<h3>A Centurion of the Thirtieth</h3>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>Cities and Thrones and Powers</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>Stand in Time's eye,</i></span>
<span><i>Almost as long as flowers,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>Which daily die.</i></span>
<span><i>But, as new buds put forth</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>To glad new men,</i></span>
<span><i>Out of the spent and unconsidered Earth,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>The Cities rise again.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>This season's Daffodil,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>She never hears,</i></span>
<span><i>What change, what chance, what chill,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>Cut down last year's:</i></span>
<span><i>But with bold countenance,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>And knowledge small,</i></span>
<span><i>Esteems her seven days' continuance</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>To be perpetual.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>So Time that is o'er-kind,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>To all that be,</i></span>
<span><i>Ordains us e'en as blind,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>As bold as she:</i></span>
<span><i>That in our very death,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>And burial sure,</i></span>
<span><i>Shadow to shadow, well persuaded, saith,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>'See how our works endure!'</i></span></div>
</div>
<hr />
<SPAN name="page_141"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[141]</span>
<h4>A Centurion of the Thirtieth</h4>
<p>Dan had come to grief over his Latin, and was kept in; so Una went alone
to Far Wood. Dan's big catapult and the lead bullets that Hobden had
made for him were hidden in an old hollow beech-stub on the west of the
wood. They had named the place out of the verse in <i>Lays of Ancient
Rome</i>:</p>
<blockquote>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span>From lordly Volaterrae,</span>
<span class="i2">Where scowls the far-famed hold</span>
<span>Piled by the hands of giants</span>
<span class="i2">For Godlike Kings of old.</span></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p>They were the 'Godlike Kings', and when old Hobden
piled some comfortable brushwood between the big wooden
knees of Volaterrae, they called him 'Hands of Giants'.</p>
<p>Una slipped through their private gap in the fence, and
sat still awhile, scowling as scowlily and lordlily as she
knew how; for Volaterrae is an important watch-tower
that juts out of Far Wood just as Far Wood juts out of the
hillside. Pook's Hill lay below her and all the turns of the
brook as it wanders out of the Willingford Woods, between
hop-gardens, to old Hobden's cottage at the
Forge. The Sou'-West wind (there is always
<SPAN name="page_142"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[142]</span>
a wind by Volaterrae) blew from the bare ridge where Cherry Clack
Windmill stands.</p>
<p>Now wind prowling through woods sounds like exciting
things going to happen, and that is why on blowy
days you stand up in Volaterrae and shout bits of the <i>Lays</i>
to suit its noises.</p>
<p>Una took Dan's catapult from its secret place, and
made ready to meet Lars Porsena's army stealing
through the wind-whitened aspens by the brook. A gust
boomed up the valley, and Una chanted sorrowfully:</p>
<blockquote>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span>'Verbenna down to Ostia</span>
<span class="i2">Hath wasted all the plain:</span>
<span>Astur hath stormed Janiculum,</span>
<span class="i2">And the stout guards are slain.'</span></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p>But the wind, not charging fair to the wood, started aside and shook a
single oak in Gleason's pasture. Here it made itself all small and
