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+<title>For the Temple:</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of For the Temple, by G. A. Henty
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: For the Temple
+ A Tale of the Fall of Jerusalem
+
+Author: G. A. Henty
+
+Release Date: May 26, 2007 [EBook #21614]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOR THE TEMPLE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Martin Robb.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<h1>For the Temple:</h1>
+<h2>A Tale of the Fall of Jerusalem<br />
+By G. A. Henty.</h2>
+<hr />
+<center>
+<table summary="Table of Contents">
+<caption>Contents</caption>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"></td>
+<td class="rtoc"><a href="#Preface">Preface</a>.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch1">Chapter 1</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Lake Of Tiberias.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch2">Chapter 2</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">A Storm On Galilee.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch3">Chapter 3</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Revolt Against Rome.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch4">Chapter 4</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Lull Before The Storm.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch5">Chapter 5</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Siege Of Jotapata.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch6">Chapter 6</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Fall Of The City.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch7">Chapter 7</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Massacre On The Lake.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch8">Chapter 8</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Among The Mountains.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch9">Chapter 9</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Storming Of Gamala.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch10">Chapter 10</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Captives.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch11">Chapter 11</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">A Tale Of Civil Strife.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch12">Chapter 12</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Desultory Fighting.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch13">Chapter 13</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Test Of Devotion.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch14">Chapter 14</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Jerusalem.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch15">Chapter 15</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Siege Is Begun.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch16">Chapter 16</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Subterranean Passage.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch17">Chapter 17</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">The Capture Of The Temple.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch18">Chapter 18</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">Slaves.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="ltoc"><a href="#Ch19">Chapter 19</a>:</td>
+<td class="rtoc">At Rome.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<table summary="Illustrations">
+<caption>Illustrations<br /></caption>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#PicA">On the Sea of Galilee.</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#PicB">Heightening the Walls of Jotapata under Shelter
+of Ox Hides.</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#PicC">John Incites his Countrymen to Harass the
+Romans.</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#PicD">The Roman Camp Surprised and Set on
+Fire.</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#PicE">Mary and the Hebrew Women in the Hands of the
+Romans.</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#PicF">Titus Brings Josephus to See John.</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#PicG">John and his Band in Sight of
+Jerusalem.</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#PicH">Misery in Jerusalem During the Siege by
+Titus.</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#PicI">'Lesbia,' the Roman said, 'I have brought you
+two more slaves.'</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#PicJ">The Return of John to his House on the
+Lake.</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+<h2><a name="Preface" id="Preface">Preface</a>.</h2>
+<p>In all history, there is no drama of more terrible interest than
+that which terminated with the total destruction of Jerusalem. Had
+the whole Jewish nation joined in the desperate resistance made, by
+a section of it, to the overwhelming strength of Rome, the world
+would have had no record of truer patriotism than that displayed,
+by this small people, in their resistance to the forces of the
+mistress of the world.</p>
+<p>Unhappily, the reverse of this was the case. Except in the
+defense of Jotapata and Gamala, it can scarcely be said that the
+Jewish people, as a body, offered any serious resistance to the
+arms of Rome. The defenders of Jerusalem were a mere fraction of
+its population--a fraction composed almost entirely of turbulent
+characters and robber bands, who fought with the fury of
+desperation; after having placed themselves beyond the pale of
+forgiveness, or mercy, by the deeds of unutterable cruelty with
+which they had desolated the city, before its siege by the Romans.
+They fought, it is true, with unflinching courage--a courage never
+surpassed in history--but it was the courage of despair; and its
+result was to bring destruction upon the whole population, as well
+as upon themselves.</p>
+<p>Fortunately the narrative of Josephus, an eyewitness of the
+events which he describes, has come down to us; and it is the
+storehouse from which all subsequent histories of the events have
+been drawn. It is, no doubt, tinged throughout by his desire to
+stand well with his patrons, Vespasian and Titus; but there is no
+reason to doubt the accuracy of his descriptions. I have endeavored
+to present you with as vivid a picture as possible of the events of
+the war, without encumbering the story with details and, except as
+regards the exploits of John of Gamala, of whom Josephus says
+nothing, have strictly followed, in every particular, the narrative
+of the historian.</p>
+<p>G. A. Henty.</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch1" id="Ch1">Chapter 1</a>: The Lake Of
+Tiberias.</h2>
+<p>"Dreaming, John, as usual? I never saw such a boy. You are
+always in extremes; either tiring yourself out, or lying half
+asleep."</p>
+<p>"I was not half asleep, mother. I was looking at the lake."</p>
+<p>"I cannot see much to look at, John. It's just as it has been
+ever since you were born, or since I was born."</p>
+<p>"No, I suppose there's no change, mother; but I am never tired
+of looking at the sun shining on the ripples, and the fishermen's
+boats, and the birds standing in the shallows or flying off, in a
+desperate hurry, without any reason that I can make out. Besides,
+mother, when one is looking at the lake, one is thinking of other
+things."</p>
+<p>"And very often thinking of nothing at all, my son."</p>
+<p>"Perhaps so, mother; but there's plenty to think of, in these
+times."</p>
+<p>"Plenty, John; there are baskets and baskets of figs to be
+stripped from the trees, and hung up to dry for the winter and,
+next week, we are going to begin the grape harvest. But the figs
+are the principal matter, at present; and I think that it would be
+far more useful for you to go and help old Isaac and his son, in
+getting them in, than in lying there watching the lake."</p>
+<p>"I suppose it would, mother," the lad said, rising briskly; for
+his fits of indolence were by no means common and, as a rule, he
+was ready to assist at any work which might be going on.</p>
+<p>"I do not wonder at John loving the lake," his mother said to
+herself, when the lad had hurried away. "It is a fair scene; and it
+may be, as Simon thinks, that a change may come over it, before
+long, and that ruin and desolation may fall upon us all."</p>
+<p>There were, indeed, few scenes which could surpass in tranquil
+beauty that which Martha, the wife of Simon, was looking upon--the
+sheet of sparkling water, with its low shores dotted with towns and
+villages. Down the lake, on the opposite shore, rose the walls and
+citadel of Tiberias, with many stately buildings; for although
+Tiberias was not, now, the chief town of Galilee--for Sepphoris had
+usurped its place--it had been the seat of the Roman authority, and
+the kings who ruled the country for Rome generally dwelt there.
+Half a mile from the spot where Martha was standing rose the
+newly-erected walls of Hippos.</p>
+<p>Where the towns and villages did not engross the shore, the rich
+orchards and vineyards extended down to the very edge of the water.
+The plain of Galilee was a veritable garden. Here flourished, in
+the greatest abundance, the vine and the fig; while the low hills
+were covered with olive groves, and the corn waved thickly on the
+rich, fat land. No region on the earth's face possessed a fairer
+climate. The heat was never extreme; the winds blowing from the
+Great Sea brought the needed moisture for the vegetation; and so
+soft and equable was the air that, for ten months in the year,
+grapes and figs could be gathered.</p>
+<p>The population, supported by the abundant fruits of the earth,
+was very large. Villages--which would elsewhere be called towns,
+for those containing but a few thousand inhabitants were regarded
+as small, indeed--were scattered thickly over the plain; and few
+areas of equal dimensions could show a population approaching that
+which inhabited the plains and slopes between the Sea of Galilee
+and the Mediterranean. None could then have dreamed of the dangers
+that were to come, or believed that this rich cultivation and
+teeming population would disappear; and that, in time, a few flocks
+of wandering sheep would scarce be able to find herbage growing, on
+the wastes of land which would take the place of this fertile
+soil.</p>
+<p>Certainly no such thought as this occurred to Martha, as she
+re-entered the house; though she did fear that trouble, and ruin,
+might be approaching.</p>
+<p>John was soon at work among the fig trees, aiding Isaac and his
+son Reuben--a lad of some fifteen years--to pick the soft, luscious
+fruit, and carry it to the little courtyard, shaded from the rays
+of the sun by an overhead trellis work, covered with vines and
+almost bending beneath the purple bunches of grapes. Miriam--the
+old nurse--and four or five maid servants, under the eye of Martha,
+tied them in rows on strings, and fastened them to pegs driven into
+that side of the house upon which the sun beat down most hotly. It
+was only the best fruit that was so served; for that which had been
+damaged in the picking, and all of smaller size, were laid on trays
+in the sun. The girls chatted merrily as they worked; for Martha,
+although a good housewife, was a gentle mistress and, so long as
+fingers were busy, heeded not if the tongue ran on.</p>
+<p>"Let the damsels be happy, while they may," she would say, if
+Miriam scolded a little when the laughter rose louder than usual.
+"Let them be happy, while they can; who knows what lies in the
+future?"</p>
+<p>But at present, the future cast no shade upon the group; nor
+upon a girl of about fourteen years old, who danced in and out of
+the courtyard in the highest spirits, now stopping a few minutes to
+string the figs, then scampering away with an empty basket which,
+when she reached the gatherers, she placed on her head and
+supported demurely, for a little while, at the foot of the ladder
+upon which John was perched--so that he could lay the figs in it
+without bruising them. But, long ere the basket was filled she
+would tire of the work and, setting it on the ground, run back into
+the house.</p>
+<p>"And so you think you are helping, Mary," John said, laughing,
+when the girl returned for the fourth time, with an empty
+basket.</p>
+<p>"Helping, John! Of course I am--ever so much. Helping you, and
+helping them at the house, and carrying empty baskets. I consider
+myself the most active of the party."</p>
+<p>"Active, certainly, Mary! but if you do not help them, in
+stringing and hanging the figs, more than you help me, I think you
+might as well leave it alone."</p>
+<p>"Fie, John! That is most ungrateful, after my standing here like
+a statue, with the basket on my head, ready for you to lay the figs
+in."</p>
+<p>"That is all very fine!" John laughed; "but before the basket is
+half full, away you go; and I have to get down the ladder, and
+bring up the basket and fix it firmly, and that without shaking the
+figs; whereas, had you left it alone, altogether, I could have
+brought up the empty basket and fixed it close by my hand, without
+any trouble at all."</p>
+<p>"You are an ungrateful boy, and you know how bad it is to be
+ungrateful! And after my making myself so hot, too!" Miriam said.
+"My face is as red as fire, and that is all the thanks I get. Very
+well, then, I shall go into the house, and leave you to your own
+bad reflections."</p>
+<p>"You need not do that, Mary. You can sit down in the shade
+there, and watch us at work; and eat figs, and get yourself cool,
+all at the same time. The sun will be down in another half hour,
+and then I shall be free to amuse you."</p>
+<p>"Amuse me, indeed!" the girl said indignantly, as she sat down
+on the bank to which John had pointed. "You mean that I shall amuse
+you; that is what it generally comes to. If it wasn't for me I am
+sure, very often, there would not be a word said when we are out
+together."</p>
+<p>"Perhaps that is true," John agreed; "but you see, there is so
+much to think about."</p>
+<p>"And so you choose the time when you are with me to think! Thank
+you, John! You had better think, at present," and, rising from the
+seat she had just taken, she walked back to the house again,
+regardless of John's explanations and shouts.</p>
+<p>Old Isaac chuckled, on his tree close by.</p>
+<p>"They are ever too sharp for us, in words, John. The damsel is
+younger than you, by full two years; and yet she can always put you
+in the wrong, with her tongue."</p>
+<p>"She puts meanings to my words which I never thought of," John
+said, "and is angered, or pretends to be--for I never know which it
+is--at things which she has coined out of her own mind, for they
+had no place in mine."</p>
+<p>"Boys' wits are always slower than girls'," the old man said. "A
+girl has more fancy, in her little finger, than a boy in his whole
+body. Your cousin laughs at you, because she sees that you take it
+all seriously; and wonders, in her mind, how it is her thoughts run
+ahead of yours. But I love the damsel, and so do all in the house
+for, if she be a little wayward at times, she is bright and loving,
+and has cheered the house since she came here.</p>
+<p>"Your father is not a man of many words; and Martha, as becomes
+her age, is staid and quiet, though she is no enemy of mirth and
+cheerfulness; but the loss of all her children, save you, has
+saddened her, and I think she must often have pined that she had
+not a girl; and she has brightened much since the damsel came here,
+three years ago.</p>
+<p>"But the sun is sinking, and my basket is full. There will be
+enough for the maids to go on with, in the morning, until we can
+supply them with more."</p>
+<p>John's basket was not full, but he was well content to stop and,
+descending their ladders, the three returned to the house.</p>
+<p>Simon of Gadez--for that was the name of his farm, and the
+little fishing village close by, on the shore--was a prosperous and
+well-to-do man. His land, like that of all around him, had come
+down from father to son, through long generations; for the law by
+which all mortgages were cleared off, every seven years, prevented
+those who might be disposed to idleness and extravagance from
+ruining themselves, and their children. Every man dwelt upon the
+land which, as eldest son, he had inherited; while the younger
+sons, taking their smaller share, would settle in the towns or
+villages and become traders, or fishermen, according to their bent
+and means.</p>
+<p>There were poor in Palestine--for there will be poor,
+everywhere, so long as human nature remains as it is; and some men
+are idle and self indulgent, while others are industrious and
+thrifty--but, taking it as a whole there were, thanks to the wise
+provisions of their laws, no people on the face of the earth so
+generally comfortable, and well to do. They grumbled, of course,
+over the exactions of the tax collectors--exactions due, not to the
+contribution which was paid by the province to imperial Rome, but
+to the luxury and extravagance of their kings, and to the greed and
+corruption of the officials. But in spite of this, the people of
+rich and prosperous Galilee could have lived in contentment, and
+happiness, had it not been for the factions in their midst.</p>
+<p>On reaching the house, John found that his father had just
+returned from Hippos, whither he had gone on business. He nodded
+when the lad entered, with his basket.</p>
+<p>"I have hired eight men in the market, today, to come out
+tomorrow to aid in gathering in the figs," he said; "and your
+mother has just sent down, to get some of the fishermen's maidens
+to come in to help her. It is time that we had done with them, and
+we will then set about the vintage. Let us reap while we can, there
+is no saying what the morrow will bring forth.</p>
+<p>"Wife, add something to the evening meal, for the Rabbi Solomon
+Ben Manasseh will sup with us, and sleep here tonight."</p>
+<p>John saw that his father looked graver than usual, but he knew
+his duty as a son too well to think of asking any questions; and he
+busied himself, for a time, in laying out the figs on
+trays--knowing that, otherwise, their own weight would crush the
+soft fruit before the morning, and bruise the tender skins.</p>
+<p>A quarter of an hour later, the quick footsteps of a donkey were
+heard approaching. John ran out and, having saluted the rabbi, held
+the animal while his father assisted him to alight and, welcoming
+him to his house, led him within. The meal was soon served. It
+consisted of fish from the lake, kid's flesh seethed in milk, and
+fruit.</p>
+<p>Only the men sat down; the rabbi sitting upon Simon's right
+hand, John on his left, and Isaac and his son at the other end of
+the table. Martha's maids waited upon them, for it was not the
+custom for the women to sit down with the men and, although in the
+country this usage was not strictly observed, and Martha and little
+Mary generally took their meals with Simon and John, they did not
+do so if any guest was present.</p>
+<p>In honor of the visitor, a white cloth had been laid on the
+table. All ate with their fingers; two dishes of each kind being
+placed on the table--one at each end. But few words were said
+during the meal. After it was concluded, Isaac and his son withdrew
+and, presently, Martha and Mary, having taken their meal in the
+women's apartments, came into the room. Mary made a little face at
+John, to signify her disapproval of the visitor, whose coming would
+compel her to keep silent all the evening. But though John smiled,
+he made no sign of sympathy for, indeed, he was anxious to hear the
+news from without; and doubted not that he should learn much, from
+the rabbi.</p>
+<p>Solomon Ben Manasseh was a man of considerable influence in
+Galilee. He was a tall, stern-looking old man, with bushy black
+eyebrows, deep-set eyes, and a long beard of black hair, streaked
+with gray. He was said to have acquired much of the learning of the
+Gentiles, among whom, at Antioch, he had dwelt for some years; but
+it was to his powers as a speaker that he owed his influence. It
+was the tongue, in those days, that ruled men; and there were few
+who could lash a crowd to fury, or still their wrath when excited,
+better than Solomon Ben Manasseh.</p>
+<p>For some time they talked upon different subjects: on the corn
+harvest and vintage, the probable amount of taxation, the marriage
+feast which was to take place, in the following week, at the house
+of one of the principal citizens of Hippos, and other matters. But
+at last Simon broached the subject which was uppermost in all their
+thoughts.</p>
+<p>"And the news from Tiberias, you say, is bad, rabbi?"</p>
+<p>"The news from Tiberias is always bad, friend Simon. In all the
+land there is not a city which will compare with it, in the
+wrongheadedness of its people and the violence of its seditions;
+and little can be hoped, as far as I can see, so long as our good
+governor, Josephus, continues to treat the malefactors so
+leniently. A score of times they have conspired against his life
+and, as often, has he eluded them; for the Lord has been ever with
+him. But each time, instead of punishing those who have brought
+about these disorders, he lets them go free; trusting always that
+they will repent them of their ways, although he sees that his
+kindness is thrown away, and that they grow even bolder and more
+bitter against him after each failure.</p>
+<p>"All Galilee is with him. Whenever he gives the word, every man
+takes up his arms and follows him and, did he but give the order,
+they would level those proud towns Tiberias and Sepphoris to the
+ground, and tear down stone by stone the stronghold of John of
+Gischala. But he will suffer them to do nothing--not a hair of
+these traitors' heads is to be touched; nor their property, to the
+value of a penny, be interfered with.</p>
+<p>"I call such lenity culpable. The law ordains punishment for
+those who disturb the people. We know what befell those who
+rebelled against Moses. Josephus has the valor and the wisdom of
+King David; but it were well if he had, like our great king, a Joab
+by his side, who would smite down traitors and spare not."</p>
+<p>"It is his only fault," Simon said. "What a change has taken
+place, since he was sent hither from Jerusalem to take up our
+government! All abuses have been repressed, extortion has been put
+down, taxes have been lightened. We eat our bread in peace and
+comfort, and each man's property is his own. Never was there such a
+change as he has wrought and, were it not for John of Gischala,
+Justus the son of Piscus, and Jesus the son of Sapphias, all would
+go quietly and well; but these men are continually stirring up the
+people--who, in their folly, listen to them--and conspiring to
+murder Josephus, and seize upon his government."</p>
+<p>"Already he has had, more than once, to reduce to submission
+Tiberias and Sepphoris; happily without bloodshed for, when the
+people of these cities saw that all Galilee was with Josephus, they
+opened their gates and submitted themselves to his mercy. Truly, in
+Leviticus it is said:</p>
+<p>"'Thou shalt not avenge, nor bear any grudge against the
+children of thy people; but thou shalt love thy neighbor as
+thyself.'</p>
+<p>"But Josephus carries this beyond reason. Seeing that his
+adversaries by no means observe this law, he should remember that
+it is also said that 'He that taketh the sword shall fall by the
+sword,' and that the law lays down punishments for the
+transgressors. Our judges and kings slew those who troubled the
+land, and destroyed them utterly; and Josephus does wrong to depart
+from their teaching."</p>
+<p>"I know not where he could have learned such notions of mercy to
+his enemies, and to the enemies of the land," Simon said. "He has
+been to Rome, but it is not among the Romans that he will have
+found that it is right to forgive those who rise up in
+rebellion."</p>
+<p>"Yes, he was in Rome when he was twenty-six years old," Solomon
+said. "He went thither to plead the cause of certain priests who
+had been thrown into bonds, by Felix, and sent to Rome. It was a
+perilous voyage, for his ship was wrecked in the Adriatic and, of
+six hundred men who were on board, only eighty were picked
+up--after floating and swimming all night--by a ship of Cyrene. He
+was not long in Rome for, being introduced to Poppaea, the wife of
+Caesar, he used his interest with her and obtained the release of
+those for whose sake he went there.</p>
+<p>"No, if he gained these ideas from anyone, he learned them from
+one Banus--an Ascetic, of the sect of the Essenes, who lived in the
+desert with no other clothing than the bark and leaves of trees,
+and no other food save that which grew wild. Josephus lived with
+him, in like fashion, for three years and, doubtless, learned all
+that was in his heart. Banus was a follower, they say, of that John
+whom Herod put to death; and for aught I know, of that Jesus who
+was crucified, two years afterwards, at Jerusalem, and in whom many
+people believed, and who has many followers, to this day. I have
+conversed with some of them and, from what they tell me, this Jesus
+taught doctrines similar to those which Josephus practices; and
+which he may have learned from Banus, without accepting the
+doctrines which the members of this sect hold, as to their founder
+being the promised Messiah who was to restore Israel."</p>
+<p>"I, too, have talked with many of the sect," Simon said; "and
+have argued with them on the folly of their belief, seeing that
+their founder by no means saved Israel, but was himself put to
+death. From what I could see, there was much that was good in the
+doctrines they hold; but they have exaggerated ideas, and are
+opposed to all wars, even to fighting for their country. I hear
+that, since there has been trouble with Rome, most of them have
+departed altogether out of the land, so as to avoid the necessity
+of fighting."</p>
+<p>"They are poor creatures," Solomon Ben Manasseh said,
+scornfully; "but we need not talk of them now, for they affect us
+in no way, save that it may be that Josephus has learned somewhat
+of their doctrines, from Banus; and that he is thus unduly and, as
+I think, most unfortunately for the country, inclined too much to
+mercy, instead of punishing the evildoers as they deserve."</p>
+<p>"But nevertheless, rabbi, it seems to me that there has been
+good policy, as well, in the mercy which Josephus has shown his
+foes. You know that John has many friends in Jerusalem; and that,
+if he could accuse Josephus of slaughtering any, he would be able
+to make so strong a party, there, that he could obtain the recall
+of Josephus."</p>
+<p>"We would not let him go," Solomon said, hotly. "Since the
+Romans have gone, we submit to the supremacy of the council at
+Jerusalem, but it is only on sufferance. For long ages we have had
+nothing to do with Judah; and we are not disposed to put our necks
+under their yoke, now. We submit to unity because, in the Romans,
+we have a common foe; but we are not going to be tyrannized.
+Josephus has shown himself a wise ruler. We are happier, under him,
+than we have been for generations under the men who call themselves
+kings, but who are nothing but Roman satraps; and we are not going
+to suffer him to be taken from us. Only let the people of Jerusalem
+try that, and they will have to deal with all the men of
+Galilee."</p>
+<p>"I am past the age at which men are bound to take up the sword,
+and John has not yet attained it but, if there were need, we would
+both go out and fight. What could they do, for the population of
+Galilee is greater than that of Judah? And while we would fight,
+every man, to the death; the Jews would, few of them, care to
+hazard their lives only to take from us the man we desire to rule
+over us. Still, Josephus does wisely, perhaps, to give no occasion
+for accusation by his enemies.</p>
+<p>"There is no talk, is there, rabbi, of any movement on the part
+of the Romans to come against us, in force?"</p>
+<p>"None, so far as I have heard," the rabbi replied. "King Agrippa
+remains in his country, to the east; but he has no Roman force with
+him sufficient to attempt any great enterprise and, so long as they
+leave us alone, we are content."</p>
+<p>"They will come, sooner or later," Simon said, shaking his head.
+"They are busy elsewhere. When they have settled with their other
+enemies, they will come here to avenge the defeat of Cestius, to
+restore Florus, and to reconquer the land. Where Rome has once laid
+her paw, she never lets slip her prey."</p>
+<p>"Well, we can fight," Solomon Ben Manasseh said, sternly. "Our
+forefathers won the land with the sword, and we can hold it by the
+sword."</p>
+<p>"Yes," Martha said quietly, joining in the conversation for the
+first time, "if God fights for us, as He fought for our
+forefathers."</p>
+<p>"Why should He not?" the rabbi asked sternly. "We are still his
+people. We are faithful to his law."</p>
+<p>"But God has, many times in the past, suffered us to fall into
+the hands of our enemies as a punishment for our sins," Martha
+said, quietly. "The tribes were carried away into captivity, and
+are scattered we know not where. The temple was destroyed, and the
+people of Judah dwelt long as captives in Babylon. He suffered us
+to fall under the yoke of the Romans.</p>
+<p>"In his right time, He will fight for us again; but can we say
+that that time has come, rabbi, and that He will smite the Romans,
+as He smote the host of Sennacherib?"</p>
+<p>"That no man can say," the rabbi answered, gloomily. "Time only
+will show but, whether or no, the people will fight valiantly."</p>
+<p>"I doubt not that they will fight," Simon said; "but many other
+nations, to whom we are but as a handful, have fought bravely, but
+have succumbed to the might of Rome. It is said that Josephus, and
+many of the wisest in Jerusalem, were heartily opposed to the
+tumults against the Romans, and that they only went with the people
+because they were in fear of their lives; and even at Tiberias many
+men of worth and gravity, such as Julius Capellus, Herod the son of
+Miarus, Herod the son of Gamalus, Compsus, and others, are all
+strongly opposed to hostility against the Romans.</p>
+<p>"And it is the same, elsewhere. Those who know best what is the
+might and power of Rome would fain remain friendly with her. It is
+the ignorant and violent classes have led us into this strait; from
+which, as I fear, naught but ruin can arise."</p>
+<p>"I thought better things of you, Simon," the rabbi said,
+angrily.</p>
+<p>"But you yourself have told me," Simon urged, "that you thought
+it a mad undertaking to provoke the vengeance of Rome."</p>
+<p>"I thought so, at first," Solomon admitted, "but now our hand is
+placed on the plow, we must not draw back; and I believe that the
+God of our fathers will show his might before the heathen."</p>
+<p>"I trust that it may be so," Simon said, gravely. "In His hand
+is all power. Whether He will see fit to put it forth, now, in our
+behalf remains to be seen. However, for the present we need not
+concern ourselves greatly with the Romans. It may be long before
+they bring an army against us; while these seditions, here, are at
+our very door, and ever threaten to involve us in civil war."</p>
+<p>"We need fear no civil war," the rabbi said. "The people of all
+Galilee, save the violent and ill disposed in a few of the towns,
+are all for Josephus. If it comes to force, John and his party know
+that they will be swept away, like a straw before the wind. The
+fear is that they may succeed in murdering Josephus; either by the
+knife of an assassin, or in one of these tumults. They would rather
+the latter, because they would then say that the people had torn
+him to pieces, in their fury at his misdoings.</p>
+<p>"However, we watch over him, as much as we can; and his friends
+have warned him that he must be careful, not only for his own sake,
+but for that of all the people; and he has promised that, as far as
+he can, he will be on his guard against these traitors."</p>
+<p>"The governor should have a strong bodyguard," John exclaimed,
+impetuously, "as the Roman governors had. In another year, I shall
+be of age to have my name inscribed in the list of fighting men;
+and I would gladly be one of his guard."</p>
+<p>"You are neither old enough to fight, nor to express an opinion
+unasked," Simon said, "in the presence of your elders."</p>
+<p>"Do not check the boy," the rabbi said. "He has fire and spirit;
+and the days are coming when we shall not ask how old, or how
+young, are those who would fight, so that they can but hold
+arms.</p>
+<p>"Josephus is wise not to have a military guard, John, because
+the people love not such appearance of state. His enemies would use
+this as an argument that he was setting himself up above them. It
+is partly because he behaves himself discreetly, and goes about
+among them like a private person, of no more account than
+themselves, that they love him. None can say he is a tyrant,
+because he has no means of tyrannizing. His enemies cannot urge it
+against him at Jerusalem--as they would doubtless do, if they
+could--that he is seeking to lead Galilee away from the rule of
+Jerusalem, and to set himself up as its master for, to do this, he
+would require to gather an army; and Josephus has not a single
+armed man at his service, save and except that when he appears to
+be in danger many, out of love of him, assemble and provide him
+escort.</p>
+<p>"No, Josephus is wise in that he affects neither pomp nor state;
+that he keeps no armed men around him, but trusts to the love of
+the people. He would be wiser, however, did he seize one of the
+occasions when the people have taken up arms for him to destroy all
+those who make sedition; and to free the country, once and for all,
+from the trouble.</p>
+<p>"Sedition should be always nipped in the bud. Lenity, in such a
+case, is the most cruel course; for it encourages men to think that
+those in authority fear them, and that they can conspire without
+danger; and whereas, at first, the blood of ten men will put an end
+to sedition, it needs, at last, the blood of as many thousands to
+restore peace and order. It is good for a man to be merciful, but
+not for a ruler, for the good of the whole people is placed in his
+hands. The sword of justice is given to him, and he is most
+merciful who uses it the most promptly against those who work
+sedition. The wise ruler will listen to the prayers of his people,
+and will grant their petitions, when they show that their case is
+hard; but he will grant nothing to him who asketh with his sword in
+his hand, for he knows full well that when he yields, once, he must
+yield always; until the time comes, as come it surely will, when he
+must resist with the sword. Then the land will be filled with blood
+whereas, in the beginning, he could have avoided all trouble, by
+refusing so much as to listen to those who spoke with threats.</p>
+<p>"Josephus is a good man, and the Lord has given him great gifts.
+He has done great things for the land; but you will see that many
+woes will come, and much blood will be shed, from this lenity of
+his towards those who stir up tumults among the people."</p>
+<p>A few minutes later the family retired to bed; the hour being a
+late one for Simon's household, which generally retired to rest a
+short time after the evening meal.</p>
+<p>The next day the work of gathering in the figs was carried on,
+earnestly and steadily, with the aid of the workers whom Simon had
+hired in the town and, in two days, the trees were all stripped,
+and strings of figs hung to dry from the boughs of all the trees
+round the house.</p>
+<p>Then the gathering of the grapes began. All the inhabitants of
+the little fishing village lent their aid--men as well as women and
+children--for the vintage was looked upon as a holiday; and Simon
+was regarded as a good friend by his neighbors, being ever ready to
+aid them when there was need, judging any disputes which arose
+between them, and lending them money without interest if misfortune
+came upon their boats or nets, or if illness befell them; while the
+women, in times of sickness or trouble, went naturally to Martha
+with their griefs, and were assured of sympathy, good advice, and
+any drugs or dainty food suited to the case.</p>
+<p>The women and girls picked the grapes, and laid them in baskets.
+These were carried by men, and emptied into the vat; where other
+men trod them down, and pressed out the juice. Martha and her maids
+saw to the cooking and laying out, on the great tables in the
+courtyard, of the meals; to which all sat down, together. Simon
+superintended the crushing of the grapes; and John worked now at
+one task, and now at another. It was a pretty scene, and rendered
+more gay by the songs of the women and girls, as they worked; and
+the burst of merry laughter which, at times, arose.</p>
+<p>It lasted four days, by which time the last bunch, save those on
+a few vines preserved for eating, was picked and crushed; and the
+vats in the cellar, sunk underground for coolness, were full to the
+brim. Simon was much pleased with the result; and declared that
+never, in his memory, had the vine and fig harvest turned out more
+abundant. The corn had long before been gathered, and there
+remained now only the olives; but it would be some little time yet
+before these were fit to be gathered, and their oil extracted, for
+they were allowed to hang on the trees until ready to drop.</p>
+<p>The last basket of grapes was brought in with much ceremony; the
+gatherers forming a little procession, and singing a thanksgiving
+hymn as they walked. The evening meal was more bounteous, even,
+than usual; and all who helped carried away with them substantial
+proofs of Simon's thankfulness, and satisfaction.</p>
+<p>For the next few days Simon and his men, and Martha's maids,
+lent their assistance in getting in the vintage of their neighbors;
+for each family had its patch of ground, and grew sufficient grapes
+and fruits for its own needs. Those in the village brought their
+grapes to a vat, which they had in common; the measures of the
+grapes being counted as they were put in, and the wine afterwards
+divided, in like proportion--for wine, to be good, must be made in
+considerable quantities.</p>
+<p>And now there was, for a time, little to do on the farm. Simon
+superintended the men who were plowing up the corn stubbles, ready
+for the sowing in the spring; sometimes putting his hand to the
+plow, and driving the oxen. Isaac and his son worked in the
+vineyard and garden, near the house; aided to some extent by John
+who, however, was not yet called upon to take a man's share in the
+work of the farm--he having but lately finished his learning, with
+the rabbi, at the school in Hippos. Still, he worked steadily every
+morning and, in the afternoon, generally went out on the lake with
+the fishermen, with whom he was a great favorite.</p>
+<p>This was not to last long for, at seventeen, he was to join his
+father, regularly, in the management of the farm and, indeed, the
+Rabbi Solomon, who was a frequent guest, was of opinion that Simon
+gave the boy too much license; and that he ought, already, to be
+doing man's work.</p>
+<p>But Simon, when urged by him, said:</p>
+<p>"I know that, at his age, I was working hard, rabbi; but the lad
+has studied diligently, and I have a good report of him; and I
+think it well that, at his age, the bow should be unbent
+somewhat.</p>
+<p>"Besides, who knows what is before us! I will let the lad have
+as much pleasure from his life as he can. The storm is approaching;
+let him play, while the sun shines."</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch2" id="Ch2">Chapter 2</a>: A Storm On Galilee.</h2>
+<p>One day, after the midday meal, John said:</p>
+<p>"Mary, Raphael and his brother have taken the big boat, and gone
+off with fish to Tiberias; and have told me that I can take the
+small boat, if I will. Ask my mother to let you off your task, and
+come out with me. It is a fortnight since we had a row on the lake,
+together."</p>
+<p>"I was beginning to think that you were never going to ask me
+again, John; and, only I should punish myself, I would say you nay.
+There have you been, going out fishing every afternoon, and leaving
+me at home to spin; and it is all the worse because your mother has
+said that the time is fast coming when I must give up wandering
+about like a child, and must behave myself like a woman.</p>
+<p>"Oh, dear, how tiresome it will be when there will be nothing to
+do but to sit and spin, and to look after the house, and to walk
+instead of running when I am out, and to behave like a grown-up
+person, altogether!"</p>
+<p>"You are almost grown up," John said; "you are taller, now, than
+any of the maids except Zillah; but I shall be sorry to see you
+growing staid and solemn. And it was selfish of me not to ask you
+to go out before, but I really did not think of it. The fishermen
+have been working hard, to make up for the time lost during the
+harvest; and I have really been useful, helping them with their
+nets, and this is the last year I shall have my liberty.</p>
+<p>"But come, don't let's be wasting time in talking; run in and
+get my mother's permission, and then join me on the shore. I will
+take some grapes down, for you to eat; for the sun is hot today,
+and there is scarce a breath of wind on the water."</p>
+<p>A few minutes later, the young pair stood together by the side
+of the boat.</p>
+<p>"Your mother made all sorts of objections," Mary said, laughing,
+"and I do think she won't let me come again. I don't think she
+would have done it, today, if Miriam had not stood up for me, and
+said that I was but a child though I was so tall; and that, as you
+were very soon going to work with your father, she thought that it
+was no use in making the change before that."</p>
+<p>"What nonsense it all is!" John said. "Besides, you know it is
+arranged that, in a few months, we are to be betrothed according to
+the wishes of your parents and mine. It would have been done, long
+ago, only my father and mother do not approve of young betrothals;
+and think it better to wait, to see if the young ones like each
+other; and I think that is quite right, too, in most cases--only,
+of course, living here, as you have done for the last three
+years--since your father and mother died--there was no fear of our
+not liking each other."</p>
+<p>"Well, you see," Mary said, as she sat in the stern of the boat,
+while John rowed it quietly along, "it might have been just the
+other way. When people don't see anything of each other, till they
+are betrothed by their parents, they can't dislike each other very
+much; whereas, when they get to know each other, if they are
+disagreeable they might get to almost hate each other."</p>
+<p>"Yes, there is something in that," John agreed. "Of course, in
+our case it is all right, because we do like each other--we
+couldn't have liked each other more, I think, if we had been
+brother and sister--but it seems to me that, sometimes, it must be
+horrid when a boy is told by his parents that he is to be betrothed
+to a girl he has never seen. You see it isn't as if it were for a
+short time, but for all one's life. It must be awful!"</p>
+<p>"Awful!" Mary agreed, heartily; "but of course, it would have to
+be done."</p>
+<p>"Of course," John said--the possibility of a lad refusing to
+obey his parents' commands not even occurring to him. "Still it
+doesn't seem to me quite right that one should have no choice, in
+so important a matter. Of course, when one's got a father and
+mother like mine--who would be sure to think only of making me
+happy, and not of the amount of dowry, or anything of that sort--it
+would be all right; but with some parents, it would be
+dreadful."</p>
+<p>For some time, not a word was spoken; both of them meditating
+over the unpleasantness of being forced to marry someone they
+disliked. Then, finding the subject too difficult for them, they
+began to talk about other things; stopping, sometimes, to see the
+fishermen haul up their nets, for there were a number of boats out
+on the lake. They rowed down as far as Tiberias and, there, John
+ceased rowing; and they sat chatting over the wealth and beauty of
+that city, which John had often visited with his father, but which
+Mary had never entered.</p>
+<p>Then John turned the head of the boat up the lake and again
+began to row but, scarcely had he dipped his oar into the water,
+when he exclaimed:</p>
+<p>"Look at that black cloud rising, at the other end of the lake!
+Why did you not tell me, Mary?"</p>
+<p>"How stupid of me," she exclaimed, "not to have kept my eyes
+open!"</p>
+<p>He bent to his oars, and made the boat move through the water at
+a very different rate to that at which she had before traveled.</p>
+<p>"Most of the boats have gone," Mary said, presently, "and the
+rest are all rowing to the shore; and the clouds are coming up very
+fast," she added, looking round.</p>
+<p>"We are going to have a storm," John said. "It will be upon us
+long before we get back. I shall make for the shore, Mary. We must
+leave the boat there, and take shelter for a while, and then walk
+home. It will not be more than four miles to walk."</p>
+<p>But though he spoke cheerfully, John knew enough of the sudden
+storms that burst upon the Sea of Galilee to be aware that, long
+before he could cross the mile and a half of water, which separated
+them from the eastern shore, the storm would be upon them; and
+indeed, they were not more than half way when it burst.</p>
+<p>The sky was already covered with black clouds. A great darkness
+gathered round them; then came a heavy downpour of rain; and then,
+with a sudden burst, the wind smote them. It was useless, now, to
+try to row, for the oars would have been twisted from his hands in
+a moment; and John took the helm, and told Mary to lie down in the
+bottom of the boat. He had already turned the boat's head up the
+lake, the direction in which the storm was traveling.</p>
+<p>The boat sprang forward, as if it had received a blow, when the
+gale struck it. John had, more than once, been out on the lake with
+the fishermen, when sudden storms had come up; and knew what was
+best to be done. When he had laid in his oars, he had put them so
+that the blades stood partly up above the bow, and caught the wind
+somewhat; and he, himself, crouched down in the bottom, with his
+head below the gunwale and his hand on the tiller; so that the
+tendency of the boat was to drive straight before the wind. With a
+strong crew, he knew that he could have rowed obliquely towards the
+shore but, alone, his strength could have done nothing to keep the
+heavy boat off her course.</p>
+<p>The sea rose, as if by magic, and the spray was soon dashing
+over them; each wave, as it followed the boat, rising higher and
+higher. The shores were no longer visible; and the crests of the
+waves seemed to gleam, with a pallid light, in the darkness which
+surrounded them. John sat quietly in the bottom of the boat, with
+one hand on the tiller and the other arm round Mary, who was
+crouched up against him. She had made no cry, or exclamation, from
+the moment the gale struck them.</p>
+<a id="PicA" name="PicA"></a>
+<center><img src="images/a.jpg" alt=
+"Illustration: On the Sea of Galilee." /></center>
+<p>"Are we getting near shore?" she asked, at last.</p>
+<p>"No, Mary; we are running straight before the wind, which is
+blowing right up the lake. There is nothing to be done but to keep
+straight before it."</p>
+<p>Mary had seen many storms on the lake, and knew into what a fury
+its waters were lashed, in a tempest such as was now upon them.</p>
+<p>"We are in God's hands, John," she said, with the quiet
+resignation of her race. "He can save us, if He will. Let us pray
+to him."</p>
+<p>John nodded and, for a few minutes, no word was spoken.</p>
+<p>"Can I do anything?" Mary asked, presently, as a wave struck the
+stern, and threw a mass of water into the boat.</p>
+<p>"Yes," John replied; "take that earthen pot, and bale out the
+water."</p>
+<p>John had no great hope that they would live through the gale,
+but he thought it better for the girl to be kept busily employed.
+She bailed steadily but, fast as she worked, the water came in
+faster; for each wave, as it swept past them, broke on board. So
+rapidly were they traveling that John had the greatest difficulty
+in keeping the boat from broaching to--in which case the following
+wave would have filled, or overturned, her.</p>
+<p>"I don't think it's any use, John," Mary said, quietly, as a
+great wave broke on board; pouring in as much water, in a second,
+as she could have baled out in ten minutes.</p>
+<p>"No use, dear. Sit quietly by me but, first, pull those oars
+aft. Now, tie them together with that piece of rope. Now, when the
+boat goes down, keep tight hold of them.</p>
+<p>"Cut off another piece of rope, and give it me. When we are in
+the water, I will fasten you to the oars. They will keep you
+afloat, easily enough. I will keep close to you. You know I am a
+good swimmer and, whenever I feel tired, I can rest my hands on the
+oars, too.</p>
+<p>"Keep up your courage, and keep as quiet as you can. These
+sudden storms seldom last long; and my father will be sure to get
+the boats out, as soon as he can, to look for us."</p>
+<p>John spoke cheerfully, but he had no great hopes of their being
+able to live in so rough a sea. Mary had still less, but she
+quietly carried out John's instructions. The boat was half-full of
+water, now, and rose but heavily upon the waves.</p>
+<p>John raised himself and looked round; in hopes that the wind
+might, unnoticed, have shifted a little and blown them towards the
+shore. As he glanced around, him he gave a shout. Following almost
+in their track, and some fifty yards away, was a large galley;
+running before the wind, with a rag of sail set on its mast.</p>
+<p>"We are saved, Mary!" he exclaimed. "Here is a galley, close to
+us."</p>
+<p>He shouted loudly, though he knew that his voice could not be
+heard, many yards away, in the teeth of the gale but, almost
+directly, he saw two or three men stand up in the bow of the
+galley. One was pointing towards them, and he saw that they were
+seen.</p>
+<p>In another minute the galley came sweeping along, close to the
+boat. A dozen figures appeared over her side, and two or three
+ropes were thrown. John caught one, twisted it rapidly round Mary's
+body and his own, knotted it and, taking her in his arms, jumped
+overboard. Another minute they were drawn alongside the galley, and
+pulled on board. As soon as the ropes were unfastened, John rose to
+his feet; but Mary lay, insensible, on the deck.</p>
+<p>"Carry the damsel into the cabin," a man, who was evidently in
+authority said. "She has fainted, but will soon come round. I will
+see to her, myself."</p>
+<p>The suddenness of the rescue, the plunge in the water, and the
+sudden revulsion of his feelings affected John so much that it was
+two or three minutes before he could speak.</p>
+<p>"Come along with me, lad," one of the sailors said, laying his
+hand on his shoulder. "Some dry clothes, and a draught of wine will
+set you all right again; but you have had a narrow escape of it.
+That boat of yours was pretty nearly water logged and, in another
+five minutes, we should have been too late."</p>
+<p>John hastily changed his clothes in the forecastle, took a
+draught of wine, and then hurried back again towards the aft cabin.
+Just as he reached it, the man who had ordered Mary to be carried
+in came out.</p>
+<p>"The damsel has opened her eyes," he said, "and you need not be
+uneasy about her. I have given her some woolen cloths, and bade her
+take off her wet garments, and wrap herself in them.</p>
+<p>"Why did you not make for the shore, before the tempest broke?
+It was foolish of you, indeed, to be out on the lake, when anyone
+could see that this gale was coming."</p>
+<p>"I was rowing down, and did not notice it until I turned," John
+replied. "I was making for the shore, when the gale struck
+her."</p>
+<p>"It was well, for you, that I noticed you. I was, myself,
+thinking of making for the shore although, in so large and
+well-manned craft as this, there is little fear upon the lake. It
+is not like the Great Sea; where I, myself, have seen a large ship
+as helpless, before the waves, as that small boat we picked you
+from.</p>
+<p>"I had just set out from Tiberias, when I marked the storm
+coming up; but my business was urgent and, moreover, I marked your
+little boat, and saw that you were not likely to gain the shore; so
+I bade the helmsman keep his eye on you, until the darkness fell
+upon us; and then to follow straight in your wake, for you could
+but run before the wind--and well he did it for, when we first
+caught sight of you, you were right ahead of us."</p>
+<p>The speaker was a man of about thirty years of age; tall, and
+with a certain air of command.</p>
+<p>"I thank you, indeed, sir," John said, "for saving my life; and
+that of my cousin Mary, the daughter of my father's brother. Truly,
+my father and mother will be grateful to you, for having saved us;
+for I am their only son.</p>
+<p>"Whom are they to thank for our rescue?"</p>
+<p>"I am Joseph, the son of Matthias, to whom the Jews have
+intrusted the governorship of this province."</p>
+<p>"Josephus!" John exclaimed, in a tone of surprise and
+reverence.</p>
+<p>"So men call me," Josephus replied, with a smile.</p>
+<p>It was, indeed, the governor. Flavius Josephus, as the Romans
+afterwards called him, came of a noble Jewish family--his father,
+Matthias, belonging to the highest of the twenty-four classes into
+which the sacerdotal families were divided. Matthias was eminent
+for his attainments, and piety; and had been one of the leading men
+in Jerusalem. From his youth, Josephus had carefully prepared
+himself for public life, mastering the doctrines of the three
+leading sects among the Jews--the Pharisees, Sadducees, and
+Essenes--and having spent three years in the desert, with Banus the
+Ascetic. The fact that, at only twenty-six years of age, he had
+gone as the leader of a deputation to Rome, on behalf of some
+priests sent there by Felix, shows that he was early looked upon as
+a conspicuous person among the Jews; and he was but thirty when he
+was intrusted with the important position of Governor of
+Galilee.</p>
+<p>Contrary to the custom of the times, he had sought to make no
+gain from his position. He accepted neither presents, nor bribes;
+but devoted himself entirely to ameliorating the condition of the
+people, and in repressing the turbulence of the lower classes of
+the great towns; and of the robber chieftains who, like John of
+Gischala, took advantage of the relaxation of authority, caused by
+the successful rising against the Romans, to plunder and tyrannize
+over the people.</p>
+<p>The expression of the face of Josephus was lofty and, at the
+same time, gentle. His temper was singularly equable and, whatever
+the circumstances, he never gave way to anger, but kept his
+passions well under control. His address was soft and winning, and
+he had the art of attracting respect and friendship from all who
+came in contact with him. Poppaea, the wife of Nero, had received
+him with much favor and, bravely as he fought against them,
+Vespasian and Titus were, afterwards, as much attached to him as
+were the Jews of Galilee. There can be no doubt that, had he been
+otherwise placed than as one of a people on the verge of
+destruction, Josephus would have been one of the great figures of
+history.</p>
+<p>John had been accustomed to hear his father and his friends
+speak in tones of such admiration for Josephus, as the man who was
+regarded not only as the benefactor of the Jews of Galilee, but as
+the leader and mainstay of the nation, that he had long ardently
+desired to see him; and to find that he had now been rescued from
+death by him, and that he was now talking to him face to face,
+filled him with confusion.</p>
+<p>"You are a brave lad," Josephus said, "for you kept your head
+well, in a time when older men might have lost their presence of
+mind. You must have kept your boat dead before the wind; and you
+were quick and ready, in seizing the rope and knotting it round
+yourself, and the maid with you. I feared you might try and fasten
+it to the boat. If you had, full of water as she was, and fast as
+we were sailing before the wind, the rope would barely have stood
+the strain."</p>
+<p>"The clouds are breaking," the captain of the boat said, coming
+up to Josephus, "and I think that we are past the worst of the
+gale. And well it is so for, even in so staunch a craft, there is
+much peril in such a sea as this."</p>
+<p>The vessel, although one of the largest on the lake, was indeed
+pitching and rolling very heavily; but she was light and buoyant
+and, each time that she plunged bows under, as the following waves
+lifted her stern high in the air, she rose lightly again; and
+scarce a drop fell into her deep waist, the lofty erections, fore
+and aft, throwing off the water.</p>
+<p>"Where do you belong, my lad?" Josephus asked. "I fear that it
+is impossible for us to put you ashore, until we reach Capernaum;
+but once there, I will see that you are provided with means to take
+you home."</p>
+<p>"Our farm lies three miles above Hippos."</p>
+<p>"That is unfortunate," Josephus said, "since it lies on the
+opposite side of the lake to Capernaum. However, we shall see. If
+the storm goes down rapidly, I may be able to get a fishing boat to
+take you across, this evening; for your parents will be in sore
+trouble. If not, you must wait till early morning."</p>
+<p>In another hour they reached Capernaum. The wind had, by this
+time, greatly abated; although the sea still ran high. The ship was
+soon alongside a landing jetty, which ran out a considerable
+distance, and formed a breakwater protecting the shipping from the
+heavy sea which broke there when the wind was, as at present, from
+the south.</p>
+<p>Mary came out from the cabin, as the vessel entered the harbor,
+wrapped up from head to foot in the woolen cloths with which she
+had been furnished. John sprang to her side.</p>
+<p>"Are you quite well, Mary?"</p>
+<p>"Quite well," she said, "only very ashamed of having fainted,
+and very uncomfortable in these wrappings. But, oh! John, how
+thankful we ought to be, to God, for having sent this ship to our
+aid, just when all seemed lost!"</p>
+<p>"We ought, indeed, Mary. I have been thanking him, as I have
+been standing here watching the waves; and I am sure you have been
+doing the same, in the cabin."</p>
+<p>"Yes, indeed, John. But what am I to do, now? I do not like
+going on shore like this, and the officer told me I was, on no
+account, to put on my wet clothes."</p>
+<p>"Do you know, it is Josephus himself, Mary--think of that--the
+great Josephus, who has saved us! He marked our boat before the
+storm broke and, seeing that we could not reach the shore, had his
+vessel steered so as to overtake us."</p>
+<p>Mary was too surprised to utter more than an exclamation. The
+thought that the man, who had been talking so kindly and pleasantly
+to her, was the great leader of whom she had heard so much, quite
+took away her breath.</p>
+<p>At that moment Josephus, himself, came up.</p>
+<p>"I am glad to see you have got your color again, maiden," he
+said. "I am just going to land. Do you, with your cousin, remain on
+board here. I will send a woman down, with some attire for you. She
+will conduct you both to the house where I shall be staying.</p>
+<p>"The sea is going down, and the captain tells me that he thinks,
+in another three or four hours, I shall be able to get a boat to
+send you across to your home. It will be late, but you will not
+mind that; for they are sure not to retire to rest, at home, but to
+be up all night, searching for you."</p>
+<p>A crowd had assembled on the jetty, for Josephus was expected,
+and the violent storm had excited the fears of all for his safety;
+and the leading inhabitants had all flocked down to welcome him,
+when his vessel was seen approaching.</p>
+<p>"Isn't he kind and good?" Mary said, enthusiastically, as she
+watched the greeting which he received, as he landed. "He talked to
+me, just as if he had been of my own family."</p>
+<p>"He is grand!" John agreed, with equal enthusiasm. "He is just
+what I pictured to myself that a great leader would be; such as
+Joshua, or Gideon, or the Prince of the Maccabees."</p>
+<p>"Yes; but more gentle, John."</p>
+<p>"Brave men should always be gentle," John said, positively.</p>
+<p>"They ought to be, perhaps," Mary agreed, "but I don't think
+they are."</p>
+<p>They chatted, then, about the storm and the anxiety which they
+would be feeling, at home; until an officer, accompanied by a woman
+carrying attire for Mary, came on board. Mary soon came out of the
+cabin, dressed; and the officer conducted them to the house which
+had been placed at the disposal of Josephus. The woman led them up
+to a room, where a meal had been prepared for them.</p>
+<p>"Josephus is in council, with the elders," she said. "He bade me
+see that you had all that you required. He has arranged that a bark
+shall start with you, as soon as the sea goes down; but if, by
+eight o'clock, it is still too rough, I shall take the maiden home
+to my house, to sleep; and they will arouse you, as soon as it is
+safe to put out, whatever the hour may be, as your friends will be
+in great anxiety concerning you."</p>
+<p>The sun had already set and, just as they finished their meal,
+the man belonging to the boat came to say that it would be midnight
+before he could put out.</p>
+<p>Mary then went over with the woman; and John lay down on some
+mats, to sleep, until it was time to start. He slept soundly, until
+he was aroused by the entry of someone, with lights. He started to
+his feet, and found that it was Josephus, himself, with an
+attendant.</p>
+<p>"I had not forgotten you," he said, "but I have been, until now,
+in council. It is close upon midnight, and the boat is in
+readiness. I have sent to fetch the damsel, and have bidden them
+take plenty of warm wraps, so that the night air may do her no
+harm."</p>
+<p>Mary soon arrived; and Josephus, himself, went down with them to
+the shore, and saw them on board the boat--which was a large one,
+with eight rowers. The wind had died away to a gentle breeze, and
+the sea had gone down greatly. The moon was up, and the stars
+shining brightly. Josephus chatted kindly to John, as they made
+their way down to the shore.</p>
+<p>"Tell your father," he said, "that I hope he will come over to
+see me, ere long; and that I shall bear you in mind. The time is
+coming when every Jew who can bear arms will be needed in the
+service of his country and, if your father consents, I will place
+you near my person; for I have seen that you are brave and cool, in
+danger, and you will have plenty of opportunities of winning
+advancement."</p>
+<p>With many thanks for his kindness, John and Mary took their
+places in the stern of the boat. Mary enveloped herself in the
+wraps that had been prepared for her, for the nights were chilly.
+Then the sail was hoisted, and the boat sailed away from the land.
+The wind had shifted round, somewhat, to the west, and they were
+able to lay their course across towards Hippos; but their progress
+was slow, and the master bade the crew get out their oars, and aid
+the sail.</p>
+<p>In three hours they neared the land, John pointing out the exact
+position of the village; which was plainly enough marked out, by a
+great fire blazing on the shore. As they approached it, they could
+see several figures and, presently, there came a shout, which John
+recognized as that of Isaac.</p>
+<p>"Any news?"</p>
+<p>"Here we are, Isaac, safe and well."</p>
+<p>There was a confused sound, of shouts and cries of pleasure. In
+a few minutes, the boat grated on the shallow shore. The moment she
+did so, John leaped out over the bow and waded ashore, and was at
+once clasped in his mother's arms; while one of the fishermen
+carried Mary to the land. She received, from Martha, a full share
+of her caresses; for she loved the girl almost as dearly as she did
+her son. Then Miriam and the maids embraced and kissed her, while
+Isaac folded John in his arms.</p>
+<p>"The God of Israel be thanked and praised, my children!" Martha
+exclaimed. "He has brought you back to us, as from the dead, for we
+never thought to see you again. Some of the fishermen returned, and
+told us that they saw your boat, far on the lake, before the storm
+burst; and none held out hope that you could have weathered such a
+storm."</p>
+<p>"Where is father?" John asked.</p>
+<p>"He is out on the lake, as are all the fishermen of the village,
+searching for you.</p>
+<p>"That reminds me, Isaac, set fire to the other piles of wood
+that we have prepared.</p>
+<p>"If one of the boats returned, with any sure news of you, we
+were to light them to call the others back--one fire if the news
+was bad, two if it was good--but we hardly even dared to hope that
+the second would be required."</p>
+<p>A brand from the fire was soon applied to the other piles, and
+the three fires shone out across the lake, with the good news. In a
+quarter of an hour a boat was seen approaching, and soon came a
+shout:</p>
+<p>"Is all well?"</p>
+<p>"All is well," John shouted, in reply, and soon he was clasped
+in his father's arms.</p>
+<p>The other boats came in, one by one; the last to arrive towing
+in the boat--which had been found, bottom upwards, far up the lake,
+its discovery destroying the last hope of its late occupants being
+found alive.</p>
+<p>As soon as Simon landed, the party returned to the house. Miriam
+and the maids hurried to prepare a meal--of which all were sorely
+in need, for no food had been eaten since the gale burst on the
+lake; while their three hours in the boat had again sharpened the
+appetite of John and Mary. A quantity of food was cooked, and a
+skin of old wine brought up from the cellar; and Isaac remained
+down on the shore, to bid all who had been engaged in the search
+come up and feast, as soon as they landed.</p>
+<p>John related to his parents the adventure which had befallen
+them, and they wondered greatly at the narrowness of their
+deliverance. When the feasting was over, Simon called all together,
+and solemnly returned thanks to God for the mercies which He had
+given them. It was broad daylight before all sought their beds, for
+a few hours, before beginning the work of the day.</p>
+<p>A week later Josephus himself came to Hippos, bringing with him
+two nobles, who had fled from King Agrippa and sought refuge with
+him. He had received them hospitably, and had allotted a home to
+them at Tarichea, where he principally dwelt.</p>
+<p>He had, just before, had another narrow escape, for six hundred
+armed men--robbers and others--had assembled round his house,
+charging him with keeping some spoils which had been taken, by a
+party of men of that town, from the wife of Ptolemy--King Agrippa's
+procurator--instead of dividing them among the people. For a time,
+he pacified them by telling them that this money was destined for
+strengthening the walls of their town, and for walling other towns
+at present undefended; but the leaders of the evildoers were
+determined to set his house on fire, and slay him.</p>
+<p>He had but twenty armed men with him. Closing the doors, he went
+to an upper room, and told the robbers to send in one of their
+number to receive the money. Directly he entered, the door was
+closed. One of his hands was cut off, and hung round his neck; and
+he was then turned out again. Believing that Josephus would not
+have ventured to act so boldly, had he not had a large body of
+armed men with him, the crowd were seized with panic and fled to
+their homes.</p>
+<p>After this, the enemies of Josephus persuaded the people that
+the nobles he had sheltered were wizards; and demanded that they
+should be given up to be slain, unless they would change their
+religion to that of the Jews. Josephus tried to argue them out of
+their belief, saying that there were no such things as wizards and,
+if the Romans had wizards who could work them wrong, they would not
+need to send an army to fight against them; but as the people still
+clamored, he got the men privately on board a ship, and sailed
+across the lake with them to Hippos; where he dismissed them, with
+many presents.</p>
+<p>As soon as the news came that Josephus had come to Hippos, Simon
+set out with Martha, John, and Mary, to see him. Josephus received
+them kindly, and would permit no thanks for what he had done.</p>
+<p>"Your son is a brave youth," he said to Simon, "and I would
+gladly have him near me, if you would like to have it so. This is a
+time when there are greater things than planting vineyards, and
+gathering in harvests, to be done; and there is a need for brave
+and faithful men. If, then, you and your wife will give the lad to
+me, I will see to him, and keep him near me. I have need of
+faithful men with me, for my enemies are ever trying to slay me. If
+all goes well with the lad, he will have a good opportunity of
+rising to honor.</p>
+<p>"What say you? Do not give an answer hastily, but think it over
+among yourselves and, if you agree to my proposal, send him across
+the lake to me."</p>
+<p>"It needs no thought, sir," Simon said. "I know well that there
+are more urgent things, now, than sowing and reaping; and that much
+trouble and peril threaten the land. Right glad am I that my son
+should serve one who is the hope of Israel, and his mother will not
+grudge him for such service. As to advancement, I wish nothing
+better than that he should till the land of his fathers; but none
+can say what the Lord has in store for us, or whether strangers may
+not reap what I have sown. Thus, then, the wisdom which he will
+gain, in being with you, is likely to be a far better inheritance
+than any I can give him.</p>
+<p>"What say you, Martha?"</p>
+<p>"I say as you do, Simon. It will grieve me to part with him, but
+I know that such an offer as that which my lord Josephus makes is
+greatly for his good. Moreover, the manner in which he was saved
+from death seems to show that the Lord has something for his hand
+to do, and that his path is specially marked out for him. To refuse
+to let him go would be to commit the sin of withstanding God--</p>
+<p>"Therefore, my lord, I willingly give up my son to follow
+you."</p>
+<p>"I think that you have decided wisely," Josephus said. "I tarry
+here, for tonight, and tomorrow cross to Tiberias; therefore, let
+him be here by noon."</p>
+<p>Mary was the most silent of the party, on the way home. Simon
+and his wife felt convinced the decision they had made was a wise
+one and, although they were not ambitious, they yet felt that the
+offer of Josephus was a most advantageous one, and opened a career
+of honor to their son.</p>
+<p>John, himself, was in a state of the highest delight. To be
+about the person of Josephus seemed, to him, the greatest honor and
+happiness. It opened the way to the performance of great actions,
+which would bring honor to his father's name; and although he had
+been, hitherto, prepared to settle down to the life of a cultivator
+of the soil, he had had his yearnings for one of more excitement
+and adventure; and these were now likely to be gratified, to the
+fullest.</p>
+<p>Mary, however, felt the approaching loss of her friend and
+playmate greatly, though even she was not insensible to the honor
+which the offer of Josephus conferred upon him.</p>
+<p>"You don't seem glad of my good fortune, Mary," John said as,
+after they returned home, they strolled together, as usual, down to
+the edge of the lake.</p>
+<p>"It may be your good fortune, but it's not mine," the girl said,
+pettishly. "It will be very dull here, without you. I know what it
+will be. Your mother will always be full of anxiety, and will be
+fretting whenever we get news of any disturbances; and that is
+often enough, for there seem to be disturbances, continually. Your
+father will go about silently, Miriam will be sharper than usual
+with the maids, and everything will go wrong. I can't see why you
+couldn't have said that, in a year or two, you would go with the
+governor; but that, at present, you thought you had better stop
+with your own people."</p>
+<p>"A nice milksop he would have thought me!" John laughed. "No, if
+he thought I was man enough to do him service, it would have been a
+nice thing for me to say that I thought I was too young.</p>
+<p>"Besides, Mary, after all it is your good fortune, as well as
+mine; for is it not settled that you are to share it? Josephus is
+all powerful and, if I please him and do my duty, he can, in time,
+raise me to a position of great honor. I may even come to be the
+governor of a town, or a captain over troops, or a councilor."</p>
+<p>"No, no!" Mary laughed, "not a councilor, John. A governor,
+perhaps; and a captain, perhaps; but never, I should say, a
+councilor."</p>
+<p>John laughed good temperedly.</p>
+<p>"Well, Mary, then you shall look forward to be the wife of a
+governor, or captain; but you see, I might even fill the place of a
+councilor with credit, because I could always come to you for
+advice before, I give an opinion--then I should be sure to be
+right.</p>
+<p>"But, seriously, Mary, I do think it great honor to have had
+such an offer made me, by the governor."</p>
+<p>"Seriously, so do I, John; though I wish, in my heart, he had
+not made it. I had looked forward to living here, all my life, just
+as your mother has done; and now there will be nothing fixed to
+look forward to.</p>
+<p>"Besides, where there is honor, there is danger. There seem to
+be always tumults, always conspiracies--and then, as your father
+says, above all there are the Romans to be reckoned with and, of
+course, if you are near Josephus you run a risk, going wherever he
+does."</p>
+<p>"I shall never be in greater risk, Mary, than we were, together,
+on the lake the other day. God helped us, then, and brought us
+through it; and I have faith that He will do so, again. It may be
+that I am meant to do something useful, before I die. At any rate,
+when the Romans come, everyone will have to fight; so I shall be in
+no greater danger than any one else."</p>
+<p>"I know, John, and I am not speaking quite in earnest. I am
+sorry you are going--that is only natural--but I am proud that you
+are to be near our great leader, and I believe that our God will be
+your shield and protector.</p>
+<p>"And now, we had better go in. Your father will, doubtless, have
+much to say to you, this evening; and your mother will grudge every
+minute you are out of her sight."</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch3" id="Ch3">Chapter 3</a>: The Revolt Against
+Rome.</h2>
+<p>That evening the Rabbi Solomon Ben Manasseh came in, and was
+informed of the offer which Josephus had made.</p>
+<p>"You were present, rabbi," Simon said, "at the events which took
+place in Jerusalem, and at the defeat of Cestius. John has been
+asking me to tell him more about these matters for, now that he is
+to be with the governor, it is well that he should be well
+acquainted with public affairs."</p>
+<p>"I will willingly tell him the history for, as you say, it is
+right that the young man should be well acquainted with the public
+events and the state of parties and, though the story must be
+somewhat long, I will try and not make it tedious.</p>
+<p>"The first tumult broke out in Caesarea, and began by frays
+between our people and the Syrian Greeks. Felix the governor took
+the part of the Greeks; and many of our people were killed, and
+more plundered. When Felix was recalled to Rome, we sent a
+deputation there with charges against him; but the Greeks, by means
+of bribery, obtained a decree against us, depriving the Jews of
+Caesarea of rights of equal citizenship. From this constant
+troubles arose but, outside Caesarea, Festus kept all quiet;
+putting down robbers, as well as impostors who led the people
+astray.</p>
+<p>"Then there came trouble in Jerusalem. King Agrippa's palace
+stood on Mount Zion, looking towards the Temple; and he built a
+lofty story, from whose platform he could command a view of the
+courts of the Temple, and watch the sacrifices. Our people resented
+this impious intrusion, and built a high wall to cut off the view.
+Agrippa demanded its destruction, on the ground that it intercepted
+the view of the Roman guard. We appealed to Nero, and sent to him a
+deputation; headed by Ismael, the high priest, and Hilkiah, the
+treasurer. They obtained an order for the wall to be allowed to
+stand, but Ismael and Hilkiah were detained at Rome. Agrippa
+thereupon appointed another high priest--Joseph--but, soon
+afterwards, nominated Annas in his place.</p>
+<p>"When Festus--the Roman governor--was away, Annas put to death
+many of the sect called Christians, to gratify the Sadducees. The
+people were indignant, for these men had done no harm; and Agrippa
+deprived him of the priesthood and appointed Jesus, son of Damnai.
+Then, unhappily, Festus--who was a just and good governor--died,
+and Albinus succeeded him. He was a man greedy of money, and ready
+to do anything for gain. He took bribes from robbers, and
+encouraged, rather than repressed, evil doers. There was open war,
+in the streets, between the followers of various chief robbers.
