'»i A' m '•m WBis rm. T#.^% n A JALLISTA OF THE FHIRD Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2009 with funding from Boston Library Consortium IVIember Libraries http://www.archive.org/details/callistasketchof01newm CALLISTA: A SKETCH OF THE THIRD CENTURY 9100 "} CO 00 CM o o c o C o XI o o Callista : A SKETCH OF THE 3RD CENTURY BY CARDINAL NEWMAN ^ BOSTON COLLEGE LIBRARY CHESTISUT HILL, MASS. .^^s'lUN COLLJtfiOJfi LlliKAiiJ m.Js^bimMi: hill, mas^ LONDON : BURNS & OATES, LIMITED NEW YORK, CINCINNATI, CHICAGO : BENZIGER BROTHERS liOTe thy God. and love Him onlj'. And thy breast will ne'er be lor.ejy. In that One Great Spirit meet All things mighty, grave, and s\>-oet. Vainly strives the soul to mingle With a being of our kind ; Vainly hearts with hearts are twined : For the deepest still is single. An Impalpable resistance Ilolds like natures still at distance. Mortal ! love that Holy One, Or dwell for aye alone. De Veuf TO H. W. W. To you alone, who have known me so long, and who love me so well, could I venture to offer a trifle like this. But you will recognize the author in his work, and take pleasure in the recognition. J. TI. N. ADVERTISEMENT. It is hardly necessary to say tLat tlic following Sketch is a simple fiction from beginning to end. It has very little in it of historical truth, even indirectly introduced, though it has not admitted any actual interference with known facts without notice of it. Nor has it any pretensions to an antiquarian character. Yet it has required more reading than may appear at first sight. It is an attempt to imagine and express the feel- ings and mutual relations of Christians and heathens at the period to which it belongs ; and it has been undertaken as the nearest approach which the Author could make to a more important work suggested to him from a high ecclesiastical quarter. September 13, 1855. POSTSCEIPT. Since the Volume has boon in print, the Author finds that his name has got abroad. This leads him to add, that he wrote great part of Chapters I., IV., and V., and sketched the character and fortunes of Juba, in the early spring of 1848, Haviug got as far as this, he stopped from sheer inability tc aovise person- ages or incidents. He suddenly resumed the thread of his story shortly after St. Mary Magdalen's day last year, and has been successful so far as this, that he has brought it to an end. Without being able to lay his finger upon fnstances in point, he has some misgivings lest there should be any want of exact- ness in his minor statements, whether of opinion or fact, which carry with them authority when they beai- the name of a writer- Edgbastou, February 8, 1658 CALLISTA; A SKETCH OF THE THIRD CENTURY. CHAPTEE L In no province of the vast Eoman empire, as it existed in the middle of the third century, did nature wear a richer or a more joyous garb than she displayed in Proconsular Africa, a territory of which Carthage was the metropolis, and Sicca might be considered the cen- tre. The latter city, which was the seat of a Eoman colony, lay upon a precipitous or steep bank, which led up along a chain of hills to a mountainous tract in the direction of the north and east. In striking con- trast with this wild and barren region was the view pre- sented by the west and south, where for many miles stretched a smiling champaign, exuberantly wooded, and varied with a thousand hues, till it was terminated at length by the successive tiers of the Atlas, and thf» dim and fantastic forms of the JNTumidian mountains. The immediate neighbourhood of the city was occu- pied by gardens, vineyards, cornfields, and meadows, crossed or encircled here by noble avenues of trees or the remains of primeval forests, there by the clus- tering groves which wealth and luxury had created. This spacious plain, though level when compared with the northern heights by which the city was backed, and the peaks and crags which skirted the southern B 2 CALLISTA ; and western horizon, was discovered, as light and shadow travelled with the sun, to be diversified with hill and dale, upland and hollow ; while orange gar- dens, orchards, olive and palm plantations held their ap- propriate sites on the slopes or the bottoms. Through the mass of green, which extended still more thickly from the west round to the north, might be seen at intervals two solid causeways tracking their persever- ing course to the Mediterranean coast, the one to the ancient rival of Rome, the other to Hippo Eegius in Numidia. Tourists might have complained of the absence of water from the scene ; but the native pea- sant would have explained to them that the eye alone had reason to be discontented, and that the thick foliage and the uneven surface did but conceal what mother earth with no niggard bounty supplied. The Bagradas, issuing from the spurs of the Atlas, made up in depth what it wanted in breadth of bed, and ploughed the rich and yielding mould with its rapid stream, till, after passing Sicca in its way, it fell into the sea near Carthage. It was but the largest of a multitude of others, most of them tributaries to it, deepening as much as they increased it. While chan- nels had been cut from the larger rills for the irriga- tion of the open land, brooks, which sprang up in the gravel whicli lay against the hills, had been artificially banked with cut stones or paved with pebbles; and, where neither springs nor rivulets were to be found, wells had been dug, sometimes to the vast depth of as much as 200 fathoms, with such effect that the spurt- ing column of water had in some instances drowned the zealous workmen who had been the first to reach it. And, while such were the resources of less favoured localities or seasons, profuse rains descended over the whole region for one half of the year, and the thick summer dews compensated by night for the daily tribute extorted by an African sun. At various distances over the undulating surface, and through the woods, were seen the villas and the A. SKETCH OF THE THIRD CENTURT. S hamlets of that happy land. It was an age when the pride of architecture had been indulged to the full ; edifices, public and private, mansions and temples, ran off far away from each market-town or borough, as from a centre, some of stone or marble, but most of them ol that composite of fine earth, rammed tight by means ol frames, for which the Saracens were afterwards famous, and of which specimens remain to this day, as hard in surface, as sharp at the angles, as when they first were finished. Every here and there, on hill or crag, crowned with basilicas and temples, radiant in the sun, might be seen the cities of the province or of its neigh- bourhood, Thibursicumbur, Thugga, Laribus, Siguessa, Sufetula, and many others ; while in the far distance, on an elevated table-land under the Atlas, might b^i discerned the Colonia Scillitana, famous about fifty years before the date of which we write for the mar- tyrdom of Speratus and his companions, who were beheaded at the order of the proconsul for refusing to swear by the genius of Eome and the emperor. If the spectator now takes his stand, not in Sicca itself, but about a quarter of a mile to the south-east, on the hill or knoll on which was placed the cottage of Agellius, the city itself will enter into the picture. Its name, Sicca Yeneria, if it be derived from the Succoth- benoth, or "tents of the daughters," mentioned by the inspired writer as an object of pagan worship in Samaria, shows that it owed its foundation to the Phoenician colonists of the country. At any rate the Punic deities retained their hold upon the place ; the temples of the Tyrian Hercules and of Saturn, the scene of annual human sacrifices, were conspicuous Id its outline, though these and all other religious build- ings in it looked small beside the mysterious antique shrine devoted to the sensual rites of the Syrian Astarte. Public baths and a theatre, a capitol, imita- tive of Eome, a gymnasium, the long outline of a por- tico, an equestrian statue in brass of the Emperor Severus, were grouped together above the streets of B 2 4 CALLISTA ; a city, which, narrow and winding, ran up and down across the hill. In its centre an extraordinary spring threw up incessantly several tons of water every minute, and was inclosed by the superstitious grati- tude of the inhabitants with the peristylium of a sacred place. At the extreme back, towards the north, which could not be seen from the point of view where we last stationed ourselves, there was a sheer descent of rock, bestowing on the city, when it was seen at a distance on the Mediterranean side, the same bold and striking appearance which attaches to Castro Gio- vanni, the ancient Enna, in the heart of Sicily. And now, withdrawing our eyes from the pano- rama, whether in its distant or nearer objects, if we would at length contemplate the a]iot itself from which we have been last surveying it, we shall find almost as much to repay attention, and to elicit admiration. We stand in the midst of a farm of some wealthy pro- prietor, consisting of a number of fields and gardens, separated from each other by hedges of cactus or the aloe. At the foot of the hill, which sloped down on the side furthest from Sicca to one of the tributaries of the rich and turbid river of which we have spoken, a large yard or garden, intersected with a hundred arti- ficial rills, was devoted to the cultivation of the beau- tiful and odoriferous khennah. A thick grove of palms seemed to triumph in the refreshment of the water's side, and lifted up their thankful boughs towards hea- ven. The barley harvest in the fields which lay higher up the hill was over, or at least was finishing ; and all that remained of the crop was the incessant and im- portunate chirping of the cicadce, and the rude booths of reeds and bulrushes, now left to wither, in which the peasant boys found shelter j'rom the sun, while in an earlier month they frightened from the grain the myriads of linnets, goldfinches, and other small birds who, as in other countries, contested with the human proprietor the possession of it. On the south-western slope lies a neat and carefully dregsed vineyard, the A SKETCH or THE THIRD CENTURY. 5 vine-stakes of whicli, dwarfish as they are, already cast long shadows on the eastern side. Slaves are scattered over it, testifying to the scorching power of the sun by their broad petasus, and to its oppressive heat by the scanty suhligarium which reached from the belt or girdle to the knees. They are engaged in cutting oft useless twigs to which the last showers of spring have given birth, and are twisting those which promise fruit into positions where they will be safe both from the breeze and from the sun. Every thing gives token of that gracious and happy season which the great Latin poets have hymned in their beautiful but heathen strains ; when, after the heavy rains, and raw mists, and piercing winds, and fitful sun-gleams of a long six months, the mighty mother manifests herself anew, and pours out the resources of her innermost being for the life and enjoyment of every portion of tlie vast whole ; — or, to apply the lines of a modern bard, " When the bare earth, till now Desert and bare, unsightly, unadorned, Brings forth the tender grass, whose verdure clads Her universal face with pleasant green ; Then herbs of every leaf, that sudden flower, Opening their various colours, and make gay Her bosom, swelling sweet ; and, these scarce blown, Forth flourishes the clustering vine, forth creeps The swelling gourd, up stands the corny reed Embattled in her fields, and the humble shrub, And bush with frizzled hair implicit; last Rise, as in dan^ie, the stately trees, and spread Their branches hung with copious fruit, or gem Their blossoms ; with high woods the hills arc crowned ; With tufts the valleys, and each fountain side ; With borders long the rivers ; that earth now Seems like to heaven, a seat where gods might dwell, Or wander with dehght, and love to haunt Her sacred shades." A snatch from some old Greek chant, with some- thing of plaintiveness in the tone, issues from the thicket just across the mule-path, cut deep in tlie earth, which reaches from the city gate to the stream- let; and a youth, who had the appearance of the 6 CALLISTA : assistant bailiff or -procurator of the farm leaped from it, and went over to the labourers, who were busy with the vines. His eyes and hair and the cast of hia features spoke of Europe ; his manner had something of shyness and reserve, rather than of rusticity ; and he wore a simple red tunic with half sleeves, descend- ing to the knee, and tightened round him by a belt. Hia legs and feet were protected by boots which came half up his calf. He addressed one of the slaves, and his voice was gentle and cheerful. " Ah, Sansar !" he cried, " I don't like your way of managing these branches so well as my own ; but it is a difficult thing to move an old fellow like you. You never fasten together the shoots which you don't cut off, they are flying about quite wild, and the first ox that passes through the field next month for the ploughing will break them off." He spoke in Latin ; the man understood it, and answered him in the same language, though with de- viations from purity of accent and syntax, not without parallel in the talkee-talkee of the VYest Indian negro. "Ay, ay, master," he said, "ay, ay; but it's all a mistake to use the plough at all. The fork does the work much better, and no fear for the grape. I hide the tendril under the leaf against the sun, which is the only enemy we have to consider." " Ah ! but the fork does not raise so much dust as the plough and the heavy cattle which draw it," re- turned Agellius; "and the said dust does more for the protection of the tendril than the shade of the leaf." " But those huge beasts," retorted the slave, "turn up great ridges, and destroy the yard." " It's no good arguing with an old vinedresser, who had formed his theory before I was born," said Agel- Uus good-humouredly ; and he passed on into a garden beyond. Here were other indications of the happy month through which the year was now travelling. The A. SKETCH OF THE THIED CE^^TURT. 7 garden, so to call it, was a space of several acres in extent ; it was one large bed of roses, and preparation was making for extracting their essence, for which various parts of that country are to this day cele- brated. Here was another set of labourers, and a raan of middle age was surveying them at his leisure. His business-like, severe, anu off-hand manner be- spoke the villicus or bailiff himself. " Always here," said he, "as if you were a slave, not a Eoman, my good fellow^ ; yet slaves have their Saturnalia; always serving, not worshipping the all- bounteous and all-blessed. "Why are you. not taking holiday in the town r'" " Why should I, sir ?" asked Agellius ; " don't you recollect old Hiempsal's saying about ' one foot in the slipper, and one in the shoe.' jSTothing would be done well if I were a town-goer. You engaged me, I suppose, to be here, not there." "Ah!" answered he, "but at this season the empire, the genius of Home, the customs of the coun- try, demand it, and above all the great goddess Astarte, and her genial, jocund month. ' Parturit almus ager ;' you know the verse ; do not be out of tune with nature, nor clash and jar with the great system of the universe." A cloud of confusion, or of distress, passed over Ageliius's face. He seemed as if he wished to speak ; at length he merely said, " It's a fault on the right side in a servant, I suppose." " I know the way of your people," Yitricus replied, " Corybantians, Phrygians, Jews, what do you call yourselves? There are so many fantastic religions now-a-days. Hang yourself outright at your house- door, if you are tired of living, — and you are a sensible fellow. How can any man, whose head sits right upon his shoulders, say that life is worth having, and not worth enjoying?" "I am a quiet being," answered Agellius, "I like 8 CALLISTA ; the country, which you think so tame, and care little for the flaunting town. Tastes differ." " Town ! you need not go to Sicca," answered the bailiflf, " all Sicca is out of town. It has poured into the fields, and groves, and river side. Lift up your eyes, man alive, open your ears, and let pleasure flow in. Be passive under the sweet breath of the goddess, and she will fill you with ecstasy." It was as Yitricus had said ; the solemn feast-days of Astarte were in course of celebration ; of Astarte, the well-known divinity of Carthage and its dependent cities, whom Heliogabalus had lately introduced to Rome, who in her diff'erent aspects was at once Urania, Juno, and Aphrodite, according as she embodied the idea of the philosopher, the statesman, or the vulgai ; lofty and intellectual as Urania, majestic and com man ding as Juno, seductive as the goddess of sen- suality and excess. " There goes the son of as good and frank a soldier as ever brandished pilum," said Vitricus to himself, " till in his last years some infernal god took umbrage at him, and saddled him and his with one of those absurd superstitions which are as plentiful here as serpents. He indeed was too old himself to get much harm from it ; but it shows its sour nature in these young shoots. A good servant, but the plague's in his bones, and he will rot." His subordinate's reflections were of a diflferent character : " The very air breathes sin to-day," he cried ; " O that I did not find the taint of the city in these works of God! Alas! sweet nature, the child of the Almighty, is made to do the