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Maro and Flaccus underwent great anxiety, hidden as they were in the vat of the wine-press, from which hiding-place they heard the whole news, with its accompanying details. Caesar had been a.s.sa.s.sinated by Ca.s.sius and Brutus in the Capitol.
"Brutus?" whispered Maro. "Then it is certainly over with the Caesars, just as the old Brutus made an end of the Kings!"
And Brutus was flying to h.e.l.las to rouse the Greeks against the Romans.
"Long live Brutus!" they cried in the garden.
"Then we shall live also!" said the pliant Flaccus. "Caesar is dead; let us do homage to Brutus for the present."
Many years had pa.s.sed when the former student of Athens, Quintus Horatius Flaccus, was walking one day in the garden of his villa on the Sabine Hills. This villa he had received as a gift from his friend Maecenas, who possessed a splendid country-house close by in Tibur itself.
Horace was now a very famous poet, but still essentially the same as he had been when a student in Athens. Destiny or the G.o.ds had played with him, but the poet had taken it as a good joke on the part of the Higher Powers, and answered it with a satire. After the murder of Caesar, Brutus had fled to Greece, and been so well received there, that the Athenians had erected a statue to him, and raised troops for him against Antonius and the other generals, among whom was the invalid Octavia.n.u.s (afterwards Augustus).
Horace was compelled to serve as a soldier, and actually commanded a legion at Philippi, where Brutus fell. The poet, who was no warrior, fled from the superior force of the enemy, and came to Rome, where, after the amnesty had been proclaimed, he became a clerk in a public office. At the same time he had begun to write verses, was discovered by Maecenas, and received his reward in the form of an estate.
The Emperor Augustus admired him, and offered him a position as secretary, but Horace refused, partly because he could never see anything else but an usurper in this Emperor, partly because he loved freedom and independence above all things.
Just now he was walking in his garden, whose fruit-trees he had himself cultivated. He plucked roses and hyacinths, for he awaited the visit of a favourite guest, his old friend and fellow-student of Athens, Publius Virgilius Maro, as well known as Horace himself, although he had not yet allowed his _Aeneid_ to appear in ma.n.u.script.
A table was laid in a vine-arbour; flagons of old Ma.s.sisian and Falernian lay already on ice, oysters and eels were there; a kid and some quails were roasting on the spit in the kitchen; fruit had been plucked in the garden; and the only thing wanting on the table, which had been laid for two persons, were flowers.
A little slave, who was able to write, ran to and fro between the garden-gate and the dove-tower, in order to look out for the expected guest. The poet was standing at the water-barrel and was.h.i.+ng his hands, after he had finished plucking flowers, when someone clapped him on the shoulder.
"Virgil! Which way have you come, then?"
"Over the hills of Tibur from Maecenas."
"Welcome, wanderer, whichever way you have come! Sit down--you must be tired--in my hemicyklion, under the olives I planted myself, while the spits turn, and they ply the chopping-knife. Here you see my plot of land which represents the world to me."
Their first greetings and questions were over, and the two friends sat down to the table. The host was certainly an Epicurean or votary of pleasure; but in order to be able to enjoy, one must be moderate, and the meal, judging by Roman customs, was quite a frugal one, but simple and brilliant. Then the cups were pa.s.sed round, and the wine awoke memories in spite of its supposed lethal capacity of quenching them.
"Well, you were in the war, friend?" began Virgil.
"Yes, and I fled disgracefully, as you know."
"I have read so in one of your poems, but it is said not to be true, and you have slandered yourself."
"Have I? Perhaps! One talks nonsense when one writes."
"You poet, do you remember how you asked me in Athens whether it were difficult? How did you come to write?"
"I needed money!"
"Now you slander yourself again! If all clients who needed money could write, the world would be full of poets."
"Well, perhaps it was not so. But speak of yourself--of your _Aeneid_."
Virgil looked gloomy: "Of that I will not speak."
"Is it finished?"
"More than that! It is done with!"
"Done with?"
"Yes! When I read it, I found it a failure! It was not Homer; it was nothing. It was a punishment, because I wished to outs.h.i.+ne my father."
"Have you destroyed it?"
"Not yet; but it is sealed up, in order to be destroyed after my death."
"Now _you_ are slandering yourself, and you are depressed, Maro, not by years, not by work, but by something else."
"Yes, by something else. The future disturbs me!"