+Albinus opened the prisons, and filled the city with malefactors;
+and, at the completion of the works at the Temple, eighteen
+thousand workmen were discharged, and thus the city was filled with
+men ready to sell their services to the highest bidders.</p>
+<p>"Albinus was succeeded by Gessius Florus, who was even worse
+than Albinus. This man was a great friend of Cestius Gallus, who
+commanded the Roman troops in Syria; and who, therefore, scoffed at
+the complaints of the people against Florus.</p>
+<p>"At this time, strange prodigies appeared in Rome. A sword of
+fire hung above the city, for a whole year. The inner gate of the
+Temple--which required twenty men to move it--opened by itself;
+chariots and armed squadrons were seen in the heavens and, worse
+than all, the priests in the Temple heard a great movement, and a
+sound of many voices, which said:</p>
+<p>"'Let us depart hence!'</p>
+<p>"So things went on, in Jerusalem, until the old feud at Caesarea
+broke out afresh. The trouble, this time, began about one of our
+synagogues. The land around it belonged to a Greek and, for this,
+our people offered a high price. The heathen who owned it refused
+and, to annoy us, raised mean houses round the synagogue. The
+Jewish youths interrupted the workmen; and the wealthier of the
+community--headed by John, a publican--subscribed eight talents,
+and sent them to Florus as a bribe, that he might order the
+building to be stopped.</p>
+<p>"Florus took the money, and made many promises; but the evil man
+desired that a revolt should take place, in order that he might
+gain great plunder. So he went away from Caesarea, and did nothing;
+and a great tumult arose between the heathen and our people. In
+this we were worsted, and went away from the city; while John, with
+twelve of the highest rank, went to Samaria to lay the matter
+before Florus; who threw them into prison--doubtless the more to
+excite the people--and at the same time sent to Jerusalem, and
+demanded seventeen talents from the treasury of the Temple.</p>
+<p>"The people burst into loud outcries, and Florus advanced upon
+the city with all his force. But we knew that we could not oppose
+the Romans; and so received Florus, on his arrival, with
+acclamations. But this did not suit the tyrant. The next morning he
+ordered his troops to plunder the upper market, and to put to death
+all they met. The soldiers obeyed, and slew three thousand six
+hundred men, women, and children.</p>
+<p>"You may imagine, John, the feelings of grief and rage which
+filled every heart. The next day the multitude assembled in the
+marketplace, wailing for the dead and cursing Florus. But the
+principal men of the city, with the priests, tore their robes and
+went among them, praying them to disperse and not to provoke the
+anger of the governor. The people obeyed their voices, and went
+quietly home.</p>
+<p>"But Florus was not content that matters should end so. He sent
+for the priests and leaders, and commanded them to go forth and
+receive, with acclamations of welcome, two cohorts of troops who
+were advancing from Caesarea. The priests called the people
+together in the Temple and, with difficulty, persuaded them to obey
+the order. The troops, having orders from Florus, fell upon the
+people and trampled them down and, driving the multitude before
+them, entered the city; and at the same time Florus sallied out
+from his palace, with his troops, and both parties pressed forward
+to gain the Castle of Antonia, whose possession would lay the
+Temple open to them, and enable Florus to gain the sacred treasures
+deposited there.</p>
+<p>"But, as soon as the people perceived their object, they ran
+together in such vast crowds that the Roman soldiers could not cut
+their way through the mass which blocked up the streets; while the
+more active men, going up on to the roofs, hurled down stones and
+missiles upon the troops.</p>
+<p>"What a scene was that, John! I was on the portico near Antonia,
+and saw it all. It was terrible to hear the shouts of the soldiers,
+as they strove to hew their way through the defenseless people; the
+war cries of our own youths, the shrieks and wailings of the women.
+While the Romans were still striving, our people broke down the
+galleries connecting Antonia with the Temple; and Florus, seeing
+that he could not carry out his object, ordered his troops to
+retire to their quarters and, calling the chief priests and the
+rulers, proposed to leave the city, leaving behind him one cohort
+to preserve the peace.</p>
+<p>"As soon as he had done so, he sent to Cestius Gallus lying
+accounts of the tumults, laying all the blame upon us; while we and
+Bernice, the sister of King Agrippa--who had tried, in vain, to
+obtain mercy for the people from Florus--sent complaints against
+him. Cestius was moving to Jerusalem--to inquire into the matter,
+as he said, but really to restore Florus--when, fortunately, King
+Agrippa arrived from Egypt.</p>
+<p>"While he was yet seven miles from the city, a procession of the
+people met him, headed by the women whose husbands had been slain.
+These, with cries and wailings, called on Agrippa for protection;
+and related to a centurion, whom Cestius had sent forward, and who
+met Agrippa on the way, the cruelty of Florus. When the king and
+the centurion arrived in the city, they were taken to the
+marketplace and shown the houses where the inhabitants had been
+massacred.</p>
+<p>"Agrippa called the people together and, taking his seat on a
+lofty dais, with Bernice by his side, harangued them. He assured
+them that, when the emperor heard what had been done, he would send
+a better governor to them, in the place of Florus. He told them
+that it was vain to hope for independence, for that the Romans had
+conquered all the nations in the world; and that the Jews could not
+contend against them, and that war would bring about the
+destruction of the city, and the Temple. The people exclaimed they
+had taken up arms, not against the Romans, but against Florus.</p>
+<p>"Agrippa urged us to pay our tribute, and repair the galleries.
+This was willingly done. We sent out leading men to collect the
+arrears of tribute, and these soon brought in forty talents. All
+was going on well, until Agrippa tried to persuade us to receive
+Florus, till the emperor should send another governor. At the
+thought of the return of Florus, a mad rage seized the people. They
+poured abuse upon Agrippa, threw stones at him, and ordered him to
+leave the city. This he did, and retired to his own kingdom.</p>
+<p>"The upper class, and all those who possessed wisdom enough to
+know how great was the power of Rome, still strove for peace. But
+the people were beyond control. They seized the fortress of
+Masada--a very strong place near the Dead Sea--and put the Roman
+garrison to the sword. But what was even worse, Eleazar--son of
+Ananias, the chief priest--persuaded the priests to reject the
+offerings regularly made, in the name of the emperor, to the God of
+the Hebrews; and to make a regulation that, from that time, no
+foreigner should be allowed to sacrifice in the Temple.</p>
+<p>"The chief priests, with the heads of the Pharisees, addressed
+the people in the quadrangle of the Temple, before the eastern
+gate. I, myself, was one of those who spoke. We told them that the
+Temple had long benefited by the splendid gifts of strangers; and
+that it was not only inhospitable, but impious, to preclude them
+from offering victims, and worshiping God, there. We, who were
+learned in the law, showed them that it was an ancient and
+immemorial usage to receive the offerings of strangers; and that
+this refusal to accept the Roman gifts was nothing short of a
+declaration of war.</p>
+<p>"But all we could do, or say, availed nothing. The influence of
+Eleazar was too great. A madness had seized the people, and they
+rejected all our words; but the party of peace made one more
+effort. They sent a deputation--headed by Simon, son of Ananias--to
+Florus, and another to Agrippa, praying them to march upon
+Jerusalem, and reassert their authority, before it was too late.
+Florus made no reply, for things were going just as he wished; but
+Agrippa, anxious to preserve the city, sent three thousand
+horsemen, commanded by Darius and Philip. When these troops
+arrived, the party of peace took possession of the upper city;
+while Eleazar and the war party held the Temple.</p>
+<p>"For a week, fighting went on between the two parties. Then, at
+the festival of the Wood Carrying, great numbers of the poorer
+people were allowed by the party of the chief priest to pass
+through their lines; and go, as usual, to the Temple. When there,
+these joined the party of Eleazar, and a great attack was made on
+the upper city. The troops of Darius and Philip gave way. The house
+of Ananias--the high priest--and the palaces of Agrippa and Bernice
+were burned, and also the public archives. Here all the bonds of
+the debtors were registered and, thus, at one blow the power of the
+rich over the poor was destroyed. Ananias himself, and a few
+others, escaped into the upper towers of the palace, which they
+held.</p>
+<p>"The next day, Eleazar's party attacked the fortress of Antonia,
+which was feebly garrisoned and, after two days' fighting, captured
+it, and slew the garrison. Manahem, the son of Judas the Zealot,
+arrived two days later, while the people were besieging the palace.
+He was accepted as general, by them; and took charge of the siege.
+Having mined under one of the towers, they brought it to the
+ground, and the garrison asked for terms. Free passage was granted
+to the troops of Agrippa, and the Jews; but none was granted to the
+Roman soldiers, who were few in number and retreated to the three
+great towers, Hippicus, Phasaelus, and Mariamne.</p>
+<p>"The palace was entered, and Ananias and Hezekiah--his
+brother--were found in hiding, and put to death. Manahem now
+assumed the state of a king; but Eleazar, unwilling that, after
+having led the enterprise, the fruits should be gathered by
+another, stirred up the people against him, and he was slain. The
+three towers were now besieged; and Metilius--the Roman
+commander--finding he could no longer hold out, agreed to
+surrender, on the condition that his men should deliver up their
+arms, and be allowed to march away, unharmed.</p>
+<p>"The terms were accepted and ratified but, as soon as the Roman
+soldiers marched out, and laid down their arms, Eleazar and his
+followers fell upon them and slew them; Metilius himself being,
+alone, spared. After this terrible massacre, a sadness fell on the
+city. All felt that there was no longer any hope of making
+conditions with Rome. We had placed ourselves beyond the pale of
+forgiveness. It was war, to the death, with Rome.</p>
+<p>"Up to this time, as I have told you, I was one of those who had
+labored to maintain peace. I had fought in the palace, by the side
+of Ananias; and had left it only when the troops, and we of their
+party, were permitted to march out when it surrendered. But, from
+this time, I took another part. All hope of peace, of concessions,
+or of conditions was at an end. There remained nothing now but to
+fight and, as the vengeance of Rome would fall on the whole Jewish
+people, it was for the whole Jewish people to unite in the struggle
+for existence.</p>
+<p>"On the very day and hour in which the Romans were put to death,
+retribution began to fall upon the nation; for the Greeks of
+Caesarea rose suddenly, and massacred the Jews. Twenty thousand
+were slain, in a single day. The news of these two massacres drove
+the whole people to madness. They rose throughout the land, laid
+waste the country all round the cities of Syria--Philadelphia,
+Sebonitis, Gerasa, Pella, and Scythopolis--and burned and destroyed
+many places.</p>
+<p>"The Syrians, in turn, fell upon the Jewish inhabitants of all
+their towns; and a frightful carnage, everywhere, took place. Then,
+our people made an inroad into the domains of Scythopolis but,
+though the Jewish inhabitants there joined the Syrians in defending
+their territory, the Syrians doubted their fidelity and, falling
+upon them in the night, slew them all, and seized their property.
+Thirteen thousand perished here. In many other cities, the same
+things were done; in Ascalon, two thousand five hundred were put to
+the sword; in Ptolemais, two thousand were killed. The land was
+deluged with blood, and despair fell upon all.</p>
+<p>"Even in Alexandria, our countrymen suffered. Breaking out into
+a quarrel with the Greeks, a tumult arose; and Tiberias Alexander,
+the governor--by faith a Jew--tried to pacify matters; but the
+madness which had seized the people, here, had fallen also upon the
+Jews of Alexandria. They heaped abuse upon Alexander, who was
+forced to send the troops against them. The Jews fought, but
+vainly; and fifty thousand men, women, and children fell.</p>
+<p>"While blood was flowing over the land, Cestius Gallus--the
+prefect--was preparing for invasion. He had with him the Twelfth
+Legion, forty-two hundred strong; two thousand picked men, taken
+from the other legions; six cohorts of foot, about twenty-five
+hundred; and four troops of horse, twelve hundred. Of allies he
+had, from Antiochus, two thousand horse and three thousand foot;
+from Agrippa, one thousand horse and three thousand foot; Sohemus
+joined him with four thousand men--a third of whom were horse, the
+rest archers. Thus he had ten thousand Roman troops, and thirteen
+thousand allies; besides many volunteers, who joined him from the
+Syrian cities.</p>
+<p>"After burning and pillaging Zebulon, and wasting the district,
+Cestius returned to Ptolemais, and then advanced to Caesarea. He
+sent forward a part of his army to Joppa. The city was open, and no
+resistance was offered; nevertheless, the Romans slew all, to the
+number of eight thousand five hundred. The cities of Galilee opened
+their gates, without resistance, and Cestius advanced against
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>"When he arrived within six miles of the town, the Jews poured
+out; and fell upon them with such fury that, if the horse and light
+troops had not made a circuit, and fallen upon us in the rear, I
+believe we should have destroyed the whole army. But we were forced
+to fall back, having killed over five hundred. As the Romans moved
+forward, Simon--son of Gioras--with a band, pressed them closely in
+rear; and slew many, and carried off numbers of their beasts of
+burden.</p>
+<p>"Agrippa now tried, once more, to make peace, and sent a
+deputation to persuade us to surrender--offering, in the name of
+Cestius, pardon for all that had passed--but Eleazar's party,
+fearing the people might listen to him, fell upon the deputation,
+slew some, and drove the others back.</p>
+<p>"Cestius advanced within a mile of Jerusalem and--after waiting
+three days, in hopes that the Jews would surrender, and knowing
+that many of the chief persons were friendly to him--he advanced to
+the attack, took the suburb of Bezetha, and encamped opposite the
+palace in the upper city. The people discovered that Ananias and
+his friends had agreed to open the gates; and so slew them, and
+threw the bodies over the wall. The Romans for five days attacked
+and, on the sixth, Cestius, with the flower of his army made an
+assault; but the people fought bravely and, disregarding the
+flights of arrows which the archers shot against them, held the
+walls, and poured missiles of all kinds upon the enemy; until at
+last, just as it seemed to all that the Romans would succeed in
+mining the walls, and firing the gates, Cestius called off his
+troops.</p>
+<p>"Had he not done so, he would speedily have taken the city; for
+the peace party were on the point of seizing one of the gates, and
+opening it. I no longer belonged to this party; for it seemed to me
+that it was altogether too late, now, to make terms; nor could we
+expect that the Romans would keep to their conditions, after we had
+set them the example of breaking faith.</p>
+<p>"Cestius fell back to his camp, a mile distant, but he had no
+rest there. Exultant at seeing a retreat from their walls, all the
+people poured out, and fell upon the Romans with fury.</p>
+<p>"The next morning Cestius began to retreat; but we swarmed
+around him, pressing upon his rear, and dashing down from the hills
+upon his flanks, giving him no rest. The heavy-armed Romans could
+do nothing against us; but marched steadily on--leaving numbers of
+dead behind them--till they reached their former camp at Gabao, six
+miles away. Here Cestius waited two days but, seeing how the hills
+around him swarmed with our people, who flocked in from all
+quarters, he gave the word for a further retreat; killing all the
+beasts of burden, and leaving all the baggage behind, and taking on
+only those animals which bore the arrows and engines of war. Then
+he marched down the valley, towards Bethoron.</p>
+<p>"The multitude felt now that their enemy was delivered into
+their hands. Was it not in Bethoron that Joshua had defeated the
+Canaanites, while the sun stayed his course? Was it not here that
+Judas, the Maccabean, had routed the host of Nicanor? As soon as
+the Romans entered the defile, the Jews rushed down upon them, sure
+of their prey.</p>
+<p>"The Roman horse were powerless to act. The men of the legions
+could not climb the rocky sides and, from every point, javelins,
+stones, and arrows were poured down upon them; and all would have
+been slain, had not night come on and hidden them from us, and
+enabled them to reach Bethoron.</p>
+<p>"What rejoicings were there not, on the hills that night, as we
+looked down on their camp there; and thought that, in the morning,
+they would be ours! Fires burned on every crest. Hymns of praise,
+and exulting cries, arose everywhere in the darkness; but the watch
+was not kept strictly enough. Cestius left four hundred of his
+bravest men to mount guard, and keep the fires alight--so that we
+might think that all his army was there--and then, with the rest,
+he stole away.</p>
+<p>"In the morning, we saw that the camp was well-nigh deserted
+and, furious at the escape of our foes, rushed down, slew the four
+hundred whom Cestius had left behind, and then set out in pursuit.
+But Cestius had many hours' start and, though we followed as far as
+Antipatris, we could not overtake him; and so returned, with much
+rich spoil, and all the Roman engines of war, to Jerusalem--having,
+with scarcely any loss, defeated a great Roman army, and slain five
+thousand three hundred foot, and three hundred and eighty
+horse.</p>
+<p>"Such is the history of events which have brought about the
+present state of things. As you see, there is no hope of pardon, or
+mercy, from Rome. We have offended beyond forgiveness. But the
+madness against which I fought so hard, at first, is still upon the
+people. They provoked the power of Rome; and then, by breaking the
+terms, and massacring the Roman garrison, they went far beyond the
+first offense of insurrection. By the destruction of the army of
+Cestius, they struck a heavy blow against the pride of the Romans.
+For generations, no such misfortune had fallen upon their arms.</p>
+<p>"What, then, would a sane people have done since? Surely they
+would have spent every moment in preparing themselves for the
+struggle. Every man should have been called to arms. The passes
+should have been all fortified, for it is among the hills that we
+can best cope with the heavy Roman troops. The cities best
+calculated for defense should have been strongly walled;
+preparations made for places of refuge, among the mountains, for
+the women and children; large depots of provisions gathered up, in
+readiness for the strife. That we could ever, in the long run, hope
+to resist, successfully, the might of Rome was out of the question;
+but we might so sternly, and valiantly, have resisted as to be able
+to obtain fair terms, on our submission.</p>
+<p>"Instead of this, men go on as if Rome had no existence; and we
+only show an energy in quarreling among ourselves. At bottom, it
+would seem that the people rely upon our God doing great things for
+us, as he did when he smote the Assyrian army of Sennacherib; and
+such is my hope, also, seeing that, so far, a wonderful success has
+attended us. And yet, how can one expect the Divine assistance, in
+a war so begun and so conducted--for a people who turn their swords
+against each other, who spend their strength in civil feuds, who
+neither humble themselves, nor repent of the wickedness of their
+ways?</p>
+<p>"Alas, my son, though I speak brave words to the people, my
+heart is very sad; and I fear that troubles, like those which fell
+upon us when we were carried captive into Babylon, await us
+now!"</p>
+<p>There was silence, as the rabbi finished. John had, of course,
+heard something of the events which had been taking place but, as
+he now heard them, in sequence, the gravity and danger of the
+situation came freshly upon him.</p>
+<p>"What can be done?" he asked, after a long pause.</p>
+<p>"Nothing, save to pray to the Lord," the rabbi said,
+sorrowfully. "Josephus is doing what he can, towards building walls
+to the towns; but it is not walls, but soldiers that are wanted
+and, so long as the people remain blind and indifferent to the
+danger, thinking of naught save tilling their ground, and laying up
+money, nothing can be done."</p>
+<p>"Then will destruction come upon all?" John asked, looking round
+in a bewildered and hopeless way.</p>
+<p>"We may hope not," the rabbi said. "Here in Galilee, we have had
+no share in the events in Jerusalem; and many towns, even now, are
+faithful to the Romans. Therefore it may be that, in this province,
+all will not be involved in the lot of Jerusalem. There can be,
+unless a mighty change takes place, no general resistance to the
+Romans; and it may be, therefore, that no general destruction will
+fall upon the people. As to this, none can say.</p>
+<p>"Vespasian--the Roman general who has been charged, by Nero,
+with the command of the army which is gathering against us--is said
+to be a merciful man, as well as a great commander. The Roman
+mercies are not tender, but it may be that the very worst may not
+fall upon this province. The men of spirit and courage will,
+doubtless, proceed to Jerusalem to share in the defense of the Holy
+City. If we cannot fight with success, here, it is far better that
+the men should fight at Jerusalem; leaving their wives and families
+here, and doing naught to call down the vengeance of the Romans
+upon this province.</p>
+<p>"In Galilee there have, as elsewhere, been risings against the
+Romans; but these will count for little, in their eyes, in
+comparison to the terrible deeds at Jerusalem; and I pray, for the
+sake of all my friends here, that the Romans may march through the
+land, on their way to Jerusalem, without burning and wasting the
+country. Here, on the eastern shore of Galilee, there is much more
+hope of escape than there is across the lake. Not only are we out
+of the line of the march of the army, but there are few important
+cities on this side; and the disposition of the people has not been
+so hostile to the Romans.</p>
+<p>"My own opinion is that, when the Romans advance, it will be the
+duty of every Jew who can bear arms to go down to the defense of
+the Holy City. Its position is one of vast strength. We shall have
+numbers, and courage, though neither order nor discipline; and it
+may be that, at the last, the Lord will defend his sanctuary, and
+save it from destruction at the hands of the heathen. Should it not
+be so, we can but die; and how could a Jew better die than in
+defense of God's Temple?"</p>
+<p>"It would have been better," Simon said, "had we not, by our
+evil doings, have brought God's Temple into danger."</p>
+<p>"He has suffered it," the rabbi said, "and his ways are not the
+ways of man. It may be that He has suffered such madness to fall
+upon, us in order that His name may, at last, be glorified."</p>
+<p>"May it be so!" Simon said piously; "and now, let us to bed, for
+the hour is growing late."</p>
+<p>The following morning Simon, his wife, and the whole household
+accompanied John to the shore; as Simon had arranged with one of
+the boatmen to take the lad to Hippos. The distance was but short;
+but Simon, when his wife had expressed surprise at his sending John
+in a boat, said:</p>
+<p>"It is not the distance, Martha. A half-hour's walk is naught to
+the lad; but I had reasons, altogether apart from the question of
+distance. John is going out to play a man's part. He is young but,
+since my lord Josephus has chosen to place him among those who form
+his bodyguard, he has a right to claim to be regarded as a man.
+That being so, I would not accompany him to Hippos; for it would
+seem like one leading a child, and it were best to let him go by
+himself.</p>
+<p>"Again, it were better to have but one parting. Here he will
+receive my blessing, and say goodbye to us all. Doubtless he will
+often be with us, for Tiberias lies within sight and, so long as
+Josephus remains in Galilee, he will never be more than a long
+day's journey from home. The lad loves us, and will come as often
+as he can but, surrounded as Josephus is by dangers, the boy will
+not be able to get away on his own business. He must take the
+duties, as well as the honor of the office; and we must not blind
+ourselves to the fact that, in one of these popular tumults, great
+danger and even death may come upon him.</p>
+<p>"This seems to you terrible," he went on, in answer to an
+exclamation of alarm from Martha; "but it does not seem so terrible
+to me. We go on planting, and gathering in, as if no danger
+threatened us, and the evil day were far off; but it is not so. The
+Roman hosts are gathering, and we are wasting our strength, in
+party strife, and are doing naught to prepare against the storm. We
+have gone to war, without counting the cost. We have affronted and
+put to shame Rome, before whom all nations bow and, assuredly, she
+will take a terrible vengeance. Another year, and who can say who
+will be alive, and who dead--who will be wandering over the wasted
+fields of our people, or who will be a slave, in Rome!</p>
+<p>"In the times that are at hand, no man's life will be worth
+anything; and therefore I say, wife, that though there be danger
+and peril around the lad, let us not trouble overmuch; for he is,
+like all of us, in God's hands."</p>
+<p>Therefore, the parting took place on the shore. Simon solemnly
+blessed John, and his mother cried over him. Mary was a little
+surprised at these demonstrations, at what she regarded as a very
+temporary separation; but her merry spirits were subdued at the
+sight of her aunt's tears, although she, herself, saw nothing to
+cry about.</p>
+<p>She brightened up, however, when John whispered, as he said
+goodbye to her:</p>
+<p>"I shall come across the lake, as often as I can, to see how you
+are getting on, Mary."</p>
+<p>Then he took his place in the stern of the boat. The fishermen
+dipped their oars in the water, and the boat drew away from the
+little group, who stood watching it as it made its way across the
+sparkling water to Hippos.</p>
+<p>Upon landing, John at once went to the house where Josephus was
+lodging. The latter gave him in charge to the leader of the little
+group of men who had attached themselves to him, as his
+bodyguard.</p>
+<p>"Joab," he said, "this youth will, henceforth, make one of your
+party. He is brave and, I think, ready and quick witted. Give him
+arms and see that he has all that is needful. Being young, he will
+be able to mingle unsuspected among the crowds; and may obtain
+tidings of evil intended me, when men would not speak, maybe,
+before others whom they might judge my friends. He will be able to
+bear messages, unsuspected; and may prove of great service to the
+cause."</p>
+<p>John found, at once, that there was nothing like discipline, or
+regular duties, among the little band who constituted the bodyguard
+of Josephus. They were simply men who, from affection for the
+governor, and a hatred for those who, by their plots and
+conspiracies, would undo the good work he was accomplishing, had
+left their farms and occupations to follow and guard him.</p>
+<p>Every Jewish boy received a certain training in the use of
+weapons, in order to be prepared to fight in the national army,
+when the day of deliverance should arrive; but beyond that, the
+Jews had no military training, whatever. Their army would be simply
+a gathering of the men capable of bearing arms, throughout the
+land--each ready to give his life, for his faith and his country;
+relying, like their forefathers, on the sword of the Lord and
+Israel, but without the slightest idea of military drill,
+discipline, or tactics. Such an army might fight bravely, might die
+nobly, but it could have little chance of victory over the
+well-trained legions of imperial Rome.</p>
+<p>At noon, Josephus embarked in a galley with his little band of
+followers--eight in number--and sailed across the lake to Tiberias.
+Here they landed, and went up to the house in which Josephus always
+dwelt, when in that city. His stay there was generally short,
+Tarichea being his general abode--for there he felt in safety, the
+inhabitants being devoted to him; while those of Tiberias were ever
+ready to follow the advice of the disaffected, and a section were
+eager for the return of the Romans, and the renewal of the business
+and trade which had brought wealth to the city, before the troubles
+began.</p>
+<p>That evening, Josephus sent for John, and said:</p>
+<p>"I purpose, in two days, to go to Tarichea, where I shall spend
+the Sabbath. I hear that there is a rumor that many of the citizens
+have, privately, sent to King Agrippa asking him to send hither
+Roman troops, and promising them a good reception. The men with me
+are known, to many in the city, and would be shunned by my enemies,
+and so would hear naught of what is going on; therefore, I purpose
+to leave you here.</p>
+<p>"In the morning, go early to the house of Samuel, the son of
+Gideon. He dwells in the street called that of Tarichea, for it
+leadeth in the direction of that town. He is a tanner, by trade;
+and you will have no difficulty in finding it. He has been here,
+this evening, and I have spoken to him about you and, when you
+present yourself to him, he will take you in. Thus, no one will
+know that you are of my company.</p>
+<p>"Pass your time in the streets and, when you see groups of
+people assemble, join yourself to them and gather what they are
+saying. If it is ought that is important for me to know, come here
+and tell me or, if it be after I have departed for Tarichea, bring
+me the news there. It is but thirty furlongs distant."</p>
+<p>John followed up the instructions given him, and was hospitably
+received by Samuel the tanner.</p>
+<p>In the course of the day, a number of the citizens called upon
+Josephus and begged him, at once, to set about building walls for
+the town, as he had already built them for Tarichea. When he
+assured them that he had already made preparations for doing so,
+and that the builders should set to work, forthwith, they appeared
+satisfied; and the city remained perfectly tranquil until Josephus
+left, the next morning, for Tarichea.</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch4" id="Ch4">Chapter 4</a>: The Lull Before The
+Storm.</h2>
+<p>The galley which carried Josephus from Tiberias was scarcely out
+of sight when John, who was standing in the marketplace watching
+the busy scene with amusement, heard the shout raised:</p>
+<p>"The Romans are coming!"</p>
+<p>At once, people left their business, and all ran to the
+outskirts of the city. John ran with them and, on arriving there,
+saw a party of Roman horsemen riding along, at no great distance.
+The people began to shout loudly to them to come into the town,
+calling out that all the citizens were loyal to King Agrippa and
+the Romans, and that they hated the traitor Josephus.</p>
+<p>The Romans halted, but made no sign of entering the town;
+fearing that treachery was intended, and remembering the fate of
+their comrades, who had trusted to Jewish faith when they
+surrendered the towers of Hippicus, Phasaelus, and Mariamne. The
+movement, however, spread through the city. The people assembled in
+crowds, shouting "Death to Josephus!" and exclaiming for the
+Romans, and King Agrippa. Such as were loyal to Josephus did not
+venture to raise their voices, so numerous and furious were the
+multitude; and the whole city was soon in open revolt, the citizens
+arming themselves in readiness for war.</p>
+<p>As soon as he saw the course which affairs were taking, John
+made his way out of the town, and ran at the top of his speed to
+Tarichea, where he arrived in a little over half an hour. He was
+directed at once to the house of Josephus, who rose in surprise, at
+the table at which he was seated, writing, at John's entry.</p>
+<p>"Scarcely had you left, my lord, than some Roman horsemen
+approached near the town; whereupon the whole city rose in revolt,
+shouting to them to enter and take possession, in the name of the
+king, and breathing out threats against yourself. The Romans had
+not entered, as I came away; but the populace were all in arms, and
+your friends did not venture to lift up a voice. Tiberias has
+wholly revolted to the Romans."</p>
+<p>"This is bad news, indeed," Josephus said, gravely. "I have but
+the seven armed men who accompanied me from Tiberias, here. All
+those who were assembled in the city I bade disperse, so soon as I
+arrived; in order that they might go to their towns, or villages,
+for the Sabbath. Were I to send round the country, I could speedily
+get a great force together but, in a few hours, the Sabbath will
+begin; and it is contrary to the law to fight upon the Sabbath,
+even though the necessity be great.</p>
+<p>"And yet, if the people of Tiberias march hither, we can hardly
+hope to resist successfully; for the men of the town are too few to
+man the full extent of the walls. It is most necessary to put down
+this rising, before King Agrippa can send large numbers of troops
+into Tiberias; and yet, we can do nothing until the Sabbath is
+past.</p>
+<p>"Nor would I shed blood, if it can be avoided. Hitherto I have
+put down every rising, and caused Sepphoris, Tiberias, and other
+cities to expel the evildoers, and return to obedience, by
+tact--and by the great force which I could bring against them--and
+without any need of bloodshed. But this time, I fear, great trouble
+will come of it; since I cannot take prompt measures, and the enemy
+will have time to organize their forces, and to receive help from
+John of Gischala and other robbers--to say nothing of the
+Romans."</p>
+<p>Josephus walked up and down the room, in agitation, and then
+stood looking out into the harbor.</p>
+<p>"Ah!" he exclaimed suddenly, "we may yet frighten them into
+submission. Call in Joab."</p>
+<p>When Joab entered Josephus explained to him, in a few words, the
+condition of things at Tiberias; and then proceeded:</p>
+<p>"Send quickly to the principal men of the town, and bid them put
+trusty men at each of the gates, and let none pass out. Order the
+fighting men to man the walls, in case those of Tiberias should
+come hither, at once. Then let one or two able fellows embark on
+board each of the boats and vessels in the port, taking with them
+two or three of the infirm and aged men. Send a fast galley across
+to Hippos; and bid the fishermen set out, at once, with all their
+boats, and join us off Tiberias. We will not approach close enough
+to the city for the people to see how feebly we are manned but,
+when they perceive all these ships making towards them, they will
+think that I have with me a great army, with which I purpose to
+destroy their city."</p>
+<p>The orders were very quickly carried out. Josephus embarked,
+with his eight companions, in one ship and, followed by two hundred
+and thirty vessels, of various sizes, sailed towards Tiberias.</p>
+<p>As they approached the town, they saw a great movement among the
+population. Men and women were seen, crowding down to the
+shore--the men holding up their hands, to show that they were
+unarmed; the women wailing, and uttering loud cries of
+lamentation.</p>
+<p>Josephus waited for an hour, until the ships from Hippos also
+came up, and then caused them all to anchor off the town--but at
+such a distance that the numbers of those on board could not be
+seen. Then he advanced, in his own ship, to within speaking
+distance of the land. The people cried out to him to spare the
+city, and their wives and children; saying that they had been
+misled by evil men, and regretted bitterly what they had done.</p>
+<p>Josephus told them that, assuredly, they deserved that the city
+should be wholly destroyed; for that now, when there was so much
+that had to be done to prepare for the war which Rome would make
+against the country, they troubled the country with their
+seditions. The people set up a doleful cry for mercy; and Josephus
+then said that, this time, he would spare them; but that their
+principal men must be handed over to him.</p>
+<p>To this the people joyfully agreed; and a boat, with ten of
+their senate, came out to the vessel. Josephus had them bound, and
+sent them on board one of the other ships. Another and another boat
+load came off; until all the members of the senate, and many of the
+principal inhabitants, were prisoners. Some of the men had been
+drawn from the other ships, and put on board those with the
+prisoners; and these then sailed away to Tarichea.</p>
+<p>The people of Tiberias--terrified at seeing so many taken away,
+and not knowing how many more might be demanded--now denounced a
+young man, named Clitus, as being the leader of the revolt. Seven
+of the bodyguard of Josephus had gone down the lake, with the
+prisoners; and one Levi, alone, remained. Josephus told him to go
+ashore, and to cut off one of the hands of Clitus.</p>
+<p>Levi was, however, afraid to land, alone, among such a number of
+enemies; whereupon Josephus addressed Clitus, and told him that he
+was worthy of death, but that he would spare his life, if his two
+hands were sent on board a ship. Clitus begged that he might be
+permitted to keep one hand, to which Josephus agreed. Clitus then
+drew his sword, and struck off his left hand. Josephus now
+professed to be satisfied and, after warning the people against
+again listening to evil advisers, sailed away with the whole fleet.
+Josephus, that evening, entertained the principal persons among the
+prisoners and, in the morning, allowed all to return to
+Tiberias.</p>
+<p>The people there had already learned that they had been duped;
+but with time had come reflection and, knowing that in a day or two
+Josephus could have assembled the whole population of Galilee
+against them, and have destroyed them before any help could come,
+there were few who were not well content that their revolt had been
+so easily, and bloodlessly, repressed; and Josephus rose, in their
+estimation, by the quickness and boldness of the stratagem by which
+he had, without bloodshed save in the punishment of Clitus,
+restored tranquillity.</p>
+<p>Through the winter, Josephus was incessantly active. He
+endeavored to organize an army, enrolled a hundred thousand men,
+appointed commanders and captains, and strove to establish
+something like military drill and order. But the people were averse
+to leaving their farms and occupations, and but little progress was
+made. Moreover, a great part of the time of Josephus was occupied
+in suppressing the revolts, which were continually breaking out in
+Sepphoris, Tiberias, and Gamala; and in thwarting the attempts of
+John of Gischala, and his other enemies, who strove by means of
+bribery, at Jerusalem, to have him recalled--and would have
+succeeded, had it not been that the Galileans, save those of the
+great cities, were always ready to turn out, in all their force, to
+defend him and, by sending deputations to Jerusalem, counteracted
+the efforts, there, of his enemies.</p>
+<p>John was incessantly engaged, as he accompanied Josephus in his
+rapid journeys through the province, either to suppress the risings
+or to see to the work of organization; and only once or twice was
+he able to pay a short visit to his family.</p>
+<p>"You look worn and fagged, John," his cousin said, on the
+occasion of his last visit, when spring was close at hand.</p>
+<p>"I am well in health, Mary; but it does try one, to see how all
+the efforts of Josephus are marred by the turbulence of the people
+of Tiberias and Sepphoris. All his thoughts and time are occupied
+in keeping order, and the work of organizing the army makes but
+little progress.</p>
+<p>"Vespasian is gathering a great force, at Antioch. His son Titus
+will soon join him, with another legion; and they will, together,
+advance against us."</p>
+<p>"But I hear that the walling of the cities is well-nigh
+finished."</p>
+<p>"That is so, Mary, and doubtless many of them will be able to
+make a long defense but, after all, the taking of a city is a mere
+question of time. The Romans have great siege engines, which
+nothing can withstand but, even if the walls were so strong that
+they could not be battered down, each city could, in time, be
+reduced by famine. It is not for me, who am but a boy, to judge the
+doings of my elders; but it seems to me that this walling of cities
+is altogether wrong. They can give no aid to each other and, one by
+one, must fall; and all within perish, or be made slaves, for the
+Romans give no quarter when they capture a city by storm.</p>
+<p>"It seems to me that it would be far better to hold Jerusalem,
+only, with a strong force of fighting men; and for all the rest of
+the men capable of carrying arms to gather among the hills, and
+there to fight the Romans. When the legion of Cestius was destroyed
+we showed that, among defiles and on rocky ground, our active,
+lightly-armed men were a match for the Roman soldiers, in their
+heavy armor; and in this way I think that we might check even the
+legions of Vespasian. The women and the old men and children could
+gather in the cities, and admit the Romans when they approached. In
+that case they would suffer no harm; for the Romans are clement,
+when not opposed.</p>
+<p>"As it is, it seems to me that, in the end, destruction will
+fall on all alike. Here in Galilee we have a leader, but he is
+hampered by dissensions and jealousies. Samaria stands neutral.
+Jerusalem, which ought to take the lead, is torn by faction. There
+is war in her streets. She thinks only of herself, and naught of
+the country; although she must know that, when the Romans have
+crushed down all opposition elsewhere she must, sooner or later,
+fall. The country seems possessed with madness, and I see no hope
+in the future."</p>
+<p>"Save in the God of Israel," Mary said, gently; "that is what
+Simon and Martha say."</p>
+<p>"Save in him," John assented; "but, dear, He suffered us to be
+carried away into Babylon; and how are we to expect His aid
+now--when the people do naught for themselves, when His city is
+divided in itself, when its streets are wet with blood, and its
+very altars defiled by conflict? When evil men are made high
+priests, and all rule and authority is at an end, what right have
+we to expect aid at the hands of Jehovah?</p>
+<p>"My greatest comfort, Mary, is that we lie here on the east of
+the lake, and that we are within the jurisdiction of King Agrippa.
+On this side, his authority has never been altogether thrown off;
+though some of the cities have made common cause with those of the
+other side. Still, we may hope that, on this side of Jordan, we may
+escape the horrors of war."</p>
+<p>"You are out of spirits, John, and take a gloomy view of things;
+but I know that Simon, too, thinks that everything will end badly,
+and I have heard him say that he, too, is glad that his farm lies
+on this side of the lake; and that he wishes Gamala had not thrown
+off the authority of the king, so that there might be naught to
+bring the Romans across Jordan.</p>
+<p>"Our mother is more hopeful. She trusts in God for, as she says,
+though the wealthy and powerful may have forsaken Him, the people
+still cling to Him; and He will not let us fall into the hands of
+our enemies."</p>
+<p>"I hope it will be so, Mary; and I own I am out of spirits, and
+look at matters in the worst light. However, I will have a talk
+with father, tonight."</p>
+<p>That evening, John had a long conversation with Simon, and
+repeated the forebodings he had expressed to Mary.</p>
+<p>"At any rate, father, I hope that when the Romans approach you
+will at least send away my mother, Mary, and the women to a place
+of safety. We are but a few miles from Gamala and, if the Romans
+come there and besiege it, they will spread through the country;
+and will pillage, even if they do not slay, in all the villages.
+If, as we trust, God will give victory to our arms, they can return
+in peace; if not, let them at least be free from the dangers which
+are threatening us."</p>
+<p>"I have been thinking of it, John. A fortnight since, I sent old
+Isaac to your mother's brother--whose farm, as you know, lies upon
+the slopes of Mount Hermon, a few miles from Neve, and very near
+the boundary of Manasseh--to ask him if he will receive Martha, and
+Mary, and the women, until the troubles are over. He will gladly do
+so; and I purpose sending them away, as soon as I hear that the
+Romans have crossed the frontier."</p>
+<p>"I am, indeed, rejoiced to hear it, father; but do not let them
+tarry for that, let them go as soon as the snows have melted on
+Mount Hermon, for the Roman cavalry will spread quickly over the
+land. Let them go as soon as the roads are fit for travel. I shall
+feel a weight off my mind, when I know that they are safe.</p>
+<p>"And does my mother know what you have decided?"</p>
+<p>"She knows, John, but in truth she is reluctant to go. She says,
+at present, that if I stay she also will stay."</p>
+<p>"I trust, father, that you will overrule my mother; and that you
+will either go with her or, if you stay, you will insist upon her
+going. Should you not overcome her opposition, and finally suffer
+her, with Miriam and the older women, to remain with you, I hope
+that you will send Mary and the young ones to my uncle. The danger,
+with them, is vastly greater. The Romans, unless their blood is
+heated by opposition, may not interfere with the old people--who
+are valueless as slaves--but the young ones--" and he stopped.</p>
+<p>"I have thought it over, my son, and even if your mother remains
+here with me, I will assuredly send off Mary, and the young
+maidens, to the mountain. Make your mind easy, on that score. We
+old people have taken root on the land which was our fathers'. I
+shall not leave, whatever may befall--and it may be that your
+mother will tarry here, with me--but the young women shall
+assuredly be sent away, until the danger is over.</p>
+<p>"Not that I think the peril is as great as it seems, to you. Our
+people have ever shown themselves courageous, in great danger. They
+know the fate that awaits them, after provoking the anger of Rome.
+They know they are fighting for faith, for country, and their
+families, and will fight desperately. They greatly outnumber the
+Romans--at least, the army by which we shall first be attacked--and
+maybe, if we can resist that, we may make terms with Rome for,
+assuredly, in the long run she must overpower us."</p>
+<p>"I should think with you, father," John said, shaking his head,
+"if I saw anything like union among the people; but I lose all
+heart, when I see how divided they are, how blind to the storm that
+is coming against us, how careless as to anything but the trouble
+of the day, how intent upon the work of their farms and businesses,
+how disinclined to submit to discipline, and to prepare themselves
+for the day of battle."</p>
+<p>"You are young, my son, and full of enthusiasm; but it is hard
+to stir men, whose lives have traveled in one groove, from their
+ordinary course. In all our history, although we have been ready to
+assemble and meet the foe, we have ever been ready to lay by the
+sword, when the danger is past, and to return to our homes and
+families. We have been a nation of fighting men, but never a nation
+with an army."</p>
+<p>"Yes, father, because we trusted in God to give us victory, on
+the day of battle. He was our army. When He fought with us, we
+conquered; when He abstained, we were beaten. He suffered us to
+fall into the hands of the Romans and, instead of repenting of our
+sins, we have sinned more and more.</p>
+<p>"The news from Jerusalem is worse and worse. There is civil war
+in its streets. Robbers are its masters. The worst of the people
+sit in high places."</p>
+<p>"That is so, my son. God's anger still burns fiercely, and the
+people perish; yet it may be that He will be merciful, in the
+end."</p>
+<p>"I hope so, father, for assuredly our hope is only in Him."</p>
+<p>Early in the spring, Vespasian was joined by King Agrippa, with
+all his forces; and they advanced to Ptolemais and, here, Titus
+joined his father, having brought his troops from Alexandria by
+sea. The force of Vespasian now consisted of the Fifth, Tenth, and
+Fifteenth Legions. Besides these he had twenty-three cohorts; ten
+of which numbered a thousand footmen, the rest, each, six hundred
+footmen and a hundred and fifty horse. The allied force,
+contributed by Agrippa and others, consisted of two thousand
+archers, and a thousand horse; while Malchus, King of Arabia, sent
+a thousand horse, and five thousand archers. The total force
+amounted to sixty thousand regular troops, besides great numbers of
+camp followers--who were all trained to military service, and could
+fight, in case of need.</p>
+<p>Vespasian had encountered no resistance, on his march down to
+Ptolemais. The inhabitants of the country through which he passed
+forsook the villages and farms; and retired, according to the
+orders they had received, to the fortified towns. There was no army
+to meet the Romans in the field. The efforts at organization which
+Josephus had made bore no fruit, whatever. No sooner had the
+invader entered the country, than it lay at his mercy; save only
+the walled cities into which the people had crowded.</p>
+<p>In the range of mountains stretching across Upper Galilee were
+three places of great strength: Gabara, Gischala, and Jotapata. The
+last named had been very strongly fortified, by Josephus himself;
+and here he intended to take up his own position.</p>
+<p>"It is a pitiful sight, truly," Joab remarked to John, as they
+saw the long line of fugitives--men, women, and children--with such
+belongings as they could carry on their own backs, and those of
+their beasts of burden. "It is a pitiful sight, is it not?"</p>
+<p>"It is a pitiful sight, Joab, and one that fills me with
+foreboding, as well as with pity. What agonies may not these poor
+people be doomed to suffer, when the Romans lay siege to
+Jotapata?"</p>
+<p>"They can never take it," Joab said, scornfully.</p>
+<p>"I wish I could think so, Joab. When did the Romans ever lay
+siege to a place, and fail to capture it? Once, twice, three times
+they may fail but, in the end, they assuredly will take it."</p>
+<p>"Look at its position. See how wild is the country through which
+they will have to march."</p>
+<p>"They have made roads over all the world, Joab. They will make
+very short work of the difficulties here. It may take the Romans
+weeks, or months, to besiege each of these strong places; but they
+will assuredly carry them, in the end--and then, better a thousand
+times that the men had, in the first place, slain the women, and
+rushed to die on the Roman swords."</p>
+<p>"It seems to me, John," Joab said stiffly, "that you are over
+bold, in thus criticising the plans of our general."</p>
+<p>"It may be so," John said, recklessly, "but methinks, when we
+are all risking our lives, each man may have a right to his
+opinions. I am ready, like the rest, to die when the time comes;
+but that does not prevent me having my opinions. Besides, it seems
+to me that there is no heresy in questioning the plans of our
+general. I love Josephus, and would willingly give my life for him.
+He has shown himself a wise ruler, firm to carry out what is right,
+and to suppress all evildoers but, after all, he has not served in
+war. He is full of resources, and will, I doubt not, devise every
+means to check the Romans but, even so, he may not be able to cope,
+in war, with such generals as theirs, who have won their experience
+all over the world. Nor may the general's plan of defense, which he
+has adopted, be the best suited for the occasion.</p>
+<p>"Would you have us fight the Romans in the open?" Joab said,
+scornfully. "What has been done in the south? See how our people
+marched out from Jerusalem--under John the Essene, Niger of Peraea,
+and Silas the Babylonian--to attack Ascalon, held by but one cohort
+of Roman foot, and one troop of horse. What happened? Antoninus,
+the Roman commander, charged the army without fear, rode through
+and through them, broke them up into fragments, and slew till night
+time--when ten thousand men, with John and Silas, lay dead.</p>
+<p>"Not satisfied with this defeat, in a short time Niger advanced
+again against Ascalon; when Antoninus sallied out again, and slew
+eight thousand of them. Thus, eighteen thousand men were killed, by
+one weak cohort of foot and a troop of horse; and yet you say we
+ought not to hide behind our walls, but to meet them in the
+open!"</p>
+<p>"I would not meet them in the open, where the Roman cavalry
+could charge--at any rate, not until our people have learned
+discipline. I would harass them, and attack them in defiles, as
+Cestius was attacked; harassing them night and day, giving them no
+peace or rest, never allowing them to meet us in the plains, but
+moving rapidly hither and thither among the mountains--leaving the
+women in the cities, which should offer no resistance, so that the
+Romans would have no point to strike at--until at length, when we
+have gained confidence and discipline and order, we should be able
+to take bolder measures, gradually, and fight them hand to
+hand."</p>
+<p>"Maybe you are right, lad," Joab said, thoughtfully. "I like not
+being cooped up in a stronghold, myself; and methinks that a
+mountain warfare, such as you speak of, would suit the genius of
+the people. We are light limbed and active--inured to fatigue, for
+we are a nation of cultivators--brave, assuredly, and ready to give
+our lives.</p>
+<p>"They say that, in the fight near Ascalon, not a Jew fled. Fight
+they could not, they were powerless against the rush of the heavy
+Roman horse; but they died as they stood, destroyed but not
+defeated. Gabara and Gischala and Jotapata may fall but, lad, it
+will be only after a defense so desperate that the haughty Romans
+may well hesitate; for if such be the resistance of these little
+mountain towns, what will not be the task of conquering Jerusalem,
+garrisoned by the whole nation?"</p>
+<p>"That is true," John said, "and if our deaths here be for the
+safety of Jerusalem, we shall not have died in vain. But I doubt
+whether such men as those who have power in Jerusalem will agree to
+any terms, however favorable, that may be offered.</p>
+<p>"It may be that it is God's will that it should be so. Two days
+ago, as I journeyed hither, after going down to Sepphoris with a
+message from the general to some of the principal inhabitants
+there, I met an old man, traveling with his wife and family. I
+asked him whether he was on his way hither, but he said 'No,' he
+was going across Jordan, and through Manasseh, and over Mount
+Hermon into Trachonitis. He said that he was a follower of that
+Christ who was put to death, in Jerusalem, some thirty-five years
+since, and whom many people still believe was the Messiah. He says
+that he foretold the destruction of Jerusalem, by the Romans; and
+warned his followers not to stay in the walled cities, but to fly
+to the deserts when the time came."</p>
+<p>"The Messiah was to save Israel," Joab said, scornfully. "Christ
+could not save even himself."</p>
+<p>"I know not," John said, simply. "I have heard of him from
+others; and my father heard him preach, several times, near the
+lake. He says that he was a man of wondrous power, and that he
+preached a new doctrine. He says that he did not talk about
+himself, or claim to be the Messiah; but that he simply told the
+people to be kind and good to each other, and to love God and do
+his will. My father said that he thought he was a good and holy
+man, and full of the Spirit of God. He did works of great power,
+too; but bore himself meekly, like any other man. My father always
+regards him as a prophet; and said that he grieved, when he heard
+that he had been put to death at Jerusalem. If he were a prophet,
+what he said about the destruction of Jerusalem should have weight
+with us."</p>
+<p>"All who heard him agreed that he was a good man," Joab
+assented. "I have never known one of those who heard him say
+otherwise, and maybe he was a prophet. Certainly, he called upon
+the people to repent and turn from their sins and, had they done as
+he taught them, these evils might not have fallen upon us, and God
+would doubtless have been ready to aid his people, as of old.</p>
+<p>"However, it is too late to think about it, now. We want all our
+thoughts for the matter we have in hand. We have done all that we
+can to put this town into a state of defense and, methinks, if the
+Romans ever penetrate through these mountains and forests, they
+will see that they have a task which will tax all their powers,
+before they take Jotapata."</p>
+<p>The position of the town was, indeed, immensely strong. It stood
+on the summit of a lofty mass of rock which, on three sides, fell
+abruptly down into the deep and almost impassable ravines which
+surrounded it. On the north side, alone, where the ridge sloped
+more gradually down, it could be approached. The town extended part
+of the way down this declivity and, at its foot, Josephus had built
+a strong wall. On all sides were lofty mountains, covered with
+thick forests; and the town could not be seen by an enemy, until
+they were close at hand.</p>
+<p>As soon as Vespasian had arrived at Ptolemais (on the site of
+which city stands the modern Acre) he was met by a deputation from
+Sepphoris. That city had only been prevented from declaring for the
+Romans by the exertions of Josephus, and the knowledge that all
+Galilee would follow him to attack it, should it revolt. But as
+soon as Vespasian arrived at Ptolemais, which was scarce twenty
+miles away, they sent deputies with their submission to him;
+begging that a force might be sent, to defend them against any
+attack by the Jews.</p>
+<p>Vespasian received them with courtesy; and sent Placidus, with a
+thousand horse and six thousand foot, to the city. The infantry
+took up their quarters in the town; but the horsemen made raids
+over the plains, burning the villages, slaying all the men capable
+of bearing arms, and carrying off the rest of the population as
+slaves.</p>
+<p>The day after the conversation between Joab and John, a man
+brought the news to Jotapata that Placidus was marching against it.
+Josephus at once ordered the fighting men to assemble and, marching
+out, placed them in ambuscade, in the mountains, on the road by
+which the Romans would approach.</p>
+<p>As soon as the latter had fairly entered the pass, the Jews
+sprang to their feet, and hurled their javelins and shot their
+arrows among them. The Romans, in vain, endeavored to reach their
+assailants; and numbers were wounded, as they tried to climb the
+heights, but few were killed--for they were so completely covered,
+by their armor and shields, that the Jewish missiles, thrown from a
+distance, seldom inflicted mortal wounds. They were, however,
+unable to make their way further; and Placidus was obliged to
+retire to Sepphoris, having failed, signally, in gaining the credit
+he had hoped for, from the capture of the strongest of the Jewish
+strongholds in Upper Galilee.</p>
+<p>The Jews, on their part, were greatly inspirited by the success
+of their first encounter with the Romans; and returned, rejoicing,
+to their stronghold.</p>
+<p>All being ready at Jotapata, Josephus--with a considerable
+number of the fighting men--proceeded to Garis, not far from
+Sepphoris, where the army had assembled. But no sooner had the news
+arrived, that the great army of Vespasian was in movement, than
+they dispersed in all directions; and Josephus was left with a mere
+handful of followers, with whom he fled to Tiberias. Thence he
+wrote earnest letters to Jerusalem; saying that, unless a strong
+army was fitted out and put in the field, it was useless to attempt
+to fight the Romans; and that it would be wiser to come to terms
+with them, than to maintain a useless resistance, which would bring
+destruction upon the nation. He remained a short time, only, at
+Tiberias; and thence hurried up with his followers to Jotapata,
+which he reached on the 14th of May.</p>
+<p>Vespasian marched first to Gadara--which was undefended, the
+fighting men having all gone to Jotapata--but, although no
+resistance was offered, Vespasian put all the males to the sword;
+and burned the town and all the villages in the neighborhood, and
+then advanced against Jotapata. For four days, the pioneers of the
+Roman army had labored incessantly--cutting a road through the
+forests, filling up ravines, and clearing away obstacles--and, on
+the fifth day, the road was constructed close up to Jotapata.</p>
+<p>On the 14th of May, Placidus and Ebutius were sent forward by
+Vespasian, with a thousand horse, to surround the town and cut off
+all possibility of escape. On the following day Vespasian himself,
+with his whole army, arrived there. The defenders of Jotapata could
+scarcely believe their eyes when they saw the long, heavy
+column--with all its baggage, and siege engines--marching along a
+straight and level road, where they had believed that it would be
+next to impossible for even the infantry of the enemy to make their
+way. If this marvel had been accomplished in five days, what hope
+was there that the city would be able to withstand this force,
+which had so readily triumphed over the defenses of nature?</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch5" id="Ch5">Chapter 5</a>: The Siege Of
+Jotapata.</h2>
+<p>"Well, Joab, what do you think, now?" John said, as he stood on
+the wall with his older companion, watching the seemingly endless
+column of the enemy. "It seems to me that we are caught here, like
+rats in a trap, and that we should have done better, a thousand
+times, in maintaining our freedom of movement among the mountains.
+It is one thing to cut a road; it would be another to clear off all
+the forests from the Anti-Libanus and, so long as there was a
+forest to shelter us, the Romans could never have overtaken us.
+Here, there is nothing to do but to die."</p>
+<p>"That is so, John. I own that the counsel you urged would have
+been wiser than this. Here are all the best fighting men in
+Galilee, shut up without hope of succor, or of mercy. Well, lad, we
+can at least teach the Romans the lesson that the Jews know how to
+die; and the capture of this mountain town will cost them as much
+as they reckoned would suffice for the conquest of the whole
+country. Jotapata may save Jerusalem, yet."</p>
+<p>John was no coward, and was prepared to fight to the last; but
+he was young, and the love of life was strong within. He thought of
+his old father and mother, who had no children but him; of his
+pretty Mary--far away now, he hoped, on the slopes of Mount
+Hermon--and of the grief that his death would cause to them; and he
+resolved that, although he would do his duty, he would strain every
+nerve to preserve the life so dear to them.</p>
+<p>He had no longer any duties to perform, other than those common
+to all able to bear arms. When the Romans attacked, his place would
+be near Josephus or, were a sally ordered, he would issue out with
+the general; but until then, his time was his own. There was no
+mission to be performed, now, no fear of plots against the life of
+the general; therefore, he was free to wander where he liked. Save
+the newly erected wall, across the neck of rock below the town,
+there were no defenses; for it was deemed impossible for man to
+climb the cliffs that fell, sheer down, at every other point.</p>
+<p>John strolled quietly round the town; stopping, now and then, to
+look over the low wall that bordered the precipice--erected solely
+to prevent children from falling over. The depth was very great;
+and it seemed to him that there could be no escape, anywhere, save
+on that side which was now blocked by the wall--and which would,
+ere long, be trebly blocked by the Romans.</p>
+<p>The town was crowded. At ordinary times, it might contain near
+three or four thousand inhabitants; now, over twenty-five thousand
+had gathered there. Of these, more than half were men; but many had
+brought their wives and children with them. Every vacant foot of
+ground was taken up. The inhabitants shared their homes with the
+strangers, but the accommodation was altogether insufficient; and
+the greater part of the newcomers had erected little tents, and
+shelters, of cloths or blankets.</p>
+<p>In the upper part of the town there were, at present,
+comparatively few people about; for the greater part had gone to
+the slope, whence they watched, with terror and dismay, the great
+Roman column as it poured down, in an unbroken line, hour after
+hour. The news of the destruction which had fallen on Gadara had
+been brought in, by fugitives; and all knew that, although no
+resistance had been offered there, every male had been put to
+death, and the women taken captives.</p>
+<p>There was naught, then, to be gained by surrender; even had
+anyone dared to propose it. As for victory, over such a host as
+that which was marching to the assault, none could hope for it.
+For, hold out as they might, and repel every assault on the wall,
+there was an enemy within which would conquer them.</p>
+<p>For Jotapata possessed no wells. The water had, daily, to be
+fetched by the women from the stream in the ravine and, although
+stores of grain had been collected, sufficient to last for many
+months, the supply of water stored up in cisterns would scarce
+suffice to supply the multitudes gathered on the rock for a
+fortnight.</p>
+<p>Death, then, certain and inevitable, awaited them; and yet, an
+occasional wail from some woman, as she pressed her children to her
+breast, alone told of the despair which reigned in every heart. The
+greater portion looked out, silent, and as if stupefied. They had
+relied, absolutely, on the mountains and forests to block the
+progress of the invader. They had thought that, at the worst, they
+would have had to deal with a few companies of infantry, only.
+Thus, the sight of the sixty thousand Roman troops--swelled to nigh
+a hundred thousand, by the camp followers and artificers--with its
+cavalry and machines of war, seemed like some terrible
+nightmare.</p>
+<p>After making the circuit of the rock, and wandering for some
+time among the impromptu camps in the streets, John returned to a
+group of boys whom he had noticed, leaning against the low wall
+with a carelessness, as to the danger of a fall over the precipice,
+which proved that they must be natives of the place.</p>
+<p>"If there be any possible way of descending these precipices,"
+he said to himself, "it will be the boys who will know of it. Where
+a goat could climb, these boys, born among the mountains, would try
+to follow; if only to excel each other in daring, and to risk
+breaking their necks."</p>
+<p>Thus thinking, he walked up to the group, who were from twelve
+to fifteen years old.</p>
+<p>"I suppose you belong to the town?" he began.</p>
+<p>There was a general assent from the five boys, who looked with
+considerable respect at John--who, although but two years the
+senior of the eldest among them, wore a man's garb, and carried
+sword and buckler.</p>
+<p>"I am one of the bodyguard of the governor," John went on, "and
+I dare say you can tell me all sorts of things, about this country,
+that may be useful for him to know. Is it quite certain that no one
+could climb up these rocks from below; and that there is no fear of
+the Romans making a surprise, in that way?"</p>
+<p>The boys looked at each other, but no one volunteered to give
+information.</p>
+<p>"Come!" John went on, "I have only just left off being a boy,
+myself, and I was always climbing into all sorts of places, when I
+got a chance; and I have no doubt it's the same, with you. When you
+have been down below, there, you have tried how far you can get
+up.</p>
+<p>"Did you ever get up far, or did you ever hear of anyone getting
+up far?"</p>
+<p>"I expect I have been up as far as anyone," the eldest of the
+boys said. "I went up after a young kid that had strayed away from
+its mother. I got up a long way--half way up, I should say--but I
+couldn't get any further. I was barefooted, too.</p>
+<p>"I am sure no one with armor on could have got up anything like
+so far. I don't believe he could get up fifty feet."</p>
+<p>"And have any of you ever tried to get down from above?"</p>
+<p>They shook their heads.</p>
+<p>"Jonas the son of James did, once," one of the smaller boys
+said. "He had a pet hawk he had tamed, and it flew away and
+perched, a good way down; and he clambered down to fetch it. He had
+a rope tied round him, and some of the others held it, in case he
+should slip. I know he went down a good way, and he got the hawk;
+and his father beat him for doing it, I know."</p>
+<p>"Is he here, now?" John asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes, he is here," the boy said. "That's his father's house, the
+one close to the edge of the rock. I don't know whether you will
+find him there, now. He ain't indoors more than he can help. His
+own mother's dead, and his father's got another wife, and they
+don't get on well together."</p>
+<p>"Well, I will have a chat with him, one of these days. And you
+are all quite sure that there is no possible path up, from
+below?"</p>
+<p>"I won't say there isn't any possible path," the eldest boy
+said; "but I feel quite sure there is not. I have looked, hundreds
+of times, when I have been down below; and I feel pretty sure that,
+if there had been any place where a goat could have got up, I
+should have noticed it. But you see, the rock goes down almost
+straight, in most places. Anyhow, I have never heard of anyone who
+ever got up and, if anyone had done it, it would have been talked
+about, for years and years."</p>
+<p>"No doubt it would," John agreed. "So I shall tell the governor
+that he need not be in the least uneasy about an attack, except in
+front."</p>
+<p>So saying, he nodded to the boys, and walked away again.</p>
+<p>In the evening, the whole of the Roman army had arrived; and
+Vespasian drew up his troops on a hill, less than a mile to the
+north of the city, and there encamped them. The next morning, a
+triple line of embankments was thrown up, by the Romans, around the
+foot of the hill where, alone, escape or issue was possible; and
+this entirely cut off those within the town from any possibility of
+flight.</p>
+<p>The Jews looked on at these preparations as wild animals might
+regard a line of hunters surrounding them. But the dull despair of
+the previous day had now been succeeded by a fierce rage. Hope
+there was none. They must die, doubtless; but they would die
+fighting fiercely, till the last. Disdaining to be pent up within
+the walls, many of the fighting men encamped outside, and boldly
+went forward to meet the enemy.</p>
+<p>Vespasian called up his slingers and archers, and these poured
+their missiles upon the Jews; while he himself, with his heavy
+infantry, began to mount the slope towards the part of the wall
+which appeared the weakest. Josephus at once summoned the fighting
+men in the town and, sallying at their head through the gate,
+rushed down and flung himself upon the Romans. Both sides fought
+bravely; the Romans strong in their discipline, their skill with
+their weapons, and their defensive armor; the Jews fighting with
+the valor of despair, heightened by the thought of their wives and
+children in the town, above.</p>
+<p>The Romans were pushed down the hill, and the fight continued at
+its foot until darkness came on, when both parties drew off. The
+number of killed on either side was small, for the bucklers and
+helmets defended the vital points. The Romans had thirteen killed
+and very many wounded, the Jews seventeen killed and six hundred
+wounded.</p>
+<p>John had fought bravely by the side of Josephus. Joab and two
+others of the little band were killed. All the others were wounded,
+more or less severely; for Josephus was always in the front, and
+his chosen followers kept close to him. In the heat of the fight,
+John felt his spirits rise higher than they had done since the
+troubles had begun. He had fought, at first, so recklessly that
+Josephus had checked him, with the words:</p>
+<p>"Steady, my brave lad. He fights best who fights most coolly.
+The more you guard yourself, the more you will kill."</p>
+<p>More than once, when Josephus--whose commanding figure, and
+evident leadership, attracted the attention of the Roman
+soldiers--was surrounded and cut off, John, with three or four
+others, made their way through to him, and brought him off.</p>
+<p>When it became dark, both parties drew off; the Romans sullenly,
+for they felt it a disgrace to have been thus driven back, by foes
+they despised; the Jews with shouts of triumph, for they had proved
+themselves a match for the first soldiers in the world, and the
+dread with which the glittering column had inspired them had passed
+away.</p>
+<p>The following day, the Jews again sallied out and attacked the
+Romans as they advanced and, for five days in succession, the
+combat raged--the Jews fighting with desperate valor, the Romans
+with steady resolution. At the end of that time, the Jews had been
+forced back behind their wall, and the Romans established
+themselves in front of it.</p>
+<p>Vespasian, seeing that the wall could not be carried by assault,
+as he had expected, called a council of war; and it was determined
+to proceed by the regular process of a siege, and to erect a bank
+against that part of the wall which offered the greatest facility
+for attack. Accordingly the whole army, with the exception of the
+troops who guarded the banks of circumvallation, went into the
+mountains to get materials. Stone and timber, in vast quantities,
+were brought down and, when these were in readiness, the work
+commenced.</p>
+<p>A sort of penthouse roofing, constructed of wattles covered with
+earth, was first raised, to protect the workers from the missiles
+of the enemy upon the wall; and here the working parties labored
+securely, while the rest of the troops brought up earth, stone, and
+wood for their use. The Jews did their best to interfere with the
+work, hurling down huge stones upon the penthouse; sometimes
+breaking down the supports of the roof and causing gaps, through
+which they poured a storm of arrows and javelins, until the damage
+had been repaired.</p>
+<p>To protect his workmen, Vespasian brought up his siege
+engines--of which he had a hundred and sixty--and, from these, vast
+quantities of missiles were discharged at the Jews upon the walls.
+The catapults threw javelins, balls of fire, and blazing arrows;
+while the ballistae hurled huge stones, which swept lanes through
+the ranks of the defenders. At the same time the light-armed
+troops, the Arab archers, and those of Agrippa and Antiochus kept
+up a rain of arrows, so that it became impossible for the Jews to
+remain on the walls.</p>
+<p>But they were not inactive. Sallying out in small parties, they
+fell with fury upon the working parties who, having stripped off
+their heavy armor, were unable to resist their sudden onslaughts.
+Driving out and slaying all before them, the Jews so often applied
+fire to the wattles and timbers of the bank that Vespasian was
+obliged to make his work continuous, along the whole extent of the
+wall, to keep out the assailants.</p>
+<p>But, in spite of all the efforts of the Jews, the embankment
+rose steadily, until it almost equaled the height of the wall; and
+the struggle now went on between the combatants on even terms, they
+being separated only by the short interval between the wall and
+bank. Josephus found that in such a conflict the Romans--with their
+crowd of archers and slingers, and their formidable machines--had
+all the advantage; and that it was absolutely necessary to raise
+the walls still higher.</p>
+<p>He called together a number of the principal men, and pointed
+out the necessity for this. They agreed with him, but urged that it
+was impossible for men to work, exposed to such a storm of
+missiles. Josephus replied that he had thought of that. A number of
+strong posts were prepared and, at night, these were fixed
+securely, standing on the wall. Along the top of these, a strong
+rope was stretched; and on this were hung, touching each other, the
+hides of newly-killed oxen. These formed a complete screen, hiding
+the workers from the sight of those on the embankment.</p>
+<a id="PicB" name="PicB"></a>
+<center><img src="images/b.jpg" alt=
+"Illustration: Heightening the Walls of Jotapata under Shelter of Ox Hides." />
+</center>
+<p>The hides, when struck with the stones from the ballistae, gave
+way and deadened the force of the missiles; while the arrows and
+javelins glanced off from the slippery surface. Behind this
+shelter, the garrison worked night and day, raising the posts and
+screens as their work proceeded, until they had heightened the wall
+no less than thirty-five feet; with a number of towers on its
+summit, and a strong battlement facing the Romans.</p>
+<p>The besiegers were much discouraged at their want of success,
+and enraged at finding the efforts of so large an army completely
+baffled by a small town, which they had expected to carry at the
+first assault; while the Jews proportionately rejoiced. Becoming
+more and more confident, they continually sallied out in small
+parties, through the gateway or by ladders from the walls, attacked
+the Romans upon their embankment, or set fire to it. And it was the
+desperation with which these men fought, even more than their
+success in defending the wall, that discouraged the Romans; for the
+Jews were utterly careless of their lives, and were well content to
+die, when they saw that they had achieved their object of setting
+fire to the Roman works.</p>
+<p>Vespasian, at length, determined to turn the siege into a
+blockade; and to starve out the town which he could not capture. He
+accordingly contented himself by posting a strong force to defend
+the embankment, and withdrew the main body of the army to their
+encampment. He had been informed of the shortness of the supply of
+water; and had anticipated that, in a very short time, thirst would
+compel the inhabitants to yield.</p>
+<p>John had taken his full share in the fighting, and had
+frequently earned the warm commendation of Josephus. His spirits
+had risen with the conflict; but he could not shut his eyes to the
+fact that, sooner or later, the Romans must become masters of the
+place. One evening, therefore, when he had done his share of duty
+on the walls, he went up to the house which had been pointed out to
+him as that in which lived the boy who had descended the face of
+the rocks, for some distance.</p>
+<p>At a short distance from the door, a lad of some fifteen years
+old, with no covering but a piece of ragged sackcloth round the
+loins, was crouched up in a corner, seemingly asleep. At the sound
+of John's footsteps, he opened his eyes in a quick, watchful way,
+that showed that he had not been really asleep.</p>
+<p>"Are you Jonas, the son of James?" John asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes I am," the boy said, rising to his feet. "What do you want
+with me?"</p>
+<p>"I want to have a talk with you," John said. "I am one of the
+governor's bodyguard; and I think, perhaps, you may be able to give
+us some useful information."</p>
+<p>"Well, come away from here," the boy said, "else we shall be
+having her--" and he nodded to the house, "--coming out with a
+stick."</p>
+<p>"You have rather a hard time of it, from what I hear," John
+began, when they stopped at the wall, a short distance away from
+the house.</p>
+<p>"I have that," the boy said. "I look like it, don't I?"</p>
+<p>"You do," John agreed, looking at the boy's thin, half-starved
+figure; "and yet, there is plenty to eat in the town."</p>
+<p>"There may be," the boy said; "anyhow, I don't get my share.