crouched among the grasses, waving the tips of them as a cat waves the
tip of her tail before she springs.</p>
<p>'Now welcome—welcome, Sextus,' sang Una, loading the catapult—</p>
<blockquote>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i2">'Now welcome to thy home!</span>
<span>Why dost thou stay, and turn away?</span>
<span class="i2">Here lies the road to Rome.'</span></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p>She fired into the face of the lull, to wake up the cowardly wind, and
heard a grunt from behind a thorn in the pasture.</p>
<p>'Oh, my Winkie!' she said aloud, and that was something she had picked
up from Dan. 'I b'lieve I've tickled up a Gleason cow.'</p>
<SPAN name="page_143"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[143]</span>
<p>'You little painted beast!' a voice cried. 'I'll teach you to sling your
masters!'</p>
<p>She looked down most cautiously, and saw a young man covered with hoopy
bronze armour all glowing among the late broom. But what Una admired
beyond all was his great bronze helmet with a red horse-tail that
flicked in the wind. She could hear the long hairs rasp on his shimmery
shoulder-plates.</p>
<p>'What does the Faun mean,' he said, half aloud to himself, 'by telling
me that the Painted People have changed?' He caught sight of Una's
yellow head. 'Have you seen a painted lead-slinger?' he called.</p>
<p>'No-o,' said Una. 'But if you've seen a bullet——'</p>
<p>'Seen?' cried the man. 'It passed within a hair's breadth of my ear.'</p>
<p>'Well, that was me. I'm most awfully sorry.'</p>
<p>'Didn't the Faun tell you I was coming?' He smiled.</p>
<p>'Not if you mean Puck. I thought you were a Gleason cow. I—I didn't
know you were a—a——What are you?'</p>
<p>He laughed outright, showing a set of splendid teeth. His face and eyes
were dark, and his eyebrows met above his big nose in one bushy black
bar.</p>
<p>'They call me Parnesius. I have been a Centurion of the Seventh Cohort
of the Thirtieth Legion—the Ulpia Victrix. Did you sling that bullet?'</p>
<p>'I did. I was using Dan's catapult,' said Una.</p>
<SPAN name="page_144"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[144]</span>
<p>'Catapults!' said he. 'I ought to know something about them. Show me!'</p>
<p>He leaped the rough fence with a rattle of spear, shield, and armour,
and hoisted himself into Volaterrae as quickly as a shadow.</p>
<p>'A sling on a forked stick. I understand!' he cried, and pulled at the
elastic. 'But what wonderful beast yields this stretching leather?'</p>
<p>'It's laccy—elastic. You put the bullet into that loop, and then you
pull hard.'</p>
<p>The man pulled, and hit himself square on his thumb-nail.</p>
<p>'Each to his own weapon,' he said gravely, handing it back. 'I am better
with the bigger machine, little maiden. But it's a pretty toy. A wolf
would laugh at it. Aren't you afraid of wolves?'</p>
<p>'There aren't any,' said Una.</p>
<p>'Never believe it! A wolf's like a Winged Hat. He comes when he isn't
expected. Don't they hunt wolves here?'</p>
<p>'We don't hunt,' said Una, remembering what she had heard from grown-ups.
'We preserve—pheasants. Do you know them?'</p>
<p>'I ought to,' said the young man, smiling again, and he imitated the cry
of the cock-pheasant so perfectly that a bird answered out of the wood.</p>
<p>'What a big painted clucking fool is a pheasant!' he said. 'Just like
some Romans.'</p>
<p>'But you're a Roman yourself, aren't you?' said Una.</p>
<p>'Ye-es and no. I'm one of a good few thousands who have never seen Rome
except in a picture. </p>
<hr />
<SPAN name="page_145"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[145]</span>
<center>
<SPAN href="./images/page_145_full.png">
<ANTIMG src="./images/page_145.png" height-obs="637" width-obs="400" alt="'You put the bullet into that loop.'" /></SPAN>
<div class="caption">'You put the bullet into that loop.'</div>
</center>
<hr />
<SPAN name="page_147"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[147]</span>
<p>My people have lived at Vectis for generations.
