Thursday [November 3, 1927] |
Dear Melmoth:–

. . . So you are busy delving into the shady past of that
insufferable young Asiatic Varius Avitus Bassianus? Ugh! There are few persons I loathe more than
that cursed little Syrian rat!

I have myself been carried back to Roman times by my recent perusal of James
Rhoades’
Æneid, a translation never before read by me, and more faithful to P.
Maro than any other versified version I have ever seen—including that of my late uncle Dr.
Clark, which did not attain publication. This Virgilian diversion, together with the spectral
thoughts incident to All Hallows’ Eve with its Witch-Sabbaths on the hills, produced in me
last Monday night a Roman dream of such supernal clearness and vividness, and such titanic
adumbrations of hidden horror, that I verily believe I shall some day employ it in fiction. Roman
dreams were no uncommon features of my youth—I used to follow the Divine Julius all over
Gallia as a Tribunus Militum o’nights—but I had so long ceased to experience them, that
the present one impressed me with extraordinary force.

It was a flaming sunset or late afternoon in the tiny provincial town of Pompelo,
at the foot of the Pyrenees in Hispania Citerior. The year must have been in the late republic, for
the province was still ruled by a senatorial proconsul instead of a prætorian legate of
Augustus, and the day was the first before the Kalends of November. The hills rose scarlet and gold
to the north of the little town, and the westering sun shone ruddily and mystically on the crude
new stone and plaster buildings of the dusty forum and the wooden walls of the circus some distance
to the east. Groups of citizens—broad-browed Roman colonists and coarse-haired Romanised
natives, together with obvious hybrids of the two strains, alike clad in cheap woollen
togas—and sprinklings of helmeted legionaries and coarse-mantled, black-bearded tribesmen of
the circumambient Vascones—all thronged the few paved streets and forum; moved by some vague
and ill-defined uneasiness.

I myself had just alighted from a litter, which the Illyrian bearers seemed to
have brought in some haste from Calagurris, across the Iberus to the southward. It appeared that I
was a provincial quæstor named L. Cælius Rufus, and that I had been summoned by the
proconsul, P. Scribonius Libo, who had come from Tarraco some days before. The soldiers were the
fifth cohort of the XIIth legion, under the military tribune Sex. Asellius; and the legatus of the
whole region, Cn. Balbutius, had also come from Calagurris, where the permanent station was.

The cause of the conference was a horror that brooded on the hills. All the
townsfolk were frightened, and had begged the presence of a cohort from Calagurris. It was the
Terrible Season of the autumn, and the wild people in the mountains were preparing for the
frightful ceremonies which only rumour told of in the towns. They were the very old folk who dwelt
higher up in the hills and spoke a choppy language which the Vascones could not understand. One
seldom saw them; but a few times a year they sent down little yellow, squint-eyed messengers (who
looked like Scythians) to trade with the merchants by means of gestures, and every spring and
autumn they held the infamous rites on the peaks, their howlings and altar-fires throwing terror
into the villages. Always the same—the night before the Kalends of Maius and the night before
the Kalends of November. Townsfolk would disappear just before these nights, and would never be
heard of again. And there were whispers that the native shepherds and farmers were not ill-disposed
toward the very old folk—that more than one thatched hut was vacant before midnight on the two
hideous Sabbaths.

This year the horror was very great, for the people knew that the wrath of the
very old folk was upon Pompelo. Three months previously five of the little squint-eyed traders had
come down from the hills, and in a market brawl three of them had been killed. The remaining two
had gone back wordlessly to their mountains—and this autumn not a single villager had
disappeared. There was menace in this immunity. It was not like the very old folk to spare their
victims at the Sabbath. It was too good to be normal, and the villagers were afraid.

For many nights there had been a hollow drumming on the hills, and at last the
ædile Tib. Annæus Stilpo (half native in blood) had sent to Balbutius at Calagurris for
a cohort to stamp out the Sabbath on the terrible night. Balbutius had carelessly refused, on the
ground that the villagers' fears were empty, and that the loathsome rites of hill folk were of no
concern to the Roman People unless our own citizens were menaced. I, however, who seemed to be a
close friend of Balbutius, had disagreed with him; averring that I had studied deeply in the black
forbidden lore, and that I believed the very old folk capable of visiting almost any nameless doom
upon the town, which after all was a Roman settlement and contained a great number of our citizens.
The complaining ædile's own mother Helvia was a pure Roman, the daughter of M. Helvius Cinna,
who had come over with Scipio's army. Accordingly I had sent a slave—a nimble little Greek
called Antipater—to the proconsul with letters, and Scribonius had heeded my plea and ordered
Balbutius to send his fifth cohort, under Asellius, to Pompelo; entering the hills at dusk on the
eve of November's Kalends and stamping out whatever nameless orgies he might find—bringing
such prisoners as he might take to Tarraco for the next proprætor's court. Balbutius,
however, had protested, so that more correspondence had ensued. I had written so much to the
proconsul that he had become gravely interested, and had resolved to make a personal inquiry into
the horror.