+Father is away fighting on the wall, and so she's worse than ever.
+She is always beating me, and I dare not go back, now. I told her,
+this morning, the sooner the Romans came in, the better I should be
+pleased. They could only kill me, and there would be an end of it;
+but they would send her to Rome for a slave, and then she would see
+how she liked being cuffed and beaten, all day."</p>
+<p>"And you are hungry, now?" John asked.</p>
+<p>"I am pretty near always hungry," the boy said.</p>
+<p>"Well, come along with me, then. I have got a little room to
+myself, and you shall have as much to eat as you like."</p>
+<p>The room John occupied had formerly been a loft over a stable,
+in the rear of the house in which Josephus now lodged; and it was
+reached by a ladder from the outside. He had shared it, at first,
+with two of his comrades; but these had both fallen, during the
+siege. After seeing the boy up into it, John went to the house and
+procured him an abundant meal; and took it, with a small horn of
+water, back to his quarters.</p>
+<p>"Here's plenty for you to eat, Jonas, but not much to drink. We
+are all on short allowance, the same as the rest of the people; and
+I am afraid that won't last long."</p>
+<p>There was a twinkle of amusement in the boy's face but, without
+a word, he set to work at the food, eating ravenously all that John
+had brought him. The latter was surprised to see that he did not
+touch the water; for he thought that if his stepmother deprived him
+of food, of which there was abundance, she would all the more
+deprive him of water, of which the ration to each person was so
+scanty.</p>
+<p>"Now," John said, "you had better throw away that bit of
+sackcloth, and take this garment. It belonged to a comrade of mine,
+who has been killed."</p>
+<p>"There's too much of it," the boy said. "If you don't mind my
+tearing it in half, I will take it."</p>
+<p>"Do as you like with it," John replied; and the boy tore the
+long strip of cotton in two, and wrapped half of it round his
+loins.</p>
+<p>"Now," he said, "what do you want to ask me?"</p>
+<p>"They tell me, Jonas, that you are a first-rate climber, and can
+go anywhere?"</p>
+<p>The boy nodded.</p>
+<p>"I can get about, I can. I have been tending goats, pretty well
+ever since I could walk and, where they can go, I can."</p>
+<p>"I want to know, in the first place, whether there is any
+possible way by which one can get up and down from this place,
+except by the road through the wall?"</p>
+<p>The boy was silent.</p>
+<p>"Now look here, Jonas," John went on, feeling sure that the lad
+could tell something, if he would, "if you could point out a way
+down, the governor would be very pleased; and as long as the siege
+lasts you can live here with me, and have as much food as you want,
+and not go near that stepmother of yours, at all."</p>
+<p>"And nobody will beat me, for telling you?" the boy asked.</p>
+<p>"Certainly not, Jonas."</p>
+<p>"It wouldn't take you beyond the Romans. They have got guards,
+all round."</p>
+<p>"No, but it might enable us to get down to the water," John
+urged, the sight of the unemptied horn causing the thought to flash
+through his mind that the boy had been in the habit of going down,
+and getting water.</p>
+<p>"Well, I will tell you," the boy said. "I don't like to tell,
+because I don't think there's anyone here knows it, but me. I found
+it out, and I never said a word about it, because I was able to
+slip away when I liked; and no one knows anything about it. But it
+doesn't make much difference, now, because the Romans are going to
+kill us all. So I will tell you.</p>
+<p>"At the end of the rock, you have to climb down about fifty
+feet. It's very steep there, and it's as much as you can do to get
+down; but when you have got down that far, you get to the head of a
+sort of dried-up water course, and it ain't very difficult to go
+down there and, that way, you can get right down to the stream. It
+don't look, from below, as if you could do it; and the Romans
+haven't put any guards on the stream, just there. I know, because I
+go down every morning, as soon as it gets light. I never tried to
+get through the Roman sentries; but I expect one could, if one
+tried.</p>
+<p>"But I don't see how you are to bring water up here, if that's
+what you want. I tell you, it is as much as you can do to get up
+and down, and you want both your hands and your feet; but I could
+go down and bring up a little water for you, in a skin hanging
+round my neck, if you like."</p>
+<p>"I am afraid that wouldn't be much good, Jonas," John said; "but
+it might be very useful to send messages out, that way."</p>
+<p>"Yes," the boy said; "but you see I have always intended, when
+the Romans took the place, to make off that way. If other people
+go, it's pretty sure to be found out, before long; and then the
+Romans will keep watch. But it don't much matter. I know another
+place where you and I could lie hidden, any time, if we had got
+enough to eat and drink. I will show you but, mind, you must
+promise not to tell anyone else. There's no room for more than two;
+and I don't mean to tell you, unless you promise."</p>
+<p>"I will promise, Jonas. I promise you, faithfully, not to tell
+anyone."</p>
+<p>"Well, the way down ain't far from the other one. I will show it
+you, one of these days. I went down there, once, to get a hawk I
+had taken from the nest, and tamed. I went down, first, with a rope
+tied round me; but I found I could have done it without that--but I
+didn't tell any of the others, as I wanted to keep the place to
+myself.</p>
+<p>"You climb down about fifty feet, and then you get on a sort of
+ledge, about three feet wide and six or seven feet long. You can't
+see it from above, because it's a hollow, as if a bit of rock had
+fallen out. Of course, if you stood up you might be seen by someone
+below, or on the hill opposite; but it's so high it is not likely
+anyone would notice you. Anyhow, if you lie down there, no one
+would see you. I have been down there, often and often, since. When
+she gets too bad to bear, I go down there and take a sleep; or lie
+there and laugh, when I think how she is hunting about for me to
+carry down the pails to the stream, for water."</p>
+<p>"I will say nothing about it, Jonas, you may be quite sure. That
+place may save both our lives. But the other path I will tell
+Josephus about. He may find it of great use."</p>
+<p>Josephus was indeed greatly pleased, when he heard that a way
+existed by which he could send out messages. Two or three active
+men were chosen for the work; but they would not venture to descend
+the steep precipice, by which Jonas made his way down to the top of
+the water course, but were lowered by ropes to that point. Before
+starting they were sewn up in skins so that, if a Roman sentry
+caught sight of them making their way down the water course, on
+their hands and feet, he would take them for dogs, or some other
+animals. Once at the bottom, they lay still till night, and then
+crawled through the line of sentries.</p>
+<p>In this way Josephus was able to send out dispatches to his
+friends outside, and to Jerusalem; imploring them to send an army,
+at once, to harass the rear of the Romans, and to afford an
+opportunity for the garrison of Jotapata to cut their way out.
+Messages came back by return and, for three weeks, communications
+were thus kept up; until one of the messengers slipped while
+descending the ravine and, as he rolled down, attracted the
+attention of the Romans who, after that, placed a strong guard at
+the foot of the water course.</p>
+<p>Until this discovery was made, Jonas had gone down regularly,
+every morning, and drank his fill; and had brought up a small skin
+of water to John, who had divided it among the children whom he saw
+most in want of it--for the pressure of thirst was now heavy. The
+Romans, from rising ground at a distance, had noticed the women
+going daily with jugs to the cistern, whence the water was doled
+out; and the besiegers directed their missiles to that point, and
+many were killed, daily, while fetching water.</p>
+<p>A dull despair now seized the Jews. So long as they were
+fighting, they had had little time to think of their situation; but
+now that the enemy no longer attacked, and there was nothing to do
+but to sit down and suffer, the hopelessness of their position
+stared them in the face. But there was no thought of surrender.
+They knew too well the fate that awaited them, at the hands of the
+Romans.</p>
+<p>They were therefore seized with rage, and indignation, when they
+heard that Josephus and some of the principal men were thinking of
+making an endeavor to escape. John, who had hitherto regarded his
+leader with a passionate devotion--although he thought that he had
+been wrong in taking to the fortified towns, instead of fighting
+among the mountains--shared in the general indignation at the
+proposed desertion.</p>
+<p>"It is he who has brought us all here," he said to Jonas--who
+had attached himself to him with dog-like fidelity--"and now he
+proposes to go away, and leave everyone here to be massacred! I
+cannot believe it."</p>
+<p>The news was, however, well founded for, when the inhabitants
+crowded down to the house--the women weeping and wailing, the men
+sullen and fierce--to beg Josephus to abandon his intention, the
+governor attempted to argue that it was for the public good that he
+should leave them. He might, he said, hurry to Jerusalem, and bring
+an army to the rescue. The people, however, were in no way
+convinced.</p>
+<p>"If you go," they said, "the Romans will speedily capture the
+city. We are ready to die, all together--to share one common
+fate--but do not leave us."</p>
+<p>As Josephus saw that, if he did not accede to the prayers of the
+women, the men would interfere by force to prevent his carrying out
+his intentions, he told them he would remain with them; and
+tranquillity was at once restored. The men, however, came again and
+again to him, asking to be led out to attack the Romans.</p>
+<p>"Let us die fighting," was the cry. "Let us die among our foes,
+and not with the agonies of thirst."</p>
+<p>"We must make them come up to attack us, again," Josephus said.
+"We shall fight to far greater advantage, so, than if we sallied
+out to attack them in their own intrenchments--when we should be
+shot down by their archers and slingers, before ever we should
+reach them."</p>
+<p>"But how are we to make them attack us? We want nothing
+better."</p>
+<p>"I will think it over," Josephus said, "and tell you in the
+morning."</p>
+<p>In the morning, to the surprise of the men, they were ordered to
+dip large numbers of garments into the precious supply of water,
+and to hang them on the walls. Loud were the outcries of the women,
+as they saw the scanty store of water, upon which their lives
+depended, so wasted; but the orders were obeyed, and the Romans
+were astonished at seeing the long line of dripping garments on the
+wall.</p>
+<p>The stratagem had its effect. Vespasian thought that the news he
+had received, that the place was ill supplied with water, must be
+erroneous; and ordered the troops again to take their station on
+the walls, and renew the attack. Great was the exultation among the
+Jews, when they saw the movement among the troops; and Josephus,
+ordering the fighting men together, said that now was their
+opportunity. There was no hope of safety, in passive resistance;
+therefore they had best sally out and, if they must die, leave at
+least a glorious example to posterity.</p>
+<p>The proposal was joyfully received, and he placed himself at
+their head. The gates were suddenly opened, and they poured out to
+the attack. So furious was their onslaught that the Romans were
+driven from the embankment. The Jews pursued them, crossed the
+lines of circumvallation, and attacked the Romans in their camp;
+tearing up the hides and penthouses behind which the Romans
+defended themselves, and setting fire to the lines in many
+places.</p>
+<p>The fight raged all day. The Jews then retired to the city, only
+to sally out again, the following morning. For three days the
+attacks were continued; the Jews driving in the Romans, each day,
+and retiring when Vespasian brought up heavy columns--who were
+unable, from the weight of their armor, to follow their
+lightly-armed assailants. Vespasian then ordered the regular troops
+to remain in camp, the assaults being repelled by the archers and
+slingers.</p>
+<p>Finding that the courage of the Jews was unabated, and that his
+troops were losing heavily in this irregular fighting, he
+determined to renew the siege, at all hazards, and bring the matter
+to a close. The heavy-armed troops were ordered to be in readiness,
+and to advance against the walls with the battering ram. This was
+pushed forward by a great number of men; being covered, as it
+advanced, with a great shield constructed of wattles and hides. As
+it was brought forward, the archers and slingers covered its
+advance by a shower of missiles against the defenders of the wall;
+while all the war machines poured in their terrible shower.</p>
+<p>The Jews, unable to show themselves above the battlements, or to
+oppose the advance of the terrible machine, crouched in shelter
+until the battering ram was placed in position.</p>
+<p>Then the ropes by which it swung from the framework overhead
+were seized, by a number of soldiers, and the first blow was
+delivered at the wall. It quivered beneath the terrible shock, and
+a cry of dismay arose from the defenders. Again and again the heavy
+ram struck, in the same place. The wall tottered beneath the blows;
+and would soon have fallen, had not Josephus ordered a number of
+sacks to be filled with straw, and let down by ropes from the
+walls, so as to deaden the blows of the ram.</p>
+<p>For a time the Romans ceased work; and then, fastening scythes
+to the ends of long poles, cut the ropes. The Jews were unable to
+show themselves above the walls, or to interfere with the men at
+work. In a few minutes the sacks were cut down, and the ram
+recommenced its work of destruction.</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch6" id="Ch6">Chapter 6</a>: The Fall Of The
+City.</h2>
+<p>The Roman soldiers--seeing the wall of Jotapata tremble beneath
+the blows of the battering ram, whose iron head pounded to powder
+the stones against which it struck--redoubled their efforts when,
+suddenly, from three sally ports which they had prepared, the Jews
+burst out; carrying their weapons in their right hands, and blazing
+torches in their left. As on previous occasions, their onslaught
+was irresistible. They swept the Romans before them; and set fire
+to the engines, the wattles, and the palisades, and even to the
+woodwork of the embankment. The timber had by this time dried and,
+as bitumen and pitch had been used as cement in the construction of
+the works, the flames spread with great rapidity; and the work of
+many days was destroyed, in an hour. All the engines and
+breastworks of the Fifth and Tenth Legions were entirely
+consumed.</p>
+<p>Just as the attack began, Eleazar--the son of Sameas, a
+Galilean--with an immense stone from the wall, struck the iron head
+of the battering ram, and knocked it off. He then leaped down from
+the wall, seized the iron head, and carried it back into the city.
+He was pierced by five arrows. Still, he pressed on and regained
+the walls; and held up the iron head in the sight of all, and then
+fell down dead.</p>
+<p>Such was the spirit with which the Jews were animated; and the
+Roman soldiers, trained as they were to conflict among many
+peoples, were yet astounded by the valor displayed by the race that
+they had considered as unwarlike peasants. But the Romans were not
+discouraged. Heavy masses of troops were brought up, the Jews were
+driven within their walls and, towards evening, the ram was again
+in position.</p>
+<p>While Vespasian was directing the attack, he was struck by a
+javelin in the heel. The Romans ceased from the attack and crowded
+round their general but, as soon as they ascertained that his wound
+was not serious, they returned to the attack with redoubled
+fury.</p>
+<p>All that night, the contest raged unceasingly. The Roman engines
+swept the walls with missiles. The towers came crashing down, under
+the blows of the huge stones; while the javelins, arrows, and the
+stones from the slings created terrible havoc among the defenders
+of the wall. But, as fast as these fell, fresh combatants took
+their places; and they continued hurling down stones, and blazing
+brands, upon the freshly-erected wattles round the battering ram.
+The Romans had the advantage in this strife for, while the fires on
+the walls--at which the Jews lighted their brands, and boiled the
+pitch and sulphur in which these were dipped--enabled them to aim
+accurately, they themselves worked in deep shadow, at the foot of
+the wall.</p>
+<p>The night was a terrible one. The bolts, stones, and arrows
+which passed over the wall spread ruin and death over the town. The
+din was unceasing. The thundering noise of the great stones; the
+dull, deep sound as the ram struck the wall; the fierce shouts of
+the combatants, as they fought hand to hand--for the corpses were,
+in places, piled so thick that the assailants could mount upon them
+to the top of the walls--the shrieks of the women, and the screams
+of the children, combined in one terrible and confused noise; which
+was echoed back, and multiplied, by the surrounding mountains.</p>
+<p>Morning was just breaking when the shaken wall gave way, and
+fell, with a crash. Vespasian called off his weary troops, and
+allowed them a short time for refreshment; then he prepared to
+storm the breach. He brought up, first, a number of his bravest
+horsemen; dismounted, and clad in complete armor. They were provided
+with long pikes, and were to charge forward, the instant the
+machines for mounting the breach were fixed. Behind these were the
+best of his infantry, while in their rear were the archers and
+slingers. Other parties, with scaling ladders, were to attack the
+uninjured part of the wall, and to draw off the attention of the
+besiegers. The rest of the horse extended all over the hills round
+the town, so that none might make their escape.</p>
+<p>Josephus prepared to receive the attack. He placed the old,
+infirm, and wounded to repel the attack on the uninjured parts of
+the wall. He then chose the five strongest and bravest men and,
+with them, took his place to form the front line of the defenders
+of the breach. He told them to kneel down and cover their heads
+with their bucklers, until the enemy's archers had emptied their
+quivers and, when the Romans had fixed the machines for mounting,
+they were to leap down among the enemy and fight to the last;
+remembering that there was now no hope of safety, naught but to
+revenge the fate which was impending over them, their wives and
+children.</p>
+<p>As the Romans mounted to the assault, a terrible cry broke out
+from the women. They saw the Romans still manning the lines which
+cut off all escape, and they believed that the end was now at hand.
+Josephus, fearing that their cries would dispirit the men, ordered
+them all to be locked up in their houses, and then calmly awaited
+the assault.</p>
+<p>The trumpet of the legion sounded, and the whole Roman host set
+up a terrible shout while, at the same moment, the air was darkened
+by the arrows of their bowmen. Kneeling beneath their bucklers, the
+Jews remained calm and immovable; and then, before the Romans had
+time to set foot upon the breach, with a yell of fury they rushed
+upon them, and threw themselves into the midst of their assailants.
+For a time, the Romans could make no way against the desperate
+courage of the Jews but, as fast as the leading files fell, fresh
+troops took their places; while the Jews, who were vastly reduced
+by their losses, had no fresh men to take the place of those who
+died.</p>
+<p>At last, the solid phalanx of the Romans drove back the
+defenders, and entered the breach. But as they did so, from the
+walls above and from the breach in front, vessels filled with
+boiling oil were hurled down upon them. The Roman ranks were
+broken; and the men, in agony, rolled on the ground, unable to
+escape the burning fluid which penetrated through the joints of
+their armor. Those who turned to fly were pierced by the javelins of
+the Jews; for the Romans carried no defensive armor on their backs,
+which were never supposed to be turned towards an enemy.</p>
+<p>Fresh troops poured up the breach, to take the place of their
+agonized comrades; but the Jews threw down, upon the planks,
+vessels filled with a sort of vegetable slime. Unable to retain
+their footing upon the slippery surface, the Romans fell upon each
+other, in heaps. Those rolling down carried others with them, and a
+terrible confusion ensued, the Jews never ceasing to pour their
+missiles upon them.</p>
+<p>When evening came, Vespasian called off his men. He saw that, to
+overcome the desperate resistance of the defenders, fresh steps
+must be taken before the assault was repeated; and he accordingly
+gave orders that the embankment should be raised, much higher than
+before; and that upon it three towers, each fifty feet high and
+strongly girded with iron, should be built.</p>
+<p>This great work was carried out, in spite of the efforts of the
+besieged. In the towers, Vespasian placed his javelin men, archers,
+and light machines and, as these now looked down upon the wall,
+they were enabled to keep up such a fire upon it that the Jews
+could no longer maintain their footing; but contented themselves
+with lying behind it, and making desperate sallies whenever they
+saw any parties of Romans approaching the breach.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, a terrible calamity had befallen the
+neighboring town of Japha. Emboldened by the vigorous defense of
+Jotapata, it had closed its gates to the Romans. Vespasian sent
+Trajan, with two thousand foot and a thousand horse, against
+it.</p>
+<p>The city was strongly situated, and surrounded by a double wall.
+Instead of waiting to be attacked, the people sallied out and fell
+upon the Romans. They were, however, beaten back; and the Romans,
+pressing on their heels, entered with them through the gates of the
+outside walls. The defenders of the gates through the inner walls,
+fearing that these, too, would be carried by the mob, closed them;
+and all those who had sallied out were butchered by the Romans.</p>
+<p>Trajan, seeing that the garrison must now be weak, sent to
+Vespasian, and asked him to send his son to complete the victory.
+Titus soon arrived, with a thousand foot and five hundred horse
+and, at once, assaulted the inner walls. The defense was feeble.
+The Romans effected their entry but, inside the town, a desperate
+conflict took place; the inhabitants defending every street, with
+the energy of despair, while the women aided their efforts by
+hurling down stones, and missiles, from the roofs. The battle
+lasted six hours, when all who could bear arms were slain. The rest
+of the male population were put to death, the women taken as
+slaves. In all, fifteen thousand were killed, two thousand one
+hundred and thirty taken prisoners.</p>
+<p>In another direction, a heavy blow had also been struck by the
+Romans. The Samaritans had not openly joined the revolt, but had
+gathered in great force on Mount Gerizim. Cerealis was sent by
+Vespasian, with three thousand infantry and six hundred horse,
+against them. He surrounded the foot of the mountain, and abstained
+from an assault until the Samaritans were weakened by thirst--many
+dying from want of water. Cerealis then mounted the hill, and sent
+to them to throw down their arms. On their refusal, he charged them
+from all sides, and put every soul--in number, eleven thousand six
+hundred--to the sword.</p>
+<p>The situation of the defenders of Jotapata was now pitiable,
+indeed. Scarce a man but had received wounds, more or less severe,
+in the desperate combats. All were utterly worn out with fatigue;
+for they were under arms, day and night, in readiness to repel the
+expected attack. Numbers of the women and children had died of
+thirst, and terror. Save the armed men lying in groups near the
+foot of the wall, in readiness to repel an assault, scarce a soul
+was to be seen in the lately-crowded streets.</p>
+<p>The houses were now ample to contain the vastly diminished
+number. Here the women and children crouched, in utter prostration.
+The power of suffering was almost gone. Few cared how soon the end
+came.</p>
+<p>The siege had now continued for forty-seven days; and the Roman
+army, strong in numbers, in discipline, and in arms, and commanded
+by one of its best generals, had yet failed to capture the little
+town--which they had expected to take within a few hours of their
+appearance before it--and so fierce was the valor of the besieged,
+that Vespasian did not venture to order his legions forward to
+renew the assault. But now, a deserter informed him that the
+garrison was greatly exhausted, that the men on guard could not
+keep awake; and that the breach could be carried, at night, by a
+sudden assault.</p>
+<p>Vespasian prepared for the assault, which was to take place at
+daybreak. A thick mist enveloped the town, and the sleeping
+sentries were not aroused by the silent steps of the approaching
+Romans. Titus was the first to enter the breach, followed by a
+small number of troops. These killed the sleeping guards, and the
+main body of the Romans then poured in. Before the Jews were
+conscious of their danger, the whole of the Roman army was upon
+them.</p>
+<p>Then the slaughter commenced. Many of the Jews killed each
+other, rather than fall into the hands of the Romans. Many threw
+themselves over the precipices, numbers took refuge in the deep
+caverns under the city. That day, all in the streets or houses were
+killed; the next, the Romans searched the caverns and underground
+passages, slaughtering all the men and boys, and sparing none but
+infants and women. During the siege and capture, forty thousand men
+fell. Only twelve hundred women and children were spared. So
+complete was the surprise, and so unresistingly did the Jews submit
+to slaughter, that only one Roman was killed.</p>
+<p>This was Antoninus, a centurion. He came upon a Jew in a deep
+cavern, and told him he would spare his life, if he would
+surrender. The Jew asked him to give him his hand, as a pledge of
+his faith, and to help him out of the cave. Antoninus did so, and
+the Jew at once ran him through with a spear.</p>
+<p>John was asleep when the Romans entered. He was aroused by Jonas
+rushing into the room. The boy was at all times restless, and
+suffered less than most of those within the walls; for there was an
+abundance of grain up to the end of the siege and, until the Romans
+had discovered the way down to the water, he had not suffered in
+any way from thirst. He was considered too young to take part in
+the actual fighting; but had labored with the rest in repairing the
+defenses, carrying food to men on the walls, and carrying away the
+dead and wounded.</p>
+<p>"Get up, John!" he exclaimed. "In the mist I have just run upon
+a mass of Roman soldiers, ranged in order. The town is taken.
+Quick, before they scatter and begin to slay!"</p>
+<p>John caught up his sword, and ran out. Just as he did so, a
+terrible shout was heard, followed by shrieks and cries. The work
+of butchery had begun.</p>
+<p>John's plans had been laid for some time. At night Jonas had
+frequently descended to the ledge, taking with him food, and jars
+of the water he brought up from below; and once or twice John had
+descended, Jonas fastening a rope round his body, and lowering it
+gradually for, active as he was, John could not get down without
+such assistance. Indeed, to any one who looked casually over the
+top, the descent appeared absolutely impossible.</p>
+<p>At the top of their speed, the lads ran to the spot at which the
+descent had to be made. The rope was hidden close at hand. John
+slipped the noose at the end over his shoulders. Jonas twisted the
+rope once round a stunted tree, which grew close by, and allowed it
+to go out gradually. As soon as the strain upon it ceased, and he
+knew John was upon the ledge, he loosened the rope and dropped the
+end over; and then began, himself, to descend, his bare feet and
+hands clinging to every inequality, however slight, in the
+rock.</p>
+<p>He presently stood by the side of John. The latter had coiled up
+the rope, and laid it by him; and had then thrown himself down, and
+was sobbing bitterly. Jonas sat down quietly beside him, till he
+had recovered his composure.</p>
+<p>"It is no use fretting," he said, philosophically. "There's no
+one you care about, particularly, up there; and I am sure there's
+no one I care about--only I should like to have peeped in, and have
+seen her face, when the Romans burst open the door. I don't suppose
+she was very sorry, though, for it will be better to be a Roman
+slave than to be going through what they have been, for the last
+month."</p>
+<p>"It is horrible!" John said, "Horrible! However, Jonas, let us
+thank God for having thus preserved our lives, when all besides are
+in such terrible danger of death."</p>
+<p>For a time, the two lads sat silent. John was the first to
+speak.</p>
+<p>"I am thankful," he said, "that, owing to our being down the
+face of the rock, the sound is carried away above our heads, and we
+can hear but little of what is going on there. It seems a confusion
+of sounds, and comes to us rather as an echo from the hills,
+yonder, than directly from above."</p>
+<p>Sometimes, indeed, thrilling screams and shouts were heard but,
+for the most part, the sounds were so blended together that they
+could not be distinguished one from another. As soon as the mist
+cleared off, the lads lay down, as far back from the ledge as they
+could get.</p>
+<p>"We must not lift up a head, today," John said. "The guards
+below, and on the hills, will have their eyes fixed on the rock, on
+the lookout for fugitives and, until nighttime, we must not venture
+to sit up. Fortunately, that outer edge of the shelf is a good deal
+higher than it is, back here; and I don't think that even those on
+the mountain, opposite, could see us as we lie."</p>
+<p>"I should think a good many may escape, like us," Jonas said,
+presently. "There are numbers of caverns and passages, from which
+they have dug the stone for the building of the houses. A lot of
+the people are sure to hide away, there."</p>
+<p>"I daresay they will," John agreed; "but I fear the Romans will
+hunt them all out."</p>
+<p>"How long do you think we shall have to stay here, John?"</p>
+<p>"Till the Romans go, whether it is one week or two; but I do not
+think they will stay here many days. The town is so full of dead
+that, in this hot weather, it will be unbearable before long. At
+any rate, we shall be able to pass a good deal of time in sleep. We
+have not had much of it, lately. Till last night, I have not been
+in the house, at night, for over a fortnight. But I felt, last
+night, as if I must have a sleep, whatever came of it. I suppose
+the guards at the breach must have felt the same, or the Romans
+could never have got in without the alarm being given."</p>
+<p>For a few minutes, John lay thinking of the terrible scenes that
+must be passing, on the rock above; then his drowsiness overcame
+him, and he was soon fast asleep.</p>
+<p>It was dark when he woke. As he moved, Jonas spoke.</p>
+<p>"Are you awake, John? Because if you are, let us have something
+to eat. I have been awake the last four hours, and I have been
+wishing you would stir."</p>
+<p>"There was no occasion to wait for my waking, Jonas. There are
+the grain and the water, close at hand; and no cooking is
+required."</p>
+<p>"I wasn't going to eat till you woke, if it had been all night,"
+Jonas said. "Still, I am glad you are awake; they are quiet now, up
+above, and I have heard the Roman trumpets sounding. I expect that
+most of them have marched back to their camp."</p>
+<p>The next day passed like the first. Occasionally cries of agony
+were heard. Sometimes bodies were hurled from the top of the rock,
+but a short distance from where they were lying.</p>
+<p>The next two days passed more quietly, but upon that following a
+murmur, as of a multitude of men working, was heard. From time to
+time there were heavy crashes, as masses of stones, hurled down the
+precipice, struck against its face as they fell; and then bounded,
+far out beyond the stream, at its foot. All these sounds were
+echoed back by the surrounding hills, until it seemed as if a storm
+was raging, far away in the heart of the mountains.</p>
+<p>"They are destroying the town," John said, in answer to his
+companion's question as to the cause of the uproar. "That is the
+best thing possible for us. Had it remained standing, they might
+have left a garrison here, to prevent our people reoccupying it. If
+they destroy it, it is a sign that they intend to march away,
+altogether."</p>
+<p>Several times Jonas wished to climb up, at night, to ascertain
+what was going on; but John would not hear of it.</p>
+<p>"There is nothing to find out, Jonas. We know what they did at
+Gadara, where they slew all the males and carried off all the
+women, although no resistance was offered. We may be sure that
+there will be no more mercy shown at Jotapata, which has affronted
+the Roman power by keeping their great army at bay, for nearly
+seven weeks, and whose capture has cost them thousands of men. We
+know what has happened--they have slain every soul, save a few
+young women, who were worth money as slaves. Now they are leveling
+the town to its foundations. The place that defied them will cease
+to exist.</p>
+<p>"And yet, they talk of Roman magnanimity! Would we had five
+thousand fighting men, hidden here with us. We would climb then,
+Jonas, and fall upon them in the night, and take a mighty vengeance
+for the woes they have inflicted. But, being alone, we will remain
+here till we have reason to believe that the last Roman has left.
+Did one of them catch sight of you, our fate would be sealed. They
+have no boys among them, and the slightest glimpse of your figure
+would be enough to tell them that you were a Jew who had been in
+hiding and, in their fear that one man should escape their
+vengeance, they would hunt you down, as a pack of wolves might hunt
+down a solitary lamb."</p>
+<p>"They could never get down here, John."</p>
+<p>"Not by the way you came; but they would lower a cage full of
+armed men, from above, and slay us without pity."</p>
+<p>"But if I were found out, John, I would not lead them here. I
+would throw myself over the precipice, rather than that risk should
+come to you!"</p>
+<p>"But I don't want you to throw yourself over the precipice,
+Jonas. I want to keep you with me: in the first place because we
+are great friends now; in the second because, if you were killed, I
+might as well throw myself over, at once--for I do not think I
+could ever climb up this rock, without your assistance."</p>
+<p>"It is much easier going up than coming down, John."</p>
+<p>"That may be and, indeed, I have no doubt it is so; but I would
+rather not put the matter to the test. No; we have provision and
+water here, enough to last us for ten days and, until they are
+consumed, it were best not to stir from here."</p>
+<p>Four days later, however, they heard the sound of the Roman
+trumpets and, on raising their heads carefully a few inches, saw
+that the guards on the opposite hills had all been withdrawn.
+Having now less fear of being seen, they raised their heads still
+further, and looked up the valley to the great camp on the hillside
+where, at night, they had seen the fires of the Romans, blazing
+high.</p>
+<p>"They are going!" Jonas exclaimed, joyously. "Look at the sun
+sparkling on the long lines of arms and armor. Not a sound is to be
+heard, above--the work is done. They are about to march away."</p>
+<p>"Do not let us expose ourselves further," John said. "It may be
+that they have left a few watchers, to see if any who have eluded
+their search may show themselves, believing that they have gone. I
+have no doubt they are going and, by tomorrow, it will be safe for
+us to move."</p>
+<p>All day they heard the sound of trumpets, for the great host
+took a long time getting into motion but, gradually, the sound grew
+fainter and fainter, as the rear guard of the army took the road
+which they had cut through the mountains, eight weeks before.</p>
+<p>That night, when darkness fell, and the two lads sat up on their
+ledge and looked round, not a light was to be seen; and not a sound
+broke the silence of the night.</p>
+<p>"At daybreak tomorrow, Jonas, as soon as it becomes light enough
+for you to see your way, you shall go up and look round. They may
+have left a guard behind, but I should hardly think so. After the
+wholesale slaughter at Gadara, and here, the hatred of the Romans
+will be so intense that, confident as they are in their arms and
+discipline, they would hardly venture to leave a small body of men,
+in the heart of these mountains."</p>
+<p>As soon as it was daylight, Jonas prepared to climb up to the
+plateau above. He took with him the rope; arranging that, if he
+found that the place was absolutely deserted, he would lower one
+end to John and fasten the other to the tree above; and that he
+would then aid John, as much as his strength would permit, in
+making his way up the rock.</p>
+<p>John watched his companion making his way up, and observed
+exactly where he placed his feet and hands, until he was out of
+sight. Then he waited. In about a quarter of an hour, the end of
+the rope fell in front of him. He fastened it securely under his
+arms and then, taking off his sandals, began the ascent. It was not
+so difficult as it had looked; and the steady strain which Jonas
+kept on the rope, from above, aided him and gave him confidence. In
+three or four minutes, he gained the top of the rock.</p>
+<p>"There is not a soul to be seen," Jonas said. "The town has
+gone, and the people, and the Romans. All is desolation!"</p>
+<p>The scene was indeed changed, since John had last looked upon
+it. Not a wall, in the so-lately busy little town, had been left
+standing. The whole area was covered, three or four feet deep with
+a chaos of stones, mortar, and beams; forming a great grave, below
+which lay the bodies of forty thousand of the defenders of the
+place. The walls so bravely defended had disappeared; and the
+embankment, whose erection had cost the Romans so much labor and
+bloodshed, had been destroyed by fire. A dead silence hung over the
+place, and the air was tainted with a terrible odor of
+corruption.</p>
+<p>The desolation and solitude of the scene overpowered John, and
+he sat down on a fragment of masonry and wept, unrestrainedly, for
+some time. He roused himself, at last, as Jonas touched him.</p>
+<p>"I shall go down again, and get what grain there is left," the
+boy said. "There is no chance of finding anything to eat within a
+day's march of here. The Roman horse will have destroyed every
+village within a wide circuit."</p>
+<p>"But I cannot let you go down again, Jonas. The danger is too
+great."</p>
+<p>"But I have been up and down, lots of times," Jonas said.</p>
+<p>"That may be, Jonas, but you might be dashed to pieces, this
+time."</p>
+<p>"Well, if you like I will fasten the rope round me; then, if I
+should slip, I shall be safe."</p>
+<p>John consented with some reluctance, but he was so nervous and
+shaken that he walked some distance away, and did not turn round
+until he heard Jonas' footsteps again approaching him.</p>
+<p>"Now we can start," the boy said. "We have got grain here,
+enough for three days; and tonight we will crush it, and cook it. I
+have had enough of eating raw grain, for a long time to come."</p>
+<p>The boy's cheerfulness restored the tone of John's nerves
+and--making their way with some difficulty over the chaos of stone
+and timber, until they arrived at the pile of charred timber, which
+marked the spot where the Roman embankment had stood--they stepped
+out briskly, descended the hill, crossed the deserted lines of
+circumvallation; and then began to ascend the mountains, which had,
+for some distance, been stripped of their timber for the purposes
+of the siege. In another hour's walking they reached the forest,
+and pressed on until the afternoon. Not that there was any need for
+speed, now, but John felt a longing to place as wide a gap as
+possible between himself and the great charnel ground which, alone,
+marked the spot where Jotapata had stood.</p>
+<p>At length, Jonas urged the necessity for a halt, for rest and
+food. They chose a spot at the foot of a great tree, and then set
+to work to collect a store of firewood. John took out the box of
+tinder which, in those days, everyone carried about with him, and a
+fire was soon lighted. Jonas then looked for two large flat stones,
+and set to work to grind some grain.</p>
+<p>The halting place had been chosen from the vicinity of a little
+spring, which rose a few yards distant. With this the pounded grain
+was moistened and, after kneading it up, Jonas rolled it in balls
+and placed them in the hot ashes of the fire. In half an hour they
+were cooked, and the meal was eaten with something like
+cheerfulness.</p>
+<p>Another day's walking brought them to a little village, nestled
+in the forest. Here they were kindly received, though the people
+scarce believed them when they said that they were survivors of the
+garrison of Jotapata. The news of the capture of the town, and the
+destruction of its defenders, had already spread through the
+country; and John now learned, for the first time, the fate which
+had befallen Japha and the Samaritans on Mount Gerizim--events
+which filled him with consternation.</p>
+<p>The folly of the tactics which had been pursued--of cooping all
+the fighting men up in the walled cities, to be destroyed one after
+the other by the Romans--was more than ever apparent. He had never,
+from the first, been very hopeful of the result of the struggle;
+but it seemed, now, as if it could end in nothing but the total
+destruction of the Jewish race of Palestine.</p>
+<p>John stayed for two days in the little mountain village and
+then, with a store of provisions sufficient to last him for some
+days, pursued his way; following the lines of the Anti-Libanus,
+until that range of hills joined the range of Mount Hermon, north
+of the sources of the Jordan.</p>
+<p>He had stopped for a day at Dan, high up among the hills. Here
+the people had no fear of Roman vengeance; for the insurrection had
+not extended so far north, and the Roman garrison of Caesarea
+Philippi overawed the plains near the upper waters of the Jordan.
+Determined, however, to run no unnecessary risks, John and his
+companion pursued their way on the lower slopes of the hills until,
+after six days' walking, they arrived at Neve.</p>
+<p>Here they learned where the farm of John's kinsman was situated,
+and made their way thither. As they came up to the house a woman
+came out, gazed intently at John and, with a scream of terror, ran
+back into the house. It was one of Martha's maids. John stood
+irresolute, fearing that his sudden appearance might startle the
+other inmates when, suddenly, Mary appeared at the door, looking
+pale but resolute. She, too, gazed fixedly at John; and her lips
+moved, but no sound came from them.</p>
+<p>"Don't you know me, Mary?" John said.</p>
+<p>The girl gave a scream of joy, and threw herself into his arms.
+A moment later Martha, followed by Miriam and the other servants,
+came out.</p>
+<p>"It is no spirit, mother, it is John, himself," Mary exclaimed
+and, the next moment, John was clasped in his mother's arms.</p>
+<p>It was not surprising that the first who saw John had thought
+that he was a spirit. The news had already been received that the
+whole of the garrison of Jotapata had been put to the sword; and
+John's appearance was changed so greatly, within the last three
+months, that he would scarce have been known. Fatigue, anxiety, and
+the loss of blood--from several wounds which he had received, in
+the course of the siege--had so pulled him down that he was but a
+shadow of his former self. His clothes were in rags. He had washed
+them at the village where he had first stopped for, before that,
+they had been stiffened with blood; and even now, stained and
+ragged as they were, they gave him the appearance of a
+mendicant.</p>
+<p>Jonas had held back a little, while the first joyful greeting
+was going on, but John soon turned to him.</p>
+<p>"Mother," he said, "this must be as another son to you for, next
+to the protection of God, it is to him I owe my life."</p>
+<p>Martha welcomed the young stranger affectionately.</p>
+<p>"Before you tell us aught that has befallen you, John, go and
+change your garments, and wash, while we prepare a meal for you.
+The clothes of your uncle's son Silas, who is about your age, will
+fit you; and those of his younger brother will do for your
+friend."</p>
+<p>"Was the last news of my father good?" John asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes, the Lord be praised, he was well when we heard of him, a
+week since!"</p>
+<p>The travelers were at once conducted to a room, and supplied
+with water and clean garments. By the time they had changed, and
+returned to the general room, John's uncle and cousin had been
+fetched in from the farm, and he received another hearty
+welcome.</p>
+<p>It almost seemed to him, as he sat down to a comfortable meal,
+with Mary and his mother waiting upon him, that the events of the
+past two months had been a hideous dream; and that he had never
+left his comfortable home on the shore of the Lake of Galilee. As
+to Jonas, unaccustomed to kind treatment, or to luxury of any kind,
+he was too confused to utter a word. When the meal was over, John
+was asked to tell his news; and he related all the stirring
+incidents of the siege, and the manner in which he and his
+companion had effected his escape.</p>
+<p>"We are, no doubt," he concluded, "the sole male survivors of
+the siege."</p>
+<p>"Not so, my son," Martha said. "There is a report that Josephus
+has survived the siege; and that he is a prisoner, in the hands of
+the Romans."</p>
+<p>"It may be that they have spared him, to grace Vespasian's
+triumph, at Rome," John said. "It is their custom, I believe, to
+carry the generals they may take in war to Rome, to be slain
+there."</p>
+<p>It was not until some time afterwards that John learned the
+particulars of the capture of Josephus. When he saw that all was
+lost, Josephus had leaped down the shaft of a dry well, from the
+bottom of which a long cavern led off, entirely concealed from the
+sight of those above. Here he found forty of the leading citizens,
+who had laid in a store of food sufficient to last for many days.
+Josephus, at least, who gives his account of all these
+circumstances, says that he quite unexpectedly found these forty
+citizens in hiding there; but this is improbable in the extreme,
+and there can be little doubt that he had, long before, prepared
+this refuge with them, when he found that the people would not
+allow them to attempt to make their escape from the city.</p>
+<p>At night Josephus came up from the well and tried to make his
+escape but, finding the Romans everywhere vigilant, he returned to
+the place of concealment. On the third day a woman, who was aware
+of the hiding place, informed the Romans of it--probably in return
+for a promise of freedom, for the Romans were searching high and
+low for Josephus; who could not, they were convinced, have escaped
+through their lines. Vespasian immediately sent two tribunes,
+Paulinus and Gallicanus, to induce him to surrender by promise of
+his life.</p>
+<p>Josephus refused to come out, and Vespasian sent another
+tribune, Nicanor, a personal friend of Josephus, to assure him of
+his safety, if he would surrender. In the account Josephus gives of
+the transaction, he says that at this moment he suddenly remembered
+a dream--in which it was revealed to him that all these calamities
+should fall upon the Jews, that he himself should be saved, and
+that Vespasian should become emperor--and that, therefore, if he
+passed over to the Romans he would do so not as a renegade, but in
+obedience to the voice of God.</p>
+<p>It was certainly a happy coincidence that the dream should have
+occurred to him, at this moment. He at once announced his readiness
+to surrender; but his forty companions did not see the matter in
+the same light. The moment Josephus left them, the Roman soldiers
+would throw combustibles down the well, and suffocate them, if they
+did not come out and submit to slaughter.</p>
+<p>They urged upon Josephus that he was their leader; that they had
+all followed his orders, and cast in their lot with his; and that
+it would be treacherous and base, in the extreme, for him now to
+save his life by going over to the Romans, when all the inferior
+people had slain themselves, or had submitted to slaughter, rather
+than beg their lives of the Romans. Josephus argued with them, at
+length, but they were not convinced and, drawing their swords,
+threatened to kill him, if he tried to leave them. They would all
+die together, they said.</p>
+<p>Josephus then proposed that, in order to avoid the sin of
+suicide, they should draw lots which should kill each other. To
+this they assented; and they continued to draw lots as to which
+should slay the other, until only Josephus and one other remained
+alive.</p>
+<p>This is the story that Josephus tells. He was, of course,
+endeavoring to put his own case in the best light, and to endeavor
+to prove that he was not--as the Jews universally regarded him--a
+traitor to his country. It need hardly be said that the story is
+improbable, in the extreme; and that, had any one of the forty men
+survived and written the history, he would probably have told a
+very different tale.</p>
+<p>The conduct of Josephus, from the first outbreak of the trouble,
+showed that he was entirely adverse to the rising against the
+Romans. He himself, having been to Rome, had seen her power and
+might; and had been received with great favor by Poppaea, the wife
+of Nero, and had made many friends there. He had, therefore, at the
+outset, opposed as far as he was able, without going so far as to
+throw suspicion on his patriotism, the rebellion against the
+Romans. During the events in Galilee, he had shown himself anxious
+to keep in favor with the Romans. He had rebuked those who had
+attacked the soldiers traveling as an escort, with a large amount
+of treasure belonging to King Agrippa; and would have sent back the
+spoils taken, had not the people risen against it. He affected
+great indignation at the plunder of Agrippa's palace at Tiberias
+and, gathering all he could of the spoils, had handed them over to
+the care of the chief of Agrippa's friends there. He had protected
+the two officers of Agrippa, whom the Jews would have killed--had
+released and sent them back to the king; and when John of Gischala
+wished to carry off large quantities of grain, stored by the Romans
+in Upper Galilee, Josephus refused to allow him to do so, saying
+that it should be kept for its owners.</p>
+<p>It is almost certain that Josephus must, in some way, have
+entered into communication with the Romans; for how otherwise could
+he, with the principal inhabitants, have proposed to make their
+escape, when every avenue was closed? Josephus was a man of great
+talent and energy, full of resources, and of great personal
+bravery--at least, if his own account of his conduct during the
+siege is to be believed. But no one can read his labored excuses
+for his own conduct without feeling sure that he had, all along,
+been in correspondence with the Romans; and that he had,
+beforehand, been assured that his life should be spared.</p>
+<p>He had, from the first, despaired of successful resistance to
+the Romans; and his conduct in throwing himself, at the last
+moment, into a town about to be besieged and, as he must have
+known, captured--for the want of water, alone, rendered its fall a
+mere question of time--when his presence and leadership was so
+urgently required among the people to whose command he had been
+appointed, seems to prove that he wished to fall into their
+hands.</p>
+<p>It would not be just to brand Josephus as a traitor. He had done
+his best to induce the Galileans to form themselves into an army,
+and to defend the province; and it was only when that army
+dispersed, at the approach of the Romans, that he went to Jotapata.
+It was his leadership that enabled that city to continue its heroic
+defense It cannot, therefore, be said that Josephus in any way
+betrayed the trust confided to him by the council at Jerusalem. But
+the conclusion can hardly be avoided that, from the first,
+foreseeing that utter ruin and destruction would fall upon the
+Jews, he had set himself to work to prepare a way of pardon and
+escape, for himself; and that he thought a position of honor, among
+the Romans, vastly preferable to an unknown grave among the
+mountains of Galilee.</p>
+<p>Upon being taken out of the well, Josephus was taken to
+Vespasian and, in the presence only of the general, his son Titus,
+and two other officers, announced that he was endowed with
+prophetic powers, and that he was commissioned by God to tell
+Vespasian that he would become emperor, and that he would be
+succeeded by his son Titus. The prophecy was one that required no
+more penetration than for any person, in the present day, to
+predict that the most rising man in a great political party would
+one day become prime minister. The emperor was hated, and it was
+morally certain that his fall would not long be delayed; and in
+that case the most popular general in the Roman army would, almost
+certainly, be chosen to succeed him.</p>
+<p>Vespasian, himself, was not greatly affected by the prophecy.
+But Josephus declared that he had, all along, predicted the success
+of the Romans, the fall of the town after forty-six days' siege,
+and his own safety; and as some of the female captives were brought
+up and, on Josephus appealing to them whether this was not so,
+naturally replied in the affirmative, Josephus says that Vespasian
+was then satisfied of his prisoner's divine mission, and henceforth
+treated him with great honor.</p>
+<p>It is much more easy to believe that an agreement already
+existed between Vespasian and Josephus; and that the latter only
+got up this story to enable him to maintain that he was not a
+traitor to his country, but acting in accordance with the orders of
+God. Certain it is that no similar act of clemency was shown, by
+Vespasian, to any other Jew; that no other thought of pity or mercy
+entered his mind, during the campaign, that he spared no man who
+fell alive into his hands, and that no more ruthless and wholesale
+extermination than that which he inflicted upon the people of
+Palestine was ever carried out, by the most barbarous of
+conquerors.</p>
+<p>To this day, the memory of Josephus is hated among the Jews.</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch7" id="Ch7">Chapter 7</a>: The Massacre On The
+Lake.</h2>
+<p>John remained for three weeks at his uncle's. A messenger, with
+the news of his safe arrival there, had been sent off to his
+father; who came up to see him, three days later. The formal act of
+betrothal between John and his cousin took place. Simon and Martha
+would have been willing that the full ceremony of marriage should
+take place, and the latter even urged this upon her son.</p>
+<p>"You are now more than seventeen, John, and have taken your
+place among men; and may well take to yourself a wife. Mary is nigh
+fifteen, and many maidens marry earlier. You love each other. Why,
+then, should you not be married? It would cheer the old age of your
+father, and myself, to see our grandchildren growing up around
+us."</p>
+<p>"Had the times been different, mother, I would gladly have had
+it so; but with the land torn by war, with our brethren being
+slaughtered everywhere, with Jerusalem and the Temple in danger, it
+is no time for marrying and giving in marriage. Besides, the law
+says that, for a year after marriage, a man shall not go to the war
+or journey upon business; but shall remain at home, quiet, with his
+wife. I could not do that, now. Did the news come, tomorrow, that
+the Romans were marching upon Jerusalem, assuredly I should do my
+duty, and take up arms and go to the defense of the Holy City; and
+maybe Mary would be left a widow, before the days of rejoicing for
+the marriage were over.</p>
+<p>"No, mother; the life of no man who can wield a weapon is his
+own, at present. The defense of the Temple is the first, and
+greatest, of duties. If I fall there, you will adopt Mary as your
+child; and marry her to someone who will take my place, and be a
+son to you. Mary will grieve for me, doubtless, for a time; but it
+will be the grief of a sister for a brother, not that of a wife for
+her husband and, in time, she will marry the man to whom you shall
+give her, and will be happy. Even for myself, I would rather that
+it were so left. I shall feel more free from cares and
+responsibilities; and though, if you and my father lay your orders
+upon me, I shall of course obey them, I pray you that, in this
+matter, you will suffer me to have my way."</p>
+<p>Martha talked the matter over with her husband; and they agreed
+that John's wishes should be carried out, and that the marriage
+should be postponed until the troubles were over. Neither of them
+believed that John would fall in the struggle. They regarded his
+escape from Jotapata as well-nigh miraculous, and felt assured that
+God, having specially protected him through such great danger,
+would continue to do so to the end.</p>
+<p>Contrary to expectation, Vespasian had not followed up his
+success at Jotapata by a march against Jerusalem. His army had
+suffered very heavy losses in the siege; and the desperate valor
+which the defenders of the town had shown had, doubtless, impressed
+upon his mind the formidable nature of the task he had
+undertaken.</p>
+<p>If a little mountain town had cost him so dearly, what would not
+be the loss which would be entailed by the capture of a city like
+Jerusalem, with its position of vast natural strength, its solid
+and massive fortifications; and defended, as it would be, by the
+whole strength of the Jewish nation, fighting with the fury of
+religious fanaticism and despair! His army, strong as it was, would
+doubtless capture the city, but at such a cost that it might be
+crippled for further action; and Vespasian was keeping one eye upon
+Rome, and wished to have his army complete, and in perfect order,
+in readiness for anything that might occur there.</p>
+<p>Therefore, after the fall of Jotapata he marched first to
+Caesarea and, after a short halt there, passed north to Caesarea
+Philippi--where the climate, cooled by the breezes from the
+mountains, was pleasant and healthful--and here he gave the army
+twenty days to rest, and recover from their wounds and fatigues. He
+then marched south again to Scythopolis, or Bethsan, lying just
+within the borders of Samaria, and not far from the Jordan. Here
+Titus, with a detached force, joined him; and they prepared to
+reduce the cities near the lake.</p>
+<p>Simon had by this time returned home, accompanied by John and
+Jonas. Simon tried to persuade his son to remain with his mother,
+but John had entreated that he might accompany him.</p>
+<p>"The war may last for a long time, father; and the land must be
+tilled, else why should you yourself return home? We are in the
+province of King Agrippa and, after what has befallen Jotapata and
+Japha, it is not likely that the people of Hippos, or of other
+towns, will venture to show disaffection--therefore there is no
+reason why the Romans should carry fire and sword through Agrippa's
+country, east of Jordan. It is well that my mother and Mary should
+not return for, if evil days should come, they could not save
+themselves by rapid flight; besides we risk but death, and death
+were a thousand times better than slavery among the Romans. If we
+find that they are approaching, and are wasting the land, we can
+fly. The boats are close by; and we can take to the lake, and land
+where we will, and make our way back here."</p>
+<p>"And you will not seek, John, when the Romans approach, to enter
+Tiberias or Gamala, or any other cities that may hold out against
+the Romans?"</p>
+<p>"No, father. I have had my share of defending a walled city and,
+save for Jerusalem, I will fight no more in cities. All these
+places must fall, sooner or later, if the Romans sit down before
+them. I will not be cooped up again. If any leader arises, and
+draws together a band in the mountains to harass and attack the
+Romans, I will join him--for it has always seemed to me that in
+that way, only, can we successfully fight against them--but if not,
+I will aid you in the labors of the farm, until the Romans march
+against Jerusalem."</p>
+<p>Simon yielded to his son's wishes, for the events of the last
+year had aged him much, and he felt the need of assistance on the
+farm. The men who had worked for him had--save Isaac, and one or
+two of the older men--gone away to Jerusalem, or to Gamala, or one
+or other of the fortified towns. The time for the harvest was at
+hand, and there would be few to gather it in.</p>
+<p>Martha would fain have accompanied them, but Simon would not
+hear of this.</p>
+<p>"You are in a safe refuge here, wife, and rather than that you
+should leave it, I would abandon our farm, altogether. If you come,
+Mary and the women must come also and, even for us men, the danger
+would be greater than were we alone."</p>
+<p>Mary also tried her power of persuasion, but Simon was not to be
+moved; and the three set off together--for Jonas, as a matter of
+course, accompanied John wherever he went.</p>
+<p>The three weeks' kindness, rest, and good feeding had done
+wonders for him. The wild, reckless expression, which John had
+noticed when he had first met him, had well-nigh disappeared; his
+bones had become better covered, and his cheeks filled out and,
+comfortably clothed as he now was, few would have recognized in him
+the wild goatherd of Jotapata.</p>
+<p>Simon was mounted on a donkey, the others walked.</p>
+<p>"It is well that I am off again," Jonas said. "Another month
+there, and I should have got fat and lazy, and should have almost
+forgotten how to run and climb, and should have grown like the
+dwellers on the plains."</p>
+<p>"There will be plenty of work for you, on the farm, Jonas,"
+Simon said. "You need not be afraid of growing fat and lazy,
+there."</p>
+<p>"I don't think I am fond of work," Jonas said, thoughtfully,
+"not of steady work, but I will work hard now, Simon; you have all
+been so good to me that I would work till I dropped for you. I
+wouldn't have worked before, not if they had beaten me ever so
+much; because they were always unkind to me, and why should one
+work, for those who do nothing for you but beat and ill-use
+you?"</p>
+<p>"You should always do your duty, Jonas," Simon said. "If others
+do not do their duty to you, so much the worse for them; but that
+is no excuse for your not doing your duty, as far as you can."</p>
+<p>Jonas, being a little behind Simon, made a little face
+expressive of his disagreement with this opinion; but he said
+nothing.</p>
+<p>They followed the course of the river Hieromax down to
+Capitolias; where they slept, that night, in the house of some
+friends of Simon and, on the following evening, arrived at the
+farm. John received a hearty greeting, from Isaac and the other
+men; and several of the fishermen, when they heard of his return,
+came in to see him.</p>
+<p>For the next fortnight, John and Jonas worked from daylight till
+dark and, by the end of that time, the greater part of the corn was
+gathered in the granary. A portion was stored away in a deep pit,
+straw being laid over it when the hole was nearly full, and earth
+being thrown in level to the surface; so that, should the Romans
+come and sack the granary, there should still remain a store which
+would carry them on until the next harvest.</p>
+<p>Then the news came, from across the lake, that the Romans were
+breaking up their camp at Scythopolis, and were moving towards
+Tiberias. No resistance was expected to be offered there. The
+greater part of the inhabitants had, all along, been well affected
+to the Romans; and had only been compelled, by a small faction in
+the city and by the fear of the country people of Galilee, to join
+in the insurrection. It was, too, the richest city in the dominions
+of King Agrippa for, although these lay for the most part east of
+Jordan, the towns of Tiberias and Tarichea were included in
+them.</p>
+<p>Tiberias was, in fact, his chief city. Here he had his richest
+palace; and the city, which greatly benefited by being the seat of
+his government, was Roman rather than Jewish in its hopes and
+feelings. So confident was Vespasian that no resistance would be
+offered that, when he arrived within half a mile of the town, he
+sent forward an officer, with fifty horse, to exhort the people to
+open their gates.</p>
+<p>When he got near the town, the officer dismounted and went
+forward to speak; when a party of the war faction, headed by Jesus
+the son of Shaphat, charged out upon him. The officer, having had
+no orders to fight the Jews, fled on foot; with five of his men,
+who had also dismounted. Their assailants seized the horses, and
+carried them in triumph into the city.</p>
+<p>The senate of Tiberias at once issued out from the city, and
+hurried to the camp of Vespasian; and implored him not to visit the
+crime of a small body of desperate men upon the whole city, whose
+inhabitants had always been favorably disposed towards Rome.
+Agrippa added his entreaties to theirs; and Vespasian, who had just
+given orders for the troops to advance to storm and sack the city,
+recalled them. The insurgents under Jesus fled to Tarichea and, the
+gates being opened, the Romans entered Tiberias; Vespasian issuing
+strict orders against plundering, and the ill treatment of the
+inhabitants.</p>
+<p>At Tarichea were assembled not only the insurgents from
+Tiberias, but fighting men from all the towns on the lake, and from
+the country on the east. The city had been carefully fortified by
+Josephus and, as the inhabitants had a very large number of vessels
+in the port, they relied upon these for escape, in case the town
+should be reduced to extremities. No sooner did the Romans appear
+before their walls, and begin to lay out their siege works, than
+the Tiberians and others, under the command of Jesus, sallied out
+and dispersed the workmen.</p>
+<p>When the Roman troops advanced, in regular order, some of the
+Jews retired into the city. Others made for their boats, which were
+ranged along on the shore; and in these, putting out a little
+distance, they cast anchor, and opened fire with their missiles
+upon the Romans.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, a large number of Jews had just arrived from
+the farther side of Jordan. Vespasian sent Titus, with six hundred
+chosen horse, to disperse them. The number of the Jews was so large
+that Titus sent for further succor, and was reinforced by Trajan,
+with four hundred horse; while Antonius Silo, with two thousand
+archers, was sent by Vespasian to the side of a hill opposite the
+city, to open fire thence upon the defenders of the walls, and thus
+prevent them from harassing the Roman horsemen as they
+advanced.</p>
+<p>The Jews resisted the first charge of the cavalry; but they
+could not long withstand the long spears, and the weight and
+impetus of the horses, and fled in disorder towards the town. The
+cavalry pursued and tried to cut them off from it but, although
+great numbers were slaughtered, the rest--by pure weight of
+numbers--broke through, and reached the city.</p>
+<p>A great dissension arose within the walls. The inhabitants of
+the town--dismayed by the defeat inflicted, by a small number of
+Romans, upon the multitude in the field--were unwilling to draw
+upon themselves the terrible fate which had befallen the towns
+which had resisted the Romans, and therefore clamored for instant
+surrender. The strangers--great numbers of whom were mountaineers
+from Peraea, Ammonitis, and the broken country of Mount Galaad and
+the slopes of Hermon, who knew little of what had been passing in
+Galilee--were for resistance, and a fray arose in the town.</p>
+<p>The noise of the tumult reached Titus; who called upon his men
+to seize the moment, while the enemy were engaged in civil discord,
+to attack. Then, leading his men, he dashed on horseback into the
+lake, passed round the end of the wall, and entered the city.</p>
+<p>Consternation seized the besieged. The inhabitants attempted no
+resistance, still hoping that their peaceful character would save
+them from ill treatment; and many allowed themselves to be
+slaughtered, unresistingly. Jesus and his followers, however,
+fought gallantly; striving, but in vain, to make their way down to
+the ships in the port. Jesus himself, and many of his men, were
+killed.</p>
+<p>Titus opened the gates, and sent word to his father that the
+city was captured; and the Roman army at once entered. Vespasian
+placed a number of his troops in the large vessels in the port, and
+sent them off to attack those who had first fled to the boats.
+These were, for the most part, fishermen from the various towns on
+the lake. The cavalry were sent all round the lake, to cut off and
+slay those who sought to gain the land.</p>
+<p>The battle--or rather the slaughter--went on for some time. The
+fishermen, in their light boats, could do nothing against the
+soldiers in the large vessels. These slew them with arrows or
+javelins, from a distance; or ran them down, and killed them as
+they struggled in the water. Many of the boats were run ashore; but
+the occupants were slain, there, by the soldiers on the lookout for
+them. Altogether, six thousand perished in the slaughter.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, Vespasian had set up a tribunal in Tarichea.
+The inhabitants of the town were separated from the strangers.
+Vespasian himself was, as Josephus said, unwilling to shed more
+blood--as he had promised, when he had entered the city, to spare
+the lives of all--but he yielded to the arguments of those who said
+that the strangers were mountain robbers, the foes of every man.
+Accordingly, they were ordered to leave the city, by the road to
+Tiberias.</p>
+<p>As soon as they had left the town, the troops surrounded them,
+headed by Vespasian in person. Twelve hundred of the aged and
+helpless he ordered to be slain, at once; six thousand of the most
+able-bodied he sent to Nero, to be employed on the canal he was
+digging across the isthmus of Corinth; thirty thousand four hundred
+were sold as slaves; and a large number were bestowed upon Agrippa,
+who also sold them as slaves. This act, after the formal promise of
+pardon, disgraces the memory of Vespasian even more than the
+wholesale massacres of the garrisons of the towns which resisted to
+the last.</p>
+<p>The news of this act of wholesale vengeance spread such terror
+through the land that the whole of the cities of Galilee at once
+opened their gates; and sent deputations to Vespasian to offer
+their submission, and ask for pardon. Gamala, Gischala, and
+Itabyrium--a town on Mount Tabor, which had been strongly fortified
+by Josephus--alone held out. Itabyrium lay some ten miles to the
+west of Tiberias.</p>
+<p>Standing back among the trees, at a short distance from the
+lake, Simon, John, and the workers on the farm watched with horror
+the slaughter of the fishermen on the lake. None of their neighbors
+were among those who had gone out to aid in the defense of
+Tarichea; for Simon had gone among them, to dissuade them from
+launching their boats and joining the flotilla, as it proceeded
+down the lake in the morning. He urged upon them that, if they took
+part in the affair, they would only bring down vengeance upon
+themselves and their families.</p>
+<p>"There is no lack of men," he said, "in Tiberias and Tarichea.
+Such aid as you can give would be useless and, whether the cities
+fall at once, or whether they resist, the vengeance of the Romans
+will fall upon you. In a few hours, their horsemen can ride round
+the shores of the lake, and cut off all who are absent from
+returning to their homes, and give the villages to fire and sword.
+Those who can point to their boats, drawn up at the side of the
+lake, will be able to give proof to the Romans that they have not
+taken part against them. So far, we have escaped the horrors of war
+on this side of Jordan.</p>
+<p>"If the strong cities of Galilee cannot resist the Roman arms,
+what hope should we have on this side, where the population is
+comparatively scanty, and where there are few strong places? Do not
+let us provoke the Romans, my friends. If they go up against
+Jerusalem, let those who will, go, and die in defense of the
+Temple; but it would be worse than folly to provoke the wrath of
+the Romans, by thrusting yourselves into the quarrel here."</p>
+<p>Warmly did the fishermen congratulate themselves, when they saw
+the combat proceeding on the lake, and when a strong body of Roman
+horse rode along the shore, leaving parties at regular intervals to
+cut off those who might try and land. A body of twenty were posted
+down by the boats, and two came into the village and demanded food
+for the party. Simon, when he saw them coming, ordered all the
+able-bodied men to retire, and remain in the olive groves on the
+slopes, at a distance from the lake, until the Romans had gone;
+while he, and Isaac, and some other old men, went down and met the
+soldiers.</p>
+<p>"Are any of the people of this place out there on the lake?" the
+officer in command of the twenty men asked; as Simon and his party,
+bringing bread, fruit, and wine, came down to the waterside.</p>
+<p>"No, sir," Simon replied. "We have but eight boats belonging to
+the village, and they are all there. We are peaceable people, who
+till the soil and fish the lake, and take no part in the doings of
+the great towns. We are subjects of King Agrippa, and have no cause
+for discontent with him."</p>
+<p>"A great many other people have no cause for discontent, old
+man," the officer said; "but they have, nevertheless, risen in
+rebellion. However, as your boats are here, and your people seem to
+have taken no part in this matter, I have naught to say against
+you; especially as your wine is good, and you have brought down
+plenty of it."</p>
+<p>Simon and his companions withdrew and, with aching hearts,
+watched from a distance the massacre upon the lake. The fury,
+however, produced among the men in the towns and villages on the
+shore, at the sight of the numerous corpses washed ashore, was so
+great that many of the young men left their avocations and started
+for Gamala; which, relying upon the strength of its position--which
+was even stronger than that of Jotapata--was resolved to resist to
+the last.</p>
+<p>Several of the young men of the village, and many from the
+villages near, were determined to take this course, maddened by the
+slaughter of many friends and relations. John himself was as
+furious as any, especially when the news came of the violation of
+faith at Tarichea, and of the selling of nigh forty thousand men
+into slavery.</p>
+<p>"Father," he said, that evening, "I had thought to stay quietly
+with you, until the Romans advanced against Jerusalem; but I find I
+cannot do so. The massacre at Jotapata was bad enough, but the
+slaughter of defenseless men, on the lake, is worse. I pray you,
+let me go."</p>
+<p>"Would you go into Gamala, and die there, John?" Simon asked.