Horace shook his cup and recited: [Footnote: Hor. Od. I. ii.] "Do not go to the astrologers, Leuconoe. Better bear life as it comes. Be wise, clear your wine! While we speak, envious life is flying. Enjoy the present, and think as little as possible about the future."
"That I cannot!" broke in Virgil. "I cannot drown myself in my cups, when I see my fatherland peris.h.i.+ng."
"Has Rome ever been so powerful as it is now? Do we not possess the whole known world--Egypt, Syria, Greece, Italy, Spain, Germany, Gaul, Britain? And yet we live in a time of peace: the Temple of Ja.n.u.s is closed; the earth rejoices; the arts flourish; and commerce was never so active as at present."
"Yes, the peace that precedes a war. For all these conquered nations are awake, and have an eye on Rome. Not on Greece as before, for Greece is barren and laid waste, and pa.s.ses into the great silence. Do you know that Sulla and Mithridates have gone slaying and pillaging over h.e.l.las, so that science and art have fled to the Egyptian Alexandria or the growing Byzantium? Do you know that pirates, whose origin is unknown, from the East, have recently plundered every temple in h.e.l.las, so that hardly any religious service can be held there? The oracles are dumb, the poets are silent like song-birds in a storm, the great tragedies are no longer performed; people rather go to see farces and gladiatorial shows. h.e.l.las is a ruin, and Rome will soon be one."
"Times are bad, I grant, but every time has been one of decay, and has, however, prepared the way for a new epoch. The fallen leaves of autumn form a forcing-bed for the coming spring; Nature, life, and history ever renew themselves through death. Therefore death is to me only a renewal, a change, and whenever I meet a funeral, I always say to myself, 'O how pleasant it is to live!'"
"My dear Flaccus, you live with your dreams in the Golden Age, while we others only drag ourselves through this life of the Iron Age. Do you remember how Hesiod complains already of his own time?"
"No, I have forgotten that, but in order to oblige you I will listen."
"'The people of to-day are an iron race, and never rest from the burden of work, neither by day nor by night. They are a sinful folk, and the G.o.ds send them heavy troubles. But even when they send joy, this turns to their misfortune. Some day Zeus will destroy them, these many-tongued people, when they are born with grey locks on their temples. Yes, our children are born old men already, toothless, wrinkled and with bald heads. The father is not gracious to the child, nor the child to the father, nor the guest to his host, nor servant to fellow-servant, nor brother to brother. Children dishonour their old parents, revile them and speak unfriendly words--these young scoundrels who know nothing of divine vengeance, and never thank their ageing parents for their fostering care of them as children. Might is right, and one city destroys another. Honesty and faithfulness in keeping vows are never rewarded, as little as kindness or justice. Oh no, they who practise sin and break the law, demand honour. Scoundrels betray n.o.ble men, and commit perjury without scruple. Envy follows men, these unhappy ones with their harsh voices and dreadful faces, who rejoice over the evil and the mischief which they do.'"
"Yes, so Hesiod spoke a thousand years ago, and I must confess his words are well deserved, but what can one do?"
"Yes, they are. Cicero was murdered, and I feel inclined to follow the example of Cato, who died in order to escape sin. I sink, Flaccus, in lies and hypocrisy. But I will not sink ... I will mount. I have praised Augustus and his son Marcellus in my verses, but I believe no more in them, for they are not the future. Therefore the _Aeneid_ shall be burnt!"
"You disquiet me, Maro. But what do you believe in?"
"I believe in the Sibyl, who has prophesied that the Iron Age will end, and the Golden Age return."
"You have sung of that in the Fourth Eclogue, I remember.... Have you fever?"
"I believe I have. Do you remember--no! our fathers remember when the Capitol was burnt, and the Sibylline books destroyed. But now new books have come from Alexandria, and in them they have read that a new era will begin; that Rome will be destroyed but built up again, and that a Golden Age...."
Here the seer was silent. Then he continued: "Pardon me, Flaccus, but I am poorly, and must ride home before the mists rise from the Campagna."
"Eheu fugaces, Postume, Postume! Labuntur anni! I will follow you, friend, on my a.s.s, for you are sick. But 'the man of righteous heart and rock-like purpose will not be shaken nor terrified by the blind zeal of the citizens commanding evil, nor the glance of the threatening tyrant.... If the walls of the world fall in, they will bury him unterrified beneath their ruin.'"