fiend's work, and does it better than the town. O ye beautiful trees and fair flowers, O bright sun and balmy air, what a bondage ye are in, and how do ye groan till you are redeemed from it I Ye are bond-slaves, but not will- ingly, as man is ; but how will you ever be turned to nobler purpose ? How is this vast, this solid establish- A SKETCH or THE THIED CENTTJET. » ment of error, the incubus of many thousand years, ever to have an end ? You yourselves, dear ones, will come to nought first. Any how, the public way is no place for me this evening. They'll soon be back from their accursed revelry." A sound of horns and voices had been heard from time to time through the woods, as if proceeding from parties dispersed through them ; and in the growing twilight might be seen lights, glancing and wandering through the foliage. The cottage in which Agellius dwelt was on the other side of the hollow bridle-way which crossed the hill. To make for home he had first to walk for some little distance along it ; and scarcely had he descended into it for that purpose, when he found himself in the front of a band of revellers, who were returning from some scene of impious festivity. They were arrayed in holiday guise, as far as they studied dress at all ; the symbols of idolatry were on their foreheads and arras ; some of them were intoxicated, and most of them, were women. " Why have you not been worshipping, young fel- low ?" said one. " Comely built," said another, "but struck by the furies. I know the cut of him." " By Astarte," said a third, " he's one of those sly Gnostics ! I have seen the chap before, with his hang- dog look. He's one of Pluto's whelps, first cousin to Cerberus, and his name's Channibal." On which they all began to shout out, " I say, Channibal, Channibal, here's a lad that knows you. Old fellow, come along with us," and the speaker made a dash at him. On this Agellius, who was slowly making his way past them on the broken and steep path, leapt up in two or three steps to the ridge, and went away in security ; when one woman cried out, " O the toad, I know him now ; he is a wizard ; he eats little children ! didn't you see him make that sign ? it's a charm. My sister did it ; the fool left me to be one of them. She wa? 10 OALLISTA ; ever doing so " (mimicking the sign of the cross) . " He's a Christian, blight him ! he'll turn us into beasts." "Cerberus bite him!" said another, "he sucks blood ;" and taking up a stone, she made it whiz past his ear as he disappeared from view. A general scream of contempt and hatred followed. " Where's the ass's head ? put out the lights, put out the lights ! gibbet him ! that's whj he has not been with honest people down in the vale." And then they struck up a blasphemous song, the sentiments of which we are not going even to conceive, much less to attempt iu words. A SKETCH OP THE THIED CENTUBI. 11 CHAPTER II. The revellers went on their waj; Agellius went on his, and reached his lowly and lonely cottage. He was the elder of the two sons of a Eoman legionary, of the Secunda Italica, who had settled, married, and died in Sicca, having in his old age become a Christian. The fortitude of some confessors at Carthage in the persecution of Severus had been the initial cause of his conversion. He had been posted as one of their guards, and had attended them to the scene of their martyrdom, in addition to the civil force, to whom in the proconsulate the administration of the law was committed. Therefore, happily for him, it could not fall to his duty to be their executioner; a function which, however revolting to his feelings, he might not have had courage to dechne. He remained a pagan, though he could not sliake off the impression which the martyrs had made upon him ; and, after completing his time of service, he retired to the protection of some great friends in Sicca, where his brother already lived. Here he took a wife of the old I^umidian stock, and supported himself by the produce of a small piece of land which had been given him for life by the imperial government. If trial were necessary in order to keep alive the good seed which had been sown in his heart, he found a never-failing supply of that article in the companion of his declining years. In the hey- 12 CALLI8TA; day of her youth she might have been fitted to throw a sort of sunshine, or rather torch-hglit, on a military carouse ; but now, when poor Strabo, a man well to do in the world, looking for peace, had fallen under her arts, he found he had surrendered his freedom to a malignant, profligate woman, whose passions made her better company for evil spirits than for an invalided soldier. Indeed, as time went on, the popular belief, which she rather encouraged, went to the extent that she actually did hold an intercourse with the unseen world ; and certainly she matured in a hatred towards God and man, which would naturally follow, and not unnaturally betoken, such intercourse. The more, then, she inflicted on him her proficiency in these amiable characteristics, the more he looked out for some con- solation elsewhere ; and the more she involved herself in the guilt or the repute of unlawful arts, the more was he drawn to that religion, where alone to com- mune with the invisible is to hold intercourse with heaven, not with hell. Whether so great a trial supplied a more human inducement for looking to- wards Christianity, it is impossible to say. Most men, certainly Eoman soldiers, may be considered to act on mixed motives ; but so it was in fact, that, on his be- coming in his last years a Christian, he found, perhaps discovered, to his great satisfaction, that the Church did not oblige him to continue or renew a tie which bound him to so much misery, and that he might end his days in a tranquillity which his past life required, and his wife's presence would have precluded. He made a good end ; he had been allowed to take the blessed sacrament from the altar to his own home on the last time he had been able to attend a synaxis of the faithful, and thus had communicated at least six months within his decease ; and the priest who anointed him at the beginning of his last illness also took his confession. He died, begging forgiveness of all whom he had injured, and giving large alms to the poor. This was about the year 236, in the midst of A SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTUBT. 13 that long peace of the Church which was broken at length by the Decian persecution. This peace of well-r.igh fifty years had necessarily a peculiar, and not a happy effect upon the Christians of the proconsulate. They multiplied in the greater and the maritime cities, and made their way into po- sitions of importance, whether in trade or the govern- mental departments ; they extended their family con- nexions, and were on good terms with the heathen. "Whatever jealousy might be still cherished against the Christian name, nevertheless individual Christians were treated with civility, and recognized as citizens ; though among the populace there would be occasions, at the time of the more solemn pagan feasts, when accidental outbursts might be expected of the an- tipathy latent m the community, as we have been recording in the foregoing chapter. Men of sense, however, began to understand them better, and to be more just to the reasonableness of their faith. This would lead them to scorn Christianity less, but it would lead them to fear it more. It was no longer a matter merely for the populace to insult, but for a government deliberately to put down. The prevailing and still growing unbelief among the lower classes of the population did but make a religion more formid- able, which, as heathen statesmen felt, was able to wield the weapons of enthusiasm and zeal with a force and success uniinown even to the most fortunate im- postors among the Oriental or Egyptian hierophants. The philosophical schools were impressed with similar apprehensions, and had now for fifty years been em- ployed in creating and systematizing a new intellectual basis for the received paganism. But, while the signs of the times led to the antici- pation that a struggle was impending between the heads of the state religion and of the new worship which was taking its place, the great body of Christ tians, laymen and ecclesiastics, were on better and better terms, individually, with the members of society 14 callista; or what is now called the public ; and, without losing their faith, or those embers of charity which favour- able circumstances would promptly rekindle, were, it must be confessed, in a state of considerable relaxation ; they often were on the brink of deplorable sins, and sometimes fell over the brink. And many would join the Church on inferior motives as soon as no great temporal disadvantage attached to the act, or the families of Christian parents might grow up with so little of moral and religious education as to make it difficult to say why they called themselv^es members of a divine religion. Mixed marriages would increase both the scandal and the confusion. "A long repose," says St. Cyprian, speaking cf this very period, " had corrupted the discipline which had come down to us. Every one was applying himself to the increase of wealth ; and, forgetting both the conduct of the faithful under the Apostles, and what ought to be their conduct in every age, with insatiable eagerness for gain devoted himself to the multiplying of possessions. The priests were wanting in religious devotedness, the ministers in entireness of faith ; there was no mercy in works, no discipline in manners. Men wore their beards disfigured, and women dyed their faces. Their eyes were changed from what Grod made them, and a lying colour was passed upon the hair. The hearts of the simple were misled by treache- rous artifices, and brethren became entangled in se- ductive snares. Ties of marriage were formed with unbelievers ; members of Christ abandoned to the heathen. Not only rash swearing was heard, but even false ; persons in high place were swollen with con- temptuousness ; poisoned reproaches fell from their mouths, and men were sundered by unabating quarrels. Numerous bishops, who ought to be an encourage- ment and example to others, despising their sacred tailing, engaged themselves in secular vocations, re- linquished their sees, deserted their people, strayed among foreign provinces, hunted the markets for A SKETCH OF THE THIRD CENTTJET. 15 mercantile profits, and tried to araass large sums of money, while they had brethren starving wathin the Church ; took possession of estates by fraudulent proceedings, and multiplied their gains by accumulated usuries ^" The relaxation which would extend the profession of Christianity in the larger cities would contract or extinguish it in remote or country places. There would be little zeal to keep up Churches, which could not be served without an effort or without secular loss. Carthage, Utica, Hippo, Milevis, or Curubis, was a more attractive residence than the towns of uncouth African names, which amaze the ecclesiastical student in the acts of the councils. Vocations became scarce ; sees remained vacant ; congregations died out. This was pretty much the case with the Church and see of Sicca. At the time of which we write, history pre- serves no record of any bishop as exercising his pas- toral functions in that city. In matter of fact there was none. The last bishop, an amiable old man, had m the course of years acquired a considerable extent of arable land, and employed himself principally, for lack of more spiritual occupation, in reaping, stacking, selling, and sending off his wheat for the Eoman market. His deacon had been celebrated in early youth for his boldness in the chase, and took part in the capture of lions and panthers (an act of charity towards the peasants round Sicca) for the Roman amphitheatre. IS'o priests were to be found, and the bishop became parochus till his death. Afterwards infants and catechumens lost baptism ; parents lost faith, or at least love ; wanderers lost repentance and conversion. For a time there was a flourishing meet- ing-house of Tertullianists, who had scared more hum- ble minds by pronouncing the eternal perdition of every Catholic ; there had also been various descriptions of Gnostics, who had carried off the clever youths and • Vid. Oxford trans, of St. Cyprian. 16 CALLISTA ; restless speculators ; and there had been the lapse of time, gradually consuming the generation which had survived the flourishing old times of the African Church. And the result was, that in the year 250 it was difficult to say of whom the Church of Sicca con- sisted. There was no bishop, no priest, no deacon. There was the old mansionarius or sacristan : there were two or three pious women, married or single, who owed their religion to good mothers ; there were some slaves who kept to their faith, no one knew how or why ; there were a vast many persons who ought to be Catholics, but were heretics, or nothing at all, or all but pagans, and sure to become pagans on the asking; there were Agellius and his brother Juba, and how far these two had a claim to the Christian name we now proceed to explain. They were about the ages of seven and eight when their father died, and they fell under the guardianship of their uncle, whose residence at Sicca had been one of the reasons which determined Strabo to settle there. This man, being possessed of some capital, drove a thriving trade in idols, large and small, amulets, and the like instruments of the established superstition. His father had come to Carthage in the service of one of the assessors of the proconsul of the day ; and his son, finding competition ran too high to give him prospect of remuneration in the metropolis, had opened his statue-shop in Sicca. Those modern arts which enable an English town in this day to be so fertile in the production of ware of this description for the markets of the pagan East, were then unknown ; and Jucundus depended on certain artists whom he im- ported, especially on two Grreeks, brother and sister, who came from some isle on the Asian coast, for the sup- ply of his trade. He was a good-natured man, self-in- dulgent, positive, and warmly attached to the reigning paganism, both as being the law of the land and the vital principle of the state ; and, while he was really kind to his orphan nephews, he simply abominated, as ^B^ 1 ' ^H^H^^^^^^^^H ■| ^^Ik l^^^^S^ ^Jmm^^\ ^^^?^ m{^^ ilJ%,-* 1 ^^H \ fl ' ^"siIHH ^^^ "d^^^m Page 16. Agellius and his brother Juba. A SKETCH or THE THlED CEKTtJET. 17 in duty bound, the idiotic cant and impudent fee-fa- fum, to which, in his infallible judgment, poor old Strabo had betrayed his children. He would have restored them, you may be quite sure, to their country and their country's gods, had they acquiesced in the restoration ; but in different ways these little chaps, and he shook his head as he said it, were difficult to deal with. Agellius had a very positive opinion of his own on the matter ; and as for Juba, though he had no opinion at all, yet he had an equally positive aver- sion to have any opinion at all, even in favour of paganism, thrust on him by another. He had re- mained in his catechumen state since he grew up, because he found himself in it; and though nothing would make him go forward in his profession of Chris- tianity, no earthly power would be able to make him go back. So there he was, like a mule, stuck fast in the door of the Church, and feeling a gratification in his independence of mind. However, whatever his profession might be, still, as time went on, he plainly took after his mother ; renewed his intercourse with her after his father's death, and at length went so far as to avow that he believed in nothing but the devil, if even he believed in him. It was scarcely safe, how- ever, to affirm that the senses of this hopeful lad were his own. Agellius, on the other hand, when a boy of six years old, had insisted on receiving baptism ; had perplexed his father by a manifestation of zeal to which the old man was a stranger, and had made the good bishop lose the corn-fleet which was starting for Italy from his importunity to learn the catechism. Baptized he was, confirmed, communicated ; but a boy's nature is variable, and by the time Agellius had reached ado- lescence, the gracious impulses of his childhood had in some measure faded away, though he still retained his faith in its first keenness and vigour. But he had no one to keep him up to his duty ; no exhortations, no example, no sympathy. His father's friends had taken c 18 CAtLIStA ; him up so far as this, that by an extraordinary favour they had got him a lease for some years of the pro- perty which Strabo, a veteran soldier, had rented of the imperial government. The care of this small property fell upon him, ana another and more serious charge was added to it. The long prosperity of the province had increased the opulence and enlarged the upper class of Sicca. Officials, contractors, and ser- vants of the government had made fortunes, and raised villas in the neighbourhood of the city. Natives of the place, returning from E-ome or from provincial service elsewhere, had invested their gains in long leases of state lands, or of the farms belonging to the imperial res privata or privy purse, and had become virtual proprietors of the rich fields or beautiful gardens in which they had played as children. One of such persons, who had had a place in the officium of the quaestor, or rather procurator, as he began to be called, was the employer of Agellius. His property adjoined the cottage of the latter; and, having first employed the youth from recollection of his father, he confided to him the place of under-bailifF from the talents he showed for farm business. Such was his position at the early age of twenty- two ; and honourable as it was in itself, and from the mode in which it was obtained, no one would consider it adapted, under the circumstances, to counteract the religious languor and coldness which had grown upon him. And in truth he did not know where he stood, further than that he M'as firm in faith, as we have said, and had shrunk, from a boy upwards, from the vice and immorality which was the very atmosphere of Sicca. He might any day be betrayed into some fatal inconsistency, which would either lead him into sin, or oblige him abruptly to retrace his steps, and find a truer and safer position. He was not generally known to be a Christian, at least for certain, though he was seen to keep clear of the established religion. It was not that he hid, so much as that the world did A SKETCH or THE THIED CENTUEY. 