READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
BOOK I - THE VISIGOTHIC INVASIONCHAPTER XIII.HONORIUS, STILICHO, ALARIC
By the death of Theodosius a division, which proved to
be practically a final division, was made between the Eastern and Western
halves of the Roman Empire, and Honorius, a boy eleven years of age, began to
rule over its Western portion.
Britain, Gaul, Spain, the south-west corner of
Germany, the western half of the province of Illyricum (comprising Austria west
of the Danube, and Dalmatia), Italy, and the African shore of the Mediterranean
as far east as Tripoli, were all included in the dominions of the young
monarch. The whole of this territory, except the northern part of the British
province, was still virtually untouched by barbarian invasion. It was the
Eastern half of the Empire which had suffered the dangerous aneurism of the Gothic
settlement south of the Danube, and which had seen the provinces of Thrace and
Macedon, so near to its capital, harried by the yearly incursions of the
barbarians: it was the East which, could a prophet have arisen to announce the
impending ruin of one half of the Empire, would have seemed likely to fall the
first sacrifice. But the marvelous foresight of Constantine, instructed by the
difficulties of his own campaign against Licinius, had led him to root his
dynasty in a stronghold which, for the space of nine centuries, was to defz
external assault, and that city, the offspring of Imperial Christianity,
cherished with grateful devotion the powers to which it owed its being. Old
Rome, on the other hand, unfavourably situated for defence, and penetrated with
memories of Republican freedom and Pagan art, visited only at distant intervals
by the Emperors, was sinking into a state of sullen isolation, fearing the ruin
of the state, yet almost prepared to view with indifference the ruin of the
Caesar.
Simultaneously with this renewed division of the Roman
Empire a new generation of men, and one destined to witness and to share in
mighty revolutions, appeared on the scene. Theodosius is gone. Most of the
counsellors and warriors who stood round his throne have disappeared, some
having perished in civil war and some having fallen victims to the intrigues of
their adversaries. Ambrose, though not in advanced old age, has but two years
more to live, and takes no more a conspicuous part in public affairs. The three
persons with whom for the next decade and a half we have chiefly to deal are
those whose names appear at the head of this chapter—Honorius, Stilicho,
Alaric.
We begin with ‘Our Master, the Eternal and
ever-Ausgust Honorius.’ What was the character and appearance of the lad who
from his palace at Milan issued his edicts to the Western world? Hear first the
courtly Claudian:—
Thee from the fair first dawning of thy life
A palace nurtured; in triumphal strife
A camp, bright with the flashing swords of men,
Nourished thine infancy; for even then
Thy lofty fortunes brooked no humble home,
But gave thee life with empire. Thou didst come,
Meet present from an Empress to her Lord,
And thee in purple swathed his realm adored.
Rome's victor eagles marked thy earliest day,
And in the midst of spears thy cradle lay.
When thou wast born, to Rhine's extremest floods
Germania trembled, the Caucasian woods
Shook with new terror. Meroeno more
—Fearing thy power divine—her quiver bore,
But from her hair the useless arrows tore.
Crawling, o'er shields, thou mad'st thy childish way,
And spoils of mighty princes were thy play.
And again :—
Spain reared thy sire her golden streams beside,
But Bosporus recalls thy birth with pride.
From the Hesperian threshold rose thy line,
But bright Aurora was thy nurse divine.
For such a prize what eager strife is shown
Since, of two worlds, each claims thee for her own.
Thebes gloried in the might of Hercules
And joy of Bacchus, both her offspring these;
Delos stood still to mark Apollo's birth,
The tiny Thunderer crept o'er Cretan earth;
But more than Delos, more than Crete, must be
The land which fostered thy divinity.
No narrow shores could our new god receive,
Nor might rough Cynthian rocks thy members grieve.
Thy mother lay on gold, with gems arrayed,
When upon Tyrian cushions thou wast laid.
A palace echoed to her labour's cry,
And oh! what tokens of thy fortunes high
Abounded then! what flight, what call of birds,
And from pale prophets what mysterious words!
Of thy great name the horned Ammon spoke,
Delphi for thee her age-long silence broke.
The Persian Magi sang of thee; thy power
Thrilled through the Etrurian Augur; in that hour
Babylon's sages gazing on the stars
Read with blank fear the triumph of thy wars.
And now once more the rocks of Cumae's cave
Bang with the shrieks the frenzied Sibyl gave.
No Corybantian priests thy birth-cry drowned
With cymbals' clash; an army stood around
In glittering steel; their standards waved above
Thine infant head, oh, more august than Jove!
Thou saw'st adoring legions round thee fall,
And thy shrill cries gave back the trumpet's call.
Empire and life were thine the selfsame day,
And in thy cradle did a consul play.
By thy new name the new-born year was known,
It gave thee being, 'twas given thee for thine own.
Quirinus' robe thy mother made thee wear,
And helped thee, crawling, to the curule chair.
Porphyrogenitus, "born in the Purple
Chamber", is the key-note of the poet's panegyric. This fortunate accident
of birth amid the splendours of royalty was not shared by Arcadius, who came
into the world while Theodosius was still in a private station.
The childhood of the "New Divinity" is thus
sketched:—
First wast thou wont thy victor-sire to greet,
When he from Ister homeward turned his feet.
'Twas thou who first didst softly soothe the glance
Of that still war-o'ershadowed countenance.
Coaxing, thou pray'dst for trophies from the foe,
A helt Gelonian, or a Scythian bow,
A Dacian javelin, or a Suevic rein.
He on his shining shield, how oft again
Would raise thee smiling; to his panting breast
How oft thy eager little form was pressed.
Thou from the gleaming steel didst fear no harm,
But to the helmet's crest stretched forth thine arm.
And then thy sire would say with holy joy,
King of Olympus! grant that this my boy
Thus may return victorious from his foe,
From wasted Parthia, Babylon laid low.
Red be his sword like mine; like mine his breath
Come panting fast from the great game of Death.
Be war's delicious dust on every limb,
And let him bring me spoils as I to him.
This pretty little picture, borrowed from the Iliad,
in which Theodosius is equal to Hector, and Honorius is more than Astyanax (for
Astyanax did fear “the dazzling helm and nodding crest”), need not of course
have had any existence in reality.
