THE FORLORN CAMPAIGN
THE FORLORN CAMPAIGN
[CRASSUS IN PARTHIA. B. C.53]
Go then, Valerius. Let the legions know,That I will answer this new embassyWithin the hour.... They will mutiny,If I refuse these terms.... What shall I do?What shall I do?The trap is plain enoughTo me; but they, they only see the rough,Long road and the red, ever-circling cloudOf horsemen, raining arrows on them there.Gods! And the mountains are so near, so near!Scarce three days march ... that we shall never make.I boasted once. The gods like not the proud.And I shall die in this red waste of sand,Though my heart tremble and my stiff limbs shake.A thousand slaves bowed down at my command;I lived in ivory palaces of delight;I ruled an empire ... here is all my might;An old and wearied man in a bare tent,Whence, presently, I shall go out to die.How they will rage at Rome! Each will outvieThe next in fury: none will dare lament.Caesar will listen with a little smile,A smile like two blue ice-cliffs as they part,Slow-rising from the deep caves of his heart.Pompey will bow his great gold head awhile,And say, “He died a Roman. It is well.”Perhaps be sad, a little. For the rest,That yelping pack of nobles, they will howlHow, “Crassus was a madman at the best,And in this last attempt, a blind old owl,A drink-crazed miser with a wooden sword.He blundered here and here! His whole campaignWas one great blunder!” So with one accord,They howl.To praise is hard, easy to damn.I failed in this. Some other will succeed.Yet they are right, in part. That day, far back,When by the borderline I checked my steed....Our spies had said the Parthian army layEncamped near by and ready for the fray.We found no army; nothing but a track,Thousands of footprints stamped in the red sand,Where a great host had passed. A sudden fearSeized on the legions and on every handThe men shrank back.... No foe stood anywhere,Nothing but scarlet sand and brassy sky,And men aghast at signs traced on the ground,A ring of white, scared faces, without sound.Then afterwards, there came that burning marchUnder a sky of flame, continually.Our very armor seemed to shrink and parchBeneath that sun; our tongues grew swelled and black;And ever circling, circling, front and back,The Parthians galloped in a cloud of dust.They would not turn and fight but slew us thus.Their bitter arrows came like hail on us.Our strongest dropped and died without a blow.Then, beyond Carrhæ, trusting in our woe,They turned at last and stood to wait our thrust.But two things I remember of that fight.How Publius went out—the burning lightSmote on his armor, turning it to gold,Save where, a sunset cloud, his red cloak rolled;And in his face was joy and keen delight,Youth and a boy’s high heart and great resolves....A golden knight he stood, a golden knight....He rides away, the crimson cloud dissolves....One other picture burns within my brain,Like white-hot sand; and will burn now untilI go into the trap tonight.... AgainThe dust cloud rose, and from a little hillI saw the sheen of spearheads at its rim,And near the rim a spot of black that grew,Grew, grew, till earth and sky alike were dim;For there was nought but it in earth and sky....Nought but a black, dead, face ... a face I knew....The lips were bloody ... down upon the pikeDripped long slow drops like tears.... I hear them now,Gathering, hanging.... Gods! they strike and strike!...Dripping forever on my naked heart....Great tears of blood.... Once, very long ago,I had a son.... How glad he seemed to startOn that attack!... No ... no ... I shall go mad!I must not think how glad he was!... how glad....We fell back towards the mountains. Cassius tookAnother way. He may be slain or safe,I know not; for myself, my legious chafeAnd mutiny, I die here. But as I lookSo close to death, I see that what I stroveTo do will yet be done and Rome shall ruleForever o’er the bloody road I clove.I break ... but she will find another tool.Ere the first sword was sharpened and the first trumpet blownRome looked upon the new-made lands and marked them for her own!Ere the first ship was timbered and the first rudder hungRome held the oceans in her hands, splendid and stern and young!The wild tribes bend before her, the kings are overthrown,The purple empires of the East before her feet fall down.From strange barbaric countries her captains bring her spoil,Treasures of gems and ivory, spices and wines and oil.Wheat grows for her in Egypt; for her the Greek scribes write,For her the diver dares the shark, the fowler scales the height,To feed her great arenas the bold beast-tamer quakesAmong the tawny lions or the hissing pits of snakes.Her legions march in Asia, they tramp through Farthest Gaul,In Greece their horns blow up the dawn, in Spain they stand a wall.And still upon her Seven Hills Rome rules the seas and tides,The earth and all that in it is, while that stern strength abides.Hail for the last time, Mother! Your sons stand here at bay.Still you have sons for conquest. We fall the Roman way!Our cheers still ringing, our short swords drawn,We die here singing, but Rome, Rome goes on!Ah! Yes, Valerius, I will answer them.Comrades! I know these terms are but a trap:Yet I would rather die by Parthian swordsThan Roman.After I am dead push on,Straight to the mountains; once the heights are won,You can defy at last these swarming hordes.Break camp at once to guard against mishap.Farewell! Valerius is your general now....Up there, you say, upon that hillock’s browThey wait?... Yes, I can see the glint of steel....