Vectis—that island West yonder that you can see from so far in clear
weather.'</p>
<p>'Do you mean the Isle of Wight? It lifts up just before rain, and you
see it from the Downs.'</p>
<p>'Very likely. Our villa's on the South edge of the Island, by the Broken
Cliffs. Most of it is three hundred years old, but the cow-stables,
where our first ancestor lived, must be a hundred years older. Oh, quite
that, because the founder of our family had his land given him by
Agricola at the Settlement. It's not a bad little place for its size. In
spring-time violets grow down to the very beach. I've gathered sea-weeds
for myself and violets for my Mother many a time with our old nurse.'</p>
<p>'Was your nurse a—a Romaness too?'</p>
<p>'No, a Numidian. Gods be good to her! A dear, fat, brown thing with a
tongue like a cowbell. She was a free woman. By the way, are you free,
maiden?'</p>
<p>'Oh, quite,' said Una. 'At least, till tea-time; and in summer our
governess doesn't say much if we're late.'</p>
<p>The young man laughed again—a proper understanding laugh.</p>
<p>'I see,' said he. 'That accounts for your being in the wood. <i>We</i> hid
among the cliffs.'</p>
<p>'Did you have a governess, then?'</p>
<p>'Did we not? A Greek, too. She had a way of clutching her dress when she
hunted us among the gorse-bushes that made us laugh. Then she'd
<SPAN name="page_148"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[148]</span>
say she'd get us whipped. She never did, though, bless her! Aglaia was a
thorough sportswoman, for all her learning.'</p>
<p>'But what lessons did you do—when—when you were little?'</p>
<p>'Ancient history, the Classics, arithmetic and so on,' he answered. 'My
sister and I were thick-heads, but my two brothers (I'm the middle one)
liked those things, and, of course, Mother was clever enough for any
six. She was nearly as tall as I am, and she looked like the new statue
on the Western Road—the Demeter of the Baskets, you know. And funny!
Roma Dea! How Mother could make us laugh!'</p>
<p>'What at?'</p>
<p>'Little jokes and sayings that every family has. Don't you know?'</p>
<p>'I know we have, but I didn't know other people had them too,' said Una.
'Tell me about all your family, please.'</p>
<p>'Good families are very much alike. Mother would sit spinning of
evenings while Aglaia read in her corner, and Father did accounts, and
we four romped about the passages. When our noise grew too loud the
Pater would say, "Less tumult! Less tumult! Have you never heard of a
Father's right over his children? He can slay them, my loves—slay them
dead, and the Gods highly approve of the action!" Then Mother would prim
up her dear mouth over the wheel and answer: "H'm! I'm afraid there
can't be much of the Roman Father about you!" Then the Pater would roll
up his accounts, and say, "I'll
<SPAN name="page_149"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[149]</span>
show you!" and then—then, he'd be worse than any of us!'</p>
<p>'Fathers can—if they like,' said Una, her eyes dancing.</p>
<p>'Didn't I say all good families are very much the same?'</p>
<p>'What did you do in summer?' said Una. 'Play about, like us?'</p>
<p>'Yes, and we visited our friends. There are no wolves in Vectis. We had
many friends, and as many ponies as we wished.'</p>
<p>'It must have been lovely,' said Una. 'I hope it lasted for ever.'</p>
<p>'Not quite, little maid. When I was about sixteen or seventeen, the
Father felt gouty, and we all went to the Waters.'</p>
<p>'What waters?'</p>
<p>'At Aquae Solis. Every one goes there. You ought to get your Father to
take you some day.'</p>
<p>'But where? I don't know,' said Una.</p>
<p>The young man looked astonished for a moment. 'Aquae Solis,' he
repeated. 'The best baths in Britain. just as good, I'm told, as Rome.
All the old gluttons sit in hot water, and talk scandal and politics.
