of the present day, by their
sacred banners, to offer sacrifice before some famous
image. Black with the perpetual smoke of lamps
and incense, oftenest old and ugly, perhaps
on that account the more likely to listen to the desires
of the suffering — had not those sacred effigies
sometimes given sensible tokens that they were aware?
The image of the Fortune of Women — Fortuna
Muliebris, in the Latin Way, had spoken (not once
only) and declared; Bene me, Matronae! vidistis
riteque dedicastis! The Apollo of Cumae had wept
during three whole nights and days. The images
in the temple of Juno Sospita had been seen
to sweat. Nay! there was blood — divine
blood — in the hearts of some of them:
the images in the Grove of Feronia had sweated blood!
From one and all Cornelius had turned
away: like the “atheist” of whom
Apuleius tells he had never once raised hand to lip
in passing image or sanctuary, and had parted from
Marius finally when the latter determined to enter
the crowded doorway of a temple, on their return into
the Forum, below the Palatine hill, where the mothers
were pressing in, with a multitude of every sort of
children, to touch the lightning-struck image of the
wolf-nurse of Romulus — so tender to little
ones! — just discernible in its dark shrine,
amid a blaze of lights. Marius gazed after his
companion of the day, as he mounted the steps to his
lodging, singing to himself, as it seemed. Marius
failed precisely to catch the words.
And, as the rich, fresh evening came
on, there was heard all over Rome, far above a whisper,
the whole town seeming hushed to catch it distinctly,
the lively, reckless call to “play,” from
the sons and daughters of foolishness, to those in
whom their life was still green — Donec
virenti canities abest! — Donec
virenti canities abest!+ Marius could hardly
doubt how Cornelius would have taken the call.
And as for himself, slight as was the burden of positive
moral obligation with which he had entered Rome, it
was to no wasteful and vagrant affections, such as
these, that his Epicureanism had committed him.