19 not care to know, what he believed. In that day there were many rites and worships which kept to them- selves ; many forms of moroseness or misanthropy, as they were considered, which withdrew their votaries from the public ceremonial. The Catholic faith seemed to the multitude to be one of these ; it was only in critical times, when some idolatrous act was insisted on by the magistrate, that the specific nature of Christianity was tested and detected. Then at length it was seen to differ from all other religious varieties by that irrational and disgusting obstinacy, as it was felt to be, which had rather suffer torments and lose life than submit to some graceful, ortouchiog, or at least trifling observance which the tradition ot afjes had sanctioned. 20 fJALLlSTA.; CHAPTER III. The cottage for which Agellius was making, when lant we had sight of him, was a small brick house, consisting of one room, with a loft over it, and a kitchen on the side, not very unlike that holy habitation which once contained the Eternal "Word in human form with his Virgin Mother, and Joseph, their guardian. It was situated on the declivity of the hill, and, unlike the gardens of Italy, the space before it was ornamented with a plot of turf. A noble palm on one side, in spite of its distance from the water, and a group of orange-trees on the other, formed a foreground to the rich landscape which was described in our opening chapter. The borders and beds were gay with the lily, the bacchar, amber- coloured and purple, the golden abrotomus, the red cnenaonmm, and the variegated iris. Against the wall of the house were trained pomegranates, with their crimson blossoms, the star- like pothos or jessamine, and the symbolical passion- flower, which well became a Christian dwelling. It was an intimation of what would be found within ; for on the side of the room was rudely painted a red cross, with doves about it, as is found in early Christian shrines to this day. So long had been the peace of the Church, that the tradition of persecution seemed to liave been lost ; and Christians allowed them- selves in the profession of their faith at home, cautious .to they might be in public places ; as freely as now in A. SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTrET. 21 England, where we do not scruple to raise crucifixea within our churches and houses, though we shrink from doing so within sight of the hundred cabs and omni- buses which rattle past them. Under the cross were two or three pictures, or rather sketches. In the centre stood the Blessed Virgin with hands spread out in prayer, attended by the holy Apostles Peter and Paul on her right and left. IJnder this repre- sentation were rudely scratched upon the walls the words, " Advocata nostra," a title which the earliest antiquity bestows upon her. On a small shelf was placed a case with two or three rolls or sheets of parchment in it. The appearance of them spoke of use indeed, but of reverential treatment. These were the Psalms, the Grospel according to St. Luke, and St. Paul's Epistle to the Eomans, in the old Latin version. The Grospel was handsomely covered, and ornamented with gold. The apartment was otherwise furnished with such implements and materials as might be expected in the cottage of a countryman : one or two stools and benches for sitting, a table, and in one corner a heap of dried leaves and rushes, with a large crimson coverlet, for rest at night. Elsewhere were two mill- stones fixed in a frame, with a handle attached to the rim of one of them, for grinding corn. Then again, garden tools ; boxes of seeds ; a vessel containing syrup for assuaging the sting of the scorpion ; the asir-rese or anagallis, a potent medicine of the class of poisons, which was taken in wine for the same mischance. It hung from the beams, with a large bunch of atsir- tiphua, a sort of camomile, smaller in the flower and more fragrant than our own, which was used as a febrifuge. Thence, too, hung a plentiful gathering of dried grapes, of the kind called duracince ; and near the door a bough of the green Tjargut or 'psyllium^ to drive away the smaller insects. Poor Agellius felt the contrast between the un- godly turmoil from which he had escaped, and the 22 CALLISTA ; deep stillness into whicli he now bad entered; but neither satisfied him quite. There was no repose out of doors, and no relief within. He was lonelv at home, lonely in the crowd. He needed the sympathy of bis kind ; hearts which might beat with his heart ; friends with whom he might share his joys and griefs ; advisers whom be might consult ; minds like his own, who would understand him., — minds unlike bis own, who would succour and respond to him. A very great trial certainly this, in which the soul is flung back upon itself; and that especially in the case of the young, for whom memory and experience do so little, and wayward and excited feelings do so much. Great gain had it been for Ageliius, even in its natural effect, putting aside higher benefits, to have been able to recur to sacramental confession ; but to confession he had never been, though once or twice he had attended the public liomologesis of the Church. Shall we wonder that the poor youth began to be despond- ent and impatient under his trial ? Shall we not feel for him, though we may be sorry for him, should it turn out that he was looking restlessly into every corner of the small world of acquaintance in which his lot lay for those with whom he could converse easily, and interchange speculation, argument, aspiration, and affection ? " No one cares for me," he said, as he sat down on his rustic bench. " I am nothing to any one ; I am a hermit, like Elias or John, without the call to be one. Yet even Elias felt the burden of being one against many; even John asked at length in expostulation, 'Art Thou He that shall com.e?' Am I for ever to have the knowledge, without the consolation, of the truth ? am I for ever to belong to a great divine societv, yet never see the face of anv of its mem- bers ?"" He paused in his thoughts, as if drinking in the full taste and measure of his unhappiness. And tlien his reflections took a turn, and he said suddenly, " Why A SKETCH OF THE THIED CEiN-TUIlT. 23 do I not leave Sicca ? "What binds me to my father's farm ? I am young, and my interest in it will soon expire. What keeps me from Carthage, Hippo, Cir- tha, where Christians are so many?" But here he stopped as suddenly as he had begun ; and a strange feeling, half pang, half thrill, went through his heart. And he felt unwilling to pursue his thought, or to answer the question which he had asked ; and he set- tled into a dull, stagnant condition of mind, in which he seemed hardly to think at all. Be of good cheer, solitary one, though thou art not a hero yet! There is One that cares for thee, and loves thee, more than thou canst feel, love, or care for thyself. Cast all thy caro upon Him. He sees thee, and is watching thee ; He is hanging over thee, and smiles in compassion at thy troubles. His angel, who is thine, is whispering good thoughts to thee. He knows thy weakness ; He foresees thy errors ; but He holds thee by thy right hand, and thou shalt not, canst not escape Him. By thy faith, which thou hast so simply, resolutely retained in the midst of idolatry ; by thy purity, which, like some fair flower, thou hast cherished in the midst of pollution, He will remember thee in thy e\al hour, and thine enemy shall not pre- vail against thee ! AVhat means that smile upon Agellius's face ? It is the response of the child to the loving parent. He knows not why, but the cloud is past. He signs himself with the holy cross, and sweet reviving thoughts enliven him. He names the sacred Name, and it is like ointment poured out upon his soul. He rises; he kneels down under the dread symbol of his salvation ; and he begins his evening prayer. 24 oallibta; CHAPTER IV. There was more of heart, less of effort, less of me- chanical habit in Agellius's prayers that night, than there had been for a long while before. He got up, struck a light, and communicated it to his small earthen lamp. Its pale rays feebly searched the room, and discovered at the other end of it Juba, who had silently opened the door, and sat down near it, while his brother was employed upon his devotions. The countenance of the latter fell, for he was not to go to sleep with the resignation and peace which had just before been poured into his breast. Yet why should he complain ? we receive consolation in this world for the very purpose of preparing us against trouble to come. Juba was a tall, swarthy, wild- looking youth. He was holding his head on one side as he sat, and his face towards the roof; he nodded obliquely, arched his eyebrows, parsed up his lips, and crossed his arms, while he gave utterance to a strange, half-whispered laugh. " He, he, he !" he cried ; " so you are on your knees, Agellius." " Why shouldn't I be at this hour," answered Agellius, "and before T go to bed?" " 0, every one to his taste, of course," said Juba ; "but to an unprejudiced mind there is something unworthy in the act." "Why, Juba," said his brother somewhat sharply, " don't you profess any religion at all ?" A SKETCH OF TWR THIED CENTURY. 25 "Perhaps I do, and perliaps I don't," answered Juba ; " but never shall it be a bowing and scraping, crawling and cringing religion. You may take your oath of that." "AVhat ails you to come here at this time of night?" asked Ageiliua ; "who asked for your com- pany?" "I will come just when I please," said the other, " and go when I please. I won't give an account of my actions to any one, god or man, devil or priest, much less to you. What right have you to ask me?" "Then," said Agellius, "you'll never get peace or comfort as long as you live ; that I can tell you ; let alone the life to come." Juba kept silent for a while, and bit his nails with a smile on his face, and his eyes looking askance upon the ground. " I want no more than I have ; I am well content," he said. " Contented with yourself," retorted Agellius. "Of course," Juba replied; "whom ought one to wisb rather to be contented with ?" " I suppose, with your Creator." "Creator!" answered Juba, tossing back his head with an air of superiority; "Creator; — that, I con- sider, is an assumption." " O my dear brother," cried Agellius, " don't go on in that dreadful way !" " ' Go on !' who began ? Is one man to lay down the law, and not the other too ? is it so generally received, this belief of a Creator ? Who have brought in the belief? the Christians. 'Tis the Christians that began it. The world went on very well without it before their rise. And now, whf began the dispute but you ?" "Well, if I did," answered Agellius; "but I didn't. You began in coming here; what in the world are you come for ? by what right do you disturb me at this hour?" 26 CALLISTA. ; There was no appearance of anger in Juba; he seemed as free from feeling of every kind, from what is called lieart, as if he had been a stone. In answer to his brother's question, he quietly said, "I have been down there," pointing in the direction of the woods. An expression of sharp anguish passed over his brother's face, and for a moment he was silent. At length he said, "You don't mean to say you have been down to poor mother ?" " I do," said Juba. There was again a silence for a little while ; then Agellius renewed the conversation. " You have fallen off sadly, Juba, in the course of the last several years." J uba tossed his head, and crossed his legs. " At one time I thought you would have been bap- tized," his brother continued. "That was my weakness," answered Juba ; " it was a weak moment: it was just after tlie old bishop's death. He had been kind to me as a child ; and he said some womanish words to me, and it was excusable in me." "0 that you had yielded to your wish!" cried Agellius. Juba looked superior. " The fit passed," he said. " I have come to a juster view of things. It is not every one who has the strength of mind. I consider that a logical head comes to a very different conclu- sion;" and he began wagging his own, to the right and left, as if it w^ere coming to a great many. " Well," said Agellius, gaping, and desiring at least to come to a conclusion of the altercation, " what brings you here so late ?" " I was on my way to Jucundus," he answered, "and have been delayed by the Succoth-benoth in the grove across the river." Here they were thrown back upon tlieir controversy. Agellius turned quite white. " My poor fellow," he said, " what were you there for ?" A SKETCH OF THE THIRD CENTFBT. 27 " To see the world," answered Jaba ; " it's un* manly not to see it. Why shouldn't I see it ? It wai good fun. I despise them all, fools and idiots. There they were, scampering about, or lying like logs, all in liquor. Apes and swine ! However, I will do as others do, if I please. I will be as drunk as they, when I see good. I am my own master, and it would be no kind of harm. " No harm ! why, is it no harm to become an ape or a hog?" "Tou don't take just views of human nature," an- swered Juba with a self-satisfied air. " Our first duty is to seek our own happiness. If a man thinks it happier to be a hog, why let him be a hog," and he laughed. "This is where you are narrow-minded. I shall seek my own happiness, and try this way, if I please." "Happiness!" cried Agellius; "where have you been picking up all this stuff? Can you call such detestable filth happiness?" "What do you know about such matters ?" asked Juba. " Did you ever see them ? did you ever try them ? Tou would be twice the man you are, if you had. Tou will not be a man till you do. Tou are carried oiF your legs in your own way. I'd rather get drunk every day than fall down on all-fours as you do, crawling on your stomach like a worm, and whining like a hound that has been beaten." " jSTow, as 1 live, you shan't stop here one instant longer!" cried out Agellius, starting up. "Be of£ with you ! get away ! what do you come here to blas- pheme for? who wants your who asked for you ? Gro! go, I say! take yourself off! Why don't you go? Keep your ribaldry for others." "I am as good as you any day," said Juba. " I don't set myself up," answered Agellius, " but it's impossible to confound Christian and unbeliever as you do." 28 CALLISTA . " Christian and unbeliever!" said Juba slowly. " I suppose, when they are a-courting each other, they are confounded." He looked hard at Agellius, as if he thought he had hit a blot. Then he continued, " If I were a Christian, I'd be so in earnest : else I'd be an honest heathen." Agellius coloured somewhat, and sat down, as if under embarrassment. "I despise you," said Juba; "you have not the pluck to be a Christian. Be consistent, and fizz upon a stake; but you're not made of that stuff. You're even afraid of uncle. Nay, you can be caught by those painted wares, about which, when it suits your purpose, you can be so grave. I despise you," he continued, " I despise you, and the whole kit of you. What's the difference between you and another ? Your people say, ' Earth's a vanity, life's a dream, riches a deceit, pleasure a snare. Fratres charissimi, the time is short ;' but who love earth, and life, and riches, and pleasure better than they ? You are all of you as fond of the world, as set upon gain, as chary of repu- tation, as ambitious of power, as the jolly old heathen who, you say, is going the way of the pit." " It is one thing to have a conscience," answered Agellius, " another thing to act upon it. The con- science of these poor people is darkened. You had a conscience once." "Conscience, conscience," said Juba. "Yes, cer- tainly, once I had a conscience. Yes, and once I had a bad chill, and went about chattering and shivering ; and once I had a game leg, and then I went limping; and so, you see, I once on a time had a conscience. O yes, I have had many consciences before now, white, black, yellow, and green : they were all bad ; but they are all gone, and now T have none." Agellius said nothing; his one wish, as may be supposed, was to get rid of so unwelcome a vi- sitor. A SKETCH or THE THIED CENTUET. 