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THE
Story of the Goths
FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE END OF THE GOTHIC DOMINION
IN SPAIN
XXIII.
THE YEAR-LONG SIEGE.
THE story of the long siege of Rome is one continuous record of
wonderful patience, resolution, and readiness of resource on the part of
Belisarius, and of miserable incompetence on the part of his antagonist. The
first thing which King Witigis attempted to do was to enclose Rome with a
circle of stockaded camps. But the scale on which
these camps were constructed was so ample that even the immense army of the
Goths was insufficient to supply men to occupy more than seven of them, which
blockaded eight out of the fourteen gates, leaving the six gates on the
southern side of the city uninvested. The seven
camps, each containing more than thrice the number of men who formed the
garrison of Rome, were fortified with as much elaborate care as if they were
intended to withstand an assault from an overwhelming force. King Witigis's principle of action was that it is never possible
to be too secure.
The next thing which the Goths did was, in imitation of Belisarius's
own proceedings at Naples, to destroy the aqueducts that supplied Rome with
water. Belisarius did not intend that Rome should be captured as he had taken
Naples, and therefore
he took care that the underground passages should be solidly walled up.
The cutting off of the supply from the aqueducts put an end to the enjoyment of
the public baths, the great luxury of Roman life, and the complaints of the
citizens were bitter. But with the river flowing through the city, and the
wells belonging to private houses, there was not much reason to fear that want
of water would compel Belisarius to surrender.
One of the aqueducts, however, had furnished the water-power to the
corn-mills, and the consequence of the cutting-off of the stream was that the
daily supply of flour could not be doled out to the soldiers and the citizens.
Belisarius therefore contrived to have two barges moored just below the Elian
Bridge, near the northern wall of the city, with a water-wheel between them, so
that the stream, rushing with force from under the arch of the bridge, should
turn the wheel, and so drive the mills which were placed on the barges. The
Goths were informed of this device by deserters, and sent floating down the
river a quantity of large trunks of trees and bodies of dead Romans, and by
this means managed to upset the machinery. However, Belisarius's ingenuity was
equal to this occasion also. He caused long iron chains to be drawn across the
opening of the bridge, which intercepted everything that came down the stream,
and men were employed from time to time to clear away the obstructions which
had accumulated. This contrivance served a double purpose, for it prevented the
possibility of a night attack being made by boats sailing under the bridge.
After a few days had passed Witigis began to think that the capture of
Rome would not prove so easy an undertaking as he had fancied. He therefore
determined to see whether Belisarius could be induced to surrender by the
offer of honorable conditions.
A Gothic chief named Albes, accompanied by several
other nobles, was sent into the city with a communication to Belisarius. He
found the general surrounded by his staff and the principal senators, and
addressed him in a formal speech, bidding him look from the walls at the vast
numbers of the besiegers and consider whether it would not be mere
foolhardiness to think of resisting them.
Belisarius grimly replied that the question whether resistance was
"foolhardiness" or not was his concern and not theirs, and that he
did not intend to be guided by the advice which they offered him. Resist he
would, and a time would come when the Goth would be glad to hide themselves
if they could even in the bramble-bushes. Rome belonged to the emperor; the
Gothic intruders who had stolen it had been turned out, and so long as
Belisarius lived they should not come back.
After Belisarius had spoken, Albes and his
companions looked expectantly at the senators. They had heard from deserters
how fiercely some of the principal Romans had talked (in private) about the
conduct of Belisarius, and they thought that the appeal made by Albes would call forth such a burst of indignation as would
compel the general to yield. But the senators sat pale and trembling, and none
of them dared to speak a word except a certain Fidelius,
whom Belisarius had made Praetorian Prefect, and who loaded the Goths
with abuse.
The envoys went back to the Gothic camp, and were received by Witigis
with the eager inquiry, "What sort of a man is Belisarius? Is he going
to give way?" They replied with emphasis that the Goths had made a great
mistake in thinking they could frighten that man by anything they could say or
do. On receiving this report the king hurried on his preparations for taking
the city by storm.