He had at length proceeded to Pompelo with his lictors and attendants; there
hearing enough rumours to be greatly impressed and disturbed, and standing firmly by his order for
the Sabbath's extirpation. Desirous of conferring with one who had studied the subject, he ordered
me to accompany Asellius' cohort—and Balbutius had also come along to press his adverse
advice, for he honestly believed that drastic military action would stir up a dangerous sentiment
of unrest amongst the Vascones both tribal and settled.

So here we all were in the mystic sunset of the autumn hills—old Scribonius
Libo in his toga prætexta, the golden light glancing on his shiny bald head and wrinkled hawk
face, Balbutius with his gleaming helmet and breastplate, blue-shaven lips compressed in
conscientiously dogged opposition, young Asellius with his polished greaves and superior sneer, and
the curious throng of townsfolk, legionaries, tribesmen, peasants, lictors, slaves, and attendants.
I myself seemed to wear a common toga, and to have no especially distinguishing characteristic. And
everywhere horror brooded. The town and country folk scarcely dared speak aloud, and the men of
Libo's entourage, who had been there nearly a week, seemed to have caught something of the nameless
dread. Old Scribonius himself looked very grave, and the sharp voices of us later comers seemed to
hold something of curious inappropriateness, as in a place of death or the temple of some mystic
god.

We entered the prætorium and held grave converse. Balbutius pressed his
objections, and was sustained by Asellius, who appeared to hold all the natives in extreme contempt
while at the same time deeming it inadvisable to excite them. Both soldiers maintained that we
could better afford to antagonise the minority of colonists and civilised natives by inaction, than
to antagonise a probable majority of tribesmen and cottagers by stamping out the dread rites.

I, on the other hand, renewed my demand for action, and offered to accompany the
cohort on any expedition it might undertake. I pointed out that the barbarous Vascones were at best
turbulent and uncertain, so that skirmishes with them were inevitable sooner or later whichever
course we might take; that they had not in the past proved dangerous adversaries to our legions,
and that it would ill become the representatives of the Roman People to suffer barbarians to
interfere with a course which the justice and prestige of the Republic demanded. That, on the other
hand, the successful administration of a province depended primarily upon the safety and good-will
of the civilised element in whose hands the local machinery of commerce and prosperity reposed, and
in whose veins a large mixture of our own Italian blood coursed. These, though in numbers they
might form a minority, were the stable element whose constancy might be relied on, and whose
cooperation would most firmly bind the province to the Imperium of the Senate and the Roman People.
It was at once a duty and an advantage to afford them the protection due to Roman citizens; even
(and here I shot a sarcastic look at Balbutius and Asellius) at the expense of a little trouble and
activity, and of a slight interruption of the draught-playing and cock-fighting at the camp in
Calagurris. That the danger to the town and inhabitants of Pompelo was a real one, I could not from
my studies doubt. I had read many scrolls out of Syria and Ægyptus, and the cryptic towns of
Etruria, and had talked at length with the bloodthirsty priest of Diana Aricina in his temple in
the woods bordering Lacus Nemorensis. There were shocking dooms that might be called out of the
hills on the Sabbaths; dooms which ought not to exist within the territories of the Roman People;
and to permit orgies of the kind known to prevail at Sabbaths would be but little in consonance
with the customs of those whose forefathers, A. Postumius being consul, had executed so many Roman
citizens for the practice of the Bacchanalia—a matter kept ever in memory by the Senatus
Consultum de Bacchanalibus, graven upon bronze and set open to every eye. Checked in time, before
the progress of the rites might evoke anything with which the iron of a Roman pilum might not be
able to deal, the Sabbath would not be too much for the powers of a single cohort. Only
participants need be apprehended, and the sparing of a great number of mere spectators would
considerably lessen the resentment which any of the sympathising country folk might feel. In short,
both principle and policy demanded stern action; and I could not doubt but that Publius Scribonius,
bearing in mind the dignity and obligations of the Roman People, would adhere to his plan of
despatching the cohort, me accompanying, despite such objections as Balbutius and
Asellius—speaking indeed more like provincials than Romans—might see fit to offer and
multiply.