+"Better to die at the Temple, than to throw away your life
+here."</p>
+<p>"I do not intend to go into Gamala, father, nor to throw away my
+life--though I care little for it, except for the sake of you and
+my mother and Mary--but I would do something; and I would save the
+sons of our neighbors, and others, from the fate that assuredly
+waits them if they enter Gamala. They know not, as I do, how surely
+the walls will go down before the Roman engines; but even did they
+know it, so determined are they to fight these slayers of our
+countrymen that they would still go.</p>
+<p>"What I propose to do is to carry out what I have always
+believed to be the true way of fighting the Romans. I will collect
+a band, and take to the mountains, and harass them whenever we may
+find opportunity. I know the young men from our village will follow
+me, if I will lead them; and they will be able to get their friends
+along the shore to do the like. In that way the danger will not be
+so great for, in the mountains, the Romans would have no chance of
+overtaking us while, if we are successful, many will gather round
+us, and we may do good service."</p>
+<p>"I will not stay you, John, if you feel that the Lord has called
+upon you to go; and indeed, you may save, as you say, the lives of
+many of our neighbors, by persuading them to take to the hills with
+you, instead of shutting themselves up in Gamala. Go down, then, to
+the village, and talk to them; and see what they say to your
+plan."</p>
+<p>John had little doubt as to his proposal being accepted by the
+younger men of the village. The fact that he had been chosen as one
+of the bodyguard of Josephus had, at once, given him importance in
+the eyes of his neighbors; and that he should have passed through
+the siege of Jotapata, and had escaped, had caused them to regard
+him not only as a valiant fighter, but as one under the special
+protection of God. Since his return, scarce an evening had passed
+without parties coming, from one or other of the villages along the
+shore, to hear from his lips the story of the siege.</p>
+<p>As soon, then, as he went down to the fishing village, and told
+the young men who had determined to leave for Gamala that he
+thought badly of such action--but that he intended to raise a band,
+and take to the mountains and harass the Romans--they eagerly
+agreed to follow him, and to obey his orders. There were eight of
+them, and John at once made them take an oath of obedience and
+fellowship; swearing in all things to obey his orders, to be true
+to each other to death, to be ready to give their lives, when
+called upon, for the destruction of the Romans; and never, if they
+fell into the hands of the enemy, to betray the secrets of the
+band, whatever might be the tortures to which they were
+exposed.</p>
+<p>John could have obtained more than eight men in the village, but
+he would only take quite young men.</p>
+<p>"I want only men who can undergo fatigue and watching; who can
+climb mountains, and run as fast as the Roman horse can gallop.
+Besides, for work like this it is necessary that there should be
+one leader, and that he should be promptly obeyed. If I take older
+men, they will naturally wish to have a voice in the ordering of
+things. I have seen enough of military matters to know that, for
+prompt decision and swift execution, one head--and one head
+only--is necessary. Besides, we may find difficulties in the way of
+getting food and, at first, I wish for only a small band. If
+success attends us, we shall increase rapidly. Twenty will be quite
+enough, to begin with."</p>
+<p>As soon as the eight young men--of whom all but two were under
+twenty years old--had taken the oath, they started at once to the
+villages round.</p>
+<p>"Do each of you gather in two, but no more," John said; "and let
+them be those whom you know to be strong and active. Do not bring
+more; and if four of you bring but one, so much the better. If you
+find many more eager to join, you can tell them that we will send
+for them, when the time comes, to increase our numbers; and pray
+them to abide here, and not to go into Gamala.</p>
+<p>"Let each bring his arms and a bag of meal; and meet me,
+tomorrow evening at sundown, on the Hieromax River, three miles
+below Capitolias--that will be opposite to Abila, which lies on the
+mountain side. Let all travel singly, for the Roman horse may be
+about. However, as we shall be walking east, while Gamala lies to
+the west of south, they will not take us--should we come upon
+them--for men going thither to aid in the defense of the town."</p>
+<p>The young men started at once on their missions, full of
+confidence in John; and feeling certain that, under his leadership,
+they should soon come to blows with the Romans; being also, in
+their hearts, well satisfied that their warfare would be in the
+open country, and they should not be called upon to fight pent up
+in walls from which there was no escape.</p>
+<p>Having seen his followers off, John returned home, and told
+Simon the progress he had made. The old man sighed.</p>
+<p>"I do not seek to keep you, John; for your duty to your country
+stands, now, in the first rank of all; and it may be that the Lord
+preserved you, at Jotapata, because he intends you to do great
+deeds for him, here. I do not say spare yourself, or avoid danger,
+for our sakes. I only say, do not throw away your life by rashness.
+Remember that, young as you are, you are a leader, and be prudent
+as well as brave.</p>
+<p>"After Gamala has fallen--as fall I fear it will--and the Romans
+have moved away from these parts--as they will then do, for there
+is no resistance to them, on this side of Jordan, save at that
+town--I shall bring your mother and Mary back again; and you will
+find us waiting here to welcome you, if you return. If not, my son,
+I shall mourn for you, as Jacob mourned for Joseph--and more,
+seeing that you are the only prop of my old age--but I shall have
+the consolation of knowing that you died for your country."</p>
+<p>"You will find in Mary a daughter, father; and you must find a
+husband for her, who will take my place. But it may be that if the
+Romans march not direct upon Jerusalem--and they say that Vespasian
+has arranged that two of the legions shall winter on the sea coast,
+at Caesarea, and the third at Scythopolis--it is probable that he
+will not move against Jerusalem till the spring. In that case I may
+be often here, during the winter. For I will not go down to
+Jerusalem until the last thing; for there all is turmoil and
+disturbance and, until the time comes when they must lay aside
+their private feuds and unite to repel the invader, I will not go
+down."</p>
+<p>Father and son talked until late in the night. In the morning
+John made his preparations for departure. He had told Jonas of his
+intentions. The boy listened silently, only saying, "Wherever you
+go, John, I am ready to go with you; it makes no difference to me;"
+and afterwards went down to the lake side, where he filled his
+pouch with smooth pebbles, each of which he selected with great
+care for, when herding his goats among the mountains, Jonas had
+been always practicing with a sling, and many a cony had fallen
+before his unerring aim.</p>
+<p>All the lads in the mountains were accustomed to the use of the
+sling, but none in Jotapata had approached Jonas in their skill
+with this weapon. During the siege he had often astonished John by
+the accuracy of his aim; and had several times compelled the Romans
+to cease working one of their machines, which specially harassed
+the defenders of the wall, by striking down one after another of
+those who directed it--his stones seldom failing to strike them
+full in the face, the only spot unprotected by their armor.</p>
+<p>In the morning, John prepared to start. He and Jonas each
+carried a small sack, supported by a strap passing over the
+shoulders, and containing some eight pounds of meal and a gourd of
+water. Jonas carried no weapon, save a long knife hidden under his
+garment, and his sling and pouch of stones. John carried a sword
+and buckler, and a horn. Before they started, John knelt before his
+father and received his blessing; and Simon, as he bade him adieu,
+gave him a small bag of money.</p>
+<p>"You will need to buy things in the mountains, lad; and I would
+not that you should be driven, like the robber bands, to take food
+by force. It is true that they who go not to the war should support
+those who risk their lives for their country; but there are many
+aged men who, like myself, cannot fight, there are many women whose
+husbands are away in Gamala or Jerusalem, and these may not be able
+to afford to assist others. Therefore, it is well that you should
+have means of paying for what you require; otherwise the curse of
+the widow and fatherless may fall upon you.</p>
+<p>"And now, farewell, my son! May God have you in his keeping, and
+send you home safe to your mother and me!"</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch8" id="Ch8">Chapter 8</a>: Among The Mountains.</h2>
+<p>Jonas was in high spirits as they started from the farm. He was
+leaving no friends behind and, so long as he had John with him, he
+was perfectly contented. He was delighted to be on the move again
+for, although he had worked steadily in getting in the harvest,
+regular labor was distasteful to him and, accustomed as he had been
+to wander, for weeks, free and unchecked with his goats among the
+mountains, the regular life and order of the farm were irksome to
+him.</p>
+<p>John, on the other hand, was silent; replying briefly to the
+boy's questions. He felt the danger of the enterprise upon which he
+had embarked, and his responsibility as leader; and the thought of
+the grief which his father and mother would feel, did ought befall
+him, weighed on his mind. Presently, however, he roused
+himself.</p>
+<p>"Now, Jonas, you must keep a sharp lookout round for, if we see
+any Roman soldiers in the distance, I must hide my sword and
+buckler before they discover us, and you must stow away your sling
+and pouch; then we will walk quietly on. If they question us, we
+are going to stay with friends at Capitolias and, as there will be
+nothing suspicious about us, they will not interfere with us. After
+they have passed on, we will go back for our arms. We are not
+traveling in the direction of Gamala, and they will have no reason
+to doubt our story."</p>
+<p>They did not, however, meet any of the parties of Roman horse
+who were scouring the country, carrying off grain and cattle for
+the use of the army; and they arrived, in the afternoon, on the
+bank of the Hieromax. Upon the other side of the river rose the
+steep slopes of Mount Galaad, high up on whose side was perched the
+little town of Abila.</p>
+<p>"Here we can wait, Jonas. We are nearly opposite the town. The
+others will, doubtless, soon be here."</p>
+<p>It was not long before the band made their appearance, coming
+along in twos and threes as they had met on the river bank. By
+sunset the last had arrived, and John found that each of his first
+recruits had brought two others.</p>
+<p>He looked with satisfaction at the band. The greater part of
+them had been fishermen. All were strong and active; and John saw
+that his order that young men, only, should be taken had been
+obeyed, for not one of them was over the age of twenty-three and,
+as he had laid it down, as an absolute rule, all were unmarried.
+All were, like himself, armed with sword and buckler; and several
+had brought with them bags with javelin heads, to be fitted to
+staves, later on. All their faces bore a look of determination and,
+at the same time, of gladness.</p>
+<p>The massacre on the lake had excited the inhabitants of the
+shore to fury, and even those who had hitherto held back from the
+national cause were now eager to fight against the Romans; but many
+shrunk from going to Gamala--which was, indeed, already as full of
+fighting men as it could hold--and John's proposal to form a band,
+for warfare in the mountains, had exactly suited the more
+adventurous spirits.</p>
+<p>All present were known to John, personally. Many of them were
+sons of friends of Simon; and the others he had met at village
+gatherings, or when fishing on the lake. There were warm greetings,
+as each accession to the party arrived; and each member of the band
+felt his spirits rise higher, at finding that so many of those he
+knew, personally, were to be his comrades in the enterprise.</p>
+<p>When the last comer had arrived, John said:</p>
+<p>"We will now be moving forward. We had best get well up the
+mountain, before night falls. It matters not much where we camp,
+tonight; tomorrow we can choose a good spot for our
+headquarters."</p>
+<p>It being now the height of the dry season, the river was low,
+and they had no difficulty in wading across. Then they struck up
+the hill, to the right of Abila, until they had fairly entered the
+forests which clothed the lower slopes of the mountains. Then John
+gave the word for a halt.</p>
+<p>Dead wood was soon collected, and a fire made. Cakes of meal
+were baked in the ashes and, after these had been eaten, the party
+lay round the fire and, a few minutes later, John rose to his
+feet.</p>
+<a id="PicC" name="PicC"></a>
+<center><img src="images/c.jpg" alt=
+"Illustration: John Incites his Countrymen to Harass the Romans." />
+</center>
+<p>"You all know the reason for which we are gathered together
+here. We all long for vengeance on the oppressors of our country,
+the murderers of our kinsmen and friends, the men who carry off our
+women to shame and slavery in Rome. We are all ready to die, for
+our country and our God; but we would fain die doing as much harm
+to the Romans as we can, fighting like freemen in the open, instead
+of rats slaughtered in a cage. That is why, instead of going into
+Gamala, we have gathered here.</p>
+<p>"I am the youngest among you; but I have so far assumed the
+leadership because, in the first place, I have been much with
+Josephus, who--although he may now, most unworthily, have gone over
+to the Romans to save his life--was yet a wise governor, and a
+great leader. From him, I have learned much of the Romans. In the
+second place, I have seen more of their warfare than any of you,
+having passed through the terrible siege of Jotapata. Lastly, I
+believe that God, having saved me almost alone of all the host that
+defended the town, has intended me as an instrument for his
+service.</p>
+<p>"Therefore have I taken upon myself the command, in the first
+place, of this band; but at the same time, if you think that I am
+too young, and would rather place another at your head, I will
+stand aside, and release from their oath those who have already
+sworn. I am not self seeking. I crave not the leadership over you,
+and will obey whomsoever you may choose for your chief. But to
+whomsoever is the leader, prompt obedience must be given; for there
+must, even in a band like this, be order and discipline. We work
+for a common good, but we must yield to the direction of one will,
+and one head.</p>
+<p>"Now, what say you? I will walk away, to leave you free to
+consult one with another; and will abide by your decision, whatever
+it be. Only the decision, once made, must be adhered to. There must
+be no after grumbling, no hesitation or drawing back. You must have
+absolute confidence, and give absolute obedience, to him whom you
+choose. For only so can we hope to succeed in our enterprises."</p>
+<p>John had gone but a short way among the trees, when he was
+called back again. All had come prepared to follow him. His father
+had always been a man of weight and position among the villagers on
+the shore and, democratic as were the Jewish institutions, there
+was yet a certain respect paid to those of position above their
+fellows. John's experience and, especially, his escape from
+Jotapata, seemed specially to mark him as one destined to play an
+important part. And his quiet resolute bearing, now--the feeling
+that he knew what was to be done, and how to do it; that he was, in
+fact, their natural leader--came home to all, and it was with
+sincerity that they assured him that they accepted him as their
+leader.</p>
+<p>"Very well," John said, quietly. "Then let those who have not
+already taken the oath stand up, and do so."</p>
+<p>This was done, and John then said:</p>
+<p>"Now, I will tell you more of my plans; although these, of
+course, cannot be in any way settled until we see how things turn
+out. It is by watching for opportunities and seizing the right
+moment, only, that we can hope for success. We are all ready to
+give our lives for our country, but we do not wish to throw them
+away. We want each of us to do as much as possible. We want to
+live, so as to share in the defense of the Temple; therefore, we
+have to combine prudence with daring.</p>
+<p>"As for an attack upon any strong body of Roman troops, it would
+be impossible--unless they attempt to follow us among the
+mountains. One of our first duties will be to learn the country
+well, so that we may know where to defend ourselves, should they
+come up after us; where, from eminences, we can cast down rocks
+upon them; where there are crags which we can climb, but up which
+their heavy-armed soldiers cannot follow us. This is our first task
+for, as yet, they have not commenced the siege of Gamala. When they
+do so, we must draw down near them and hide ourselves, mark the
+position of their camp, see how their tents are arranged, and where
+their sentries are placed.</p>
+<p>"Then we can begin work: sometimes falling upon their guards; at
+other times creeping in past their sentries, scattering through the
+camp and, at a given signal, firing their tents with the brands
+from their fires; slaying those who first rush out, and then making
+off again to the hills.</p>
+<p>"Then, too, they will be sending great numbers of men up the
+hills, to cut timber and branches for their embankments, their
+breastworks, and the construction of the wattles to protect their
+machines. We shall be in hiding and, when a party of men separates
+from the rest, we will fall upon these; we will harass their
+workers from a distance, always avoiding a regular combat, but
+hindering their work, and wearing them out. Thus we may do better
+service, to the defenders of Gamala, than if we were within the
+walls.</p>
+<p>"At present we have only swords, but we must get bows and
+arrows. It would not have been safe to have carried them across the
+plains; but we can procure them at Abila, or Jabez Galaad. I fear
+that we shall not be able to interfere with the provisioning of the
+army--for upon the plains we shall have no chance with their
+cavalry--but, here in these mountains, stretching away over Peraea
+into Arabia and Moab, we can laugh at pursuit by the Romans; and
+even Agrippa's light-armed Arabs will have difficulty in following
+us, and of them we need have little fear. At Jotapata we proved
+ourselves a match for the Romans; and their light-armed troops will
+not care to venture against us, alone, as they will not know our
+numbers, and will fear being led into ambushes.</p>
+<p>"There is one question which we have to consider, and that is
+food; as to flesh, we shall have it in abundance. There will be
+many flocks of goats, belonging to those in Gamala, straying among
+the mountains without an owner; therefore of goats' milk and flesh
+we can take abundance, but there will be a scarcity of grain. I
+have some money with me, with which we can purchase it at Abila,
+and the villages. As for Jabez Galaad, it is too close to Gamala;
+and the Romans will probably ascend the hill and destroy it, or
+place a guard there. At any rate, the money will be sufficient to
+purchase meal for us, for some time--much longer, probably, than
+Gamala will be able to hold out--and when that has fallen, it will
+be time to arrange about the future. Only let us take nothing
+without payment; let us not be like the robber bands, which prey
+upon the people, until they long for the Romans as masters.</p>
+<p>"Only we must remember that, while we desire now to do the
+Romans as much harm as possible, this is but the beginning of our
+work; and that we must save ourselves for the future. Gamala is but
+one town; and we shall have plenty of opportunities for striking at
+the enemy, in the future. We have put our hands to the plow now
+and, so long as the war lasts, we will not look back. It may be
+that our example may lead others to follow it and, in that case,
+the Romans' difficulties will thicken, every day. Were there scores
+of bands of determined men, like us, hanging around them; ready to
+attack small bodies, whenever they venture away from their camps to
+gather in provisions and forage, and to harass them, at night, by
+constant alarms, we could wear them out.</p>
+<p>"Only, we must always avoid a pitched battle. In irregular
+fighting we are as good as they--better, for we can move more
+quickly--but when it comes to fighting in order of battle, we have
+no chance with them, whatever. Their cavalry, the other day outside
+Tarichea, were like wolves among a flock of sheep. Nothing but
+disaster can come of fighting in the plain. Every people should
+fight in the way that suits them best, and an attempt to meet an
+enemy in their own way of fighting is sure to lead to disaster. Let
+the Roman keep the plain, with his cavalry and his heavy infantry;
+let the Jew, light footed and swift, keep to the hills. He is as
+much superior, there, as is the Roman in the plains.</p>
+<p>"And now, we must establish signals. We will get horns, at
+Abila; and I will fix upon signals. One long note will mean, gather
+to me; two, fall back gradually; three, retire at once with all
+speed, to the spot agreed upon, before setting out in the morning.
+Two short notes will mean, advance and attack in the manner
+arranged; one short note, oft repeated, will tell you the Romans
+are advancing, sound your horns--for it were well that each
+provided himself with a cow's horn, so that the signals can be
+repeated. If we are scattered over a hillside among the trees, and
+the Romans hear horns sounded in many quarters, they will think
+that there must be a large body of men assembled. This will make
+them slow and cautious in all their movements; will force many to
+stand prepared, with their arms, to guard those at work; and will
+altogether confuse and puzzle them.</p>
+<p>"And now, we will lie down and sleep; as soon as it is dawn, we
+will be on foot again."</p>
+<p>The next two days were spent in exploring that part of the
+mountains: examining the direction, and extent, of each valley and
+ravine; seeing where steep precipices afforded an opportunity for
+rolling down rocks upon an enemy passing along the valley, or
+trying to storm the height; in searching for pools in dried
+watercourses; and in deciding upon a spot favorable for the camp.
+They fixed upon a spot high up on the mountains, two miles east of
+Abila, as their headquarters. It was in a pass between two peaks,
+and gave them the option of descending either to the north or
+south, or of skirting along the mountains towards the sources of
+the Jabbok river, and thence crossing the Hermon range beyond the
+limits of Peraea.</p>
+<p>Jonas was sent, the first thing, to discover whether the Romans
+had taken possession of Jabez Galaad; which lay but five miles from
+Gamala, and on the southern side of the range of hills on whose
+western spur Gamala was built. He returned, in a short time, saying
+that he had found the inhabitants in a state of great alarm; for
+that a Roman force could be seen, coming up the road from the
+plain. Most of the fighting men of the town were in Gamala; the
+rest, with the young women, were leaving, so that only old people
+and children would be found in the town when the Romans arrived.
+Jonas also brought word that Vespasian's whole army was moving
+against Gamala.</p>
+<p>John had given Jonas money, before he started, to purchase bows
+and arrows. He had brought back bows for the whole party, and as
+many arrows as he could carry.</p>
+<p>"I paid nothing for them," he said, as he threw them down. "The
+man who sold them was praying those who were leaving the town to
+take them--for he thought that, if the Romans found them in his
+house, they would destroy it--but no one listened. All were too
+busy, in carrying off such of their household goods as they could
+take, to burden themselves further; so he gladly gave me as many as
+I could take. I carried off nearly all his bows; and I left him
+breaking up the rest, and his store of arrows, in order to burn
+them before the Romans arrived.</p>
+<p>"A boy, carrying a bag of arrowheads, came with me some little
+distance. I paid the man for them, and they are now hidden in the
+forest. You can fetch them when you will, but I could not carry
+more with me than I have got."</p>
+<p>"You have done well, Jonas," John said, as the men seized each a
+bow, and divided the arrows among them; and then stood waiting,
+expecting orders from John to proceed, at once, to harass the Roman
+column as it ascended the hill.</p>
+<p>John said, in answer to their looks:</p>
+<p>"We will not meddle with them, today. Did we shoot at them, they
+would suppose that we belonged to Jabez Galaad; and would, in
+revenge, destroy the town and all those they may find within it;
+and our first essay against them would bring destruction upon
+thousands of our countrymen."</p>
+<p>The others saw the justness of his reasoning, and their faith in
+him as their leader was strengthened by his calmness, and readiness
+of decision.</p>
+<p>"Is the bag of arrowheads heavy, Jonas?"</p>
+<p>"It is as much as the boy, who was about my own age, could
+carry," Jonas replied.</p>
+<p>"Then do you, Phineas, and you, Simeon, go with Jonas to the
+place where the bag is hidden, and carry it to the place we have
+fixed upon for our camp. If, on the way, you come across a herd of
+goats, shoot two or three of them and take them with you, and get
+fires ready. The day is getting on, but we will go across the
+mountains, and see where the Romans are pitching their camp and, by
+sunset, we will be with you."</p>
+<p>Making their way along the mountain the band came, after an
+hour's walking, to a point where they could obtain a view of
+Gamala. The city stood on the western extremity of the hill which,
+after sloping gradually down, rose suddenly in a sharp ridge like
+the hump of a camel--from which the town had its name, Gamala. On
+both sides, this rock ended abruptly in a precipitous chasm; in
+which ran the two branches of the Hieromax, which met at the lower
+end of the ridge, and ran together into the end of the lake at
+Tarichea, three miles away.</p>
+<p>Thus, Gamala was only accessible from behind, where the ridge
+joined the mountains. Across this neck of land a deep fosse had
+been dug, so as to cut off all approach. The houses were crowded
+thickly on the steep slope of the ridge, which was so abrupt that
+the houses seemed to overhang one another. On the southern crag,
+which was of immense height, was the citadel of the town. There was
+a spring, supplying abundance of water, within the walls. Had it
+been defended by a garrison as brave and numerous as that of
+Jotapata, it would have been well-nigh impregnable; but Cheres and
+Joseph, who commanded, had none of the genius of Josephus, although
+they were brave and determined.</p>
+<p>The city was crowded with fugitives from all parts; and had
+already, for seven months, resisted a besieging force which Agrippa
+had sent against it. It was impossible to blockade the whole
+circuit of the town; but Vespasian took possession of all the
+neighboring heights, and established his camp, with that of the
+Fifteenth Legion, on the hill facing the city to the east. The
+Fifth Legion threw up works, opposite the center of the city; while
+the Tenth set to work to fill up ditches and ravines, in order to
+facilitate the approaches.</p>
+<p>Agrippa approached the wall, to persuade the inhabitants to
+surrender; but was struck on the right elbow by a stone from a
+sling, and forced to retire. This insult to the native king, who
+came in the character of an ambassador, enraged the Romans; and
+they set about the operations for the siege with great vigor. In
+spite of the efforts of the Jews, the fosse which protected the
+wall on the east was speedily filled up; and the Romans then began,
+as at Jotapata, to raise an embankment facing the wall.</p>
+<p>The day after the Romans had established their camp, John and
+his followers advanced along the mountain until they could look
+down upon it and, for a long time, watched the Romans at work, and
+learned all the details of the camp.</p>
+<p>"You must fix them in your minds," John said, "in order that,
+even on a dark night, you may be able to make your way about it
+without difficulty; so that you may be able, after striking a blow,
+to fly directly to the mountain--for any who get confused, and miss
+their way, will assuredly be killed. You see, the enemy have placed
+a strong guard, halfway up the hillside, in order to protect
+themselves from surprise; but it will be possible, by moving down
+to the streams, and then mounting again, to reach the camp without
+passing through them. And by the same way we must make our retreat
+for, if we succeed in setting the camp on fire, the flames will
+enable the guard on the mountains to see us approaching them.</p>
+<p>"I had hoped that we might be able to penetrate, unobserved, to
+the tent of Vespasian, and to slay him and some of his generals
+but, by the bustle that we see round that tower on the hillside,
+and by the strong force of cavalry picketed round it, it is evident
+that he has taken up his quarters there and, indeed, from the top
+of the tower he can look down upon the town, and on all that is
+passing there, and issue his directions to his troops accordingly;
+so we must give up that idea. Another time, we may be more
+fortunate.</p>
+<p>"But see, a great number of troops are ascending the hill
+towards us, doubtless to cut timber for their works. As soon as
+they are at work, we will attack them."</p>
+<p>The party retired into the forest and, as soon as they heard the
+sound of the Roman axes, they crept quietly forward; moving
+noiselessly, with their sandaled feet, among the trees. When within
+a short distance of the Romans, John ordered them to halt; and
+crept forward, with Jonas, to reconnoiter. There was little fear of
+their being heard, for several hundred men were at work, felling
+trees; a line of sentries, at ten paces apart, standing under arms
+to prevent a surprise. The Romans were working too thickly to
+permit of any successful action, by so small a party; and John saw
+that the idea of an attack must be abandoned, and that he must
+confine himself, for the present, to harassing the sentries.</p>
+<p>Rejoining his men, he told them what he had discovered; and bade
+them scatter along the line and, crawling up under the protection
+of the trees, to approach as near as they could to the line of
+sentries; and then to shoot at them--or at the workmen, many of
+whom, having thrown off their heavy armor to enable them the better
+to work, offered more favorable marks for the arrows than the
+sentries--whose faces, only, were exposed.</p>
+<p>They were on no account to come to close quarters with the
+Romans. If the latter advanced, they were instantly to retire,
+approaching again as soon as the Romans recommenced their work; and
+so to continue, until he blew the signal for them to draw off,
+altogether. They were not to begin until they heard his signal for
+attack.</p>
+<p>After allowing some little time to elapse for the men to get
+into position, John blew his horn. A moment, and cries and shouts
+were heard along the whole Roman line. The sound of chopping
+instantly ceased, and the Roman trumpets blew to arms.</p>
+<p>John had advanced sufficiently near to see the Roman workmen
+before he gave the signal. Jonas was a little in advance of him
+and, as the horn sounded, he saw him step out from behind a tree,
+whirl his sling round his head and discharge a stone and, almost
+simultaneously, a Roman sentinel, some forty paces away, fell with
+a crash upon the ground.</p>
+<p>The Roman soldiers who had retained their armor ran instantly
+forward, to support their sentries. The others hastily buckled on
+their breastplates, caught up their bucklers and helmets, and
+joined their comrades. Arrows continued to fall among them from
+their invisible foes and, although most of these fell harmless from
+their armor, several soldiers fell, in addition to the seven or
+eight who had been killed by the first volley.</p>
+<p>The centurion in command soon saw that the number of his
+assailants was small but, afraid of being drawn into an ambush, he
+hesitated to give orders for an advance; but dispatched a messenger
+instantly to camp, contenting himself with throwing out strong
+parties a hundred yards in advance of his line. These now became
+the objects of attack, while arrows ceased to fall among the main
+body of the troops.</p>
+<p>John moved round the flank, till he gained a position whence he
+could observe the camp. The trumpets above had been heard there,
+and the troops had already taken up their position under arms. As
+he looked on, he saw the messenger run up to a party of mounted
+officers. A minute later a trumpet sounded, and a strong body of
+Arabian archers advanced, at a run, up the slope. John at once
+withdrew to his first position, and sounded the order for instant
+retreat; and then, hurrying back half a mile, sounded the note for
+his followers to assemble at the spot where he was standing.</p>
+<p>In a few minutes, all had joined him. They were in high spirits
+at the success of this first skirmish; and wondered why they had
+been so suddenly called off, when the Romans had shown no signs of
+advancing against them.</p>
+<p>"There are fully a thousand Arab archers in the forest, by this
+time," John said. "They are as fleet of foot as we are, and it
+would be madness to remain. We have stopped their work, for a time;
+and have killed many, without a scratch to ourselves. That is well
+enough, for today. Tomorrow we will beat them up, again."</p>
+<p>At daybreak, two of the party were sent forward to the edge of
+the wood, to see with what force the Romans went out to work. They
+brought back the report that they were accompanied by a strong body
+of archers; and that, as soon as they reached the forest, the
+archers were scattered in front of them for a long distance, and
+that it would be impossible to approach them, unobserved.</p>
+<p>On the previous afternoon, John had dispatched Jonas to Abila,
+and he had returned with a number of cows' horns. Round the fire in
+the evening, the men had set to work to pierce the points with
+heated arrowheads, and had converted them into instruments capable
+of giving a deep, prolonged sound. On the return of the scouts,
+John set his men in motion.</p>
+<p>"We cannot fight them, today, but we can hinder their work. We
+will scatter through the forest and, as we approach them, each is
+to sound his horn; and continue to do so, from time to time. The
+Romans will think that a great force is advancing against
+them."</p>
+<p>This was done, with the effect John had anticipated. Hearing the
+sound of horns, all over the mountainside, the Romans concluded
+that a great force was advancing to attack them; and the archers
+were at once recalled. The troops all stood to arms and, for
+several hours, remained waiting an attack. Then, after strong
+bodies of heavy-armed troops--preceded by the archers, skirmishing
+before them--had pushed some distance into the forest without
+meeting with an enemy, the work recommenced; a considerable number
+still standing to their arms, as protectors to the rest.</p>
+<p>Although a certain amount of time had been gained, for the city,
+by the interruption of the work of bringing in timber, John had
+undertaken these sham attacks rather with the purpose of
+accustoming his band to work together, and to give them confidence,
+than with the view of troubling the Romans. In this he was
+perfectly successful. The band, when they reached their camp, that
+evening, were in high spirits. They had, for two days, puzzled and
+baffled a large Roman force; had inflicted some loss upon them, and
+forced them to desist from their work. They were pleased with
+themselves, and their leader; and had lost much of the dread of the
+Romans which the capture of Jotapata, Japha, and Tarichea, and the
+tales of their cruelty and ferocity, had excited among the whole
+population.</p>
+<p>A reverse, at the commencement of their work, would have been
+fatal; and John had felt that, however earnest the men were, in
+their determination to die fighting for their country, the loss of
+a few of their number at the outset would have so dispirited the
+rest that the probability was that the band would disperse--or
+would, at any rate, be unwilling to undertake any desperate
+operation. But in their present mood they were ready for any
+enterprise upon which he might lead them; and he, accordingly, told
+them that he should abstain, next day, from a continuance of his
+attacks upon the working party; but that, at night, he would carry
+out the design of setting fire to their camp.</p>
+<p>Accordingly, the following day, the Romans pursued their work
+unmolested; although they still continued the precaution of keeping
+a force of archers, and parties of heavy-armed troops, in advance
+of those working in the wood. John did not move till the afternoon;
+and then, descending the hill to the right, he skirted along in the
+lower forest until within two miles of Gamala. Here he halted until
+nightfall.</p>
+<p>While waiting for the hour of action, he gave final instructions
+to his men, and assigned to them the order in which they should
+ascend from the river towards the rear of the camp. When they
+approached the spot where they would probably find Roman sentries
+posted, they were to advance singly, crawling along upon the
+ground. Those who first went through were to keep straight on until
+they reached the further end of the camp; stopping, as near as they
+could judge, fifty paces apart. They were then to wait for half an
+hour, so as to be sure that all would have gained their allotted
+positions. Then, when they saw a certain star sink below the
+horizon (a method of calculating time to which all were accustomed)
+they were to creep forward into the Roman camp; and each to make
+his way, as noiselessly as possible, until he came within a few
+paces of one of the smoldering fires of the Romans, and to wait
+until they heard a single note from John's horn.</p>
+<p>Each was at once to spring forward, seize a lighted brand and
+fire the nearest tent; and then to crawl away--cutting, as they
+went, the ropes of the tents, so as to bring them down, and create
+as much confusion as possible. Then, either by crawling or, if
+discovered, by leaping to their feet and making a sudden rush, all
+were to make their way down to the river again; to follow its banks
+for half a mile, and then wait in a body for an hour. At the end of
+that time they were to make their way back to their camp in the
+mountain; certain, by that time, that all who were alive would have
+rejoined them. Should he himself not be with the party, they were
+at once to proceed to the election of another leader.</p>
+<p>At about ten o'clock they again moved forward and, descending to
+the river, followed its banks until they arrived at the spot they
+had fixed on; then, in single file, they began to climb the hill.
+John placed himself in the middle of the line, in order to have a
+central position when the attack began. As soon as they reached the
+top of the slope, they lay down and, one by one, crawled forward
+into the darkness; two or three minutes being allowed to elapse
+between the departure of each man. They could hear the call of the
+Roman sentries as they answered each other, every half hour; and
+knew that the line was but a hundred yards or so in front of them.
+The night was very dark, and no sudden shout proclaimed that those
+ahead had been noticed.</p>
+<p>When John's turn came to advance, Jonas was to follow next
+behind him. All had left their bows, arrows, bucklers, and swords
+behind them, and carried only their knives; for they had not come
+to fight, and the knives were required only for cutting the tent
+ropes or, in case of discovery, to enable them to take a life or
+two before they fell, fighting. Each had sworn to kill himself, if
+he found escape impossible, in order to escape a death by torture
+if he fell alive into the hands of the Romans.</p>
+<p>John, on approaching the line of sentries, was guided by sound,
+only, in trying to avoid them. He could not see their figures; but
+could hear the sound of their footsteps, and the clash of their
+arms, as they tramped a few yards backwards and forwards. He was,
+like his comrades, stripped to the waist--having only on a short
+garment, reaching halfway down the knee--as it was upon speed, and
+activity, that his life would depend.</p>
+<p>Without interruption, he crawled through the lines of sentries
+and continued his course until he was, as near as he could tell,
+opposite the center of the long line of tents; then he lay quiet,
+watching the setting of the star. No sound was heard from the camp
+in front; although from down the hillside beyond it came a confused
+noise, as of a host of men at work; and the glare of many fires
+reddened the skies for, there, five thousand men were at work
+raising the embankment against the doomed city; while the archers
+and slingers maintained a never-ceasing conflict, of missiles, with
+the defenders on the walls.</p>
+<p>The star seemed, to John, as if it hung on its course; so long
+was it in sinking to the horizon. But at last it sank; and John,
+crawling noiselessly forward, made his way into the Roman camp. It
+was arranged with wide and regular streets, laid out with
+mechanical accuracy. Here and there, in front of a tent of a
+commanding officer, sentries paced to and fro; the sound of their
+footsteps and the clash of their arms, each time they turned,
+giving warning of their positions. In the center of the streets the
+fires--round which the soldiers had, shortly before, been
+gathered--still glowed and flickered for, although the days were
+hot, the cold at night rendered fires desirable; and there was an
+abundance of fuel to be obtained, from the hills.</p>
+<p>John crawled along with the greatest care. He had no fear of
+being seen, but had he come roughly against a tent-rope he might
+have brought out some wakeful occupant of the tent to see who was
+moving.</p>
+<p>He continued his course until he found himself opposite a fire,
+in which some of the brands were burning brightly; while there was
+no sentry on guard, within a distance of fifty yards. So far,
+everything had gone well; neither in passing through the lines of
+the sentries, nor in making their way into the camp, had any of the
+band been observed. It was certain now that some, at least, would
+succeed in setting fire to the tents, before they were discovered;
+and the wind, which was blowing briskly from the mountains, would
+speedily spread the flames; and a heavy blow would be inflicted
+upon the enemy.</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch9" id="Ch9">Chapter 9</a>: The Storming Of
+Gamala.</h2>
+<p>At last, John made sure that all his followers must have taken
+up a favorable position. Rising to his feet he sounded a short note
+on his horn; then sprang forward and seized one of the blazing
+brands, and applied it to a tent. The canvas, dried by the
+scorching sun, lit in an instant and, as the flame leaped up, John
+ran further among the tents, lighted another and, leaving the brand
+there, sprang twenty yards away and then threw himself down.</p>
+<p>By this time, although not twenty seconds had elapsed since he
+had given the signal, a sudden uproar had succeeded the stillness
+which had reigned in the camp. The sentries had started on their
+posts, as they heard the note of the horn; but had stood a moment,
+irresolute, not knowing what it meant. Then, as the first flash of
+flame shot up, a simultaneous shout had arisen from every man on
+guard; rising louder and louder as the first flame was followed,
+almost instantly, by a score of others in different parts of the
+camp.</p>
+<p>It was but a few seconds later that the first trumpeter who
+rushed from his tent blew the alarm. Before its notes ceased, it
+was answered all over the camp and, with a start, the sleeping
+soldiers sprang up, caught up their arms, and rushed out of their
+tents. Startled, as they were, with the suddenness of the awaking,
+and the sight of the blazing tents, there was none of that
+confusion that would have occurred among troops less inured to
+warfare. Each man did his duty and--buckling on their arms as best
+they might, stumbling over the tent ropes in the darkness, amazed
+by the sound of the fall of tents, here and there, expecting every
+moment to be attacked by their unseen foe--the troops made their
+way speedily to the wide streets, and there fell in together, in
+military array, and waited for orders.</p>
+<p>These were not long in coming. As soon as the generals reached
+the spot, they told off a number of men to endeavor to extinguish
+the flames; sent other parties to scour the camp, and search for
+the enemy; while the rest, in solid order, awaited any attack that
+might be made upon them.</p>
+<p>But, short as was the time that had elapsed since the first
+alarm, it had sufficed to give the flames such hold and power that
+they were beyond control. With extraordinary rapidity the fire had
+leaped from tent to tent, and threatened to overwhelm the whole
+camp. The soldiers tried, in vain, to arrest the progress of the
+flames; rushing among the blazing tents, cutting the ropes to bring
+them to the ground, and trying to beat out the masses of fire as
+they fell. Many were terribly burnt, in their endeavors, but in
+vain; and the officers soon called them off, and set them to work
+pulling down the tents which the fire had not yet reached. But even
+this was useless: the flakes of fire, driven before the wind, fell
+on the heaps of dried canvas; and the flames spread almost as
+rapidly as they had done when the tents were standing.</p>
+<p>Nor were the parties in search of the incendiaries more
+successful. John had lain quiet, where he threw himself down, for a
+minute or two; by which time the tents had emptied of their
+occupants. Then, pausing only occasionally to circle a tent and cut
+away its ropes, he made his way to the edge of the camp. By this
+time the sheet of flame had extended well-nigh across the camp;
+extending high above it, and lighting it almost as if by day. But
+between him and the fire lay, still, a dark mass of tents; for the
+wind was blowing in the opposite direction and, light as it was
+elsewhere, in the black shadow of the tents it was still dark in
+the extreme.</p>
+<p>John made his way along, until he came to the end of the next
+street, and then paused. Already, three or four active figures had
+run past him at the top of their speed, and he wished to be the
+last to retreat. He stayed till he heard the tramp of troops coming
+down--driven out by the spreading flames--and then sprang across
+the end of the road and dashed along at full speed, still keeping
+close to the line of tents.</p>
+<p>A shout, which rose from the leading files of the Roman column,
+showed that he was seen. As he neared the end of the next opening,
+the Roman soldiers were pouring out; and he turned in among the
+tents again. Through these he made his way; dashing across the open
+spaces and, once, rushing through the midst of a Roman
+column--through which he passed before the troops had time to
+strike at, or seize him.</p>
+<p>At last, he reached the extremity of the camp. The slope down to
+the river was but fifty yards away and, once over the brow, he
+would be in darkness and safe from pursuit. But already the Romans
+had drawn up a column of men along the edge of the plateau, to cut
+off any who might try to pass. John paused among the last row of
+the tents, hesitating what course to adopt. He could not make
+directly up the mountain, for the space between it and the camp was
+now covered by the Roman cavalry--the greater portion of their
+infantry being still engaged in trying to save at least some
+portion of the camp.</p>
+<p>Suddenly he heard a footstep among the tents, close behind him.
+He drew back into the tent by which he was standing, and peered
+cautiously out. A Roman soldier came hastily along, and entered the
+next tent--doubtless to fetch some article of value, which he had
+left behind him as he rushed out, on the first alarm.</p>
+<p>A sudden idea flashed across John's brain. He waited till the
+soldier came out, followed him with silent steps; and then sprang
+upon him at a bound, hurling him to the ground, and burying his
+knife again and again in his body.</p>
+<a id="PicD" name="PicD"></a>
+<center><img src="images/d.jpg" alt=
+"Illustration: The Roman Camp Surprised and Set on Fire." /></center>
+<p>Not a cry had escaped the Roman. The instant he was sure he was
+dead, John rose to his feet, placed the helmet of the fallen man on
+his head, secured the breastplate by a single buckle round his
+neck, took up his buckler and sword; and then, emerging from one of
+the tents, ran towards the Roman line, making for one of the narrow
+openings between the different companies. Several other
+soldiers--who had, like the man whom John had killed, gone back to
+their tents to fetch armor, or arms, left there--were also hurrying
+to take their places in the ranks. Therefore, no special attention
+was paid to John until he was within a few yards of the
+opening.</p>
+<p>Then a centurion at the end of the line said sternly:</p>
+<p>"You will be punished, tomorrow, for not being in your place.
+What is your name?" for, as John was between him and the sheet of
+flame rising from the camp, the Roman was unable to see his
+face.</p>
+<p>Instead of halting, as he expected, John sprang past him and,
+throwing down his helmet and buckler, dashed through the space
+between the companies.</p>
+<p>"Seize him! Cut him down!" the centurion shouted; but John was
+already descending the slope.</p>
+<p>As he ran, he swung the loosely buckled breastplate round on to
+his back; and it was well he did so for, a moment later, a Roman
+javelin rang against it, the force of the blow almost throwing him
+on his face. But, in a moment, he continued his course. He was in
+total darkness now and, though the javelins were flying around him,
+they were thrown at random. But the descent had now become so steep
+he was obliged to pause in his course, and to make his way
+cautiously.</p>
+<p>He undid the buckle, and left the breastplate behind him; threw
+down the sword; and climbed down until he stood by the side of the
+river. He could hear shouts above him, and knew that the Romans
+were searching the hillside, hoping that he had been killed or
+wounded by their darts. But he had no fear of pursuit. He swam the
+river--for he had struck upon a deep spot--and then, at full speed,
+ran along on the bank--knowing that some of the Roman cavalry were
+encamped upon the plain, and would soon be on the spot.</p>
+<p>However, all was quiet, and he met no one until he arrived
+opposite the place where it had been arranged that the party should
+meet. Then he waded across.</p>
+<p>"Is that you, John?" a voice exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"It is I, Jonas. Thank God, you have got back safely! How many
+are with you?"</p>
+<p>There was a loud cry of satisfaction and, as he made his way up
+the bank, a number of his followers crowded round him; all in the
+highest state of delight at his return. Jonas threw his arms round
+his neck, crying with joy.</p>
+<p>"I thought you must have fallen, John. I have been here ten
+minutes. Most of the others were here before me. Only three have
+arrived since and, for the last five minutes, none have come."</p>
+<p>"I fear no more will come," John said. "The Romans have cut off
+all retreat.</p>
+<p>"How many are missing?"</p>
+<p>"We were nineteen, here, before you came," one of the men
+replied.</p>
+<p>"Then there are six missing," John said. "We will not give them
+up. Some may have made their way straight up the mountain, fearing
+to be seen as they passed the ends of the open spaces. Some may
+have made their way, down the opposite slope, to the other arm of
+the river. But, even if all are killed, we need not repine. They
+have died as they wished--taking vengeance upon the Romans.</p>
+<p>"It has been a glorious success. More than half the Roman camp
+is assuredly destroyed; and they must have lost a prodigious
+quantity of stores, of all kinds.</p>
+<p>"Who are missing?"</p>
+<p>He heard the names of those absent.</p>
+<p>"I trust we may see some of them, yet," he said; "but if not,
+Jonas, tomorrow, shall carry to their friends the news of their
+death. They will be wept; but their parents will be proud that
+their sons have died in striking so heavy a blow upon our
+oppressors. They will live, in the memory of their villages, as men
+who died doing a great deed; and women will say:</p>
+<p>"'Had all done their duty, as they did, the Romans would never
+have enslaved our nation.'</p>
+<p>"We will wait another half hour, here; but I fear that no more
+will join us, for the Romans are drawn up all along the line where,
+alone, a descent could be made in the valley."</p>
+<p>"Then how did you escape, John," Jonas asked; "and how is it
+that you were not here, before? Several of those who were in the
+line beyond you have returned."</p>
+<p>"I waited till I hoped that all had passed," John said. "Each
+one who ran past the open spaces added to the danger--for the
+Romans beyond could not but notice them, as they passed the spaces
+lighted by the flames--and it was my duty, as leader, to be the
+last to go."</p>
+<p>"Six of those who were beyond you have joined us," one of the
+men said. "The other six are those that are missing."</p>
+<p>"That is what I feared," John answered. "I felt sure that those
+behind me would have got safely away, before the Romans recovered
+from their first confusion. The danger was, of course, greater in
+proportion to the distance from the edge of the slope."</p>
+<p>"But how did you get through, John, since you say that all
+escape is cut off?"</p>
+<p>John related how he had slain the Roman soldier, and escaped
+with his armor; and the recital raised him still higher in the
+estimation of his followers--for the modern feeling, that it is
+right to kill even the bitterest enemy only in fair fight, was
+wholly unknown in those days when, as was done by the Romans at
+Jotapata, men would cut the throat of a sleeping foe, with no more
+compunction than if they were slaughtering a fowl.</p>
+<p>Perceiving, by John's narration, that there was no chance of any
+of their comrades getting through to join them, now, the party
+struck off into the hills and, after three hours' march, reached
+their encampment. They gave a shout of joy, as they approached it;
+for a fire was burning brightly, and they knew that some of their
+comrades must have reached the spot before them.</p>
+<p>Four men rose, as they approached, and joyful greetings were
+exchanged. Their stories were soon told. As soon as they heard--by
+the shouts of the Romans on the hillside, and of the outer
+sentries--that they were discovered as they passed the spaces lit
+up by flames, they had turned back. Two of them had made their way
+up a deep watercourse, past the Roman guard on the hill--the
+attention of the soldiers being fixed upon the camp. The other two
+had climbed down the precipitous rocks on the other side of the
+hill.</p>
+<p>"It was terrible work, in the darkness," one of them said. "I
+fell, once, and thought I had broken my leg; but, fortunately, I
+had caught on a ledge, and was able to go on after a time. I think
+two of our party must have perished there; for twice, as I was
+descending, I heard a sudden cry, and then a sound as of a body
+falling from rock to rock."</p>
+<p>"Better so than to have fallen into the hands of the Romans,"
+John said, "and to have been forced to slay themselves by their own
+hands, as we agreed to do.</p>
+<p>"Well, my friends, we have done a glorious deed. We have begun
+well. Let us trust that we may strike many more such blows against
+our tyrants. Now, let us thank God that he has fought by our hands,
+and that He has brought so many of us back from so great a
+danger!</p>
+<p>"Simeon, you are the oldest of the party; do you lift up your
+voice for us all."</p>
+<p>The party all stood listening reverently, while Simeon said a
+prayer of thanksgiving. Then one of them broke out into one of the
+psalms of triumph, and all joined at once. When this was done, they
+gathered round the fire, prepared their cakes of meal, and put meat
+on long skewers on the flames. Having eaten, they talked for hours,
+each in turn giving his account of his share in the adventure.</p>
+<p>They then talked of their missing friends; those from the same
+village telling what they knew of them, and what relations they had
+left behind. At last, just as morning was breaking, they retired
+into the little bowers of boughs that had been erected to keep off
+the cold--which was, at this elevation, sharp at nights. They were
+soon fast asleep.</p>
+<p>The first thing the next morning, Jonas set off to explore the
+foot of the precipices on the south side of the Roman camp, and to
+search for the bodies of their two missing comrades. He found one,
+terribly crushed; of the other he could find no sign, whatever. On
+his returning to the mountain camp, one of the young men was sent
+off to bear, to the relatives of the man whose body had been found,
+the certain news of his death; and to inquire, of the friends of
+the other, whether he had any relations living near the mountains
+to whom he might have made his way, if hurt or disabled by his
+fall.</p>
+<p>The messenger returned, on the following day, with the news that
+their missing comrade had already arrived at his home. His fall had
+not been a very deep one and, when he recovered consciousness, some
+hours before daybreak, he found that one of his legs was useless,
+and an arm broken. Thinking that, in the morning, the Romans might
+search the foot of the precipices, he dragged himself with the
+greatest difficulty a few hundred yards and, there, concealed
+himself among some bushes.</p>
+<p>A man came along, in search of an ass that had strayed. He
+called to him and, on the man hearing that he was one of the party
+who had caused the great fire in the Roman camp--the sight of whose
+flames had caused such exultation in the heart of every Jew in the
+plains around--he hurried away, and fetched another with a donkey.
+Upon this the injured man was lifted, and carried down to the lake;
+passing, on the way, several parties of Roman soldiers, to whom the
+idea did not occur that the sick man was one of the party who had
+inflicted such a terrible blow upon them on the previous night.
+Once by the side of the lake, there was no difficulty in getting
+him on board a boat, in which he was carried to his native
+village.</p>
+<p>The Romans were furious at the blow which had been struck them.
+More than half their camp and camp equipage had been destroyed; a
+great part of the baggage of the officers and soldiers had been
+burned, and each man had to deplore losses of his own, as well as
+the destruction of the public property. But, more than this, they
+felt the blow to their pride. There was not a soldier but felt
+humiliated at the thought that a number of the enemy--for, from the
+fire breaking out simultaneously, it was certain at least a score
+of men must have been engaged in the matter--should penetrate
+unseen into the midst of their camp; and worse still that, after
+effecting all this damage, all should have succeeded in making
+their escape--for, so far as they knew, the whole of the Jews got
+safely away.</p>
+<p>But not for a moment did they relax their siege operations. The
+troops engaged upon the embankment were relieved at the usual hour;
+and half a legion went up into the mountains, as usual, to procure
+timber; while four thousand archers, divided into parties two
+hundred strong, extended themselves all over the hills, and
+searched the forest for miles for some sign of their enemy--who
+were, they were now convinced, comparatively few in numbers.</p>
+<p>The news of the daring attack on the Roman camp spread far and
+wide among the towns and villages of the plains; and aroused the
+drooping spirits of the people, who had begun to think that it
+would be worse than useless to offer any opposition to the Roman
+power. Whence came the party which had accomplished the deed, or
+who was its leader, none knew; and the inhabitants of the villages
+near Hippos who, alone, could have enlightened them, were careful
+to maintain an absolute silence; for they knew that if, by any
+chance, a rumor reached the Romans of the locality from which their
+assailants had come, they would have carried fire and sword among
+all the villages by the lake.</p>
+<p>Titus was away, being absent on a mission in Syria; and
+Vespasian himself went among the troops, exhorting them not to be
+downcast at the disaster that had befallen them, for that the
+bravest men were subject to sudden misfortunes of this kind; and
+exhorted them to push on the siege with all the more vigor, in
+order that they might the sooner remove to camping grounds where
+they would not be exposed to such attacks by a lurking foe.</p>
+<p>The soldiers replied with cheers; and the next day, the
+embankment being completed, they opened so terrible a fire from
+their war engines upon the defenders of the walls that these were
+forced to retire into the city. The Romans at once pushed forward
+their battering rams to the walls and, setting to work with the
+greatest vigor, speedily made three breaches; through which they
+rushed, with exulting shouts. The Jews ran down to oppose them, and
+a desperate conflict took place in the narrow streets; but the
+Romans, pouring in in great numbers through the breaches, pressed
+them step by step up the steep hill.</p>
+<p>The Jews, animated by despair, again turned, and fell upon them
+with such fury that the Romans could not withstand the assault, and
+were driven down the steep lanes and paths, with great slaughter.
+But those who fled were stopped by the crowd of their own men,
+pressing up the hill from below; and the Roman soldiers--jammed, as
+it were, between the Jews above, and their own countrymen
+below--took refuge in the houses, in great numbers.</p>
+<p>But these were not constructed to bear the weight of so many
+men, in heavy armor. The floors fell in and, as many of the Romans
+climbed up on to the flat roofs, these also fell, bringing the
+walls down with them. Standing, as they did, almost one above
+another, each house that fell brought down the one below it and,
+thus, the ruin spread--as one house of cards brings down
+another--until the whole of the town standing on the steep
+declivity, on its eastern side, was a mass of ruins.</p>
+<p>The confusion was tremendous. The dust of the falling houses so
+thickened the air that men could not see a yard in front of them.
+Hundreds of the Roman soldiers were buried among the ruins. Some
+were killed, at once. Others, jammed between fallen timbers, strove
+in vain to extricate themselves, and shouted to their comrades to
+come to their assistance; but these--enveloped in darkness,
+ignorant of the ground, half suffocated with dust--were powerless
+to aid them.</p>
+<p>In the confusion, Romans fell by the swords of Romans. Many who
+could not extricate themselves slew themselves, with their own
+swords; while the exulting Jews--seeing, in this terrible disaster,
+a miracle effected in their favor--crowded down from above, slaying
+with their swords, hurling masses of stone down on the foe, killing
+those unable to retreat, and adding to the confusion and terror
+with their yells of triumph, which rose high above the confused
+shouts of the Romans.</p>
+<p>Vespasian himself, who had entered the town with his soldiers,
+and had pushed forward with them up the hill, was nearly involved
+in the common destruction; but, as the houses came crashing down
+around him, he shouted loudly to the soldiers near to gather round
+him, and to lock their shields together to form a testudo.
+Recognizing the voice of their beloved general, the soldiers near
+rallied round him and, sheltered beneath their closely-packed
+shields, resisted the storm of darts and stones from above and,
+gradually and in good order, made their way down over the ruins and
+issued safely from the walls.</p>
+<p>The loss of the Romans was great. The soldiers were greatly
+dispirited by their defeat, and especially by the thought that they
+had deserted their general in their retreat. Vespasian, however,
+was wise enough to see that this was no time for rebuke; and he
+accordingly addressed them in language of approbation. He said that
+their repulse was in no way due to want of valor on their part, but
+to an accident such as none could foresee; and which had been
+brought about, to some extent, by their too impetuous ardor, which
+led them to fight rather with the desperate fury of the Jews than
+with the steady discipline that distinguished Roman soldiers.</p>
+<p>The defenders of the city were full of exultation at their
+success and, setting to work with ardor, soon repaired the breaches
+and strengthened the walls. But all knew that, in spite of their
+momentary success, their position was desperate, for their
+provisions were almost exhausted. The stores which had been laid up
+were very large; but the siege had lasted for many months before
+the arrival of the Romans, and the number of the people assembled
+within the walls far exceeded the usual population.</p>
+<p>The Romans, on their part, increased the height of their
+embankment, and prepared for a second assault.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, Itabyrium had fallen. The hill of Tabor was
+inaccessible, except on the north side; and the level area, on the
+top, was surrounded by a strong wall. Placidus had been sent, with
+six hundred horse, against the place; but the hill was so steep,
+and difficult, that he hesitated to attack it. Each party pretended
+to be anxious to treat, each intending to take advantage of the
+other. Placidus invited the garrison to descend the hill, and
+discuss terms with him. The Itabyrians accepted the invitation,
+with the design of assailing the Romans, unawares. Placidus, who
+was on his guard, feigned a retreat. The Itabyrians boldly pursued
+on to the plain; when the Roman horse, wheeling round, dashed among
+them, inflicting terrible slaughter and cutting off their retreat
+towards the city. Those who escaped the slaughter fled to
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>The town, weakened by the loss of so many fighting men, and
+being much distressed by want of water, again opened negotiations;
+and surrendered upon the promise that the lives of all within it
+should be spared.</p>
+<p>Hunger was now doing its work among the people of Gamala. The
+inhabitants suffered terribly, for the provisions were all taken
+for the use of the fighting men; and the rest had to subsist, as
+best they could, on any little hoards they might have hidden away,
+or on garbage of all kinds. Numbers made their escape through the
+sewers and passages which led into the ravines, where the Romans
+had placed no guards.</p>
+<p>Still the assaults of the Romans were bravely repelled until, on
+the night of the 22d of September, two soldiers of the Fifteenth
+Legion contrived to creep, unobserved, to the foot of one of the
+highest towers of the wall; and began, silently, to undermine its
+foundations. Before morning broke, they had got in so far that they
+could not be perceived from the walls. Still they worked in,
+leaving a few stones in their place, to support the tower until the
+last moment. Then they struck these away, and ran for their
+lives.</p>
+<p>The tower fell with a terrible crash, with the guards upon it.
+In their terror, the defenders of the walls leaped up and fled in
+all directions; and many were killed by the Romans' darts--among
+them Josephus, one of their two leaders--while Chares, who was
+lying in the height of a fever, expired from the excitement of the
+calamity.</p>
+<p>The confusion in the town was terrible. Deprived of their two
+leaders, and with the town open to assault, none knew what was to
+be done. All expected instant destruction, and the air was filled
+with the screams and wailings of the women; but the Romans, mindful
+of their last repulse, did not at once advance to the assault. But
+in the afternoon Titus--who had now returned--taking two hundred
+horse, and a force of infantry, crossed the breach and entered the
+town.</p>
+<p>Some of the defenders rushed to meet him. Others, catching up
+their children, ran with their wives to the citadel. The defenders
+fought bravely, but were driven steadily up the hill by the
+Romans--who were now reinforced by the whole strength of the army,
+led by Vespasian. Quarter was neither asked nor given. The
+defenders contested every foot of the hill, until the last defender
+of Gamala, outside, the citadel had fallen.</p>
+<p>Then Vespasian led his men against the citadel itself. It stood
+on a rugged rock, of great height, offering tremendous difficulties
+to the assailants. The Jews stood upon the summit, rolling down
+great stones and darts upon the Romans, as they strove to ascend.
+But the very heavens seemed to fight against the unfortunate Jews,
+for a terrific tempest suddenly broke upon the city. So furious was
+the wind that the Jews could no longer stand on the edge of the
+crag, or oppose the progress of the enemy; while the Romans,
+sheltered from the wind by the rock, itself, were able to press
+upwards.</p>
+<p>The platform once gained, they rushed upon the Jews, slaying all
+they met, men, women, and children. Vast numbers of the Jews, in
+their despair, threw themselves headlong, with their wives and
+children, over the precipices and, when the butchery was complete,
+five thousand bodies were found at the foot of the rocks. Four
+thousand lay dead on the platform above. Of all those in Gamala
+when the Romans entered, two women, alone, escaped. They were the
+sisters of Philip, a general in Agrippa's army. They managed to
+conceal themselves until the carnage was over, and the fury of the
+Romans had subsided; and then showed themselves, and proclaimed who
+they were.</p>
+<p>Gischala now, alone of the cities of Galilee, defied the Roman
+arms. The people themselves were, for the most part, tillers of the
+soil, and were anxious to make their submission; but John--the
+rival and bitter enemy of Josephus--with the robber band he had
+collected, was master of the town, and refused to allow any talk of
+submission. The city had none of the natural strength of Jotapata
+and Gamala, and Vespasian sent Titus against it with a thousand
+horse; while he ordered the Tenth Legion to take up its winter
+quarters at Scythopolis; and himself moved, with the other two
+legions, to Caesarea.</p>
+<p>Titus, on his arrival before Gischala, saw that the city could
+be easily taken by assault but, desirous of avoiding any more
+shedding of blood, and learning that the inhabitants were desirous
+of surrendering, he sent an officer before it to offer terms of
+capitulation. The troops of John of Gischala manned the walls and,
+when the summons of Titus was proclaimed, John answered that the
+garrison accepted willingly the generous terms that were offered;
+but that, the day being the Sabbath, nothing could be concluded,
+without an infringement of the law, until the next day.</p>
+<p>Titus at once granted the delay, and drew off his troops to a
+neighboring town. In the night, John of Gischala marched away with
+all his armed men; followed by many of the inhabitants, with their
+wives and children--fearing to remain in the city, exposed to the
+anger of Titus, when he found he had been duped. The women and
+children soon began to drop behind; but the men pressed on, leaving
+the helpless and despairing women behind them.</p>
+<p>In the morning, when Titus appeared before the town, it opened
+its gates to him at once; the people hailing him as their deliverer
+from the oppression they had so long suffered, at the hands of John
+and his bands of ruffians. Titus entered Gischala amidst the
+acclamations of the people; and behaved with great moderation,
+injuring no one, and contenting himself with throwing down a
+portion of the walls; and warning the inhabitants that, if they
+again rose in rebellion, the same mercy would not be extended to
+them.</p>
+<p>He had at once dispatched a troop of horse in pursuit of the
+fugitives. They overtook them, and slew six thousand of the men,
+and brought three thousand women and children back into the city.
+John himself, with the strongest of his band, were not overtaken,
+but made their way to Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>The fame of the successful exploit, of the destruction of the
+Roman camp, brought large numbers of young men flocking to the
+hills, as soon as the Romans retired from Gamala, all eager to join
+the band; and John could have recruited his numbers to any extent
+but, now that all Galilee had fallen, and the Romans retired to
+their winter quarters, he did not see that there was anything to be
+done, until the spring. It would be madness to attack either of the
+great Roman camps, at Scythopolis or Caesarea; and although,
+doubtless, the garrisons left in Tiberias, Tarichea, and other
+towns might have been driven out, this would only have brought upon
+those cities the anger of the Romans, and involved them in ruin and
+destruction.</p>
+<p>Still less would it have been of any advantage to go down, at
+present, into Judea. That province was suffering woes, as great as
+the Romans could inflict upon it, from the action of the factions.
+Under the pretense of punishing all who were supposed to be
+favorable to making terms with Rome, bands of armed men pervaded
+the whole country, plundering and slaying the wretched
+inhabitants.</p>
+<p>Law and order were at an end. Those in Jerusalem who claimed,
+for themselves, the chief authority in the country had done nothing
+to assist their countrymen, in the north, in their struggle with
+the Romans. Not a man had been dispatched to Galilee. The leaders
+were occupied in their own desperate feuds, and battles took place
+in the streets of the city. The peaceful inhabitants were plundered
+and ill treated, and the condition of those within the walls was as
+terrible as was that of those without. Anarchy, plunder, and
+carnage extended throughout Judea and, while the destruction of
+Jerusalem was threatened by the Roman army in the north, the Jews
+made no preparation, whatever, for its defense, but spent their
+whole time and energy in civil strife.</p>
+<p>When, therefore, the numerous band who had now gathered round
+him urged him to lead them down to Jerusalem, John refused to do
+so. Getting upon an elevated spot, where his voice could be heard
+by them all, he said:</p>
+<p>"My friends, you have heard, as well as I, what is taking place
+in Jerusalem and the country round it. Did we go down there, what
+good could we do? We should be drawn into the strife, on one side
+or another; and the swords which should be kept for the defense of
+the Temple against the Romans would be stained with Jewish blood.
+Moreover, we should aid to consume the food stored away in the
+granaries.</p>
+<p>"Nor can we, through the winter, attempt any enterprise against
+the Romans here. The woes of Galilee are over. Tens of thousands
+have fallen, but those that survive can go about their business and
+till their fields in peace. Were we to renew the war, here, we
+should bring upon them a fresh outburst of the Roman vengeance.</p>
+<p>"Therefore, there is naught for us to do, now; but in the
+spring, when the Romans get into motion against Jerusalem, we will
+march to its defense. We have naught to do with the evil deeds that
+are being performed there; we have but to do our duty, and the
+first duty of every Jew is to die, if need be, in the defense of
+the Temple. Therefore, let us now disperse to our homes. When the
+first news comes that the Romans are stirring, those of you who are
+disposed to follow me, and obey my orders, can assemble here.</p>
+<p>"But let only such come. Let the rest make their way, singly, to
+Jerusalem. I am resolved to have only such with me who will follow
+me as one man. You know how the factions rage in the city. A
+compact body of men, true to themselves and their leader, can
+maintain themselves aloof from the strife, and make themselves
+respected by both parties; but single men must take sides with one
+faction or other, or be ill treated by both.</p>
+<p>"We are wanted, at home. The fields are lying untilled, for want
+of hands; therefore let us lay aside our arms until the spring, and
+do our duty to our families until we are called upon to aid in the
+defense of the Temple. When the hour comes, I shall be ready to
+lead, if you are ready to follow."</p>
+<p>John's address received general approval, and the gathering
+dispersed; all vowing that they would assemble in the spring, and
+follow John wherever he chose to lead them--for he was already
+regarded with an almost superstitious admiration in the country
+around. His deliverance at Jotapata and the success that he, alone
+of the Jewish leaders, had gained over the Romans, marked him in
+their eyes as one specially chosen by God to lead them to victory;
+and in a few hours the hill above Gamala was deserted, and John and
+his followers were all on their way towards their homes.</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch10" id="Ch10">Chapter 10</a>: Captives.</h2>
+<p>John was received with great joy by his father; who had already
+heard the story brought by the injured member of the band from
+Gamala, and was filled with pride that his son should so have
+distinguished himself. He at once agreed to John's proposal that he
+should start, on the following day, to fetch the women from Neve,
+as there was no longer any fear of trouble from the Romans. Galilee
+was completely subdued and, whatever events might take place in
+Judea, those in the north would be unaffected by them.</p>
+<p>The day after his return, then, John set out with Jonas for
+Neve. John charged his companion on no account to say anything of
+their doings at the siege of Gamala; and as communication was
+difficult, and they had not heard from Simon since John had left
+him, his friends at Neve were not aware that he had been absent
+from the farm. Martha and Mary were delighted to see him, and to
+hear that all was well at home. They had been greatly alarmed at
+the news of the slaughter of the fishermen on the lake, fearing
+that John might have gone across to Tarichea with some of his
+friends in the village. Their fears on this head, however, abated
+as time passed on and they did not hear from Simon; who, they felt
+assured, would have brought the news to Martha, had aught happened
+to their son.</p>
+<p>They had mourned over the siege and massacre of Gamala, and had
+been filled with joy when the news had arrived, three days before,
+that the Roman army had marched away to take up its quarters for
+the winter; and they had looked for the summons, which John
+brought, for their return home.</p>
+<p>"And does your father think, John, that there will be trouble
+again in the spring? Shall we have to leave home again, as soon as
+the winter is past?"</p>
+<p>"He hopes not, mother. Gamala was the only town on this side of
+the Jordan that resisted the Roman authority and, as all the
+territories of Agrippa are now peaceful, there is no reason why the
+Romans should enter these again; and indeed, all Galilee has now
+surrendered. As Vespasian moved towards the sea, deputies came to
+him from every town and village; and I think, now, that there will
+be no more trouble there."</p>
+<p>"It has been terrible enough, my son. What tens of thousands of
+men have perished, what destruction has been wrought! We have been
+mourning, for months now, for the woes which have fallen upon our
+people."</p>
+<p>"It has been most terrible, mother; and yet, it might have been
+worse. Nigh a hundred and fifty thousand have fallen, at Gadara,
+Jotapata, Japha, Tarichea, and Gamala; besides those who were slain
+in the villages that had been sacked, and destroyed. Still,
+considering all things, it might have been worse and, were it all
+over now--did no more dangers threaten our nation--we might even
+rejoice that no greater evils have befallen us, for our revolt
+against Rome. But what has been done is but a preparation for the
+siege of Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>"However, do not let us begin to mourn over the future. The
+storm has, for the present, passed away from us and, whatever
+misfortunes have befallen our countrymen, we have happily escaped.
