A Struggle For Rome Volume Iii Part 58
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"Even Justinian cannot blind and crucify a dead man. When Cethegus Caesarius has fallen, I cannot wake him up again to please the Emperor's cruelty. And of his money, you, Albinus, shall not receive a single solidus, nor you, Scaevola, one drop of his blood. His gold is for the Emperor, his blood for the Goths, and his name for immortality."
"Do you wish the death of a hero for that wretch?" now asked Anicius angrily.
"Yes, son of Boethius; for he has deserved it! But you have a veritable right to revenge yourself on him--you shall behead the fallen man, and take his head to the Emperor at Byzantium. Do you not hear the tuba?
The fight has commenced!"
CHAPTER XIV.
When King Teja saw the whole of Na.r.s.es' forces advancing towards the mouth of the pa.s.s, he said to his heroes:
"It seems that instead of the stars, the mid-day sun is to s.h.i.+ne upon the last battle of the Goths! That is the only change in our plan."
He then placed a number of warriors in front of the hollow in the lava, showed them the royal treasure and the corpse of Theodoric, raised upon a purple throne, and ordered them to pay attention while the fight for the pa.s.s was raging, and, on receiving a sign from Adalgoth--to whom and Wachis he had confided the last defence of the pa.s.s--at once to throw the throne and the coffers into the crater. The unarmed people pressed together round the lava cave--not a tear was seen, not a sigh was heard.
Teja arranged his men into hundreds, and these hundreds into families, so that father and sons, brothers and cousins, fought at each other's side; an order of battle the terrible obstinacy of which the Romans had often experienced since the days of the Cimbrians and Teutons, of Ariovist and Armin. The natural construction of the last battlefield of the Goths necessitated of itself the old order of battle inherited from Odin--the wedge.
The deep and close columns of the Byzantines now stood in orderly ranks from the sh.o.r.e of the sea to within a spear's throw from the mouth of the pa.s.s: a magnificent but fearful spectacle. The sun shone brightly upon their weapons, while the Goths still stood in the deep shadow of the rocks. Far away over the spears and standards of the enemy, the Goths beheld the lovely blue sea, the surface of which flashed with a silvery light.
King Teja stood near Adalgoth, who carried the banner of Theodoric, at the mouth of the pa.s.s. All the poet was roused in the Hero-King.
"Look!" he said to his favourite, "what more lovely place could a man have to die in? It cannot be more beautiful in the heaven of the Christian, nor in Master Hildebrand's Asgard or Breidablick. Up, Adalgoth! Let us die here, worthy of our nation and of this beauteous death-place."
He threw back the purple mantle which he wore over his black steel armour, took the little harp upon his left arm, and sang in a low, restrained voice:
"From farthest North till Rome--Byzant-- The Goths to battle call!
In glory rose the Goths' bright star-- In glory shall it fall!
Our swords raised high, we fight for fame; Heroes with heroes vie; Farewell, thou n.o.ble hero-race-- Up, Goths, and let us die!"
And he shattered the still vibrating harp upon the rocks at his feet.
"And now, Adalgoth, farewell! Would that I could have saved the rest of my people! Not here; but by an un.o.bstructed retreat to the north. It was not to be. Na.r.s.es would never grant it, and the last of the Goths cannot _beg_. Now let us go--to death!"
And raising his dreaded weapon, the mighty battleaxe with its lance-like shaft, he stepped to the head of the "wedge," Behind him Aligern, his cousin, and old Hildebrand. Behind them Duke Guntharis of Tuscany, the Wolfung, Earl Grippa of Ravenna, and Earl Wisand of Volsinii, the standard-bearer. Behind them again, Wisand's brother, Ragnaris of Tarentum, and four earls, his kinsmen. Then, in ever-broadening front, first six, then ten Goths. The rear was formed of close ranks, arranged by tens.
Wachis, halting in the pa.s.s near Adalgoth, blew, at a sign from the King, a signal on the Gothic war-horn, and the a.s.saulting force marched out of the ravine.
The heroes in league with Johannes stood upon the first level place close before the pa.s.s; only Alboin, Gisulf, and Cethegus were still missing. Next behind the ten leaders stood Longobardians and Herulians, who at once greeted the advancing Goths with a hail of spears.
The first to rush upon the King, who was easily recognisable by the crown upon his helmet, was Althias the Armenian. He fell dead at once, his skull split to the ears.
The second was the Herulian, Rodulf. Holding his spear at his left side with both hands, he rushed at Teja. Teja stood firm, and, receiving the stroke upon his narrow s.h.i.+eld, pierced his adversary through the body with the lance-like point of his battle-axe. Rodulf staggered back at the shock, then fell dead.
Before Teja could disengage his weapon from the scales of his enemy's mail-coat, Suartua, the nephew of the fallen Herulian, the Persian Kabades, and the Bajuvar Garizo, all attacked him at once.
Teja thrust back the last--the nearest and boldest--with such vigour, that he fell in the narrow and slippery lava path, and over a declivity on the right.
"Now help, O holy virgin of Neapolis!" cried the tall man as he flew downwards. "Help me, as you have done during all these years of war!"
And, but little damaged, Miriam's admirer came to a stop, slightly stunned by his fall.
The Herulian Suartua was brandis.h.i.+ng his sword over Teja's head, when Aligern, springing forward, struck his arm clean off his shoulder.
Suartua screamed and fell.
