CHAPTER XXII
THE TRIUMPH
Another week went by and the eve of the Triumph was at hand. On the
afternoon before the great day sewing-women had come to the house of
Gallus, bringing with them the robe that Miriam must wear. As had been
promised, it was splendid, of white silk covered with silver discs and
having the picture of the gate Nicanor fashioned on the breast, but
cut so low that it shamed Miriam to put it on.
"It is naught, it is naught," said Julia. "The designer has made it
thus that the multitude may see those pearls from which you take your
name." But to herself she thought: "Oh! monstrous age, and monstrous
men, whose eyes can delight in the disgrace of a poor unfriended
maiden. Surely the cup of iniquity of my people is full, and they
shall drink it to the dregs!"
That same afternoon also came an assistant of the officer, who was
called the Marshal, with orders to Gallus as to when and where he was
to deliver over his charge upon the morrow. With him he brought a
packet, which, when opened, proved to contain a splendid golden
girdle, fashioned to the likeness of a fetter. The clasp was an
amethyst, and round it were cut these words: "The gift of Domitian to
her who to-morrow shall be his."
Miriam threw the thing from her as though it were a snake.
"I will not wear it," she said. "I say that I will not wear it; at
least to-day I am my own," while Julia groaned and Gallus cursed
beneath his breath.
Knowing her sore plight, that evening there came to visit her one of
the elders of the Christian Church in Rome, a bishop named Cyril, who
had been the friend and disciple of the Apostle Peter. To him the poor
girl poured out all the agony of her heart.
"Oh! my father, my father in Christ," she said, "I swear to you that
were I not of our holy faith, rather than endure this shame I would
slay myself to-night! Other dangers have I passed, but they have been
of the body alone, whereas this----. Pity me and tell me, you in whose
ear God speaks, tell me, what must I do?"
"Daughter," answered the grave and gentle man, "you must trust in God.
Did He not save you in the house at Tyre? Did He not save you in the
streets of Jerusalem? Did He not save you on the gate Nicanor?"
"He did," answered Miriam.
"Aye, daughter, and so shall He save you in the slave-market of Rome.
I have a message for your ear, and it is that no shame shall come near
to you. Tread your path, drink your cup, and fear nothing, for the
Lord shall send His angel to protect you until such time as it pleases
Him to take you to Himself."
Miriam looked at him, and as she looked peace fell upon her soul and
shone in her soft eyes.
"I hear the word of the Lord spoken through the mouth of His
messenger," she said, "and henceforth I will strive to fear nothing,
no, not even Domitian."
"Least of all Domitian, daughter, that son of Satan, whom Satan shall
pay in his own coin."
Then going to the door he summoned Julia, and while Gallus watched
without, the two of them prayed long and earnestly with Miriam. When
their prayer was finished the bishop rose, blessed her, and bade her
farewell.
"I leave you, daughter," he said, "but though you see him not, another
takes my place. Do you believe?"
"I have said that I believe," murmured Miriam.
Indeed, in those days when men still lived who had seen the Christ and
His voice still echoed through the world, to the strong faith of His
followers, it was not hard to credit that His angel did descend to
earth to protect and save at their Master's bidding.
So Cyril, the bishop, went, and that night from many a catacomb
prayers rose up to Heaven for Miriam in her peril. That night also she
slept peacefully.
Two hours before the dawn, Julia awoke her and arrayed her in the
glittering, hateful garments. When all was ready, with tears she bade
her farewell.
"Child, child," she said, "you have become to me as my own daughter
was, and now I know not how and when we shall meet again."
"Perhaps sooner than you think," Miriam answered. "But if not, if,
indeed, I speak to you for the last time, why, then, my blessings on
you who have played a mother's part to a helpless maid that was no kin
of yours. Yes, and on you Gallus also, who have kept me safe through
so many dangers."