Let us now turn from poetry to fact, and see what mark
the real Honorius made upon the men and things that surrounded him. None. It is
impossible to imagine characters more utterly destitute of moral colour, of
self-determining energy, than those of the two sons of Theodosius. In Arcadius
we do at length discover traces of uxoriousness, a blemish in some rulers, but
which becomes almost a merit in him when contrasted with the absolute vacancy,
the inability to love, to hate, to think, to execute, almost to be, which marks
the impersonal personality of Honorius. After earnestly scrutinising his life
to discover some traces of human emotion under the stolid mask of his
countenance, we may perhaps pronounce with some confidence on the three
following points.
1. He perceived, through life, the extreme importance
of keeping the sacred person of the Emperor of the West out of the reach of
danger.
2. He was, at any rate in youth, a sportsman.
3. In his later years he showed considerable interest
in the rearing of poultry.
We must not do him injustice. He was also religious,
after the fashion of his time; and he found leisure in some of the direst
emergencies of his country to put forth fresh edicts for the suppression of
Heresy and Paganism.
It is natural to ask. Why this sudden decay of energy
in the Theodosian line? Why in Arcadius and Honorius do we find no trace of the
impetuous will of their father. If the coins of Theodosius, his wife, and sons,
may be trusted to convey any likeness of the imperial lineaments, Flaccilla was
the cause. As we so often notice in our daily life, the child that inherits the
father's sex copies the mother's character; in feature as well as in mind
Arcadius and Honorius are the true sons of the pious, timid, feeble Flaccilla.
Instead of the fresh vigorous face and well-defined nose of Theodosius,
Honorius inherits the low brow, long feeble nose, and melancholy lymphatic
beauty of his mother. Another reason for the extraordinary poverty, almost
imbecility, of Honorius's character may be drawn from the unrestrained and
increasing irascibility of Theodosius in later life, which, as we gather from a
hint of Claudian's, was not always subdued in the presence of the Empress
herself. The poet says (addressing Serena, niece and adopted daughter of the
Emperor)—
When harassed with the heavy cares of state,
Home he returned, moody and passionate;
When from their angry sire his children fled,
And e'en Flaccilla saw his scowl with dread,
Then thou alone could'st break his roaring rage,
Alone, with soothing speech, his wrath assuage
But probably, after all, the chief cause of the want
of energy shown by the sons of Theodosius was the enervating moral atmosphere
which surrounded them from childhood. Passing their early years in the sacred
recesses of the palace, shut out from contact with the healthy world outside by
the purple veil and the brightly clothed Silentiarii, hailed in childhood with
the great name of Augustus, surrounded by adoring courtiers and listening to
flattery as fulsome, but not always as eloquent, as that of Claudian, it is not
surprising that these unfortunate lads grew up to manhood flaccid, nerveless,
and ignorant, the mere tools of the ministers who governed in their names, and
utterly unable to support, themselves, any of the real weight of the Empire
But let us pass on from Honorius to describe the
character and fortunes of the real ruler of the Western world, Stilicho.
Stilicho was born probably between 350 and 360.He was the son of a Vandal chief
who had entered the service of the Emperor Valens, and had apparently commanded
his squadrons of barbarian auxiliaries in a creditable manner.Had there been
any worse stigma than the fact of his Vandal descent attaching to Stilicho's
parentage, we should certainly have heard it from his captious critic Orosius;
had he by either parent been linked to any noble Roman family, we should have
had it impressed upon our recollection by his flatterer Claudian, who, however,
if his father had been a great general, would certainly not have dropped the
hint that “even though he had wrought no illustrious deed, nor with faithful
allegiance to Valens ever guided his chestnut-haired squadrons, it would have
been enough for his fame that he was the begetter of Stilicho”.
When the young Vandal, tall, and of stately presence,
moved through the streets of Constantinople, the crowds on either hand
deferentially made way for him. And yet he was still only a private soldier,
but the instinct of the multitude foretold his future advancement. Nor was that
advancement long in coming: scarcely had he attained manhood when the Emperor
sent him on an embassy to the Persian court. Arrived at Babylon (continues the
flattering bard) his proud deportment struck awe into the hearts of the stern
nobles of Parthia, while the quiver-bearing multitude thronged eagerly to gaze
on the illustrious stranger, and the Persian ladies, smitten by his goodly
appearance, nourished in secret the hopeless flame of love. Hopeless, for a
higher alliance than that of any Persian dame was in store for him on his
return to Constantinople. There, in the court of her uncle Theodosius, dwelt
the learned and dignified Serena. She was the daughter of his brother, the
elder Honorius, and was older than any of his own children. In the old days,
when they were all dwelling together in Spain, and when Theodosius was still in
a private station, he took a fancy to the little maiden, and often carried her
back with him from her father's house to cheer his own still childless home.
When the elder Honorius died, and Theodosius found himself at the summit of the
world, he remembered his old favorite, and summoned her, with her sister
Thermantia, to his court. Both were adopted by him as his daughters, but Serena
retained the stronger influence over him, and, as we have already seen,
ventured to approach and to soothe him in those angrier moments when his vapid
Empress dared not face his wrath,
Such was the bride whom the Emperor (probably about
the year 385) bestowed on the young warrior. Henceforward his promotion was
certain. He rose to high rank in the army, being made Magister Utriusque
Militiae some years before the death of Theodosius, he distinguished himself in
many campaigns against the Visigoths, and finally, when his wife Serena had
brought her little cousin Honorius to bis dying father at Milan, Stilicho
received from his sovereign, whom he had no doubt accompanied in his campaign
against Arbogast, the guardianship of his son and the regency of the
West-Western Empire. It is also stated, with some probability, that Theodosius
on his death-bed gave to this stalwart kinsman a general charge to watch over
the safety of the East as well as the West, thus constituting him in some
measure guardian of Arcadius as well as of Honorius.
Of the great abilities of Stilicho as a general and a
civil administrator there can be no doubt, as to the integrity of his character
there is a conflict of testimony. We are met at the outset by the words of
Zosimus, who couples Rufinus and him in the same condemnation, declaring that
on the death of Theodosius everything was done in the Western and Eastern
Empires according to the mere pleasure of these two men, that they took bribes
without any pretence of concealment, that large possessions came to be
accounted a calamity, since they marked out the owner for the calumnies and
false accusations of delators in the minister's service, that through the
perversion of justice all manner of wickedness increased in the cities, that
ancient and substantial families were rapidly sunk into penury, while vast
masses of wealth of all descriptions were being accumulated in the dwellings of
Rufinus and Stilicho.