+The farm stands uninjured, and no harm has come to any of us."</p>
+<p>"And all the villagers have escaped, John? Did none of our
+neighbors go out in their boats to Tarichea? We feared, when we
+heard of the sea fight, that some must have fallen."</p>
+<p>"No, mother. Fortunately, they listened to the counsels of my
+father, who implored them not to put out on the lake for that, did
+they do so, they would only bring misfortune and ruin upon
+themselves."</p>
+<p>"And have you heard, John," Mary asked, "anything of the
+champion who they say has arisen? We have heard all sorts of tales
+of him--how he harassed the Romans before Gamala and, with his
+followers, burned their camp one night and well nigh destroyed
+them; and how, when he goes into the fight, the Roman javelins drop
+off without harming him; and how, when he strikes, the Romans fall
+before his blows like wheat before a sickle."</p>
+<p>John burst into a laugh.</p>
+<p>"I wonder, Mary, that the reports didn't say also that he could
+fly through the air when he chose; could render himself invisible
+to the enemy; and could, by a wave of his hand, destroy them as the
+hosts of Sennacherib were destroyed. The Romans were harassed
+somewhat, at Gamala, by John and his followers, who crept into
+their camp at night and set it on fire, and had a few skirmishes
+with their working parties; but when you have said that, you have
+said all that there is to say about it."</p>
+<p>"That is not like you, John," Mary said, indignantly, for the
+tales that had circulated through the province had fired her
+imagination. "Everyone is talking of what he has done. He, alone of
+all our leaders, has checked the Romans; and has shown wisdom, as
+well as valor, in fighting. I should have thought you would have
+been one of the first to praise him. Everyone is talking about him
+and, since we heard of what he has been doing, mother and I pray
+for him, daily, as we pray for you and your father; and now you
+want to make out he has done nothing."</p>
+<p>"I do not want to make out that he has done nothing, Mary, for
+doubtless the Lord has been with him, and has enabled him to give
+some trouble to the Romans; but I was laughing at the fables you
+have heard about him, and at the reports which had converted his
+skirmishes with the Romans into all sorts of marvelous
+actions."</p>
+<p>"I believe they were marvelous actions," Mary said. "Why should
+what people say be all wrong?</p>
+<p>"We believe in him, don't we, mother?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, Mary. It is true that the tales we have heard may be, as
+John says, exaggerated; but assuredly this new champion of our
+people must be a man of wisdom and valor, and I see not why, as God
+raised up champions for Israel in the old time, he should not do so
+now, when our need is so great."</p>
+<p>"There is no reason, mother," John said, more quietly, "but I
+fear that the champion of Israel is not yet forthcoming. We have
+heard of the doings of this John and, as I said, he has merely had
+some skirmishes with the Romans--his band being too small to admit
+of any regular fighting. He interrupted their work, and gave them
+some trouble; and his men, creeping down into the camp, set it on
+fire, and so caused them a good deal of loss; but more than this
+cannot be said of him."</p>
+<p>"At any rate," Mary said disdainfully, "he has done more than
+your Josephus, John--for he brought ruin on all who took his
+advice, and went into the cities he had fortified. It may please
+you to make little of what this champion has done. Others do not
+think so. Everywhere he is talked of, and praised--the old men are
+talking of him, the Jewish maidens are singing songs in his honor. I
+heard them, yesterday, gathered round a well near Neve. His father
+must rejoice, and his mother be proud of him, if they are
+alive.</p>
+<p>"What do they say down by the lake, Jonas, of this captain? Are
+not the tales we have heard believed, there?"</p>
+<p>"I have heard nothing about the Roman javelins not harming him,"
+Jonas said; "but he certainly got safely out of the hands of the
+Romans, when they had well-nigh taken him; and all say that he is
+brave and prudent, and men have great confidence and trust in
+him."</p>
+<p>"Ridiculous, Jonas!" John exclaimed angrily, and Mary and his
+mother looked at him in surprise.</p>
+<p>"Truly, John," his mother said, "what Mary said is just. This is
+not like you. I should have thought you would have been one of the
+first to admire this new leader, seeing that he is fighting in the
+way I have heard you advocate as being that in which the Romans
+should be fought, instead of the Jews being shut up in the
+cities."</p>
+<p>"Quite so, mother! No doubt he is adopting the proper way of
+fighting, and therefore has naturally had some success. I am only
+saying that he has done nothing wonderful; but has given the Romans
+some trouble by refusing to fight, and by merely trying to harass
+them. If there were a thousand men who would gather small bands
+together, and harass the Romans night and day in the same manner,
+they would render it well-nigh impossible for them to make any
+progress. As it was, he merely aided in delaying the fall of Gamala
+by a day or two.</p>
+<p>"And now, let us talk of something else. Our father has
+succeeded in getting in the principal part of the harvest, but I
+fear that this year you will be short of fruit. We have had no time
+to gather in the figs, and they have all fallen from the trees; and
+although we have made enough wine for our own use, there will be
+but little to sell."</p>
+<p>"It matters not at all," Martha said. "God has been very
+merciful towards us and, so that we have but bread to eat and water
+to drink, until next harvest, we shall have nothing to repine
+about, when ruin and destruction have fallen upon so many."</p>
+<p>That evening, when Mary and Martha had retired to their
+apartments, the former, who had been very silent all the evening,
+said:</p>
+<p>"I cannot understand, mother, why John speaks so coldly of the
+doings of this brave leader; and why he was almost angry at our
+praises of him. It seems altogether unlike him."</p>
+<p>"It is unlike him, Mary; but you must never be surprised at men,
+they do not like to hear each other praised; and though I should
+have thought, from what I know of my son, that he was above the
+feeling of jealousy, I cannot but think that he showed some signs
+of that feeling today."</p>
+<p>"But it seems absurd, mother. I can understand John being
+jealous of any one his own age who surpassed him in any
+exercises--though I never saw him so for, when in rowing on the
+lake, or in shooting with bows and arrows, or in other sports, some
+of our neighbors' sons have surpassed him, he never seemed to mind
+at all; and it seems almost absurd to think that he could be
+jealous of a great leader, who has done brave deeds for our
+people."</p>
+<p>"It does seem so, Mary, and I wonder myself; but it has been
+ever one of our national faults to be jealous of our leaders. From
+the time the people vexed Moses and Aaron, in the wilderness, it
+has ever been the same. I grieve to see it in John, who has
+distinguished himself greatly for his age, and of whom we are
+proud; but no one is perfect, my child, and you must not trouble
+because you find that your betrothed husband is not free from all
+weaknesses."</p>
+<p>"I don't expect him to be free from all weaknesses, mother; but
+this is one of the last weaknesses I should have expected to find
+in him, and it troubles me. When everything seemed so dark, it was
+a pleasure to think that a hero, perhaps a deliverer, had arisen;
+and now John seems to say that he has done nothing."</p>
+<p>"My dear child," Martha said, "something may have occurred to
+vex John on the way and, when men are put out, they will often show
+it in the strangest manner. Probably John will, another time, speak
+just as warmly in praise of our new leader as you would,
+yourself."</p>
+<p>"Perhaps it may be so, mother," Mary assented. "I can hardly
+believe that John is jealous--it does seem so unlike himself."</p>
+<p>"I would not speak on the subject again, Mary, if I were you;
+unless he, himself, brings it up. A wise woman keeps silence on
+subjects which may lead to disagreement. You will learn, when you
+have married, that this is the easiest and best way."</p>
+<p>"I suppose so, mother," Mary said, in a tone of disappointment;
+"but somehow it never seemed to me, before, that John and I could
+have any subject on which there would be disagreement."</p>
+<p>"My dear Mary," Martha said, smiling, "John and you are both
+mortal; and although you may truly love each other--and will, I
+trust, be very happy as husband and wife--subjects will occur upon
+which you will differ; and then, as you know, the wisest plan is
+for the wife to be silent. It is the wife's duty always to give way
+to the husband."</p>
+<p>Mary gave a little shrug of her shoulders, as if to intimate
+that she did not regard altogether favorably this view of a wife's
+duties; however, she said no more, but kissed Martha, and retired
+to bed.</p>
+<p>The next morning they started early, and journeyed to
+Capitolias, where they stayed at the house of some friends. In the
+evening, the talk again turned upon the new leader, who had burned
+the Roman camp. When they did so, John at once made some excuse,
+and went out. He regretted, now, that he had not at once told his
+mother what he had been doing. He had intended, in the first place,
+to give her a little surprise; but had no idea of the exaggerated
+reports that had been spread about and, when Mary broke out into
+praise of the unknown leader, it seemed to him that it would have
+been absurd to say that he, himself, was the person of whom she had
+formed so fantastically exalted an opinion. Not having said so at
+first, he did not see how he could say so, afterwards; and so left
+the matter as it stood, until they should return home.</p>
+<p>While John was out, he heard news which caused him some
+uneasiness. It was said that parties of Roman horse, from
+Scythopolis, had been scouring the country; burning many
+villages--under the pretext that some Roman soldiers, who had
+straggled away marauding on their own account, had been killed by
+the peasants--slaughtering the people, and carrying off as slaves
+such young women and men as were likely to fetch good prices.</p>
+<p>He told his mother what he had heard; and asked her whether she
+did not think that it would be better to stay where they were, for
+a time, or return to Neve. But Martha was anxious to be at home,
+again; and the friend with whom they were stopping said that these
+reports were a week old, and that doubtless the Romans had returned
+to their camp. She determined, therefore, that she and Mary would
+continue their journey; but that the maids should remain with their
+friend, at Capitolias, until the Roman excursions ceased.</p>
+<p>They accordingly set out in the morning, as before--the two
+women riding, and John and Jonas walking by the side of the
+donkeys. Following the road by the side of the Hieromax they kept
+on, without meeting anything to cause alarm, until they reached the
+angle of the stream, where the road to Hippos branched off from
+that which followed the river down to Tarichea. They had gone but a
+short distance, when they saw a cloud of dust rising along the road
+in front of them, and the sparkle of arms in the sun.</p>
+<p>"Turn aside, mother," John exclaimed. "Those must be the Romans
+ahead."</p>
+<p>Turning aside, they rode towards some gardens and orchards at no
+great distance but, before they reached them, two Roman soldiers
+separated themselves from the rest, and galloped after them.</p>
+<p>"Fly, John!" Martha said, hurriedly. "You and Jonas can
+escape."</p>
+<p>"It would only ensure evil to you if we did, mother. No, we will
+keep together."</p>
+<p>The Roman soldiers rode up, and roughly ordered the party to
+accompany them back to the main body, which consisted of fifty men.
+The leader, a young officer whose garments and armor showed that he
+belonged to a family of importance, rode forward a few paces to
+meet them.</p>
+<p>"Some more of this accursed race of rebels!" he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"We are quiet travelers," John said, "journeying from Capitolias
+to Tarichea. We have harmed no one, my lord."</p>
+<p>"You are all the same," the Roman said, scowling. "You speak us
+fair one day, and stab us in the back the next.</p>
+<p>"Pomponius," he said to a sergeant, "put these two lads with the
+rest. They ought to fetch a good price, for they are strong and
+active. As to the girl, I will make a present of her, to the
+general, to send to his wife in Rome. She is the prettiest Jewess I
+have seen, since I entered the country. The old woman can go. She
+is of no use to anyone."</p>
+<a id="PicE" name="PicE"></a>
+<center><img src="images/e.jpg" alt=
+"Illustration: Mary and the Hebrew Women in the Hands of the Romans." />
+</center>
+<p>Martha threw her arms round Mary; and would have striven to
+resist, with her feeble strength, the carrying out of the order,
+when John said in Hebrew:</p>
+<p>"Mother, you will ruin us all, and lose your own life! Go home
+quietly, and trust to me to save Mary."</p>
+<p>The habit of submitting to her husband's will, which Martha had
+practiced all her life, asserted itself. She embraced Mary
+passionately, and drew aside as the Roman soldiers approached; and
+then, tottering away a short distance, sank weeping on the ground.
+Mary shed no tear but, pale as death, walked by the side of a
+soldier, who led her to the rear of the cavalcade, where four or
+five other young women were standing, in dejected attitudes.</p>
+<p>John and Jonas were similarly placed, with some young men, in
+the midst of the Roman soldiers. Their hands were tied behind them,
+and the troop resumed its way. They were traveling by the road
+along which the little party had just come. Whenever a house or
+small village was seen, half of the troop galloped off. Flames were
+soon seen to rise, and parties of wretched captives were driven
+in.</p>
+<p>When about halfway to Capitolias, the troop halted. The horses
+were turned into a field of ripe corn, to feed. Half the men sat
+down to a meal, while the remainder stood on guard over the
+captives. John had whispered to Jonas to work his hands so as to
+loosen his cords, if possible; and the lad, whose bones were very
+small, soon said that he could slip the ropes off without
+difficulty.</p>
+<p>It was harder work for John and, indeed, while on the march he
+did not venture to exert himself, fearing that the movements would
+be noticed by his guards. But when they halted, he got into the
+middle of the group of captives, and tried his best to loosen the
+cords. Jonas was close beside him.</p>
+<p>"It is of no use, Jonas," he said. "The cords are cutting into
+my flesh, and they will not yield in the slightest."</p>
+<p>"Let me try, John.</p>
+<p>"Stand round close," Jonas said to the other captives, in
+Hebrew. "I want to loosen my friend's knots. If he can get away, he
+will bring rescue to you all."</p>
+<p>The others moved so as to completely cover the movements of
+Jonas; and the lad, stooping down, applied his teeth to the knot in
+John's cords, and soon succeeded in loosening it.</p>
+<p>"That will be enough, Jonas. I can draw my hand through,
+now."</p>
+<p>Jonas again stood up.</p>
+<p>"When I make an effort to escape, Jonas, do you dash between the
+horsemen, and run for it. In the confusion you will get a start,
+and they will not overtake you until you are across the river. Once
+on the hill, you are safe. If you remain behind and I get away, as
+likely as not one of the soldiers would send a javelin through you,
+as being my companion."</p>
+<p>After half an hour's halt, the Romans again mounted their horses
+and turned to retrace their steps. Two Romans rode on either side
+of the captives, who were about fifty in number; and John gradually
+made his way to the front of the party, between the two leading
+horsemen.</p>
+<p>The officer, talking to his sergeant, rode a few paces ahead, in
+the middle of the road. Since the cords had been loosened, John had
+continued to work his fingers until the circulation was restored.
+Suddenly he slipped his hands from their fastenings, gave three
+bounds forward, and vaulted on to the back of the horse behind the
+officer. He had drawn the knife which had been hidden in his
+girdle; and he threw one arm round the officer, while he struck the
+knife deep into the horse's flank. The animal reared in the air and
+then, at a second application of the knife, sprang forward at the
+top of his speed, before the astonished Roman knew what had
+happened. John held him in his arms like a vice and, exerting all
+his strength, lifted him from the saddle and hurled him headlong to
+the ground; where he lay, bleeding and insensible.</p>
+<p>John had now time to look round. Struck with astonishment at the
+sudden incident which had passed under their eyes, the Romans had,
+at first, instinctively reined in their horses. The sergeant had
+been the first to recover himself and, shouting to the five leading
+soldiers on each side to follow him, had spurred in pursuit, just
+as his officer was hurled to the ground. But John was already some
+fifty yards away, and felt sure that he could not be overtaken.</p>
+<p>He had remarked the horse ridden by the officer, while they were
+eating; and saw that it was of far higher blood and swifter pace
+than any of those ridden by the soldiers. His own weight, too, was
+far less than that of the heavy-armed men in pursuit of him and,
+with a shout of scornful defiance, and a wave of his hand, he
+continued his course. Before a mile had been passed he had left his
+pursuers far in the rear and, seeing the hopelessness of the
+pursuit, they presently reined up and returned to the main
+body.</p>
+<p>Jonas had carried out John's instructions and, the instant the
+latter sprang on the officer, he slipped under the belly of the
+horse next to him and ran, at the top of his speed, for the river.
+It was but a hundred yards away, and he had gone three quarters the
+distance before any of the soldiers--confused at the attack upon
+their officer, doubtful whether the whole of the captives were not
+about to fall upon them, and without orders how to act, set out in
+pursuit.</p>
+<p>Jonas plunged into the stream, dived to the other side, and then
+sprang forward again, just as three or four soldiers reached the
+bank he had left. Their javelins were hurled after him, but without
+effect and, with a shout of triumph, he sprang up the hillside, and
+was soon safe from pursuit.</p>
+<p>As soon as he saw that the Romans had turned back, John sprang
+from his horse, unstrapped the heavy armor which covered its chest
+and sides, and flung it away; and then, mounting, resumed his
+course. At the first house he came to he borrowed a shepherd's horn
+and, as he approached the first village, sounded his signal for the
+assembly.</p>
+<p>Two or three young men ran out from their houses, as he dashed
+up; for there was not a village in those parts from which some of
+the young men had not gone up to the mountains to join him, after
+the fall of Gamala, and all were ready to follow him anywhere. He
+rapidly gave them orders to go to all the villages round; and
+instruct the young men to assemble, with all speed possible, at
+their old trysting place near Jabez Galaad; and to spread the news
+as they went, some from each village being sent as messengers to
+others. Then he pursued his way at full speed and, by sunset, had
+issued his orders in some twenty villages.</p>
+<p>Being convinced that, by night, a sufficient number of men would
+have gathered in the mountain for his purpose, he rode back to the
+river, swam his horse across; and then, leaving it to shift for
+itself, made his way up the mountain. Some seventy or eighty men
+had already arrived at the appointed place, and fresh parties were
+coming in every minute. Jonas was already there, John having
+arranged with him to watch the movements of the Romans until the
+sun set, and then to bring word to the place of meeting as to their
+movements.</p>
+<p>"Well, Jonas, what is your news?"</p>
+<p>"The Romans have halted, for the night, at a spot about a mile
+this side of where we left them. They remained where they were,
+until the party who had ridden after you returned; then they went
+slowly back, after having made a litter with their spears, on which
+four of them carried the officer you threw from his horse--what a
+crash he made! I heard the clang of his arms, as I was running.
+They stopped near one of the villages they burned as we went past;
+and when I turned to make my way here their fires were burning, so
+there's no doubt they mean to halt there for the night."</p>
+<p>"That is good news, indeed!" John said. "Before morning we will
+rouse them up in a way they little expect."</p>
+<p>John's followers arrived eager for the fight, for the news of
+the devastations committed by this party of Romans had roused the
+whole district to fury. As a rule the Romans, except when actually
+on a campaign, abstained from all ill treatment of the
+inhabitants--the orders against plundering and injuring the people
+being here, as in other countries held by the Roman arms, very
+stringent. In the present case, there was no doubt that Roman
+soldiers had been killed; but these had brought their fate upon
+themselves, by their ill treatment and insult of the villagers, and
+no notice would have been taken of the slaying of men while acting
+in disobedience of orders, had it not been that they belonged to
+the company of Servilius Maro.</p>
+<p>He was a young noble, possessed of great influence in Rome, and
+of a ferocious and cruel disposition; and he had urged the general
+so strongly to allow him to go out, to inflict punishment upon the
+country people, that consent had reluctantly been given. But even
+at this time, although the Jews were not aware of it, a messenger
+was on his way to Servilius with peremptory orders to him to return
+at once to Scythopolis, as most serious reports as to his cruelty
+to peaceful inhabitants had come to the general's ears.</p>
+<p>But that message Servilius was never to receive. By midnight,
+upwards of four hundred men had gathered at the rendezvous in the
+mountains. John divided the force into four bodies, and gave each
+their orders as to the part that they were to take; and then
+marched down the hill, crossed the river, and advanced towards the
+Roman bivouac.</p>
+<p>When within a quarter of a mile of the fires, the band broke up
+into sections and proceeded to surround the enemy. When each
+company reached the position John had marked out for it, the men
+began to crawl slowly forward towards the Romans. John sounded a
+note on his horn and, with a shout, the whole band rushed to their
+feet and charged down upon the enemy. Before the latter could
+spring to their feet, and mount their horses, the Jews were among
+them.</p>
+<p>John, with a picked band of twenty men, at once made his way to
+the center of the camp; where the captives, ignorant of the cause
+of this sudden alarm, stood huddled together. Placing his men
+around them, to prevent any Roman soldier injuring them, John
+joined in the fray.</p>
+<p>It was short. Taken by surprise, unable to get together and form
+in order of defense, the Roman soldiers were surrounded and cut
+down, each man fighting stubbornly to the last. One of the first to
+fall was their leader who, springing to his feet at the alarm, had
+rushed just as he was, without helmet or armor, among his soldiers,
+and was stabbed in a dozen places before he had time to draw his
+sword.</p>
+<p>The moment the conflict was over, and the last Roman had fallen,
+John ordered his men to disperse, at once.</p>
+<p>"Regain your homes before morning," he said. "There may be other
+parties of Romans out, and it is as well that none, even of your
+friends, should see you return; and then the Romans will have no
+clue as to those who have taken part in this night's business. Take
+not any of their arms, or spoils. We have fought for vengeance, and
+to relieve our friends, not for plunder. It is well that the Romans
+should see that, when they hear of the disaster and march out to
+bury the dead."</p>
+<p>The men were already crowding round the captives, relieving them
+from their bonds and, in many cases, embracing and weeping on their
+necks, for among them were many friends and relations of the
+rescuing party.</p>
+<p>John soon found Mary.</p>
+<p>"Is this a miracle you have performed, John?" the girl said.
+"Can it be true that our captors have been slain, and that we are
+free?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, dear, we can continue our journey."</p>
+<p>"But how has it happened, John; how has it all come about?"</p>
+<p>"Jonas and I escaped, as I suppose you know, Mary."</p>
+<p>"There was a great confusion and stir upon the road," Mary said,
+"but I did not know what had happened, until we got here. Then some
+of the men said that two of the captives had escaped; and that one
+of them jumped on to the horse of the officer and overthrew him,
+and had ridden off. They said they were both young and, as I missed
+you both from among the party, I thought it must have been you.</p>
+<p>"But how did all these men come together?"</p>
+<p>"I rode round the country, calling upon the young men in the
+villages to take up arms, to rescue their friends who had been
+carried away captive into slavery, and to revenge the destruction
+which this band of ruffians had caused. There were plenty of brave
+men ready to undertake the task and, as you see, we have carried it
+out.</p>
+<p>"And now, Mary, we had best be going. You see, the others are
+dispersing fast; and it is as well to be as far from here, by
+morning, as possible. A troop of Roman horse may come along,
+journeying between Scythopolis and Capitolias; and if they came
+upon this camp, they might scour all the country."</p>
+<p>"I am ready, John. What a fate you have saved me from! I have
+seemed in a dream, ever since the Romans met us this afternoon. I
+have tried to think of what my life was going to be, but could not.
+When we got here I tried to weep, but no tears would come. I have
+been sitting there, as still and cold as if frozen, till I heard
+the notes of a horn.</p>
+<p>"Oh, John, do you know John of Gamala was there?"</p>
+<p>"How do you know, Mary?" John asked, in surprise.</p>
+<p>"One of the young men who was a captive was lying near, and he
+leaped to his feet when the horn sounded, and shouted, 'There is
+John of Gamala's horn; we are saved.' Did you know he was with
+you?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, I knew he was," John said.</p>
+<p>"You won't say anything against him, again," Mary said. "Why did
+you not bring him here to us, that we might thank him?"</p>
+<p>"Certainly I will not say anything against him, in future,
+Mary.</p>
+<p>"And now, let us be going. I am very anxious about my poor
+mother. We will follow the road to the spot where we left her. By
+the time we get there, morning will be breaking. We will inquire
+for her, at every village we pass through; for I am sure she cannot
+have gone far. The Romans did not take the asses but, even with
+them, she could not have traveled far, and probably took shelter at
+the first place which she came to."</p>
+<p>This proved to be the case. At the first village they arrived at
+after passing the spot at which they had been taken captives, they
+heard that, late the evening before, a woman had arrived in sore
+distress. She was leading two asses, which she seemed too feeble to
+mount. She stated that her son and daughter had been carried away
+by the Romans; and she had been received, for the night, in the
+principal house in the village.</p>
+<p>Martha's delight, when John and Mary entered the house where she
+had been sheltered, was beyond words. She fell on their neck and
+kissed them, with broken sentences of thankfulness to God at their
+deliverance; and it was some time before she was sufficiently calm
+to hear how their escape had been effected, by the night attack
+upon the Romans by the country people. She was scarcely surprised
+when she heard that John had effected his escape, and summoned the
+people to rise to rescue them.</p>
+<p>"You told me to trust to you to save Mary, John; and I have kept
+on saying your words, over and over again, to myself. It seemed to
+me as if I did not quite understand them, and yet there was comfort
+in them. I could not even think what you could do to help Mary; and
+yet it appeared as if you, yourself, must have some hope."</p>
+<p>As soon as Martha was sufficiently recovered from her emotions
+to resume their journey, the party again started. They made a
+detour to avoid Hippos for, as John said, there might be inquiries
+as to everyone who was noticed coming from the direction of the
+scene of the struggle. They made many halts by the way, for Martha
+was scarcely able to retain her seat on the donkey, and even Mary
+was greatly shaken by the event of her captivity and rescue. During
+the heat of the day they remained under the shade of some trees,
+and the sun was setting when they approached the farm.</p>
+<p>Simon and the men hurried out, when the sound of the asses' feet
+was heard. Martha burst into tears, as he assisted her to
+alight.</p>
+<p>"What ails you, wife? I trust that no evil has befallen you by
+the way. Where are the maids?</p>
+<p>"Why, Mary, my child, you look pale, too!"</p>
+<p>"No wonder, uncle, that aunt is shaken, and that I look pale.
+For John, and I, and Jonas were taken captives by the Romans, who
+carried us off to sell as slaves, leaving poor mother behind."</p>
+<p>"And how then have you escaped, child?"</p>
+<p>"John and Jonas got away from them, and raised all the country;
+for the Romans had done much harm, killing, and carrying away
+captives, and burning. So when he called them the men took up arms,
+and fell upon the Romans at night and slew them all, and rescued
+me, and some fifty other captives who had fallen into their
+hands."</p>
+<p>Simon asked no further questions, for the time, but helped
+Martha into the house, and then handed her over to the care of Mary
+and, half an hour later, she had recovered sufficiently to return
+to the room; and sit there, holding Simon's hand in quiet
+happiness, and watching Mary as she resumed her accustomed tasks,
+and assisted old Isaac in preparing supper.</p>
+<p>"Everything looks just as it was, mother. I could hardly have
+believed things would have got on so well, without me to look after
+them. And there are quantities of grapes on the vines, still. They
+are too ripe for wine, but they will last us, for eating, for
+months, and that is ever so much better than making them into
+wine--"</p>
+<p>She stopped, for Simon had taken his place at the head of the
+table; and offered up thanks, in the name of the whole household,
+for the mercies that had been vouchsafed to them; and especially
+that they were all, once again, assembled together in their house,
+without there being one vacant place.</p>
+<p>Then the meal began. While it was eaten, many questions were
+asked, on both sides; Simon inquiring about his brother-in-law, and
+his family, and the life they had led at the farm; Martha asking
+after their neighbors--who had suffered, and who had escaped
+without loss or harm. When Isaac and the men retired, Jonas rose
+also to go, but Simon stopped him.</p>
+<p>"Remain with us, Jonas. Your life has been strangely cast in
+that of John's, and I would that, henceforth, you take your place
+as one of the family. You saved his life at Jotapata, and you will
+henceforth be as an adopted son to me.</p>
+<p>"Martha, I know that you will spare some of your affection for
+the lad, who is as a younger brother to John; and who would, I
+believe--nay I feel sure--if need be, give his life for his
+friend."</p>
+<p>"I would do so, indeed," Jonas said, simply. "He found me an
+outcast, whom none cared for. He has treated me like a brother, and
+I would gladly die for him."</p>
+<p>Martha said a few kind words to Jonas, whose quiet and somewhat
+subdued manner, and whose evident affection for John, had greatly
+pleased her; and Mary gave him a little nod, which signified that
+she gladly accepted him as one of the family.</p>
+<p>"And now, Martha," Simon said, "you have not yet told me how
+proud you must feel, in the doings of our son. Our friends here are
+never weary of congratulating me; and truly I feel thankful that a
+son of mine should have done such deeds, and that the Lord should
+have chosen him, to use him as an instrument of his will."</p>
+<p>"My dear father," John interrupted, "I have told you that there
+is nothing at all out of the way in what we have done. Jonas and
+the others did just as much as I did, and methinks that some of
+them make much more than is needful of our skirmishes, and praise
+me because in so doing they praise themselves, who did as much as I
+did."</p>
+<p>"But I do not understand you, Simon," Martha said. "I know that
+John fought bravely at Jotapata, and that it was marvelous that he
+and Jonas escaped, when so many fell. Is it this that you are
+speaking of?"</p>
+<p>"What! Has John said nothing about what he has been doing,
+since?" Simon asked, in surprise.</p>
+<p>"No, father, I said nothing about it," John said, before his
+mother could speak. "I thought, in the first place, that you would
+like to tell them; and in the next, the people there had heard such
+magnified reports that I could not, for very shame, lay claim to be
+the hero they had pictured to themselves."</p>
+<p>"But what has he done?" Martha asked, more and more surprised;
+while Mary, at his last words, sprang to her feet, and stood
+looking at him with an intent and eager face.</p>
+<p>"He should have told you, Martha," Simon said. "It is no light
+thing that this son of ours has done. Young as he is, the eyes of
+the people are upon them. For with a small band, which he gathered
+here, he harassed the enemy several days and, boldly entering their
+camp, destroyed it by fire."</p>
+<p>"Oh, John!" Mary said, in a low voice; while Martha
+exclaimed:</p>
+<p>"What! Is the John, of whom we have heard so much--the young
+man, of whom the people speak as their future leader--our boy? You
+cannot mean it, Simon!"</p>
+<p>"There is no mistake about it, Martha. The lad came to me; and
+said he thought that, with a small band, he could cause much
+trouble to the Romans. So I told him he could go, not knowing
+whether he spoke from the restlessness of youth, or because it was
+the will of the Lord that he should go and fight for the country.
+Indeed, it seemed to many that his marvelous escape from Jotapata
+showed that God had need of him. So I did not withstand him. There
+were many from the villages round who were ready to join themselves
+to him, and follow him, for the fame of his escape had made him
+much talked of.</p>
+<p>"So he went, with twenty-four followers and, of course, Jonas
+here; and truly he did, as all men say, great things. And though he
+saved not Gamala--as indeed could not have been done, save by a
+miracle of God, with so small a band--he did much and, by the
+burning of their camp, not only struck a heavy blow upon the
+Romans, but he inspired the people with hope.</p>
+<p>"Before, it seemed that to resist the Romans was to bring
+certain destruction upon those who adventured it; now men see that
+with prudence, united with bravery, much may be done and, in the
+spring, John will be followed by a great gathering of fighting men,
+from all the country round."</p>
+<p>Martha sat, in speechless surprise, looking at her son.</p>
+<p>"My dear mother," John said, "what I told you before, when you
+were praising the unknown John, is equally true now that it is John
+your son. We acted with common sense which, so far, no one seems to
+have exercised in our struggle with the Romans. We just kept out of
+their reach, and took good care never to come to actual blows with
+them. We constantly threatened them; and compelled them, who knew
+nothing of our numbers or strength, to cease working.</p>
+<p>"As to the burning their camp, of course there was a certain
+amount of danger in it, but one cannot make war without danger. We
+crept through their sentries into the camp, in the night, and set
+it on fire; and then made our escape, as best we could. As only one
+of our number was killed; and he from falling over a precipice, and
+not by the sword of the Romans, you see the peril could not have
+been very great.</p>
+<p>"It was just as I said, that because we did not throw away our
+lives, but were prudent and cautious, we succeeded. People have
+made a great fuss about it, because it is the only success, however
+small, that we have gained over the Romans but, as my father says,
+it has certainly had a good effect. It has excited a feeling of
+hopefulness and, in the spring, many will take the field with the
+belief that, after all, the Romans are not invincible; and that
+those who fight against them are not merely throwing away their
+lives."</p>
+<p>It was some time before Martha could realize that the hero, of
+which she had heard so much, was the quiet lad standing before
+her--her own son John.</p>
+<p>"Simon," she said, at last, "morning and night I have prayed God
+to protect him of whom we heard so much, little thinking that it
+was my own son I was praying for. Tonight, I will thank him that he
+has so blessed me. Assuredly, God's hand is with him. The dangers
+he has run and the success that he has gained may, as he says, be
+magnified by report; nevertheless he has assuredly withstood the
+Romans, even as David went out against Goliath. Tomorrow I will
+hear more of this; but I feel shaken with the journey, and with
+this strange news.</p>
+<p>"Come, Mary, let us to bed!"</p>
+<p>But Mary had already stolen away, without having said a single
+word, after her first exclamation.</p>
+<p>John was at work soon after daybreak, next morning, for there
+was much to be done. The men were plowing up the stubble, ready for
+the sowing, Jonas had gone off, with Isaac, to drive in some cattle
+from the hills; and John set to work to dig up a patch of garden
+ground, near the house. He had not been long at work, when he saw
+Mary approaching. She came along quietly and slowly, with a step
+altogether unlike her own.</p>
+<p>"Why, Mary, is that you?" he said, as she approached. "Why,
+Miriam herself could not walk slower.</p>
+<p>"Are you ill this morning, child?" he asked, with a change of
+voice, as he saw how pale she was looking.</p>
+<p>Mary did not speak until she came quite close; then she stopped,
+and looked at him with eyes full of tears.</p>
+<p>"Oh, John," she began, "what can I say?"</p>
+<p>"Why, my dear Mary, what on earth is the matter with you?" he
+said, throwing down his spade, and taking her hands in his.</p>
+<p>"I am so unhappy, John."</p>
+<p>"Unhappy!" John repeated. "What is making you unhappy,
+child?"</p>
+<p>"It is so dreadful," she said, "to think that I, who ought to
+have known you so well--I, your betrothed wife--have been thinking
+that you were so mean as to be jealous; for I did think it was
+that, John, when you made light of the doings of the hero I had
+been thinking about so much, and would not allow that he had done
+anything particular. I thought that you were jealous, John; and now
+I know what you have done, and why you spoke so, I feel I am
+altogether unworthy of you."</p>
+<p>"Well, Mary, I never thought you were a little goose, before.
+What nonsense you are talking! It was only natural you should have
+thought I was jealous; and I should have been jealous, if it had
+been anyone else you were praising so much. It was my fault, for
+not telling you at once. Concealments are always stupid; but I had
+thought that it would give you a pleasant surprise, when you got
+home, to hear about it; but instead of causing you pleasure, I have
+caused you pain. I was not vexed, in the slightest; I was rather
+amused, when you answered me so curtly."</p>
+<p>"I think it was cruel of you, John, to let me go on thinking
+badly of you, and showing yourself in so unworthy a light. That
+does not make it any the less wrong of me. I ought to have believed
+in you."</p>
+<p>"You are making a mountain out of a molehill, Mary, and I won't
+hear any such nonsense. You heard an absurd story, as to what
+someone had been doing, and you naturally made a hero of him. You
+were hurt by my speaking slightingly of this hero of yours, and
+naturally thought I was jealous at hearing such praises of another
+from my betrothed wife. It was all perfectly natural. I was not in
+the least offended with you, or put out in any way; except that I
+was vexed with myself for not telling you, at once, that all these
+fables related to your cousin John.</p>
+<p>"Now, dry your eyes, and don't think any more about it. Go and
+pick two of the finest bunches of grapes you can find, and we will
+eat them together."</p>
+<p>But it was some time before Mary recovered her brightness. The
+changes which the last few months had made almost depressed her. It
+was but a year ago that John and she had been boy and girl,
+together; now he had become a man, had done great deeds, was looked
+upon by many as one chosen for the deliverance of the nation. Mary
+felt that she, too, had aged; but the change in her was as nothing
+to that in her old playfellow. It was but a year ago she had been
+gravely advising him; treating him, sometimes, as if she had been
+the elder.</p>
+<p>She would have treated him now, if he would have let her, with
+something of the deference and respect which a Jewish maiden would
+usually pay to a betrothed husband--one who was shortly to become
+her lord. But the first time he detected this manner, John simply
+laughed at her, and said:</p>
+<p>"My dear Mary, do not let us have any nonsense of this sort. We
+have been always equals, you and I; friends and companions. You
+know, just as well as I do, that in all matters which we have had
+in common, you have always had quite as much sense as I and, on a
+great many matters, more sense.</p>
+<p>"Nothing has occurred since then to alter that. I have grown
+into a young man, you into a young woman; but we have advanced
+equally. On matters concerning warfare, I have gained a good deal
+of knowledge; in other matters, doubtless, you have gained
+knowledge. And if, dear, it is God's will that I pass through the
+troubles and dangers that lie before us, and we become man and
+wife, I trust that we shall always be the friends and comrades that
+we have been, as boy and girl together.</p>
+<p>"It is all very well, when young men and maidens have seen
+nothing of each other until their parents bring them together as
+man and wife, for the bride to affect a deep respect--which I have
+not the least doubt she is generally far from feeling, in her
+heart--for the man to whom she is given. Happily, this has not been
+the way with us. We have learned to know each other well; and to
+know that, beyond the difference in strength which a man has over a
+woman, there is no difference between us--that one will rule the
+house, and the other will rule the farm, but that in all things, I
+trust, we shall be companions and equals. I do hope, Mary, that
+there will be no change in our ways, the few months we have to be
+together, now.</p>
+<p>"In the spring, I go up to help to defend Jerusalem; and it is
+no use hiding the fact from ourselves that there is but little
+chance of my returning. We know what has befallen those who have,
+hitherto, defended cities against the Romans; and what has happened
+at Jotapata, and Gamala, will probably happen at Jerusalem. But for
+this reason, let us have no change; let us be as brother and sister
+to one another, as we have been, all along. If God brings me back
+safe to you, and you become my wife, there will be plenty of time
+to settle exactly how much deference you shall pay me; but I shall
+expect that, when the novelty of affecting the wifely obedience,
+which is enjoined upon the females of our race, is past, you will
+be quite ready to take up that equality which is, after all, the
+rule in practice."</p>
+<p>"I shall remember your words," Mary said, saucily, "when the
+time comes. It may be you will regret your expressions about
+equality, some day."</p>
+<p>So, during the winter, Mary tried to be bright and cheerful; and
+Martha, whose heart was filled with anxiety as to the dangers and
+trials which lay before them--Jerusalem and the Temple threatened,
+and John away, engaged in desperate enterprises--often wondered to
+herself, when she heard the girl's merry laugh as she talked with
+John, and saw how completely she seemed to put aside every sort of
+anxiety; but she did not know how Mary often spent the entire night
+in weeping and prayer, and how hard was her struggle to keep up the
+brave appearance which was, she knew, a pleasure to John.</p>
+<p>He was not much at home, being often absent for days together.
+Strangers came and went, frequently. John had long conversations
+with them; and sometimes went away with them, and did not return
+for three or four days. No questions were asked, by his parents, as
+to these visitors or his absence. They knew that they had reference
+to what they considered his mission; and as, when he returned home,
+he evidently wished to lay aside all thought of other things, and
+to devote himself to his life with them, they asked no questions as
+to what he was doing.</p>
+<p>He spoke, sometimes, of these things to Mary, when they were
+together alone. She knew that numbers of young men were only
+waiting his signal to join him; that parties of them met him among
+the hills, and were there organized into companies, each with
+officers of their own choice over them; and that, unknown to the
+Romans at Scythopolis, there were daily held, throughout the
+country on both sides of the Jordan, meetings where men practiced
+with their arms, improved their skill with the bow and arrow, and
+learned to obey the various signals of the bugle, which John had
+now elaborated.</p>
+<p>John was resolute in refusing to accept any men with wives and
+families. There were other leaders, he said, under whom these could
+fight; he was determined to have none but men who were ready to
+sacrifice their lives, and without the care of others dependent
+upon them. He was ready to accept youths of fifteen, as well as men
+of five-and-twenty; believing that, in point of courage, the one
+were equal to the other. But each candidate had to be introduced by
+others, who vouched for his activity, hardihood, and courage.</p>
+<p>One of his objects was to avoid increasing his band to too great
+dimensions. The number of those ready to go up to defend Jerusalem,
+and eager to enroll themselves as followers of this new
+leader--whose mission was now generally believed in, in that part
+of the country--was very large; but John knew that a multitude
+would be unwieldy; that he would find it impossible to carry out,
+with thousands of men, tactics dependent for success upon celerity
+of movement; and, moreover, that did he arrive in Jerusalem with so
+great a following, he would at once become an object of jealousy to
+the leaders of the factions there.</p>
+<p>He therefore limited the number to four hundred men; urging upon
+all others who presented themselves, or sent messages to him, to
+form themselves into similar bands; to choose leaders, and to act
+as independent bodies, hanging upon the rear of the Romans,
+harassing them with frequent night alarms, cutting off their
+convoys, attacking their working parties; and always avoiding
+encounters with strong bodies of the Romans, by retreating into the
+hills. He said that, although he would not receive more men into
+his own force than he thought could be easily handled, he should be
+glad to act in concert with the other leaders so that, at times,
+the bands might all unite in a common enterprise; and especially
+that, if they entered Jerusalem, they might hold together, and thus
+be enabled to keep aloof from the parties of John of Gischala, or
+Eleazar, who were contending for the mastery of the city.</p>
+<p>His advice was taken, and several bands similar to his own were
+formed; but their leaders felt that they needed the prestige and
+authority which John had gained, and that their followers would not
+obey their orders with the faith which was inspired, in the members
+of John's own band, by their belief in his special mission. Their
+representations on this subject were so urgent that John, at their
+request, attended a meeting at which ten of these chiefs were
+present.</p>
+<p>It was held in a farmhouse, not far from the spot where Gamala
+had stood. John was embarrassed at the respect which these men, all
+of them several years older than himself, paid him; but he accepted
+the position quietly, for he felt that the belief that existed, as
+to his having a special mission, added greatly to his power of
+utility. He listened to their representations as to their want of
+authority, and to the rivalries and jealousies which already
+existed among those who had enrolled themselves. When they had
+finished, he said:</p>
+<p>"I have been thinking the matter well over. I am convinced that
+it is absolutely necessary that none of the commands shall exceed
+the numbers I have fixed upon--namely, four hundred men, divided
+into eight companies, each with a captain--but at the same time, I
+do not see any reasons why all our corps should not be nominally
+under one leader. If, then, you think it will strengthen your
+position, I am ready to accept the general leadership, and to
+appoint you each as commanders of your troops. Then you will hold
+my commissions; and I will support you, in your commands, with any
+authority I may have.</p>
+<p>"At the same time you will understand that you will, in reality,
+act altogether independently of me; save and except when, it seems
+to me, that we can unite in any enterprise. If we enter Jerusalem,
+we will then hold together for mutual protection from the factions;
+but even there you will each command independently for, did I
+assume a general command, it would excite the jealousy of the
+leaders of the factions, and we should be forced to take part in
+the civil strife which is devastating the city."</p>
+<p>A cordial consent to this proposition was given by the other
+leaders, who said that the knowledge that they were John's officers
+would add immensely to their authority; and would also raise the
+courage and devotion of their men, who would not believe that they
+were being led to victory, unless they were acting under the orders
+of John, himself.</p>
+<p>"Remember," John said, "that if misfortune befalls us, I have
+never laid claim to any divine commission. We are all agents of
+God, and it may be that he has specially chosen me as one of his
+instruments; but this I cannot say, beyond the fact that, so far, I
+have been carried safely through great dangers, and have been
+enabled to win successes over the Romans. But I do not set up as a
+specially-appointed leader.</p>
+<p>"I say this for two reasons: in the first place, that you should
+not think that I am claiming authority and command on grounds which
+may not be justified; and in the second place that, if I should
+fall early in the fighting, others should not be disheartened, and
+believe that the Lord has deserted them.</p>
+<p>"I am but a lad among you, and I recognize that it is God who
+has so strangely brought me into eminence but, having done that
+much, he may now choose some other instrument. If this should be
+so--if, as may well be, one of you should obtain far greater
+success than may attend me--I shall be only too glad to lay aside
+this authority over the rest, with which you are willing to invest
+me, and to follow him as cheerfully as you now propose to follow
+me."</p>
+<p>The meeting soon afterwards broke up, and the news that John of
+Gamala--as he was generally called, from the success he had gained
+over the Romans before that town--had assumed the supreme command
+of the various bands which were being raised, in eastern Galilee
+and on the east of Jordan, spread rapidly; and greatly increased
+the popular feeling of hope, and confidence. Fresh bands were
+formed, the leaders all receiving their appointments from him.
+Before the spring arrived, there were twenty bands formed and
+organized, in readiness to march down towards Jerusalem, as soon as
+the Roman legions got into motion.</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch11" id="Ch11">Chapter 11</a>: A Tale Of Civil
+Strife.</h2>
+<p>Towards the spring, Simon and his family were surprised by a
+visit from the Rabbi Solomon Ben Manasseh. It was a year since they
+had last seen him, when he called to take leave of them, on
+starting for Jerusalem. They scarcely recognized him as he entered,
+so old and broken did he look.</p>
+<p>"The Lord be praised that I see you all, safe and well!" he
+said, as they assisted him to dismount from the donkey that he
+rode. "Ah, my friends, you are happy, indeed, in your quiet farm;
+free from all the distractions of this terrible time! Looking round
+here, and seeing you just as I left you--save that the young people
+have grown, somewhat--I could think that I left you but yesterday,
+and that I have been passing through a hideous nightmare.</p>
+<p>"Look at me! My flesh has fallen away, and my strength has gone.
+I can scarce stand upon my legs, and a young child could overthrow
+me. I have wept, till my tears are dried up, over the misfortunes
+of Jerusalem; and yet no enemy has come within sight of her walls,
+or dug a trench against her. She is devoured by her own children.
+Ruin and desolation have come upon her."</p>
+<p>The old man was assisted into the house, and food and wine
+placed before him. Then he was led into the guest chamber, and
+there slept for some hours. In the evening, he had recovered
+somewhat of his strength, and joined the party at their meal.</p>
+<p>When it was concluded, and the family were alone, he told them
+what had happened in Jerusalem during the past year. Vague rumors
+of dissension, and civil war, had reached them; but a jealous watch
+was set round the city, and none were suffered to leave, under the
+pretext that all who wished to go out were deserters who sought to
+join the Romans.</p>
+<p>"I passed through, with difficulty," the rabbi said, "after
+bribing John of Gischala, with all my worldly means, to grant me a
+pass through the guards; and even then should not have succeeded,
+had he not known me in old times, when I looked upon him as one
+zealous for the defense of the country against the Romans--little
+thinking, then, that the days would come when he would grow into an
+oppressor of the people, tenfold as cruel and pitiless as the worst
+of the Roman tribunes.</p>
+<p>"Last autumn when, with the band of horsemen, with steeds weary
+with hard riding, he arrived before the gates of Jerusalem--saying
+that they had come to defend the city, thinking it not worth while
+to risk their lives in the defense of a mere mountain town, like
+Gischala--the people poured out to meet him, and do him honor.
+Terrible rumors of slaughter and massacre, in Galilee, had reached
+us, but none knew the exact truth. Moreover, John had been an enemy
+of Josephus and, since Josephus had gone over to the Romans, his
+name was hated and accursed among the people; and thus they were
+favorably inclined towards John.</p>
+<p>"I don't think anyone was deceived by the story he told, for it
+was evident that John and his men had fled before the Romans.
+Still, the tidings he brought were reassuring, and he was gladly
+received in the city. He told us that the Romans had suffered very
+heavily at the sieges of Jotapata and Gamala, that they were
+greatly dispirited by the desperate resistance they had met with,
+that a number of their engines of war had been destroyed, and that
+they were in no condition to undertake the siege of a strong city
+like Jerusalem. But though all outwardly rejoiced, many in their
+hearts grieved at the news, for they thought that even an
+occupation by the Romans would be preferable to the suffering they
+were undergoing.</p>
+<p>"For months, bands of robbers, who called themselves Zealots,
+had ravaged the whole country; pillaging, burning, and slaying,
+under the pretense that those they assaulted were favorable to the
+cause of Rome. Thus, gradually, the country people all forsook
+their homes, and fled to Jerusalem for refuge and, when the country
+was left a desert and no more plunder was to be gained, these
+robber bands gradually entered Jerusalem. As you know, the gates of
+the holy city were always open to all the Jewish people; and none
+thought of excluding the strangers who entered, believing that
+every armed man would add to the power of resistance, when the
+Romans appeared before it.</p>
+<p>"The robbers, who came singly or in small parties from all parts
+of the country, soon gathered themselves together in the city, and
+established a sort of terror over the peaceable inhabitants. Men
+were robbed, and murdered, openly in the street; houses were broken
+open, and pillaged; none dare walk in the street, without the risk
+of insult or assault. Antipas, Levias, and Saphias--all of royal
+blood--were seized, thrown into prison, and there murdered; and
+many others of the principal people were slain.</p>
+<p>"Then the robbers proceeded to further lengths. They took upon
+themselves to appoint a high priest; selected a family which had no
+claim whatever to the distinction and, drawing lots among them,
+chose as high priest one Phannias--a country priest, ignorant,
+boorish, and wholly unable to discharge the function of the office.
+Hitherto, the people had submitted to the oppression of the
+Zealots, but this desecration of the holy office filled them with
+rage and indignation; and Ananus--the oldest of the chief priests,
+a man of piety and wisdom--was the head of the movement and,
+calling the people together, exhorted them to resist the tyranny
+which oppressed them, and which was now desecrating the Temple--for
+the Zealots had taken refuge there, and made the holy place their
+headquarters.</p>
+<p>"The people seized their arms, but before they were ready for
+the attack the Zealots, learning what was going on, took the
+initiative and fell upon them. The people were less accustomed to
+arms than their foes, but they had the superiority of numbers, and
+fought with fury. At first the Zealots gained the advantage, but
+the people increased in numbers. Those behind pressed those in
+front forward, and the Zealots were driven back into the Temple,
+and the Quadrangle of the Gentiles was taken.</p>
+<p>"The Zealots fled into the inner court, and closed the gates.
+Thither their wounded had already been carried, and the whole place
+was defiled with their blood. But Ananus, having the fear of God
+before his eyes, did not like to attack them there and, leaving six
+thousand chosen men on guard in the cloisters, and arranging that
+these should be regularly relieved, retired.</p>
+<p>"Such was the state of things, when John of Gischala arrived. He
+at once professed complete agreement with the party of Ananus, and
+was admitted into all their councils; but all the time, as we
+afterwards learned, he was keeping up a secret correspondence with
+the Zealots, and betrayed to them all that took place at the
+council. There was some distrust of him but, in addition to the
+party that had entered the city with him, he had speedily gathered
+together many others and, distracted as we already were with our
+troubles, none cared to add to the number of their enemies by
+openly distrusting John--who took many solemn oaths of fidelity to
+the cause of order.</p>
+<p>"He at length volunteered to enter the inner Temple, on a
+mission to the Zealots; and to persuade them to surrender, and
+leave the city. But no sooner was he among them than he threw off
+the mask, and told the Zealots that the offers to allow them to
+depart in peace were blinds, and that they would at once be
+massacred if they surrendered. He therefore advised them to resist,
+and to send for assistance without--recommending them especially to
+send to the Idumeans. Eleazar and Zacharias--the chiefs of the
+Zealots--felt sure that they, above all, would be sacrificed if
+they surrendered; and they embraced John's counsel, and sent off
+swift-footed messengers to the Idumeans, urging them to come to
+their assistance.</p>
+<p>"The Idumeans had, since their conquest by Hyrcanus, been
+incorporated with the Jews. They were a fierce and warlike
+people--of Arab descent--and, immediately the messengers of the
+Zealots arrived, they embraced the proposal, anticipating the
+acquisition of great plunder in Jerusalem. Marching with all speed,
+they appeared, twenty thousand strong, before the walls of
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>"Although taken completely by surprise--for none knew that
+messengers had gone over to the Idumeans--the people manned the
+walls; and Jesus, a colleague of Ananus, addressed the Idumeans. He
+asked them to take one of three courses: either to unite with the
+people, in punishing the notorious robbers and assassins who were
+desecrating the Temple; or to enter the city unarmed, and arbitrate
+between the conflicting parties; or to depart, and leave the city
+to settle its own difficulties. Simon, the leader of the Idumeans,
+answered that they came to take the part of the true patriots,
+against men who were conspiring basely to sell the people into the
+hands of the Romans.</p>
+<p>"At this answer Jesus left the wall, and we held debate upon the
+situation. Before the arrival of this new enemy, we felt certain of
+overpowering the Zealots; and Ananus would, ere long, have been
+persuaded to lay aside his scruples and attack them for, as they
+were desecrating the sanctuary, it would be better to shed their
+blood there and, when these wicked men were slain, to offer up
+atonement and purify the Temple--as had been done before, in the
+days of the Maccabees, after the Temple had been defiled.</p>
+<p>"We redoubled our guards round the Temple, so that none could
+issue out thence to communicate with the Idumeans. At night a
+terrible storm set in, with lightning, thunder, and rain, so that
+the very earth seemed to shake. A great awe fell upon all, within
+and without the city. To all, it seemed a sign of the wrath of God
+at the civil discords; but though, doubtless, it was the voice of
+the Almighty, it was rather a presage of further evils.</p>
+<p>"Under shelter of the storm--which drove all the guards to take
+refuge--some of the Zealots cut asunder the bars of the gate, and
+crept along the street to the wall. Then they sawed through the
+bars of the gate that faced the Idumeans, who were trembling with
+terror in the storm. Unseen by anyone, the Idumeans entered the
+gate, marched through the city, and approached the Temple. Then
+they fell upon our guards, while the Zealots attacked them from
+behind.</p>
+<p>"Furious at the hours they had passed exposed to the tempest,
+ashamed of their fears, and naturally pitiless and cruel, the
+Idumeans gave no quarter; and a terrible carnage took place among
+the ten thousand men who had been placed in the outer court of the
+Temple. Some fought desperately, others threw themselves down from
+the wall into the city and, when morning dawned, eight thousand
+five hundred of our best fighting men had been slain.</p>
+<p>"As soon as it was daylight, the Idumeans broke into the city,
+pillaging and slaying. The high priests, Ananus and Jesus, were
+among those who were slain; and in that terrible night were
+extinguished the last hopes of saving Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>"Ananus was a man of the highest character. He had labored
+unceasingly to place the city in a posture of defense; believing,
+and rightly, that the stronger were its walls, and the more
+formidable the resistance it could offer, the better chance there
+was of obtaining favorable terms from the Romans. Ananus was the
+leader and hope of the peace party, which comprised all the
+respectable classes, and all the older and wiser men in Jerusalem.
+His death left the conduct of affairs in the hands of the
+thoughtless, the rash, and the desperate.</p>
+<p>"The massacre continued for days, the Idumeans hunting the
+citizens in the streets. Vast numbers were killed, without
+question. The young men of the upper classes were dragged to
+prison, and were there scourged and tortured to force them to join
+the Zealots, but not one would do so. All preferred death. Thus
+perished twelve thousand of the best and wisest in Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>"Then the Zealots set up a tribunal and, by proclamation,
+assembled seventy of the principal citizens remaining to form a
+court; and before it brought Zacharias, the son of Baruch--an
+upright, patriotic, and wealthy man. Him they charged with entering
+into correspondence with the Romans, but produced no shadow of
+evidence against him. Zacharias defended himself boldly, clearly
+establishing his own innocence, and denouncing the iniquities of
+his accusers. The seventy unanimously acquitted the prisoner,
+preferring to die with him, to condemning an innocent man. The
+Zealots rushed forward, with cries of rage, and slew Zacharias and,
+with blows and insults, turned the judges out of the Temple.</p>
+<p>"The Idumeans at length began to weary of massacre, and were
+sated with pillage and, declaring that they had been deceived by
+the Zealots, and that they believed no treason had been intended,
+they left the city; first opening the prisons, and releasing two
+thousand persons confined there, who fled to Simon the son of
+Gioras, who was wasting the country toward Idumea.</p>
+<p>"The Zealots, after their departure, redoubled their iniquities;
+and seemed as if they would leave none alive, save the lowest of
+the people. Gorion, a great and distinguished man, was among the
+slain. Niger of Peraea, who had been the leader in the attack on
+the Romans at Ascalon--a noble and true-hearted patriot--was also
+murdered. He died calling upon the Romans to come to avenge those
+who had been thus murdered; and denouncing famine, pestilence, and
+civil massacre, as well as war, against the accursed city.</p>
+<p>"I had lain hidden, with an obscure family, with whom I had
+lodged during these terrible times. So great was the terror and
+misery in the city that those who lived envied the dead. It was
+death to bury even a relative, and both within and without the city
+lay heaps of bodies, decaying in the sun.</p>
+<p>"Even among the Zealots themselves, factions arose. John of
+Gischala headed one party, and that the more violent. Over these he
+ruled with absolute authority, and occupied one portion of the
+city. The other party acknowledged no special leader. Sometimes,
+then, the factions fought among themselves; but neither side ceased
+from plundering and murdering the inhabitants.</p>
+<p>"Such, my friends, was the condition of Jerusalem when I left
+it; having, as I told you, purchased a permission from John of
+Gischala to pass through the guards at the gates.</p>
+<p>"As I traveled here, I learned that another danger threatens us.
+The sect called the Assassins, as you know, seized the strong
+fortress of Masada, near the Dead Sea, at the beginning of the
+troubles. Until lately, they have been content to subsist on the
+plunder of the adjacent country but, on the night of the Passover,
+they surprised Engaddi, dispersed all who resisted, and slew seven
+hundred women and children who could not escape. They carried off
+the contents of the granaries, and are now wasting the whole
+region.</p>
+<p>"What hope can there be of success, my friends, when, with an
+enemy close to their gates, the Jews are slaying more of their
+fellow countrymen than the Romans themselves? Did ever a country
+present so humiliating and terrible a spectacle? Were such
+atrocities ever perpetrated by men upon their brothers? And yet,
+the madmen still believe that the Almighty will deliver them--will
+save from destruction that Temple which they have polluted, the
+altars that they have deluged with blood."</p>
+<p>When the rabbi had finished his narration, there was a long
+silence. Martha was in tears, at the recital of the misery which
+was endured by the inhabitants of Jerusalem; Simon sat with his
+face covered with his hands; John had scarce moved, since the rabbi
+had begun his story, but sat with a heavy frown on his face,
+looking straight before him; while Mary anxiously watched him, to
+see the effect of the recital upon him.</p>
+<p>Simon was the first to speak.</p>
+<p>"It is a tale of mourning, lamentation, and woe that you have
+told us, rabbi. Not even in the days of our captivity in Babylon
+were the Jewish people fallen so low. Let us to bed now. These
+things are too terrible to speak of, until we have laid them before
+the Lord, and asked his guidance. I wonder not, now, rabbi, that
+years seem to have rolled over your head since we last met."</p>
+<p>The others rose. Mary, as she passed John, laid her hands on his
+shoulder with a caressing action--which was very rare to her, for
+she generally behaved to him as to a brother, holding any
+exhibition of greater affection unmaidenly, until the days of
+betrothal were ended. The action seemed to recall John from his
+gloomy thought, and he smiled down at her anxious face; then, when
+the others went off to their apartments, he went out into the night
+air and stood for hours, nearly immovable, with his eyes fixed on
+the stars.</p>
+<p>In the morning, Mary joined him in the garden; as had come to be
+their custom, this being the only time in the day when they were
+alone together.</p>
+<p>"Well, John?" she asked.</p>
+<p>He understood her question.</p>
+<p>"I have thought it over, Mary, in every way; but I cannot see
+that my duty is changed by what we heard last night. Affection for
+you, and my parents, would keep me here; and I wish that I could
+see that my duty could go hand in hand with my wishes. I have been
+sorely tempted to yield--to resign the struggle, to remain here in
+peace and quiet--but I should never be happy. I do not believe that
+I am, as so many think, specially called to be a deliverer--though
+God has assuredly specially protected and aided me--but, did I draw
+back now, it would be a grievous discouragement to many. I have put
+my hand to the plow, and cannot look back.</p>
+<p>"God has permitted these miseries to fall upon Jerusalem,
+doubtless, as a punishment for the sins of the people. It may be
+yet that his wrath will be abated, and that he will remember the
+mercies of old. He has suffered his Temple to be profaned, but it
+may not be his purpose to allow it to be destroyed, utterly. The
+evil doings, therefore, of evil men do not release us from our
+duty; and it has always been held the chief duty of all Jews to
+die, if need be, in defense of the Temple. Never, so long as that
+stands, can we say that the Lord has wholly turned his face from
+us--that he purposes another period of exile, and captivity, to
+befall his people.</p>
+<p>"Therefore, Mary, I shall go on as I have intended; warring
+against the Romans, and doing what I can to hinder their advance
+against Jerusalem. I think that the war may last longer than I had
+expected. Vespasian will have heard--from those who, like the
+rabbi, have escaped from Jerusalem--what is going on within the
+city; and knowing the great strength of its walls; and judging,
+from what he saw at Jotapata and Gamala, how desperate would be its
+resistance, were he to appear before it, he may well decide to
+leave it for the present; suffering the population to prey upon
+each other, to consume their provisions and waste their strength
+till, when he marches against it, there will be no longer men left
+to man the walls."</p>
+<p>"I thought you would decide so, John," Mary said, quietly; "and
+much as I love you--for I do love you, John--I would rather part
+with you so, never to see you again, than that you should draw back
+now. I set you up on a pedestal, before I knew that it was you who
+was my hero; and I would not have it said that he, of whom such
+high hopes were cherished, drew back from the enterprise he had
+taken up. Rather would I mourn for you, all my life, than that men
+should say of you:</p>
+<p>"'This is he of whom we said, he is the deliverer; but who
+shrank from the dangers of battle, and threw down his country's
+sword.'"</p>
+<p>"Thank you, Mary. I am glad to hear you say so. I thought that I
+was right, but it was very hard so to decide. And, now that you
+agree with me, my chief cause for hanging back is removed.
+Henceforth, I shall trouble no more over it. My conscience tells me
+that I am right to go. You say go, also. Therefore now, whatever
+betides, I shall not blame myself; but shall feel that I could not
+have taken any other course."</p>
+<p>"I have faith, John, that you will come back to me, when the
+troubles are over. I believe that, whatever may happen at
+Jerusalem, you will be spared to me. I think that it was either for
+the country, or for me, that your life was spared, alone of all
+those that fought at Jotapata; and I mean to keep on thinking so.
+It will keep up my spirits, while you are away, and will help me to
+cheer our mother."</p>
+<p>"If the Romans do not move upon Jerusalem, I may be able to be
+often at home. Our policy will be to strike a blow; and then, when
+the Romans gather in force, to scatter and disappear; so that I may
+often be home, until the time comes when the enemy gather round
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>"But at any rate, Mary, I shall try and believe that your hope
+is well founded; and that, in the end, I shall return alive to you.
+Certainly I shall not spare my life; for, when one takes up the
+post of a leader of his fellows, he must never hang back from
+danger, but must be always in the front. At the same time, I shall
+never forget that you are thinking and praying for me, and will
+never throw away my life recklessly; and if the time comes when I
+see that all is lost--that fighting is no longer of avail--I will
+neither rush into the enemy's ranks to die, nor will I throw down
+my arms and die unresisting, nor will I slay myself with my own
+weapons; but I will strive, in every way, to save my life for your
+sake, having done all that I could for our country, and the
+Temple."</p>
+<p>"That is all I ask, John. I am quite content to wait here, until
+the day comes that you shall return; and then, though our cause be
+lost, our country ruined, and God's Temple destroyed, we can yet
+feel that God has been good and merciful to us--even if we be
+driven out of our home, and have to become exiles, in a far
+land."</p>
+<p>A week later, the news came that the Romans were preparing to
+take the field. The young men of the village at once started, as
+messengers, through the country. At night, a vast pile of brushwood
+was lighted on the hill above Gamala; and answering fires soon
+blazed out from other heights. At the signal, men left their homes
+on the shores of Galilee, in the cities of the plains, in the
+mountains of Peraea and Batanaea. Capitolias, Gerisa and Pella,
+Sepphoris, Caphernaum and Tiberias--and even the towns and villages
+almost within sight of Caesar's camp, at Caesarea--sent their
+contingents and, in twenty-four hours, eight thousand armed men
+were gathered on the slopes of Mount Galaad.</p>
+<p>Each man brought with him grain, sufficient for a week's
+consumption; and all had, according to their means, brought money,
+in accordance with the instructions John and the other commanders
+had issued. For John held that although--as they were fighting for
+the country--they must, if necessary, live upon the country; yet
+that, as far as possible, they should abstain from taking food
+without payment, and so run the risk of being confounded with the
+bands who, under the cloak of patriotism, plundered and robbed the
+whole country.</p>
+<p>The bands assembled, each under their leaders. It was easy to
+see that they had come from different localities. Tarichea and
+Tiberias had both sent two companies, and the aspect of these
+differed widely from that of the companies of peasants, raised in
+the villages on the slopes of Hermon or among the mountains of
+Peraea; but all seemed animated by an equal feeling of devotion,
+and of confidence in their young leader.</p>
+<p>John, after carefully inspecting his own band, visited the camps
+of the other companies; and was everywhere received with
+acclamations. He addressed each company in turn--not only urging
+them to show bravery, for that every Jew had shown, who had fought
+against the Romans--but pointing out that far more than this was
+required. While they must be ready to give their lives, when need
+be; they must be equally ready to shun the fight, to scatter and
+fly, when their leaders gave the orders. It was not by bravery that
+they could hope to overcome the Romans; but by harassing them night
+and day, by attacking their camps, cutting off their convoys, and
+giving them no rest. Above all, obedience was required.</p>
+<p>"Look at the Roman soldiers," he said. "They have no wills of
+their own. They advance, or retreat; they attack, when they know
+that those who first attack must die; they support all hardships
+and fatigues; they accomplish marvels, in the way of work; they
+give themselves up, in fact, to obey the orders given them, never
+questioning whether those orders are the best, but blindly obeying
+them; and so it must be, here, if we are to fight the Romans with a
+chance of success.</p>
+<p>"The most useful man here--the man who will do best service to
+his country--is not he who is strongest, or bravest, but he who is
+most prompt in his obedience to orders. The true hero is he who
+gives up his will and, if need be, his life, at the order of his
+leader. You have chosen your own officers, and I have confirmed the
+choice that you have made. It is for you, now, to give them your
+support and assistance. There will be hardships, these must be
+borne without complaint; there will be delays, these must be
+supported with patience; there will be combats and dangers, these
+must be met with confidence and courage--believing that God will
+give you success; and that, although the issue of the strife is in
+his hands, each of you should do his best, by his conduct and
+courage, to gain success.</p>
+<p>"We shall not act in one great body, for we could not find food,
+in the villages, for so large a number. Moreover, to do so would be
+to give the Romans an opportunity of massing their forces against
+us, of surrounding and destroying us. On great occasions, and for a
+great object, we may gather together and unite our forces. At other
+times, although acting upon a general plan, and in concert with
+each other, each company will work independently. So we shall elude
+the Romans. When they strike at us, we shall be gone. When they try
+to inclose us, we shall disperse. When they pursue one body, others
+will fall upon them. When they think that we are in one part of the
+country, we will be striking a blow in another. When they fancy
+themselves in security, we will fall upon them. We will give them
+no rest, or peace."</p>
+<p>John's addresses were received with shouts of approval. By the
+great majority of those present, he was now seen for the first
+time; but his appearance, the tone of authority with which he
+spoke, his air of confidence, and the manner in which he had
+evidently thought out the plans of action, and prepared for all
+contingencies, confirmed the reports which they had heard of him;
+and the conviction that he was a specially appointed leader was
+deepened, and strengthened. How otherwise could one who was a mere
+youth speak with such firmness, and authority?</p>
+<p>The memories of the Jews were stored with legends of the prowess
+of Judas the Maccabean, and his brothers; and of other leaders who
+had, from time to time, arisen and enabled them to clear their
+country of oppressors; and they were thus prepared to accept,
+willingly, those who appeared to them specially sent as leaders,
+and the question of age and experience weighed but little with
+them. Moreover, as none had been trained as soldiers, there were
+none who had to set aside superior claims.</p>
+<p>Samuel had been chosen as a child, Saul was the youngest of his
+brethren, and David a lad when he slew the champion of the
+Philistines. Such being the case, the youth of John was no
+drawback, in the eyes of his followers; and indeed the fact that,
+being still a youth, he had yet escaped from Jotapata, where all
+his elders had died; and that he had inflicted a heavy blow upon
+the Romans, when all others who had opposed them had perished,
+seemed in itself a proof that he was under special protection.</p>
+<p>John probably believed in himself less than did any man among
+his followers. Piously and devoutly brought up, he saw in the two
+escapes that he had had, from death at the hands of the Romans,
+signs of a special protection of God. But, while he hoped that he
+might be able to do the Romans much harm, he had not any conviction
+that he was destined to deliver his country. He had none of the
+fervent enthusiasm of men who are convinced that they have a divine
+mission, and that miracles would be wrought in his favor.</p>
+<p>He had seen the tremendous strength of the Roman army, as it
+defiled from the mountains before Jotapata. He had learned the
+power of their war engines, and had evidence of their discipline,
+their bravery and perseverance; and had no idea that such a force
+as that gathered round him could cope with the legions of Rome.