"And who hopes, dear one, to keep you safe through many more. Since I
may not swear by the gods before you, I swear it by the Eagles that
Domitian will do well to have a care how he deals by you. To him I owe
no fealty and, as has been proved before to-day, the sword of
vengeance can reach the heart of princes."
"Aye, Gallus," said Miriam gently, "but let it not be your sword, nor,
I trust, shall you need to think of vengeance."
Then the litter was brought into the courtyard, with the guards that
were sent to accompany it, and they started for the gathering-place
beyond the Triumphal Way. Dark though it still was, all Rome was
astir. On every side shone torches, from every house and street rose
the murmur of voices, for the mighty city made herself ready to
celebrate the greatest festival which her inhabitants had seen. Even
now at times the press was so dense that the soldiers were obliged to
force a way through the crowd, which poured outwards to find good
places along the line of the Triumph, or to take up their station on
stands of timber, and in houses they had hired, whose roofs, balconies
and windows commanded the path of the pageant.
They crossed the Tiber. This Miriam knew by the roar of the water
beneath, and because the crush upon the narrow bridge was so great.
Thence she was borne along through country comparatively open, to the
gateways of some large building, where she was ordered to dismount
from the litter. Here officers were waiting who took charge of her,
giving to Gallus a written receipt for her person. Then, either
because he would not trust himself to bid her farewell, or because he
did not think it wise to do so in the presence of the officers, Gallus
turned and left her without a word.
"Come on, girl," said a man, but a secretary, looking up from his
tablets, called to him:
"Gently there with that lot, or you will hear about it. She is Pearl-
Maiden, the captive who made the quarrel between the Cęsars and
Domitian, of which all Rome is talking. Gently, I tell you, gently,
for many free princesses are worth less to-day."
Hearing this, the man bowed to Miriam, almost with reverence, and
begged her to follow him to a place that had been set apart for her.
She obeyed, passing through a great number of people, of whom all she
could see in the gloom of the breaking dawn was that, like herself,
they were captives, to a little chamber where she was left alone
watching the light grow through the lattice, and listening to the hum
of voices that rose without, mingled now and again with sobs and wails
of grief. Presently the door opened and a servant entered with bread
on a platter and milk in an earthenware vessel. These she took
thankfully, knowing that she would need food to support her during the
long day, but scarcely had she begun to eat when a slave appeared clad
in the imperial livery, and bearing a tray of luxurious meats served
in silver vessels.
"Pearl-Maiden," he said, "my master, Domitian, sends you greeting and
this present. The vessels are your own, and will be kept for you, but
he bids me add, that to-night you shall sup off dishes of gold."
Miriam made no answer, though one rose to her lips; but after the man
had departed, with her foot she overset the tray so that the silver
vases fell clattering to the floor, where the savory meats were
spilled. Then she went on eating the bread and milk till her hunger
was satisfied.
Scarcely had she finished her meal, when an officer entered the cell
and led her out into a great square, where she was marshalled amongst
many other prisoners. By now the sun was up and she saw before her a
splendid building, and gathered below the building all the Senate of
Rome in their robes, and many knights on horses, and nobles, and
princes from every country with their retinues--a very wonderful and
gallant sight. In front of the building were cloisters, before which
were set two ivory chairs, while to right and left of these chairs, as
far as the eye could reach, were drawn up thousand upon thousands of
soldiers; the Senate, the Knights and the Princes, as she could see
from the rising ground whereon she stood, being in front of them and
of the chairs. Presently from the cloisters, clad in garments of silk
and wearing crowns of laurel, appeared the Cęsars, Vespasian and
Titus, attended by Domitian and their staffs. As they came the
soldiers saw them and set up a mighty triumphant shout which sounded
like the roar of the sea, that endured while the Cęsars sat themselves
upon their thrones. Up and up went the sound of the continual
shouting, till at length Vespasian rose and lifted his hand.