And the Generals come through the streets with their guards behind them;
and the magistrates come in their chairs with their stiff guards behind
them; and you meet fortune-tellers, and goldsmiths, and merchants, and
philosophers, and feather-sellers, and ultra-Roman Britons, and
ultra-British Romans, and tame tribesmen pretending to be civilised, and
Jew lecturers, and—oh, everybody interesting. We young people, of
<SPAN name="page_150"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[150]</span>
course, took no interest in politics. We had not the gout: there were
many of our age like us. We did not find life sad.</p>
<p>'But while we were enjoying ourselves without thinking, my sister met
the son of a magistrate in the West—and a year afterwards she was
married to him. My young brother, who was always interested in plants
and roots, met the First Doctor of a Legion from the City of the
Legions, and he decided that he would be an Army doctor. I do not think
it is a profession for a well-born man, but then—I'm not my brother. He
went to Rome to study medicine, and now he's First Doctor of a Legion in
Egypt—at Antinoe, I think, but I have not heard from him for some time.</p>
<p>'My eldest brother came across a Greek philosopher, and told my Father
that he intended to settle down on the estate as a farmer and a
philosopher. You see,'—the young man's eyes twinkled—'his philosopher
was a long-haired one!'</p>
<p>'I thought philosophers were bald,' said Una.</p>
<p>'Not all. She was very pretty. I don't blame him. Nothing could have
suited me better than my eldest brother's doing this, for I was only too
keen to join the Army. I had always feared I should have to stay at home
and look after the estate while my brother took <i>this</i>.'</p>
<p>He rapped on his great glistening shield that never seemed to be in his
way.</p>
<p>'So we were well contented—we young people—and we rode back to
Clausentum along the Wood Road very quietly. But when we reached
<SPAN name="page_151"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[151]</span>
home, Aglaia, our governess, saw what had come to us. I remember her at the
door, the torch over her head, watching us climb the cliff-path from the
boat. "Aie! Aie!" she said. "Children you went away. Men and a woman you
return!" Then she kissed Mother, and Mother wept. Thus our visit to the
Waters settled our fates for each of us, Maiden.'</p>
<p>He rose to his feet and listened, leaning on the shield-rim.</p>
<p>'I think that's Dan—my brother,' said Una.</p>
<p>'Yes; and the Faun is with him,' he replied, as Dan with Puck stumbled
through the copse.</p>
<p>'We should have come sooner,' Puck called, 'but the beauties of your
native tongue, O Parnesius, have enthralled this young citizen.'</p>
<p>Parnesius looked bewildered, even when Una explained.</p>
<p>'Dan said the plural of "dominus" was "dominoes", and when Miss Blake
said it wasn't he said he supposed it was "backgammon", and so he had to
write it out twice—for cheek, you know.'</p>
<p>Dan had climbed into Volaterrae, hot and panting.</p>
<p>'I've run nearly all the way,' he gasped, 'and then Puck met me. How do
you do, Sir?'</p>
<p>'I am in good health,' Parnesius answered. 'See! I have tried to bend
the bow of Ulysses, but——' He held up his thumb.</p>
<p>'I'm sorry. You must have pulled off too soon,' said Dan. 'But Puck said
you were telling Una a story.'</p>
<SPAN name="page_152"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[152]</span>
<p>'Continue, O Parnesius,' said Puck, who had perched himself on a dead
branch above them. 'I will be chorus. Has he puzzled you much, Una?'</p>
<p>'Not a bit, except—I didn't know where Ak—Ak something was,' she
answered.</p>
<p>'Oh, Aquae Solis. That's Bath, where the buns come from. Let the hero
tell his own tale.'</p>
<p>Parnesius pretended to thrust his spear at Puck's legs, but Puck reached
down, caught at the horse-tail plume, and pulled off the tall helmet.</p>
<p>'Thanks, jester,' said Parnesius, shaking his curly dark head. 'That is
cooler. Now hang it up for me....</p>
<p>'I was telling your sister how I joined the Army,' he said to Dan.</p>
<p>'Did you have to pass an Exam?' Dan asked eagerly.</p>
<p>'No. I went to my Father, and said I should like to enter the Dacian
Horse (I had seen some at Aquae Solis); but he said I had better begin
service in a regular Legion from Rome. Now, like many of our youngsters,
I was not too fond of anything Roman. The Roman-born officers and
magistrates looked down on us British-born as though we were barbarians.