Claudian, in a fine torrent of angry verse, brings in
the very same idea of widespread corruption aud robbery forcibly before us, but
of course with him Rufinus is the only guilty one. Of Stilicho’s moral
character he draws a flattering picture. His clemency is depicted in
twenty-four lines, his truthfulness in twenty. His justice, patience,
temperance, prudence, constancy, are more rapidly sketched; but great stress is
laid on his utter freedom from avarice, the mother of all the vices, on his
firmness in suppressing the too common practice of delation (false and
frivolous accusations against the rich for the sake of hush-money), and on his
bestowal of the offices of the state on merit alone, irrespective of all other
considerations.
With this conflict of testimony before us, and feeling
that the prejudices of Zosimus may make his testimony almost as valueless as
the venal verses of Claudian, our best course will be to watch the life of the
great Vandal for ourselves, and draw our own conclusion at its close.
One thing is certain, that the animosity existing
between Stilicho and the successive ministers of the Eastern Emperor (an
animosity which does not necessarily imply any fault on the part of the former)
was one most potent cause of the downfall of the Western Empire. In part this
was due to the peculiar position of military affairs at the time of the death
of Theodosius. The army of the East, the backbone of which was the Gothic
auxiliaries, had just conquered, at the river Frigidus, the army of the West,
which similarly depended upon the Frankish and West German soldiery. The two
hosts coalesced in devotion to Theodosius; they were perhaps ready to follow
the standards of a rising-general like Stilicho, but they were in no great haste
to march off to wearisome sentinel duty on the frontiers of Persia or Scythia,
nor was Stilicho anxious so to scatter them. Hence heart-burnings between him
and the Eastern court, and complaints, perhaps well-founded, made by the
latter, that he kept all the most able-bodied and warlike soldiers for himself
and sent the cripples and good-for-nothing fellows to Constantinople. Whatever
the original grievance, for a period of thirteen years (from 395-408) hearty
co-operation between the courts of Rome and Constantinople was unknown, and
intrigues which it is impossible now to unravel were being woven by the
ministers of Arcadius against Honorius, perhaps by Stilicho against them. The
Roman Empire was a house divided against itself, and it is therefore no marvel
if it was brought to naught.
Odious as the character of Rufinus was, it must be
admitted in justice to him that his position was a difficult one. He was
expected to administer the Eastern Empire for the obviously incapable Arcadius,
but the chief forces of that Empire were under the command of his avowed enemy,
Stilicho, who also put forward a claim of indefinite magnitude to joint or
superior guardianship of the helpless sovereign. To make his situation still
more difficult, he was at this time foiled by a yet more artful villain than
himself in a palace intrigue. Rufinus proposed to himself to marry his daughter
to Arcadius, but during his temporary absence from the capital, the Eunuch
Eutropius (the same man whom Theodosius had despatched on a mission to the
hermit John before his last campaign) contrived to bring under his young
master’s notice the picture of a young Frankish maiden of surpassing beauty.
This was Eudoxia, the daughter of the late Count Bauto, who had been brought up
in the house of Promotus, and who had among her foster-brothers and sisters
doubtless imbibed undying enmity to the crafty minister who had contrived the
death of that veteran. In the feeble soul of Arcadius the flame of love was
easily kindled, and he gladly gave command (during a temporary absence of the
terrible guardian) that the fair Frankish maiden should be won. Eutropius bade
the people make holiday and deck their houses for an Imperial wedding. He set
forth with his attendants bearing the Imperial crown, the bright robes of an
Imperial bride; and with dance and song the festive procession moved through
the streets of Constantinople. All men expected that the chamberlain would
proceed to the house of Bufinus, whose ambitious designs were well known. But
no; the attendants moved on to the humbler abode of Promotus, brought forth
from thence Eudoxia in all her radiant Northern beauty, and led her to the
palace, where for the next nine years she reigned supreme. Rufinus on his
return to Constantinople found that his position was undermined, and that
henceforward he would have a covert rival at Constantinople besides the avowed
rival at Milan.
The third name on our list is Alaric, the great
Visigothic chieftain whose genius taught him the best means of turning the
estrangement between the two Empires to account. Alaric was sprung from one of
those royal or semi-royal houses which, among the German nations, proudly
traced back their lineage to the gods of Walhalla. His family, the Balthi,
ranked, some said, only second in nobility to the Amals; and when Alaric in
after-days had performed some of his daring deeds against the great
world-Empire, men said, remembering the meaning of the name of his forefathers,
‘Rightly is he called Baltha (Bold), for he is indeed the boldest of mankind’.
As for the year of his birth we have no certain information. It may have been
any time between 360 and 370, but can hardly have been much earlier than the
first or much later than the second date. His birthplace was the island Peuce,
in the Delta of the Danube, apparently south of what is now termed the Sulina
mouth of that river. We have already met with him crossing the Alps as a leader
of auxiliaries in the army of Theodosius, when that Emperor marched to
encounter Eugenius and Arbogast. With the accession of the two young Princes
the spell of the Theodosian name over the barbarian mind was broken. The
ill-timed parsimony of Rufinus, perhaps of Stilicho also, curtailed the
largesses hitherto given to the Gothic troops, and thus yet further estranged
them from the Empire. Then individual grievances were not wanting to their
general. He was still only a leader of barbarian auxiliaries, bound to
difficult and little-honoured labour on the wings of the Imperial armies,
though Theodosius had led him to believe that if the campaign against Eugenius
prospered he would be promoted to high military office in the regular army, and
thus earn the right to command Roman legionaries in the centre of the line of
battle. And already perhaps in the very outset of his career he felt that
mysterious, irresistible impulse, urging him onwards to Rome, which fourteen
years after he spoke of to the Italian monk who had almost succeeded by his
intercessions in inducing him to turn back from the yet uncaptured city.
But however varied the causes might be, the effect is
clear. From the day that Alaric was accepted as leader of the Gothic people
their policy changed, or rather they began to have a policy, which they had
never had before. No longer now satisfied to serve as the mere auxiliary of
Rome, Alaric adopted the maxim which he himself had probably heard from the
lips of Priulf just before his murder by Fravitta, that the Goths had fought
Rome's battles long enough, and that the time was now come for them to fight
their own. And though the career which he was thus entering upon was one of
wide-wasting war and invasion, it would be a mistake to think of the young king
as a mere barbarian marauder. Knowing the Roman court and army well, and
despising them as heartily, educated in the Christian faith, proud of the
willing allegiance of a nation of warriors, fated to destroy, yet not loving
the work of mere destruction, Alaric, and the kings of the Visigoths who
followed him, are in fact knights-errant who rear the standard of chivalry—with
its errors as well as its noble thoughts—in the level waste of the Orientalised
despotism and effete civilisation of the Roman Empire.