Then silence fell and, covering his head with his cloak, he seemed to
make some prayer, after which Titus also covered his head with his
cloak and offered a prayer. This done, Vespasian addressed the
soldiers, thanking them for their bravery and promising them rewards,
whereon they shouted again until they were marched off to the feast
that had been made ready. Now the Cęsars vanished and the officers
began to order the great procession, of which Miriam could see neither
the beginning nor the end. All she knew was that before her in lines
eight wide were marshalled two thousand or more Jewish prisoners bound
together with ropes, among whom, immediately in front of her, were a
few women. Next she came, walking by herself, and behind her, also
walking by himself, a dark, sullen-looking man, clad in a white robe
and a purple cloak, with a gilded chain about his neck.
Looking at him she wondered where she had seen his face, which seemed
familiar to her. Then there rose before her mind a vision of the Court
of the Sanhedrim sitting in the cloisters of the Temple, and of
herself standing there before them. She remembered that this man was
seated next to that Simeon who had been so bitter against her and
pronounced upon her the cruel sentence of death, also that some one in
the crowd had addressed him as Simon, the son of Gioras, none other
than the savage general whom the Jews had admitted into the city to
make way upon the Zealot, John of Gischala. From that day to this she
had heard nothing of him till now they met again, the judge and the
victim, caught in a common net. Presently, in the confusion they were
brought together and he knew her.
"Are you Miriam, the grand-daughter of Benoni?" he asked.
"I am Miriam," she answered, "whom you, Simon, and your fellows doomed
to a cruel death, but who have been preserved----"
"----To walk in a Roman Triumph. Better that you had died, maiden, at
the hands of your own people."
"Better that you had died, Simon, at your own hands, or at those of
the Romans."
"That I am about to do," he replied bitterly. "Fear not, woman, you
will be avenged."
"I ask no vengeance," she answered. "Nay, cruel as you are I grieve
that you, a great captain, should have come to this."
"I grieve also, maiden. Your grandsire, old Benoni, chose the better
part."
Then the soldiers separated them and they spoke no more.
An hour passed and the procession began its march along the Triumphal
Way. Of it Miriam could see little. All she knew was that in front
there were ranks of fettered prisoners, while behind men carried upon
trays and tables the golden vessels of the Temple, the seven-branched
candlestick and the ancient sacred book of the Jewish law. They were
followed by other men, who bore aloft images of victory in ivory and
gold. Then, although these did not join them till they reached the
Porta Triumphalis, or the Gate of Pomp, attended, each of them, by
lictors having their fasces wreathed with laurel, came the Cęsars.
First went Vespasian Cęsar, the father. He rode in a splendid golden
chariot, to which were harnessed four white horses led by Libyan
soldiers. Behind him stood a slave clad in a dull robe, set there to
avert the influence of the evil eye and of the envious gods, who held
a crown above the head of the Imperator, and now and again whispered
in his ear the ominous words, /Respice post te, hominem memento te/
("Look back at me and remember thy mortality.")
After Vespasian Cęsar, the father, came Titus Cęsar, the son, but his
chariot was of silver, and graved upon its front was a picture of the
Holy House of the Jews melting in the flames. Like his father he was
attired in the /toga picta/ and /tunica palmata/, the gold-embroidered
over-robe and the tunic laced with silver leaves, while in his right
hand he held a laurel bough, and in his left a sceptre. He also was
attended by a slave who whispered in his ear the message of mortality.
Next to the chariot of Titus, alongside of it indeed, and as little
behind as custom would allow, rode Domitian, gloriously arrayed and
mounted on a splendid steed. Then came the tribunes and the knights on
horseback, and after them the legionaries to the number of five
thousand, every man of them having his spear wreathed in laurel.
Now the great procession was across the Tiber, and, following its
appointed path down broad streets and past palaces and temples, drew
slowly towards its object, the shrine of Jupiter Capitolinus, that
stood at the head of the Sacred Way beyond the Forum. Everywhere the
side paths, the windows of houses, the great scaffoldings of timber,
and the steps of temples were crowded with spectators. Never before
did Miriam understand how many people could inhabit a single city.