Go then, Valerius. Let the legions know,That I will answer this new embassyWithin the hour.... They will mutiny,If I refuse these terms.... What shall I do?What shall I do?The trap is plain enoughTo me; but they, they only see the rough,Long road and the red, ever-circling cloudOf horsemen, raining arrows on them there.Gods! And the mountains are so near, so near!Scarce three days march ... that we shall never make.I boasted once. The gods like not the proud.And I shall die in this red waste of sand,Though my heart tremble and my stiff limbs shake.A thousand slaves bowed down at my command;I lived in ivory palaces of delight;I ruled an empire ... here is all my might;An old and wearied man in a bare tent,Whence, presently, I shall go out to die.How they will rage at Rome! Each will outvieThe next in fury: none will dare lament.Caesar will listen with a little smile,A smile like two blue ice-cliffs as they part,Slow-rising from the deep caves of his heart.Pompey will bow his great gold head awhile,And say, “He died a Roman. It is well.”Perhaps be sad, a little. For the rest,That yelping pack of nobles, they will howlHow, “Crassus was a madman at the best,And in this last attempt, a blind old owl,A drink-crazed miser with a wooden sword.He blundered here and here! His whole campaignWas one great blunder!” So with one accord,They howl.To praise is hard, easy to damn.I failed in this. Some other will succeed.Yet they are right, in part. That day, far back,When by the borderline I checked my steed....Our spies had said the Parthian army layEncamped near by and ready for the fray.We found no army; nothing but a track,Thousands of footprints stamped in the red sand,Where a great host had passed. A sudden fearSeized on the legions and on every handThe men shrank back.... No foe stood anywhere,Nothing but scarlet sand and brassy sky,And men aghast at signs traced on the ground,A ring of white, scared faces, without sound.Then afterwards, there came that burning marchUnder a sky of flame, continually.Our very armor seemed to shrink and parchBeneath that sun; our tongues grew swelled and black;And ever circling, circling, front and back,The Parthians galloped in a cloud of dust.They would not turn and fight but slew us thus.Their bitter arrows came like hail on us.Our strongest dropped and died without a blow.Then, beyond Carrhæ, trusting in our woe,They turned at last and stood to wait our thrust.But two things I remember of that fight.How Publius went out—the burning lightSmote on his armor, turning it to gold,Save where, a sunset cloud, his red cloak rolled;And in his face was joy and keen delight,Youth and a boy’s high heart and great resolves....A golden knight he stood, a golden knight....He rides away, the crimson cloud dissolves....One other picture burns within my brain,Like white-hot sand; and will burn now untilI go into the trap tonight.... AgainThe dust cloud rose, and from a little hillI saw the sheen of spearheads at its rim,And near the rim a spot of black that grew,Grew, grew, till earth and sky alike were dim;For there was nought but it in earth and sky....Nought but a black, dead, face ... a face I knew....The lips were bloody ... down upon the pikeDripped long slow drops like tears.... I hear them now,Gathering, hanging.... Gods! they strike and strike!...Dripping forever on my naked heart....Great tears of blood.... Once, very long ago,I had a son.... How glad he seemed to startOn that attack!... No ... no ... I shall go mad!I must not think how glad he was!... how glad....We fell back towards the mountains. Cassius tookAnother way. He may be slain or safe,I know not; for myself, my legious chafeAnd mutiny, I die here. But as I lookSo close to death, I see that what I stroveTo do will yet be done and Rome shall ruleForever o’er the bloody road I clove.I break ... but she will find another tool.Ere the first sword was sharpened and the first trumpet blownRome looked upon the new-made lands and marked them for her own!Ere the first ship was timbered and the first rudder hungRome held the oceans in her hands, splendid and stern and young!The wild tribes bend before her, the kings are overthrown,The purple empires of the East before her feet fall down.From strange barbaric countries her captains bring her spoil,Treasures of gems and ivory, spices and wines and oil.Wheat grows for her in Egypt; for her the Greek scribes write,For her the diver dares the shark, the fowler scales the height,To feed her great arenas the bold beast-tamer quakesAmong the tawny lions or the hissing pits of snakes.Her legions march in Asia, they tramp through Farthest Gaul,In Greece their horns blow up the dawn, in Spain they stand a wall.And still upon her Seven Hills Rome rules the seas and tides,The earth and all that in it is, while that stern strength abides.Hail for the last time, Mother! Your sons stand here at bay.Still you have sons for conquest. We fall the Roman way!Our cheers still ringing, our short swords drawn,We die here singing, but Rome, Rome goes on!Ah! Yes, Valerius, I will answer them.Comrades! I know these terms are but a trap:Yet I would rather die by Parthian swordsThan Roman.After I am dead push on,Straight to the mountains; once the heights are won,You can defy at last these swarming hordes.Break camp at once to guard against mishap.Farewell! Valerius is your general now....Up there, you say, upon that hillock’s browThey wait?... Yes, I can see the glint of steel....
Go then, Valerius. Let the legions know,That I will answer this new embassyWithin the hour.... They will mutiny,If I refuse these terms.... What shall I do?What shall I do?The trap is plain enoughTo me; but they, they only see the rough,Long road and the red, ever-circling cloudOf horsemen, raining arrows on them there.Gods! And the mountains are so near, so near!Scarce three days march ... that we shall never make.
Go then, Valerius. Let the legions know,
That I will answer this new embassy
Within the hour.... They will mutiny,
If I refuse these terms.... What shall I do?
What shall I do?The trap is plain enough
To me; but they, they only see the rough,
Long road and the red, ever-circling cloud
Of horsemen, raining arrows on them there.
Gods! And the mountains are so near, so near!
Scarce three days march ... that we shall never make.
I boasted once. The gods like not the proud.And I shall die in this red waste of sand,Though my heart tremble and my stiff limbs shake.A thousand slaves bowed down at my command;I lived in ivory palaces of delight;I ruled an empire ... here is all my might;An old and wearied man in a bare tent,Whence, presently, I shall go out to die.
I boasted once. The gods like not the proud.
And I shall die in this red waste of sand,
Though my heart tremble and my stiff limbs shake.
A thousand slaves bowed down at my command;
I lived in ivory palaces of delight;
I ruled an empire ... here is all my might;
An old and wearied man in a bare tent,
Whence, presently, I shall go out to die.
How they will rage at Rome! Each will outvieThe next in fury: none will dare lament.Caesar will listen with a little smile,A smile like two blue ice-cliffs as they part,Slow-rising from the deep caves of his heart.Pompey will bow his great gold head awhile,And say, “He died a Roman. It is well.”Perhaps be sad, a little. For the rest,That yelping pack of nobles, they will howlHow, “Crassus was a madman at the best,And in this last attempt, a blind old owl,A drink-crazed miser with a wooden sword.He blundered here and here! His whole campaignWas one great blunder!” So with one accord,They howl.To praise is hard, easy to damn.I failed in this. Some other will succeed.
How they will rage at Rome! Each will outvie
The next in fury: none will dare lament.
Caesar will listen with a little smile,
A smile like two blue ice-cliffs as they part,
Slow-rising from the deep caves of his heart.
Pompey will bow his great gold head awhile,
And say, “He died a Roman. It is well.”
Perhaps be sad, a little. For the rest,
That yelping pack of nobles, they will howl
How, “Crassus was a madman at the best,
And in this last attempt, a blind old owl,
A drink-crazed miser with a wooden sword.
He blundered here and here! His whole campaign
Was one great blunder!” So with one accord,
They howl.
To praise is hard, easy to damn.
I failed in this. Some other will succeed.
Yet they are right, in part. That day, far back,When by the borderline I checked my steed....Our spies had said the Parthian army layEncamped near by and ready for the fray.We found no army; nothing but a track,Thousands of footprints stamped in the red sand,Where a great host had passed. A sudden fearSeized on the legions and on every handThe men shrank back.... No foe stood anywhere,Nothing but scarlet sand and brassy sky,And men aghast at signs traced on the ground,A ring of white, scared faces, without sound.
Yet they are right, in part. That day, far back,
When by the borderline I checked my steed....
Our spies had said the Parthian army lay
Encamped near by and ready for the fray.
We found no army; nothing but a track,
Thousands of footprints stamped in the red sand,
Where a great host had passed. A sudden fear
Seized on the legions and on every hand
The men shrank back.... No foe stood anywhere,
Nothing but scarlet sand and brassy sky,
And men aghast at signs traced on the ground,
A ring of white, scared faces, without sound.
Then afterwards, there came that burning marchUnder a sky of flame, continually.Our very armor seemed to shrink and parchBeneath that sun; our tongues grew swelled and black;And ever circling, circling, front and back,The Parthians galloped in a cloud of dust.They would not turn and fight but slew us thus.Their bitter arrows came like hail on us.Our strongest dropped and died without a blow.Then, beyond Carrhæ, trusting in our woe,They turned at last and stood to wait our thrust.But two things I remember of that fight.How Publius went out—the burning lightSmote on his armor, turning it to gold,Save where, a sunset cloud, his red cloak rolled;And in his face was joy and keen delight,Youth and a boy’s high heart and great resolves....A golden knight he stood, a golden knight....He rides away, the crimson cloud dissolves....
Then afterwards, there came that burning march
Under a sky of flame, continually.
Our very armor seemed to shrink and parch
Beneath that sun; our tongues grew swelled and black;
And ever circling, circling, front and back,
The Parthians galloped in a cloud of dust.
They would not turn and fight but slew us thus.
Their bitter arrows came like hail on us.
Our strongest dropped and died without a blow.
Then, beyond Carrhæ, trusting in our woe,
They turned at last and stood to wait our thrust.
But two things I remember of that fight.
How Publius went out—the burning light
Smote on his armor, turning it to gold,
Save where, a sunset cloud, his red cloak rolled;
And in his face was joy and keen delight,
Youth and a boy’s high heart and great resolves....
A golden knight he stood, a golden knight....
He rides away, the crimson cloud dissolves....
One other picture burns within my brain,Like white-hot sand; and will burn now untilI go into the trap tonight.... AgainThe dust cloud rose, and from a little hillI saw the sheen of spearheads at its rim,And near the rim a spot of black that grew,Grew, grew, till earth and sky alike were dim;For there was nought but it in earth and sky....Nought but a black, dead, face ... a face I knew....The lips were bloody ... down upon the pikeDripped long slow drops like tears.... I hear them now,Gathering, hanging.... Gods! they strike and strike!...Dripping forever on my naked heart....Great tears of blood.... Once, very long ago,I had a son.... How glad he seemed to startOn that attack!... No ... no ... I shall go mad!I must not think how glad he was!... how glad....
One other picture burns within my brain,
Like white-hot sand; and will burn now until
I go into the trap tonight.... Again
The dust cloud rose, and from a little hill
I saw the sheen of spearheads at its rim,
And near the rim a spot of black that grew,
Grew, grew, till earth and sky alike were dim;
For there was nought but it in earth and sky....
Nought but a black, dead, face ... a face I knew....
The lips were bloody ... down upon the pike
Dripped long slow drops like tears.... I hear them now,
Gathering, hanging.... Gods! they strike and strike!...
Dripping forever on my naked heart....
Great tears of blood.... Once, very long ago,
I had a son.... How glad he seemed to start
On that attack!... No ... no ... I shall go mad!
I must not think how glad he was!... how glad....
We fell back towards the mountains. Cassius tookAnother way. He may be slain or safe,I know not; for myself, my legious chafeAnd mutiny, I die here. But as I lookSo close to death, I see that what I stroveTo do will yet be done and Rome shall ruleForever o’er the bloody road I clove.I break ... but she will find another tool.
We fell back towards the mountains. Cassius took
Another way. He may be slain or safe,
I know not; for myself, my legious chafe
And mutiny, I die here. But as I look
So close to death, I see that what I strove
To do will yet be done and Rome shall rule
Forever o’er the bloody road I clove.
I break ... but she will find another tool.
Ere the first sword was sharpened and the first trumpet blownRome looked upon the new-made lands and marked them for her own!Ere the first ship was timbered and the first rudder hungRome held the oceans in her hands, splendid and stern and young!
Ere the first sword was sharpened and the first trumpet blown
Rome looked upon the new-made lands and marked them for her own!
Ere the first ship was timbered and the first rudder hung
Rome held the oceans in her hands, splendid and stern and young!
The wild tribes bend before her, the kings are overthrown,The purple empires of the East before her feet fall down.From strange barbaric countries her captains bring her spoil,Treasures of gems and ivory, spices and wines and oil.
The wild tribes bend before her, the kings are overthrown,
The purple empires of the East before her feet fall down.
From strange barbaric countries her captains bring her spoil,
Treasures of gems and ivory, spices and wines and oil.
Wheat grows for her in Egypt; for her the Greek scribes write,For her the diver dares the shark, the fowler scales the height,To feed her great arenas the bold beast-tamer quakesAmong the tawny lions or the hissing pits of snakes.
Wheat grows for her in Egypt; for her the Greek scribes write,
For her the diver dares the shark, the fowler scales the height,
To feed her great arenas the bold beast-tamer quakes
Among the tawny lions or the hissing pits of snakes.
Her legions march in Asia, they tramp through Farthest Gaul,In Greece their horns blow up the dawn, in Spain they stand a wall.And still upon her Seven Hills Rome rules the seas and tides,The earth and all that in it is, while that stern strength abides.
Her legions march in Asia, they tramp through Farthest Gaul,
In Greece their horns blow up the dawn, in Spain they stand a wall.
And still upon her Seven Hills Rome rules the seas and tides,
The earth and all that in it is, while that stern strength abides.
Hail for the last time, Mother! Your sons stand here at bay.Still you have sons for conquest. We fall the Roman way!Our cheers still ringing, our short swords drawn,We die here singing, but Rome, Rome goes on!
Hail for the last time, Mother! Your sons stand here at bay.
Still you have sons for conquest. We fall the Roman way!
Our cheers still ringing, our short swords drawn,
We die here singing, but Rome, Rome goes on!
Ah! Yes, Valerius, I will answer them.
Ah! Yes, Valerius, I will answer them.
Comrades! I know these terms are but a trap:Yet I would rather die by Parthian swordsThan Roman.After I am dead push on,Straight to the mountains; once the heights are won,You can defy at last these swarming hordes.Break camp at once to guard against mishap.Farewell! Valerius is your general now....
Comrades! I know these terms are but a trap:
Yet I would rather die by Parthian swords
Than Roman.
After I am dead push on,
Straight to the mountains; once the heights are won,
You can defy at last these swarming hordes.
Break camp at once to guard against mishap.
Farewell! Valerius is your general now....
Up there, you say, upon that hillock’s browThey wait?... Yes, I can see the glint of steel....
Up there, you say, upon that hillock’s brow
They wait?... Yes, I can see the glint of steel....