I told my Father so.</p>
<p>'"I know they do," he said; "but remember, after all, we are the people
of the Old Stock, and our duty is to the Empire."</p>
<p>'"To which Empire?" I asked. "We split the Eagle before I was born."</p>
<SPAN name="page_153"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[153]</span>
<p>'"What thieves' talk is that?" said my Father. He hated slang.</p>
<p>'"Well, sir," I said, "we've one Emperor in Rome, and I don't know how
many Emperors the outlying Provinces have set up from time to time.
Which am I to follow?"</p>
<p>'"Gratian," said he. "At least he's a sportsman."</p>
<p>'"He's all that," I said. "Hasn't he turned himself into a
raw-beef-eating Scythian?"</p>
<p>'"Where did you hear of it?" said the Pater.</p>
<p>'"At Aquae Solis," I said. It was perfectly true. This precious Emperor
Gratian of ours had a bodyguard of fur-cloaked Scythians, and he was so
crazy about them that he dressed like them. In Rome of all places in the
world! It was as bad as if my own Father had painted himself blue!</p>
<p>'"No matter for the clothes," said the Pater. "They are only the fringe
of the trouble. It began before your time or mine. Rome has forsaken her
Gods, and must be punished. The great war with the Painted People broke
out in the very year the temples of our Gods were destroyed. We beat the
Painted People in the very year our temples were rebuilt. Go back
further still."... He went back to the time of Diocletian; and to listen
to him you would have thought Eternal Rome herself was on the edge of
destruction, just because a few people had become a little large-minded.</p>
<p>'<i>I</i> knew nothing about it. Aglaia never taught us the history of our
own country. She was so full of her ancient Greeks.</p>
<SPAN name="page_154"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[154]</span>
<p>'"There is no hope for Rome," said the Pater, at last. "She has forsaken
her Gods, but if the Gods forgive <i>us</i> here, we may save Britain. To do
that, we must keep the Painted People back. Therefore, I tell you,
Parnesius, as a Father, that if your heart is set on service, your place
is among men on the Wall—and not with women among the cities."'</p>
<p>'What Wall?' asked Dan and Una at once.</p>
<p>'Father meant the one we call Hadrian's Wall. I'll tell you about it
later. It was built long ago, across North Britain, to keep out the
Painted People—Picts, you call them. Father had fought in the great
Pict War that lasted more than twenty years, and he knew what fighting
meant. Theodosius, one of our great Generals, had chased the little
beasts back far into the North before I was born. Down at Vectis, of
course, we never troubled our heads about them. But when my Father spoke
as he did, I kissed his hand, and waited for orders. We British-born
Romans know what is due to our parents.'</p>
<p>'If I kissed my Father's hand, he'd laugh,' said Dan.</p>
<p>'Customs change; but if you do not obey your Father, the Gods remember
it. You may be quite sure of <i>that</i>.</p>
<p>'After our talk, seeing I was in earnest, the Pater sent me over to
Clausentum to learn my foot-drill in a barrack full of foreign
auxiliaries—as unwashed and unshaved a mob of mixed barbarians as ever
scrubbed a breastplate. It was your stick in their stomachs and your
shield in
<SPAN name="page_155"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[155]</span>
their faces to push them into any sort of formation. When I
had learned my work the Instructor gave me a handful—and they were a
handful!—of Gauls and Iberians to polish up till they were sent to
their stations up-country. I did my best, and one night a villa in the
suburbs caught fire, and I had my handful out and at work before any of
the other troops. I noticed a quiet-looking man on the lawn, leaning on
a stick. He watched us passing buckets from the pond, and at last he
said to me: "Who are you?"</p>
<p>'"A probationer, waiting for a command," I answered. <i>I</i> didn't know who
he was from Deucalion!</p>
<p>'"Born in Britain?" he said.</p>
<p>'"Yes, if you were born in Spain," I said, for he neighed his words like
an Iberian mule.</p>
<p>'"And what might you call yourself when you are at home?" he said,
laughing.</p>
<p>'"That depends," I answered; "sometimes one thing and sometimes another.