They passed them by thousands and by tens of thousands, and still, far
as the eye could reach, stretched the white sea of faces. Ahead that
sea would be quiet, then, as the procession pierced it, it began to
murmur. Presently the murmur grew to a shout, the shout to a roar, and
when the Cęsars appeared in their glittering chariots, the roar to a
triumphant peal which shook the street like thunder. And so on for
miles and miles, till Miriam's eyes were dim with the glare and
glitter, and her head swam at the ceaseless sound of shouting.
Often the procession would halt for a while, either because of a check
to one of the pageants in front, or in order that some of its members
might refresh themselves with drink which was brought to them. Then
the crowd, ceasing from its cheers, would make jokes, and criticise
whatever person or thing they chanced to be near. Greatly did they
criticise Miriam in this fashion, or at the least she thought so, who
must listen to it all. Most of them, she found, knew her by her name
of Pearl-Maiden, and pointed out to each other the necklace about her
throat. Many, too, had heard something of her story, and looked
eagerly at the picture of the gate Nicanor blazoned upon her breast.
But the greater part concerned themselves only with her delicate
beauty, passing from mouth to mouth the gossip concerning Domitian,
his quarrel with the Cęsars, and the intention which he had announced
of buying this captive at the public sale. Always it was the same
talk; sometimes more brutal and open than others--that was the only
difference.
Once they halted thus in the street of palaces through which they
passed near to the Baths of Agrippa. Here the endless comments began
again, but Miriam tried to shut her ears to it and looked about her.
To her left was a noble-looking house built of white marble, but she
noticed that its shutters were closed, also that it was undecorated
with garlands, and idly wondered why. Others wondered too, for when
they had wearied of discussing her points, she heard one plebeian ask
another whose house that was and why it had been shut up upon this
festal day. His fellow answered that he could not remember the owner's
name, but he was a rich noble who had fallen in the Jewish wars, and
that the palace was closed because it was not yet certain who was his
heir.
At that moment her attention was distracted by a sound of groans and
laughter coming from behind. She looked round to see that the wretched
Jewish general, Simon, had sunk fainting to the ground, overcome by
the heat, or the terrors of his mind, or by the sufferings which he
was forced to endure at the hands of his cruel guards, who flogged him
as he walked, for the pleasure of the people. Now they were beating
him to life again with their rods; hence the laughter of the audience
and the groans of the victim. Sick at heart, Miriam turned away from
this horrid sight, to hear a tall man, whose back was towards her, but
who was clad in the rich robes of an Eastern merchant, asking one of
the marshals of the Triumph, in a foreign accent, whether it was true
that the captive Pearl-Maiden was to be sold that evening in the
auction-mart of the Forum. The marshal answered yes, such were the
orders as regarded her and the other women, since there was no
convenient place to house them, and it was thought best to be rid of
them and let their masters take them home at once.
"Does she please you, sir? Are you going to bid?" he added. "If so,
you will find yourself in high company."
"Perhaps, perhaps," answered the man with a shrug of his shoulders.
Then he vanished into the crowd.
Now, for the first time that day, Miriam's spirit seemed to fail her.
The weariness of her body, the foul talk, the fouler cruelty, the cold
discussion of the sale of human beings to the first-comer as though
they were sheep or swine, the fear of her fate that night, pressed
upon and overcame her mind, so that she felt inclined, like Simon, the
son of Gioras, to sink fainting to the pavement and lie there till the
cruel rods beat her to her feet again. Hope sank low and faith grew
dim, while in her heart she wondered vaguely what was the meaning of
it all, and why poor men and women were made to suffer thus for the
pleasure of other men and women; wondered also what escape there could
be for her.
While she mused thus, like a ray of light through the clouds, a sense
of consolation, sweet as it was sudden, seemed to pierce the darkness
of her bitter thoughts. She knew not whence it came, nor what it might
portend, yet it existed, and the source of it seemed near to her. She
scanned the faces of the crowd, finding pity in a few, curiosity in
more, but in most gross admiration if they were men, or scorn of her
misfortune and jealousy of her loveliness if they were women. Not from
among these did that consolation flow. She looked up to the sky, half
expecting to see there that angel of the Lord into whose keeping the
bishop, Cyril, had delivered her. But the skies were empty and brazen
as the faces of the Roman crowd; not a cloud could be seen in them,
much less an angel.
As her eyes sank earthwards their glance fell upon one of the windows
of the marble house to her left. If she remembered right some few
minutes before the shutters of that window had been closed, now they
were open, revealing two heavy curtains of blue embroidered silk.
Miriam thought this strange, and, without seeming to do so, kept her
eyes fixed upon the curtains. Presently, for her sight was good, she
saw fingers between them--long, dark-coloured fingers. Then very
slowly the curtains were parted, and in the opening thus made appeared
a face, the face of an old woman, dark and noble looking and crowned
with snow-white hair. Even at that distance Miriam knew it in an
instant.
Oh, Heaven! it was the face of Nehushta, Nehushta whom she thought
dead, or at least for ever lost. For a moment Miriam was paralysed,
wondering whether this was not some vision born of the turmoil and
excitement of that dreadful day. Nay, surely it was no vision, surely
it was Nehushta herself who looked at her with loving eyes, for see!
she made the sign of the cross in the air before her, the symbol of
Christian hope and greeting, then laid her finger upon her lips in
token of secrecy and silence. The curtain closed and she was gone, who
not five seconds before had so mysteriously appeared.
Miriam's knees gave way beneath her, and while the marshals shouted to
the procession to set forward, she felt that she must sink to the
ground. Indeed, she would have fallen had not some woman in the crowd
stepped forward and thrust a goblet of wine into her hands, saying:
"Drink that, Pearl-Maiden, it will make your pale cheeks even prettier
than they are."
The words were coarse, but Miriam, looking at the woman, knew her for
one of the Christian community with whom she had worshipped in the
catacombs. So she took the cup, fearing nothing, and drank it off.
Then new strength came to her, and she went forward with the others on
that toilsome, endless march.
At length, however, it did end, an hour or so before sunset. They had
passed miles of streets; they had trodden the Sacred Way bordered by
fanes innumerable and adorned with statues set on columns; and now
marched up the steep slope that was crowned by the glorious temple of
Jupiter Capitolinus. As they began to climb it guards broke into their
lines, and seizing the chain that hung about the neck of Simon,
dragged him away.
"Whither do they take you?" asked Miriam as he passed her.
"To what I desire--death," he answered, and was gone.
Now the Cęsars, dismounting from their chariots, took up their
stations by altars at the head of the steps, while beneath them, rank
upon rank, gathered all those who had shared their Triumph, each
company in its allotted place. Then followed a long pause, the
multitude waiting for Miriam knew not what. Presently men were seen
running from the Forum up a path that had been left open, one of them
carrying in his hand some object wrapped in a napkin. Arriving in face
of the Cęsars he threw aside the cloth and held up before them and in
sight of all the people the grizzly head of Simon, the son of Gioras.
By this public murder of a brave captain of their foes was consummated
the Triumph of the Romans, and at the sight of its red proof trumpets
blew, banners waved, and from half a million throats went up a shout
of victory that seemed to rend the very skies, for the multitude was
drunk with the glory of its brutal vengeance.
Then silence was called, and there before the Temple of Jove the
beasts were slain, and the Cęsars offered sacrifice to the gods that
had given them victory.
Thus ended the Triumph of Vespasian and Titus, and with it the record
of the struggle of the Jews against the iron beak and claws of the
Roman Eagle.