29 " The truth is," coDtinued Juba, with the air of a teacher, "the truth is, that religion was a fashion with me, which is now gone by. It was the com- plexion of a particular stage of my life. I was neither the better nor the worse for it. It was an accident, like the bloom on my face, which soon," he said, spreading his lingers over his dirty-coloured cheeks, and stroking them, "which soon will disappear. I acted according to the feeling, while it lasted ; but I can no more recal it than my first teeth, or the down on my chin. It's among the things that were." Agellius still keeping silence from weariness and disgust, he looked at him in a significant way, and said slowly, " I see how it is ; I have penetration enough to perceive that you don't believe a bit more about religion than I do." " You must not say that under my roof," cried Agellius, feeling he must not let his brother's charge pass without a protest. " Many are my sins, but un- belief is not one of them." Juba tossed his head. " I think I can see through a stone slab as well as any one," he said. " It is as I have said ; but you're too proud to confess it. It's part of your hypocrisy." "Well," said Agellius coldly, "let's have done. It's getting late, Juba; you'll be missed at home. Jucundus will be inquiriug of you, and some of those revelling friends of yours may do you a mischief by the way. — Why, my good fellow," he continued in surprise, "you have no leggings. The scorpions will catch hold of you to a certainty in the dark. Come, let me tie some straw wisps about you." "No fear of scorpions for me," answered Juba; "1 have some real good amulets for the occasion, which even loola-Jcog and uffah will respect." Saying this, he passed out of the room as uncere- moniously as he had entered it, and took the direction of the city, talking to himself, and singing snatches of wild airs as he went along, throwing back and shaking 30 CALLISTA ; his head, and now and then uttering a sharp interna! laugh. Disdaining to follow the ordinary path, he dived down into the thick and wet grass, and scram- bled through the ravine, which the public road crossed before it ascended the hill. Meanwhile he accompanied his quickened pace with a louder strain, and it ran as follows : — " The little black Moor is the chap for me, "When the night is dark, and the earth is fren, Under the limbs of the broad yew-tree. 'Twas Father Cham that planted that yew, And he fed it fat with the bloody dew Of a score of brats, as his lineage grew. Footing and flaunting it, all in the night. Each lock flings fire, each heel strikes light ; No lamps need they, whose breath is bright." Here he was interrupted by a sudden growl, which sounded almost under his feet ; and some wild animal was seen to slink away. Juba showed no surprise ; he had taken out a small metal idol, and whispering some words to it, had presented it to the animal. He clambered up the bank, gained the city gate, and made his way for his uncle's dv/elling, which was near the temple of Astarte. A. SKETCH or THE THIED CENTUET. 31 CHAPTER V. The house of Jucundus was closed for the night when Juba reached it, or you would see, were you his com- panion, that it was one of the most showy shops in Sicca. It was the image-store of the place, and set out for sale, not articles of statuary alone, but of me- tal, of mosaic work, and of jewelry, as far as they were dedicated to the service of paganism. It was bright with the many colours adopted in the embellishment of images, and. the many lights which silver and gold, brass and ivory, alabaster, gypsum, talc, and glass re- flected. Shelves and cabinets were laden with wares ; both the precious material, and the elaborated trinket. All tastes were suited, the popular and the refined, the fashion of the day and the love of the antique, the classical and the barDarian devotion. There you might see the rude symbols of invisible powers, which, origi- nating in deficiency of art, had been perpetuated by reverence for the past ; the mysterious cube of marble sacred among the Arabs, the pillar which was the emblem of Mercury or Bacchus, the broad-based cone of Heliogabalus, the pyramid of Vaphos, and the tile or brick of Juno. There too were ^he unmeaning blocks of stone with human heads, which were to be dressed out in rich robes, and to simulate the human form. There were other articles besides, as portable as these were unmanageable ; little Junes, Mercuries, Dianas, and Tortunes, for the bosom or the girdle. House- 32 CALLI8TA ; hold gods were there, and the objects of personal devotion, Minerva or Yesta, with handsome niches or shrines in which they might reside. There too were the brass crowns, or nimbi, which were intended to protect the heads of the gods from bats and birds. There you might buy, were you a heathen, rings with heads on them of Jupiter, Mars, the Sun, Serapis, and above all Astarte. You would find there the rings and signets of the Basilidians ; amulets too of wood or ivory ; figures of demons, preternaturally ugly ; little skeletons, and other superstitious devices. It would be hard, indeed, if you could not be pleased, whatever your religious denomination, unless indeed you were determined to reject all the appliances and objects of idolatry indiscriminately ; and in that case you would rejoice that it was night, when you arrived there, and, in particular, that darkness swallowed up other appliances and objects of pagan worship, which to darkness were due by a peculiar title, and by dark- ness were best shrouded, till the coming of that day, when all things, good and evil, shall be made light. The shop, as we have said, was closed ; concealed from view by large lumbering shutters, and made secure by heavy bars of wood. So we must enter by the passage or vestibule on the right side, and that will conduct us into a modest atrium, with an implu- vium on one side, and on the other the triclinium or supper-room, backing the shop. Jucundus had been pleasantly engaged in a small supper-party ; and, mindful that a symposium should lie within the num- ber of the Graces and of the Muses, he had confined his guests to two, the young Greek Aristo, who was one of his principal artists, and Cornelius, the son of a freedman of aE-oman of distinction, who had lately got a place in one of the scrinia of the proconsular officium, and had migrated into the province from the imperial city, where he had spent his best days. The dinner had not been altogether suitable to modern ideas of good living. The grapes from Tacape, A SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTUET. 33 and the dates from the lake Tritonis, the white and black figs, the nectarines and peaches, and the water- melons, address themselves to the imagination of an EnglisKman, as well as of an African of the third cen- tury. So also might the liquor derived from the sap or honey of the Getulian palm, and the sweet wine, called melilotus, made from the poetical fruit found upon the coasts of the Syrtis. He would have been struck too with the sweetness of the mutton ; but he would have asked what the sheep's tails were before he tasted them, and found how like marrow the firm substance ate, of which they consisted. He would have felt he ought to admire the roes of mullets, pressed and dried, from Mauretania; but he would have thought twice before he tried the lion cutlets, though they had the flavour of veal, and the addi- tional gout of being imperial property, and poached from a preserve. But, when he saw the indigenous dish, the very haggis and cock-a-leekie of Africa, in the shape of — (alas ! alas ! it must be said, with what- ever apology for its introduction) — in shape, then, of a delicate puppy, served up with tomatas, with its head between its fore-paws, we consider he would have risen from the unholy table, and thought he had fallen upon the hospitality of some sorceress of the neighbouring forest. However, to that festive board our Briton was not invited, for he had some previous engagement that evening, either of painting himself with woad, or of hiding himself to the chin in the fens ; so that nothing occurred to disturb the harmony of the party, and the good humour and easy conversa- tion which was the effect of Bnch excellent cheer. Cornelius had been present at the Secular Grames in the foregoing year, and was full of them, of Eome, and of himself in connexion with it, as became so genuine a cockney of the imperial period. He was full of the high patriotic thoughts which so solemn a celebration had kindled within him. " O great Eome!" he said, " thou art first, and there is no second. In that won- 34 CALLISTA ; derful pageant which these eyes saw last year was embodied her majesty, was promised her eternity. We die, she lives. I say, let a man die. It's well for him to take hemlock, or open a vein, after having seen the secular games. AVhat was there to live for ? I felt it ; life was gone ; its best gifts flat and insipid after that great day. Excellent — Tauromenian, I suppose ? We know it in Eome. Fill up my cup. I drink to the genius of the emperor." He was full of his subject, and soon resumed it. " Fancy the Campus Martins lighted up from one end to the other. It was the finest thing in the world. A large plain, covered, not with streets, not with woods, but broken and crossed with superb buildings in the midst of groves, avenues of trees, and green grass down to the water's edge. There's nothing that isn't there. Do you want the grandest temples in the world, the most spacious porticoes, the longest race- courses ? there they are. Do you want gymnasia ? there they are. Do you want arclies, statues, obelisks ? you find them there. There you have at one end the stupendous mausoleum of Augustus, cased with white marble, and just across the river the huge towering mound of Hadrian. At the other end you have the noble Pantheon of Agrippa, with its splendid Syra- cusan columns, and its dome glittering with silver tiles. Hard by are the baths of Alexander, with their beautiful groves. Ah, my good friend ! I shall have no time to drink, if I go on. Beyond are the numerous chapels and fanes which fringe the base of the Capi- toline hill ; the tall column of Antoninus comes next, with its adjacent basilica, where is kept the authentic list of the provinces of the empire, and of the govern- ors, each a king in power and dominion, who are sent out to them. Well, I am now only beginning. Fancy, I say, this magnificent region all lighted up; every temple to and fro, every bath, every grove, gleaming with innumerable lamps and torches. No, not even the gods of Olympus have any thing that A SKETCH or THE THIED CENTURT. 35 comes near it. Eome is the greatest of all divinities. In the dead of night all was alive ; then it was, when nature sleeps exhausted^ Borne began the solemn sacrifices to commemorate her thousand years. On the banks of the Tiber, which had seen ^neas land, and Eomulus ascend to the gods, the clear red flame shot up as the victims burned. The music of ten thousand horns and flutes burst forth, and the sacred dances began upon the greensward. I am too old to dance ; but, I protest, even I stood up and threw oif. AYe danced through three nights, dancing the old mil- lenary out, dancing the new millenary in. We were all Eomans, no strangers, no slaves. It was a solemn family feast, the feast of all the Eomans." " Then we came in for the feast," said Aristo ; " for Caracalla gave Eoraan citizenship to all freemen all over the world. We are all of us Eomans, recollect, Cornelius." "Ah! that was another matter, a condescension," answered Cornelius. " Yes, in a certain sense, I grant it ; but it was a political act." "I warrant you," retorted Aristo, "most political. We were to be fleeced, do you see ? so your imperial government made us Eomans, that we might have the taxes of Eomans, and that in addition to our own. TouVe taxed us double ; and as for the privilege of citizenship, much it is, by Hercules, when every snob has it who can wear apileus or cherish his hair." " Ah ! but you should have seen the procession from the Capitol," continued Cornelius, " on, I think, the second day ; from the Capitol to the Circus, all down the Via Sacra. Hosts of strangers there, and provincials from the four corners of the earth, but not in the pro- cession. There you saw all in one coup-d'wil the real good blood of Eome, the young blood of the new gene- ration, and promise of the future ; the sons of patrician and consular families, of imperators, orators, conquer- ors, statesmen. They rode at the head of the pro- cession, fine young fellows, six abreast ; and still more D 2 36 CALLISTA ; of them on foot. Then came the running horses and the chariots, the boxers, wrestlers, and other com- batants, all ready for the competition. The whole school of gladiators then turned out, boys and all, with their masters, dressed in red tunics, and splendidly armed. They formed three bands, and they went for- ward gaily, dancing and singing the Pyrrhic. By-the- bye, a thousand pair of gladiators fought during the games, a round thousand, and such clean-made, well- built fellows, and they came against each other so gallantly! You should have seen it; I can't go through it. There was a lot of satyrs, jumping and frisking, in burlesque of the martial dances which pre- ceded them. There was a crowd of trumpeters and horn-blowers ; ministers of the sacrifices with their victims, bulls and rams, dressed up with gay wreaths ; drivers, butchers, haruspices, heralds ; images of gods with their cars of ivory or of silver, drawn by tame lions and elephants. I can't recollect the order. ! but the grandest thing of all was the Carmen, sung by twenty-seven noble youths, and as many noble maidens, taken for the purpose from the bosoms of their families to propitiate the gods of Eome. The flamens, augurs, colleges of priests, it was endless. Last all of came the emperor himself." " That's the late man," observed Jucundus, " Philip ; no bad riddance his death if all's true that's said of him." "All emperors are good in their time and way," answered Cornelius ; " Philip was good then, and Decius is good now; — whom the gods preserve!" "True," said Aristo, "I understand; an emperor cannot do wrong, except in dying, and then every thing goes wrong with him. His death is his first bad deed ; he ought to be ashamed of it ; it somehow turns all his great virtues into vices." " Ah ! no one was so good an emperor as our man, Gordianus," said Jucundus, "a princely old man, living and dead. Patron of trade, and of the arts; A SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTURY. 37 such villas ! he had enormous revenues. Poor old gentleman ! and his son too. I never shall forget the day when the news came that he was gone. Let me see, it was shortly after that old fool Strabo's death, — I mean my brother; a good thirteen years ago. All Africa was in tears ; there was no one like Grordianus." " That's old world's philosophy," said Aristo ; " Ju- cundus, you must go to school. Don't you see that all that is, is right ; and all that was, is wrong ? ' Te nos facimus, Eortuna, deam \' says your poet ; well, I drink 'to the fortune of Rome,' — while it lasts." "You're a young man," answered Cornelius, "a very young man, and a Grreek. Greeks never under- stand Eome. It's most difficult to understand us. It's a science. Look at this medal, young gentle- man ; it was. one of those struck at the games. Is it not grand ? ' Novum saeculum ;' and on the reverse, '^ternitati.' Always changing, always imperishable. Emperors rise and fall ; Eome remains. The eternal city ! Isn't this good philosophy ?" "Truly, a most beautiful medal," said Aristo, ex- amining it, and handing it on to his host. "You might make an amulet of it, Jucundus. But as to eternity, why it is a very great word ; and if I mistake not, other states have been eternal before Eome. Ten centuries is a very respectable eternity; be content, Eome is eternal already, and may die without preju- dice to the medal." "Blaspheme not," replied Cornelius; "Eome is healthier, more full of life, and promises more, than at any former time, you may rely upon it. '.Novum saBCulum!' she has the age of the eagle, and will but cast her feathers to begin a fresh thousand." "But Egypt," interposed Aristo, "if old Herodo- tus speaks true, scarcely had a beginning. Up and up, 1 " We make thee, O Fortune, a goddess." S8 CALLISTA ; the higher you do go, the more dynasties of Egyptian kings do you find. And we hear strange reports of the nations in the far east, beyond the Ganges." "But I tell you, man," rejoined Cornelius, "Eome is a city of kings. That one city, in this one year, has as many kings at once as those of all the kings of all the dynasties of Egypt put together. Sesostris, and the rest of them, what are they to imperators, prefects, proconsuls, vicarii, and rationales? Look back at Lucullus, Caesar, Pompey, Sylla, Titus, Trajan. What's old Cheops's pyramid to the Elavian amphi- theatre ? "What is the many-gated Thebes to Nero's golden house, while it was ? What the grandest palace of Sesostris or Ptolemy but a second-rate villa of one of ten thousand Eoman citizens ? Our houses stand on acres of ground ; they ascend as high as the tower of Babylon ; they swarm with columns like a forest ; they pullulate into statues and pictures. The w^alls, pavements, and ceilings are dazzling from the lustre of the rarest marble, red and yellow, green and mottled. Fountains of perfumed water shoot aloft from the floor, and fish swim in rocky channels round about the room, waiting to be caught and killed for the banquet. We dine ; and we feast on the head of the ostrich, the brains of the peacock, the liver of the bream, the milk of the murena, and the tongue of the flamingo. A flight of doves, nightingales, becca- ficos are concentrated into one dish. On great occa- sions we eat a phoenix. Our saucepans are of silver, our dishes of gold, our vases of onyx, and our cups of precious stones. HaDgings and carpets of Tyrian purple are around us and beneath us, and we lie on ivory couches. The choicest wines of Greece and Italy crown our goblets, and exotic flowers crown our l-'eads. In come troops of dancers from Lydia, or pantomimes from Alexandria, to entertain both eye and mind ; or our noble dames and maidens take a place at our tables; they wash in asses' milk, they dress by mirrors as large as fish-ponds, and tiiey A SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTUET. 39 glitter from head to foot with combs, brooches, neck- laces, collars, ear-rings, armlets, bracelets, finger-rings, girdles, stomachers, and anklets, all of diamond and emerald. Our slaves may be counted by thousands, and they come from all parts of the world. Every thing rare and precious is brought to Eome : the gum of Arabia, the nard of Assyria, the papyrus of Egypt, the citron-wood of Mauretania, the bronze of -^gina, the pearls of Britain, the cloth of gold of Phrygia, the fine webs of Cos, the embroidery of Babylon, the silks of Persia, the lion-skins of Getulia, the wool of Miletus, the plaids of Gaul. Thus we live, an impe- rial people, who do nothing but enjoy themselves, and keep festival the whole year ; and at length we die,-— and then we burn : we burn, — in stacks of cinnamon and cassia, and in shrouds of asbestos, making empha- tically a good end of it. Such are we Eomans, a great people. Why, we are honoured wherever we go. There's my master, there's myself; as we came here from Italy, I protest we were nearly worshipped as demigods." "And perhaps some fine morning," said Aristo, " Eome herself will burn in cinnamon and cassia, and in all her burnished Corinthian brass and scarlet bravery, the old mother following her children to tlie funeral pyre. One has heard something of Babylon, and its drained moat, and the soldiers of the Per- sian." A pause occurred in the conversation, as one of Jucundus's slaves entered with fresh wine, larger goblets, and a vase of snow from the Atlas. 