Such then was the chief whom the Visigothic warriors,
in accordance with the usages of their forefathers, raised upon the buckler and
held aloft in the sight of all men as their newly-chosen king. The actual date
of this election is uncertain, but it is much the most probable conjecture that
it occurred in 395, immediately after the death of Theodosius, and was
consequent upon the change of policy adopted by the ministers of his sons.
If the date is not quite clear, the purpose of this
election is not clouded by any doubt. As Jordanes says, ‘After Theodosius, that
lover of peace and of the Gothic nation, had departed this life, and when his
sons, living luxuriously, began to annihilate both Empires, and to filch from
their auxiliaries, I mean the Goths, their accustomed gifts, soon the Goths
conceived an increasing dislike for those princes; and fearing lest their own
valour should be relaxed by a long peace, they ordained over themselves a King,
named Alaric. Presently then the aforesaid Alaric, being created King, and
entering into deliberation with his people, persuaded them to seek kingdoms for
themselves by their own labours rather than quietly to lie down in subjection
to others, and therefore gathering together an army he marched against the
Empire’.
Little as they knew what they were doing, the
flaxen-haired barbarians who in the Illyrian plains raised amid shouts of Thiudans,
Thiudans (‘the king! the king!’) the shield upon which Alaric stood erect,
were in fact upheaving into reality the stately monarchy of Spain, with her
Pelayos and San Fernandos, her Alonsos and Conquistadors, her Ferdinand and
Isabella, with Columbus landing at Guanahani, and Vasco Nunez wading knee-deep
into the new-found ocean of the Pacific to take possession of its waves and
shores for Spain. All these sights, and, alas, also her Inquisition, her
Autos-da-fe, her wrecked Armada, the impotence and bankruptcy of Iberia in
these latter days, might have passed before the unsealed eyes of a seer, had there
been such an one among those Gothic warriors, for all these things were to
spring from that days decision.
Thus then the spring of 395 was a time of terror and
dismay to the inhabitants of the Eastern Empire. While the savage Huns, passing
through the Caucasian Gates, laid waste the provinces of the Empire on the
Upper Euphrates, and even appeared in sight of the walls of Antioch, Alaric
with his Visigothic followers, in the first fervour of the enthusiasm of
revolt, ravaged Moesia and Thrace, and carried consternation to the environs of
Constantinople. Induced by some means or other to turn his face southward, he
departed from these old battle-fields of his race, penetrated Thessaly, passed
the unguarded defile of Thermopylae, and, according to the story of Zosimus
(coloured of course by his heathen prejudices), ‘having gathered all his troops
round the sacred city of Athens, Alaric was about to proceed to the assault.
When lo! he beheld Athene Promachus, just as she is represented in herstatues,
clothed in full armour, going round about the walls thereof, and Achilles
standing upon the battlements, with that aspect of divine rage and thirst for
battle which Homer ascribes to him when he heard of the death of Patroclus.
Awe-struck at the sight Alaric desisted from his warlike enterprise, signalled
for truce, and concluded a treaty with the Athenians. After which he entered
the city in peaceful guise with a few of his followers, was hospitably
entertained by the chief inhabitants, received presents from them, and
departed, leaving both Athens and Attica untouched by the ravages of war’.
He did not turn homewards, however, but penetrated
into Peloponnesus, where Corinth, Argos, and Sparta all fell before him.
The precise details of these campaigns are difficult
to recover, and lie beyond our present horizon. What is important for us is
their bearing on the relations between the two ministers Stilicho and Rufinus.
The latter is accused of having actually invited Alaric to invade his master’s
dominions, or, at any rate, of having smoothed Alaric’s passage into Greece in
order to remove him from his too menacing neighbourhood to Constantinople. He
was jealous of the overshadowing power of Stilicho, he was too conscious of his
own intense unpopularity with all classes; even the dumb loyalty of his master
was beginning to fail him. The beautiful barbarian Empress was now putting
forth all her arts to mould the plastic soul of her husband into hostility to
his chief minister. Surrounded by so many dangers Rufinus perhaps conceived the
desperate idea of playing off one barbarian against another, of saving himself
from the Vandal Stilicho by means of Alaric the Goth. We can only say
‘perhaps’, because we hear of these events only from men who were bitter
enemies of the minister and who wrote after his fall, and because some of the
misdeeds imputed to him look more like the acts of a bewildered and
panic-stricken man than like the skilful moves of a cunning traitor. Suspicion
was aroused by the fact that in all the wide-wasting raids of the soldiers of
Alaric the vast estates of Rufinus in Moesia and Thrace were ostentatiously
spared; but it might be part of the Visigoth’s plan to arouse that very
suspicion. Rufinus paid a visit to the camp of the barbarian to endeavour to
bring him back to his old loyalty to the Empire, and in that visit, to the
grief and indignation of the Byzantines, he even affected a certain barbaresque
fashion in his own costume, changed the flowing toga, which became the Roman
magistrate, for the tight leathern garments of the Teutons, and carried the
large bow and displayed the heavy, perhaps silver-mounted, bridle which
distinguished the auxiliaries from the legions. But this again was not
necessarily a proof of disaffection to the Empire. It might be only a clumsy
imitation by an upstart civilian of the arts by which the great soldier
Theodosius had won the love of his barbarian foederati. It is probable
enough that Rufinus may at this interview have suggested to Alaric the policy
of withdrawing from before the strong defences of Constantinople and gratifying
his barbarians with the spoil of the yet unwasted provinces of Greece. A base
and cowardly expedient certainly; but we need not perhaps believe the
accusation of Zosimus that he actually committed the government of Greece to
the dissolute Musonius, the defence of Thermopylae to the treacherous
Gerontius, in order to ensure the success of Alaric's invasion. When a man is
so universally hated as was the grasping Rufinus, his very blunders and weaknesses
are easily interpreted as evidence of yet more and deeper wickedness.
To Stilicho an appeal was naturally addressed to bring
or to send the Eastern army to the defence of the Eastern Empire. He came: it
was still early spring, for events had moved rapidly since the death of
Theodosius. He had under his command a mighty host collected from various
provinces of the Empire, some of whose legions had fought under Arbogast, some
under his conqueror, on the great day of the battle of the Frigidus, but all were
now welded together into one body by their enthusiastic confidence in their
great leader, Stilicho, and all were eager for the fray.
The Imperial army had come up with the Visigoths at
some unnamed place within the confines of Thessaly. Alaric recalled his
marauding squadrons, gathered all his forces into one plain, surrounded the
herds of cattle which he had collected with a double fosse and a rampart of
stakes. All men in both armies knew that a great battle was impending, a battle
which, as we the after-comers can see, might well have changed the course of
history. Suddenly letters arrived from Constantinople, subscribed by the hand
of Arcadius, commanding Stilicho to desist from further prosecution of the war,
to withdraw the legions of Honorius within the limits of the Western Empire,
and to send the other half of the army straight to Constantinople.
This infatuated decree, which can only be explained
bythe supposition that Arcadius had really been persuaded of the disloyalty of
Stilicho, and feared the rebel more than the barbarian, had been wrung from the
Emperor by the cajolery and menaces of Rufinus.
Stilicho obeyed at once, notwithstanding the earnest
dissuasions of the soldiers, with a promptness which must surely be allowed to
count heavily in proof of his loyalty to the Theodosian line, and his
reluctance to weaken the commonwealth by civil war. The army of the whole Roman
Empire had appeared for the last time in one common camp; the Western portion
set off for Italy, the Eastern for Constantinople. With deep resentment in
their hearts the latter passed through Thessaly and Macedon, revolving silently
a scheme of revenge which, if it passed from the domain of thought into that of
uttered words, was faithfully kept from all outside, an army’s secret.
On their return to Constantinople, Rufinus, whodeemed
himself now secure from Stilicho’s hatred, and who had extorted a promise from
Arcadius that he should be associated with him in the sovereignty, caused coins
to be struck with his effigy, and prepared a liberal donative for the troops in
commemoration of his accession to the Empire. In a plain near the capital the
greedy minister and the helpless sovereign proceeded to review the troops.
Rufinus, who already practised the condescending suppleness of an imperial bow,
addressed individual soldiers by name, informed them of the health of their
wives and families, and appropriated to himself the cheers which were meant for
the son ofTheodosius. While this was going on, and while the high platform on
which he and Arcadius stood, he could be seen plucking the Emperor by the
mantle, beseeching, almost commanding him, to fulfil his promise, and at once
declare him co-emperor, the army in the meantime was spreading out both its
wings, not to protect but to destroy, and enclosed the imperial platform in a
narrower and ever-narrower circle. At length Rufinus raised his head, and saw
everywhere around him the lowering faces of his foes. One moment of awakening
he had from his fond dream of Empire, and then a soldier stepped forth from the
ranks, and with the words, ‘With this sword Stilicho strikes thee’ plunged the
weapon into his heart.
Then as many as were able to do so clustered round the
corpse, hacked it to pieces, carried off the limbs in triumph, sowed them over
the fields as the Maenads sowed the fragments of the flesh of Pentheus, but
fixed the head on a spear, where they made it practise its newly learned lesson
of condescending salutation, and carried round through the city the dead hand
and arm, with grim ingenuity making the fingers unclose and close again upon
imaginary wealth, and crying out: ‘Give, give to the insatiate one.’
There is no doubt that the minister had made himself
thoroughly hateful to both the people and the army, but we need not accept too
literally the statement (taken from Claudian) that the murder was entirely
planned by the soldiery. The general under whose command they marched back to
Constantinople was Gainas the Goth, a friend of Stilicho’s. Zosimus states that
Gainas gave the signal for the murder, and had arranged the whole pageant of
the review for this express object, a statement which we can easily believe
—when we find that for the next five or six years the chief power over the
feeble soul of Arcadius was divided between three persons, his fair Frankish
Empress Eudoxia, Eutropius, the haggard old eunuch who had placed her on the
throne, and Gainas the Goth, commander of the Eastern army.
In the following year Stilicho made a rapid march
—rather a journey than a campaign— to the banks of the Rhine, and may have thus
succeeded in confirming the wavering loyalty of some Frankish and Alamannic
chiefs. Then, with some of his Western legions, he crossed the Adriatic and
again appeared on its Eastern shore, this time in the Peloponnesus, as the
champion of the Empire against the Visigoths. We must suppose that for a time
the tremors of Arcadius had been soothed by his new ministers, and that he was
willing that his realm should be delivered by Stilicho. The outset of the campaign
was successful. The greater part of Peloponnesus was cleared of the invader,
who was shut up in the rugged mountain country on the confines of Elis and
Arcadia. The Roman army expected soon to behold him forced by famine to an
ignominious surrender, when they discovered that he had pierced the lines of
circumvallation at an unguarded point, and marched with all his plunder
northwards to Epirus. What was the cause of this unlooked-for issue of the
struggle? ‘The disgraceful carelessness of Stilicho’ says Zosimus. ‘He was
wasting his time with harlots and buffoons when he should have been keeping
close watch on the enemy’. ‘Treason,’ hints Orosius. ‘Orders from
Constantinople, where a treaty had been concluded with Alaric’, half suggests
Claudian, but he does not tell the story as if he himself believed it. The most
probable explanation of this and of some similar passages in Stilicho’s
subsequent career is that Fabian caution co-operated with the instinct of the Condottiere against pushing his foe too hard. There was always danger for Rome in driving
Alaric to desperation: there was danger privately for Stilicho if the dead
Alaric should render him no longer indispensable.
Whatever might be the cause, Stilicho returned to
Italy, and henceforward he interferes no more with the armed hand in the
affairs of the Eastern Empire. Left alone with the Visigothic King, the
ministers of Arcadius soon concluded one of those treaties (foedera) of
which the history of the Eastern Empire is full. With almost sublime cowardice
they rewarded the Grecian raids of Alaric by clothing him with the sacred
character of an officer of the Empire in their portion of Ulyricum. The precise
title under which he exercised jurisdiction is not stated, but the scope of his
powers and his manner of wielding them are thus described by Claudian—
He who, unpunished, laid Achaia waste
And smote Epirus, foremost now is placed
In all the Illyrian land. Each city's gate
Greets the new friend, the armed destroyer late:
And in law's name he sways the trembling crew
Whose wives he ravished, and whose sons he slew.