The slanting sun was now very low, and the whole hushed town seemed draped in an
unreal and malign glamour. Then P. Scribonius the proconsul signified his approval of my words, and
stationed me with the cohort in the provisional capacity of a centurio primipilus; Balbutius and
Asellius assenting, the former with better grace than the latter. As twilight fell on the wild
autumnal slopes, a measured, hideous beating of strange drums floated down from afar in terrible
rhythm. Some few of the legionarii shewed timidity, but sharp commands brought them into line, and
the whole cohort was soon drawn up on the open plain east of the circus. Libo himself, as well as
Balbutius, insisted on accompanying the cohort; but great difficulty was suffered in getting a
native guide to point out the paths up the mountain. Finally a young man named Vercellius, the son
of pure Roman parents, agreed to take us at least past the foothills. We began to march in the new
dusk, with the thin silver sickle of a young moon trembling over the woods on our left. That which
disquieted us most was
the fact that the Sabbath was to be held at all. Reports of the
coming cohort must have reached the hills, and even the lack of a final decision could not make the
rumour less alarming—yet there were the sinister drums as of yore, as if the celebrants had
some peculiar reason to be indifferent whether or not the forces of the Roman People marched
against them. The sound grew louder as we entered a rising gap in the hills, steep wooded banks
enclosing us narrowly on either side, and displaying curiously fantastic tree-trunks in the light
of our bobbing torches. All were afoot save Libo, Balbutius, Asellius, two or three of the
centuriones, and myself, and at length the way became so steep and narrow that those who had horses
were forced to leave them; a squad of ten men being left to guard them, though robber bands were
not likely to be abroad on such a night of terror. Once in a while it seemed as though we detected
a skulking form in the woods nearby, and after a half-hour's climb the steepness and narrowness of
the way made the advance of so great a body of men—over 300, all told—exceedingly
cumbrous and difficult. Then with utter and horrifying suddenness we heard a frightful sound from
below. It was from the tethered horses—they had
screamed, not neighed, but
screamed... and there was no light down there, nor the sound of any human thing, to shew why
they had done so. At the same moment bonfires blazed out on all the peaks ahead, so that terror
seemed to lurk equally well before and behind us. Looking for the youth Vercellius, our guide, we
found only a crumpled heap weltering in a pool of blood. In his hand was a short sword snatched
from the belt of D. Vibulanus, a subcenturio, and on his face was such a look of terror that the
stoutest veterans turned pale at the sight. He had killed himself when the horses screamed... he,
who had been born and lived all his life in that region, and knew what men whispered about the
hills. All the torches now began to dim, and the cries of frightened legionaries mingled with the
unceasing screams of the tethered horses. The air grew perceptibly colder, more suddenly so than is
usual at November's brink, and seemed stirred by terrible undulations which I could not help
connecting with the beating of huge wings. The whole cohort now remained at a standstill, and as
the torches faded I watched what I thought were fantastic shadows outlined in the sky by the
spectral luminosity of the Via Lactea as it flowed through Perseus, Cassiopeia, Cepheus, and
Cygnus. Then suddenly all the stars were blotted from the sky—even bright Deneb and Vega
ahead, and the lone Altair and Fomalhaut behind us. And as the torches died out altogether, there
remained above the stricken and shrieking cohort only the noxious and horrible altar-flames on the
towering peaks; hellish and red, and now silhouetting the mad, leaping, and colossal forms of such
nameless beasts as had never a Phrygian priest or Campanian grandam whispered of in the wildest of
furtive tales. And above the nighted screaming of men and horses that dæmonic drumming rose
to louder pitch, whilst an ice-cold wind of shocking sentience and deliberateness swept down from
those forbidden heights and coiled about each man separately, till all the cohort was struggling
and screaming in the dark, as if acting out the fate of Laocoön and his sons. Only old
Scribonius Libo seemed resigned. He uttered words amidst the screaming, and they echo still in my
ears.
“Malitia vetus—malitia vetus est . . . venit . . .
tandem venit . . .”

And then I waked. It was the most vivid dream in years, drawing upon wells of the
subconscious long untouched and forgotten. Of the fate of that cohort no record exists, but the
town at least was saved—for encyclopædias tell of the survival of Pompelo to this day,
under the modern Spanish name of Pompelona. . . .
Yrs for Gothick
Supremacy–
C · IVLIVS · VERVS ·
MAXIMINVS. |