+Still, that firm and pious belief, which was so deeply ingrained in
+the heart of the Jews, that God specially interested himself in
+them--that he personally directed everything that befell them, and
+intervened in every incident of their history--had its natural
+effect upon him.</p>
+<p>His training taught him that he was an instrument in God's hands
+and, although he hardly even hoped that he was destined to be a
+deliverer of Jerusalem, he thought that God might intend him to do
+great things for his people. At any rate, while never claiming any
+special authority--or to have, more than those around him, any
+special mission--he was careful not to damp the enthusiasm of his
+followers, by disclaiming the mission they attributed to him;
+knowing how much such a belief added to his authority, and to the
+efficiency of the force under his command.</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch12" id="Ch12">Chapter 12</a>: Desultory
+Fighting.</h2>
+<p>After having gone through the camps of the whole of the
+companies, John assembled the leaders round him, and held a council
+as to future operations. It was agreed that it would be best to
+leave alone, for the present, the legion at Scythopolis; for rumors
+of the gathering would almost certainly have reached that city, and
+the Romans might be on their guard against attack. It was resolved,
+therefore, to cross the Jordan a few miles below Tarichea, to
+traverse the hills between Endor and Gelbus and, by a long march,
+to gain the range of hills extending from Carmel to Samaria, and
+forming the boundary between the latter province and Galilee. They
+would then be looking down upon the camp of Vespasian, at
+Caesarea.</p>
+<p>The country, between these hills and the city, was too flat for
+them to engage with any hopes of success; for although, by a
+surprise, they might inflict great damage on the Romans, they would
+be wholly unable to withstand the charges of the Roman horse. They
+would, therefore, maintain a lookout from the mountains; and attack
+the Roman camp the first time it was pitched on ground whence a
+rapid retreat could be effected, to the hills.</p>
+<p>As the Jordan was unfordable, between Scythopolis and the lake,
+all who could not swim were ordered to carry with them, on their
+march down to the river, logs of light wood sufficient to support
+them in crossing. Those who could swim were to assist in piloting
+over those unable to do so. This would be a work of no great
+difficulty, for the width of the Jordan is not great, and it was
+only for a short distance in the center that it would be
+unfordable. As was to be expected, the companies raised near the
+shores of the lake contained but few men unable to swim, while
+those from the mountain districts were almost wholly ignorant of
+the art.</p>
+<p>The bands were, therefore, linked together for the purpose of
+crossing; one of those from the plains, and a company of
+mountaineers, marching down to the stream together. The
+preparations were all complete by the afternoon and, just as it was
+becoming twilight, the leading bands arrived on the banks of the
+Jordan. The crossing was effected without difficulty and, in two
+hours, all were over. Then the companies formed up under their
+leaders, and started independently; men who knew the country well
+being assigned, as guides, to each.</p>
+<p>They crossed the hill between Endor and Gelbus, marched through
+Jezrael; and then, just as morning was breaking, ascended the
+slopes of Mount Carmel, leaving Legio on their right. It was a
+march of about fifty miles; but the men were all active and
+vigorous, lightly armed, and sustained by enthusiasm and
+excitement, and not a man dropped behind during the journey. Once
+among the hills, they threw themselves down for a rest of some
+hours. From the crest of the hill, it was but some twelve miles
+down to Caesarea; and the blue line of the sea extended, right and
+left, as far as the eye could reach.</p>
+<p>In the afternoon Jonas was sent down to the city, to learn how
+matters stood there, and when Vespasian was going to move. He was
+to remain there that night, and return with the news on the
+following morning. He came back, however, at midnight; saying that
+the Romans had marched on the previous day, that they had taken the
+southern road which skirted the mountains for some distance, and
+would probably cross the central range at Sichem, and either
+proceed to Scythopolis, or join the legion thence on the plain of
+Aulon, west of the Jordan.</p>
+<p>This was a disappointment but, at daybreak, the companies were
+afoot. It was decided they should march separately; each taking its
+own line to the east, following unfrequented roads, and keeping
+among the hills as far as possible, so that no report of the
+passage of any large gathering of men should reach the Romans.
+Although no time had been lost, John, when he approached the
+Jordan, learned that Vespasian had already joined the legion from
+Scythopolis, and had crossed the river into Peraea, and was
+marching with all speed against Gadara, its chief city.</p>
+<p>Halting for the night near the Jordan; John crossed the river by
+a ford, next morning, and then moved forward, cautiously, to
+commence operations as soon as the Romans were engaged upon the
+siege of the city. But, ere many hours had passed, he learned that
+the inhabitants had sent forward a deputation to Vespasian; and
+that the war party, taken by surprise by the rapid advance of the
+Romans, had hastily evacuated the city, after slaying many of those
+who were willing to admit the Romans. When Vespasian arrived, he
+had been received with acclamations by the inhabitants; who had
+already destroyed a portion of their walls, to prove that they
+never thought of resistance.</p>
+<p>Having thus established the Roman authority in Peraea, Vespasian
+left a garrison there; and set out, with the main body of his army,
+for Caesarea, leaving a garrison in the town; and dispatching
+Placidus, with five hundred horse and three thousand foot, in
+pursuit of the fugitives who had fled from Gadara before he entered
+it.</p>
+<p>As Vespasian marched back, the band under John began their work.
+Wherever the road led through the mountains, they rolled down rocks
+upon the column. The light-armed allies of the Romans were sent out
+on each flank and, climbing the hills, attacked their assailants.
+As soon, however, as they neared the crests--which were, as they
+believed, held by small parties, only, of the enemy--the Jews
+rushed upon them with fury, overthrew them, and drove them down the
+hills; until the heavy-armed troops were obliged to advance to
+their assistance, upon which the Jews at once fell back to the
+higher slopes.</p>
+<p>Growing bolder by success, they even ventured to rush down upon
+the baggage; breaking through its guard, and killing great numbers
+of the animals. A party of Roman horse which came up at full gallop
+was charged, just as they reached the spot, by two more companies
+from the hill; and these, before the Romans could face about and
+oppose their line of long spears to their assailants, were among
+them--stabbing the horses, leaping up behind the soldiers and
+slaying them with their knives, and throwing the whole into
+confusion. Then the sound of a horn was heard on the hillside, and
+the whole of the Jews instantly relinquished their work and took to
+the mountains, just as a large body of cavalry, headed by Titus,
+came thundering up.</p>
+<p>At night, the Romans were disturbed by constant alarms. Men
+crept up to the sentries, and slew them in the darkness. Numbers of
+the enemy penetrated into the camp; killing the soldiers as they
+slept, hocking the horses, and setting fire to the camp in several
+places; and it was not until the whole army got under arms that the
+attack ceased. The next day, they were similarly harassed upon the
+march; and it was not until they had crossed the mountains, and
+descended on to the western plain, that the Jews drew off, highly
+satisfied with the result of their first encounter with the
+Romans.</p>
+<p>Their loss had been slight--not more than twenty having
+fallen--while they had killed more than two hundred of the
+light-armed troops, had inflicted some loss upon the Romans
+themselves, had slain numbers of baggage animals; and had shown the
+enemy that, however formidable the Roman soldiers might be on the
+plains, the legions of Vespasian were no more invincible than was
+that of Cestius, among the hills.</p>
+<p>They regretted however that, instead of engaging the main army,
+they had not followed the force under Placidus--of whose dispatch
+from Gadara they had not learned, until it was too late. The
+fugitives, of whom Placidus was in pursuit, had taken possession of
+the village of Bethennabris. He pursued the stratagem which had
+already succeeded so well. He feigned a retreat, and the Jews
+sallied out and attacked him. He cut off the greater part from
+returning to the village and, at night, attacked Bethennabris,
+captured it, and put all within it to the sword.</p>
+<p>Those who had escaped were joined by great numbers of the
+country people; and made for the Jordan, intending to cross by the
+ford opposite Jericho. But the river was swollen with rain, and
+they were unable to cross. Placidus overtook and attacked them.
+Vast numbers were killed, and more were driven into the river and
+drowned. Fifteen thousand fell. Two thousand five hundred were
+taken prisoners, with a vast number of animals, of all kinds.
+Placidus then reduced the whole of Peraea, and the coast of the
+Dead Sea, as far as Machaerus.</p>
+<p>Vespasian soon moved down from Caesarea, keeping near the sea,
+and capturing Antipatris, Lydda, and Thamna, and blocking Emmaus.
+Then, continuing his course southward, he wasted the country to the
+frontier of Idumea, and captured the towns Betaris and Caphartobas,
+putting to the sword about ten thousand men. Then he marched back,
+by Emmaus and Sichem, descended the hills and marched to Jericho;
+where he was joined by Placidus, with the troops from Peraea.</p>
+<p>The city had been deserted by its inhabitants, and the Roman
+army rested here for some time until, just as Vespasian was about
+to march upon Jerusalem, the news arrived of the death of Nero and,
+unwilling to weaken his army by besieging the city--strong in
+itself, and defended by a host--Vespasian withdrew to Caesarea and,
+for another two years, Jerusalem had time for preparation, or
+submission.</p>
+<p>As Vespasian's march had, except when he was crossing the
+mountains from Emmaus to Sichem, lain entirely in the plains, John
+had been able to do but little. Half the force had been sent across
+the Jordan, and its operations had greatly added to the
+difficulties Placidus had met with in subduing Peraea. The other
+companies had closely followed the march of Vespasian, had made
+many attacks upon parties dispatched to pillage the country and,
+after the Romans marched north again, besieged and captured some of
+the small places in which they had left garrisons.</p>
+<p>They had united when the two Roman armies met at Jericho; and
+were prepared to defend, desperately, the rugged mountain roads
+leading thence to Jerusalem when, to their surprise, they saw the
+Roman host moving away to the north again.</p>
+<p>As soon as they ascertained that Vespasian had, for the present,
+entirely abandoned the idea of attacking Jerusalem, and that his
+troops had gone into permanent quarters, John held a council with
+the other commanders. Some were in favor of remaining in arms, and
+of constantly attacking the Roman garrisons. Others were for
+scattering and returning to their homes--from which they had now
+been absent three months--until the Romans again set themselves in
+motion against Jerusalem. Opinions were about equally divided, and
+John remained silent until all had spoken. Then he said:</p>
+<p>"I think that we had better disperse. If we remained in arms, we
+might gain some successes, we might surprise and slay some Roman
+garrisons; but the others would speedily prepare themselves against
+attack, by strengthening their walls and taking every precaution.
+But, did we succeed in destroying the garrisons in every one of the
+towns they have captured, of what benefit would it be? It would
+rather excite the Romans yet more against the people. Yet more
+would they march through the land, burning, destroying, and
+slaying. They would turn the country into a desert; and either
+slay, or carry away all the people captives. We should irritate
+without seriously injuring the Romans; and the very people, whose
+sufferings we should heighten by our work, would turn against
+us.</p>
+<p>"Now that the whole country has been scoured, all the towns
+which have resisted destroyed, and all the men who defended them
+put to the sword, there may be breathing space for the land, until
+the Romans advance against Jerusalem. It may be that those in
+Jerusalem may come to terms with the Romans, in which case there
+need not be any more bloodshed. Therefore, I say that it seems to
+me that it would be wrong to continue the war, so long as the
+Romans rest peacefully in their camps; but should Jerusalem have
+need of us in her defense, every one of us will again take the
+field."</p>
+<p>John's counsel was finally adopted. Many of the men were longing
+to return to their homes, where they knew that they would be
+welcomed, and honored, for the deeds they had performed; for
+although they had achieved no grand successes, they had done much
+by compelling the Romans to keep together, and had thus saved many
+towns from plunder and destruction. Their operations, too, had
+created a fresh sensation of hope, and had aroused the people from
+the dull despair in which they were sinking.</p>
+<p>Had messengers been now sent out on all sides, a great multitude
+of men would have collected; but John knew well that numbers would
+be of no avail, and that in a pitched battle the Romans could
+defeat many times their number of the undisciplined and ill-armed
+Jews.</p>
+<p>John himself stood even higher, in the estimation of his
+followers, than he did at the commencement of the campaign. His own
+band had been particularly successful, and had several times
+encountered parties of the Romans almost equal to themselves in
+numbers. His plans had been always well laid, and on no occasion
+had the Romans cut off and killed any numerous parties. Altogether,
+the justness of his views had been established by experience, the
+men had gained confidence in themselves and in him, and now only
+regretted that they had had no opportunity of attacking the Romans
+in anything like equal numbers.</p>
+<p>Therefore, when the news spread that John was of opinion that
+the wisest course was for them to return to their homes, and there
+to hold themselves in readiness to reassemble, whenever the Romans
+moved against Jerusalem; the decision was willingly accepted and, a
+few hours after the Roman column had marched out from Jericho, the
+Jewish companies started for their respective homes, all promising
+to take up arms again, when the signal was given. Although the
+success that had attended them had not been so great as they had
+hoped, it had been sufficiently marked to inspire them with
+confidence in themselves, and their leader. But few lives had been
+lost; and they had learned that, so long as they persisted in the
+tactics their leader had laid down, there was but little chance of
+the Romans striking a heavy blow at them.</p>
+<p>Surprise was mingled with joy, in the greetings John received on
+his return home.</p>
+<p>"No disaster has befallen your bands, I hope, John?" Simon
+asked, anxiously. "We heard that the Romans had reached Jericho;
+and we have been praying the Lord, night and day, for his
+protection for you--believing that you would doubtless fall upon
+the enemy, as they marched through the mountains towards
+Jerusalem."</p>
+<p>"We should have done so, father, and already had taken up a
+position on the heights commanding the roads; but there was no
+fighting, simply because Vespasian has marched away with his army
+to Caesarea, and will not, as we believe, make any movement against
+Jerusalem this year."</p>
+<p>"The Lord be praised!" Simon said, piously. "There is time yet
+for the city to repent, in sackcloth and ashes, for its sins; and
+to come to such terms with the Romans as may save the Temple."</p>
+<p>"So far as I have heard, father, Jerusalem is little likely
+either to repent or to negotiate. The news of what is passing there
+is even worse than that which the Rabbi Solomon told us; but I will
+not pain you by talking of these matters, now.</p>
+<p>"You have heard what we have been doing. We have done no great
+deeds, but we have harassed the Romans sorely, so that they could
+not say that they held the country beyond the flight of their
+arrows. We have taken many cities where they had left small
+garrisons. We have cut off very many small parties, have captured
+many flocks and herds which they had carried off, and have lost but
+few men while inflicting much damage. Moreover, we have gained
+experience and confidence and, when the time comes for fighting
+hand-to-hand with the Romans, we shall enter upon the struggle
+without fear."</p>
+<p>"But what can have induced the Romans to retire, when almost
+within sight of Jerusalem?"</p>
+<p>"Partly, no doubt, because Vespasian considered it better to let
+the Jews go on slaying each other, than to waste his strength in
+killing them; but partly, I believe, because of news from Rome. We
+heard a rumor that a messenger had arrived in the Roman camp, with
+news that Nero is dead; and Vespasian may well wish to keep his
+army together, to watch the course of events."</p>
+<p>This was, indeed, Vespasian's main object in retiring; and for
+nearly two years he kept his army in hand, waiting for his
+opportunity, while Galba, Otho, and Vitellius in turn gained and
+lost the imperial crown. John remained at home, except that he went
+out with the companies in the spring of 69; when Vespasian, for a
+time, set his troops in motion. As before, the Romans marched down
+into the south of Judea, and reduced the country on the western
+shore of the Dead Sea; while Cerealis entered Idumea and completely
+subdued it, so that there now remained only the towns of Herodium,
+Masada, Machaerus, and Jerusalem itself which still remained
+unconquered.</p>
+<p>John's troops had pursued precisely the same tactics as in the
+previous year; and had contented themselves with harassing the
+Romans whenever the latter entered difficult country, and in
+preventing them from sending out small foraging parties. John
+himself would not have called his men under arms, as he saw that no
+real advantage was gained; but the men were eager to go, and he saw
+that there was a considerable advantage in their continued practice
+in arms, in the quickness with which they worked together, and in
+the confidence which they had in themselves.</p>
+<p>The company suffered but slight loss in the operations; but
+John, himself, had an adventure which nearly cost him his life.
+Vespasian, with the bulk of his army, was encamped at Hebron; while
+Titus was at Carmelia, near the Dead Sea. John's company were in
+the hills near Hebron; and he, wishing to examine the Roman
+position at Carmelia, and the road between the two towns, started
+by himself. He carried, as usual, his buckler, two light javelins,
+and a sword. The road led down a series of precipitous valleys; and
+John, knowing that he could instantly gain the hills, out of reach
+of danger, did not hesitate to descend into it.</p>
+<p>He was now nineteen, strong, active, and sinewy. The position in
+which he had been placed had given him the habit of command, and
+the heavy responsibility which had devolved upon him had added two
+or three years to his apparent age. He was taller than most of his
+countrymen, broad across the shoulders, and a match for any single
+man under his command.</p>
+<p>As he walked along, he heard the sound of a horse's footsteps,
+coming up the valley. He sprang a short distance up the craggy
+hillside, and then paused as a single horseman came in sight. As he
+came a little nearer John saw, by the splendor of his armor, and
+that of the horse he was riding, that he was an officer of rank and
+distinction. John scorned to fly before a single foe, and stood
+quietly watching him, till he came nearly abreast of him. The
+horseman reined up his charger and, without a word, seized his
+javelin and hurled it at the armed figure, standing on the hillside
+some thirty feet above him. John sprang lightly aside, and the
+missile struck the rock with a sharp clang, close to him. In
+return, he threw a javelin at the Roman, which struck him on the
+armor and fell, blunted.</p>
+<p>"Well thrown!" the Roman said, calmly, and hurled a second
+javelin.</p>
+<p>The stroke was too swift to avoid; but John threw up his buckler
+so as to receive it at an angle, and the javelin glanced off, and
+flew far up the hillside. This time John sprang down the rocks,
+with the activity of a goat, till within a few feet of the Roman.
+Then he threw his javelin at the horse, with so true an aim that it
+struck at a spot unprotected by armor, and the animal fell.</p>
+<p>With an exclamation of anger, the Roman threw himself off, as
+the animal sank beneath his legs. He had already drawn his sword,
+as John approached, and stood at once on the defensive. Without a
+moment's hesitation John sprang at him, and the combat commenced.
+John trusted to his activity, while the Roman had an immense
+advantage in his heavy armor--John being unprotected, save by his
+buckler. The Roman stood calm and confident, while John
+attacked--moving quickly, round and round him; springing in to
+deliver a blow, and then bounding out of reach of the sweep of the
+heavy Roman sword. For some time the combat continued. John had
+received two or three severe wounds while, although the Roman was
+bleeding, his armor protected him from any serious hurt.</p>
+<p>Suddenly John sprang in at the Roman, throwing himself with all
+his force against him. He partially warded, with his sword, the
+blow which the Roman struck at him as he came in; but his weapon
+was beaten down, and the Roman blade cut through his thick
+headdress. But the impetus of his spring was sufficient. The Roman,
+taken by surprise by this sudden attack, tottered, and then fell
+with a crash, John falling on the top of him.</p>
+<p>John was almost blinded by the blood which streamed down his
+forehead, from the blow he had last received; but he dashed it
+aside, seized his long knife and, in another moment, would have
+slain his enemy, had not the latter exclaimed:</p>
+<p>"Strike, Jew! I am Titus."</p>
+<p>John was confused by the last blow he had received, but a
+thousand thoughts whirled in his brain. For an instant he grasped
+the knife more firmly, to slay the son of the chief enemy of his
+country; then the possibility of carrying him away a captive
+occurred to him, but he saw that this was out of the question. Then
+another thought dashed across his brain.</p>
+<p>"Swear," he said, in Greek, for he was ignorant of Latin, "by
+your gods, to spare the Temple, or I will kill you."</p>
+<p>There was a moment's hesitation. The knife was already
+descending, when Titus exclaimed, in the same language:</p>
+<p>"I swear to do all in my power to save the Temple."</p>
+<p>John's knife fell from his hand. He tried to rise to his feet;
+then everything seemed to swim round, and he fell, insensible.
+Titus rose to his feet. He was shaken by the fall; and he, too, had
+lost much blood. Panting from his exertions, he looked down upon
+his prostrate foe; and the generosity which was the prevailing
+feature of his character, except when excited in battle, mastered
+him.</p>
+<p>"By Hercules," he exclaimed, "that is a gallant youth; though he
+is a Jew, and he has well-nigh made an end of me! What will
+Vespasian say, when he hears that I have been beaten in fair fight,
+and owe my life to the mercy of a Jew? How they think of their
+temple, these Jews! Why, I would not injure it, were it in my power
+to do so. Have not our emperors sent offerings there? Besides, we
+war not with the gods of the people we conquer.</p>
+<p>"Ah, here come Plancus and the others! This will be a lesson to
+me not to trust myself, alone, among these mountains again. It is
+the first time I have done so, and it shall be the last."</p>
+<p>A messenger had, in fact, arrived at Carmelia, with an order
+from Vespasian for him to go to Hebron--as he had a desire to speak
+with him--and ordering Plancus, a centurion, to follow with his
+troop, Titus had sprung on his horse, and ridden off at once.</p>
+<p>The Romans were soon upon the spot, and were loud in exclamation
+of surprise and grief at seeing their commander covered with dust,
+and bleeding from several wounds, while his horse lay dead beside
+him. To their inquiries whether he was seriously wounded, Titus
+replied, lightly:</p>
+<p>"I am more dirty than hurt. Though, had it not been for my
+armor, there would have been a different tale to tell, for these
+Jews fight like demons. As you see, he first slew my horse with his
+javelin, and then we fought it out on foot."</p>
+<p>"Was there only this one?" the centurion asked, in surprise,
+pointing to John's body.</p>
+<p>"Only that one," Titus said, "and he nearly got the best of it.
+Fighting with these Jews is like fighting with wild cats, so fierce
+are they in the attack, and so quick are their movements. I tell
+you that, for a moment, my life was at his mercy.</p>
+<p>"See if he is dead, Plancus."</p>
+<p>"No, he breathes," Plancus said, stooping over him.</p>
+<p>"Let four of the men make a litter, with their spears," Titus
+said; "and take him down to Carmelia, and let my own leech attend
+him. I would gladly save his life, if I can. I began the fray and,
+truly, he has shown himself so gallant a young man that I would not
+that he should die."</p>
+<p>Accordingly, when John opened his eyes, he found himself lying
+in a Roman tent, where an old man was sitting by his couch; and a
+Roman sentry pacing, backwards and forwards, before the entrance of
+the tent.</p>
+<p>"Drink this," the old man said, placing a cordial to his lips.
+"You need have no fear, you are in the camp of Titus; and he,
+himself, has ordered that all attention shall be paid to you."</p>
+<p>John was too weak from loss of blood, and confused from the
+effects of the blow on his head, even to feel the sensation of
+wonder. He drank the potion, and closed his eyes again, and went
+off into a sleep which lasted for many hours. It was not until the
+next day that he thoroughly awoke. The leech continued to attend
+him and, at the end of four days, he was able to sit up.</p>
+<a id="PicF" name="PicF"></a>
+<center><img src="images/f.jpg" alt=
+"Illustration: Titus Brings Josephus to See John." /></center>
+<p>In the afternoon, he heard a clash of arms as the sentry gave
+the military salute and, a moment later, Titus entered, accompanied
+by one whom John instantly recognized as Josephus. John rose to his
+feet.</p>
+<p>"I told you he was but a young man," Titus said to Josephus;
+"but now that I can see him more nearly or, at any rate, more
+calmly, I can see that he is little more than a lad; and yet, as
+you have heard me say, he is a man of valor, and defeated me in
+fair fight."</p>
+<p>"I seem to know his face," Josephus said, and then addressed
+John in Hebrew.</p>
+<p>"Who are you, young man?"</p>
+<p>"I am that John whom you saved in the storm, on the Sea of
+Galilee, and who fought with you at Jotapata."</p>
+<p>"Is it possible?" Josephus exclaimed, in surprise. "I thought
+that I, alone, was saved there."</p>
+<p>"I lay hidden with the boy Jonas, who told us of the track down
+to the water," John said, quietly, "and have since then been
+fighting the Romans. While you--"</p>
+<p>"While I have been their prisoner," Josephus broke in. "I know
+that all my countrymen are enraged against me but, truly, without a
+cause."</p>
+<p>Josephus then translated to Titus what John had told him, adding
+that the young man had served him with zeal and devotion, and that
+he had an affection for him.</p>
+<p>"Then I am the more glad that he has not lost his life," Titus
+said, courteously.</p>
+<p>"And now, my antagonist," he said, in Greek, to John, "I would
+tell you that I bear you no malice; though you have shed my blood,
+and brought somewhat of disgrace upon me--for truly it is a
+disgrace for a Roman soldier, in heavy armor, to be overthrown by
+one who carries but a light buckler as his protection. But I love a
+brave man, even though he be a foe; and I honor those who are
+fighting for what they believe to be the cause of their country. If
+I let you go free, will you promise me not to bear arms again,
+against Rome?"</p>
+<p>"I could not promise that, Titus," John said, quietly, "even
+were you to order me, now, to be taken out and slain. It is the
+first duty of all Jews to fight for the Holy City and, so long as I
+live, and the Holy City is in danger, so long I must fight for her.
+These are the commands of my religion; and I cannot, even to save
+my life, disobey them."</p>
+<p>"I will not press you to do so," Titus said; "though Josephus,
+here, will tell you that Rome is not an unkind lord, even to those
+who have most withstood it. When you are well enough to leave us,
+you shall go unharmed; though, could you have seen your way to
+desist from hostility to us, I would have been a good friend to
+you; and have promoted you to posts of honor, and that in countries
+where you would not have been opposed to your countrymen. But if
+you will not have it so, you are free to go; and remember that, at
+any time, you have a friend in Titus; and that when this war is
+over, and peace restored, if you come to me I will repeat the offer
+that I have now made.</p>
+<p>"Moreover, you may rely upon it that, in the last extremity, I
+will do all in my power to save the Temple; and indeed, in no case
+would I have injured a building so venerable and holy."</p>
+<p>Titus then left the tent, but Josephus remained for some time,
+talking with John.</p>
+<p>"I suppose you, like all others, have looked upon me as a
+traitor, John?" he began.</p>
+<p>"Not so," John replied. "I knew that you fought bravely, at
+Jotapata; and risked your life many times in its defense I knew,
+too, that you from the first opposed the revolt against the Romans,
+and it is not for me to judge as to your position among them."</p>
+<p>"I am a prisoner," Josephus said. "I am kindly treated, indeed,
+and Vespasian frequently asks my opinion of matters connected with
+the country; but surely I am doing more good to my countrymen, by
+softening his heart towards them, than if I had died at
+Jotapata--still more if I had been, like John of Gischala, a
+scourge to it. I trust even yet that, through my influence,
+Jerusalem may be saved. When the time comes Vespasian will, I hope,
+grant terms; and my only fear is that the madness of the people
+will lead them to refuse all accommodation, and so force him into
+taking the city by storm--in which case it cannot but be that
+terrible misery will fall upon it, and that vast numbers will lose
+their lives.</p>
+<p>"And now, tell me how you are, at home, and what you have been
+doing since I last saw you."</p>
+<p>John thought it as well not to mention, to Josephus, the
+prominent part which he had taken among those who had so harassed
+the Romans; but he said that he had joined the bands raised in
+Galilee, and had been among those who had hung upon the Roman flank
+and rear, wherever they marched.</p>
+<p>"The Jews have behaved with prudence and valor," Josephus said,
+"and I now see that it would have been far better had I trusted
+more in mountain warfare, than in fenced cities; but it would have
+been the same, in the end. I know the Jews. They would have fought
+bravely, for a time; but the thought of each would have turned to
+his farm and his vineyard, and they would never have kept the field
+for any length of time. The Romans therefore would, in the end,
+have tired them out and, perhaps, the fate which has befallen the
+cities that resisted would have fallen upon all the land.</p>
+<p>"And now remember that, although but a prisoner, I have much
+influence with Vespasian; and that at any time, should you fall
+into their hands again, I will exert that influence in your
+favor."</p>
+<p>John remained about ten days at Carmelia. Titus had several
+interviews with him, and at the last of these said:</p>
+<p>"I have conceived a strong friendship for you, young man, and
+would willingly do you service. Take this signet ring. At all
+times, and in all places, it will pass you to my presence. If a
+Roman sword be raised to strike you, and you show this ring, it
+will be lowered. That you should fight against us to the last is,
+as you believe, your duty; and as I myself would so fight for Rome,
+I seek not further to dissuade you. But when resistance is at an
+end, and it is useless any longer to hold the sword, your death
+cannot benefit your country. Therefore, when that time comes--if
+not before--use this ring, and come to me; and I will grant you not
+only your own life, but that of such friends as you may wish to
+save.</p>
+<p>"I do not forget that you had my life in your hands, and that
+you spared it. It is a life that may yet be valuable to Rome; and
+though even now, when I speak of it, my cheek flushes with
+humiliation, I am none the less grateful. It pleases me to see
+that, in the conversations you have had with my officers, you have
+borne yourself so modestly, and have made no mention of this; for
+although I, myself, do not hesitate to speak of the mishap which
+befell me, it is pleasant for me that it is not spoken of by
+others. Believe me, then, that at all times you will find a sincere
+friend in Titus."</p>
+<p>John replied in suitable terms; thanking Titus for the promises
+he had made, and disclaiming any merit in his success--which was
+but the last effort of a beaten man, and was the result of the
+sudden surprise, and not of any skill or bravery.</p>
+<p>Upon the following morning, Titus furnished him with an escort
+far beyond the confines of the camp; and then, taking to the hills,
+John rejoined his companions, who had long since given him up as
+dead. They could scarce credit him, when he told them that he had
+been lying wounded, in the hands of the Romans; and were still more
+surprised at hearing that he had been engaged in a personal
+encounter with Titus. Of this John gave no details, beyond the fact
+that, after throwing their javelins, the horse of Titus had fallen,
+and they had fought hand to hand until, at last, he had fallen,
+bleeding from a severe wound; and that Titus himself had been
+wounded.</p>
+<p>"But how was it he did not slay you?" was the question. "It
+seems almost a miracle, especially after wounding Titus,
+himself."</p>
+<p>"Doubtless the Lord put it into his heart to spare me," John
+said. "Titus only said that he preserved my life as that of a brave
+foe. The Romans esteem bravery and, as I had withstood Titus for
+some time, he was pleased to think that I had done well."</p>
+<p>"Ah, if you had killed him, what rejoicings there would have
+been in the land!"</p>
+<p>"No," John said earnestly, "there would have been mourning. You
+may be sure that Vespasian would have avenged his blood upon all
+the people. It would have been a misfortune, indeed, had Titus
+fallen. It is well that it ended as it did."</p>
+<p>John was, however, far too weak to be able to accompany his band
+upon its rapid marches; and therefore, for a time, resigned its
+command to one of his captains. He determined to go, until his
+strength returned to him, to a small community of which he had
+heard as dwelling in an almost inaccessible valley on the shore of
+the Dead Sea. He was told that they took no part in the commotion
+of the times, and that they lived in such poverty that even the
+robbers of Simon had not cared to interfere with them. They
+practiced hospitality to strangers, and spent their lives in
+religious observances. As John had often heard from his father of
+this sect--which was at one time numerous in the land, but had been
+sorely persecuted by the priests and Pharisees--he determined to
+stop for a time among them, and learn somewhat of their
+doctrines.</p>
+<p>Accompanied by Jonas, he made his way across the mountains to
+the valley where they dwelt. As wounded, and a stranger, he was
+received without question among them; and a little hut, similar to
+that in which they all lived, was placed at his disposal. These
+huts were ranged in a square, in the center of which stood a larger
+building, used as their synagogue. Here John remained nearly a
+month; and was greatly struck by their religious fervor, the
+simplicity and austerity of their lives, and the doctrines which
+they held. He learned that the more rigorous of the sect abstained,
+altogether, from the use of meat and wine; and that celibacy was
+strictly enjoined. Those who married did not separate themselves
+from the sect, but were considered as occupying an inferior
+position in it. Their food was of the simplest kind, and only
+sufficient to sustain life. The community raised the grain and
+vegetables necessary for their use.</p>
+<p>But it was the religious doctrines which they held which most
+greatly surprised John. They attached no importance, whatever, to
+the ceremonial law of the Jewish Scriptures; maintaining, in the
+first place, that the Scriptures had a spiritual signification
+wholly apart from the literal meaning, alone understood by the
+world; and that this spiritual meaning could only be attained by
+those who, after long probation, were initiated into the inner
+mysteries of the sect.</p>
+<p>In the second place, they held that the written law had been
+altogether superseded by the coming of the great prophet, Christ,
+who had been put to death by the Jewish priests. John learned that
+there were already large numbers of Jews who had accepted the
+doctrines taught by this Christ, although they did not all embrace
+the strict rules and modes of life of the ascetics. John was
+greatly struck with their doctrines, although he did not hear
+enough to do more than to dimly understand their meaning. He
+determined however that, if he went safely through the war, he
+would inquire further into these mysteries.</p>
+<p>At the end of the four weeks, his strength being comparatively
+restored, he took his leave of the community, and rejoined his
+band.</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch13" id="Ch13">Chapter 13</a>: The Test Of
+Devotion.</h2>
+<p>Although John was able to join his companions, he was still far
+from strong; and was glad to have a valid excuse for handing over
+his command to his lieutenant, and returning home. The campaign was
+nearly over; and he could not have followed those rapid marches
+through the hills which enabled the band to appear, now on one
+side, now on the other of the Romans, and to keep them in a
+constant state of watchfulness.</p>
+<p>At the same time, he was glad of the excuse to leave for,
+although he had declared to Titus that he would fight again in
+defense of Jerusalem, he felt that, after the kind treatment he had
+met with, he could not take part in the daily skirmishes with the
+Romans.</p>
+<p>Mounting a donkey, which was among the many animals captured in
+the attacks upon the Romans' baggage train, John bade adieu to his
+comrades; and with Jonas, now grown into a sturdy young fellow,
+started for home. He journeyed by the road to the west of
+Jerusalem, in order to avoid the bandits of Simon son of Gioras;
+who still scourged the neighborhood of Masada and Herodium, lying
+between Jerusalem and the Dead Sea. He avoided all the towns in
+which there were Roman garrisons; for the bandages on his head
+would have shown, at once, that he had been engaged in fighting. He
+traveled slowly, and was six days before he arrived home.</p>
+<p>"This time, my son, you have not come home unharmed," Simon
+said. "Truly you are a shadow of your former self."</p>
+<p>"I shall soon be strong again, father; and these are honorable
+scars, for I had them in single combat with Titus, himself, in the
+valley between Hebron and Carmelia."</p>
+<p>"Then how is it that you live to tell the tale, my son?" Simon
+asked, while exclamations of wonder broke from Mary and Martha.
+"Surely God did not deliver him into your hands?"</p>
+<p>"I wish not to boast, father, and I have told the true story to
+none; but truly God did deliver him into my hands."</p>
+<p>"And he is dead?" Simon exclaimed.</p>
+<p>"No, father, he lives, for I spared him."</p>
+<p>"Spared him!" Simon exclaimed. "What, you did not avenge the
+miseries of our people upon the son of the oppressor?"</p>
+<p>"No, father; and I rejoice that I did not for, had I done so,
+surely the Romans would have avenged his death upon all the land.
+But I thought not of that, at the time. I was sore wounded, and
+bleeding, and my sense was well-nigh gone; but as I knelt upon him,
+and lifted my hand to slay him, a thought--surely sent by God,
+himself--came into my mind, and I said:</p>
+<p>"'Swear by your gods that you will spare the Temple, or I slay
+you;' and he swore that, so far as lay in his power, he would spare
+the Temple."</p>
+<p>An exclamation of joy burst from his hearers, and Simon
+said:</p>
+<p>"Verily, my son, God has raised you up as a deliverer of his
+Temple; not, as some hoped, by defeating our oppressors, but by
+binding one of their mightiest ones to do it no harm."</p>
+<p>"I pray, father, say naught of this to anyone. It is between
+ourselves, and Titus, and the Lord; and I would not that any man
+should know of it. Moreover, Titus behaved with the greatest
+generosity to me.</p>
+<p>"My victory over him was but a surprise. I was sorely wounded,
+while he was almost unharmed, when I sprang upon him and, by the
+sudden impulse, threw him to the ground, he being burdened with his
+heavy armor I had but strength to hear him swear, and then I fell
+as one dead. Titus might have slain me, as I lay; but he not only
+did me no harm but, when his soldiers came up, he gave me into
+their care, and directed me to be carried down to his camp, placed
+in a tent, and tended by his own leech and, when I recovered, he
+let me go free."</p>
+<p>"Truly it is a marvelous tale, John. That you should have fallen
+into the hands of the Romans, and come forth unharmed after
+discomfiting their leader, is as marvelous to me as Daniel coming
+unharmed from the lions' den. We will say naught of your story, my
+son. Tell us only what you told your own companions, so that we may
+know what to say, when we are questioned."</p>
+<p>"I told them the truth, father, although not all the truth. I
+said that I met Titus, and fought with him; that I wounded him
+somewhat; but that, by virtue of his armor, I did him no great
+harm, while he wounded me so seriously that I fell down as one
+dead; that he, feeling that I had fought like a brave foeman, had
+me carried to his tent, and tended and cared for until I was able
+to go forth; when he sent me away free, and unharmed."</p>
+<p>"Truly men say of Titus that he is clement and merciful, and
+therein differs much from Vespasian his father; and the clemency
+which he showed to the people of Gischala, and other places which
+he has taken, proves that is so; but this deed of his to you shows
+that he must have a great heart, for few men of rank, and warlike
+fame, who had been discomfited by one yet scarce a man, but would
+have left him by the road to die, so that none might know what had
+happened."</p>
+<p>"Titus made no secret of it, father," John said. "He told
+Josephus, in my hearing, that I had spared his life. He said naught
+of the oath which he had taken; but I know that he will keep it as
+far, as he said, lies in his power."</p>
+<p>"What is he like?" Mary asked.</p>
+<p>"He is not of very tall stature, but stoutly built, and strong.
+His face--clean shaved, as is their custom--has a pleasant and
+kindly expression, that tallies with his disposition, for he is
+greatly beloved by his soldiers. In action they say he is brave to
+rashness, quick to anger, but as quickly appeased. Had he been in
+command of the Roman legions, they would have been not less
+formidable in the fight and, perhaps, when the passions of Titus
+were roused, not less savage; but they would not have wrought such
+wholesale cruelty and destruction as they have done."</p>
+<p>"It is rarely that pity enters into the heart of a Roman," Simon
+said; "and yet, it is hardly for us to complain for, when we
+crossed over the Jordan and conquered Canaan, we put all to the
+sword, and spared none. It may be that in future times, if wars do
+not altogether cease in the world, they will be waged in another
+spirit; but so far, from the commencement of the world until now,
+it has ever been the same--war has brought desolation and
+destruction upon the vanquished."</p>
+<p>The next morning John went early into the garden; not that he
+was strong enough for heavy work, but in order that Mary might, as
+usual, join him there.</p>
+<p>"Do you know, John," she said, after their first greeting, "you
+have made me happier than I have been, for some time."</p>
+<p>"How is that, Mary?"</p>
+<p>"It seemed to me, John, that you were getting away from me."</p>
+<p>"Getting away, Mary!" he repeated; "how do you mean?"</p>
+<p>"You were becoming a great leader, John. I was proud that it
+should be so, proud to think that you might become a deliverer of
+the nation; and then it would have been meet and right that you
+should take to yourself, as a wife, a daughter of one of the great
+ones of the land."</p>
+<p>"Mary!" John exclaimed, indignantly.</p>
+<p>"It might have been necessary, John. The tillers of the soil can
+marry where they please. Those who have power must wed for other
+reasons than that of love. They must make alliances that will
+strengthen their position, and it would have been your duty to have
+sacrificed your love for the sake of your country. I should have
+been the first to bid you do so. I should have been content to make
+my sacrifice, too, on the altar of our country; content with
+knowing that you, the deliverer of Israel, would have chosen me
+from among all other women, had you only had your own pleasure and
+happiness to consult.</p>
+<p>"But after what you told us yesterday, I think, perhaps, that
+this need not be so; and that the way in which you were to save the
+Temple was not the way we thought. Your mission has been
+fulfilled--not by great victories, which would have made you the
+hero of Israel--but in that contest in the valley, where no eyes
+but those of God beheld you; and should the Temple be saved, no one
+will know that you were its savior, save we who love you.
+Therefore, John, once again I can look forward to the time when you
+and I can dwell, together, in the house of your fathers."</p>
+<p>Mary was so earnest that John did not attempt to laugh her out
+of her fancies, as was his usual way. He only said, quietly:</p>
+<p>"Perhaps you are right, Mary, as to my mission; but I do not
+think, dear, that even had I been made ruler of Israel, I would
+have gone elsewhere for a wife; but as you say, circumstances might
+have been too strong for me and, at any rate, I am well pleased
+that there is no chance of my happiness being set in one scale, and
+the good of my country in another."</p>
+<p>"And now, John, I believe that you will come back to me, even if
+Jerusalem falls. This is the third time your life has been spared
+and, if we count that day when we were so nearly drowned together
+on the lake, we may say that four times your life has been saved,
+when it seemed all but lost; and I believe, now, that it will be
+saved to the end."</p>
+<p>"I hope for your sake, Mary, and for my father and mother's,
+that it may be so. I have so much to make my life happy that I will
+assuredly do all in my power to save it. As you know, I have never
+held with those who would destroy themselves, when all seemed lost.
+My idea is: a man should fight until the last; but should, if
+possible, provide some way of escape, when fighting is no longer of
+avail.</p>
+<p>"Fortunately, if I do not fall in battle, I have a talisman
+which will bring me safe to you. Titus has given me a signet ring
+which will, at all times, procure me access to him. He has promised
+that, at all times, he will be my friend and, should I fall into
+the hands of his soldiers again, he will let me go free, and will
+give me the lives of any who may be dear to me."</p>
+<p>"This Titus must be a noble enemy," Mary said, with tears in her
+eyes. "He is strong, and kind, and generous. Had such a man been
+raised up as the leader of our people, instead of the leader of our
+foes, how different it might have been!"</p>
+<p>"Yes, indeed," John agreed; "truly we are sheep without a
+shepherd; nay, we are sheep whose leaders are ravening wolves, who
+devour their own flock."</p>
+<p>The time passed, quietly and happily save for the grief which
+the tidings of the terrible doings in Jerusalem caused. The two
+years' respite which the city had obtained, when Vespasian marched
+away from Jericho, instead of being turned to good account, had
+brought even greater evils than before. Simon son of Gioras, having
+wasted all the country towards Idumea, began to threaten Jerusalem.
+The Zealots marched out against him, but were driven back to the
+city. Simon--thinking that the Idumeans, believing him to be
+occupied with Jerusalem, would have grown careless--suddenly
+entered their country at the head of twenty thousand men.</p>
+<p>The Idumeans flew to arms, and met him with twenty-five thousand
+men; and a furious battle ensued, in which neither party gained the
+advantage. Simon retreated, and the Idumeans dispersed. Simon
+raised an even larger force than before, and advanced with forty
+thousand irregular troops, besides his heavy-armed soldiers. They
+took Hebron, and wasted Idumea with fire and sword.</p>
+<p>The Zealots, in Simon's absence, succeeded in capturing his
+wife; and carried her off to Jerusalem, hoping by this means to
+force him to come to terms. On receiving the news he hurried back
+with his forces, surrounded Jerusalem, and slew everyone who
+ventured to leave the city--except some whom he sent back, having
+cut off their hands, to tell those within that, unless his wife
+were returned, he would storm the city and slay every man within
+it. Even the Zealots were alarmed at his threats and fury, and
+restored his wife; whereupon he withdrew.</p>
+<p>This had happened in the previous year, before Cerealis and
+Vespasian had entered Idumea. As soon as the Romans had retired,
+Simon again sallied forth from Masada, collected a great number of
+Idumeans, and drove them before him into Jerusalem. Then he
+encamped before the city, and slew all who quitted the protection
+of its walls.</p>
+<p>Thus, within, John of Gischala and his followers tyrannized over
+the people, murdering and plundering till they were sated with
+blood, and knew not what to do with their booty; while Simon cut
+off all flight beyond its walls. But at length the party of John
+became divided. The Idumeans, who were in considerable numbers in
+the city, rose and drove John and the Zealots into the palace built
+by Grapte; which had served them as their headquarters, and the
+storehouse where they piled up the treasure which they had amassed
+by the plunder of the people. But the Idumeans attacked them here,
+and drove them into the Temple--which adjoined the palace--and took
+possession of all the plunder that they had amassed. The Zealots,
+however, were in great force in the Temple, and threatened to pour
+out and destroy the whole city by fire. The Idumeans called an
+assembly of the chief priests, and they decided to admit Simon
+within the gates.</p>
+<p>The high priest, Matthias, went out in person to invite him to
+enter and, amidst the joyful greetings of the population, Simon
+marched through the gates with his followers, and took possession
+of the upper city. This was the last and most fatal mistake of the
+people of Jerusalem. The sheep had invited a tiger to save them
+from a wolf; and now two tyrants, instead of one, lorded it over
+the city. As soon as Simon entered, he proceeded to attack the
+Zealots in the Temple; but the commanding position of that building
+enabled them to defend themselves with success.</p>
+<p>To obtain still further advantage, they reared four strong
+towers; and on these placed their military engines and bowmen, and
+so swept the approaches to the Temple that Simon was forced to
+desist from the attack. All through the winter, fighting went on
+without intermission, and the streets of Jerusalem ran with
+blood.</p>
+<p>A further division took place among the Zealots. Eleazar--who
+had been their head before the arrival of John of Gischala--jealous
+of the supremacy of that leader, got together a party and suddenly
+seceded from the main band, and seized the inner court of the
+Temple. Now, fighting went on within as well as without the holy
+buildings. The party of Eleazar were well supplied with provisions,
+for the stores in the Temple were of immense extent. They were too
+few in numbers to sally out to attack the party of John; but they
+were strong enough to defend the walls of the inner court, which
+looked down upon the rest of the Temple, and enabled them to
+command the positions of John's troops.</p>
+<p>Day and night the struggle went on. The inner court of the
+Temple was desecrated by blood--dying men lay on the steps of the
+altar, and the shouts and songs of the savage soldiery rose, where
+the hymns of praise of the Levites had been wont to ascend.</p>
+<p>John's troops continued their attacks upon the inner court,
+while they successfully resisted the assaults of Simon; who tried
+to take advantage of the internecine strife raging between the two
+parties of Zealots, but the superior height of the positions held
+by John's men enabled them to defend themselves as successfully as
+did those of Eleazar against their attacks.</p>
+<p>And yet, during all this terrible strife, the services of the
+Temple were continued, in the midst of blood and carnage. Free
+ingress and egress were, as at all times, permitted to the pious;
+who made their way unharmed through the fierce combatants, passed
+over the pavement slippery with blood, and laid their offering on
+the altars--often paying with their lives for their pious services,
+being smitten down, even as they prayed at the altar, by the
+missiles which the followers of John poured incessantly into the
+inner court.</p>
+<p>Sometimes, drunk with the wine obtained from the abundant stores
+of the Temple, the followers of Eleazar would sally out against
+John. Sometimes John would pour out against Simon, wasting and
+destroying the city as far as his troops could penetrate. Thus, the
+Temple became surrounded by a waste of ruins, held in turn by one
+or other of the factions. Even the rites of burial, so dear to the
+Jews, were neglected; and the bodies of the slain lay, unburied,
+where they fell, And yet, the forces of the three factions which
+thus desolated the city were comparatively small and, had the
+wretched population who were tyrannized over by them possessed any
+unanimity, or been led by any man of courage, they could easily
+have overthrown them all; for Simon's force amounted to about
+fifteen thousand, that of John to six thousand, while Eleazar could
+count but two thousand four hundred men, and yet in Jerusalem were
+gathered a population amounting, with the original inhabitants and
+the fugitives from the country around, to over a million
+people.</p>
+<p>At length, the long interval of suspense was drawing to an end.
+At the death of Vitellius, Vespasian had been called upon, by the
+general voice of the people, to ascend the throne; and had, some
+time before, left for Rome to assume the imperial purple. He was
+joyfully acknowledged by the whole Roman empire; who had groaned
+under a succession of brutal tyrants, and now hailed the accession
+of one who was, at once, a great general and an upright and able
+man; and who would rule the empire with a firm, just, and moderate
+hand. When winter was over, Vespasian sent Titus--who had, in the
+meantime, gone to Egypt--back to Palestine, and ordered him to
+complete the conquest of Judea.</p>
+<p>The Twelfth Legion--that which had been defeated, when under the
+command of Cestius--was ordered to reinforce the three already in
+Judea; and the gaps made in the ranks during the war, and by the
+withdrawal of the men who had accompanied Vespasian to Rome, were
+filled by an addition of two thousand picked troops from
+Alexandria, and three thousand from the legions stationed on the
+Euphrates. The Syrian kings sent large contingents; and Tiberius
+Alexander--an intimate friend of Titus, a man of wisdom and
+integrity--was appointed to high command. His knowledge of the
+country, which he had once governed, added to his value in the
+Roman councils.</p>
+<p>As soon as the news spread that the Roman army was collecting
+for its march against Jerusalem, the signal fires were kindled on
+the hills above Gamala; and John, after a tender farewell to his
+parents and Mary, set out with Jonas. In twenty-four hours, the
+band had again assembled. When they were gathered, John addressed
+them. He pointed out to them that the campaign that they were now
+about to undertake differed widely from those which had preceded
+it.</p>
+<p>"Hitherto," he said "you have but skirmished around the Romans,
+and have run but comparatively little danger; but now, those who go
+with me must make up their minds that they are going to Jerusalem
+to die. It may be that the Lord will yet deliver the Holy City from
+her enemies, as he delivered it in days of old. But you know what
+has been doing in Jerusalem, for the last four years; that not only
+the streets, but the altar itself have been flooded with the blood
+of the people, how the Jews themselves have desecrated the Temple,
+and how wickedness of all kinds has prevailed in the city.</p>
+<p>"Thus, you can judge for yourselves what chance there is that
+God will interfere on behalf of the people who have forsaken and
+insulted him. If he does not interfere, in my opinion the fate of
+the city is sealed. I have seen the Romans at work, at Jotapata and
+Gamala; and I know how the strongest walls go down before their
+engines and battering rams. Moreover I hear that, in the wars which
+have been raging within the gates, the magazines--which contain
+sufficient food to last even her great population for years--have
+been entirely destroyed; and thus those who go to defend her have
+to face not the Roman sword only, but famine.</p>
+<p>"Therefore, I say that those who go up to defend the Temple must
+make up their minds that they go to die for the Temple. It is for
+each of you to ask yourselves whether you are ready to do this. I
+ask no one to go with me. Let each, before it is too late, ask
+himself whether he is ready to do this thing. I blame none who find
+the sacrifice too great. It is between them and their
+conscience.</p>
+<p>"Therefore, I pray you, let all tonight disperse among the
+hills, each by himself, so that you may think over what I have
+said; and let all who may come to the conclusion that they are not
+called upon to go to certain death, in defense of the Temple,
+depart to their homes without reproach from their comrades. Each
+man here has done his duty, so long as hope remained. Now it is for
+each to decide, for himself, whether he feels called upon to give
+his life for the Temple."</p>
+<p>Silently the crowd dispersed, and John joined the captains, and
+passed the night with them.</p>
+<p>"I fear we shall have but a small gathering in the morning," one
+of them said, as they sat down by the fire. "Many will fight as
+long as there is hope, but few will go down to certain death."</p>
+<p>"It is better so," John said. "Misery and ruin have fallen upon
+the country. As you saw for yourselves, Judea and Idumea are but
+deserts, and more have fallen by famine and misery than by the
+sword. We would not have our nation blotted out; and as, in the
+days after the captivity in Babylon, God again collected his people
+and restored their land to them, so it may be his intention to do,
+now, when they have paid the full penalty of their disobedience and
+wickedness. Therefore, I would not that any should go down to die,
+save those who feel that God has called them to do so.</p>
+<p>"Already the victims who have fallen in these four years are
+well-nigh countless; and in Jerusalem there are a million
+people--sufficient, if they have spirit and strength and the Lord
+is with them--to defend the walls. Thus, then, however small the
+number of those who may gather tomorrow, I shall be content. Had
+the Romans advanced against Jerusalem at the commencement of the
+war, there was not a Jew capable of bearing arms but would have
+gone up to the defense of the Holy City; but now, their spirit is
+broken by the woes that have come upon them, and still more by the
+civil wars in Jerusalem herself. A spirit of hopelessness and
+despair has come upon us. It is not that men fear to die, or that
+they care to live; it is that they say:</p>
+<p>"'What matters it whether we live or die? All is lost. Why
+should we trouble as to what may come upon us?'"</p>
+<p>"Then you no longer believe in your mission, John?" one of the
+party said, gloomily.</p>
+<p>"I have never proclaimed a mission," John said. "Others have
+proclaimed it for me. I simply invited a score of men to follow me,
+to do what we could to hinder the Romans; and because God gave us
+success, others believed that I was sent as a deliverer.</p>
+<p>"And yet, I believe that I had a mission, and that mission has
+been fulfilled. I told you not, before; but I tell you now, for
+your comfort, what happened between me and Titus--but I wish not
+that it should be told to others. I told you that I fought with
+him; and that, being wounded and insensible, I was carried into his
+tent--but that was not all. When we fought, although sorely
+wounded, I sprang upon him and we fell to the ground, I uppermost.
+I drew my knife, and would have slain him; when the Lord put a
+thought into my mind, and I called upon him to swear that he would
+spare the Temple.</p>
+<p>"He swore that, if it lay in his power, he would do so. Then he
+was but in inferior command. Now he is general of the army, and
+should be able to keep his oath. Thus, if I had a mission to save
+the Temple, I trust that I have fulfilled it; and that, whatever
+fate may fall upon the city, the Temple will yet remain erect and
+unharmed."</p>
+<p>John's words gave new life and energy to the before dispirited
+men gathered round him. It seemed to them not only that the Temple
+would be saved, but that their belief in their leader's mission as
+a deliverer was fully justified; and a feeling of enthusiasm
+succeeded that of depression.</p>
+<p>"Why did you not tell us before? Why did you not let all your
+followers know what a great thing you had done, John?" one of them
+asked, presently.</p>
+<p>"For two reasons," John replied. "I did not wish to seem to
+exalt myself, or to boast of the success which God had given me
+over the Roman; for it was assuredly his strength, and not mine,
+for I myself could do naught against the strength and skill of
+Titus and, as I told you, was wounded nigh to death, while he
+received small hurt. In the next place I thought that, if I made it
+public, it would be noised abroad through the land; and that Titus,
+when he heard that all men knew that he had been worsted in fight
+with a Jew, might repent of his oath--or might even ask to be sent
+to some other command, so that he might not be called upon to keep
+it."</p>
+<p>John's companions agreed that the second reason was a valid one,
+though they did not agree that the first should have weighed with
+him.</p>
+<p>"It is not by hiding a light under a bushel," one of them said,
+"that men gain the confidence of their followers. The more men
+believe in their leaders, the more blindly will they follow him,
+the greater the efforts they will make for him. It was the belief
+in your mission which gathered eight thousand men on these
+mountains to follow you; and the proof that you have given us that
+that belief was well founded, and that you had a mission to save
+the Temple--the knowledge that you had, single handed, forced the
+Roman general to swear an oath to save the Temple--would have so
+heightened that enthusiasm that they would have followed you, had
+you bidden them attack the whole Roman army. I agree that, for your
+second reason, it was wise to say nothing of what took place; but
+your first was, I think, a mistaken one."</p>
+<p>"At any rate," another said, "the hand of God is plainly marked
+in the matter; for it has placed Titus in full command, and has
+thus given him the power of carrying out the oath which he swore.
+Now, my friends, we can go up with light hearts with John to
+Jerusalem for, though we may die, yet do we feel assured that the
+Lord purposes to save the Temple; and that, one day, he will
+restore the glories of Judah."</p>
+<p>In the morning, as John had expected, the number of those who
+gathered at the sound of the trumpet was comparatively small. The
+night's reflection, the feeling that the sacrifice of their lives
+would be of no avail, and the dull despair that had seized the
+whole nation had had their effect and, of the eight thousand men
+who had gathered there the night before, but six hundred now obeyed
+the summons.</p>
+<p>These gathered, stern and silent, but with an expression of
+desperate resolution on their faces. At the earnest request of his
+captains, John allowed them to go among the men and to tell them
+that, although the manner in which it was done was a secret, John
+had given to them undoubted proofs that he had a mission from God;
+and that they believed that, whatever might happen to Jerusalem, it
+was the Lord's will that the Temple should be saved. The joyous
+expression of their leaders' faces, even more than their words,
+assured their followers of their sincerity. Their spirit rose, and
+a renewed feeling of enthusiasm seized them; and when, an hour
+later, John took his place on a rock to address them, the shouts of
+greeting which broke forth showed him how great was the change in
+their spirit.</p>
+<p>"My friends," he said, "I greet you who have decided to die with
+me, if need be, in defense of Jerusalem. I blame not those who have
+gone. They would not have gone, had the Lord required them to stay;
+but to you he has spoken, and has told you that he has need of your
+services. Henceforward, we will act as one band--a band of men
+inspired with one thought, and one aim. And now, though our numbers
+may not be great, yet a force so composed of men who hold their
+lives as naught may do wonders. You remember how Gideon sent the
+greater part of his army away and, with a mere handful, defeated
+the hosts of the enemy!</p>
+<p>"We look not for victory; but we will show the Romans what men
+can do to avenge their bleeding country--what deeds Jews can
+perform, when fighting for the Temple. We shall go into Jerusalem.
+There we will hold aloof from all parties. If we are attacked, we
+will defend ourselves. But our aim will be to act as a body apart
+from others, ready to undertake the most desperate services, and to
+set an example of courage and devotion.</p>
+<p>"Now let us count our numbers, and arrange ourselves anew into
+companies."</p>
+<p>It was found that the bands composed of men from Tiberias, and
+the other cities of the lake, had entirely disappeared; and that
+those who had stayed were principally hardy dwellers among the
+hills. They were again divided into twenty companies of thirty men
+each and, after examining their arms, and seeing that all were well
+provided, John gave the order, and the band set off.</p>
+<p>Keeping on the eastern side of Jordan they stopped at a large
+village, near the ford opposite Jericho; and here a quantity of
+grain was purchased, and was made up into sacks, each weighing
+fifty pounds.</p>
+<p>"The granaries that remain will be principally in the hands of
+the troops of John, or Simon," John said; "and it is as well that
+we should have our own store to depend upon. So long as we can buy
+food, we will do so; and we can fall back upon our own magazine, if
+necessary. It will be best for two or three of us to go into the
+city, first, and find a quarter where we can lodge close together,
+and as far removed as possible from the factions. Simon holds the
+upper town, and John the Temple; therefore we will establish
+ourselves in the lower town. We will not go in in a body, for they
+might refuse us admittance; but as the Romans approach there will
+be a stream of fugitives entering the city. We will mingle with
+them, and pass in unobserved.</p>
+<p>"Many of the fugitives will be carrying the goods they most
+value; and many, doubtless, will take in provisions with them.
+Therefore, our sacks of grain will not excite attention."</p>
+<p>It was five years since John had journeyed up with his parents
+to Jerusalem, and he therefore knew but little of the city. Some of
+his followers, however, had been there more recently; and he picked
+out four of these, one of whom was a captain of a company, to enter
+the city and find a suitable post for them. The whole band crossed
+the Jordan together, and made a detour to avoid Jericho, where the
+Tenth Legion had been quartered during the winter. Then they took
+their way up the steep road through the hills until, passing
+through Bethany, they came out on the crest of the hill looking
+down upon the Valley of Jehoshaphat; with the Temple rising
+immediately opposite to them, and the palace of Agrippa, and the
+crowded houses of the city, in the background.</p>
+<a id="PicG" name="PicG"></a>
+<center><img src="images/g.jpg" alt=
+"Illustration: John and his Band in Sight of Jerusalem." /></center>
+<p>The men laid down their sacks, and stood for a long time,
+looking at Jerusalem. Many were moved to tears, as they looked on
+the stately beauty of the Holy City, and thought how low it had
+fallen; with civil tumult within, and a terrible enemy approaching
+from without. Even now, there is no fairer scene in the world than
+the view of Jerusalem from the spot where they were
+standing--called then, as now, the Mount of Olives--and it must
+have been superb, indeed, in the days when the Temple stood intact,
+and the palaces of Agrippa and Herod rose on the brow of Mount
+Zion.</p>
+<p>After a long pause they resumed their way, crossed the upper end
+of the Valley of Jehoshaphat, and established themselves for the
+night in a grove of trees near the Grotto of Jeremiah; four chosen
+men at once entering the city, by the Old Gate on the north side of
+the city. The country here--and indeed, all the hills around
+Jerusalem--were covered with the houses of the wealthy, surrounded
+by gardens and orchards. They belonged not only to the Jews of the
+city; but to those who dwelt in foreign countries, and who were
+accustomed each year to come to Jerusalem for the Passover, and to
+spend some time there before they returned to their distant homes.
+Even now, undismayed by the dangers of the times, and the knowledge
+that the Romans would shortly besiege the city, pilgrims were
+arriving from all the cities of Asia Minor, Greece, and Egypt, for
+the time of the Passover was close at hand.</p>
+<p>At the foot of the walls, and on the slopes around, large
+numbers of pilgrims were encamped--the rich in gorgeous tents, the
+poor in shelters constructed of boughs or carpets. This overflow of
+people was an occurrence which was witnessed every year, on the
+same occasion; but its proportions were this time of greater
+magnitude than usual, partly owing to the difficulty of procuring
+lodgings in the town, owing to the crowds of fugitives there,
+partly because many thought it safer to camp outside, and to enter
+the city only to pay their devotions, and take part in the
+ceremonial, than to put themselves wholly into the power of the
+ruffians of Simon and John.</p>
+<p>In the following morning the men returned, and reported that
+they had found a spot in the inner lower town, between the Corner
+Gate and the Gate of Ephraim in the second wall, where was a large
+house, inhabited now but by two or three persons. Here a great
+number of them could take up their quarters, while the others could
+find lodging near. The reason why so many houses were empty there
+was that it was somewhat exposed to the irruptions of Simon's men
+from the upper town, as they frequently came down and robbed those
+who entered the city at the Damascus Gate, from which led the great
+north road.</p>
+<p>Crowds of fugitives were making their way by this road to the
+city, flying before the advance of the Romans; who were, they said,
+but a few hours' march in their rear. Many were men, coming to take
+their part in the defense of the city; but the great proportion
+were old men, women, and children, flying for refuge. John shook
+his head, as he watched the stream of fugitives, for he well knew
+the horrors that would befall the besieged town.</p>
+<p>"Better a thousand times," he said to Jonas, "that these poor
+people should have remained in their villages. They have nothing
+which would tempt the cupidity of the Roman soldiers, and no evil
+might have befallen them; whereas now they will perish by famine or
+disease, or be slain by the Romans, besides consuming the food
+which would have sustained the fighting men. Were I master of
+Jerusalem I would, when I heard the Romans were approaching, have
+cleared out from the city all who could not aid in the defense It
+would have seemed a harsh action; but it would have been a merciful
+one, and would greatly strengthen the power of resistance."</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch14" id="Ch14">Chapter 14</a>: Jerusalem.</h2>
+<p>Mingling with the crowd, John and his followers made their way
+through the Damascus Gate into Jerusalem, and followed the Damascus
+Street to the Gate of Ephraim. An air of sombre misery pervaded the
+whole population. In their hearts the greater portion of the
+population had, for many months, been longing for the approach of
+the Romans. Even death would be preferable to the misery which they
+suffered. There were but few people in the streets; for all
+remained in their houses, with closed doors, save when necessity
+drove them out to make purchases. Turning sharp round by the wall,
+the members of the band made their way along by it, until they were
+met by one or other of those who had gone on in advance, and were
+conducted to the house which had been hired for them.</p>
+<p>The inhabitants of the houses near looked out of their windows
+in alarm, when they saw so many armed men arriving; but they gained
+courage, on observing their quiet and orderly demeanor; and doors
+were presently unbolted, and men came out to inquire who were the
+newcomers. When they were told that they were from Galilee and
+Peraea, and had come down only to fight for the Holy City--that
+they would harm no one, and had nothing in common with any of the
+factions--confidence was restored, and offers were at once made to
+take in ten, fifteen, or twenty men, according to the size of the
+houses; for the people soon saw that the new arrivals would prove a
+protection from the attacks and insults of small numbers of Simon's
+men--who had hitherto pervaded the lower town, breaking into
+houses, robbing and murdering wheresoever they chose.</p>
+<p>The grain was all stored in the house that had been hired; and
+here John took up his quarters, with the men of his own company and
+those of Asher, one of his bravest and most determined captains.
+The rest were all accommodated in houses in the same street. And as
+this, like most of the streets of Jerusalem, was very narrow, John
+felt that it could be defended against an attack by a greatly
+superior force.</p>
+<p>It was but half an hour after the band had been settled in their
+quarters that a shriek was heard at the end of the street. John ran
+out in time to see a woman struck down; while a body of some twenty
+half-drunken soldiers, with drawn swords, were trying to force in
+the door of a house. John sounded his bugle, and there was a rush
+of armed men into the street. John put himself at the head of the
+two companies with him, and advanced against the soldiers, and
+sternly ordered them to desist. The soldiers, astonished by the
+sudden appearance of so large a body of armed men, drew back in
+astonishment.</p>
+<p>"Who are you?" one, who seemed to be their leader, asked.</p>
+<p>"It matters not who I am," John said, quietly. "It is enough, as
+you see, that I have a force here sufficiently strong to make
+myself obeyed. This street, henceforth, is mine; and beware of
+attempting plunder or violence here, for whoever does so surely
+dies!"</p>
+<p>Muttering threats below their breath, the soldiers sullenly
+withdrew. An hour later, one of the inhabitants ran in to inform
+John that a large body of men were coming down from the upper city.
