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<h2> THE STAR </h2>
<p>He had long ago retired from public life, and in his Tuscan villa, where
he now lived quite alone, seldom seeing his friends, he never regretted
the strenuous days of his activity. He had done his work well; he had been
more than a competent public servant; as Pro-Consul he proved a pillar of
strength to the State, a man whose name at one time was on men’s lips as
having left plenty where he had found dearth, and order and justice where
corruption, oppression, and anarchy, had once run riot. His retirement had
been somewhat of a surprise to his friends, for although he was ripe in
years, his mental powers were undiminished and his body was active and
vigorous. But his withdrawal from public life was due not so much to
fatigue or to a longing for leisure as to a lack of sympathy, which he
felt to be growing stronger and stronger as the years went by, with the
manners and customs, the mode of thought, and the manner of living of the
new world and the new generation which was growing up around him. Nurtured
as he had been in the old school and the strong traditions which taught an
austere simplicity of life, a contempt for luxury and show, he was
bewildered and saddened by the rapid growth of riches, the shameless
worship of wealth, the unrestrained passion for amusement at all costs,
the thirst for new sensations, and the ostentatious airs of the youth of
the day, who seemed to be born disillusioned and whose palates were jaded
before they knew the taste of food. He found much to console him in
literature, not only in the literature of the past but in the literature
of his day, but here again he was beset with misgivings and haunted by
forebodings. He felt that the State had reached its zenith both in
material prosperity and intellectual achievement, and that all the future
held in reserve was decline and decay. This thought was ever present with
him; in the vast extension of empire he foresaw the inevitable
disintegration, and he wondered in a melancholy fashion what would be the
fate of mankind when the Empire, dismembered and rotten, should become the
prey of the Barbarians.</p>
<p>It was in the winter of the second year after his retirement that his
melancholy increased to a pitch of almost intolerable heaviness. That
winter was an extraordinarily mild one, and even during the coldest month
he strolled every evening after he had supped on the terrace walk which
was before the portico. He was strolling one night on the terrace
pondering on the fate of mankind, and more especially on the life—if
there was such a thing—beyond the grave. He was not a superstitious
man, but, saturated with tradition, he was a scrupulous observer of
religious feast, custom, and ritual. He had lately been disturbed by what
he considered to be an ill-favoured omen. One night—it was twelve
nights ago he reckoned—the statues of Pan and Apollo, standing in
his dining-room, which was at the end of the portico, had fallen to the
ground without any apparent cause and had been shattered into fragments.
And it had seemed to him that the crash of this accident was immediately
followed by a low and prolonged wail, which appeared to come from nowhere
in particular and yet to fill the world; the noise of the moan had seemed
to be quite close to him, and as it died away its echo had seemed to be
miles and miles distant. He thought it had been a hallucination, but that
same night a still stranger thing happened. After the accident, which had
wakened the whole household, he had been unable to go to sleep again and
he had gone from his sleeping chamber into an adjoining room, and,
lighting a lamp, had taken down and read out of the “Iliad” of Homer.
After he had been reading for about half an hour he heard a voice calling
him very distinctly by his name, but as soon as the sound had ceased he
was not quite certain whether he had heard it or not. At that moment one
of his slaves, who had been born in the East, entered the room and asked
him what he required, saying that he had heard his master calling loudly.
What these signs and portents signified he had no idea; perhaps, he mused,
they mean my own death, which is of no consequence; or perhaps—which
may the Fates forfend—some disaster to an absent friend or even to
the State. But so far—and twelve days had passed since he had seen
these strange manifestations—he had received no news which confirmed
his fears.</p>
<p>As he was thus musing he looked up at the sky, and he noticed the presence
of a new and unfamiliar star, which he had never seen before. He was a
close observer of the heavens and learned in astronomy, and he felt quite
certain that he had never seen this star before. It was a star of peculiar
radiance, large and white—almost blue in its whiteness—it
shone in the East, and seemed to put all the other stars to shame by its
overwhelming radiance and purity. While he was thus gazing at the star it
seemed to him as though a great darkness had come upon the world. He heard
a low muttering sound as of a distant earthquake, and this was quickly
followed by the tramping of innumerable armies. He knew that the end had
come. It is the Barbarians, he thought, who have already conquered the
world. Rome has fallen never to rise again; Rome has shared the fate of
Troy and Carthage, of Babylon, and Memphis; Rome is a name in an old
wife’s tale; and little savage children shall be given our holy trophies
for playthings, and shall use our ruined temples and our overthrown
palaces as their playground. And so sharp was the vividness of his vision
that he wondered what would happen to his villa, and whether or no the
Barbarians would destroy the image of Ceres on the terrace, which he
especially cherished, not for its beauty but because it had belonged to
his father and to his grandfather before him.</p>
<p>An eternity seemed to pass, and the tramp, tramp, tramp of the armies of
those untrained hordes which were coming from the North and overrunning
the world seemed to get nearer and nearer. He wondered what they would do
with him; he had no place for fear in his heart, but he remembered that on
the portico in the morning his freedman’s child had been playing with the
pieces of a broken jar, a copper coin, and a dog made of terra-cotta. He
remembered the child’s brown eyes and curly hair, its smile, its laughter,
and lisping talk—it was a piece of earth and sun—and he
thought of the spears of the Barbarians, and then shifted his thoughts
because they sickened him.</p>
<p>Then, just when he thought the heavy footsteps had reached the approach of
his villa, the vision changed. The noise of tramping ceased, and through
the thick darkness there pierced the radiance of the star: the strange
star he had seen that night. The world seemed to awake from a dark
slumber. The ruins rose from the dust and took once more a stately shape,
even lordlier than before. Rome had risen from the dead, and once more she
dominated the world like a starry diadem. Before him he seemed to see the
pillars and the portals of a huge temple, more splendid and gorgeous than
the Temples of Caesar. The gates were wide open, and from within came a
blare of trumpets. He saw a kneeling multitude; and soldiers with shining
breastplates, far taller than the legionaries of Caesar, were keeping a
way through the dense crowd, while the figure of an aged man—was it
the Pontifex Maximus, he wondered?—was borne aloft in a chair over
their heads.</p>
<p>Then once more the vision changed. At least the temple seemed to grow
wider, higher, and lighter; the crowd vanished; it seemed to him as though
a long corridor of light was opening on some ultimate and mysterious
doorway. At last this doorway was opened, and he saw distinctly before him
a dark and low manger where oxen and asses were stalled. It was littered
with straw. He could hear the peaceful beasts munching their food.</p>
<p>In the corner lay a woman, and in her arms was a child and his face shone
like the sun and lit up the whole place, in which there were neither
torches nor lamps. The door of the manger was ajar, and through it he saw
the sky and the strange star still shining brightly. He heard a voice, the
same voice which he had heard twelve nights before; but the voice was not
calling him, it was singing a song, and the song was as it were a part of
a larger music, a symphony of clear voices, more joyous and different from
anything he had ever heard.</p>
<p>The vision vanished altogether; he was standing once more under the
portico amongst the surroundings which were familiar to him. The strange
star was still shining in the sky. He went back through the folding-doors
of the piazza into the dining-room. His gloom and his perplexity had been
lifted from him; he felt quite happy; he could not have explained why. He
called his slave and told him to get plenty of provisions on the morrow,
for he expected friends to dinner. He added that he wanted nothing further
and that the slaves could go to bed.</p>
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