Thereupon Vangio and Sido, two sister's
sons of his, and the sons of Vibilius, king of the Hermunduri,
determined to force him to Rome again—to try his luck there at
dice."
"I remember; that is of recent Claudian times."
"Yes! War broke out. Vannius summoned to his aid the Yazygi; his
dear nephews called in the Lygians, who, hearing of the riches of
Vannius, and enticed by the hope of booty, came in such numbers
that Cæsar himself, Claudius, began to fear for the safety of the
boundary. Claudius did not wish to interfere in a war among
barbarians, but he wrote to Atelius Hister, who commanded the
legions of the Danube, to turn a watchful eye on the course of the
war, and not permit them to disturb our peace. Hister required,
then, of the Lygians a promise not to cross the boundary; to this
they not only agreed, but gave hostages, among whom were the wife
and daughter of their leader. It is known to thee that barbarians
take their wives and children to war with them. My Lygia is the
daughter of that leader."
"Whence dost thou know all this?"
"Aulus Plautius told it himself. The Lygians did not cross the
boundary, indeed; but barbarians come and go like a tempest. So did
the Lygians vanish with their wild-ox horns on their heads. They
killed Vannius's Suevi and Yazygi; but their own king fell. They
disappeared with their booty then, and the hostages remained in
Hister's hands. The mother died soon after, and Hister, not knowing
what to do with the daughter, sent her to Pomponius, the governor
of all Germany. He, at the close of the war with the Catti,
returned to Rome, where Claudius, as is known to thee, permitted
him to have a triumph. The maiden on that occasion walked after the
car of the conqueror; but, at the end of the solemnity,—since
hostages cannot be considered captives, and since Pomponius did not
know what to do with her definitely—he gave her to his sister
Pomponia Græcina, the wife of Plautius. In that house where
all—beginning with the masters and ending with the poultry in the
hen-house—are virtuous, that maiden grew up as virtuous, alas! as
Græcina herself, and so beautiful that even Poppæa, if near her,
would seem like an autumn fig near an apple of the Hesperides."
"And what?"
"And I repeat to thee that from the moment when I saw how the
sun-rays at that fountain passed through her body, I fell in love
to distraction."
"She is as transparent as a lamprey eel, then, or a youthful
sardine?"
"Jest not, Petronius; but if the freedom with which I speak of
my desire misleads thee, know this,—that bright garments frequently
cover deep wounds. I must tell thee, too, that, while returning
from Asia, I slept one night in the temple of Mopsus to have a
prophetic dream. Well, Mopsus appeared in a dream to me, and
declared that, through love, a great change in my life would take
place."
"Pliny declares, as I hear, that he does not believe in the
gods, but he believes in dreams; and perhaps he is right. My jests
do not prevent me from thinking at times that in truth there is
only one deity, eternal, creative, all-powerful, Venus Genetrix.
She brings souls together; she unites bodies and things. Eros
called the world out of chaos. Whether he did well is another
question; but, since he did so, we should recognize his might,
though we are free not to bless it."
"Alas! Petronius, it is easier to find philosophy in the world
than wise counsel."
"Tell me, what is thy wish specially?"
"I wish to have Lygia. I wish that these arms of mine, which now
embrace only air, might embrace Lygia and press her to my bosom. I
wish to breathe with her breath. Were she a slave, I would give
Aulus for her one hundred maidens with feet whitened with lime as a
sign that they were exhibited on sale for the first time. I wish to
have her in my house till my head is as white as the top of Soracte
in winter."
"She is not a slave, but she belongs to the 'family' of
Plautius; and since she is a deserted maiden, she may be considered
an 'alumna.' Plautius might yield her to thee if he wished."
"Then it seems that thou knowest not Pomponia Græcina. Both have
become as much attached to her as if she were their own
daughter."
"Pomponia I know,—a real cypress. If she were not the wife of
Aulus, she might be engaged as a mourner. Since the death of Julius
she has not thrown aside dark robes; and in general she looks as
if, while still alive, she were walking on the asphodel meadow. She
is, moreover, a 'one-man woman'; hence, among our ladies of four
and five divorces, she is straightway a phoenix. But! hast thou
heard that in Upper Egypt the phoenix has just been hatched out, as
'tis said?—an event which happens not oftener than once in five
centuries."
"Petronius! Petronius! Let us talk of the phoenix some other
time."
"What shall I tell thee, my Marcus? I know Aulus Plautius, who,
though he blames my mode of life, has for me a certain weakness,
and even respects me, perhaps, more than others, for he knows that
I have never been an informer like Domitius Afer, Tigellinus, and a
whole rabble of Ahenobarbus's intimates [Nero's name was originally
L. Domitius Ahenobarbus]. Without pretending to be a stoic, I have
been offended more than once at acts of Nero, which Seneca and
Burrus looked at through their fingers.
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