+John immediately called his men to arms and, at their head, took up
+his position at the end of the street.</p>
+<p>Ere long, a crowd of soldiers were seen approaching. At their
+head strode one whom John at once guessed to be Simon, himself.
+When he arrived within ten paces Simon stopped, surprised at the
+compact order and resolute appearance of the band which filled the
+street.</p>
+<p>"Who are you?" he asked John, imperiously.</p>
+<p>"My name is John, and I am generally called John of Gamala,
+although that is not my birthplace."</p>
+<p>Simon uttered an exclamation of astonishment; for the tales of
+John's attack upon the Roman camp at Gamala, and of his subsequent
+actions against the Romans, were well known in Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>"You are but a lad," Simon said, contemptuously, "and John of
+Gamala must be a warrior!"</p>
+<p>"I am John of Gamala," John repeated, quietly, "and these men
+are part of my band. We have come down to defend Jerusalem, since
+there is no more to be done in the open country. We wish to
+interfere with none, to take part with no faction, but simply to
+defend the city. We war with the Romans, and not with Jews. We
+assault no one, but woe be to him who assaults us! Here are six
+hundred of us, each man ready to die; and though you have twenty
+men to one, yet will we withstand you, if you meddle with us.</p>
+<p>"By tonight, the Romans will be outside the walls. Is this the
+time that Jews should fall upon each other, like wild beasts?"</p>
+<p>Simon hesitated. The idea of opposition excited him, as usual,
+to fury but, upon the other hand, he saw that this determined body
+were not to be overcome, save with great loss, and he wanted his
+men for his struggles with the Zealots.</p>
+<p>"You are not in correspondence with John of Gischala?" he asked,
+doubtfully.</p>
+<p>"I am in correspondence with none," John said. "As I have told
+you, we come only to fight for Jerusalem; and will take no part, on
+one side or other, in your dissensions. We have taken up this
+street, between this gate and the Corner Gate, and this street we
+will hold."</p>
+<p>Simon still hesitated. He saw that, round this nucleus of
+determined men, the whole of the citizens of the lower town might
+gather; and that he might be forced to confine himself to the upper
+town. This, however, would be of no great importance, now. The
+inner, lower town was the poor quarter of Jerusalem. Here dwelt the
+artisans and mechanics, in the narrow and tortuous lanes; while the
+wealthier classes resided either in the upper town, where stood the
+palaces of the great; or in the new town, between the second and
+third walls.</p>
+<p>The new town had, indeed, until lately been a suburb outside the
+walls. Agrippa had begun the third wall--which was to inclose
+this--and, had he been allowed to build it according to his design,
+he would have made Jerusalem absolutely impregnable, save by
+famine; but the authorities at Rome, knowing how turbulent were the
+population of Jerusalem, and foreseeing that at some time they
+might have to lay siege to the city, had forbidden its
+construction; and the new wall had been hastily erected by the
+Jews, themselves, after they had risen and defeated Cestius, four
+years before. This wall inclosed a vast number of villas, with
+gardens and open spaces, now thickly tenanted by the temporary
+habitations of the fugitives and pilgrims.</p>
+<p>The lower town, then, contained but little to tempt the cupidity
+of Simon's troops. Its houses had, indeed, been ransacked over and
+over again; and Simon reflected that, even should his men be
+prevented from descending into it, it would matter but little
+while, as it was separated from the upper town by the Tyropoeon
+Valley, and the first wall, no rising there could be a formidable
+danger to him. Still, it galled him to be resisted and, had it not
+been that the Romans were close at hand, he would at once have
+given his men orders to attack the strangers.</p>
+<p>He stood for some minutes, stroking his beard, and then
+said:</p>
+<p>"I will give you no answer, now. I will think over what you say,
+till tomorrow, then we will talk again."</p>
+<p>"I doubt not what your decision will be," John said. "You are a
+brave man, Simon; and although you have done much harm to the Jews,
+yet I know that you will defend Jerusalem, to the end, against the
+Romans. You need feel no jealousy of me. I aspire to no leadership,
+or power. I am here only to fight, and six hundred such men as mine
+are not to be despised in the day of trial. Should the Romans march
+away, baffled, before the walls, I, too, shall leave; and you, who
+remain, can resume your mad struggles, if you will. But I think
+that, in the presence of the enemy, all strife within the city
+should cease; and that we should be as one man, in the face of the
+Romans."</p>
+<p>Simon looked with surprise, and some admiration, at the young
+man who so boldly addressed him. Savage and cruel as he was, Simon
+was a man of the greatest bravery. He had none of the duplicity and
+treachery which characterized John of Gischala, but was
+straightforward and, in his way, honest. As only his picture has
+come down to us, as described by the pen of Josephus who, at the
+time of his writing his history, had become thoroughly a Roman, and
+who elevated Titus and his troops at the expense of his own
+countrymen, great allowance must be made for the dark colors in
+which he is painted. The fact that he was regarded with affection
+and devotion by his troops, who were willing to go to certain death
+at his orders, shows that at least there must have been many good
+qualities in him; and history records no instance of more desperate
+and sustained bravery than he exhibited in defense of
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>The frankness of John's speech, instead of angering him, pleased
+him much.</p>
+<p>"Enough," he said. "I need no further time to reflect. A man who
+had thought of treachery would not speak so boldly, and fearlessly,
+as you do. Let us be friends.</p>
+<p>"I have often wondered what sort of man was the John of Gamala
+of whom I have heard so much, and who has so long kept the field
+against the Romans; and although I wonder greatly at seeing you so
+young a man, yet I rejoice that so valiant a fighter should be
+here, to aid us in the struggle. Here is my hand, in token of
+amity."</p>
+<p>John took the hand held out to him, and a shout of satisfaction
+rose from the armed men on either side--the followers of John being
+rejoiced that they would not be called upon to engage in civil
+strife, those of Simon well satisfied that they were not to be
+called upon to attack a body of men who looked such formidable
+antagonists.</p>
+<p>Just at this moment, a man rode in at the gate, saying that the
+Romans were but two miles distant, and would speedily make their
+appearance over the Hill of Scopus. Simon ordered a party of his
+men to proceed at once to Damascus Gate, and to close it as soon as
+the Romans were visible. Then he turned again to John.</p>
+<p>"Come up with me," he said, "to the Palace of Herod. From its
+summit, we can see the enemy approaching."</p>
+<p>Giving orders to his men to lay aside their arms, and calling
+Jonas to accompany him, John without hesitation turned to accompany
+Simon. The latter had hardly expected him to accept his invitation,
+and the readiness with which he did so at once pleased and
+gratified him. It was a proof of fearlessness, and a testimony to
+John's belief in his faith and honor. John of Gischala, treacherous
+himself, would not have placed himself in his power, whatever the
+guarantee he gave for his safety; while he himself would not have
+confided himself to John of Gischala, though the latter had sworn
+to his safety with his hand on the altar.</p>
+<p>John, himself, was struck with the rugged grandeur of Simon's
+appearance. He was far above the stature of ordinary men, and of
+immense strength; and there was, nevertheless, an ease and
+lightness in his carriage which showed that he was no less active
+than strong. His face was leonine in expression. His long hair fell
+back from his forehead, his eyebrows were heavy, his eyes were gray
+and clear; with a fierce and savage expression when his brows met
+in a frown, and his lips were firmly set; but at other times frank,
+open, and straightforward in their look. The mouth was set and
+determined, without being hard; and a pleasant smile, at times, lit
+up his features. He was a man capable of strong affections, and
+generous impulses.</p>
+<p>He was cruel, at times; but it was an age of cruelty; and Titus
+himself, who is held up as a magnanimous general, was guilty of far
+more hideous cruelties than any committed by Simon. Had the latter
+been master of Jerusalem from the first, and had not the granaries
+been destroyed in the civil war, the legions of Titus would never
+have achieved the conquest of the city.</p>
+<p>Ascending the steep slope of the valley, they passed through the
+gate in the first wall and, turning to the right, entered the
+Palace of Herod, which was at once a royal dwelling, and a fortress
+of tremendous strength. Much as John's thoughts were otherwise
+occupied, he could not help being struck by the magnificence and
+splendor of this noble building; but he said nothing as Simon
+strode along through the forum, passed out beyond the palace
+itself, entered the strong and lofty tower of Phasaelus, and
+ascended to its summit.</p>
+<p>An involuntary exclamation burst from John, as he gained the
+platform. From the point on which he stood, he commanded a view of
+the whole city, and of the country round. Far below, at his feet,
+lay the crowded streets of the inner town; between which and the
+outer wall the ground was thickly occupied by houses of the better
+class, standing half-embowered in trees. Close beside him rose the
+stately towers of Hippicus and Mariamne. Behind him was the Palace
+of Herod, standing on the ground once occupied by the Castle of
+David. On the east the Palace of Agrippa partly obscured the view
+of the Temple; but a portion of the building could be seen,
+standing on its platform on the summit of Mount Moriah. To its
+left, and connected with it by two lines of cloisters, was the
+castle of Antonia while, still further along, was the fort known as
+Acra. Behind the Palace of Herod, and its superb gardens, were
+scattered the palaces and mansions of the wealthy Jews and
+strangers which, with their gardens, occupied the whole of the
+upper part of Mount Zion. On the lower slope of Mount Moriah, lying
+between the Valley of Jehoshaphat and that of the Tyropoeon, was a
+densely-populated suburb known as the New Town. Westward, beyond
+the Tower of Hippicus, lay the valley of Hinnom, with the Dragon
+Pool glistening in the sun while, at a distance of four or five
+miles, to the southward could be seen the village of Bethlehem. The
+whole country outside the walls was a garden, with countless
+villas, mansions, and groves of trees.</p>
+<p>For some minutes, John looked round in admiration of the scene,
+while Simon stood with his eyes fixed upon the road crossing Mount
+Scopus. Suddenly he uttered an exclamation, and John joined him,
+and looked in the direction in which he was gazing. The white line
+of the road was darkened by a moving mass, sparkling as the sun
+shone on arms and armor.</p>
+<p>"They come, at last," Simon said and, as he spoke, cries of
+wailing and lamentation were heard from the walls, far below
+them.</p>
+<p>The four years that had elapsed, since danger first threatened
+Jerusalem, had deepened the impression in the minds of the Jews
+that the enemy would not be permitted to approach the Holy City. It
+was true that their faith had been sorely shaken, by many strange
+prodigies. A strange light had shone about the altar and the
+Temple, and it was said that voices had been heard from the Holy of
+Holies, saying, "Let us depart hence." The Beautiful Gate of the
+Temple, which required the strength of twenty men to close it, had
+opened of its own accord. War chariots and armies had been seen
+contending in the clouds; and for months a great comet, in shape
+like a flaming sword, had hung over the city. Still men had hoped,
+and the cry from the watchers that the Roman army was in sight
+struck dismay among the inhabitants. There were still many without
+the walls. Some of these rushed wildly into the gates, and entered
+the city; while the wiser fled away to the hills, and made their
+way to their homes.</p>
+<p>Titus, as he reached the brow of Mount Scopus, reined in his
+horse and looked for some time, in silence, at the great and
+magnificent city which extended before him; and there can be little
+doubt that he would fain have spared it, had it been possible. Even
+a Roman could not gaze on the massive beauty of the Temple,
+unmoved. It was the most famous religious edifice in the world.
+From all parts, pilgrims flocked to it; and kings made offerings to
+it. It was believed by the Jews to be the special seat of their
+deity; and the Romans, partly from policy, partly from
+superstition, paid respect and reverence to the gods of all the
+nations they subdued, and annual offerings had been sent by Rome to
+the Temple.</p>
+<p>Titus may well have wished to spare the city the ruin and misery
+of a siege, to preserve the Temple intact, and to hand over to King
+Agrippa, uninjured, his palace and capital. In all the wide
+dominions of Rome, there was not a city which approached Jerusalem
+in beauty and grandeur; and Titus must have felt that whatever
+honor would accrue to him, from its conquest, would be dearly
+purchased by the linking of his name, to all time, as the destroyer
+of so magnificent a city. Similar emotions were felt by the group
+of officers who rode with Titus, and who reined up their horses as
+he did so. With them, the military point of view was doubtless the
+most prominent; and as they saw, from their lofty vantage ground,
+how the deep valleys of Hinnom and Jehoshaphat girt the city in on
+either side, and how stately and strong were the walls and towers,
+they may well have felt how mighty was the task which they had
+before them.</p>
+<p>The scene was calm and peaceful. No sound of warlike trumpets
+came from the walls, no signs of an enemy appeared without; and
+Titus rode on, past the deserted villas and beautiful grounds that
+bordered the road, until he neared the Damascus Gate. He was
+accompanied by six hundred horse, for the legions had encamped in
+the Valley of Thorns, near the village of Gaboth Saul, some four
+miles from Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>The walls appeared deserted; but Titus, having experience of the
+desperate courage of the Jews, paused at some little distance from
+the gate and, turning to the right, entered a lane which ran
+parallel to the wall, and made his way towards the Tower of
+Psephinus--or the Rubble Tower--at the north-eastern angle of the
+outer wall. Suddenly, a gate near the Tower of the Women was thrown
+open, and a crowd of armed men dashed out. Rushing forward at the
+top of their speed, some threw themselves across the road which
+Titus was following; but most of them rushed in behind him, cutting
+him off from the main body of his cavalry, and leaving him isolated
+with but a few followers.</p>
+<p>The main body of Roman cavalry, furiously assailed, and ignorant
+that Titus was cut off from them, turned and fled. Titus hesitated
+a moment. In front of him was an unknown country. He knew not
+whither the lane he was following led. Hedges rose on either side
+and, even did he burst through the crowd in front of him, he might
+be overwhelmed by missiles, as he rode on. Therefore, calling upon
+his men to follow him, he turned round and dashed into the crowd
+which barred his retreat.</p>
+<p>He wore neither helmet nor breastplate for, as he had only
+advanced to reconnoiter, and with no thought of fighting, these had
+been left behind. Yet, though javelins flew around him in showers,
+and arrows whizzed close to him, not one touched him as he struck,
+right and left, among those who barred his passage; while his
+warhorse, excited by the shouts and tumult, trampled them under his
+feet.</p>
+<p>In vain the Jews, astonished at his bravery, and still more so
+at his immunity from harm amid the shower of missiles, strove to
+seize him. He and his little band cut his way onward, those in
+front drawing back with almost superstitious fear from his attack.
+Two, only, of his followers were slain. One fell, pierced with
+numerous javelins. Another was pulled from his horse and killed
+but, with the rest, he emerged unharmed from among his assailants,
+and reached his camp in safety.</p>
+<p>The soldiers of Simon--for it was his men who guarded this part
+of the wall--returned with mingled feelings. They were triumphant
+that they had caused the son of Caesar, himself, to fly before
+them. They were humiliated that so great a prize should have
+escaped them, when he seemed in their hands; and they had a
+superstitious feeling that he had been divinely protected from
+their assaults.</p>
+<p>From their lookout, Simon and John had seen the Roman cavalry
+turn off from the Damascus road into the lane, and had then lost
+sight of them. Then they heard the sudden din of battle, and the
+shouts of the combatants, and saw the Roman cavalry riding off in
+full speed; but the clamor had continued and, in a short time,
+another little party of horsemen were seen to issue from the lane,
+and follow their companions.</p>
+<p>Simon laughed, grimly.</p>
+<p>"We have taught the Romans, early, that the wasps have stings
+and that, if they think they are going to take the nest without
+trouble, they will be mistaken.</p>
+<p>"And now, John, what do you advise? You were, they say, at
+Jotapata and Gamala; and you have since shown how well you
+understand the Roman tactics. I am a soldier, with an arm to strike
+but, so far, I have not had experience in the Roman tactics at
+sieges. Tell me, what would you do first, were you commander of
+this city?"</p>
+<p>"There is no doubt what is the first thing to be done," John
+said. "It is the duty of all within this city to lay aside their
+feuds, and unite in her defense. It is for you, as the strongest, to
+make the first advance; and to send at once to John and Eleazar to
+propose that, so long as the Romans are before the city, there
+shall be a truce between you; and to arrange which part of the
+walls shall be held by the soldiers of each. You must also arrange
+to unite for common action, both in the defense and in attacking
+them without the walls; for it is only by disturbing them at their
+work, and by hindering them as they bring forward their engines of
+war, that you can hope to hold the city. Strong as your walls may
+be, they will crumble to ruins when the battering rams once begin
+their work against them."</p>
+<p>Simon was silent for a minute, then he said:</p>
+<p>"Your advice is good. I will send at once to John and Eleazar,
+and ask them to meet me on the bridge across the Tyropoeon, which
+separates our forces."</p>
+<p>The sun was already setting, but the distance was short. Simon
+advanced to the bridge and, hailing the Zealots on the other side,
+said that he desired an interview with John, in reference to the
+defense of the city; and that he pledged his solemn oath that no
+harm should come to him. He sent a similar message to Eleazar. John
+shortly appeared for, from the summit of Antonia, he too had
+watched the advancing Romans, and felt the necessity for common
+action for defense of the town.</p>
+<p>Eleazar refused to come. He would have trusted Simon, but to
+reach the meeting place he would have had to pass through the outer
+courts of the Temple held by John, and he knew that no confidence
+could be reposed in any oath that the latter might take. He sent
+word, however, that he was willing to abstain from all hostilities,
+and to make common cause with the others for the defense of the
+city.</p>
+<p>John of Gischala advanced alone on to the bridge, a wide and
+stately edifice carried on lofty arches across the Tyropoeon
+valley, from a point near the Palace of Agrippa to the platform of
+the Temple.</p>
+<p>"Come with me," Simon said to his companion.</p>
+<p>John of Gischala paused in his advance, as he saw that Simon was
+not alone.</p>
+<p>"Let one of your men come with you, if you like," Simon said,
+with a grim laugh at his hesitation; "or two, or six, if you
+like."</p>
+<p>But John of Gischala knew that the eyes of the soldiers on both
+sides of the bridge were upon him and, having faith in the oath of
+Simon, he again advanced.</p>
+<p>John looked with curiosity at the man of whom he had heard so
+much; and who, having been a scourge to Upper Galilee with his
+horde of robbers, had now brought such misery upon Jerusalem.
+Without approaching his rival in size and strength, John of
+Gischala was a powerfully-built man. He did not shrink from danger,
+and had upon occasion shown great bravery; but he relied upon
+craft, more than force, to gain his ends. He possessed great power
+of oratory, could rouse men's passions or calm them, at will. He
+could cajole or threaten, persuade or deceive, with equal facility;
+was always ready to break an oath, if it was inconvenient to keep
+it. Although fond of power, he was still more greedy of gain. But
+in one respect, he and Simon agreed: both hated the Romans, with an
+intense and bitter hatred; both were ready to die in defense of
+Jerusalem.</p>
+<p>"I think it is time, John," Simon said, "to cease from our
+strife, for the present, and to make common cause against the
+enemy. If we continue our dissensions, and the Romans in
+consequence take the city, our names will be accursed, in all
+generations, as the men who gave Jerusalem into the hands of the
+Romans."</p>
+<p>"I am ready to agree to a truce," John of Gischala said. "It is
+you who have been attacking me, not I who have been attacking you;
+but we need not talk of that, now. Is it to be an understood thing
+that, if the Romans retire, we shall both occupy the positions we
+hold now, whatever changes may have taken place; and we can then
+either come to an understanding, or fight the matter out?"</p>
+<p>"Yes, that is what I would propose," Simon replied. "Whatever
+changes may take place, when the Romans retire we occupy exactly
+the positions we hold now. Will you swear to that, by the
+Temple?"</p>
+<p>"I will," John said.</p>
+<p>The two men each took a solemn oath to carry out the terms they
+agreed upon and, throughout the siege, to put aside all enmity
+towards each other; and to act together, in all things, for the
+defense of the city. They then arranged as to the portion of the
+wall which each should occupy, these corresponding very nearly to
+the lines which they at present held.</p>
+<p>Simon held the whole of the third wall which, commencing from
+Hippicus, the tower at the north corner of the high town, ran
+northward to Psephinus--or the Rubble Tower--then eastward to the
+Valley of Jehoshaphat, and again south to the Temple platform. The
+second wall, inclosing the inner low town--or Inner Acra, as it was
+sometimes called--was divided between the two. Simon also held the
+first wall, from Hippicus right round at the foot of Zion across
+the lower end of the Tyropoeon Valley, and round the outer low town
+as far as the platform of the Temple. John held the Temple
+platform, the middle low town, and some parts of the city
+immediately adjacent, both on the south slope of Mount Moriah--or
+Ophel, as this portion of the hill was called--and part of the
+inner low town.</p>
+<p>The line, therefore, which Simon had to defend was vastly
+greater than that held by John's troops but, in fact, the whole
+line bordering the valleys of Hinnom and Jehoshaphat was
+practically unassailable--the wall being built along the edge of
+precipices, where it could not be attacked either with battering
+rams or by escalade--and it was really the north face of the city,
+only, that was exposed to serious assault. The outer wall on this
+side--that against which the assault would first be made--was
+entirely occupied by Simon's troops; but it was not anticipated
+that any successful resistance could be made here, for the walls,
+hastily raised by the Jews after turning out the Romans, were
+incapable of offering a long resistance to such a force as was now
+to assail it. It was, then, at the second wall that the first great
+stand would be made; and John and Simon's troops divided this
+between them, so that the division was fair enough, when it was
+considered that Simon's force was more than double that of
+John.</p>
+<p>When this matter had been arranged, John of Gischala said to
+Simon:</p>
+<p>"Who is this young man who accompanies you?"</p>
+<p>"He is one who has done much more for the cause than either you
+or I, John of Gischala; and indeed, hitherto it may be doubted
+whether we have not been the two worst enemies of Jerusalem. This
+is John of Gamala, of whom we have heard so often, during the last
+three years."</p>
+<p>"This, John of Gamala!" John repeated, in a tone of incredulity;
+"you are mocking me, Simon."</p>
+<p>"I mock no one," Simon said, sternly. "I tell you this is John
+of Gamala; and when we think that you and I--men of war--have as
+yet struck no single blow against the Romans, since I aided in the
+defeat of the legion of Cestius--for you fled from Gischala like a
+coward, at night, while I have been fighting for my own land, down
+here--we may well feel ashamed, both of us, in the presence of this
+youth; who has for three years harassed the Romans, burning their
+camps, driving out small garrisons, hindering pillagers from
+straying over the country, cutting off their convoys, and forcing
+them to keep ever on the watch.</p>
+<p>"I tell you, John, I feel ashamed beside him. He has brought
+here six hundred men of his band, all picked and determined
+fellows, for the defense of the city. I tell you they will be no
+mean assistance; and you would say so, also, had you seen how they
+drew up today, in solid order, ready to withstand the whole of my
+force. He is not of my party, or of yours; he comes simply to fight
+against the Romans and, as I understand him, when the Romans
+retire, he will leave, also."</p>
+<p>"That is certainly my intention," John said, quietly; "but
+before I go, I hope that I shall be able to act as mediator between
+you both, and to persuade you to come to some arrangement which may
+free Jerusalem from a renewal of the evils which, between you, you
+have inflicted upon her. If you beat back the Romans, you will have
+gained all the honor that men could desire; and your names will go
+down to all posterity as the saviors of Jerusalem and the Temple.
+If you desire treasure, there is not a Jew but that will be ready
+to contribute, to the utmost of his power. If you desire power,
+Palestine is wide enough for you to divide it between you--only
+beware, lest by striving longer against each other, your names go
+down as those who have been the tyrants of the land; names to be
+accursed, as long as the Hebrew tongue remains."</p>
+<p>The two men were silent. Bold as they were, they felt abashed
+before the outspoken rebuke of this stripling. They had heard him
+spoken of as one under the special protection of Jehovah. They knew
+that he had had marvelous escapes, and that he had fought
+single-handed with Titus; and the air of authority with which he
+spoke, his entire disregard of their power, his fearlessness in the
+presence of men before whom all Jerusalem trembled, confirmed the
+stories they had heard, and created an impression almost to
+awe.</p>
+<p>"If we three are alive, when the Romans depart from before the
+city," Simon said, in his deep voice, "it shall be as you say; and
+I bind myself, beforehand, to agree to whatever you shall decide is
+just and right.</p>
+<p>"Therefore, John of Gischala, henceforth I shall regard this not
+as a truce, but as the beginning of peace between us; and our
+rivalry shall be who shall best defend the Holy City against her
+foes."</p>
+<p>"So be it!" John of Gischala replied; "but I would that Eleazar
+were here. He is an enemy in my midst; and just as, whenever I was
+fighting with you, he fell upon me from behind; so will it be that,
+while I am struggling with the Romans, he may be attacking me from
+the inner Temple. He has none of the outer walls to defend; and
+will, therefore, be free to choose the moment when he can fall upon
+me, unawares."</p>
+<p>"Make peace with him, at any price," John said, "only put an end
+to this strife, and let there be no more bloodshed in the Temple.
+How can we hope for God's assistance, in defending the city, when
+his altars are being daily desecrated with blood?"</p>
+<p>"I will see what I can do," John said. "Somehow or other, this
+strife must be brought to an end; and it shall be done without
+bloodshed, if possible."</p>
+<p>"There is another thing, John," Simon said. "Our comrade here
+has been telling me that, from what he saw at Jotapata and Gamala,
+he is convinced that by passive resistance, only, we cannot defeat
+the Romans, but that we must sally out and attack them in their
+camps, and at their work; and therefore let us agree that we will
+meet here, from time to time, and arrange that, issuing together
+through the gates in our portions of the wall, we may unite in
+falling upon the Romans."</p>
+<p>"The counsel is good," John of Gischala said. "It will keep up
+the courage of men, to fight in the open. Whenever an opportunity
+presents itself, my men shall act with yours. You have given Titus
+a lesson, today. The next time, we will divide the honor."</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch15" id="Ch15">Chapter 15</a>: The Siege Is
+Begun.</h2>
+<p>The Fifth Legion--which had been stationed at Emmaus, halfway
+between Jerusalem and Jaffa--marching the greater part of the
+night, joined the Twelfth and Fifteenth at their halting place at
+Gaboth Saul and, the next morning, the three advanced together. The
+Twelfth and Fifteenth marched halfway down the Hill of Scopus, and
+encamped together on a knoll; while the Fifth Legion encamped three
+furlongs to their rear so that, in case of an attack by the Jews,
+its weary soldiers should not have to bear the brunt of the
+conflict. As these legions were marking out their camp, the Tenth
+Legion--which had marched up from Jericho--appeared on the Mount of
+Olives, and Titus sent word for them to encamp there. Thus
+Jerusalem was overlooked, throughout its length and breadth, by the
+Roman camps on the hills to the north and east sides.</p>
+<p>John had, at the earnest request of Simon, taken up his
+residence with him in the Palace of Herod and, from the top of the
+Tower of Phasaelus, watched the Roman legions at work.</p>
+<p>"It seems to me," he said to Simon, "that now is the time for us
+to make an assault. The Romans raise veritable fortifications round
+their camp and, when once these are completed, we can scarcely hope
+to storm them; whereas, if we fall suddenly upon them, now, we can
+fight on even terms. The legion on the Mount of Olives is widely
+separated from the rest; and we might overcome it, before the
+others could come to its assistance."</p>
+<p>"I agree with you," Simon said; "let us strike a blow, at
+once."</p>
+<p>Simon at once sent off to John, to propose that the latter
+should issue out from the Golden Gate in the middle of the Temple
+platform; while he, himself, would lead out his troops by the gate
+to the north of that platform. In accordance with the suggestion of
+John, he requested John of Gischala to place a watchman on a
+conspicuous position on the wall, with orders to wave his mantle as
+a signal to both parties to charge as, from his position, he would
+be better able than they to see what the Romans were doing; and
+both parties could see him, while they might be invisible to each
+other.</p>
+<p>John of Gischala sent back, at once, to say that he approved of
+the plan, and would join in it. Simon called his troops together
+and--leaving the outer wall strongly manned, lest the Twelfth and
+Fifteenth Legions might take advantage of the absence of so large a
+portion of the garrison to make a sudden attack upon it--marched
+towards the northeastern gate; being joined on the way by John,
+with his band. They waited until a messenger came from John of
+Gischala, saying that he was ready; then the gates were thrown
+open, and the troops poured out.</p>
+<p>John had given strict orders to his men to keep together in
+their companies, each under his commander; and not to try to
+maintain regular order as one band, for this would be next to
+impossible, fighting on such hilly and broken ground. Besides, they
+would be sure to get mixed up with the masses of Simon's
+troops.</p>
+<p>At the same moment that Simon's force poured through the
+northeastern gate, that of John of Gischala issued from the Temple
+platform and, in rivalry with each other, both dashed down the
+steep declivity into the bottom of the Valley of Jehoshaphat, and
+then climbed the sharp slope of the Mount of Olives. Then with loud
+shouts they fell, in wild disorder, each as he reached the spot,
+upon the Tenth Legion.</p>
+<p>The Romans, anticipating no attack, and many of them unarmed as
+they worked at the intrenchments, were unable to resist the fierce
+onslaught. Accustomed to regular warfare, this rush of armed men
+from all sides upon them surprised and disconcerted them. Every
+moment added to the number of their assailants, as fresh combatants
+continued to pour out from the city and, fighting stubbornly and
+sullenly, the Romans were driven out of their half-formed
+intrenchments up the slope, and over the crest of the Mount of
+Olives.</p>
+<p>The Jews fought, regardless of life. Single men dashed into the
+midst of the Romans and fell there, fighting fiercely. John's
+compact companies hurled themselves upon the line, and broke it.
+Simon fought desperately at the head of his men, cutting down all
+who stood in his way. The Romans were wavering, and would soon have
+broken into open flight, when rescue arrived. The general in
+command had, immediately the Jews had been seen issuing out, sent
+off a horseman to Titus with the news; and he, putting himself at
+the head of his bodyguard, started instantly to their
+assistance.</p>
+<p>Falling suddenly upon the flank of the Jews, he bore them down
+by the impetuosity and weight of the charge. In vain, Simon and
+John of Gischala tried to rally their men; and John's bands,
+gathering round him at the sound of his bugle, opposed a firm and
+steady resistance. The Roman legion rallied and, ashamed of having
+been driven back before the very eyes of Titus, attacked the Jews
+with fury; and the latter were driven down the hill into the
+valley.</p>
+<p>Here, John's band refused to retire further. Simon and John of
+Gischala rallied their troops, and an obstinate contest ensued; the
+Romans being unable to push the Jews farther back, now that the
+latter were, in turn, fighting with the ground in their favor. For
+some time the battle raged. Then Titus, seeing that he could not
+drive the Jews back into the city, ordered a portion of the Tenth
+Legion to reascend the Mount of Olives, and complete the work of
+fortifying their camp; so that, at the end of the day, the legion
+could fall back to a place of safety.</p>
+<p>The watchman on the wall saw the movement, and thought that the
+Romans were retreating. He waved his mantle wildly and, at the
+signal, the Jews again burst down upon their foes, and fresh forces
+poured down from the gates to their assistance. In vain, the Roman
+line tried to hold the bottom of the valley. The Jews burst through
+them, and drove them in disorder up the hill; Titus alone, with a
+few followers, making a stand on the lower slopes. The Jews,
+rushing on, surrounded his party and fell upon him from all sides,
+while their main body swarmed up the hill, and the Romans, panic
+stricken, dispersed in all directions.</p>
+<p>Victory seemed in the hands of the Jews, when some of the Romans
+discovered that Titus was not with them; but was cut off, and
+surrounded, at the bottom of the hill. They shouted to others, and
+the news rapidly spread through the fugitives. Overwhelmed with
+shame at having deserted their general, and knowing the severe
+punishment which, according to Roman military law, would befall
+them for their cowardice, the Romans paused in their flight.</p>
+<p>Their discipline came to their aid, and they quickly fell in, in
+companies and, with a shout of fury, advanced upon the scattered
+Jews; who, although vastly superior in numbers, had no order or
+formation which would enable them to resist the downward impetus of
+the solid masses of heavy-armed Romans. Again they were driven down
+the hill; and the Romans, pressing upon them, found to their
+delight that Titus and his band had successfully resisted the
+attacks of their foes.</p>
+<p>The Jews were driven some distance up the side of the slope; and
+there the combat was renewed until, seeing that they could make no
+further impression upon the enemy, the Jews retired sullenly
+through their gates into the city. They were, however, well
+satisfied with their day's work. Numbers had fallen, but they had
+inflicted heavy loss upon the Romans. They had forced one of the
+legions to retreat, in fair fight; had all but captured Titus; and
+had proved, to the Romans, the formidable nature of the task they
+had undertaken.</p>
+<p>The next day, the 13th of April, was the day of the Passover;
+and all Jerusalem prepared, as usual, to celebrate the day of the
+great sacrifice. The gates of the Temple were, as usual, thrown
+open; and the multitude thronged in to worship. John of Gischala
+had sworn to Eleazar, as he had to Simon, to lay aside all
+hostility but, as usual, he did not allow his oath to prevent him
+from carrying out his designs. A number of his men concealed their
+arms under their garments, and entered the Temple with the
+worshipers.</p>
+<p>At a signal, the swords were drawn and the cry of battle was
+raised. Eleazar and his followers at once fled, in dismay, to the
+vaults under the Temple. The multitude in the courts above, panic
+stricken at the threatened conflict, strove to escape. Many were
+trampled under foot and killed. Some were wantonly slain by John's
+followers, to whom murder had become a pastime.</p>
+<p>When order was restored, John of Gischala went to the entrance
+of the vaults, and shouted to Eleazar that he desired to keep his
+oath, and would do him no harm; but that, for the general safety of
+the city, he could be no longer permitted to hold the inner Temple
+but must, with his men, take his share in the defense of the walls.
+If Eleazar would agree to do this, he promised that no harm,
+whatever, should be done to him or his followers. Eleazar, being at
+the mercy of his foe, accepted the terms and, with his followers,
+ascended into the Temple.</p>
+<p>For once, John of Gischala kept his word. Eleazar was permitted
+to retain the command of his own two thousand men, but his force
+henceforth formed a part of the Zealot army of John. Thus, from
+this time forward, there were but two factions in the city.</p>
+<p>Josephus, always the bitter enemy of John of Gischala, speaks in
+terms of the utmost reprobation of his conduct on this occasion;
+and the occasion and manner in which the deed was effected cannot,
+for a moment, be defended. At the same time, it must be admitted
+that the occasion was an urgent one, that the existence of this
+enemy in his midst crippled John of Gischala's power to defend his
+portion of the city; and that the suppression of Eleazar's faction,
+and the conversion of his troops from enemies into allies, was an
+act of high policy, and was indeed a necessity, if Jerusalem was to
+be successfully defended.</p>
+<p>The desecration of the Temple, however, upon so sacred an
+occasion as the feast of the Passover, filled all pious Jews with
+horror; and caused John to be regarded with even greater
+detestation than before. For the opinion of the unarmed multitude,
+however, he cared little. He had crushed the faction of Eleazar,
+had added two thousand men to his strength; and was now ready,
+without fear of trouble within, to face the Roman enemy
+without.</p>
+<p>The desperate sortie of the Jews had convinced Titus that, if
+Jerusalem was to be taken, it must be by means of regular siege
+operations, conducted with the greatest care and caution and,
+having made a circuit of the city, he perceived that it was
+impregnable, save on the north and northwestern sides--that is, the
+part defended by the third wall. He therefore, reluctantly, gave
+orders that all the villas, mansions, gardens, and groves standing
+between that wall and the foot of Mount Scopus should be destroyed
+and, placing strong bodies of troops opposite the gates, to prevent
+any sortie of the defenders, he set the whole of the three legions
+encamped on that side to carry out the work of destruction.</p>
+<p>A feeling of grief and dismay filled the city, at the sight of
+the devastation that was being wrought; and there were very many
+among the multitude who would gladly have avoided further evils, by
+submitting to the Romans. But such an idea did not enter the heads
+of the military leaders, and Simon determined upon another
+sortie.</p>
+<p>A number of the citizens were ordered to take their places upon
+the walls, and to cry out to the Romans that they desired peace,
+and to implore them to enter the town and take possession. In the
+meantime, a number of Simon's men issued out from the Women's Gate
+in confusion, as if expelled by the peace party. They appeared to
+be in a state of extreme terror: sometimes advancing towards the
+Romans, as if to submit to them; at other times retreating towards
+the wall, as if afraid of putting themselves into the hands of the
+Romans--but, as they neared the walls, they were assailed by a
+shower of missiles from above.</p>
+<p>Titus suspected that a trick was being played, and ordered the
+troops to stand fast; but the battalion facing the gate, seeing it
+stand open, were unable to resist the impulse to rush in and take
+possession. They therefore advanced, through the crowd of Jews
+outside, until close to the gate. Then Simon's men drew out their
+concealed weapons, and fell upon them in the rear; while a fresh
+body of armed men rushed out from the gate, and attacked them in
+front while, from the two flanking towers, a storm of javelins,
+arrows, and stones was poured upon them. The Romans fought
+desperately, but numbers of them were slain; and the rest took to
+flight, pursued by the Jews, and did not halt until they reached
+the tombs of Helen, half a mile from the walls; while the Jews,
+with shouts of triumph, re-entered the city.</p>
+<p>John had taken no part in this sortie. He had lost more than
+fifty men, in the fight on the Mount of Olives; and determined to
+hold the rest in reserve, until they were needed in a moment of
+extreme peril. The manner in which the bands had held together, and
+had steadfastly resisted the Roman attacks, had greatly excited the
+admiration of Simon.</p>
+<p>"I see now," he said, on the evening of the sortie, when talking
+the matter over with John, "the secret of the successes you have
+gained over the Romans. Your men fight as steadily, and with as
+much discipline as they do; while they are far quicker in their
+movements. They unite the activity of my men with the steadiness of
+the Romans. I wish, now, that I had spent the last year in training
+and disciplining my men, to act with equal steadiness and order;
+but it is too late to try to do so, now. Each will do his best, and
+will die fighting but, were I to attempt, now, to introduce
+regularity among them, they would lose the fierce rush with which
+they assault the Romans; without acquiring sufficient discipline to
+enable them to keep their order, as yours do, in the confusion of
+the battle."</p>
+<p>"Mine are all picked men," John said. "I had eight thousand
+under my orders, during the last two years of fighting; but I bade
+all leave me, when I advanced to Jerusalem, save those who were
+ready and prepared to die. Therefore, I can rely upon every man, as
+upon myself.</p>
+<p>"Unless I see some exceptional opportunity, I do not think I
+shall lead them out beyond the walls again. The time will come, as
+the siege goes on, when you will need a body of men to hold a
+breach, or arrest the advance of a Roman column; men who will die,
+rather than give way a foot. When that time comes, my band shall
+fill the gap."</p>
+<p>"I think you are right," Simon agreed. "Your men are too good to
+be wasted in desultory fighting. They shall be kept as a last
+resource; and I know that, when the time comes, they can be relied
+upon."</p>
+<p>The clearing of the ground occupied four days; and Titus then
+determined to advance his camp nearer to the city, and fixed upon a
+spot which was the highest on the plateau--a quarter of a mile to
+the northwest of the Rubble Tower. Before moving into it, the
+position was strongly fortified and, so much impressed was Titus,
+by the sallies which the Jews had made, that he formed up his whole
+army along the north and northwest side of the city. The
+heavy-armed troops, three deep, were the first line. Behind them
+came a rank of archers, and behind these the cavalry, three
+deep.</p>
+<p>Brave as were the Jews, they did not venture to sally out to
+endeavor to break through this living wall; which stood all day,
+immovable, while the baggage animals--aided by a great crowd of
+artisans and camp followers--moved the war engines, reserves, and
+baggage of the army from Mount Scopus down to the new camp. Here
+the Twelfth and Fifteenth Legions, under Titus himself, took up
+their position. The Fifth Legion, under the command of Cerealis,
+formed their camp on a knoll, a quarter of a mile from the Jaffa
+Gate, and divided from it by the Valley of Hinnom which is, here,
+of no great depth. It lay about a third of a mile south of the camp
+of Titus. The Tenth Legion remained on the Mount of Olives. Their
+camp had now been very strongly fortified, and was in a position to
+repel any attack that might be made against it.</p>
+<p>Now that his dispositions were complete, Titus determined to
+save the city, if possible, from the horrors of siege. He therefore
+sent Nicanor and Josephus, with a flag of truce, towards the walls
+to offer them terms. No sooner had they come within bow shot than
+an arrow was discharged from the wall, and struck Nicanor upon the
+shoulder. The ambassador at once retired; and Titus, indignant
+alike at the insult to his messengers, and the violation of the
+flag of truce, immediately began to make preparations for the
+siege.</p>
+<p>Could the population of the city have been consulted, they would
+have declared, by an immense majority of voices, for surrender; but
+Simon and John of Gischala, whose men held the walls, were absolute
+masters of the city; and the inhabitants were to pay now, as they
+had paid in the past, for their cowardice in allowing themselves to
+be tyrannized over by a body of men whom they outnumbered by ten to
+one.</p>
+<p>Titus, after a careful examination of the walls, determined to
+attack at a spot between the Jaffa Gate and Psephinus. In former
+times, all assaults of the enemy had been directed against the
+north; and it was here, consequently, that the wall was strongest.
+At its foot, too, a wide and deep fosse had been cut in the solid
+rock: rendering it impossible for the assailants to advance to the
+attack, until this was filled up. But, on the northwest, the walls
+had not been made equally strong; nor had the fosse been continued
+from Psephinus to the Jaffa Gate. It had no doubt been considered
+that the projecting angle of the wall at Psephinus, and the
+fortifications of the Palace of Herod, covered this portion of the
+wall--which was, moreover, to some extent protected by the Valley
+of Hinnom But between the top of the slope of that valley, and the
+foot of the walls, was a level space of ground sufficiently wide
+for the establishment of machines for breaching the wall.</p>
+<p>Here, therefore, Titus determined to make his attack. On the
+22nd of April, the troops began the work. Each legion was to erect
+a bank, mount a battering ram, and construct a tower. A vast
+quantity of timber was required, and the desolation already
+effected between the north wall and Scopus was now widely extended;
+the whole of the trees, for a great distance round Jerusalem, being
+cut down and brought to the spot. The towers were constructed about
+ninety feet in height, and with a wide face. They were put together
+beyond the range of the missiles of the defenders; and were to be
+advanced, upon wheels, up the bank until they neared the wall. As
+the three banks approached the wall, hurdles covered with hides
+were erected to protect the workers; and on each side javelin men
+and archers were posted, together with the war engines for casting
+missiles.</p>
+<p>Simon was not idle. He possessed the war engines taken when
+Antonia was surrendered by the Romans, and those captured from the
+legion of Cestius; but his men had no experience in the working of
+these machines. They could only manipulate them slowly, and their
+aim was bad. They were able, therefore, to interfere but little
+with the work of the Romans. The archers and slingers, however, did
+greater damage, and killed many while, at times, the gate would be
+thrown open, and Simon would dash out at the head of his men, and
+do much damage before the Romans could drive him back within the
+walls.</p>
+<p>The Tenth Legion did more injury to the defenders than did the
+others, being provided with more powerful war machines. Their
+ballistae threw stones, weighing a hundred weight, a distance of a
+quarter of a mile. The Jewish watchmen on the walls kept a vigilant
+watch upon these machines and, each time a stone was coming,
+shouted a warning; and the defenders threw themselves on their
+faces, until the stone passed over. Even at night, the whiteness of
+the newly-cut rock rendered the masses visible, as they flew
+through the air; and Titus then ordered the stones to be painted
+black, before they were discharged, and thus added to their effect,
+as their approach could be no longer seen.</p>
+<p>Night and day, the Romans toiled at the work; night and day the
+Jews, with missiles and sorties, hindered their approach; until the
+banks had approached so close to the walls that the battering rams
+would be within striking distance. Then the towers were brought up
+and the rams began to strike their mighty blows upon the wall
+while, from the top of the lofty towers, and from the stories
+below, the archers and war machines poured a storm of missiles down
+upon the defenders of the walls.</p>
+<p>As it was evident, now, that the danger lay solely in this
+quarter; and that the whole strength of the besieged was needed
+here; Simon sent to John of Gischala, to urge that the line of
+demarcation agreed upon by them between their respective troops
+should no longer be observed. John would not trust himself in the
+power of Simon, but gave leave to his soldiers to go down and aid
+in the defense; and they, who had been chafing at their forced
+inactivity, while Simon's men were bearing the brunt of the
+fighting, went down to take their share in the struggle.</p>
+<p>Regardless of the storm of missiles, the Jews maintained their
+place upon the walls, shooting blazing arrows and hurling
+combustibles down upon the Roman works; and executing such frequent
+and desperate sorties that Titus was obliged to keep the greater
+part of his force constantly under arms, and to gather round the
+towers large bodies of archers and horsemen, to repel the attacks.
+At length, a corner tower fell before one of the battering rams;
+but the wall behind stood firm, and no breach was effected.
+Nevertheless, the Jews appeared dispirited at this proof of the
+power of the battering rams, and fell back into the city.</p>
+<p>The Roman legionaries, under the belief that the fighting was
+over, for the evening, were drawn back into their camps. Suddenly,
+from a small gate hitherto unnoticed by the Romans--situated at the
+foot of the tower of Hippicus--the Jews poured out, with flaming
+brands in their hands, and dashed at the Roman banks; sweeping the
+defenders of the works before them, swarming up the banks, and
+surrounding the towers, to which they endeavored to set fire. They
+were, however, plated with iron outside, and the beams inside were
+of so massive a description that the Jews were unable to set light
+to them.</p>
+<p>While some of the Jews were striving to do this, the rest fell
+with such fury upon the Roman troops--who hurried up to the
+protection of their works--that they were driven back. A body of
+Alexandrian troops only, posted near the towers, maintained
+themselves against the attacks; until Titus with his cavalry
+charged down upon the Jews who, although a match for the Roman
+infantry, were never, throughout the war, able to resist the
+charges of the bodies of heavy horsemen. Titus is said to have
+killed twelve Jews with his own hand and, fighting desperately to
+the end, the assailants were driven back into the city. One
+prisoner only was taken; and him Titus, with the barbarity which
+afterwards distinguished his proceedings during the siege, ordered
+to be crucified close to the walls.</p>
+<p>Among those killed on the Jewish side was John, the commander of
+the Idumeans, who formed part of Simon's force. He was shot by an
+Arab, while he was parleying with a Roman soldier. He was a man of
+great courage and excellent judgment, and his loss was a serious
+one for the besieged.</p>
+<p>At night all was still, and silent. Both parties were exhausted
+with their long and desperate struggle, and even the machines
+ceased to hurl their missiles. Suddenly a terrific crash was heard,
+and the very ground seemed to shake. Both parties sprang to arms:
+the Jews, fearing that the wall had fallen; the Romans, not knowing
+what had happened, but apprehensive of another of the
+sorties--which they had begun to hold in high respect.</p>
+<p>Something like a panic seized them; until Titus, riding about
+among them, reassured them by his presence and words. They knew,
+indeed, that a repetition of the defeats they had suffered at the
+Jewish hands would not be forgiven. The battalion which had been
+defeated, at the sortie at the Women's Gate, had been sternly
+rebuked by Titus; who had ordered the military law to be carried
+into effect, and a certain number of the soldiers to be executed;
+and had only pardoned them upon the intercession of the whole army
+on their behalf. Therefore, the legionaries now fell into their
+ranks, at the order of Titus, and drew up in order of battle; while
+parties were sent forward to ascertain what had happened.</p>
+<p>It was found that a serious misfortune had befallen them. The
+Jews, in their attack, had been unable to set fire to the towers;
+but they had worked so vigorously, in their attempt to destroy the
+bank, that they had weakened that portion of it upon which one of
+the towers stood. This had given way, beneath the tremendous weight
+resting upon it; and the great tower had fallen, with a crash, to
+the ground.</p>
+<p>In the morning the combat recommenced but, although the Jews
+exposed their lives on the walls unflinchingly, they were unable to
+withstand the terrible shower of missiles poured upon them from the
+remaining towers, or to interrupt the steady swing of the huge rams
+which, day and night, beat against the walls. One of these,
+especially, did material damage; and the Jews themselves christened
+it "Nico," or the Conqueror.</p>
+<p>At length, wearied out by their efforts, disheartened by the
+failure of their attempts to interfere with the work of
+destruction, and knowing that the inner lines were vastly stronger
+than those without, the Jews abandoned the defense of the tottering
+wall, and retired behind their next line of defense The Romans soon
+discovered that they were unopposed, and scaled the wall. As soon
+as they found that the whole space between it and the second wall
+was abandoned, they set to work and threw down a large portion of
+the third wall, and took up their post inside. Titus established
+himself at the spot known as the camp of the Assyrians, at the foot
+of the Tower of Psephinus.</p>
+<p>As soon as his arrangements were completed, he gave orders for
+the assault to be recommenced. The date of the capture of the outer
+wall was on the 6th of May, fifteen days after the commencement of
+the siege. The capture of Bezetha, or the new town, enabled the
+Romans to make an attack directly on the Palace of Herod, on the
+one side, and Mount Moriah upon the other; without first assaulting
+the second wall, which defended the inner lower town. But two or
+three days' fighting convinced Titus that these positions could not
+be successfully attacked, until the lower town was in his
+power.</p>
+<p>The three great towers Phasaelus, Hippicus, and
+Mariamne--desperately defended by Simon's soldiers--formed an
+impregnable obstacle on the one side; while Antonia, and the steep
+ascent up to the Temple platform, was defended with equal
+stubbornness, and success, by the soldiers of John of Gischala.
+Titus therefore prepared for the assault of the second wall. The
+point selected for the attack was the middle tower on the northern
+face, close to which were the wool mart, the clothes mart, and the
+braziers' shops.</p>
+<p>There were no natural obstacles to the approach, and the
+battering ram was soon placed in position, while a strong body of
+archers prevented the defenders showing themselves above the
+parapet. The wall was of far less strength than that which the
+Romans had before encountered, and soon began to totter before the
+blows of the battering ram. The Jews, indeed, were indifferent as
+to its fall; for they knew that the possession of the inner town
+was of slight importance to them, and that its fall would not
+greatly facilitate the attack upon what was the natural line of
+defense--namely, the heights of Zion and Moriah.</p>
+<p>For a short time, the Roman advance was delayed by the
+proceedings of Castor, the Jewish officer commanding the tower
+which they had assaulted. He, with ten men, alone had remained
+there when the rest of the defenders had retired; and he got up a
+sham battle among his men--the Romans suspending operations, under
+the belief that a party of the defenders were anxious to surrender.
+Castor himself stood on the parapet, and offered Titus to
+surrender. Titus promised him his life and, when an archer standing
+near sent an arrow which pierced Castor's nose, he sternly rebuked
+him.</p>
+<p>He then asked Josephus, who was standing beside him, to go
+forward and assure Castor and his companions that their lives
+should be spared. Josephus, however, knew the way of his countrymen
+too well, and declined to endanger his life. But, upon Castor
+offering to throw down a bag of gold, a man ran forward to receive
+it, when Castor hurled a great stone down at him; and Titus, seeing
+that he was being fooled, ordered the battering ram to recommence
+its work. Just before the tower fell, Castor set fire to it; and
+leaped with his companions--as the Romans supposed into the
+flames--but really into a vault, whence they made their escape into
+the city.</p>
+<p>As soon as the tower fell, Titus entered the breach, with his
+bodyguard and a thousand heavy-armed troops. The inhabitants,
+almost entirely of the poorer class, surrendered willingly; and
+Titus gave orders that none, save those found with arms upon them,
+should be killed. The Romans dispersed through the narrow and
+winding streets when, suddenly, Simon and his men poured down from
+the upper city; and John, at the head of his band, issued from his
+quarters.</p>
+<p>While some fell upon the Romans in the streets, others entered
+the houses and rained missiles upon them from above; while another
+party, issuing from the gate by Phasaelus, attacked the Romans
+between the second and third walls, and drove them into their camp.
+For a time, Titus and those in the lower town suffered terribly;
+but at last Titus posted archers, to command the lanes leading
+towards the breach, and managed--but with considerable loss--to
+withdraw his troops through it.</p>
+<p>The Jews at once manned the wall, and formed in close order
+behind the breach. Titus led his heavy-armed troops against it, but
+John and Simon defended it with the greatest valor and, for three
+days and nights, beat back the continued attacks of the Roman
+soldiers; but at the end of that time they were utterly exhausted,
+while the Romans incessantly brought up fresh troops. Even
+Simon--who had fought desperately at the head of his men, and had
+performed prodigies of valor--could no longer continue the struggle
+and, slowly and in good order, the defenders of the breach fell
+back to the upper city, and the lower town remained in the
+possession of the Romans.</p>
+<p>In order to avoid a recurrence of the disaster which had
+befallen them, Titus ordered a considerable portion of the second
+wall to be leveled; so that the troops could, if necessary, pour in
+or out without difficulty. But Simon had no thought of repeating
+his sortie. A large number of his best men had already fallen, and
+he determined to reserve his force for the defense of the almost
+impregnable position of the upper city.</p>
+<p>Two hundred of John's band had fallen round the breach, he
+himself had received several wounds, and the fighting strength of
+his band was now but one-half of what it was at the commencement of
+the siege. He had, before the Romans first entered the inner town,
+had the remainder of his store of grain removed to the building in
+the upper town which Simon had assigned to his band. It had as yet
+been but little trenched upon, as Simon had ordered that rations,
+similar to those issued to his own men, from the few granaries
+which had escaped destruction, should be given to John's band.</p>
+<p>"What do you think, now, of the prospect?" Simon asked, as John
+and he stood together on the Tower of Phasaelus, on the day after
+the Romans had taken possession of the lower town.</p>
+<p>"I think, as I did at first," John said, "that nothing but a
+miracle can save the Temple."</p>
+<p>"But the difficulties that the Romans have overcome," Simon
+said, "are as nothing to those still before them."</p>
+<p>"That is quite true," John agreed, "and, had we but a good
+supply of food, I believe that we might hold out for months; but
+the grain is already nearly exhausted, and cannot support even the
+fighting men much longer, while the inhabitants are dying from
+hunger. Well and strong, we might resist every attack that the
+Romans can make but, when we can no longer lift our swords, they
+must overcome us. Still, as long as I can fight I am ready to do
+so, in hopes that God may yet have mercy upon us, and deliver his
+Temple."</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch16" id="Ch16">Chapter 16</a>: The Subterranean
+Passage.</h2>
+<p>For a few days after the capture of the lower city, the Jews had
+a respite. Titus knew that famine was sapping the strength of the
+defenders, and that every day weakened their power of resistance.
+He saw that the assault upon their strong position would be
+attended with immense difficulty, and loss, and he was desirous of
+saving the city from destruction. He ordered, therefore, a grand
+review of the troops to take place; and for four days the great
+army at his command--the splendid cavalry, the solid masses of the
+Roman infantry, and the light-armed troops and cavalry of the
+allies, defiled before him. The Jews from the height of the city
+watched, with a feeling of dull despair, the tremendous power
+assembled against them; and felt the hopelessness of further
+resistance.</p>
+<p>An intense desire for peace reigned, throughout the multitude,
+but John of Gischala and Simon had no thought of yielding. They
+believed that, whatever mercy Titus might be ready to grant to the
+inhabitants of the town, for them and their followers there was no
+hope, whatever, of pardon; and they were firmly resolved to resist
+until the last. Titus, finding that no offers of submission came
+from the city, sent Josephus to parley with the defenders.</p>
+<p>He could not have made a worse choice of an ambassador. Divided
+as the Jews were, among themselves, they were united in a common
+hatred for the man whom they regarded as a traitor to his country;
+and the harangue of Josephus, to the effect that resistance was
+unavailing, and that they should submit themselves to the mercy of
+Titus, was drowned by the execrations from the walls. In fact, in
+no case could his words have reached any large number of the
+inhabitants; for he had cautiously placed himself out of bow shot
+of the walls, and his words could scarcely have reached those for
+whom they had been intended, even if silence had been observed. His
+mission, therefore, was altogether unavailing.</p>
+<a id="PicH" name="PicH"></a>
+<center><img src="images/h.jpg" alt=
+"Illustration: Misery in Jerusalem During the Siege by Titus." /></center>
+<p>John felt his own resolution terribly shaken, by the sights
+which he beheld in the city. The inhabitants moved about like
+specters, or fell and died in the streets. He felt, now, that
+resistance had been a mistake; and that it would have been far
+better to have thrown open the gates, when Titus appeared before
+them--in which case the great proportion, at least, of those within
+would have been spared, and the Temple and the city itself would
+have escaped destruction. He even regretted that he had marched
+down to take part in the defense. Had he known how entirely
+exhausted were the granaries, he would not have done so. He had
+thought that, at least, there would have been sufficient provisions
+for a siege of some months, and that the patience of the Romans
+might have been worn out.</p>
+<p>He felt, now, that the sacrifice had been a useless one; but
+although he, himself, would now have raised his voice in favor of
+surrender, he was powerless. Even his own men would not have
+listened to his voice. Originally the most fervent and ardent
+spirits of his band, they were now inspired by a feeling of
+desperate enthusiasm, equal to that which animated Simon and John
+of Gischala; and his authority would have been at once overthrown,
+had he ventured to raise his voice in favor of surrender.</p>
+<p>Already, he had once been made to feel that there were points as
+to which his influence failed to have any effect, whatever. He had,
+the morning after they retired to the upper city, spoken to his men
+on the subject of their store of grain. He had urged on them the
+horrors which were taking place before their eyes--that women and
+children were expiring in thousands, and that the inhabitants were
+suffering the extreme agonies of starvation--and had concluded by
+proposing that their store should be distributed among the starving
+women. His words had been received in silence, and then one of the
+captains of the companies had risen.</p>
+<p>"What you say, John, of the sufferings which the people are
+undergoing is felt by us all; but I, for one, cannot agree to the
+proposal that we should give up our store of food. Owing to the
+number of us that have fallen, there are still well-nigh fifty
+pounds a man left, which will keep us in health and strength for
+another two months. Were we to give it out, it would not suffice
+for a single meal, for a quarter of the people assembled here, and
+would delay their death but a few hours; thus it would profit them
+nothing, while it will enable us to maintain our strength--and
+maybe, at a critical moment, to hurl back the Romans from the very
+gates of the Temple.</p>
+<p>"It would be wickedness, not charity, to part with our store. It
+would defeat the object for which we came here, and for which we
+are ready to die, without any real benefit to those on whom we
+bestowed the food."</p>
+<p>A general chorus of approval showed that the speaker represented
+the opinion of his comrades. After a pause, he went on:</p>
+<p>"There is another reason why we should keep what we, ourselves,
+have brought in here. You know how the soldiers of Simon persecute
+the people--how they torture them to discover hidden stores of
+food, how they break in and rob them as they devour, in secret, the
+provisions they have concealed. I know not whether hunger could
+drive us to act likewise, but we know the lengths to which famished
+men can be driven. Therefore, I would that we should be spared the
+necessity for such cruelties, to keep life together. We are all
+ready to die, but let it be as strong men, facing the enemy, and
+slaying as we fall."</p>
+<p>Again, the murmur of approval was heard; and John felt that it
+would be worse than useless to urge the point. He admitted to
+himself that there was reason in the argument; and that, while a
+distribution of their food would give the most temporary relief,
+only, to the multitude, it would impair the efficiency of the band.
+The result showed him that, implicit as was the obedience given to
+him in all military matters, his influence had its limits; and
+that, beyond a certain point, his authority ceased.</p>
+<p>Henceforth he remained in the house, except when he went to his
+post on the walls immediately adjoining; and he therefore escaped
+being harrowed by the sight of sufferings that he could not
+relieve. Each day, however, he set apart the half of his own
+portion of grain; and gave it to the first starving woman he met,
+when he went out. The regulation issue of rations had now ceased.
+The granaries were exhausted and, henceforth, Simon's troops lived
+entirely upon the food they extorted from the inhabitants.</p>
+<p>John of Gischala's followers fared better. Enormous as had been
+the destruction of grain, the stores in the Temple were so
+prodigious that they were enabled to live in comparative abundance,
+and so maintained their strength and fighting power.</p>
+<p>But the sufferings of the people increased daily, and great
+numbers made their escape from the city--either sallying out from
+unguarded posterns, at night; or letting themselves down from the
+lower part of the walls, by ropes. Titus allowed them to pass
+through; but John of Gischala and Simon, with purposeless cruelty,
+placed guards on all the walls and gates, to prevent the starving
+people leaving the city--although their true policy would have been
+to facilitate, in every way, the escape of all save the fighting
+men; and thus to husband what provisions still remained for the use
+of the defenders of the city.</p>
+<p>In the daytime, when the gates were open, people went out and
+collected vegetables and herbs from the gardens between the walls
+and the Roman posts; but on their return were pitilessly robbed by
+the rough soldiers, who confiscated to their own use all that was
+brought in. The efforts to escape formed a fresh pretext, to Simon
+and John of Gischala, to plunder the wealthy inhabitants who, under
+the charge of intending to fly to the Romans, were despoiled of all
+they had, tortured and executed.</p>
+<p>Titus soon changed his policy and, instead of allowing the
+deserters to make their way through, seized them and those who went
+out from the city to seek food, scourged, tortured, and crucified
+them before the walls. Sometimes as many as five hundred were
+crucified in a single day. This checked the desertion; and the
+multitude, deeming it better to die of hunger than to be tortured
+to death by the Romans, resigned themselves to the misery of
+starvation.</p>
+<p>For seventeen days, the Romans labored at their embankments, and
+only one attack was made upon the walls. This was carried out by
+the son of the King of Commagene, who had just joined the army with
+a chosen band, armed and attired in the Macedonian fashion. As soon
+as he arrived, he loudly expressed his surprise at the duration of
+the siege. Titus, hearing this, told him that he was at perfect
+liberty to assault the city, if he liked. This he and his men at
+once did, and fought with great valor; but with no success
+whatever, a great number of them being killed, and scarcely one
+escaping uninjured.</p>
+<p>For a fortnight, John had bestowed the half of his ration upon a
+poor woman, whose child was sick; and who stood at the door of her
+house, every morning, to wait his passing. One day, she begged him
+to enter.</p>
+<p>"I shall need no more food," she said. "Thanks to God, who sent
+you to our aid, my child is recovered, and can now walk; and I
+intend to fly, tonight, from this terrible place."</p>
+<p>"But there is no escape," John said. "The soldiers allow none to
+pass and, if you could pass through them, the Romans would slay
+you."</p>
+<p>"I can escape," the woman said, "and that is why I have called
+you in.</p>
+<p>"My husband--who was killed by Simon's robbers, three months
+ago--was for many years employed in working in the underground
+passages of the city, and in repairing the conduits which carry the
+water from the springs. As I often carried down his food to him,
+when he was at work, I know every winding and turn of the
+underground ways.</p>
+<p>"As you know, the ground beneath the city is honeycombed by
+passages whence stone was, in the old time, obtained for buildings.
+There are many houses which have entrance, by pits, into these
+places. This is one of them, and my husband took it for that
+convenience. From here, I can find my way down to the great conduit
+which was built, by King Hezekiah, to bring the water from the
+upper springs of the river Gihon down into the city. Some of these
+waters supply the pool known as the Dragon Pool, but the main body
+runs down the conduit in the line of the Tyropoeon Valley; and
+those from the Temple could, in old times, go down and draw water,
+thence, should the pools and cistern fail. But that entrance has
+long been blocked up for, when the Temple was destroyed and the
+people carried away captives, the ruins covered the entrance, and
+none knew of it.</p>
+<p>"My husband when at work once found a passage which ran, for
+some distance, by the side of some massive masonry of old time. One
+of the great stones was loose; and he prised it out, to see what
+might lie behind it. When he did so he heard the sound of running
+water and, passing through the hole, found himself in a great
+conduit. This he afterwards followed up; and found that it
+terminated, at the upper end of the Valley of Hinnom, in a round
+chamber, at the bottom of which springs bubbled up. There was an
+entrance to this chamber from without, through a passage. The outer
+exit of this was well-nigh filled up with earth, and many bushes
+grew there; so that none passing by would have an idea of its
+existence.</p>
+<p>"When the troubles here became great, he took me and showed me
+the conduit; and led me to the exit, saying that the time might
+come when I might need to fly from Jerusalem. The exit lies far
+beyond the camps that the Romans have planted on either side of the
+Valley of Hinnom; and by going out at night, I and my child can
+make our way, unseen, to the hills. Since you have saved our lives,
+I tell you of this secret; which is known, I think, to none but
+myself for, after showing me the place, my husband closed up the
+entrance to the passage--which was, before, well-nigh filled up
+with stones.</p>
+<p>"It may be that the time may come when you, too, will need to
+save yourself by flight. Now, if you will come with me, I will show
+you the way. See, I have mixed here a pot of charcoal and water,
+with which we can mark the turnings and the passages; so that you
+will afterwards be able to find your way for, without such aid, you
+would never be able to follow the path, through its many windings,
+after only once going through it."</p>
+<p>John thanked the woman warmly for her offer, and they at once
+prepared to descend into the pit. This was situated in a cellar
+beneath the house; and was boarded over so that plunderers,
+entering to search for provisions, would not discover it. Upon
+entering the cellar, the woman lit two lamps.</p>
+<p>"They are full of oil," she said, "and I have often been sorely
+tempted to drink it; but I have kept it untouched, knowing that my
+life might some day depend upon it."</p>
+<p>Rough steps were cut in the side of the pit and, after
+descending some thirty feet, John found himself in a long passage.