Kabades, who tried to rip up the King's body with his long and crooked scimetar, had his brains dashed out by old Hildebrand's stone axe.
Teja, again become master of his battle-axe, and rid of his nearest foes, now sprang forward to attack in his turn. He hurled his axe at a man in a boar-helmet--that is, a helmet decorated with the head and tusks of a wild boar. It was Epurulf, the Alamannian, who fell backwards to the ground.
Above Teja bent Vadomar, Epurulf's kinsman, and tried to possess himself of the Gothic King's terrible weapon; but Teja was upon him in a moment, his short sword in his right hand. It flashed, and Vadomar fell dead upon the corpse of his friend.
The two Franks, Chlotachar and Bertchramn, hurried up at the same moment, swinging the franciska, a weapon similar to Teja's battle-axe.
Both axes whizzed through the air at once. Teja caught one upon his s.h.i.+eld; the second, which came hurtling at his head, he parried with his own axe, and in another moment he stood between his two adversaries, whirled his axe round him in a circle, and at one blow the two Franks fell right and left, both their helmets beaten in.
At that moment a spear struck the King's s.h.i.+eld; it pierced the steel rim, and slightly grazed his arm. As he turned to meet this enemy--it was the Burgundian Gundobad--Ardarich, the Gepide, ran at him from behind with his drawn sword, and struck him a heavy blow on the top of his helmet. But the next moment Ardarich fell, pierced through by the spear of Duke Guntharis; and the King pressed Gundobad, who defended himself valiantly, down upon his knees. Gundobad lost his helmet in the struggle, and Teja thrust the spike of his s.h.i.+eld into his throat.
But already Taulantius the Illyrian and Autharis the Longobardian stood before Teja. The Illyrian struck at the King's s.h.i.+eld with a heavy club made of the root of the ilex, and broke off a piece of the lower rim.
At the same time, just above the crack thus made, a lance, hurled by the Longobardian, struck the s.h.i.+eld and tore off the fastening of the spike, sticking with its hook into the hole, and dragging the s.h.i.+eld down by its weight.
Already Taulantius raised his club over the King's head. But Teja did not loiter; sacrificing his half-shattered s.h.i.+eld, he dashed it into the Illyrian's visorless face, letting it go; and almost at the same moment he thrust the point of his battle-axe through the breast-plate of Autharis, who was rus.h.i.+ng upon him. But now the King stood without a s.h.i.+eld, and his distant enemies redoubled their hail of spears and arrows. With axe and sword, Teja parried the thickly falling darts.
An alarum from the pa.s.s caused him to look round. He saw that the greater part of the warriors whom he had led out of the ravine had fallen. The innumerable projectiles hurled from a distance had done their deadly work, and already, advancing from the left, a powerful division of Longobardians, Persians, and Armenians, had attacked them in the flank, and now mingled in a hand-to-hand fight.
On the right the King saw a column of Thracians, Macedonians, and Franks press forward against the guardians of the pa.s.s with spears couched; while a third division--Gepidians, Alamannians, Isaurians, and Illyrians, tried to cut off himself and the small troop which still stood at his back from the retreat into the pa.s.s.
Teja looked sharply towards the pa.s.s. For a moment the banner of Theodoric disappeared--it seemed to have fallen. This circ.u.mstance decided the King.
"Back into the pa.s.s! Save Theodoric's banner!" he cried to those behind him, and tried to break through the troop of enemies which surrounded him.
But they were in terrible earnest, for they were led by Johannes.
"Upon the King," lie cried. "Do not let him through. Do not let him go back! Spears! Throw!"
Aligern had come up.
"Take my s.h.i.+eld!" he cried.
Teja caught the proffered s.h.i.+eld just in time to receive the lance hurled by Johannes, which would otherwise have pierced his visor.
"Back to the pa.s.s!" again Teja cried, and rushed with such impetuosity upon Johannes, that the latter fell to the ground. The two nearest Isaurians succ.u.mbed to Teja's sword.
And now Teja, Aligern, Guntharis, Hildebrand, Grippa, Wisand and Ragnaris hurried back to the pa.s.s. But here the battle was already raging. Alboin and Gisulf had stormed the pa.s.s, and a heavy, pointed block of lava, hurled by Alboin, had struck Adalgoth on the thigh, and caused him to sink upon his knees. But Wachis had caught the falling banner, and Adalgoth, quickly rising, had pushed the Longobardian, who was pressing forward, out of the pa.s.s with the spike of his s.h.i.+eld.
The sudden return of the King with his little troop of heroes relieved the almost overpowered guardians of the pa.s.s. The Longobardians fell in heaps before the unexpected a.s.sault in their rear. With loud cries the two guardians of the pa.s.s rushed forth, and the Longobardians, carrying their leaders along irresistibly, ran and leaped over the jagged lava in their downward retreat. But they did not run far. They were absorbed by the ranks of Isaurians, and Illyrians, Gepidians and Alamannians, who advanced in force, led by Johannes. Gnas.h.i.+ng his teeth, he had risen from his fall, had set his helmet straight, and at once led his men against the pa.s.s, into which Teja had now entered.
"Forward!" cried Johannes; "up and at him, Alboin, Gisulf, Vitalia.n.u.s, Zenon! Let us see if this King be really spear-proof!"
A Struggle For Rome Volume Iii Part 58
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A Struggle For Rome Volume Iii Part 58 summary
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