Volume Ii Part 66 (1/2)
”Thou least of all,” said Totila.
”And we have grudged no sacrifice,” sighed the King. ”And yet if, as we all say, there is a G.o.d in heaven, just and good and almighty, why does He permit this enormous and undeserved misery? Why must we succ.u.mb to Byzantium?”
”But we must not succ.u.mb!” cried Hildebad. ”I have never speculated much, about our Almighty G.o.d; but if He permits _that_ to happen, we ought to storm heaven and overthrow His throne!”
”Do not blaspheme, my brother,” said Totila. ”And thou, my n.o.ble King, take courage and trust. Yes, a good G.o.d reigns above the stars; therefore the just cause must win at last. Courage, my Witichis; hope till the end.”
But the heart-broken man shook his head.
”I confess that I have been able to find but _one_ way out of this error; one way to get rid of this terrible doubt of G.o.d's justice. It cannot be that we suffer guiltless. And as our nation's cause is, without doubt, a just one, there must be hidden guilt in me, your King.
Repeatedly, so say our heathen songs, has a King sacrificed himself for his people when defeat, pestilence, or scarcity had persecuted the nation for years. Then the King took upon himself the hidden sin which seemed to weigh upon his people, and atoned by his death, or by going sceptreless into exile, an outlawed fugitive. Let me put off the crown from my unfortunate head. Choose another King, with whom G.o.d is not angry; choose Totila, or----”
”Thou ravest still in the fever of thy wounds,” interrupted the old master-at-arms. ”_Thou_ weighed down with guilt--thou, the most faithful of all? No! I tell you, you children of too young days, who have lost the old strength of your fathers with your fathers' old belief, and now know of no comfort for your hearts--I tell you, your distrustful speeches grieve me!” and his eyes flashed with a strange radiance as he continued, ”All that rejoices or pains us here upon earth is scarcely worth our notice. Here below there is but one thing necessary, and that is, to have been a true man, and no perjurer, and to die on the battle-field, and not upon a straw bed. Then the Walkyri bear the faithful hero from the b.l.o.o.d.y field, and carry him on rosy clouds to Odin's halls, where the Einheriar greet him with full cups.
There he daily rides forth at dawn to the hunting-field or the fencing-court, and at eve he returns to the banquet and the song in the golden halls. And lovely virgins caress the youths, and the elders chat about wise primeval times with the old primeval heroes. And there I shall meet again all the valiant companions of my youth; bold Winithar and Waltharis of Aquitania, and Guntharis of Burgundy. There I shall again behold him for whom I have so longed. Sir Beowulf; and I shall see the Cheruskians of ancient days, the first who ever beat the Romans, and of whom the singer of the Saxons still sings. And again I shall carry the s.h.i.+eld and spear of my master, the King with the eagle eyes. And thus we shall live for all eternity in light and joy, the earth below and all its woes forgotten.”
”A fine poem, old heathen!” said Totila, with a smile. ”But if all this can no longer console us for actual and heart-rending suffering? Speak thou also, Teja, thou gloomy guest. What is thy opinion of our sorrows?
Thy sword never fails us; why dost thou withhold thy words? What makes thy comforting harp dumb, thou singer of singers?”
”My words?” answered Teja, rising; ”my words and my thoughts would be perhaps harder to bear than all our suffering. Let me yet be silent, my sun-bright Totila. Perhaps a day will come when I may answer thee.
Perhaps, also, I may once more play on my harp, if but a string will vibrate.”
And he left the tent; for outside in the camp a confused and inexplicable noise of calling and questioning voices arose. The friends looked silently after Teja.
”I guess his thoughts,” at last said old Hildebrand, ”for I have known him from his boyhood. He is not as other men. And in the Northland there are many who think like him, who do not believe in Thor and Odin, but only in necessity and in their own strength. It is almost too heavy a burden for a human heart to bear, and it makes no one happy to think as he does. I wonder that he can sing and play the harp notwithstanding.”
Just then Teja, returning, tore open the curtain of the tent; his face was still paler than before; his dark eyes flashed; but his voice was as quiet as ever as he said:
”Break up the camp. King Witichis. Our s.h.i.+ps have fallen into the enemy's hands at Ostia. They have sent the head of Earl Odoswinth into the camp. And upon the walls of Rome, before the very eyes of our sentinels, they slaughter the cattle taken from the Goths. Large reinforcements from Byzantium, under Valerian and Euthalius--Huns, Slaves and Antians--have been brought into the Tiber by many s.h.i.+ps. For Johannes has marched through Picenum.”
”And Earl Ulithis?”
”Has been killed and his troops beaten. Ancona and Ariminum are taken, and----”
”Is that not yet all?” cried the King.
”No, Witichis. Johannes threatens Ravenna, He is only a few miles distant from that city. And urgent haste is necessary.”
CHAPTER XV.
The day after the arrival of this news, so fateful for the Goths, King Witichis abandoned the siege of Rome and led his thoroughly disheartened troops out of the four remaining camps.
The siege had lasted a whole year and nine days. All courage and strength, exertion and sacrifice, had been unavailing.
Silently the Goths marched past the proud walls, against which their power and good-fortune had been wrecked. Silently they suffered the taunting words cast at them from the battlements by Romans and Byzantines.
They were too much absorbed by their grief and rage to feel hurt by such mockery. But when the hors.e.m.e.n of Belisarius, issuing from the Pincian Gate, would have pursued them, they were fiercely repulsed, for Earl Teja led the Gothic rearguard.