But now I'm busy."</p>
<p>'He said no more till we had saved the family gods (they were
respectable householders), and then he grunted across the laurels:
"Listen, young sometimes-one-thing-and-sometimes-another. In future call
yourself Centurion of the Seventh Cohort of the Thirtieth, the Ulpia
Victrix. That will help me to remember you. Your Father and a few other
people call me Maximus."</p>
<p>'He tossed me the polished stick he was leaning on, and went away. You
might have knocked me down with it!'</p>
<p>'Who was he?' said Dan.</p>
<SPAN name="page_156"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[156]</span>
<p>'Maximus himself, our great General! <i>The</i> General of Britain who had
been Theodosius's right hand in the Pict War! Not only had he given me
my Centurion's stick direct, but three steps in a good Legion as well! A
new man generally begins in the Tenth Cohort of his Legion, and works
up.'</p>
<p>'And were you pleased?' said Una.</p>
<p>'Very. I thought Maximus had chosen me for my good looks and fine style
in marching, but, when I went home, the Pater told me he had served
under Maximus in the great Pict War, and had asked him to befriend me.'</p>
<p>'A child you were!' said Puck, from above.</p>
<p>'I was,' said Parnesius. 'Don't begrudge it me, Faun. Afterwards—the
Gods know I put aside the games!' And Puck nodded, brown chin on brown
hand, his big eyes still.</p>
<p>'The night before I left we sacrificed to our ancestors—the usual
little Home Sacrifice—but I never prayed so earnestly to all the Good
Shades, and then I went with my Father by boat to Regnum, and across the
chalk eastwards to Anderida yonder.'</p>
<p>'Regnum? Anderida?' The children turned their faces to Puck.</p>
<p>'Regnum's Chichester,' he said, pointing towards Cherry Clack, 'and'—he
threw his arm South behind him—'Anderida's Pevensey.'</p>
<p>'Pevensey again!' said Dan. 'Where Weland landed?'</p>
<p>'Weland and a few others,' said Puck. 'Pevensey isn't young—even
compared to me!'</p>
<SPAN name="page_157"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[157]</span>
<p>'The headquarters of the Thirtieth lay at Anderida in summer, but my own
Cohort, the Seventh, was on the Wall up North. Maximus was inspecting
Auxiliaries—the Abulci, I think—at Anderida, and we stayed with him,
for he and my Father were very old friends. I was only there ten days
when I was ordered to go up with thirty men to my Cohort.' He laughed
merrily. 'A man never forgets his first march. I was happier than any
Emperor when I led my handful through the North Gate of the Camp, and we
saluted the guard and the Altar of Victory there.'</p>
<p>'How? How?' said Dan and Una.</p>
<p>Parnesius smiled, and stood up, flashing in his armour.</p>
<p>'So!' said he; and he moved slowly through the beautiful movements of
the Roman Salute, that ends with a hollow clang of the shield coming
into its place between the shoulders.</p>
<p>'Hai!' said Puck. 'That sets one thinking!'</p>
<p>'We went out fully armed,' said Parnesius, sitting down; 'but as soon as
the road entered the Great Forest, my men expected the pack-horses to
hang their shields on. "No!" I said; "you can dress like women in
Anderida, but while you're with me you will carry your own weapons and
armour."</p>
<p>'"But it's hot," said one of them, "and we haven't a doctor. Suppose we
get sunstroke, or a fever?"</p>
<p>'"Then die," I said, "and a good riddance to Rome! Up shield—up spears,
and tighten your foot-wear!"</p>
<SPAN name="page_158"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[158]</span>
<p>'"Don't think yourself Emperor of Britain already," a fellow shouted. I
knocked him over with the butt of my spear, and explained to these
Roman-born Romans that, if there were any further trouble, we should go
on with one man short. And, by the Light of the Sun, I meant it too! My
raw Gauls at Clausentum had never treated me so.</p>
<p>'Then, quietly as a cloud, Maximus rode out of the fern (my Father
behind him), and reined up across the road. He wore the Purple, as
though he were already Emperor; his leggings were of white buckskin
laced with gold.</p>
<p>'My men dropped like—like partridges.</p>
<p>'He said nothing for some time, only looked, with his eyes puckered.