40 CALLISXA CHAPTER VJ. CoENELTiJS was full of his subject, and did not attend to the Greek. "The wild-beast hunts," he con- tinued, " ah, those hunts during the games, Aristo ! they were a spectacle for the gods. Twenty-two elephants, ten panthers, ten hyenas (by-the-bye, a new beast, not strange, however, to you here, I suppose), ten camelopards, an hippopotamus, a rhinoceros — I can't go through the list. Fancy the circus planted throughout for the occasion, and turned into a park, and then another set of wild animals, Gretes and Sar- matians, Celts and Goths, sent in against them, to hunt down, capture, and kill them, or to be killed themselves." "Ah, the Goths!" answered Aristo; "those fel- lows give you trouble, though, now and then. Per- haps they will give you more. There is a report in the praetorium to-day, that they have crossed the Danube." "Yes, they will give us trouble," said Cornelius drily ; " they have given us trouble, and they will give us more. The Samnites gave us trouble, and our friends of Carthage here, and Juofurtha, and Mithridates; trouble, yes, that is the long and the short of it; they will give us trouble. Is trouble a new thing to Eome?" he asked, stretching out his arm as if he were makinr' a speech after dinner, and giving a toast. A SKETCH OE THE THIED CENTUEY. 41 "The Goths give trouble, and take a bribe," re- torted Aristo ; " this is what trouble meaus in their case ; it's a troublesome fellow who hammers at our door till we pay his reckoning. It is troublesome to raise the means to buy them off. And the example of these troublesome savages is catching ; it was lately rumoured that the Carpians had been asking the same terms for keeping quiet." " It would ill become the majesty of Eome to soil her fingers with the blood of such vermin," said Cor- nelius ; " she ignores them." "And therefore she most majestically bleeds us instead," answered Aristo, " that she may have trea- sure to give them. We are not so troublesome as they; the more's the pity. No offence to you, however, or to the emperor, or to great Eome, Cornelius. We are over our cups ; it's only a game of politics, you know, like chess or the cottabus. IVIaro bids you ' parcere subjectis, et debellare superbos ' ;' but you have changed your manners. You coax the Groths and bully the poor African." "Africa can show fight, too," interposed Jucundus, who had been calmly listening and enjoying his own wine; "witness Thysdrus. That was giving every rapacious Quaestor a lesson that he may go too far, and find a dagger when he demands a purse." He was alluding to the revolt of Africa, which led to the downfal of the tyrant Maximin and the exalta- tion of the Grordians, when the native landlords armed their peasantry, killed the imperial officer, and raised the standard of rebellion in the neighbouring town from nnpatience of exactions under which they suffered. " No offence, I say, Cornelius, no offence to eternal Eome," said Aristo, "but you have explained to us why you weigh so heavy on us. I've always heard it was a fortune at Eome to the man who found out a new tax. Vespasian did his best ; but now you tax ^ •' To spare the subject, aud lay low the stubborn,'' 42 CALLISTA ; our smoke, aud our very shadow; aud Pescenuius threat- ened to tax the air we breathe. We'll play at riddles, and you shall solve the following: — Say who is she that eats her own limbs, and grows eternal upon them ? Ah, the Goths will take the measure of her eternity!'* "The Goths!" said Jucundus, who was warming into conversational life, " the Goths 1 no fear of the Goths; but," and he nodded significantly, "look at home ; we have more to fear indoors than abroad." . " He means the praetorians," said Cornelius to Aristo condescendingly ; " I grant you that there have been several untoward affairs ; we have had our pro- blem, but it's a thing of the past, it never can come ^gain. I venture to say that the power of the prae- torians is at an end. That murder of the two em- perors the other day was the worst job they ever did ; it has turned the public opinion of the whole world against them. I have no fear of the praetorians." " 1 don't mean praetorians more than Goths," said Jucundus : " no, give me the old weapons, the old maxims of Kome, and I defy the scythe of Saturn. Do the soldiers march under the old ensigns ? do they swear by the old gods ? do they interchange the good old signals and watchwords ? do they worship the fortune of Home ? then I say we are safe. But do we take to new ways ? do we trifle with religion ? do we make light of Jupiter, Mars, Eomulus, the augurs, and the ancilia ? then, I say, not all our shows and games, our elephants, hyenas, and hippopotamuses, will do us any good. It was not the best thing, no, not the best thing that the soldiers did, when they invested that Philip with the purple. Put he is dead aud gone." Aud he sat up, aud leaned on his elbow. "Ah! but it will be all set right now," said Corne- lius, ^^ you II see." " He'd be a reformer, that Philip," continued Ju- cundus, " and put down an enormity. Well, tliey call it an enormity ; let it be an enormity. He'd put it down : but why ? there's the point ; why ? It's no A SKETCH OE THE THIED CENTFET. 43 secret at all," and his voice grew angry, "tbat that hoary-headed atheist Fabian was at the bottom of it ; Fabian the Christian. I hate reforms." " Wei], we had long wished to do it," answered Cornelius, " but could not manage it. Alexander attempted it near twenty years ago. It's what phi- losophers have always aimed at." " The gods consume philosophers and the Christians together!" said Jucundus devoutly. "There's little to choose between them, except that the Christians are the filthier animal of the two. But both are ruining the most glorious political structure that the world ever saw. I am not over-fond of Alexander either." "Thank you in the name of philosophy," said the Greek. " And thank you in the name of the Christians," chimed in Juba. " Tiiat's good ! " cried Jucundus ; " the first word that hopeful youth has spoken since he came in, and he takes on him to call himself a Christian." " I've a right to do so, if I choose," said Juba ; " I've a right to be a Christian." " Eight ! yes, right ! ha, ha ! " answered Jucun- dus, "right! Jove help the lad! by all manner of means. Of course, you have a right to go iji malum rem in whatever way you please." "I am my own master," said Juba; "my father was a Christian. I suppose it depends on myself to follow him or not, according to my fancy, and as long as I think fit." "Fancy! think fit!" answered Jucundus, "you pompous little mule ! Yes, go and be a Christian, my ioar child, as your doting father went. Gro, like hins, 60 the priest of their mysteries ; be spit on, stripped, dipped ; feed on little boys' marrow and brains ; worship the ass ; and learn all the foul magic of the sect. And then be delated, and taken up, and torn to shreds on the rack, or thrown to the lions, and so go to Tart.-irus, if Tartarus there be, in the way you think 44 CALLISTA ; fit. You'll harm noue but yourself, my boy. I don't fear such as you, but the deeper heads." Juba stood up with a look of offended dignity, and, as on former occasions, tossed the head which had been by implication disparaged. "I despise you," he said. "Well, but you are hard on the Christians," said Aristo. " I have heard them maintain that their su- perstition, if adopted, would be the salvation of Eome. They maintain that the old religion is gone or going out ; that something new is wanted to keep the empire together ; and that their w^orship is just fitted to the times." " All I say to the vipers," said Jucundus, " is, ' Let well alone. We did well enough without you; we did well enough till you sprang up.' A plague on their insolence ! as if Jew or Egyptian could do aught for us, when Numa and the Sibyl fail. This is what I say, let Eome be true to herself, and nothing can harm her ; let her shift her foundation, and I would not buy her for this water-melon," he said, taking a suck at it. "Eome alone can harm Eome. Eecollect old Horace, ' Suis et ipsa Eoma viribus ruit ^' He was a prophet. If she falls, it is by her own hand." "I agree," said Cornelius; "certainly, to set up any new worship is treason ; not a doubt of it. The gods keep us from such ingratitude ! We have grown great by means of them, and they are part and parcel of the law of Eome. But there is no great chance of our forgetting this ; Decius won't ; that's a fact. You will see. Time will show; perhaps to-morrow, per- haps next day," he added mysteriously. "Why in* the world should you have this frantic dread of these poor scarecrows of Christians," said Aristo, " all because they hold an opinion ? Why are you not afraid of the bats and the moles ? It's an opinion : there have been other opinions before them, and there will be other opinions after. Let them 2 " And Rome falls by her own powers." A se:etch of the third cei^'tuet. 45 aloue, and they'll die away; make a hubbub about them, and they'll spread." " Spread ?" cried Jucundus, who was under the two- fold excitement of personal feeling and of wine, "spread, they'll spread ? yes, they'll spread. Yes, grow, ] ike scor- pions, twenty at a birth. The country ah'eady swarms with them ; they are as many as frogs or grasshoppers ; they start up every where under one's nose, when one least expects them. The air breeds them like plague- flies ; the wind drifts them like locusts. No one's safe ; any one may be a Christian ; it's an epidemic. Great Jove ! I may be a Christian before I know where I am. Heaven and earth ! is it not mon- strous?" he continued, with increasing fierceness. " Yes, Jucundus, my poor man, you may wake and find yourself a Christian, without knowing it, against your will. Ah, my friends, pity me ! I may find myself a beast, and obliged to suck blood and live among the tombs, as if I liked it, without power to tell you how I loathe it, all through their sorcery. By the genius of Eome, something must be done. I say, no one is safe. You call on your friend; he is sitting in the dark, unwashed, uncombed, undressed. What is the matter ? Ah ! his son has turned Christian. Your wedding-day is fixed, you are expecting your bride; she does not come ; why ? she will not have you ; she has become a Christian, AVhere's young Nomen- tanus ? Who has seen Nomentanus ? in the forum or the campus, in the circus, in the bath ? Has he cauglit the plague, or got a sunstroke ? Nothing of the kind ; the Christians have caught hold of him. Young and old, rich and poor, my lady in her litter and her slave, modest maid and Lydia at the Thermae, nothing comes amiss to them. All confidence is gone ; there's no one we can reckon on. I go to my tailor's: ' Nergal,' I say to him, ' ISTergal, I want a new tunic' The wretched hypocrite bows, and runs to and fro, and unpacks his stufis and cloths, like another man. A 46 CALLISTA ; word in your ear. The man's a Christian, dressed up like a tailor. They have no dress of their own. If I were emperor, I'd make the sneaking curs wear a badge, I would; a dog's collar, a fox's tail, or a pair of ass's ears. Then we should know friends from foes when we meet them." "We should think that dangerous," said Cornelius ; " however, you are taking it too much to heart ; you are making too much of them, my good friend. They have not even got tlie present, and you are giving them the future, which is just what they want." "If Jucundus will listen to me," said Aristo, "I could satisfy him that the Christians are actually flailing off. They once were numerous in this very place ; now there are hardly any. They have been declining for these fifty years ; the danger from them is past. Do you want to know how to revive them ? put out an imperial edict, forbid them, denounce them. Do you want them to drop away like autumn leaves ? take no notice of them. " I can't deny that in Italy they have grown," said Cornelius ; " they have grown in numbers and in wealth, and they intermarry with us. Thus the upper class becomes to a certain extent infected. AVe may find it necessary to repress them ; but, as you would repress vermin, without fearing them." " The worshippers of the gods are the many, and the Christians are the few," persisted Aristo ; " if the two parties intermarry, the weaker will get the worst of it. You wall find the statues of the gods gradually creepiug back into the Christian chapel ; and a man must be an honest fellow who buys our images, eh, Jucundus ?" " Well, Aristo," said the paterfamilias, whose violence never lasted long, "if your sister's bright eyes win back my poor Agellius, you will have some- thing more to say for yourself than at present, I grant." " I see," said Cornelius gravely, " I begin to under. A SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTUBT. 47 btai.d it. I could not make out why our good host had such great fear for the stability of Bome. But it is one of those things which the experience of life has taught me. I have often seen it in the imperial city itself. Whenever you find a man show special earnestness against these fanatics, depend on it there is something that touches him personally in the matter. There was a very great man, the present Flamen Dialis, for whom I have unbounded respect ; for a long time I was at a loss to conceive why a person of his weight, sound, sensible, well-judging, should have such a fear of the Christians. One day he made an oration against them in the senate-house; he wanted to send them to the rack. But the secret came out; the good man was on the rack himself about his daughter, who persisted in calling herself a Christian, and refused to paint her face, or go to the amphitheatre. To be sure, a most trying affair this for the old gentleman. The venerable Pater Patratus, too, what suppers he gave! a fine specimen of the Lucullus type ; yet he was always advocating the lictor and the commentariensis in the instance of the Cliristians. No wonder ; his wife and son were dis- gracing him in the eyes of the whole world by fre- quenting the meetings of the Christians. However, I agree with Decius, they must be put down. They are not formidable, but they are an eyesore." Here the rushing of the water-clock, which mea- sured time in the neighbouring square, ceased, signify- ing thereby that the night was getting on. Juba had already crept into the dark closet which served him for a sleeping-place ; had taken off his sandals, and loosened his belt ; had wrapt the serpent he had about him round his neck, and was breathing heavily. Ju- cundus made the parting nuation, and Cornelius took his leave. Aristo rose too ; and Jucundus, accom- panying them to the entrance, paid the not uncommon penalty of his potations, for the wine mounted to his head, and he returned into the room, and sat him 4,8 down again with an impression that Aristo wns etSJ at table. "My dear boy," he said, "Agellius is but a wet Christian ; that's all, not obstinate, like his brother there. 