The preparations were on a magnificent scale. All the machines which the
military engineers of those times were able to devise for the assault on a
fortress were constructed in large numbers. There were wooden towers on wheels
equal in height to the walls of the city. These were intended to be dragged by
oxen close up to the walls, so that the archers on
the top could fight on a level with the defenders of the ramparts. Then there
were the battering-rams, which consisted of huge beams of wood, each carrying a
block of iron at the end and suspended in chains from a wooden framework. The
machine moved on four wheels, and was worked from within by fifty men who
dragged back the heavy "ram", and then allowed it to swing against
the wall. The whole structure was covered with skins to protect the men who
were inside. Scaling-ladders, too, were prepared to be used when the soldiers
on the wooden towers should have succeeded in clearing a portion of the wall of
its defenders; and fascines, that is to say, bundles of reeds and brushwood,
were made in order to fill up the ditch so as to make a road across it for the
machines.
Belisarius for his part was equally busy in organizing the defence. His
army had dwindled down to five thousand men, and it cost him a great deal of
thought to distribute this little force to the best advantage. The tomb of the
great emperor Hadrian, a vast building faced with marble, which stood in the
line of the city wall at the western end of the Elian Bridge, was converted
into a fort, and such it has continued to be till this day, when it is known
as the Castle of St. Angelo. All round the walls of the city
Belisarius mounted those destructive engines which served the Romans as
artillery—machines which hurled immense stones and bolts of iron with
tremendous velocity and effect.
GOTHIC BLUNDERING
It was not till the eighteenth day of the siege that the Goths
considered themselves ready to begin the
attack. As soon as the sun rose the Romans gathered on the northern wall
saw with terror the countless host of the enemy approaching with their
battering-rams and their siege-towers drawn by oxen. The citizens gave
themselves up for lost, but their fears became mixed with indignation when
Belisarius, instead of seeming to appreciate the gravity of the situation,
actually burst out laughing, and ordered the soldiers not to shoot an arrow
till he gave the word. "What might such conduct mean? Was it madness, or
worse than madness?" were the questions which one asked of another among
the crowd. At last, when the enemy had reached the very edge of the moat,
Belisarius took up a bow and aimed at one of the Gothic leaders. The man was
clothed in armor, but the arrow hit him in the neck,
and he fell to the ground mortally wounded. The Romans, startled out of their
discontent, burst into a great cheer, which was renewed when the general again
drew his bow with a like result. And then Belisarius gave the signal to the
whole army to discharge their arrows, ordering those in his own neighborhood to aim only at the oxen. In a few moments all
the oxen were killed, and the huge machines which they drew were rendered
useless. It was easv to see now what Belisarius had been laughing at, and why he had allowed
the enemy to come so close before allowing his archers to use their weapons.
When Witigis saw that the attack on the northern side of the city had
failed, he determined to direct his efforts to the eastern side—to the neighbourhood of the Praenestine gate, towards which another body
of Goths was approaching, also with their siege-towers and
battering-rams. But he left a large detachment of his army on the northern
side, leaving orders that they should not make any attempt to storm the walls,
but should keep up a vigorous discharge of arrows, so that Belisarius might
not suspect that the main assault was being attempted elsewhere. Those who were
left behind did their best to carry out these instructions, but fighting on the
level ground against men posted on the wall they were not able to produce much
effect. There was, however, amongst them one famous warrior of noble rank, who
found a substitute for the siege-tower in a tall tree, to the top of which he
climbed, notwithstanding the weight of his helmet and cuirass, and from that
elevated position was able to do much execution amongst the defenders of the
ramparts. At last he was hit by a shot from one of the Roman engines. The iron
bolt went right through the man's steel-clad body, and pinned him to the tree.
His comrades were so much aghast at the sight that they retired to a safe
distance out of the way of those terrible machines, and the defenders of that
portion of the walls were no more molested.
But now Belisarius received a message to say that the assault on the
eastern fortifications had begun. He hastened to the spot, and by a few timely
words encouraged his soldiers, who had begun to lose heart when they saw the
numbers and equipment of the enemy. Near the Praenestine gate was a space enclosed between the city rampart and an outer wall, where in
heathen days were kept the wild beasts intended for the cruel sports of the amphitheatre. The Goths broke through
the outer wall, and crowded into the enclosure. The inner wall, they had been
truly informed, was much decayed, and they thought it would give them little
trouble. But Belisarius directed one of his chief officers to make a sally upon
the throng collected between the walls. The unexpected attack threw the Goths
into confusion, and they were slaughtered by thousands almost unresisting,
thinking only of making their escape by the breach through which they had
entered. Then, opening the gate, Belisarius issued with the main body of his
army to pursue the fugitives, who imparted their terror to their comrades
beyond the outer wall. Soon the besiegers were all in headlong flight, and
Belisarius ordered a great fire to be made of their forsaken towers and
battering-rams.
STATUES USED AS MISSILES.
What happened else during this eventful day need not be told in detail.
It may be mentioned that in their attack on the fort that had been Hadrian's
tomb the Goths were nearly winning, until it occurred to the defenders to pull
down the statues, and hurl them, whole or in fragments, upon the heads of their
assailants. More than one famous work of Greek sculpture has been found in
modern times in the moat which surrounds the Castle of St. Angelo; probably
many another lies buried there still. The sacrifice of the statues saved the
fortress: the besiegers abated the fury of their assault, and then the imperial
soldiers, set free by the termination of the fighting in other parts of the
city, came up and soon put them to flight.
On all sides the Gothic attack had ended in disaster. Thirty thousand
Goths had been slain, and many thousands wounded, and the towers and the
battering-rams were captured and burnt. It was far on in the evening when the
battle ceased. "The Romans spent the night in singing songs of victory,
extolling the fame of Belisarius, and displaying the spoils taken from the
slain; the Goths in attending on their wounded comrades, and in wailing for
those that were no more."
After this crushing failure no further attempt was made to storm the
walls of Rome. Through the remainder of the long siege the aim of Witigis was
to compel Belisarius to surrender under pressure of hunger, or to tempt him to
squander the lives of his little garrison in fruitless sorties.
Belisarius guessed at once that the Goths, now that their assault had
decisively failed, would endeavour to establish an
efficient blockade. He, therefore, promptly took measures for economizing the
stock of provisions in the city. On the very day after the battle he ordered
that the daily rations of food to the soldiers should be reduced to one-half,
the diminution being compensated by increased pay in money; and all the women,
children, and slaves in the city were sent away to Naples, some of them being conveyed
in boats, others travelling on foot along the Appian Way. It would have been to
the interest of the Goths to prevent this procession of non-combatants from
escaping from Rome; but they were so discouraged by their defeat of yesterday
that nothing was done. And so the fugitives all found their way
to Naples, whence some of them were removed to the other south Italian
towns, and others took refuge in Sicily.
SUCCOUR LONG DELAYED.
What made Belisarius anxious was that he received no tidings of the
additional troops that the emperor had promised to send him. They had sailed
from Constantinople about Christmas, but, meeting with stormy weather, had
sought shelter on the western coast of Greece, and there they still remained.
Belisarius could not understand this strange delay, and wrote a letter to
Justinian, telling him that unless aid came speedily Rome must surely fall. The
letter concluded with these words: "I know that it is my duty to
sacrifice even my life in your service, and therefore no force shall make me
abandon this place while I live. But what sort of fame will be yours if you
allow Belisarius to come to such an end?"
Justinian was deeply moved by this appeal, and sent peremptory orders to
the lagging commanders, Valerian and Martin, that they should push forward with
all speed to Rome. He also made vigorous efforts to raise a new army to be sent
to the aid of his heroic general. In a few days Belisarius was able to cheer
the hearts of his soldiers by reading to them the emperor's letter, announcing
that the wished-for reinforcements were on their way.
It was not until twenty-two days after the attempted storm that Valerian
and Martin, with sixteen hundred men, arrived in Rome. The Goths had made
little use of the delay; indeed they were so discouraged by the failure of
their assault that they scarcely attempted to guard the roads leading to Rome from the south, but remained idle in
their entrenchments.
By way of revenge for the losses he had sustained, Witigis despatched orders that the senators detained as hostages at
Ravenna should be put to death. According to the laws of war these men had
forfeited their lives ; but the execution of the penalty was as foolish as it
was cruel, for the only effect it could have was to embitter the hatred which
the Romans felt for their former barbarian masters, and to inspire them with
the resolve to fight to the bitter end.
When the sixteen hundred new soldiers had entered Rome, Belisarius
ventured to send out skirmishing parties of mounted archers to make attacks
upon the Goths. Their tactics were to avoid all close fighting, but simply to
discharge their arrows at the enemy, and when their quivers were empty to
gallop back to the gates. This mode of combat proved perfectly successful. The
little bands did fearful execution with their bows, and the pursuit of the
enemy was easily stopped by volleys of stones from the engines on the walls.
After this manoeuver had been repeated several times,
Witigis thought he had discovered a valuable secret of Roman warfare. It was
plain that small bodies of light horse were more easily managed than masses of
heavy troops, and afforded the most effective means of inflicting damage upon
an enemy. Accordingly, he sent a troop of five hundred cavalry, with orders to
take up their position near the Roman fortifications. What happened was that a
thousand picked men issued from one of the gates some distance away, and, under cover of
the inequalities of the ground, came suddenly on the five hundred Goths, took them in the rear,
and left only a few of them alive to return to their camp. King Witigis raved
and stormed about their cowardice, and said he would soon find others who would
succeed where they had failed. Three days afterwards a second five hundred,
chosen for their known bravery out of all the seven camps, were sent to avenge
the defeat of their comrades, and, before setting out, were harangued by the
king, who bade them act worthily of the fame they had won in former battles.
Bravely they may have fought, but they were met by a Roman force of three times
their number, and perished almost to a man.
TACTICS OF BELISARIUS.
Belisarius wished to continue this method of skirmishing, by which he
was able to do the enemy a great deal of mischief with very little loss on his
own side. His troops had been thoroughly trained in the art of using the bow on
horseback; to the Goths that mode of warfare was quite unfamiliar, so that
when it was employed against them they did not know how to meet it. But
unfortunately for the Romans, their easily won victories had inspired them with
an unwise contempt for the enemy, and they implored Belisarius to lead them in
one grand assault on the Gothic camp. He was very unwilling to do this, but the
army showed great discontent at his refusal, and the feeling was encouraged by
the citizens, who actually assailed the general with reproaches for his want of
courage, because he dared not risk a pitched battle with an enemy that
outnumbered his own troops more than tenfold. At last Belisarius thought
it might be better to yield to the demand than to provoke a mutiny.
Perhaps, after all, he thought, just at this moment, when the Romans were full
of ardor, and the enemy was disheartened by
continued ill-fortune, it might be possible to win a battle even against such
overwhelming odds.
It was with grave anxiety that Belisarius led forth his little army
against the foe. King Witigis had been informed by deserters of the intended
attack, and he marshalled all his troops in battle
array, leaving none in the camps but the sick and wounded. His speech to his
soldiers, as reported by the Roman historian, was not without dignity. "You know," he said, "that I have always treated you more as friends
and fellow-soldiers than as subjects. Some of you may think that I, in so
doing, have merely flattered you because I feared the loss of my crown; and
you may think that it is from the same motive that I now call on you to put
forth all your valor. Such suspicions are natural,
and I cannot blame them. But, in truth I would thankfully lay aside this
purple robe today, if I knew that another Goth would wear it in my stead.
Whatever ill might happen to myself, it would not be without consolation, if my
people did not share in it. But I remember the fate of the Vandals. I seem to
see the Goths and their children sold for slaves, their wives abandoned to the
insults of the vilest of men, and their queen, the child of Theoderic's
daughter, led away whithersoever it might please our enemies. Will you not
chose a glorious death rather than safety on such terms? If such be your
spirit, you will easily vanquish these
few wretched Greeks, to whom you are as far superior in valor as in numbers, and will inflict on them the
chastisement they deserve for all the wrongs and insults they have made you
suffer."
A FRUITLESS SORTIE.
The result of the battle justified the misgivings of Belisarius.
After much hard fighting, the Romans were put to flight, the enemy pursuing
them hotly almost to the walls. A few of them succeeded in passing through the
gates, and hastily closed them, leaving their comrades gathered in a dense mass
between the ditch and the wall. Their spears were broken, and they were so
crowded together that they could not use their bows. If the Goths had ventured
to cross the ditch they might have massacred their enemies without difficulty;
but the soldiers and citizens began to assemble upon the wall, and the
besiegers were afraid to pursue their advantage. They retired to their
encampment with shouts of exultation over their victory.
The Roman soldiers had received a severe lesson, and never again
ventured to distrust the sagacity of their general. Belisarius resumed his plan of skirmishing with mounted
archers, and, as before, was nearly always victorious. So passed away the next
three months of the siege. The historian Procopius, who was with Belisarius in Rome, has preserved for us many incidents of
the conflicts that took place during this period. One of these stories is
perhaps worth repeating here. On a certain evening it happened that the Roman
soldiers had been worsted in a skirmish, and one of them in his flight fell
through a hole into an underground vault, from which he could find
no means of escape. He did not dare to cry out, lest he should be heard
by the Goths, and so he remained there all the night. The next day a Gothic
soldier suffered the same mishap; and the Goth and the Roman, finding
themselves prisoners together, became good friends, and agreed that if either
of them succeeded in getting out of the trap he would help the other to escape
also. They both shouted with all their might, and at last they were heard by a
party of Goths, who stooped down to the hole, and called out "Who is there?" "A comrade," the Gothic soldier replied, in his own language; "I fell into this hole this morning, and cannot get out." A rope
was lowered into the vault, and there ascended, not the Goth, but the Roman!
The Gothic soldiers were stupefied with amazement. "There were two of
us," the Roman explained; "your comrade is still below. We knew
very well that if he had come out first you would not have troubled yourselves
about me". So the rope was let down again, and this time it brought up the
Goth, who said that he had given his word that his fellow-prisoner should be
set at liberty. The promise was respected, and the Roman soldier was allowed to
return to the city, none the worse for his adventure.
About midsummer a certain Euthalius landed at Terracina, sixty-two miles from Rome along the Appian Way,
bringing with him the pay which was due to the soldiers. The treasure was
conveyed safely into Rome, but at that moment food would have been more welcome
than gold; for the besieged people were now beginning to feel the pangs of
hunger.
THE SYBIL'S PROPHECY.
Probably Witigis got to hear that a large sum of money had been brought
into Rome, and this may have been what made him think of blockading the
southern approaches to the city. It is strange that he should not have done
this long before, but he seems to have clung to the hope that the place might
be taken by storm. Now, however, he took possession of a point about four
miles from Rome, where two lines of aqueducts cross one another twice within a
few hundred yards, and he converted the arches of the aqueducts into a
fortress, commanding the Appian and the Latin Ways.
Here he placed a guard of seven thousand men.
There was now no hope that any further supplies could be imported into
the city. The soldiers had still a stock of corn, but all their other
provisions were exhausted. The citizens were obliged to feed on the grass and
weeds that grew inside the walls. Famine and fever were every day lessening the
numbers of the besieged.
Until July was ended, the courage of the defenders was sustained by
superstition. For some months past people had quoted a couplet which professed
to be a prophecy of the ancient Sibyl, and which said that "when Quintilis (the old name of July) had come, a new emperor
would ascend the throne, and Rome should never again fear the Gothic
sword." Christians though the Romans were, they still believed in the
Sibyl, and eagerly accepted every foolish verse that was uttered in her name.
But Quintilis came and went, and still Justinian
reigned and still the Goths surrounded Rome.
The last hope of the citizens was gone, and in desperation they went to
Belisarius, and begged him to give them arms. "Let us fight for
ourselves", they said, "and either conquer or end our miseries by a
speedy death". Belisarius ridiculed their demand, and told them that
having never learned to fight they would be worse than useless in the field.
"But", he added, "I expect in a few days the arrival of the
greatest army that the empire has ever mustered. These new troops have already
landed in the south of Italy, and will bring with them ample supplies of
provisions. I promise you that they will bury the enemy's camp with the
multitude of their darts."
This was only an empty boast. There was indeed a rumor that an imperial army was on the way, but Belisarius knew nothing for certain.
However, he dispatched his secretary Procopius to
Naples to see what truth there was in the story, and if it should not be true,
to collect what soldiers he could, and to send victuals by sea to relieve the
needs of the Romans.
Procopius reached Naples in safety; the expected troops had not yet
been heard of, but he was able to get together a band of five hundred men, and
to fit out a large number of ships and load them with provisions. Before his
preparations were completed, the promised army arrived from Constantinople—not
the innumerable host of which Belisarius had boasted, but only about five
thousand men. Late in the autumn this body of soldiers arrived at Ostia, at the
mouth of the Tiber, half of them having travelled by the Appian
Way, and the rest having come by sea in charge of the victualling fleet collected by Procopius.
GOTHIC PROPOSALS.
Meanwhile King Witigis had managed matters so badly that his own army
was suffering from want of food. Famine and fever too were rapidly thinning the
ranks of the besiegers, and they grew so spiritless that the Romans were able
to assume the offensive, and even to intercept the supplies of corn and of
cattle on their way to the Gothic camp.
So when the Goths heard that "an immense army —for this was
what rumor called it—was coming to the relief of
Rome, they abandoned all hope of victory, and were anxious to treat for peace.
Our old friend, Cassiodorus, accompanied by two Gothic chiefs, was sent into
the city to try to induce Belisarius to come to terms.
The envoys were admitted into the general's presence, and Cassiodorus
began by saying that as the war hitherto had been productive of nothing but
misery to either party, it would be to the interest of both if by mutual
concession they could arrive at some understanding so as to put an end to the
struggle. He proposed that the matter should be discussed, not in set speeches,
but in an informal conversation, so that each point should be fully dealt with
at the time when it was raised. "Very well", said Belisarius, "there is no objection to that, if only what you have to say is to the purpose."
But Cassiodorus could not resist the temptation to make a long speech, in which
he argued that the emperor had no justification for the attack he had made upon
the Goths. Theoderic had not taken Italy by force from the empire : it had
been made over to him by Zeno, on condition of his putting down the tyrant
Odovacar. He had fulfilled the condition, and he and his successors had ruled
Italy according to Roman law, and with every regard to the welfare of the
native inhabitants. It was therefore the duty of the Romans to desist from
their unjust encroachments. Let them retire from Italy with the booty they had
taken, and leave the Goths to govern their rightful dominions in peace.
All this reasoning was very sound, but it was not likely to make any
impression on Belisarius. He replied that Theoderic had been sent to conquer
Italy for the empire to which it belonged, and instead of fulfilling his
commission he had usurped the throne himself. I do not see," he
added, "much difference between robbery and embezzlement. The country
belongs to the emperor, and it is useless to ask me
to give it to any one else. If you have any other
request to make say on."
"You know very well," answered Cassiodorus, "that we
have spoken nothing but the truth. But as a proof of our wish to make every honorable concession, we agree that you shall retain
possession of Sicily"—and then, with his accustomed eloquence, he
proceeded to favor Belisarius with statistics about the size of the island,
and the revenues which it yielded every year, and to enlarge on its importance
from a military point of view.
"We are greatly obliged to you," said Belisarius. "In
return for so great generosity, we will grant you the possession of the
whole of Britain. That is a larger island than Sicily, and it used to belong to us, just as Sicily
once belonged to you."
The Goths then suggested that they might give up Naples and the whole
south of Italy, and agree to pay a yearly tribute to the emperor. But
Belisarius had only one reply : that he had no authority to surrender any of
the territories of the empire.
"Well then," said Cassiodorus, "will you agree to a
truce for a fixed time, so that we may send ambassadors to Constantinople to
negotiate a treaty with the emperor himself?"
Belisarius accepted this proposal, and the envoys went back to their
camp.
Several days were spent in settling the conditions of the truce, and in
debating what hostages should be given on each side. In the meantime
Belisarius had brought the new soldiers, and the cargoes of the provision
ships, safely up from Ostia into Rome. The Goths dared not offer any
opposition, thinking that if they did so, Belisarius would break off the
negotiations.
At length, however, about Christmas, the articles were signed for a
truce of three months; the hostages were exchanged, and the Gothic ambassadors
set out for Constantinople, accompanied by a Roman escort. Belisarius then sent
two thousand soldiers, under the command of a certain John, of whom we shall
often hear again, to Alba Fucentia, seventy miles
east of Rome. John was instructed to remain quiet so long as the truce was
unbroken; but as soon as the Goths committed any act of hostility, he was to
ravage the Gothic territories, to carry off the women and children
as slaves, and to bring back all the plunder of every kind that he
could.
The required pretext was not long wanting. It seems almost incredible
that Witigis should have been foolish enough to violate the truce which he had
sought with so much eagerness, but the historian tells of three different
attempts which he made to surprise the city. One dark night a sentinel, looking
out from the watch-tower at the Pincian gate, reported that he had seen a
sudden flash of light close to the ground a short distance from the wall. His
comrades thought he had seen the flaming eyes of a wolf. But when, on the
following day, Belisarius heard the story, he guessed at once that the Goths,
imitating his own stratagem at Naples, were trying to get into the city through
an aqueduct, and that what the man had seen was the light of their torches
streaming for a moment through a crack in the tunnel. The aqueduct was
examined, and there were found in it the droppings of torches and some Gothic
lamps. The party of explorers had been stopped by the wall with which
Belisarius had blocked up the passage, and they had carried away one of the
stones to show to Witigis in proof of the truth of their story. Belisarius placed
a guard over the aqueduct, and the Goths made no attempt to enter the city by
that means.
On another occasion the Goths had prepared scaling-ladders and torches
to make an attack during the hour of the soldier's midday meal, but the plan
was discovered, and the assaulting party was dispersed with some loss. The
third scheme of Witigis was to bribe two Romans who lived near the part of the
wall bordering on the Tiber, to treat the sentinels with drugged wine. When
the sentinels had fallen asleep, the Goths were to make their entrance by means
of boats and ladders. One of the Romans who had entered into the plot betrayed
it to Belisarius; and pointed out his accomplice, who confessed his guilt and
was sent to the Gothic camp tied upon an ass and with his nose and ears cut off
THE TRUCE BROKEN.
After these events, Belisarius of course considered himself to be no
longer bound by the truce, and he sent letters to John ordering him to commence
hostilities at once. John was nothing loth to obey;
he was the bravest of the brave, but as cruel as he was fearless John the
Sanguinary, he was called in his own day, and the sight of burning farms and
strings of weeping captive women and children only filled his heart with brutal
joy. With his two thousand horsemen he hurried northward, plundering and
destroying all that belonged to Gothic owners, but respecting scrupulously the
possessions of the native Italians. An army of Goths, under under Wilitheus, the uncle of King Witigis, came to meet
him, but the battle resulted in the death of Wilitheus and the slaughter of most of his men. After this victory, John marched
forward unopposed to Rimini, on the Adriatic, whither he was invited by the
Roman inhabitants. The Gothic garrison, as soon as they heard of his approach,
ran away to Ravenna, and John occupied Rimini without a struggle.
While John was at Rimini he received letters from Queen Mataswintha, offering to betray the Goths into his hands
and to become his wife. No doubt the proposal included the murder
of Witigis, whom she hated with all her heart for having forced her to marry
him.
In pressing forward to the Adriatic, John was disobeying Belisarius's
orders, which were to assault every fortress that he came to, and if he were
unable to capture it then to proceed no further, lest his retreat should be cut
off. He thought, however, that when the Goths heard that he had captured
Rimini, which was only a day's march from Ravenna, they would at once abandon
the siege of Rome. He had calculated rightly. The three months of truce was
ended; nothing had been heard from Constantinople; the camp was destitute of
provisions, and the city was in a better condition of defence than ever. And
when to all these discouraging circumstances there was added the news that
Ravenna was threatened by the enemy, Witigis delayed no longer. Early one
morning (near the end of March, 538), the sentinels on the walls of Rome
reported that the seven Gothic camps had been set on fire, and that the whole
army of the besiegers was moving northward along the Flaminian Way.
Belisarius was somewhat taken by surprise at this sudden departure, and
felt at first doubtful whether it would not be best to allow the enemy to
retreat unmolested. But the fact that the Gothic army would have to cross the
Milvian Bridge, two miles from Rome, rendered it possible
for an attack on their rear to be successfully made with a small force.
Belisarius armed all his soldiers, and, waiting till most of the Goths had
crossed the river, he led a furious charge on those that were still on the
nearest bank. After some hard fighting, and heavy losses on both sides, the Goths fled in
confusion, and many thousands of them perished, some by the swords of their
enemies, while others, in their frantic haste to escape, were crushed to death
by their comrades, or fell into the river loaded with their armor and were drowned.
So ended the first siege of Rome by the Ostrogoths. Perhaps never in the
history of warfare were such splendid advantages of numbers so shamefully
thrown away through the incompetence of a general. But in spite of all, the
nation continued faithful to the king of its own choice.
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