Then he crooked his forefinger, and my men walked—crawled, I mean—to
one side.</p>
<p>'"Stand in the sun, children," he said, and they formed up on the hard
road.</p>
<p>'"What would you have done," he said to me, "if I had not been here?"</p>
<p>'"I should have killed that man," I answered.</p>
<p>'"Kill him now," he said. "He will not move a limb."</p>
<p>'"No," I said. "You've taken my men out of my command. I should only be
your butcher if I killed him now." Do you see what I meant?' Parnesius
turned to Dan.</p>
<p>'Yes,' said Dan. 'It wouldn't have been fair, somehow.'</p>
<p>'That was what I thought,' said Parnesius. 'But Maximus frowned. "You'll
never be an
<SPAN name="page_159"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[159]</span>
Emperor," he said. "Not even a General will you be."</p>
<p>'I was silent, but my Father seemed pleased.</p>
<p>'"I came here to see the last of you," he said.</p>
<p>'"You have seen it," said Maximus. "I shall never need your son any
more. He will live and he will die an officer of a Legion—and he might
have been Prefect of one of my Provinces. Now eat and drink with us," he
said. "Your men will wait till you have finished."</p>
<p>'My miserable thirty stood like wine-skins glistening in the hot sun,
and Maximus led us to where his people had set a meal. Himself he mixed
the wine.</p>
<p>'"A year from now," he said, "you will remember that you have sat with
the Emperor of Britain—and Gaul."</p>
<p>'"Yes," said the Pater, "you can drive two mules—Gaul and Britain."</p>
<p>'"Five years hence you will remember that you have drunk"—he passed me
the cup and there was blue borage in it—"with the Emperor of Rome!"</p>
<p>'"No; you can't drive three mules. They will tear you in pieces," said
my Father.</p>
<p>'"And you on the Wall, among the heather, will weep because your notion
of justice was more to you than the favour of the Emperor of Rome."</p>
<p>'I sat quite still. One does not answer a General who wears the Purple.</p>
<p>'"I am not angry with you," he went on; "I owe too much to your
Father——"</p>
<SPAN name="page_160"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[160]</span>
<p>'"You owe me nothing but advice that you never took," said the Pater.</p>
<p>'"——to be unjust to any of your family. Indeed, I say you may make a
good Tribune, but, so far as I am concerned, on the Wall you will live,
and on the Wall you will die," said Maximus.</p>
<p>'"Very like," said my Father. "But we shall have the Picts <i>and</i> their
friends breaking through before long. You cannot move all troops out of
Britain to make you Emperor, and expect the North to sit quiet."</p>
<p>'"I follow my destiny," said Maximus.</p>
<p>'"Follow it, then," said my Father, pulling up a fern root; "and die as
Theodosius died."</p>
<p>'"Ah!" said Maximus. "My old General was killed because he served the
Empire too well. <i>I</i> may be killed, but not for that reason," and he
smiled a little pale grey smile that made my blood run cold.</p>
<p>'"Then I had better follow my destiny," I said, "and take my men to the
Wall."</p>
<p>'He looked at me a long time, and bowed his head slanting like a
Spaniard. "Follow it, boy," he said. That was all. I was only too glad
to get away, though I had many messages for home. I found my men
standing as they had been put—they had not even shifted their feet in
the dust, and off I marched, still feeling that terrific smile like an
east wind up my back. I never halted them till sunset, and'—he turned
about and looked at Pook's Hill below him—'then I halted yonder.' He
pointed to the broken, bracken-covered
<SPAN name="page_161"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[161]</span>
shoulder of the Forge Hill behind old Hobden's cottage.</p>
<p>'There? Why, that's only the old Forge—where they made iron once,' said
Dan.</p>
<p>'Very good stuff it was too,' said Parnesius calmly. 'We mended three
shoulder-straps here and had a spear-head riveted. The Forge was rented
from the Government by a one-eyed smith from Carthage. I remember we
called him Cyclops. He sold me a beaver-skin rug for my sister's room.'</p>