And again, where Alaric is supposed to be himself
rehearsing the matter to his followers—
‘Our race, of old, by its own strength prevailed,
When still it fought unweaponed and unmailed;
But now, since Rome gave rights into my hand,
And owned me Duke of the Illyrian land,
How many a spear and sword and helmet fair
Did not I make the Thracian’s toil prepare,
And, bidding Law my lawless purpose crown,
Took iron tribute from each Roman town.
So Fate was with me. So the Emperor gave
The very race I plundered as my slave.
The hapless citizens, with many a groan,
Furnished the arms for havock all their own:
And in the flame, o’erwatched by tears and toil,
The steel grew red, its craftsman’s home to spoil.
From what has been before said, it will be understood
that these last expressions of the poet must not be interpreted literally. It
was not the inhabitants of Illyricum itself against whom the collected arms of
Alaric were to be used. But, taking the Roman Empire as a whole, the statement
is true enough that during an interval of quiescence, which lasted apparently
about four years, the Yisigothic King was using the forms of Roman law, the
machinery of Roman taxation, the almost unbounded authority of a Roman book
provincial governor, to prepare the weapon which was one day to pierce the
heart of Rome herself.
The precise geographical position occupied by Alaric
while ‘presiding over Illyricum’ is not more clear than his exact official rank
in the Notitia, but we may conjecture that he was in the extreme west of that
portion of Illyricum which obeyed Arcadius, that is in the regions which we now
know as Bosnia and Servia. For a chief who nourished the vast designs which
were now ripening in his soul, the position was an alluring one. Both Empires
in their weakness lay before him. He could either make his way through those Julian
Alps over whose passes he had followed Theodosius to victory and so descend
upon Italy, or by the southern bank of the Danube he could march down to the
old Moesian battlefields and so descend upon Constantinople. Hovering thus on
the frontiers both of Honorius and Arcadius he, in the words of Claudian,—
Sold his alternate oaths to either throne.
But as he remembered the long years of purposeless
battle which his predecessors had waged with the East and how they had ever
dashed themselves in vain against the impregnable battlements of
Constantinople, his thoughts evidently turned more and more towards the West,
and already, we may believe, a prophetic voice began to whisper to his soul—
‘Thou shalt pierce to the very City of cities, to Home
herself.’
Not yet however was the Imperial City immediately
threatened with war: but she was already suffering from famine, and famine
brought upon her by an ignoble foe, Gildo the Moor. For centuries, as the rural
element in the population of Italy had grown weak and the urban element had
grown strong, the dependence of Rome for her food-supply upon foreign lands,
and especially on the great grain-producing countries which lined the southern
shore of the Mediterranean, had become more absolute and complete. In fact, the
condition of Rome, from the point of view of a political economist, was during
the whole period of the Emperors as unsatisfactory as can well be imagined. She
had long passed (nor is that surprising) out of the self-sufficing stage, in
which she produced within her own territory all the necessaries of life for her
citizens. But then, having devoted herself so exclusively to the arts of war
and the science of politics, she was not producing any mercantile equivalent
for the food which she needed. Her sole manufacture, we may almost say, was the
Roman legionary, her chief exports armies and praetors; and in return for
these, through the taxation which they levied, she imported not only the ten
thousand vanities and luxuries which were consumed by her wealthy nobles, but
also the vast stores of grain which were distributed by the Caesar, as a
Terrestrial Providence, among the ever-increasing, ever-hungrier swarms of
needy idlers who represented the Plebs Romana.
Since the foundation of Constantinople, the area of
supply had been diminished by one-half; Egypt had ceased to nourish the elder
Rome. No longer now, as in the days of a certain Jewish prisoner who appealed
to Nero, would a Roman centurion easily find in Lycia ‘a ship of Alexandria’
with a cargo of wheat ‘about to sail for Italy.’ Ships from that port now
preferred the nearer and safer voyage through the land-locked Archipelago, and
discharged their cargoes at Constantinople.
Rome was thus reduced to an almost exclusive
dependence on the harvests of Africa proper (that province of which Carthage
was the capital), of Numidia, and of Mauretania, whose corn-growing capacities
must not be measured by the scanty dimensions to which they have now dwindled
under centuries of Mohammedan misrule. But this supply, ever since the death of
Theodosius, had been in a precarious condition; and in the year 397 was
entirely stopped by the orders of Gildo, who had made himself virtual master of
these three provinces.
It has been before stated that the war which the Gildo
the elder Theodosius brought to a successful issue in Africa in the year 374
was waged with a certain Mauretanian rebel named Firmus. The son of a great
sheep-farmer, Nabal, he had left behind him several brothers, one of whom,
Gildo, had in the year 386 gathered up again some portion of his brother’s
broken power. We find him, seven years later (in 393), holding the rank of
Count of Africa in the Roman official hierarchy. Probably the troubles in the
house of Valentinian II had enabled him, though a doubtful friend to the
Empire, to force himself into this position. While the great duel between
Theodosius and Arbogast was proceeding, he held aloof from the contest,
rendering indeed a nominal allegiance to the former, but refusing to send the
men or the ships which he called for. Had not the death of Theodosius followed
so promptly upon his victory, men said that he would have avenged this
insincere adhesion, worse than open enmity, upon the Count of Africa, in a way
which would have recalled the early days of Roman history, when Tullus
Hostilius tied the dictator of Alba, Mettius Fuffetius, to chariots driven in
opposite directions, and so tore asunder the body of him whose mind had wavered
between loyalty and treason.
But the great Emperor having died in his prime,
Gildo’s dav of punishment was deferred. Nay, more, he turned to his own account
the perennial jealousy existing between the ministers of the Eastern and
Western Courts, renounced his allegiance to Rome, and preferred to transfer it
to Constantinople. What brought matters to a crisis was his refusal to allow
the grain crops of 397 to be conveyed to Rome. Our often- quoted poet
represents the Mistress of the World calling, in the agony of hunger, upon
Jove, not now with her wonted look of pride; not with that commanding mien with
which she dictates her laws to Britain or lays her fasces upon trembling
India. No, but with weak voice and tardy steps and eyes dimmed of their lustre,
with hollow cheeks and thin hunger-wasted arms that scarce could upbear the
shield; her unloosed helmet showed her whitened hair, and she trailed her
rusted spear feebly behind her. Then, in the bitterness of her soul, she
addressed the Thunderer, telling him that her conquest of Carthage had been in
vain if Gildo, a meanerand more odious Hannibal, was to lord it over Africa.
