A Martyr’s Victory.
[ When Alaric the Goth was defeated at Pollentia and Verona 
(a. d. 403) by Stilicho, the general of Honorius, and so driven for a
time from Italy, the Romans celebrated that event with great re-
joicing and magnificence. A triumphal procession and a conflict
of wild beasts at once dazzled and gratified the multitude. The
shows of gladiators were then for ever brought to an end by Tele-
machus, an Asiatic monk, whom the people stoned to death in the
amphitheatre for attempting to separate the combatants. Hono-
rius was thus reminded of his duty as a Christian emperor, and
soon after put forth an edict forbidding all such exhibitions for the
future.]
                     
                     (a. d. 403) by Stilicho, the general of Honorius, and so driven for a
time from Italy, the Romans celebrated that event with great re-
joicing and magnificence. A triumphal procession and a conflict
of wild beasts at once dazzled and gratified the multitude. The
shows of gladiators were then for ever brought to an end by Tele-
machus, an Asiatic monk, whom the people stoned to death in the
amphitheatre for attempting to separate the combatants. Hono-
rius was thus reminded of his duty as a Christian emperor, and
soon after put forth an edict forbidding all such exhibitions for the
future.]

The streets are thronged in mighty Rome,1
                        
                        The gleaming ensigns spread,2
                        
                        While warriors march in triumph home,3
                        
                        With firm and measured tread :4
                        
                        For, bowed at last, and forced to yield5
                        
                        On rough Pollentia’s crimson field,6
                        
                        Stern Alaric has fled,7
                        
                        And left his ruthless Gothic powers8
                        
                        All crushed beneath Verona’s towers.9
                        Those who once quailed at that dire name10
                        
                        May now deride their foe,11
                        
                        And boast as if they shared the fame12
                        
                        Of glorious Stilicho—13
                        
                        Of him who felt no craven fears14
                        
                        Rise at the flash of northern spears,15
                        
                        And struck no feeble blow,16
                        
                        But matched, with trophies green and high,17
                        
                        The monuments of days gone by.18
                        But when the clear Italian sun19
                        
                        Pours down its noontide fire,20
                        
                        The trumpet speaks the games begun21
                        
                        Which idle crowds admire ;22
                        
                        And soon, from barred and gloomy caves23
                        
                        Driven howling out by troops of slaves,24
                        
                        In grim and sullen ire,25
                        
                        Beasts, the wild brood of many a land,26
                        
                        Pace with loud rage the level sand.27
                        Gætulia’s lion, freshly brought28
                        
                        From scorched and desert plains,29
                        
                        And ravening tigers newly sought30
                        
                        On Parthia’s waste domains ;31
                        
                        Bears from the frozen Oder’s mouth,32
                        
                        And panthers from the burning south,33
                        
                        Bred in old Nubian fanes,34
                        
                        Make there a stern and ghastly fray35
                        
                        For tribes more savage far than they.36
                        But hark! the trumpet’s warning peal37
                        
                        Is sounding as before,38
                        
                        And bondsmen clear, with staff and steel,39
                        
                        The red arena’s floor ;40
                        
                        The fainting brutes are swept away—41
                        
                        This saved to bleed another day,42
                        
                        That weltering in its gore ;43
                        
                        And men, of martial frame and race,44
                        
                        Take with slow step the vacant place.45
                        Two, chosen from the warlike throng,46
                        
                        Begin a deadly strife :47
                        
                        One a gray swordsman, scarred and strong,48
                        
                        One in the bloom of life ;49
                        
                        This nursed where snows on Hæmus shine,50
                        
                        That torn from hills beside the Rhine51
                        
                        From children, home, and wife ;52
                        
                        And high-born matrons hold their breath,53
                        
                        All bent to see the work of death.54
                        Their toil was fierce, but short ;  and now,55
                        
                        Flung bleeding in the dust,56
                        
                        The Thracian waits, with pale cold brow,57
                        
                        The last and mortal thrust ;58
                        
                        When rushing forth, till then unseen,59
                        
                        A swarthy pilgrim leaps between,60
                        
                        Strong in a Christian’s trust,61
                        
                        And drenched with blood, yet undismayed,62
                        
                        Stays with fixed grasp the uplifted blade.63
                        A light smooth cross of cedar wood64
                        
                        The gentle stranger bore,65
                        
                        Long worn in holy solitude66
                        
                        On Syria’s palmy shore :67
                        
                        ‘ Romans,’ he said,  ‘ for Him whose birth68
                        
                        Gave hopes divine of peace on earth,69
                        
                        Rise, and for evermore,70
                        
                        Servants of God in act and name,71
                        
                        Cast off these works of wrong and shame.’72
                        He ceased ;  a scowl like noon’s eclipse73
                        
                        Spreads fast from seat to seat,74
                        
                        And fourscore thousand hostile lips75
                        
                        Loud words of wrath repeat :76
                        
                        They rave and roar, as groves of pine77
                        
                        Waked on the Etrurian Apennine78
                        
                        When storms the tall crags beat,79
                        
                        Till, heaved and troubled furiously,80
                        
                        Breaks in one surge that living sea.81
                        The German leaves his task undone,82
                        
                        The Thracian creeps aside,83
                        
                        The swordsmen flee like herds that shun84
                        
                        Vexed Arno’s foaming tide ;85
                        
                        But, as a pharos meets the shock86
                        
                        Of waves on some unsheltered rock87
                        
                        Where seas are deep and wide,88
                        
                        Telemachus looked up and trod89
                        
                        That post of danger true to God.90
                        And when the stony tempest burst91
                        
                        On his defenceless head,92
                        
                        He stood unshrinking as at first,93
                        
                        As free from doubt or dread :94
                        
                        With aspect full of peace and love,95
                        
                        As if he came from worlds above,96
                        
                        And hands in prayer outspread,97
                        
                        He laid him down, nor breathed again,98
                        
                        Whelmed by that host of vengeful men.99
                        Yet deem thou not the martyr died100
                        
                        Warring for right in vain ;101
                        
                        His was the prize for which he sighed,102
                        
                        And his the eternal gain :103
                        
                        Fierce Alaric shall yet return,104
                        
                        And Rome’s fair dwellings blaze and burn,105
                        
                        Filled with red heaps of slain ;106
                        
                        But scenes, where man must bleed for mirth,107
                        
                        Shall blast no more the ransomed earth.108