<p>'But it couldn't have been here,' Dan insisted.</p>
<p>'But it was! From the Altar of Victory at Anderida to the First Forge in
the Forest here is twelve miles seven hundred paces. It is all in the
Road Book. A man doesn't forget his first march. I think I could tell
you every station between this and——' He leaned forward, but his eye
was caught by the setting sun.</p>
<p>It had come down to the top of Cherry Clack Hill, and the light poured
in between the tree trunks so that you could see red and gold and black
deep into the heart of Far Wood; and Parnesius in his armour shone as
though he had been afire.</p>
<p>'Wait!' he said, lifting a hand, and the sunlight jinked on his glass
bracelet. 'Wait! I pray to Mithras!'</p>
<p>He rose and stretched his arms westward, with deep, splendid-sounding
words.</p>
<p>Then Puck began to sing too, in a voice like bells tolling, and as he
sang he slipped from Volaterrae to the ground, and beckoned the
<SPAN name="page_162"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[162]</span>
children
to follow. They obeyed; it seemed as though the voices were pushing them
along; and through the goldy-brown light on the beech leaves they
walked, while Puck between them chanted something like this:</p>
<blockquote>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span>'Cur mundus militat sub vana gloria</span>
<span>Cujus prosperitas est transitoria?</span>
<span>Tam cito labitur ejus potentia</span>
<span>Quam vasa figuli quæ sunt fragilia.'</span></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p>They found themselves at the little locked gates of the wood.</p>
<blockquote>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span>'Quo Cæsar abiit celsus imperio?</span>
<span>Vel Dives splendidus totus in prandio?</span>
<span>Dic ubi Tullius——'</span></div>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p>Still singing, he took Dan's hand and wheeled him round to face Una as
she came out of the gate. It shut behind her, at the same time as Puck
threw the memory-magicking Oak, Ash and Thorn leaves over their heads.</p>
<p>'Well, you <i>are</i> jolly late,' said Una. 'Couldn't you get away before?'</p>
<p>'I did,' said Dan. 'I got away in lots of time, but—but I didn't know
it was so late. Where've you been?'</p>
<p>'In Volaterrae—waiting for you.'</p>
<p>'Sorry,' said Dan. 'It was all that beastly Latin.'</p>
<hr />
<SPAN name="page_163"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[163]</span>
<h4>A BRITISH-ROMAN SONG (A.D. 406)</h4>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>My father's father saw it not,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>And I, belike, shall never come,</i></span>
<span><i>To look on that so-holy spot—</i></span>
<span class="i8"><i>The very Rome—</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>Crowned by all Time, all Art, all Might,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>The equal work of Gods and Man,</i></span>
<span><i>City beneath whose oldest height—</i></span>
<span class="i8"><i>The Race began!</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>Soon to send forth again a brood,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>Unshakeable, we pray, that clings,</i></span>
<span><i>To Rome's thrice-hammered hardihood—</i></span>
<span class="i8"><i>In arduous things.</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>Strong heart with triple armour bound,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>Beat strongly, for thy life-blood runs,</i></span>
<span><i>Age after Age, the Empire round—</i></span>
<span class="i8"><i>In us thy Sons,</i></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span><i>Who, distant from the Seven Hills,</i></span>
<span class="i2"><i>Loving and serving much, require</i></span>
<span><i>Thee,—thee to guard 'gainst home-born ills</i></span>
<span class="i8"><i>The Imperial Fire!</i></span></div>
</div>
<hr class="wide" />
<SPAN name="page_165"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[165]</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />