15. The
Britons, impatient at the assaults of the Scots and Picts,
their hostilities and dreadful oppressions, send ambassadors
to Rome with letters, entreating in piteous terms the
assistance of an armed band to protect them, and offering
loyal and ready submission to the authority of Rome, if they
only would expel their foes. A legion is immediately sent,
forgetting their past rebellion, and provided sufficiently
with arms. When they had crossed over the sea and landed,
they came at once to close conflict with their cruel
enemies, and slew great numbers of them. All of them were
driven beyond the borders, and the humiliated natives
rescued from the bloody slavery which awaited them. By the
advice of their protectors, they now built a wall across the
island from one sea to the other, which being manned with a
proper force, might be a terror to the foes whom it was
intended to repel, and a protection to their friends whom it
covered. But this wall, being made of turf instead of stone,
was of no use to that foolish people, who had no head to
guide them. 16. The
Roman legion had no sooner returned home in joy and triumph,
than their former foes, like hungry and ravening wolves,
rushing with greedy jaws upon the fold which is left without
a shepherd, and wafted both by the strength of oarsmen and
the blowing wind, break through the boundaries, and spread
slaughter on every side, and like mowers cutting down the
ripe corn, they cut up, tread under foot, and overrun the
whole country. 17. And
now again they send suppliant ambassadors, with their
garments rent and their heads covered with ashes, imploring
assistance from the Romans, and like timorous chickens,
crowding under the protecting wings of their parents, that
their wretched country might not altogether be destroyed,
and that the Roman name, which now was but an empty sound to
fill the ear, might not become a reproach even to distant
nations. Upon this, the Romans, moved with compassion, as
far as human nature can be, at the relations of such
horrors, send forward, like eagles in their flight, their
unexpected bands of cavalry by land and mariners by sea, and
planting their terrible swords upon the shoulders of their
enemies, they mow them down like leaves which fall at the
destined period; and as a mountain-torrent swelled with
numerous streams, and bursting its banks with roaring noise,
with foaming crest and yeasty wave rising to the stars, by
whose eddying currents our eyes are as it were dazzled, does
with one of its billows overwhelm every obstacle in its way,
so did our illustrious defenders vigorously drive our
enemies' band beyond the sea, if any could so escape them;
for it was beyond those same seas that they transported,
year after year, the plunder which they had gained, no one
daring to resist them. 18. The
Romans, therefore, left the country, giving notice that they
could no longer be harassed by such laborious expeditions,
nor suffer the Roman standards, with so large and brave an
army, to be worn out by sea and land by fighting against
these unwarlike, plundering vagabonds; but that the
islanders, inuring themselves to warlike weapons, and
bravely fighting, should valiantly protect their country,
their property, wives and children, and, what is dearer than
these, their liberty and lives; that they should not suffer
their hands to be tied behind their backs by a nation which,
unless they were enervated by idleness and sloth, was not
more powerful than themselves, but that they should arm
those hands with buckler, sword, and spear, ready for the
field of battle; and, because they thought this also of
advantage to the people they were about to leave, they, with
the help of the miserable natives, built a wall different
from the former, by public and private contributions, and of
the same structure as walls generally, extending in a
straight line from sea to sea, between some cities, which,
from fear of their enemies, had there by chance been built.
They then give energetic counsel to the timorous natives,
and leave them patterns by which to manufacture arms.
Moreover, on the south coast where their vessels lay, as
there was some apprehension lest the barbarians might land,
they erected towers at stated intervals, commanding a
prospect of the sea; and then left the island never to
return. The
History, 11 to 14
<<< Contents
>>> The
History, 19 to 22
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