'Twas his father; the less we say about him the better ; he's gone. The Furies make his bed for him ! an odious set. Their priests, little ugly men. I saw one when I was a boy at Carthage. So unlike your noble Eoman Saliares, or your fine portly priest of Isis, clad in white, breathing odours, like spring flowers ; men who enjoyed this life, not like that sour hypocrite. He was as black as an Ethiopian, and as withered as a Saracen, and he never looked you in the face. And, after all, the fellow must die for his reli- gion, rather than put a few grains of golden incense on the altar of great Jove. Jove's the god for me ; a glorious, handsome, curly god ; — but they are all good ; all the gods are good. There's Bacchus, he's a good, comfortable god, though a sly, treacherous fel- low, — a treacherous fellow. There's Ceres too; Po- mona ; the Muses ; Astarte too, as they call her here ; all good ;— and Apollo, though he's somewhat too hot in this season, and too free with his bow. He gave me a bad fever once. Ah ! life's precious, most precious ; so I felt it then, when I was all but gone to Pluto. Life never returns; it's like water spilt; you can't gather it up. It is dispersed into the elements, to the four winds. Ah ! there's something more there than I can tell ; more than all your philosophers can determine." He seemed to think awhile, and began again: '' Enjoyment's the great rule ; ask yourself, * Have I made the most of things?' that's what I say to the rising generation. Many and many's the time when I have not turned tliem to the best account. O ! if I had now to begin life again, how many things should I correct ! I might have done better this evening. Those abominable pears ! I might have known they would not be worth the eating. Mutton, that was all Page 49. All is vanity but eating and drinking — " A SKETCH OF THE THIRD CEIfTURT. 49 well ; doves, good again ; crane, kid ; well, I don't see that I could have done much better." After a few minutes he got up half asleep, and put out all the lights but one small lamp, with which lie made his way into his own bed-closet. " All is vanity," he continued with a slow, grave utterance, "all is vanity but eating and drinking. It does not pay to serve the gods, except for this. What's fame ? what's glory? what's power? smoke. I've often thought the hog is the only really wise animal. "We should be happier if we were all hogs. Hogs keep the end of life steadily in view ; that's why those toads of Chris- tians will not eat them, lest they should get like them. Quiet, respectable, sensible enjoyment; not riot, or revel, or excess, or quarrelling. Life is short." .-^ud with this undeniable sentimt.'iit he fell asleep. 50 CiJiLIStA CHAPTER VII. Next morning, as Jucundus was dusting and polis'a.- ing his statues and other articles of taste and devotion, supplying tlie gaps in their ranks, and grouping a number of new ones which had come in from his work- men, Juba strutted into the shop, and indulged him- self from time to time in an inward laugh or snigger at the various specimens of idolatry which grinned, or frowned, or frisked, or languished on all sides of him. "Don't sneer at that Anubis," said his uncle; "it is the work of the divine Callista." " That, I suppose, is why she brings into existence so many demons," answered Juba; "nothing more can be done in the divine line; like the queen who fell in love with a baboon." "Now I come to think," retorted Jucundus, " that god of hers is something like you. She must be in love with you, Juba." The youth, as was usual with him, tossed his head with an air of lofty displeasure ; at length he said, " And why should she not fall in love with me, pray?" " Why, because you are too good or too bad to need her plastic hand. She could not make any thing out of you. ' Non ex quo vis ligno \' But slie'd be doing a good work if she wiled back your brother." * " You cannot make a silk purse," &c. A SKETCH or THE THIED CENTURY. 51 " He does not want wiling any more than I," said Juba, " /dare say! he's no Christian." "What's that?" said his uncle, looking round at him in surprise ; " Agellius no Christian ?" "Not a bit of it," answered Juba; "rest assured. I taxed him with it only last night ; let him alone, he'll come round. He's too proud to change, that's all. Preach to him, entreat him, worry him, try to turn him, work at the bit, whip him, and he will turn res- tive, start aside, or run away ; but let him have his head, pretend not to look, seem indifterent to the whole matter, and he will quietly sit down in the midst of your images there. CalHsta has an easy task ; she'll bribe him to do what he would else do for nothing." . " The very best news I have heard since your silly old father died," cried Jucundus; " the very best, — if true Juba, I'll give you a handsome present the first sow your brother sacrifices to Ceres. Ha, ha, what fine fun to see the young farmer over his cups at the Xundinae ' I could teach the boy a trick or two. Ha, ha ! no Christian ! bravo, Juba ! I'll make you a present, an Apollo to teach you manners, or a Mercury to give you wit." "It's quite true," said Juba, "he would not be thinking of Callista, if he were thinking of his saints and angels." "Ha, ha! to be sure!" returned Jucundus; "to be sure ! yet why shouldn't he worship a handsome Greek girl as well as any of those mummies and death's heads and bogies of his, which I should blush to put up here alongside even of Anubis or a scara- bseus?" " Mother thinks she is not altogether the girl you take her for," said his nephew " No matter, no matter," answered Jucundus, " no matter at all ; she may be a Lais or Phryne for mo ; the surer to make a man of him.** e2 52 CALLISTA ; " Why," said Juba, " mother thinks her head is turning in the opposite way. D'you see ? Strange, isn't it?" he added, annoyed himself, yet not unwill- ing to annoy his uncle. "Hm!" exclaimed Jucundus, making a wry face, as if to say, " What on earth is going to turn up now ?" " To tell the truth," said Juba gloomily, " I did once think of her myself. I don't see why I have not as much right to do so as Agellius, if I please. So I thought old mother might do something for me ; and I asked her for a charm or .love-potion, which would bring her from her brother down to the forest yonder. Gurta took to it kindly, for she has a mortal hatred of Callista, because of her good looks, though she won't say so, and because she's a Greek ; and she liked the notion of humbling the haughty minx. So she began one of the most tremendous spells," he shrieked out with a laugh, " one of the most tremendous spells in her whole budget. All and every thing in the most exact religious way : wine, milk, blood, meal, wax, old rags, gods, Numidian as w^ell as Punic ; such names ; one must be barbarian to boot, as well as witch, to pronounce them : a score of things there were besides. And then to see the old woman, with her streaming grey hair, twinkling eyes, and grim look, twirl about as some flute-girl at a banquet; it was enough to dance down, not only the moon, but the whole milky way. But it did not dance down Callista : at which mother got savage, and protested that Callista was a Christian." Jucundus looked much perplexed. " Medius fidius !" he said, " why, unless we look sharp, she will be converting him the wrong way;" and he began pacing up and down the small room. Juba on his part began singing : " Gurta the witch would have part in the jest ; Tho' lame as a gull, by his highness possessed, She shouldered her crutch, and danced with the rest. A SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTURY. 53 " Sporting and snorting, deep in the night, Their beards flashing fire, and their hoofs striking light, And their tails whisking round in the heat of their tiight." By this time Jucundus had recovered from the qualm which Juba's intelligence had caused him, and he cried out, " Cease your rubbish ; old Gurta's jea- lous ; I know her spite ; Christian is the most black- guard word in her vocabulary, it's Barbar for toad or adder. I see it all ; no, Callista, the divine Callista, must take in hand this piece of wax, sing a charm, and mould him into a Yertumnus. She'll show herself the more potent witch of the two. The new emperor too will help the incantation." " What P something is coming ? " asked Juba with a grin. " Coming, boy ? yes, I warrant you," answered his uncle. " We'll make them squeak. If gentle means don't do, then we'll just throw in another ingredient or two ; a sword, or a wild cat, or a firebrand." " Take care what you are about, if you deal with Agellius," said Juba. "He's a sawney, but you must not drive him to bay. Don't threaten, keep to the other line ; he's weak-hearted." " Only as a background to bring out the painting ; the Muse singing, all in light, relieved by sardix or sepia. It must come ; but perhaps Agellius will come first." It was indeed as Jucundus had hinted ; a new policy, a new era was coming upon Cliristianity, together with the new emperor. Christians had iiitherto been for the most part the objects of popular fury rather than of imperial jealousy. JSTero, indeed, from his very love of cruelty had taken pleasure in torturing them ; but statesmen and philosophers, though at times per- plexed and inconsistent, yet on the whole had de- spised them ; and the superstition of priests and peo- ple, with their " Christianos ad leones," had been the most formidable enemy of the faith. Accordingly, atrocious as the persecution had been at times, it had 54 CALLISTA ; been conducted on no plan, and had been local and fitful. But even this trial had been suspended, with but few interruptions, during the last thirty, nay fifty years. So favourable a state of things had been more or less brought about oy a succession of emperors, who had shown an actual leaning to Christianity. While the vigorous rule of the five good emperors, as they are called, had had many passages in its history of an adverse character, those who followed after, being untaught in the traditions, and strangers to the spirit, of old Eome, foreigners, or adventurers, or sen- sualists, were protectors of the new religion. The favourite mistress of Commodus is even said to have been a Christian ; so is the nurse of Caracalla. The wretched Heliogabalus, by his taste for Oriental super- stitions, both weakened the influence of the establish- ed hierarchy, and encouraged a toleration of a faith which came from Palestine, The virtuous Alexander, who followed him, was a philosopher more than a statesman ; and, in pursuance of the syncretism which he had adopted, placed the images of Abraham and our Lord among the objects of devotion which his private chapel contained. What is told us of the Emperor Philip is still more to the point: the gravest authorities report that he was actually a Christian; and, since it cannot be doubted that Christians were persuaded of the fact, the leaning of his government must have been emphatically in their favour to account for such a belief. In consequence Christians showed themselves without fear ; they emerged from the cata- combs, and built churches in public view ; and, though in certain localities, as in the instance of Africa, they had suffered from the contact of the world, they spread far and wide, and faith became the instrument at least of political power, even where it was wanting in charity, or momentarily disowned by cowardice. In a word, though Celsus a hundred years before had pronounced "a man weak who should hope to unite the three portions of the earth in a common religion," that com- A SKETCH or THE THIHD CET^TUET. 55 mon Catholic faith had been found, and a principle of empire was created which had never before existed. The phenomenon could not be mistaken ; and the Eoman statesman saw he had to deal with a rival. Nor must we suppose, because on the surface of the history we read so much of the vicissitudes of imperial power, and of the profligacy of its possessors, that the fabric of government was not sustained by traditions of the strongest temper, and by officials of the highest sagacity. It was the age of lawyers and politicians ; and they saw mo:e and more clearly that if Chris- tianity w£ 3 not to revolutionize the empire, they must follow out the line of action which Trajan and Anto- nine had pointed out. Decius then had scarcely assumed the purple, when he commenced that new policy against the Church which it was reserved to Diocletian, fifty years later, to carry out to its own final refutation. He entered on his power at the end of the year 249 ; and on the January 20th following, the day on which the Church still celebrates the event, St. Fabian, bishop of Eome, obtained the crown of martyrdom. He had been pope for the unusually long space of fourteen years, having been elected in consequence of one of those remarkable interpositions of Divine Providence of which we now and then read in the first centuries of the Church. He had come up to Home from the country, in order to be present at the election of a successor to Pope Anteros. A dove was seen to settle on his head, and the assembly rose up and forced him, to his surprise, upon the episcopal throne. After bringing back the relics of St. Pontian, his martyred predecessor, from Sardinia, and having become the apostle of great part of Gaul, he seemed destined to end his history in the same happy quiet and obscurity in which he had lived ; but it did not become a pope of that primitive time to die upon his bed, and he was reserved at length to inaugurate in his own per- 56 CALLISTA ; son, as chief pastor of the Church, a fresh company of martyrs. Suddenly an edict appeared for the extermination of the name and religion of Christ. It was addressed to tlie proconsuls and other governors of provinces ; and alleged or implied that the emperors, Decius and his son, being determined to give peace to their subjects, found the Christians alone an impediment to the ful- filment of their purpose ; and that, by reason of the enmity those sectaries entertained against the gods of Eome, — an enmity Tvhich was bringing down upon the world multiplied misfortunes. Desirous, then, above all things, of appeasing their anger, they made an irrevocable ordinance that every Christian, without exception of rank, sex, or age, should be obliged to sacrifice. Those who refused were to be thrown into prison, and in the first instance submitted to moderate punishments. If they conformed to the established religion, they were to be rewarded ; if not, they were to be drowned, burned alive, exposed to the beasts, hung upon the trees, or otherwise put to death. This edict was read in the Camp of the praetorians, posted up in the Capitol, and sent over the empire by govern- ment couriers. The authorities in each province were threatened themselves with heavy penalties, if they did not succeed in frightening or tormenting the Christians into the profession of paganism. St. Pabian, as we have said, was the firstfruits of the persecution, and eighteen months passed before his successor could be appointed. In the course of the next two months St. Pionius was burned alive at Smyrna, and St. Nestor crucified in Pamphylia. At Carthage some perplexit}^ and delay were occasioned by the absence of the proconsul. St. Cyprian, its bishop, took advantage of the delay, and retired into a place of concealment. The populace had joined with, the imperial government in seeking his life, Rpid had cried out furiously in the circus, demanding A SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTURY. 57 him "adleonem," for the lion. A panic seized the Christian body, and for a while there were far more persons found to compromise their faith than confess it. It seemed as if Aristo's anticipation was justified, that Christianity was losing its hold upon the mind of its subjects, and that nothing more was needed for those who feared it, than to let it die a natural death. And at Sicca the Eoman officials, as far as ever they dared, seemed to act on this view. Here Christians did no harm, they made no show, and there was little or nothing in the place to provoke the anger of the mob or to necessitate the interference of the magis- trate. The proconsul's absence from Carthage was both an encouragement and an excuse for delay ; and hence it was that, though we are towards the middle of the year 250, and the edict was published at Eome at its commencement, the good people of Sicca had, as we have said, little knowledge of what was taking place in the political world, and whispered about vague presages of an intended measure, which had been in some places in operation for many mouths. Com- munication with the seat of government was not very frequent or rapid in those days, and public curiosity had not been stimulated by the facilities of gratifying it. And thus we must account for a phenomenon, which we uphold to be a fact in the instance of Sicca in the early summer of a.d. 250, even though it prove unaccountable, and history has nothing to say about it, and in spite of the Acta Diurna. The case, indeed, is different now. In these times, newspapers, railroads, and magnetic telegraphs make Jis independent of government messengers. The pro- ceedings at Eome would have been generally and accurately known in a few seconds ; and then, by way of urging on the magistracy, a question would have been asked in the parliament of Carthage by the member for Sicca, or Laribus, or Thugga, or by some one of the pagani, or country party, whether the popular report was true, that an edict had been promulgated 68 CALLISTA J at E-ome against the Christians, and what steps had been taken by the local authorities throughout the proconsulate to carry out its provisions. And then the " Colonia Siccensis" would have presented some good or bad reason for the delay : that it arose from the absence of the proconsul from the seat of govern- ment, or from the unaccountable loss of the despatch in its way from the coast ; or, perhaps, on the other hand, the under-secretary would have maintained amid the cheers of his supporters that the edict had been promulgated and carried out at Sicca to the full, that crowds of Christians had at once sacrificed, and that, in short, there was no one to punish ; assertions which at that moment were too likely to be verified by the event. In truth, there were many reasons to make the magistrates, both Eoman and native, unwilling to proceed in the matter, till they were obliged. No doubt they one and all detested Christianity, and would have put it down, if they could ; but the question was, when they came to the point, ivhat they should put down. If, indeed, they could have got hold of the ringleaders, the bishops of the Church, they would have tortured and smashed them con amove, as you would kill a wasp ; and with the greater warmth and satisfaction, just because it was so difficult to get at them. Those bishops were a set of fellows as mis- chievous as they were cowardly ; they would not come out and be killed, but they sculked in the desert, and hid in masquerade. But why should gentlemen in office, opulent and happy, set about worrying a hand- ful of idiots, old, or poor, or boys, or women, or ob- scure, or amiable and well meaning ; who were but the remnant of a former generation, and as little con- nected with the fanatics of Carthage, Alexandria, or Kome, as the English freemasons with their name- sakes on the Continent ? True, Christianity was a secret society, and an illegal religion; but would it cease to be so when those harmless or resuectable A SKETCH OF THE THlED CENTXTET. 59 inhabitants of the place had been mounted on the rack or the gibbet ? And then, too, it was a most dangerous thing to open the door to popular excitement; — Avho would be able to shut it ? Once rouse the populace, and it was all over with the place. It could not be denied that the bigoted and ignorant majority, not only of the common people, but of the better classes, was steeped in a bitter prejudice, and an intense, though latent, hatred of Christianity. Besides the antipathy which arose from the extremely different views of life and duty taken by pagans and Christians, which would create a natural impulse of persecution in the hearts of the former, there were the many persons who wished to curry favour at Home with the court, and had an eye to preferment or reward. There was the pagan interest, extended and powerful, of that numer- ous class which was attached to the established reli- gion by habit, position, interest, or the prospect of advantage. There were all the great institutions or establishments of the place ; the law courts, the schools of grammar and rhetoric, the philosophic exedrce and lecture-rooms, the theatre, the amphitheatre, the mar- ket, — all were, for one reason or another, opposed to Christianity; and who could tell where they would stop in their onward course, if they were set in mo- tion ? " Quieta non movenda '^" was the motto of the local government, native and imperial, and that the more, because it was an age of revolutions, and they might be most unpleasantly compromised or embar- rassed by the direction the movement took. Besides, Decius was not immortal ; in the last twelve years eight emperors had been cut off, six of them in a few months ; and who could tell but the successor of the present might revert to the policy of Philip, and fee] no thanks to those who had suddenly left it for a policy of blood r 2 " What is at rest must not be disturbed." 60 CALLISTA ; In this cautious course they would be powerfully supported by the iufluence of personal considerations. The Eoman qfficia, the city magistrates, the heads of the established religion, the lawyers, and the philoso- phers, all would have punished the Christians, if they could ; but they could not agree whom to punish. They would have agreed with great satisfaction, as we have said, to inflict condign and capital punishment upon the heads of the sect ; and they would have had no objection, if driven to do something, to get hold of some strangers or slaves, who might be a sort of scape- goats for the rest ; but it was impossible, when they once began to persecute, to make distinctions, and not a few of them had relations who were Christians, or at least were on that borderland which the mob might mistake for the domain of Christianity, — Mar- cionites, Tertullianists, Montanists, or Grnostics. "When once the cry of "the gods of Eome" was fairly up, it would apply to tolerated religions as well as illicit, and an unhappy votary of Isis or Mithras might sufl"er, merely because there were few Christians forthcoming. A duumvir of the place had a daughter whom he had turned out of his house for receiving baptism, and who had taken refuge at Yacca. Several of the decu- rions, the tahularius of the district, the sonha, one of the exactors, who lived in Sicca ; various of the retired gentry, whom we spoke of in a former chapter ; and various attaches of the prsetorium, were in not dis- similar circumstances. Nay, the priest of Esculapius had a wife, whom he was very fond of, who, though slie promised to keep quiet, if things continued a:* they were, nevertheless had the madness to vow that, if there were any severe proceedings instituted against her people, she would at once come forward, confess herself a Christian, and throw water, instead of in- cense, upon the sacrificial flame. Not to speak of the venerable man's tenderness for her, such an exposure would seriously compromise his respectability, and, as he was infirm and apoplectic, it was a question whe- CALLISTA ; a series of similar hosts, formed one after another out of the hot mould or sand, rising into the air like clouds, enlarging into a dusky canopy, and then dis- charged against the fruitful plain. At length the huge innumerous mass was put into motion, and began its career, darkening the face of day. As be- came an instrument of divine power, it seemed to have no volition of its own ; it was set off, it drifted, with the wind, and thus made northwards, straight for Sicca. Thus they advanced, host after host, for a time wafted on the air, and gradually declining to the earth, while fresh broods were carried over the first, and neared the earth, after a longer flight, in their turn. For twelve miles did they extend from front to rear, and their whizzing aiad hissing could be heard for six miles on every side of* them. The bright sun, though hidden by them, illumined their bodies, and was reflected from their quivering wings ; and as they heavily fell earthward, they seemed like the innumera- ble flakes of a yellow-coloured snow. And like snow did they descend, a living carpet, or rather pall, upon fields, crops, gardens, copses, groves, orchards, vineyards, olive woods, orangeries, palm plantations, and the deep forests, sparing nothing within their reach, and where there was nothing to devour, lying helpless in drifts, or crawling forward obstinately, as they best might, with the hope of prey. They could spare their hundred thousand soldiers twice or thrice over, and not miss them ; their masses filled the bottoms of the ravines and hollow ways, impeding the traveller as he rode forward on his journey, and tram- pled by thousands under his horse-hoofs. In vain was all this overthrow and waste by the road-side ; in vaia their loss in river, pool, and watercourse. The poor peasants hastily dug pits and trenches as their enemy came on ; in vain they filled them from the wells or with lighted stubble. Heavily and thickly did the locusts fall ; they were lavish of their lives ; they choked the flame and the water, which destroyed them A SKETCH OP THE THIED CENTUET. 135 the while, and the vast living hostile armament still moved on. They moved right on like soldiers in their ranks, stopping at nothing, and straggling for nothing ; they carried a broad furrow or wheal all across the country, black and loathsome, while it was as green and smiling on each side of them and in front, as it had been be- fore they came. Before them, in the language of prophets, was a paradise, and behind them a desert. They are daunted by nothing ; they surmount walls and hedges, and enter enclosed gardens or inhabited houses. A rare and experimental vineyard has been planted in a sheltered grove. The high winds of Africa will not commonly allow the light trellice or the slim pole ; but here the lofty poplar of Campania has been possible, on which the vine plant mounts so many yards into the air, that the poor grape-gatherers bargain for a funeral pile and a tomb as one of the conditions of their engagement. The locusts have done what the winds and I'ightning could not do, and the whole promise of the vintage, leaves and all, is gone, and the slender stems are left bare. There is another yard, less uncommon, but still tended with more than common care ; each plant is kept within due bounds by a circular trench round it, and by upright canes on which it is to trail ; in an hour the solicitude and long toil of the vine-dresser are lost, and his pride humbled. There is a smiling farm ; another sort of vine, of remarkable character, is found against the farmhouse. This vine springs from one root, and has clothed and matted with its many branches the four walls. The whole of it is covered thick with long clusters, which another month will ripen. On every grape and leaf there is a locust. Into the dry caves and pits, carefully strewed with straw, the harvest-men have (safely, as they thought just now) been lodging the far-famed African wheat. One grain or root shoots up into ten, twenty, fifty, eighty, nay, three or four hundred stalks: sQi3nefeir>es the stalks 136 CALLISTA ; have two ears apiece, and these shoot off into a number of lesser ones. These stores are intended for the Koman populace, but the locusts have been beforehand with them. The small patches of ground belonging to the poor peasants up and down the country, for raising the turnips, garlick, barley, water-melons, on which they live, are the prey of these glutton invaders as much as the choicest vines and olives. Nor have they any reverence for the villa of the civic decurion or the lioman official. The neatly arranged kitchen garden, with its cherries, plums, peaches, and apricots, is a waste ; as the slaves sit round, in the kitchen in the first court, at their coarse evening meal, the room is filled with the invading force, and news comes to them that the enemy has fallen upon the apples and pears in the basement, and is at the same time plundering and sacking the preserves of quince and pomegranate, and revelling in the jars of precious oil of Cyprus and Mendes in the store-rooms. They come up to the walls of Sicca, and are flung against them into the ditch. Not a moment's hesita- tion or delay ; they recover their footing, they climb up the wood or stucco, they surmount the parapet, or they have entered in at the windows, filling the apart- ments, and the most private and luxurious chambers, not one or two, like stragglers at forage or rioters after a victory, but in order of battle, and with the array of an army. Choice plants or flowers about the impluvia and ocysti, for ornament or refreshment, myr- tles, oranges, pomegranates, the rose and the carna- tion, have disappeared. They dim the bright marbles of the walls and the gilding of tlie ceilings. They enter the triclinium in the midst of the banquet ; they crawl over the viands and spoil what they do not devour. Unrelaxed by success and by enjoyment, on- ward they go; a secret mysterious instinct keeps them together, as if they had a king over them. They move along the floor in so strange an order that they seem to be a tessellated pavement themselves, and to be the A SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTTTEY. 1?7 artificial embellishment of the place ; so true are their lines, and so perfect is the pattern they describe. On- ward they go, to the market, to the temple sacrifices, to the bakers' stores, to the cookshops, to the confec- tioners, to the druggists ; nothing comes amiss to them ; wherever man has aught to eat or drink, there are they, reckless of death, strong of appetite, certain of conquest. They have passed on ; the men of Sicca sadly con- gratulate themselves, and begin to look about them, and to sum up their losses. Being the proprietors of the neighbouring districts, and the purchasers of its pro- duce, they lament over the devastation, not because the fair country is disfigured, but because income is becoming scanty, and prices are becoming high. How is a population of many thousands to be fed ? where is the grain, where the melons, the figs, the dates, the gourds, the beans, the grapes, to sustain and solace the multitudes in their lanes, caverns, and garrets ? This is another weighty consideration for the class well-to- do in the world. The taxes too, and contributions, the capitation tax, the percentage upon corn, the various articles of revenues due to Eome, how are they to be paid ? How are cattle to be provided for the sacrifices and the tables of the wealthy ? One-half, at least, of the supply of Sicca is cut off. No longer slaves are seen coming into the city from the country in troops with their baskets on their shoulders, or beating forward the horse, or mule, or ox, overladen with its burden, or driving in the dangerous cow or the unresisting sheep. The animation of the place is gone ; a gloom hangs over the Porum ; and if its fre- quenters are still merry, there is something of suUen- ness and recklessness in their mirth. The gods have given the city up ; something or other has angered them. Locusts, indeed, are no uncommon visitation, but at an earlier season. Perhaps some temple has been polluted, or some unholy rite practised, or some secret conspiracy has spread. 138 CALLISTi ; Another and a still worse calamity. The invaders, as we have already hinted, could be more terrible still in their overthrow than in their ravages. The inhabit- ants of the country had attempted, where they could, to destroy them by fire and water. It would seem as if the malignant animals had resolved that the suf- ferers should have the benefit of this policy to the full ; for they had not got more than twenty miles beyond Sicca when they suddenly sickened and died. When they thus had done all the mischief they could by their living, when they thus had made their foul maws the grave of every living thing, next they died themselves, and made the desolated land their own grave. They took from it its hundred forms and varieties of beautiful life, and left it their own fetid and poisonous carcases in payment. It was a sudden catastrophe; they seemed making for the Mediter- ranean, as if, like other great conquerors, they had other worlds to subdue beyond it ; but, whether they were overgorged or struck by some atmospheric change, or that the-ir time was come and they paid the debt of nature, so it was that suddenly they fell, and their glory came to nought, and all was vanity to them as to others, and " their stench rose up, and their corrup- tion rose up, because they had done proudly." The hideous swarms lay dead in the moist steaming underwoods, in the green swamps, in the sheltered valleys, in the ditches and furrows of the fields, amid the monuments of their own prowess, the ruined crops and the dishonoured vineyards. A poisonous element, issuing from their remains, mingled with the atmo- sphere, and corrupted it. The dismayed peasant found that a plague had begun ; a new visitation, not con- fined to the territory which the enemy had made its own, but extending far and wide, as the atmosphere extends, in all directions. Their daily toil, no longer claimed by the fruits of the earth, which have ceased to exist, is now devoted to the object of ridding them- selves of the deadly legacy which they have received A SKETCH or THE THIED CENTUET. 139 in their stead. In vain ; it is their last toil ; they are digging pits, they are raising piles, for their own corpses, as well as for the bodies of their enemies. In- vader and victim lie in the same grave, burn in the same heap ; they sicken while they work, and the pestilence spreads. A new invasion is menacing Sicca, in the shape of companies of peasants and slaves, wuth their employers and overseers, nay, the farmers them- selves and proprietors, the panic having broken the bonds of discipline, rushing thither from famine and infection as to a place of safety. The inhabitants of the city are as frightened as they, and more energetic. They determine to keep them at a distance; the gates are closed ; a strict cordon is drawn ; however, by the continued pressure, numbers contrive to make an entrance, as water into a vessel, or light through the closed shutters, and anyhow the air cannot be put in quarantine ; so the pestilence has the better of it, and at last appears in the alleys and in the cellars 140 CALLISTA. ; CHAPTER XVI. " wiiETCHED minds of men ! O blind hearts !" tniW cries out a great heathen poet, but on grounds far other than the true ones. The true ground of such a lamentation is, that they do not interpret the signs of the times and of the world as He intends who has placed these signs in the heavens; that when Mane, Thecel, Phares is written upon the ethereal wall, they have no inward faculty to read them withal ; and that when they go elsewhere for one learned in tongues, instead of taking Daniel, who is used to converse witli angels, they rely on Magi or Chaldeans, who know only the languages of earth. So it was with the miser- able population of Sicca now; half famished, seized with a pestilence which would rage before it assuaged, perplexed and oppressed by the recoil upon them of the population whom thev had from time to time sent out into the surrounding territory, or from whom they had supplied their markets, they never fancied that the real cause of tlie visitation which we have been describing was their own iniquity in their Maker's sight, that His arm inflicted it, and that its natural and direct interpretation was, " Do penance, and be converted." On the contrary, they looked only at their own vain idols, and at the vain rites which these idols demanded, and they thought there was no surer escape from their misery than by upholding a lie, and putting down all who revolted from it; and thus A SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTrET. 141 tbe visitation which was sent to do them good turned through their wilful blindness to their greater condem- nation. The Forum, which at all times was the resort of idleness and dissipation, now became more and more the haunt of famine and sickness, of robust frames without work, of slavish natures virtually and for the time emancipated and uncontrolled, of youth and pas- sion houseless and shelterless. In groups and com- panies, in and out of the porticoes, on the steps of the temples, and about the booths and stalls of the mar- ket, a multitude grows day by day, from the town and from the country, and of all the various races which town and country contain. The civil magistracy and the civil force, to which the peace of the city was committed, were not equal to such an emergency as the present ; and the milites stationarii, a sort of gar- rison who represented the Eoman power, though they were ready to act against either magistrates or mob impartially, had no tenderness for either, when in colli- sion with each other. Indeed the bonds of society were broken, and every political element was at war with every other, in a case of such great common calamity, when every one was angry with every one else, for want of some clearly defined object against which the common anger might be discharged with unanimity. They had almost given over sacrificing, and consult- ing the flame or the entrails ; for no respite or reversal of their sufferings had followed their most assiduous acts of deprecation. Moreover, the omens were generally considered by the priests to have been uupropitious or adverse. A sheep had been discovered to have, instead of a liver, something very like a gizzard ; a sow had chewed and swallowed the flowers with wliich it had been embellished for the sacrifice ; and a calf, after receiving the fatal blow, instead of lying down and dying, dashed into the temple, dripping blood upon the pavement as it went, and at last fell and expired 142 CALLISTA ; just before the sacred adytum. In despair the people took to fortune-telling and its attendant arts. Old crones were found in plenty with their strange rites, the stranger the more welcome. Trenches were dug in by-places for sacrifices to the infernal gods ; amu- lets, rings, counters, tablets, pebbles, nails, bones, feathers, Ephesian or Egyptian legends, were in re- quest, and raised the hopes, or beguiled and occupied the thoughts, of those who else would have been directly dwelling on their sufferings, present or in prospect. Others were occupied, whether they would or no, with diversions fiercer and more earnest. There were continual altercations between farmers, small proprie- tors of land, government and city officials,— alterca- tions so manifold and violent, that even were there no hubbub of voices, and no incoherence of wrath and rage to complicate it, we should despair of setting it before the reader. An officer from the camp was expostulating with one of the municipal authorities that no corn had been sent thither for the last six or seven days, and the functionary attacked had thrown the blame on the farmer, and he in turn had protested that he could not get cattle to bring the waggons into Sicca ; those which he had set out with had died of exhaustion on the journey. A clerk, as we now speak, in the Officium of the society of publicans or collectors of annona, was threatening a number of small tenants with ejection for not sending in their rated portion of corn for the E-oman people : — the Officium of the Notarius, or assistant prefect, had written up to Sicca from Carthage in violent terms ; and come it must, though the locusts had eaten up every stack and granary. A number of half-starved peasants had been summoned for payment of their taxes, and in spite of their ignorance of Latin, they had been made to understand that death was the stern penalty of neglecting to bring the coin. They, on A SKETCH OF THE THIRD CENTTTET. 143 the other hand, by their fierce doggedness of manner, seemed to signify by way of answer that death was not a penalty, unless life was a boon. The villicus of one of the decurions, who had an estate in the neighbourhood, was laying his miseries before the man of business of his employer. " What are we to do ?" he said. " Half the gang of slaves is dead, and the other half is so feeble, that I can't get through the work of the month. "We ought to be sheep- shearing ; you have no chance of wool. We ought to be swarming the bees, pressing the honey, boiling and purifying the wax. We ought to be plucking the white leaves of the camomile, and steep- ing the golden flowers in oil. We ought to be gather- ing the wild grapes, sifting off the flowers, and preserv- ing the residue in honey. We ought to be sowing brassicum, parsley, and coriander against next spring. We ought to be cheese-making. We ought to be baking W'hite and red bricks and tiles in the sun ; we have no hands for the purpose. The villicus is not to blame, but the anger of the gods." The country employe o\. the procurator of the imperial BapJiia protests that the insect cannot be found from which tlie dye is extracted ; and argues that the locusts must have de- voured them, or the plant on which they feed, or that they have been carried ofi* by the pestilence. Here is old Corbulus in agonies for his febrifuge, and a slave of his is in high words with the market-carrier, who tells him that Mago is dead of a worse fever than his master's, from whom the root was to have come. "The rogue!" cried the slave, "my master has con- tracted with him for the year, and has paid him the money in advance." A jeering and mocking from the crowd assailed the unfortunate domestic, who too truly foreboded that his return without the medicine would be the signal for his summary committal to the pistrinum. " Let old Corbulus follow old Mago in his passage to perdition," said one of the rabble; "let him take his physic with Pluto, and leave us the bread 144 CALLISTA ; and wine on which he's grown gouty." " Bread, bread !" was the response elicited by this denunciation, and it spread into a circle broader than that of which the slave and the carrier were part. " AVine and bread, Ceres and Liber!" cried a young legionary, who, after a night of revelry, was emerging still half intoxicated from one of the low wine-shops in the vaults which formed the basement of the Thermcd or hot baths ; " make way there, you filthy slime of the earth, you half-kneaded, half- fermented Africans, who never yet have quite been men, but have ever smelt strong of the baboon, who are three quarters must, and two vinegar, and a fifth water, — as I was saying, you are like bad liquor, and the sight of you disagrees with the stomach and atFects the eyes." The crowd looked sullenly, and without wincing, at his shield, which was the only portion of his mili- tary accoutrements which he had preserved after his carouse. The white surface, with a silver boss in the centre, surrounded by first a white and then a red circle, and the purple border, showed that he belonged to the Tertiani or third Italic Legion, which had been stationed in Africa since the time of Augustus. " Vile double-tongued mongrels," he continued, "what are you fit for but to gather the fruits of the earth for your owners and lords, ' Eomanos dominos rerum^?' And if there are now no fruits to reap, why your service is gone. Gro home and die, and drown your- selves, for what are you fit for, except to take your dead corpses away from the nostrils of a Eoman, the cream of humankind? Ye base-born apes, that's why you catch the pestilence, because our blood mantles and foams in our ruddy veins like new milk in the wine- cup, which is too strong for this clime, and my blood is up, and I drink a full measure of it to great Rome; for what does old Horace say, but 'Nunc est bibendum ^ ?' and so get out of my way." ' " The Romans, the lords of the world." 2 «t j^ow's the time for a bout," Page 145- A rush was made upon hin.. ©OSTOfN! CeLLEGE LIBR/ A. SfeEtCn or THE THIED CENTUET. 145 To a good part of the multitude, both peasantry and town rabble, Latin was unintelligible ; but they all understood vocabulary and syntax and logic, as soon as he drew his knuckles across one fellow's face who refused to move from his path, and as soon as his insult was returned by the latter with a thrust of the dagger. A rush was made upon him, on which he made a face at them, shook his fist, and leaping on one side, ran with great swiftness to an open space in advance. From his quarrelsome humour rather than from fear, he raised a cry of alarm ; on which two or three fellow-soldiers made their appearance from simi- lar dens of intoxication and vice, and came up to the rescue. The mob assailed them with stones, and the cream of human nature was likely to be roughly churned, when, seeing matters were becoming serious, they suddenly took to their heels, and got into the Temple of Esculapius on one side of the Forum. The mob followed, the ministers of the sacred place at- tempted to shut the gates, a scuffle ensued, and a riot ,was in progress. Self-preservation is the first law of man ; trembling for the safety of his noble buildings, and considering that it was a bread riot, as it really was, the priest of the god came forward, rebuked the mob for its impiety, and showed the absurdity of sup- posing that there were loaves m his enclosure to satisfy its wants ; but he added that there was a baker's shop at the other end of the Forum, which was one of the most considerable in Sicca. A slight impulse determines the movements of an excited multitude. Off" they went to the quarter in question, where certainly there was a very large and handsome store of a substantial dealer in grain of all sorts, and in other produce. The shop, however, seemed on this occasion to be but poorly furnished ; for the baker was a prudent man, and feared a display of provisions which would be an invitation to hungry men. The assailants, however, were not to be baffled ; some one cried out that the man had withdrawn his L 146 CALttsf A ; corn from the market for his own ends, and that great stores were accumulated within. They avail theni- l^elves of the hint; they pour in through the open front, the baker escapes as he may, his mills and ovens are smashed, the house is ransacked ; whatever is found is seized, thrown about, wasted, eaten, as the case may be ; and the mob gains strength and appetite for fresh exploits. However, the rioters have no definite plan of action yet. Some of them have penetrated into the stable behind the house in search of corn. They find the mill-ass which ground for the baker, and bring it out. It is a beast of more than ordinary pretensions, such as you would not often see in a mill, showing both the wealth of the owner and the flourishing condition of his trade. The asses of Africa are finer than those in the north ; but this is fine for an African. One fellow mounts upon it, and sets oft" with the world before him, like a knight-errant, seeking an adventure, the rabble at his tail being his squire. He begins the circuit of the Forum, and picks up its riff'-raff as he goes along; — here some rascal boys, there some drunken women, here again a number of half-brutal- ized country slaves and peasants. Partly out of curi- osity, partly from idleness, from ill temper, from hope of spoil, from a vague desire to be doing some- thing or other, every one who has nothing to lose by the adventure crowds around and behind him. And on the contrary, as he advances, and the noise and com- motion increase, every one who has a position of any sort, the confidential verncd of great families, the far- mers, shopkeepers, men of business, ofi&cials, vanish from the scene of action without delay. "Africa, Africa!" is now the cry ; the signal in that country, as an ancient writer tells us, that the parties raising it have something new in hand, and have a mind to do it. Suddenly, as they march on, a low and awful growl is heard. It comes from the booth of a servant of the A SKETCH OF THE THIED CENTURY. 147 imperial court. He is employed as a transporter of wild beasts from the interior to the coast, where they are shipped for Eome ; and he has charge at present of a noble lion, who is sitting majestically, looking through the bars of his cage at the rabble, who now begin to look at him. In demeanour and in mental endowments he has the advantage of them. It was at this moment, while they were closing, hustling each other, staring at the beast, and hoping to provoke him, that a shrill voice cried out, " Christianos ad leones, Christianos ad leo- nea!" the Christians to the lions! A sudden and dead silence ensued, as if the words had struck the breath out of the promiscuous throng. An interval passed ; and then the same voice was heard again, " Christianos ad leones ! " This time the whole Porum took it up from one end to the other. The fate of the da}^, the direction of the movement, was decided ; a distinct object was obtained, and the only wonder was that the multitude had been so long to seek and so slow to find so obvious a cause of their misfortunes, so adequate a subject for their vengeance. " Christianos ad leones!" was shouted out by town and country, priests and people. "Long live the emperor! long live Decius! he told us this long ago. There's the edict; it never has been obeyed. Death to the ma- gistrates ! To the Christians ! to the Christians ! Up with great Jove, down with the atheists !" They were commencing their march when the ass caught their eye. " The Christians' god ! " they shouted out ; "the god of the Christians ! " Their first im- pulse was to give the poor beast to the lion, their next to sacrifice it, but they did not know to whom. Then they said they would make the Christians worship it ; and dressing it up in tawdry finery, they retained it at the head of their procession. l2 148 OALLISTA ; CHAPTER XVII. By the time that they had got round again to the unlucky baker's, the mob had been swelled to a size which even the area of the Forum would not contain, and it filled the adjacent streets. And by the same time it had broken upon its leaders, and, indeed, upon every one who used his reason at all, that it was very far from certain that there were any Christians in Sicca, and if so, still very far from easy to say where they were. And the difficulty was of so practical a character as to keep them inactive for the space of several hours. Meanwhile their passions were excited to the boiling point by the very presence of the diffi- culty, as men go mad of thirst when water is denied them. At length, after a long season of such violent commotion, such restless pain, such curses, shrieks, and blasphemies, such bootless gesticulations, such aimless contests with each other, that they seemed to be already inmates of the prison beneath, they set off in a blind way to make the circuit of the city as before they had paraded round the Eorum, still in the knight-errant line, looking out for what might turn up where they were sure of nothing, and relieving the intense irrita- tion of their passions by locomotion, if nothing more substantial was offered to them. It was an awful day for the respectable inhabit- ants of the place ; worse than anything even the most timid of them had anticipated, when they showed A SKETCH or THE THTED CENTUET. 149 jealousy of a popular movement against the proscribed religion ; for the stimulus of famine and pestilence was added to hatred of Christianity, in that unrea- soning multitude. The magistrates shut themselves up in dismay ; the small body of Eoman soldiery re- served their strength for the defence of themselves ; and the poor wretches, not a few, who had fallen from the faith, and offered sacrifice, hung out from their doors sinful heathen symbols to avert a storm against which apostasy was no sufficient safeguard. In this conduct the G-nostics and other sectaries imitated them, while the TertuUianists took a more manly part, from principle or pride. It would require the brazen voice which Homer speaks of, or the magic pen of Sir Walter, to catalogue and to picture, as far as it is lawful to do either, the figures and groups of that most miserable procession. As it went forward it gained variety and strength, which the circuit of the Eorum could not furnish. The more respectable religious establishments shut their gates, and would have nothing to do with it. The priests of Jupiter, the educational establishments of the Tem- ple of Mercury, the Temple of the G-euius of Eome near the Capitol, the hierophants of Isis, the Minerva, the Juno, the Esculapius, viewed the popular rising with terror and disgust; but these were not tlie popular worships. The vast homestead of Astarte, which in the numbe