‘Even the magnitude of my Empire oppresses me. Oh! for the happy days when Veii
and the Sabines were my only foes. Oh! that I could return to the old limits
and the walls of good King Ancus. Then the harvests of Etruria and Campania,
the acres which the Curii and Cincinnatus ploughed and sowed would be
sufficient for my need.’ The return to these narrow limits, which he introduces
as a mere flower of poetry, was nearer than the poet thought.
The Roman Senate declared war in the early winter
months of 398 against Gildo. Stilicho, who, of course, undertook the fitting
out of the expedition, found a suitable instrument for Rome’s chastisement in
one who had had cruel wrongs of his own to avenge upon Gildo. This was yet
another son of Nabal, Mascezel, who, not favouring his brother’s ambitious
schemes, had withdrawn to Italy. To punish this defection Gildo had caused his
two sons to be slain, and their bodies to be left unburied. Now at the head of
a Roman armament consisting of six legions (which ought to have numbered 36,600
men,) Mascezel set forth.
Claudian brings vividly before us the embarkation from
the harbour of Pisa, which the shouts of the soldiers and the bustle of the
armament filled, even as Agamemnon’s warriors made Aulis echo when they were
assembling for the war against Troy. Then we see the fleet set forth : they
leave the Riviera on their right, they give a wide berth to Corsica, they reach
Sardinia, and land at Cagliari, where they wait for favouring zephyrs.
Here, unfortunately, our mythological poet breaks off,
and we are handed over to the very different guidance of the devout but foolish
Orosius. He describes how Mascezel, having learned from Theodosius the efficacy
of prayer, made sail for the island of Capraria, and there took on board
certain holy servants of God (monks) with whom he spent the following days in
prayers, fastings, and the recitation of psalms, and thus earned a victory
without war, and revenge without the guilt of murder.
For when they reached a river which seems to havebeen
the frontier between Numidia and the province of Carthage, and when he found
that on the opposite side the enemy, 60,000 strong, were drawn up prepared to
join battle with his inferior numbers, in the night that holy man, Ambrose of
Milan, then lately deceased, appeared to him in a vision, and striking the
ground thrice with his staff said, ‘Here, here, here.’ The prophecy was clear:
that place was to be the scene of the victory, which they were to achieve on
the third day. After waiting the appointed time, and passing the third night in
prayers, the singing of hymns, and the celebration of the Sacrament, they moved
onward and met their foes with pious words. A standard-bearer of the enemy pressed
insolently forward. He was wounded in the arm, the standard fell, the distant
cohorts thought that Gildo had given the signal for surrender, and came in by
troops to give themselves up to Mascezel. The Count of Africa fled, escaped on
ship-board, was pursued, brought back to land, put to death (some say he
committed suicide); but all thiswas done by others, so that the hands and the
conscience of Mascezel were clear from his brother’s blood, and yet he had the
revenge for which he longed. The scene of Gildo’s death was Tabraca, a little
town still existing under the name Tabarca, on the frontiers of Tunis and
Algiers.
And thus the provinces of Africa were for the time won
back again for the Empire of the West, and Rome had her corn again *.
The fate of Mascezel, the re-vindicator of Africa, is
an enigma. The version given by Zosimus is that generally accepted. He says,
that he returned in triumph to Italy; that Stilicho, who was secretly envious
of his reputation, professed an earnest desire to advance his interests; but
that when the Vandal was going forth to a suburb (probably of Milan), as he was
crossing over a certain bridge, with Mascezel and others in his train, at a
given signal the guards crowded round the African and hustled him off into the
river below. ‘Thereat Stilicho laughed, but the stream hurrying the man away,
caused him to perish for lack of breath.’
Orosius, however, makes no mention of all this. In his
narrative, which is written with a bias towards religious edification, Mascezel,
in the hour of his triumph, is described as neglecting the society of the holy
men whom he had taken on board at Caprera, and even daring to violate the
sanctity of the churches by laying hands on some of the rebels who had taken
refuge there. ‘The penalty for this sacrilege followed in due course, for after
some time he himself was punished under the very eyes and amid the exulting
cries of those whom he had thus sought to slay. Thus when he hoped in God he
was assisted, and when he despised Him he was put to death.’
This does not seem to describe the same scene as the
tumultuary assassination of which Zosimus speaks. As Orosius hates Stilicho,
and omits no opportunity of insinuating calumnies against him, his silence
appears to outweigh the hostile testimony of Zosimus, who generally leans to
the side of detraction. Possibly the Roman ministers who had seen Firmus rise
again in Gildo may have feared that Gildo would rise again in Mascezel, and may
have determined by fair means or foul to crush the viper’s brood of the house
of Nabal; but such a crime, committed for reasons of state, however foul a
thing in itself, is different from the assassination prompted by mere personal
envy, which has been on insufficient grounds attributed to the Vandal hero.
The glory and power of Stilicho were now nearly at
their highest point. Shortly before the expedition against Gildo he had given
his daughter Maria in marriage to Honorius, and the father-in-law of the
Emperor might rightly be deemed to hold power with a securer grasp than his
mere chief minister. In the poem on the nuptials of Honorius and Maria, a poem
in which the mythological element—Cupid, Venus, the Nereids, and the like—is
more than usually prominent, Claudian seems perplexed to know which he is to praise
the most—the Emperor, the bride, or the bride’s father. He settles at length,
however, on Stilicho, even daring to Bay—
More of our duty e’en our prince hath won
Since thou, unconquered captain, call'st him son.
And to this quarter of the compass, during the
remaining six years over which his poems extend, the needle of his Muse’s
devotion pointed faithfully. He tells us, and one is disposed to believe that
the flattery is not wholly baseless, that when Stilicho trod the streets of
Rome there was no need of any herald to announce his advent. Even when
surrounded by the throng of citizens, his lofty stature, his demeanour, stately
yet modest, his voice, accustomed to command, yet free from the loud arrogance
of the mere military swashbuckler; above all, his capacious forehead and his
hair, touched with an early whiteness by the cares of state, and suggesting the
gravity of age combined with the vigour of youth, all proclaimed his presence
to the people; all forced the by-stander to exclaim, ‘Hic est, hic Stilichon.’
(‘ This, this can be none else than Stilicho.’)
In the same poem, Claudian indulges in anticipations
of the birth of a little ‘Honoriades,’ who should climb the knees of his
grandfather, an anticipation, however, which was not realised. There was no
issue of the marriage, and though there can be no doubt that the birth of an
Imperial grandson would have, more than anything else, consolidated the power
of Stilicho, even this failure of issue was, at a later day, attributed to the
magical arts of Serena and included in the indictment against her too
prosperous family.
The years 399 and 400 were memorable ones in the
Consular Fasti. For the first of these years, Eutropius, the chamberlain and
ruling favourite at the Court of Constantinople, was nominated Consul on behalf
of the East, while Mallius Theodoras, a Roman of respectable rank and
character, was the colleague given him by the West. For though the Consul’s
titular dignity was connected properly with Old Rome alone, this divided
nomination between the two portions of the Empire seems to have been usual, if
not universal.
Slaves and freedmen, even of the degraded class of
eunuchs to which Eutropius belonged, had before now, under weak Emperors, and
especially under Constantius, exercised great power in the state, but it had
been always by keeping themselves in the background and working upon the
suspicions or vanity of their lord. But that a slave who had sunk lower and
lower in the menial ranks as he passed from one master to another till he at
length received his freedom as the contumelious prize of his age and ugliness,
that an old and wrinkled eunuch, who had combed the hair of his mistress and
fanned her with peacocks’ feathers, should sit in the chair of Brutus, be
preceded by the lictors with the fasces, and affect to command the
armies of Rome, was too much for the still remaining pride of the Senatus
Populus Que Romanus. The populace of Constantinople only laughed at the
effeminate voice and faded prettinesses of the Eunuch-Consul, but the Western
Capital refused to defile her annals with his name, and wrote down Mallius
Theodoras as sole Consul. By a not unnatural blunder, in after years the blank
space was filled up by the division of the Western magistrate’s name, and the
year 399 (a.u.o. 1152) was assigned to 'Mallius et Theodoras, Consules'.
In the following year (400) Stilicho himself was
raised to the Consulship. The promotion seems to have come somewhat tardily to
one whose power and whose services were so transcendent, but there was perhaps
a reluctance to confer this peculiarly Roman office on one so recently sprung
from a barbarian stock. Claudian’s muse was roused by this exaltation of his
patron to some of her finest efforts. In the trilogy of poems celebrating the
first Consulship of Stilicho, the enthusiastic bard furnishes us with many of
those details as to the youth and early manhood of the General, which have been
already quoted: he describes how he had by the mere terror of his name brought
Germany into such a state of subjection and civilisation, that the perplexed
traveller sailing down the Rhine was fain to ask himself which was indeed the
German, which the Roman shore; he celebrates the civic virtues of his hero, and
he doses with a rapturous description of the sports in the amphitheatre which
were to celebrate the joyful event, and for which Diana and all her nymphs with
glad willingness purveyed the needful
animals.
From amidst the prophecies of future glory and
victory, which are, as it were, a common form in such compositions, one may be
selected which concludes the second poem. The personifications are doubtless
less vivid than those of the great Epic Poets, and some of the images are
perhaps blurred in the original, and must be yet more so in a translation.
Still, as one of the latest mythological pictures in Roman art, and as a
forecast of the future of the Empire, delivered at the very commencement of the
fifth century (according to our reckoning), the passage may be found not devoid
of interest—
The Cuve of Time.
‘Far off, in some wild spot, unknown of men,
Scarce to be traced by e’en Immortals’ ken,
Yawns the vast Cave, dark mother of the years,
Forth from whose depths each new-born time appears,
Whither it hastes, when ended. All the place
Is girdled by a serpent’s coiled embrace:
For ever fresh each green and glittering scale,
And the jaws close upon the back-bent tail,
End and beginning one. Before the Gates
Primeval Nature, stately guardian, waits,
And all around her, as in act to fly,
Hang the swift souls, soon to be bora or die.
Meanwhile a man, of venerable age,
Writes Fate’s firm verdicts on his opened page.
He tells the stars, he knows their devious way,
The secret cause of every orb’s delay,
And the fixed laws which death and life obey.
He knows what prompts the mazy dance of Mars,
The Thunderer’s steadfast course among the stars,
The Moon’s swift orbit, Saturn’s sluggish pace,
Why Venus, Mercury, haunt Sol’s resting-place.
Soon as that threshold feels the Sun-god’s feet,
The mighty Mother runs his steps to greet.
That ancient mage, before the sunbeam’s glare,
Bends all the snow-white honours of his hair,
And then, self-moved, the adamantine doors
Turn backwards; gleam upon the spacious floors
The conquering rays; Time’s mysteries old and new,
In Time’s own realm, lie open to the view.
Here, each apportioned to its separate cell,
By various metals marked, the ages dwell.
Here are the brazen years, a crowded line,
Here the stem iron, there the silvern shine.
Oh! safely guarded, rare for earth to hold,
Lie the great boons, the ruddy years of gold.
Of these the Titan chooses the most fair,
The noble form of Stilicho to wear,
Bids all the rest to follow, and as they fly
Salutes them thus, and tells their destiny.
"Lo! he, for whom the better age so long
Has tarried, comes, a Consul. Oh ye throng
Of years that men have yearned for, haste amain
And all the Virtues carry in your train.
Once more from you let mighty minds be born,
The joy of Bacchus, Ceres' wealth of corn.
Let not the starry Serpent, by the Pole,
Hiss forth the icy breath that chills the soul:
Nor with immoderate cold let Ursa rage,
With heat the Lion; Cancer’s heritage
Let not the fnry of the summer burn,
Nor let Aquarius, of the lavish urn,
Wash out the seeds from earth with lashing showers.
Let Phrixus' Ram lead in the spring with flowers,
But not the Scorpion’s hail the olives bruise,
Nor Virgin! thou the autumnal germs refuse
Kindly to foster. Dog-star! let the vine
Grape-crowned, not hear too loud that bark of
thine".
He said and sought the saffron-flaming fields
And his own vale, which circles and enshields
A fiery stream. There in a deep-grown glade,
Where feed his deathless steeds, his steps he stayed,
Bound with the fragrant flowers his amber hair,
The manes and bridles of his coursers fair—
Here served him Lucifer, Aurora there—
And with them smiling, stood the Year of Gold,
Proud on his brow the Consul’s name to hold.
Then on its hinge the gate is backward rolled,
And the stars write the Stilichonian name
On Rome’s eternal calendars of fame.’
CHAPTER XIV.ARCADIUS.
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