+The woman led the way. As they went on, John was surprised at the
+number and extent of these passages, which crossed each other in
+all directions--sometimes opening into great chambers, from which
+large quantities of stone had been taken--while he passed many
+shafts, like that by which they had descended, to the surface
+above. The woman led the way with an unfaltering step, which showed
+how thorough was her acquaintance with the ground; pausing, when
+they turned down a fresh passage, to make a smear at the corner of
+the wall with the black liquid.</p>
+<p>Presently, the passages began to descend rapidly.</p>
+<p>"We are now under the Palace of King Agrippa," she said, "and
+are descending by the side of the Tyropoeon Valley."</p>
+<p>Presently, turning down a small side passage, they found their
+way arrested by a pile of stones and rubbish. They clambered up
+this, removed some of the upper stones, and crawled along
+underneath the roof. The rubbish heap soon slanted down again, and
+they continued their way, as before. Another turn, and they were in
+a wider passage than those they had latterly traversed.</p>
+<p>"This is the wall of the conduit," the woman said, touching the
+massive masonry on her right hand. "The opening is a little further
+on."</p>
+<p>Presently they arrived at a great stone, lying across a passage,
+corresponding in size to a gap in the wall on the right. They made
+their way through this, and found themselves in the Conduit of King
+Hezekiah. A stream of water, ankle deep, was running through
+it.</p>
+<p>"We need not go further," the woman said. "Once here, you cannot
+miss your way. It will take nigh an hour's walking through the
+water before you arrive at the chamber of the springs, from which
+there is but the one exit."</p>
+<p>"I will come down again with you, tonight," John said, "and will
+carry your child to the entrance. You will both need all your
+strength, when you sally out; so as to get well beyond the Romans,
+who are scattered all over the country, cutting wood for their
+embankments. Moreover, I shall be able to see, as I come down with
+you, whether all the marks are plainly visible, and that there is
+no fear of mistake for, once lost in these passages, one would
+never find one's way again; and there would be the choice between
+dying of hunger, and of being found by the Romans--who will
+assuredly search all these passages for fugitives, as they did at
+Jotapata.</p>
+<p>"Truly, I thank you with all my heart; I feel you have given me
+the means of saving my life--that is, if I do not fall in the
+fighting."</p>
+<p>As they made their way back to the house, John examined the
+marks at every turning, and added to those that were not
+sufficiently conspicuous to catch the eye at once. When they had
+gained the cellar, and replaced the boards, the woman said:</p>
+<p>"Why should you not also leave the city, tonight? All say that
+there is no hope of resistance; and that John of Gischala and Simon
+are only bringing destruction, upon all in the city, by thus
+holding out against the Romans. Why should you throw away your life
+so uselessly?"</p>
+<p>"I have come here to defend the Temple," John said, "and so long
+as the Temple stands I will resist the enemy. It may be it is
+useless, but no one can say what is the purpose of God, or whether
+He does not yet intend to save his Holy Seat. But when the Temple
+has fallen, I shall have no more to fight for; and will then, if I
+can, save my life, for the sake of those who love me."</p>
+<p>That evening, on his return from the wall, John proceeded to the
+house of the woman. She was in readiness for the journey. The
+child, who was seven or eight years old, was dressed; and the
+mother had a little bundle with her valuables by her. As soon as
+they descended into the passage below, John offered to carry the
+child, but her mother refused.</p>
+<p>"She can walk well," she said, "for a time, and you could not
+carry her upon your shoulder; for the passages are, in many places,
+but just high enough for you to pass under without stooping. At any
+rate, she can walk for a time."</p>
+<p>It was not long, however, before the child, weakened by its
+illness, began to drag behind; and John swung her up on to his
+back. The marks, he found, were easily made out; and in half an
+hour they arrived at the entrance to the conduit. Here they were
+forced to walk, slowly. In some places the water, owing to the
+channel having sunk, deepened to the knee; at other times stones
+had fallen from the roof, and impeded their passage; and it was
+nearly two hours before they reached the arched chamber, at the
+termination of the conduit. There was a stone pavement round the
+edge of the pool, and upon this they sat down to rest, for an hour,
+for both John and the woman were exhausted by the labor they had
+undergone.</p>
+<p>"It is time for me to be moving," the woman said, rising. "It
+must be nigh midnight, and I must be some miles on my way before
+morning. The child has walked but a short distance, yet; and will
+do her best, now, when she knows that those wicked Romans will kill
+her--and her mother--if they catch them.</p>
+<p>"Won't you, Mariamne?"</p>
+<p>The child nodded. The Romans were the bogey with which Jewish
+children had, for the last five years, been frightened; and she
+announced her intention of walking till her feet fell off.</p>
+<p>"I will carry you, as much as I can," her mother said, "but it
+can only be for a short distance at a time; for I, too, am weak,
+and your weight is too much for me.</p>
+<p>"And now, God bless you, my friend," she said, turning to John;
+"and may He keep you safe through the dangers of the siege, and
+lead you to your home and parents again!"</p>
+<p>They made their way to the end of the passage together; climbed
+over the rubbish, which nearly blocked the entrance; crawled
+through the hole, and found themselves in the outer air. Thick low
+bushes covered the ground around them, and no sound was to be
+heard.</p>
+<p>John rose to his feet, and looked round. Behind him, at the
+distance of more than a quarter of a mile, the light of the Roman
+watch fires showed where the legions were encamped. Beyond and
+above could be seen, here and there, a light in the city. No sound
+was to be heard, save the occasional call of a Roman sentinel. On
+the other side, all was dark; for the working parties always
+returned to camp, at night, in readiness to repel any sortie the
+Jews might make against the camps or working parties.</p>
+<p>"It is a very dark night," John said, doubtfully. "Do you think
+you can find your way?"</p>
+<p>"There are the stars," the woman replied, confidently. "Besides,
+I was born at Bethlehem, and know the country well. I shall keep on
+west for a while, and then turn off into the deep valleys leading
+down towards Masada.</p>
+<p>"God be with you!" and, taking the child's hand, she emerged
+from the bushes, and glided noiselessly away into the darkness.</p>
+<p>John set out on his return journey--which he found very much
+shorter than he had done coming, for the weight of a child for two
+hours, when walking over difficult ground, is trying even to a
+strong and active man. He carefully replaced the boards across the
+mouth of the pit, placed the lamps in a position so that he could
+find them in the dark and, upon going out of the house, closed the
+door carefully.</p>
+<p>The next morning, that of the 29th of May, the Roman attack
+began. The Fifth and Twelfth Legions had raised embankments near
+the Struthion--or Soapwort--Pool, facing the Castle of Antonia;
+while the Tenth and Fifteenth raised theirs facing the great towers
+of Hippicus, Phasaelus, and Mariamne. They had not carried out
+their work unmolested, for the Jews had now learned the art of
+constructing and managing war machines; and had made three hundred
+scorpions for throwing arrows, and forty ballistae for hurling
+stones and, with these, they had caused terrible annoyance and
+great loss to the Romans.</p>
+<p>But now, all was prepared. On the evening of the 28th, the last
+stroke had been given to the embankment; and on the following
+morning the engines were mounted, and the troops stood in readiness
+for the attack. Suddenly a smoke was seen, stealing up round the
+embankments facing Antonia; and the Roman officers called back
+their men, not knowing what was going to occur. Then a series of
+mighty crashes was heard. The great embankments, with their engines
+and battering rams, tottered and fell. Dense smoke shot up in
+columns, followed rapidly by tongues of fire, and soon the vast
+piles of materials, collected and put together with so much pains,
+were blazing fiercely; while the Jews laughed, and shouted in
+triumph, upon the walls.</p>
+<p>The moment John of Gischala perceived where the Romans were
+going to construct their embankments, he had begun to run a mine
+from behind the walls towards them. When the gallery was extended
+under them, a great excavation was hollowed out; the roof being
+supported by huge beams, between which were piled up pitch and
+other combustibles. When the Romans were seen advancing to the
+attack, fire was applied and, as soon as the supports of the roof
+were burned away, the ground, with the embankments upon it, fell
+in.</p>
+<p>Simon, on his side, was equally ready to receive the enemy, but
+he trusted rather to valour than stratagem; and as soon as the
+Roman engines facing the towers began to shake the walls, Tepthaus,
+Megassar, and Chagiras rushed out, with torches in their hands,
+followed by a crowd of Simon's soldiers. They drove the Romans
+before them, and set fire to the great machine.</p>
+<p>The Romans crowded up to the assistance of the working parties
+but, as they advanced, they were received with showers of missiles
+from the walls; and attacked fiercely by the Jews, who poured out
+from the city in a continuous stream. The flames spread rapidly
+and, seeing no hope of saving their engines and embankments, the
+Romans retreated to their camp. The triumphant Jews pressed hard on
+their rear, rushed upon the intrenchments, and assailed the guards.
+Numbers of these were killed, but the rest fought resolutely, while
+the engines on the works poured showers of missiles among the
+Jews.</p>
+<p>Careless of death, the assailants pressed forward, stormed the
+intrenchment; and the Romans were on the point of flight when
+Titus, who had been absent upon the other side, arrived with a
+strong body of troops, and fell upon the Jews. A desperate contest
+ensued, but the Jews were finally driven back into the city.</p>
+<p>Their enterprise had, however, been crowned with complete
+success. The embankments, which had occupied the Romans seventeen
+days in building, were destroyed; and with them the battering rams,
+and the greater part of their engines. The work of reconstruction
+would be far more difficult and toilsome than at first, for the
+country had been denuded of timber, for many miles off. Moreover,
+the soldiers were becoming greatly disheartened by the failure of
+all their attacks upon the city.</p>
+<p>Titus summoned a council, and laid before them three plans: one
+for an attempt to take the city by storm; the second to repair the
+works and rebuild the engines; the third to blockade the city, and
+starve it into surrender. The last was decided upon and, as a first
+step, the whole army was set to work, to build a trench and wall
+round the city. The work was carried on with the greatest zeal; and
+in three days the wall, nearly five miles in circumference, was
+completed. Thus there was no longer any chance of escape to the
+inhabitants; no more possibility of going out, at night, to search
+for food.</p>
+<p>Now the misery of the siege was redoubled. Thousands died daily.
+A mournful silence hung over the city. Some died in their houses,
+some in the streets. Some crawled to the cemeteries, and expired
+there. Some sat upon their housetops, with their eyes fixed upon
+the Temple, until they sank back dead. No one had strength to dig
+graves, and the dead bodies were thrown from the walls into the
+ravines below.</p>
+<p>The high priest Matthias, who had admitted Simon and his
+followers into the city, was suspected of being in communication
+with the Romans; and he and his three sons were led out on to the
+wall, and executed in sight of the besiegers, while fifteen of the
+members of the Sanhedrin were executed at the same time. These
+murders caused indignation even on the part of some of Simon's men,
+and one Judas, with ten others, agreed to deliver one of the towers
+to the enemy; but the Romans--rendered cautious by the treachery
+which had before been practised--hesitated to approach and, before
+they were convinced that the offer was made in good faith, Simon
+discovered what was going on, and the eleven conspirators were
+executed upon the walls, and their bodies thrown over.</p>
+<p>Despair drove many, again, to attempt desertion. Some of these,
+on reaching the Roman lines, were spared; but many more were
+killed, for the sake of the money supposed to be concealed upon
+them. Up to the 1st of July, it was calculated that well-nigh six
+hundred thousand had perished, in addition to the vast numbers
+buried in the cemetery, and the great heaps of dead before the
+walls. Great numbers of the houses had become tombs, the
+inhabitants shutting themselves up, and dying quietly together.</p>
+<p>But, while trusting chiefly to famine, the Romans had laboured
+steadily on at their military engines--although obliged to fetch
+the timber for ten miles--and, at the beginning of July, the
+battering rams began to play against Antonia. The Jews sallied out,
+but this time with less fury than usual; and they were repulsed
+without much difficulty by the Romans. All day long the battering
+rams thundered against the wall; while men, protected by hurdles
+and penthouses, laboured to dislodge the stones at the foot of the
+walls, in spite of the storm of missiles hurled down from
+above.</p>
+<p>By nightfall, they had got out four large stones. It happened
+that these stones stood just over the part under which John of
+Gischala had driven his mine, when he destroyed the Roman
+embankments; and thus, doubly weakened, the wall fell with a crash
+during the night. John, however, had built another wall in the rear
+and, when the Romans rushed to the assault of the breach, in the
+morning, they found a new line of defence confronting them.</p>
+<p>Titus addressed the troops, and called for volunteers. Sabinus,
+a Syrian, volunteered for the attack, and eleven men followed him.
+In spite of the storm of missiles he reached the top of the wall.
+The Jews, believing that many were behind him, turned to fly; but
+his foot slipped and he fell and, before he could regain his feet,
+the Jews turned round upon him and slew him. Three of his
+companions fell beside him, on the top of the wall; and the rest
+were carried back, wounded, to camp.</p>
+<p>Two days later, in the middle of the night, twenty Roman
+soldiers, with a standard bearer and trumpeter, crept silently up
+to the breach, surprised, and slew the watch. The trumpeter blew
+the charge; and the Jews, believing that the whole Roman army was
+upon them, fled in a sudden panic. Titus at once advanced with his
+men, stormed the new wall, entered the Castle of Antonia, and then
+advanced along the cloisters which connected it with the Temple;
+but John of Gischala had by this time arrived at the spot, and
+opposed a desperate resistance to the assault; until Simon,
+crossing from the upper city by the bridge, came to his assistance;
+and John, finding that the Temple was attacked, also led his band
+across.</p>
+<p>For ten hours, the struggle raged. Vast numbers fell, on both
+sides; till the dead formed a bank between the combatants. Titus,
+finding that even the courage and discipline of his troops did not
+avail, against the desperate resistance of the Jews, at last called
+them off from the assault--well satisfied with having captured
+Antonia.</p>
+<p>During the fight the Romans had, several times, nearly
+penetrated into the Temple. Indeed, a centurion named Julian--a man
+of great strength, courage, and skill at arms--had charged the Jews
+with such fury that he had made his way, alone, as far as the inner
+court; when his mailed shoes slipped on the marble pavement, and he
+fell; and the Jews, rushing back, slew him--after a desperate
+resistance, to the end.</p>
+<p>Titus commanded that the fortress of Antonia should be levelled
+to the ground; and then sent Josephus with a message to John of
+Gischala, offering him free egress for himself and his men, if he
+would come out to fight outside, in order that the Temple might be
+saved further defilement. John replied by curses upon Josephus,
+whom he denounced as a traitor; and concluded that he feared not
+that the city should be taken, for it was the city of God. Then
+Titus sent for a number of persons of distinction who had, from
+time to time, made their escape from the city; and these attempted,
+in vain, to persuade the people--if not to surrender--at least to
+spare the Temple from defilement and ruin. Even the Roman soldiers
+were adverse to an attack upon a place so long regarded as
+pre-eminently holy, and Titus himself harangued the Jews.</p>
+<p>"You have put up a barrier," he said, "to prevent strangers from
+polluting your Temple. This the Romans have always respected. We
+have allowed you to put to death all who violated its precincts;
+yet you defile it, yourselves, with blood and carnage. I call on
+your gods--I call on my whole army--I call upon the Jews who are
+with me--I call on yourselves--to witness that I do not force you
+to this crime. Come forth and fight, in any other place, and no
+Roman shall violate your sacred edifice."</p>
+<p>But John of Gischala, and the Zealots, would hear of no
+surrender. They doubted whether Titus would keep his promise, and
+feared to surrender the stronghold which was now their last hope.
+Above all, they still believed that God would yet interfere to save
+his Temple.</p>
+<p>Titus, finding that the garrison were obstinate, raised his
+voice and called out:</p>
+<p>"John--whom I met near Hebron--if you be there, bear witness
+that I have striven to keep my oath. I will strive to the end; but
+blame me not if, not through my fault, but by the obstinacy of
+these men, destruction comes upon the Temple."</p>
+<p>John, who was standing within hearing, called out:</p>
+<p>"I am here, Titus, and I bear witness; yet, I pray you, strive
+to the end to keep the oath which you swore to me."</p>
+<p>"What is this oath, John?" Simon, who was standing close by,
+asked. "What compact have you with the Roman general?"</p>
+<p>"We met in battle, alone," John said, quietly, "and it chanced
+that he fell. I might have slain him, but it came to me that it
+were better to try to save the Temple, than to slay one of its
+enemies; and therefore swore him to save the Temple, if it lay in
+his power. He has offered to spare it. It lay with you, and John of
+Gischala, to save the Temple from destruction by accepting his
+terms. You have not done so. If the Temple is destroyed, it is by
+the obstinacy of its defenders, not by the cruelty of the
+Romans."</p>
+<p>"It would be madness to accept his offer," Simon said, angrily.
+"Titus knows well that, in the plains, we should be no match for
+his troops. Did you ever hear, before, of a garrison giving up a
+position so strong that it could not be taken from them, and going
+out to fight beyond the walls? Besides, who can tell that the
+Romans will keep their promises? Once we are at their mercy, they
+might level the Temple."</p>
+<p>"In that case, the sin would be upon their heads. Besides, there
+is no occasion to retire beyond the walls. Why should not all the
+fighting men retire into the upper city, and leave the Temple to
+God? If it is his will that the Romans should destroy it, they will
+do so. If it is his will that they should respect it, they will do
+so. He can save, or destroy, at his will. If we retreat to the
+upper town, and break down the bridge after us, they could never
+take it."</p>
+<p>"And how long could we hold out?" Simon said, with a hard laugh.
+"Is there a day's food left, in the city? If there is, my men are
+less sharp than I give them credit for. No, we will fight here, to
+the end, for the Temple; and the sooner the Romans attack, the
+better, for if they delay many days, there is not a single man will
+have strength enough to lift a sword."</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch17" id="Ch17">Chapter 17</a>: The Capture Of The
+Temple.</h2>
+<p>Although abhorring the general conduct of Simon and John of
+Gischala, and believing that conditions could be made with the
+Romans which would save the Temple, John still retained the
+hope--cherished by every Jew--that God would yet, himself, save
+Jerusalem, as in the old times. He was conscious that the people
+had forfeited all right to expect his aid; that, by their
+wickedness and forgetfulness of him--and more especially by the
+frightful scenes which had desecrated the city and Temple, during
+the last four years--they must have angered God beyond all hope of
+forgiveness. Still, the punishment which had been inflicted was
+already so terrible that he, like others, hoped that God's anger
+might yet relent, as it had done in old times, and that a remnant
+might yet be spared.</p>
+<p>But above all, their hope lay in the belief that the Temple was
+the actual abode of the Lord; and that, though he might suffer the
+whole people to perish for their sins, he would yet protect, at the
+last, his own sanctuary. Surely, John thought, as he stood on the
+roof of the Temple, this glorious building can never be meant to be
+destroyed.</p>
+<p>The Temple occupied a square, six hundred feet every way. The
+lofty rock on which it stood had been cased with solid masonry, so
+that it rose perpendicularly from the plain. On the top of this
+massive foundation was built a strong and lofty wall, round the
+whole area. Within this wall was a spacious double cloister,
+fifty-two and one half feet broad, supported by one hundred and
+sixty-two columns. On the south side the cloister was one hundred
+and five feet wide--being a triple cloister--and was here called
+the King's Cloister. Within the area surrounded by the cloisters
+was an open court, paved with marble; this was the Court of the
+Gentiles, and was separated from the second court--that of the
+Jews--by a stone railing, five feet high.</p>
+<p>An ascent of fourteen steps led to a terrace, seventeen and one
+half feet wide, beyond which rose the wall of the inner court. This
+wall was seventy feet high on the outside, forty-four feet on the
+inside. Round the inner court was another range of cloisters. There
+were ten gates into the inner court. The doors of nine of these
+gateways were fifty-two and one half feet high, and half that
+breadth. The gateways rose to the height of seventy feet. The
+tenth, usually called the Beautiful Gate of the Temple, was larger
+than the rest; the gateway being eighty-seven and one half feet in
+height, the doors seventy feet. In the centre of the inner court
+was the Temple, itself. The great porch was one hundred and
+seventy-five feet in width, the gateway tower one hundred and
+thirty-two feet high and forty-three feet wide, and through it was
+seen the Beautiful Gate. The Temple itself was built of white
+marble, and the roof was covered with sharp golden spikes.</p>
+<p>Now that it was evident that on the side of the Temple, alone,
+could the enemy make an attack, the division between Simon and John
+of Gischala's men was no longer kept up. All gathered for the
+defence of the Temple. The Jews kept up a vigilant watch, for the
+Romans could assemble in great force in Antonia, unseen by them;
+and could advance, under cover, by the cloisters which flanked the
+platform connecting Antonia with the Temple, on either side. The
+interval between Antonia and the Temple was but three hundred feet.
+The cloisters were considered to form part of the Temple, and the
+Jews were therefore reluctant to destroy them, although they
+greatly facilitated the attack of the Romans.</p>
+<p>Finding that his offers were all rejected, Titus spent seven
+days in the destruction of a large portion of Antonia, and then
+prepared for a night attack. As the whole army could not make the
+assault, thirty men were picked from each hundred. Tribunes were
+appointed over each thousand, Cerealis being chosen to command the
+whole. Titus himself mounted a watchtower in Antonia, in order that
+he might see and reward each act of bravery.</p>
+<p>The assault began between two and three o'clock in the morning.
+The Jews were on the watch and, as soon as the massive columns
+moved forward, the cries of the guards gave the alarm; and the
+Jews, sleeping in and around the Temple, seized their arms and
+rushed down to the defence. For a time, the Romans had the
+advantage. The weight of their close formation enabled them to
+press forward against the most obstinate resistance and, even in
+the darkness, there was no fear of mistaking friend for foe; while
+the Jews, fighting in small parties, often mistook each other for
+enemies, and as many fell by the swords of their friends as by
+those of the enemy. The loss was all the greater, since the troops
+of John of Gischala and Simon had no common password and, coming
+suddenly upon each other, often fought desperately before they
+discovered their mistake; but as daylight began to break, these
+mistakes became less frequent. The presence and example of their
+leaders animated the Jews to the greatest exertions, while the
+knowledge that Titus was watching them inspired the Romans with
+even more than their usual courage and obstinacy. For nine hours,
+the conflict raged; and then the Romans, unable to make the
+slightest impression upon the resistance of the Jews, fell back
+again into Antonia.</p>
+<p>Finding that, in hand-to-hand conflict, his soldiers could not
+overcome the Jews, Titus ordered the erection of small
+embankments--two on the platform between the cloisters, the other
+two outside the cloister walls. But the work proceeded slowly,
+owing to the difficulty of procuring wood. The Jews, as usual,
+hindered the work as much as possible, with showers of missiles;
+and attempted to create a diversion, by a sortie and attack upon
+the camp of the Tenth Legion, on the Mount of Olives. This,
+however, was repulsed by the Romans, without great difficulty.</p>
+<p>As the cloisters leading to Antonia afforded great assistance to
+the Romans, in their attacks, the Jews set fire to the end of the
+cloisters touching the Temple wall; and a length of from twenty to
+thirty feet of each cloister was destroyed. The Romans destroyed a
+further portion, so as to afford more room for the men at work upon
+the embankments. The action of the Jews was, to a certain extent, a
+necessity; but it depressed the spirits of the inhabitants, for
+there was a prophecy: "When square the walls, the Temple falls!"
+Hitherto, Antonia and the connecting cloisters had been considered
+as forming part of the Temple, and had given it an irregular form;
+but the destruction of these cloisters left the Temple standing a
+massive square.</p>
+<p>The embankments presently rose above the height of the wall, and
+it was evident that this would soon be taken. The Jews retired from
+the roof of the cloister facing the embankment, as if despairing of
+further resistance; but they had previously stored great quantities
+of combustibles in the space between the cedar roof of the
+cloisters and the upper platform. The Romans on the
+embankment--seeing that the Jews had retired--without waiting for
+orders ran down and, planting ladders, scaled the wall.</p>
+<p>The Jews set up cries, as if of despair; and the Romans poured
+up on to the wall until a great mass of men were collected on the
+roof of the cloister. Then, on a sudden, flames shot up in all
+directions beneath their feet, and they found themselves enveloped
+in a sea of fire. Many were burned, or smothered by the smoke. Some
+stabbed themselves with their swords. Some leaped down into the
+outer court, and were there killed by the Jews. Many jumped down
+outside the walls, and were picked up dead or with broken limbs.
+Others ran along upon the top of the walls, until they were shot
+down by the Jewish missiles.</p>
+<p>But one man seems to have escaped. A soldier named Artorius,
+standing on the wall, shouted to the Romans below, "Whoever catches
+me shall be my heir."</p>
+<p>A soldier ran forward to accept the terms. Artorius jumped down
+upon him; killing him by his fall, but himself escaping unhurt.</p>
+<p>The fire extended along the whole of the western cloister; and
+the northern cloister was, next day, burned by the Romans and,
+thus, on the west and north sides the inner Temple was now exposed
+to the invader.</p>
+<p>All this time, famine had been continuing its work. The fighting
+men were so weakened that they had scarcely strength to drag their
+limbs along, or to hold their weapons; while horrible tales are
+told of the sufferings of such of the inhabitants who still
+survived--one woman, maddened by despair, cooking and eating her
+own infant. Occasionally a baggage animal or a Roman cavalry horse
+strayed near the walls, when a crowd of famishing wretches would
+pour out, kill and devour it. Titus, however, cut off even this
+occasional supply; by ordering a soldier, whose horse had thus
+fallen into the hands of the Jews, to be put to death for his
+carelessness.</p>
+<p>John's band had been greatly diminished in number, in the two
+days they had been fighting opposite Antonia. The stores they had
+brought to the city were now exhausted; although, for a long time,
+only the smallest amount had been issued, daily, to eke out the
+handful of grain still served out to each of the fighting men. A
+few only had, in their sufferings, refused to obey the orders of
+John and their officers, and had joined the bands of Simon and John
+of Gischala in the revolting cruelties which they practised, to
+extort food from the inhabitants. These had not been allowed to
+rejoin the band; which was now reduced to a little over fifty
+stern, gaunt, and famine-worn figures--but still unshaken in their
+determination to fight to the end.</p>
+<p>The Romans now pushed on a bank, from the western wall across
+the smouldering ruins of the cloister and inner court; and a
+battering ram began to play against the inner Temple but, after six
+days' efforts, and bringing up their heaviest battering ram, the
+Romans gave it up in despair; for the huge stones which formed the
+masonry of the wall defied even the ponderous machines which the
+Romans brought to play against it. An embankment, from the northern
+side, was also carried across the outer court to the foot of the
+most easterly of the four northern gates of the inner Temple.</p>
+<p>Still anxious to save the Temple itself, and its cloisters if
+possible, Titus would not resort to the use of fire; but ordered
+his men to force the gate, with crowbars and levers. After great
+efforts, a few of the stones of the threshold were removed; but the
+gates, supported by the massive walls and the props behind, defied
+all their efforts.</p>
+<p>Titus now ordered his soldiers to carry the walls by storm.
+Ladders were brought up; and the soldiers, eager for revenge upon
+the foe who had so long baffled and humiliated them, sprang to the
+assault with shouts of exultation. The Jews offered no resistance,
+until the Romans reached the top of the wall but, as they leaped
+down on to the roof of the cloister, they threw themselves upon
+them. Numbers were slain, as they stepped off the ladders on to the
+wall; and many of the ladders were hurled backward, crushing the
+soldiers crowded upon them on the pavement beneath.</p>
+<p>Then Titus ordered the standards of the legions to be carried
+up, thinking that the soldiers would rally round these, the emblems
+of military honour. The Jews, however, permitted the standards and
+numbers of the legionaries to ascend on to the roof of the
+cloisters; and then again fell upon them, with such fury that the
+Romans were overpowered, the standards were taken, and their
+defenders killed. Not one of the Romans who had mounted the wall
+retired from it.</p>
+<p>Titus could no longer resist the appeals of his infuriated
+soldiers who, maddened by the losses they had suffered, and the
+disgrace of the loss of the standards, could not understand why
+this loss was entailed upon them--when such an easy way of
+destroying the gate, and entering the Temple, was in their power.
+Most reluctantly, Titus gave the permission they clamoured for, and
+allowed his troops to set fire to the gate. The dry woodwork caught
+like tinder, and the flames mounted instantly. The silver plates
+which covered the woodwork melted, and ran down in streams; and the
+fire at once communicated with the cloisters inside the wall.</p>
+<p>Appalled at the sight of the inner court in flames, the Jews
+stood despairing; while the shouts of triumph of the Romans rose
+high in the air. During the rest of the day, and all through the
+night, the conflagration continued and extended all round the
+cloisters. Thus the Temple, itself, was surrounded by a ring of
+fire.</p>
+<p>The next day, the 4th of August, Titus called a council of his
+generals, to deliberate on the fate of the Temple. There were
+present, besides Titus, Tiberias Alexander, the second in command;
+the commanders of the Fifth, Tenth, and Fifteenth Legions; Fronto,
+the commander of the Alexandrian troops; and Marcus Antonius
+Julianus, the procurator of Judea.</p>
+<p>Some were for levelling the Temple to the ground. Others advised
+that, if abandoned by the Jews, it might be preserved; but if
+defended as a citadel, it ought to be destroyed. Titus listened to
+the opinions of the others; and then declared his own--which was
+that, whatever the use the Jews made of it, it ought to be
+preserved. Alexander, Cerealis, and Fronto went over to the opinion
+of Titus; and therefore, by a majority of one, it was agreed that
+the Temple should be spared, however fiercely the Jews might
+resist. Orders were given to prevent the fire spreading to the
+Temple, and to clear the ground for an assault against it.</p>
+<p>The 5th of August broke. It was on that day that the Temple of
+Solomon had been burned, by Nebuchadnezzar; but the courage of the
+Jews was not depressed by the omen. The brief pause had enabled
+them to recover from the despair which they had felt, in seeing the
+inner cloister in flames; and at eight o'clock in the morning,
+sallying from the Eastern Gate, they rushed down upon the Romans.
+The latter formed in close order and, covered by their shields,
+received the onslaught calmly. But so desperately did the Jews
+fight, and in such numbers did they pour out from the Temple, that
+the Romans had begun to give way; when Titus arrived, with great
+reinforcements. But even then, it was not until one o'clock that
+the Jews were driven back, again, into the walls of the inner
+Temple.</p>
+<p>Titus, having seen his troops victorious, retired to his tent;
+and the soldiers continued their work of clearing the platform, and
+extinguishing the smouldering fire of the cloisters. Suddenly the
+Jewish bands burst out again, and another deadly struggle
+commenced. Then one of the Roman soldiers, seizing a burning brand
+from the cloisters, hurled it into the window of one of the side
+chambers that inclosed the Temple on the north.</p>
+<p>In the furious struggle that was going on, none noticed the
+action; and it was not until the flames were seen, rushing out of
+the window, that the Jews perceived what had happened. With a cry
+of anguish, they discontinued the conflict, and rushed back to try
+and extinguish the flames. But the woodwork, dried by the intense
+heat of the August sun, was ripe for burning and, in spite of the
+most desperate efforts, the fire spread rapidly.</p>
+<p>The news that the Temple was on fire reached Titus and, starting
+up, accompanied by his bodyguard of spearmen--commanded by
+Liberatus--he hastened to the spot. His officers followed him and,
+as the news spread, the whole of the Roman legionaries rushed, with
+one accord, to the spot. Titus pushed forward into the first court
+of the inner Temple--the Court of the Women--and then into the
+inner court and, by shouts and gestures, implored his own soldiers,
+and the Jews alike, to assist in subduing the flames.</p>
+<p>But the clamour and din drowned his voice. The legionaries,
+pouring in after him, added to the confusion. So great was the
+crowd that many of the soldiers were crushed to death; while many
+fell among the ruins of the still smouldering cloisters, and were
+either smothered or burned. Those who reached the sanctuary paid no
+attention to the remonstrances, commands, or even threats of Titus;
+but shouted to those in front of them to complete the work of
+destruction.</p>
+<p>Titus pressed forward, with his guards, to the vestibule; and
+then entered, first the Holy, and then the Holy of Holies. After
+one glance at the beauty and magnificence of the marvellous shrine,
+he rushed back and again implored his soldiers to exert themselves
+to save it; and ordered Liberatus to strike down any who disobeyed.
+But the soldiers were now altogether beyond control, and were mad
+with triumph, fury, and hate. One of the bodyguard, as Titus left
+the sanctuary, seized a brand and applied it to the woodwork. The
+flames leaped up, and soon the whole Temple was wrapped in
+fire.</p>
+<p>The soldiers spread through the building, snatching at the
+golden ornaments and vessels, and slaying all they met--unarmed
+men, priests in their robes, women and children. Many of the Jews
+threw themselves into the flames. Some of the priests found their
+way on to the broad wall of the inner Temple; where they remained,
+until compelled by famine to come down, when they were all
+executed. Six thousand of the populace took refuge on the roof of
+the Royal Cloister, along the south side of the outer Temple. The
+Romans set fire to this, and every soul upon it perished.</p>
+<p>As soon as they felt that their efforts to extinguish the fire
+were vain, and that the Temple was indeed lost, John of Gischala,
+Simon, and John called their men together and, issuing out, fell
+with the fury of desperation upon the dense ranks of the Roman
+soldiers in the inner court and, in spite of their resistance, cut
+their way through to the outer court; and gained the bridge leading
+from the southwest corner, across the Valley of the Tyropceon, to
+the upper city; and were therefore, for a time, in safety.</p>
+<p>John, bewildered, exhausted, and heartbroken from the terrible
+events of the past few days, staggered back to his house, and threw
+himself on his couch; and lay there for a long time, crushed by the
+severity of the blow. Until now he had hoped that Titus would, in
+the end, spare the Temple; but he recognized, now, that it was the
+obstinacy of the Jews that had brought about its destruction.</p>
+<p>"It was God's will that it should perish," he said, to himself;
+"and Titus could no more save it than I could do."</p>
+<p>After some hours, he roused himself and descended to the room
+now occupied by the remnant of the band. Jonas and ten others,
+alone, were gathered there. Some had thrown themselves down on the
+ground. Some sat in attitudes of utter dejection. Several were
+bleeding from wounds received in the desperate fight of the
+morning. Others were badly burned in the desperate efforts they had
+made to extinguish the flames. Exhausted by want of food, worn out
+by their exertions, filled with despair at the failure of their
+last hopes, the members of the little band scarce looked up when
+their leader entered.</p>
+<p>"My friends," he said, "listen to me, if but for the last time.
+We, at least, have nothing to reproach ourselves with. We have
+fought for the Temple, to the last; and if we failed to save it, it
+is because it was the will of God that it should perish. At any
+rate, our duty is done. God has not given us our lives, and
+preserved them through so many fights, that we should throw them
+away. It is our duty, now, to save our lives, if we can. Now that
+the Temple has fallen, we are called upon to do no more
+fighting.</p>
+<p>"Let the bands of John of Gischala, and Simon, fight to the
+last. They are as wild beasts, inclosed in the snare of the hunter;
+and they merit a thousand deaths, for it is they who have brought
+Jerusalem to this pass, they who have robbed and murdered the
+population, they who have destroyed the granaries which would have
+enabled the city to exist for years, they who refused the terms by
+which the Temple might have been saved, they who have caused its
+destruction in spite of the efforts of Titus to preserve it. They
+are the authors of all this ruin and woe. They have lived as wild
+beasts, so let them die!</p>
+<p>"But there is no reason why we should die with them, for their
+guilt is not upon our heads. We have done our duty in fighting for
+the Temple, and have robbed and injured none. Therefore, I say, let
+us save our lives."</p>
+<p>"Would you surrender to the Romans?" one of the band asked,
+indignantly. "Do you, whom we have followed, counsel us to become
+traitors?"</p>
+<p>"It is not treachery to surrender, when one can no longer
+resist," John said, quietly. "But I am not thinking of
+surrendering. I am thinking of passing out of the city, into the
+country around.</p>
+<p>"But first, let us eat. I see you look surprised but, although
+the store we brought hither is long since exhausted, there is still
+a last reserve. I bought it, with all the money that I had with me,
+from one of Simon's men, upon the day when we came hither from the
+lower town. He had gained it, doubtless, in wanton robbery for, at
+that time, the fighting men had plenty of food; but as it was his,
+I bought it, thinking that the time might come when one meal might
+mean life to many of us. I have never touched it, but it remains
+where I hid it, in my chamber. I will fetch it, now."</p>
+<p>John ascended to his chamber, and brought down a bag containing
+about fifteen pounds of flour.</p>
+<p>"Let us make bread of this," he said. "It will give us each a
+good meal, now; and there will be enough left to provide food for
+each, during the first day's journey."</p>
+<p>The exhausted men seemed inspired with new life, at the sight of
+the food. No thought of asking how they were to pass through the
+Roman lines occurred to them. The idea of satisfying their hunger
+overpowered all other feelings.</p>
+<p>The door was closed to keep out intruders. Dough was made, and a
+fire kindled with pieces of wood dry as tinder, so that no smoke
+should attract the eye of those who were constantly on the lookout
+for such a sign that some family were engaged in cooking. The flat
+dough cakes were placed over the glowing embers, the whole having
+been divided into twenty-four portions. Some of the men would
+hardly wait until their portions were baked; but John urged upon
+them that, were they to eat it in a half-cooked state, the
+consequences might be very serious, after their prolonged fast.
+Still, none of them could resist breaking off little pieces, to
+stay their craving.</p>
+<p>"Let us eat slowly," John said, when the food was ready. "The
+more slowly we eat, the further it will go. When it is eaten, we
+will take a sleep for four hours, to regain our strength. There is
+no fear of our being called upon to aid in the defence. The Romans
+must be as exhausted as we are; and they will need thought, and
+preparation, before they attack our last stronghold, which is far
+stronger than any they have yet taken. If we had food, we could
+hold Mount Zion against them for months."</p>
+<p>As soon as the meal was over, all lay down to sleep. None had
+asked any question as to how their escape was to be effected. The
+unexpected meal, which John's forethought had prepared for them,
+had revived all their confidence in him; and they were ready to
+follow him, wherever he might take them.</p>
+<p>It was night when John called them to awake, but the glare of
+the vast pile of the burning Temple lit up every object. The
+brightness almost equalled that of day.</p>
+<p>"It is time," John said, as the men rose to their feet and
+grasped their arms. "I trust that we shall have no occasion to use
+weapons; but we will carry them so that, if we should fall into the
+hands of the Romans, we may fall fighting, and not die by the
+torments that they inflict upon those who fall into their hands. If
+I could obtain a hearing, so as to be brought before Titus, he
+might give us our lives; but I will not trust to that. In the first
+place, they would cut us down like hunted animals, did they come
+upon us; and in the second, I would not, now, owe my life to the
+clemency of the Romans."</p>
+<p>A fierce assent was given by his followers.</p>
+<p>"Now," John went on, "let each take his piece of bread, and put
+it in his bosom. Leave your bucklers and javelins behind you, but
+take your swords.</p>
+<p>"Jonas, bring a brand from the fire.</p>
+<p>"Now, let us be off."</p>
+<p>None of those with him, except Jonas, had the least idea where
+he was going; but he had instructed the lad in the secret of the
+pit and, one day, had taken him down the passages to the
+aqueduct.</p>
+<p>"You and I found safety before, Jonas, together, and I trust may
+do so again; but should anything happen to me, you will now have
+the means of escape."</p>
+<p>"If you die, I will die with you, master," Jonas said.</p>
+<p>And indeed, in the fights he had always kept close to John,
+following every movement, and ready to dash forward when his leader
+was attacked by more than one enemy; springing upon them like a
+wildcat, and burying his knife in their throats. It was to his
+watchful protection and ready aid that John owed it that he had
+passed through so many combats, comparatively unharmed.</p>
+<p>"Not so, Jonas," he said, in answer to the lad's declaration
+that he would die with him. "It would be no satisfaction to me that
+you should share my fate, but a great one to know that you would
+get away safely. If I fall, I charge you to pass out by this
+underground way; and to carry to my father, and mother, and Mary,
+the news that I have fallen, fighting to the last, in the defence
+of the Temple. Tell them that I thought of them to the end, and
+that I sent you to them to be with them; and to be to my father and
+mother a son, until they shall find for Mary a husband who may fill
+my place, and be the stay of their old age. My father will treat
+you as an adopted son, for my sake; and will bestow upon you a
+portion of his lands.</p>
+<p>"You have been as a brother to me, Jonas; and I pray you,
+promise me to carry out my wishes."</p>
+<p>Jonas had reluctantly given the pledge but, from that hour until
+John had declared that he would fight no more, Jonas had been moody
+and silent. Now, however, as he walked behind his friend, his face
+was full of satisfaction. There was no chance, now, that he would
+have to take home the news of his leader's death. Whatever befell
+them, they would share together.</p>
+<p>They soon reached the door of the house in which the pit was
+situated. It was entered, and the door closed behind them. The
+lamps were then lit. John led the way to the cellar, and bade the
+men remove the boards.</p>
+<p>"I will go first, with one of the lamps," he said. "Do you,
+Jonas, take the other, and come last in the line.</p>
+<p>"Keep close together, so that the light may be sufficient for
+all to see."</p>
+<p>Strengthened by the meal, and by their confidence in John's
+promise to lead them through the Romans, the band felt like new
+men; and followed John with their usual light, active gait, as he
+led the way. Not a word was spoken, till they reached the hole
+leading into the aqueduct.</p>
+<p>"This is the Conduit of King Hezekiah," John said. "When we
+emerge at the other end, we shall be beyond the Roman lines."</p>
+<p>Exclamations of satisfaction burst from the men. Each had been
+wondering, as he walked, where their leader was taking them. All
+knew that the ground beneath Jerusalem was honeycombed by caves and
+passages; but that their leader could not intend to hide there was
+evident, for they had but one meal with them. But that any of these
+passages should debouch beyond the Roman lines had not occurred to
+them.</p>
+<p>Each had thought that the passages they were following would
+probably lead out, at the foot of the wall, into the Valley of
+Hinnom or of Jehoshaphat; and that John intended to creep with them
+up to the foot of the Roman wall, and to trust to activity and
+speed to climb it, and make their way through the guard placed
+there to cut off fugitives. But none had even hoped that they would
+be able to pass the wall of circumvallation without a struggle.</p>
+<p>An hour's walking brought them to the chamber over the
+springs.</p>
+<p>"Now," John said, "we will rest for half an hour, before we
+sally out. Let each man eat half the food he has brought with him.
+The rest he must keep till tomorrow, for we shall have to travel
+many miles before we can reach a spot that the Romans have not laid
+desolate, and where we may procure food.</p>
+<p>"I trust," he went on, "that we shall be altogether unnoticed.
+The sentries may be on the alert, on their wall, for they will
+think it likely that many may be trying to escape from the city;
+but all save those on duty will be either asleep after their toils,
+or feasting in honour of their success. The fact, too, of the great
+glare of light over Jerusalem will render the darkness more
+intense, when they look in the other direction.</p>
+<p>"But if we should be noticed, it is best that we should
+separate, and scatter in the darkness; each flying for his life,
+and making his way home as best he may. If we are not seen, we will
+keep together. There is no fear of meeting with any Roman bands,
+when we are once fairly away. The parties getting wood will have
+been warned, by the smoke, of what has taken place; and will have
+hurried back, to gain their share of the spoil."</p>
+<p>At the end of the half hour, John rose to his feet and led the
+way along the passage to the entrance. When he came to the spot
+where it was nearly blocked up, he blew out his light, and crawled
+forward over the rubbish, until he reached the open air. The others
+followed, until all were beside him. Then he rose to his feet. The
+Temple was not visible, but the whole sky seemed on fire above
+Jerusalem; and the outline of the three great towers of the Palace
+of Herod, and of the buildings of the upper city, stood black
+against the glare.</p>
+<p>There was no sign of life or movement near as, with a quick,
+noiseless step, the little party stole away. None of them knew more
+than the general direction which they had to follow, but the glare
+of the great fire served as a guide as to their direction and, even
+at this distance, made objects on the ground plainly visible; so
+that they were enabled to pick their way among the stumps of the
+fallen plantations and orchards, through gardens, and by ruined
+villas and houses, until they reached the edge of the plateau, and
+plunged down into the valleys descending to the Dead Sea. After
+walking for two hours, John called a halt.</p>
+<p>"We can walk slowly now," he said, "and avoid the risk of
+breaking our legs among the rocks. We are safe, here; and had best
+lie down until morning, and then resume our way. There is no fear,
+whatever, of the Romans sending out parties, for days. They have
+the upper city to take, yet, and the work of plunder and division
+of the spoil to carry out. We can sleep without anxiety."</p>
+<p>It was strange, to them all, to lie down to sleep among the
+stillness of the mountains, after the din and turmoil of the siege
+when, at any moment, they might be called upon to leap up to repel
+an attack. But few of them went off to sleep, for some time. The
+dull feeling of despair, the utter carelessness of life, the desire
+for death and the end of trouble which had so long oppressed
+them--these had passed away, now that they were free, and in the
+open air; and the thoughts of the homes they had never thought to
+see again, and of the loved ones who would greet them, on their
+return, as men who had almost come back from the dead, fell upon
+them. They could go back with heads erect, and clear consciences.
+They had fought, so long as the Temple stood. They had, over and
+over again, faced the Romans hand to hand, without giving way a
+foot. They had taken no share in the evil deeds in the city, and
+had wronged and plundered no one. They did not return as
+conquerors, but that was the will of God, and no fault of
+theirs.</p>
+<p>At daybreak they were on their feet again, and now struck off
+more to the left; following mountain paths among the hills until,
+at last, they came down to the plain, within half a mile of the
+upper end of the Dead Sea. John here called his companions round
+him.</p>
+<p>"Here, my friends," he said, "I think it were best that we
+separated; laying aside our swords and, singly or in pairs, finding
+the way back to our homes. We know not in what towns there may be
+Roman garrisons, or where we may meet parties of their soldiers
+traversing the country. Alone, we shall attract no attention. One
+man may conceal himself behind a tree, or in the smallest bush; but
+the sight of a party, together, would assuredly draw them upon us.
+Therefore, it were best to separate. Some of you will find it
+shorter to cross the ford of the Jordan, three miles away; while
+others had best follow this side of the river."</p>
+<p>All agreed that this would be the safer plan and, after a short
+talk, each took leave of his leader and comrades, and strode away;
+until Jonas, alone, remained with John.</p>
+<p>"Will you cross the river, John, or follow this side?" Jonas
+asked.</p>
+<p>"I think we had best keep on this side, Jonas. On the other the
+country is hilly, and the villages few. Here, at least, we can
+gather fruit and corn, as we go, from the deserted gardens and
+fields; and two days' walking will take us to Tarichea. We can
+cross there, or take a boat up the lake."</p>
+<p>After waiting until the last of their comrades had disappeared
+from sight, John and his companion continued their way, keeping
+about halfway between Jericho and the Jordan. They presently bore
+to the left, until on the great road running north from Jericho.
+This they followed until nightfall, rejoicing in the grapes and
+figs which they picked by the roadside where, but a few months
+since, little villages had nestled thickly.</p>
+<p>Just before darkness fell they came upon a village which,
+although deserted, had not been burned--probably owing to some body
+of Roman soldiers having taken up their post there for a time. They
+entered one of the houses, lay down, and were soon fast asleep.</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch18" id="Ch18">Chapter 18</a>: Slaves.</h2>
+<p>John was roused from sleep by being roughly shaken. He sprang to
+his feet, and found a number of men--some of whom were holding
+torches--in the room. Two of these had the appearance of merchants.
+The others were armed and, by their dress, seemed to be Arabs.</p>
+<p>"What are you doing here?" one of the men asked him.</p>
+<p>"We are peaceful travellers," John said, "injuring no one, and
+came in here to sleep the night."</p>
+<p>"You look like peaceful travellers!" the man replied. "You have
+two wounds yet unhealed on your head. Your companion has one of his
+arms bandaged. You are either robbers, or some of the cutthroats
+who escaped from Jerusalem. You may think it Iucky you have fallen
+into my hands, instead of that of the Romans, who would have
+finished you off without a question.</p>
+<p>"Bind them," he said, turning to his men.</p>
+<p>Resistance was useless. The hands of John and Jonas were tied
+behind their backs, and they were taken outside the house. Several
+fires were burning in the road, and lying down were three or four
+hundred men and women; while several men, with spears and swords,
+stood as a guard over them. John saw, at once, that he had fallen
+into the hands of a slave dealer--one of the many who had come,
+from various parts, to purchase the Jews whom the Romans sold as
+slaves--and already the multitude sold was so vast that it had
+reduced the price of slaves throughout Italy, Egypt, and the East
+to one-third of their former value. There were, however,
+comparatively few able-bodied men among them. In almost every case
+the Romans had put these to the sword, and the slave dealers,
+finding John and Jonas, had congratulated themselves on the
+acquisition; knowing well that no complaint that the captives might
+make would be listened to, and that their story would not be
+believed, even if they could get to tell it to anyone of
+authority.</p>
+<p>John and Jonas were ordered to lie down with the rest, and were
+told that, if they made any attempt to escape, they would be
+scourged to death.</p>
+<p>"The villains!" Jonas muttered, as they lay down. "Is it not
+enough to drive one mad to think that, after having escaped the
+Romans, we should fall into the hands of these rogues!"</p>
+<p>"We must not grumble at fate. Hitherto, Jonas, we have been
+marvellously preserved. First of all, we two were alone saved from
+Jotapata; then we, with ten others, alone out of six hundred
+escaped alive from Jerusalem. We have reason for thankfulness,
+rather than repining. We have been delivered out of the hands of
+death; and remember that I have the ring of Titus with me, and
+that--when the time comes--this will avail us."</p>
+<p>From the day the siege had begun, John had carried the signet
+ring of Titus; wearing it on his toe, concealed by the bands of his
+sandals. He knew that, were he to fall into the hands of the
+Romans, he would get no opportunity of speaking but, even if not
+killed at once, would be robbed of any valuable he might possess;
+and that his assertion that the ring was a signet, which Titus
+himself had given him would, even if listened to, be received with
+incredulity. He had therefore resolved to keep it concealed, and to
+produce it only when a favourable opportunity seemed to offer.</p>
+<p>"At any rate, Jonas, let us practise patience, and be thankful
+that we are still alive."</p>
+<p>In the morning, the cavalcade got into motion. John found that
+the majority of his fellow captives were people who had been taken
+captive when Titus, for the second time, obtained possession of the
+lower city. They had been sent up to Tiberias, and there sold, and
+their purchaser was now taking them down to Egypt. The men were
+mostly past middle age, and would have been of little value as
+slaves, had it not been that they were all craftsmen--workers in
+stone or metal--and would therefore fetch a fair price, if sold to
+masters of these crafts. The rest were women and children.</p>
+<p>The men were attached to each other by cords, John and Jonas
+being placed at some distance apart; and one of the armed guards
+placed himself near each, as there was far more risk of active and
+determined young men trying to make their escape than of the others
+doing so, especially after the manner in which they had been
+kidnapped. All their clothes were taken from them, save their
+loincloths; and John trembled lest he should be ordered also to
+take off his sandals, for his present captors would have no idea of
+the value of the ring, but would seize it for its setting.</p>
+<p>Fortunately, however, this was not the case. The guards all wore
+sandals and had, therefore, no motive in taking those of the
+captives, especially as they were old and worn. The party soon
+turned off from the main road, and struck across the hills to the
+west; and John bitterly regretted that he had not halted, for the
+night, a few miles further back than he did, in which case he would
+have avoided the slave dealers' caravan.</p>
+<p>The heat was intense, and John pitied the women and children,
+compelled to keep up with the rest. He soon proposed, to a woman
+who was burdened with a child about two years old, to place it on
+his shoulders; and as the guard saw in this a proof that their new
+captives had no idea of endeavouring to escape, they offered no
+objection to the arrangement which, indeed, seemed so good to them
+that, as the other mothers became fatigued, they placed the
+children on the shoulders of the male prisoners; loosing the hands
+of the latter, in order that they might prevent the little ones
+from losing their balance.</p>
+<p>The caravan halted for the night at Sichem, and the next day
+crossed Mount Gerizim to Bethsalisa, and then went on to Jaffa.
+Here the slave dealers hired a ship, and embarked the slaves. They
+were crowded closely together, but otherwise were not unkindly
+treated, being supplied with an abundance of food and water--for it
+was desirable that they should arrive in the best possible
+condition at Alexandria, whither they were bound.</p>
+<p>Fortunately the weather was fine and, in six days, they reached
+their destination. Alexandria was at that time the largest city,
+next to Rome herself, upon the shores of the Mediterranean. It had
+contained a very large Jewish population prior to the great
+massacre, five years before and, even now, there were a
+considerable number remaining. The merchant had counted upon this
+and, indeed, had it not been for the number of Jews scattered among
+the various cities of the East, the price of slaves would have
+fallen even lower than it did. But the Jewish residents, so far as
+they could afford it, came forward to buy their country men and
+women, in order to free them from slavery.</p>
+<p>When, therefore, the new arrivals were exposed in the market,
+many assuring messages reached them from their compatriots; telling
+them to keep up their courage, for friends would look after them.
+The feeling against the Jews was still too strong for those who
+remained in Alexandria to appear openly in the matter, and they
+therefore employed intermediaries, principally Greeks and Cretans,
+to buy up the captives. The women with children were the first
+purchased, as the value of these was not great. Then some of the
+older men, who were unfit for much work, were taken. Then there was
+a pause, for already many cargoes of captives had reached
+Alexandria, and the resources of their benevolent countrymen were
+becoming exhausted.</p>
+<p>No one had yet bid for John or Jonas, as the slave dealers had
+placed a high price upon them as being strong and active, and
+fitted for hard work. Their great fear was that they should be
+separated; and John had, over and over again, assured his companion
+that should he, as he hoped, succeed in getting himself sent to
+Titus, and so be freed, he would, before proceeding home, come to
+Egypt and purchase his friend's freedom.</p>
+<p>The event they feared, however, did not happen. One day a Roman,
+evidently of high rank, came into the market and, after looking
+carelessly round, fixed his eyes upon John and his companion, and
+at once approached their master. A few minutes were spent in
+bargaining; then the dealer unfastened the fetters which bound
+them, and the Roman briefly bade them follow him.</p>
+<p>He proceeded through the crowded streets, until they were in the
+country outside the town. Here, villas with beautiful gardens lined
+the roads. The Roman turned in at the entrance to one of the
+largest of these mansions. Under a colonnade, which surrounded the
+house, a lady was reclining upon a couch. Her two slave girls were
+fanning her.</p>
+<a id="PicI" name="PicI"></a>
+<center><img src="images/i.jpg" alt=
+"Illustration: 'Lesbia,' the Roman said, 'I have brought you two more slaves.'" />
+</center>
+<p>"Lesbia," the Roman said, "you complained, yesterday, that you
+had not enough slaves to keep the garden in proper order, so I have
+bought you two more from the slave market. They are Jews, that
+obstinate race that have been giving Titus so much trouble. Young
+as they are, they seem to have been fighting, for both of them are
+marked with several scars."</p>
+<p>"I dare say they will do," the lady said. "The Jews are said to
+understand the culture of the vine and fig better than other
+people, so they are probably accustomed to garden work."</p>
+<p>The Roman clapped his hands, and a slave at once appeared.</p>
+<p>"Send Philo here."</p>
+<p>A minute later a Greek appeared.</p>
+<p>"Philo, here are two slaves I have brought from the market. They
+are for work in the garden. See that they do it, and let me know
+how things go on. We shall know how to treat them, if they are
+troublesome."</p>
+<p>Philo at once led the two new slaves to the shed, at a short
+distance from the house, where the slaves employed out of doors
+lodged.</p>
+<p>"Do you speak Greek?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"As well as my native language," John replied.</p>
+<p>"My lord Tibellus is a just and good master," Philo said, "and
+you are fortunate in having fallen into his hands. He expects his
+slaves to work their best and, if they do so, he treats them well;
+but disobedience and laziness he punishes, severely. He is an
+officer of high rank in the government of the city. As you may not
+know the country, I warn you against thinking of escape. The Lake
+of Mareotis well-nigh surrounds the back of the city and, beyond
+the lake, the Roman authority extends for a vast distance, and none
+would dare to conceal runaway slaves."</p>
+<p>"We shall not attempt to escape," John said, quietly, "and are
+well content that we have fallen in such good hands. I am
+accustomed to work in a garden, but my companion has not had much
+experience at such work; therefore, I pray you be patient with him,
+at first."</p>
+<p>John had agreed with Jonas that, if they had the good fortune to
+be sold to a Roman, they would not, for a time, say anything about
+the ring. It was better, they thought, to wait until Titus returned
+to Rome--which he would be sure to do, after the complete conquest
+of Jerusalem. Even were they sent to him there, while he was still
+full of wrath and bitterness against the Jews--for the heavy loss
+that they had inflicted upon his army, and for the obstinacy which
+compelled him to destroy the city which he would fain have
+preserved, as a trophy of his victory--they might be less
+favourably received than they would be after there had been some
+time for the passions awakened by the strife to abate; especially
+after the enjoyment of the triumph which was sure to be accorded to
+him, on his return after his victory.</p>
+<p>The next day the ring, the badge of slavery, was fastened round
+the necks of the two new purchases. John had already hidden in the
+ground the precious ring, as he rightly expected that he would have
+to work barefooted. They were at once set to work in the garden.
+John was surprised at the number and variety of the plants and
+trees which filled it; and at the beauty and care with which it was
+laid out, and tended. Had it not been for the thought of the grief
+that they would be suffering, at home, he would--for a time--have
+worked contentedly. The labour was no harder than that on his
+father's farm; and as he worked well and willingly Philo, who was
+at the head of the slaves employed in the garden--which was a very
+extensive one--did not treat him with harshness.</p>
+<p>Jonas, although less skilful, also gave satisfaction; and two
+months passed without any unpleasant incident. The Roman slaves,
+save in exceptional instances, were all well treated by their
+masters, although these had power of life and death over them. They
+were well fed and, generally, had some small money payment made
+them. Sometimes, those who were clever at a handicraft were let out
+to other masters, receiving a portion of the wages they earned; so
+that they were frequently able, in old age, to purchase their
+freedom.</p>
+<p>There were four other slaves who worked in the garden. Two of
+these were Nubians, one a Parthian, the other a Spaniard. The last
+died, of homesickness and fever, after they had been there six
+weeks; and his place was filled up by another Jew, from a cargo
+freshly arrived.</p>
+<p>From him, John learned what had taken place after he had left
+Jerusalem. The bands of Simon and John of Gischala were so much
+weakened, by death and desertion, and were so enfeebled by famine,
+that they could not hope to withstand the regular approaches of the
+Roman arms, for any length of time. The two leaders therefore
+invited Titus to a parley; and the latter, being desirous of
+avoiding more bloodshed, of saving the Palace of Herod and the
+other great buildings in the upper city, and of returning to Rome
+at once, agreed to meet them. They took their places at opposite
+ends of the bridge across the Tyropceon Valley.</p>
+<p>Titus spoke first, and expostulated with them on the obstinacy
+which had already led to the destruction of the Temple, and the
+greater part of the city. He said that all the world, even to the
+distant Britons, had done homage to the Romans, and that further
+resistance would only bring destruction upon them. Finally, he
+offered their lives to all, if they would lay down their arms and
+surrender themselves as prisoners of war.</p>
+<p>Simon and John replied that they and their followers had bound
+themselves, by a solemn oath, never to surrender themselves into
+the hands of the Romans; but they expressed their willingness to
+retire, with their wives and families, into the wilderness, and
+leave the Romans in possession of the city. Titus considered this
+language, for men in so desperate a position, to be a mockery; and
+answered sternly that, henceforth, he would receive no deserters,
+and show no mercy, and that they might fight their hardest. He at
+once ordered the destruction of all the buildings standing round
+the Temple.</p>
+<p>The flames spread as far as the Palace of Helena, on Ophel, to
+the south of the Temple platform. Here the members of the royal
+family of Adiabene dwelt, and also in the Palaces of Grapte and
+Monobazus; and the descendants of Helena now went over to the
+Romans, and Titus, although he had declared that he would in future
+spare none, did not take their lives, seeing that they were of
+royal blood.</p>
+<p>Simon and John of Gischala, when they heard that the Adiabene
+princes had gone over to the Romans, rushed to the Palace of
+Helena, sacked it, and murdered all who had taken refuge in the
+building--seven thousand in number. They then sacked the rest of
+the outer lower town, and retired with their booty into the high
+town.</p>
+<p>Titus, furious at this conduct, ordered all the outer lower town
+to be burned; and soon, from the Temple platform to the Fountain of
+Siloam, a scene of desolation extended. The Roman soldiers then
+commenced to throw up banks, the one against Herod's Palace, the
+other near the bridge across the valley close to the Palace of
+Agrippa.</p>
+<p>The Idumeans, under Simon, were opposed to further resistance,
+and five of their leaders opened communication with Titus, who was
+disposed to treat with them; but the conspiracy was discovered by
+Simon, and the five leaders executed. Still, in spite of the
+watchfulness of Simon and John, large numbers of the inhabitants
+made their escape to the Romans who, tired of slaying, spared their
+lives, but sold the able-bodied as slaves, and allowed the rest to
+pass through their lines.</p>
+<p>On the 1st of September, after eighteen days' incessant labour,
+the bank on the west against Herod's Palace was completed, and the
+battering rams commenced their work. The defenders were too
+enfeebled, by famine, to offer any serious resistance and, the next
+day, a long line of the wall fell to the ground.</p>
+<p>Simon and John at first thought of cutting their way through the
+Roman ranks but, when they saw how small was the body of followers
+gathered round them, they gave up the attempt. They hesitated, for
+a moment, whether they should throw themselves into the three great
+towers, and fight to the last; or endeavour to fight their way
+through the wall of circumvallation.</p>
+<p>They chose the latter course, hurried down to the lower end of
+the upper city and, sallying out from the gate, they rushed at the
+Roman wall; but they had no engines of war to batter it, they were
+few in number and weakened by famine; and when they tried to scale
+the wall the Roman guards, assembling in haste, beat them back; and
+they returned into the city and, scattering, hid themselves in the
+underground caves.</p>
+<p>The Romans advanced to the great towers, and found them
+deserted. Titus stood amazed at their strength and solidity; and
+exclaimed that God, indeed, was on their side for that by man,
+alone, these impregnable towers could never have been taken.</p>
+<p>All resistance having now ceased, the Romans spread themselves
+through the city, slaughtering all whom they met, without
+distinction of age or sex. They were, however, aghast at the
+spectacle which the houses into which they burst presented. Some of
+these had been used as charnel houses, and had been filled with
+dead bodies. In others were found the remains of whole families
+who, with their servants, had shut themselves up to die of hunger.
+Everywhere the dead far outnumbered the living.</p>
+<p>The next day, Titus issued an order that only such as possessed
+arms should be slain, and that all others should be taken
+prisoners; but the Roman soldiers were too infuriated at the losses
+and defeats they had suffered even to obey the orders of Titus, and
+all save the able-bodied, who would be of value as slaves, were
+slaughtered. A vast number of those fit for slaves were confined in
+the charred remains of the Women's Court and, so weakened were
+these, by the ravages of famine, that eleven thousand of them are
+said to have perished. Of the survivors, some were selected to
+grace the triumphal procession at Rome. Of the remainder, all under
+the age of seventeen were sold as slaves. A part of those above
+that age were distributed, among the amphitheatres of Syria, to
+fight as gladiators against the wild beasts; and the rest were
+condemned to labour in the public works, in Egypt, for the rest of
+their lives.</p>
+<p>When all above the surface had been slain, or made prisoners,
+the Romans set to work methodically to search the conduits, sewers,
+and passages under the city. Multitudes of fugitives were found
+here, and all were slain as soon as discovered. Then the army was
+set to work, to raze the city to the ground. Every building and
+wall were thrown down, the only exception being a great barrack
+adjoining Herod's Palace--which was left for the use of one of the
+legions, which was to be quartered there for a time--and the three
+great towers--Hippicus, Phasaelus, and Mariamne--which were left
+standing, in order that they might show to future generations how
+vast had been the strength of the fortifications which Roman valour
+had captured.</p>
+<p>John of Gischala and Simon had both so effectually concealed
+themselves that for a time, they escaped the Roman searchers. At
+the end of some days, however, John was compelled by famine to come
+out, and surrender. Simon was much longer, before he made his
+appearance. He had taken with him into his hiding place a few of
+his followers, and some stone masons with their tools, and an
+effort was made to drive a mine beyond the Roman outposts. The rock
+however was hard, and the men enfeebled by famine; and the
+consequence was that Simon, like his fellow leader, was compelled
+to make his way to the surface.</p>
+<p>The spot where he appeared was on the platform of the Temple,
+far from the shaft by which he had entered the underground
+galleries. He appeared at night, clad in white, and the Roman
+guards at first took him for a spectre; and he thus escaped instant
+death, and had time to declare who he was. Titus had already left;
+but Terentius Rufus--who commanded the Tenth Legion, which had been
+left behind--sent Simon in chains to Titus, at Caesarea; and he, as
+well as John of Gischala, were taken by the latter to Rome, to
+grace his triumph.</p>
+<p>"It is strange," John said, when he heard the story, "that the
+two men who have brought all these woes upon Jerusalem should have
+both escaped with their lives. The innocent have fallen, and the
+guilty escaped--yet not escaped, for it would have been better for
+them to have died fighting, in the court of the Temple, than to
+live as slaves in the hands of the Romans."</p>
+<p>A month later, John learned the fate that had befallen the two
+Jewish leaders. Both were dragged in the triumphal procession of
+Titus through the streets of Rome; then, according to the cruel
+Roman custom, Simon was first scourged and then executed, as the
+bravest of the enemies of Rome, while John of Gischala was
+sentenced to imprisonment for life.</p>
+<p>The day after the news of the return to Rome and triumph of
+Titus arrived, John asked Philo to tell Tibellus that he prayed
+that he would hear him, as he wished to speak to him on a subject
+connected with Titus. Wondering what his Jewish slave could have to
+say about the son of the emperor, Tibellus, upon hearing from Philo
+of the request, at once ordered John to be brought to him.</p>
+<p>"Let me bring my companion, also, with me," John said to Philo.
+"He is my adopted brother, and can bear evidence to the truth of my
+statements."</p>
+<p>When they reached the colonnade Philo told them to stop there
+and, a minute later, Tibellus came out.</p>
+<p>"Philo tells me that you have something to say to me, concerning
+Titus."</p>
+<p>"I have, my lord," John said, and he advanced and held out the
+ring.</p>
+<p>The Roman took it, and examined it.</p>
+<p>"It is a signet ring of Titus!" he said, in surprise. "How came
+you by this? This is a grave matter, slave; and if you cannot
+account satisfactorily as to how you came possessed of this signet,
+you had better have thrown yourself into the sea, or swallowed
+poison, than have spoken of your possession of this signet."</p>
+<p>"It was given to me by Titus, himself." John said.</p>
+<p>The Roman made a gesture of anger.</p>
+<p>"It is ill jesting with the name of Caesar," he said, sternly.
+"This is Caesar's ring. Doubtless it was stolen from him. You may
+have taken it from the robber by force, or fraud, or as a gift--I
+know not which--but do not mock me with such a tale as that Caesar
+gave one of his signets to you, a Jew."</p>
+<p>"It is as I said," John replied, calmly. "Titus himself bestowed
+that ring upon me; and said that, if I desired to come to him at
+any time, and showed it to a Roman, it would open all doors, and
+bring me to his presence."</p>
+<p>"You do not speak as if you were mad," Tibellus said, "and yet
+your tale is not credible.</p>
+<p>"Are you weary of life, Jew? Do you long to die by torture?
+Philo has spoken well to me of you and your young companion. You
+have laboured well, and cheerfully, he tells me; and are skilled at
+your work. Do you find your lot so hard that you would die to
+escape it, and so tell me this impossible story? For death, and a
+horrible death, will assuredly be your portion. If you persist in
+this tale and, showing me this ring, say: 'I demand that you send
+me and my companion to Titus,' I should be bound to do so; and then
+torture and death will be your portion, for mocking the name of
+Caesar."</p>
+<p>"My lord," John said, calmly, "I repeat that I mock not the name
+of Caesar, and that what I have told you is true. I am not weary of
+life, or discontented with my station. I have been kindly treated
+by Philo, and work no harder than I should work at my father's
+farm, in Galilee; but I naturally long to return home. I have
+abstained from showing you this ring before, because Titus had not
+as yet conquered Jerusalem; but now that I hear he has been
+received in triumph, in Rome, he would have time to give me an
+audience; and therefore I pray that I may be sent to him."</p>
+<p>"But how is it possible that Titus could have given you this
+ring?" Tibellus asked, impressed by the calmness of John's manner,
+and yet still unable to believe a statement which appeared to him
+altogether incredible.</p>
+<p>"I will tell you, my lord, but I will tell you alone; for
+although Titus made no secret of it at the time, he might not care
+for the story to be generally told."</p>
+<p>Tibellus waved his hand to Philo, who at once withdrew.</p>
+<p>"You have found it hard to believe what I have told you, my
+lord," John went on. "You will find it harder, still, to believe
+what I now tell you; but if it is your command, I am bound to do
+so."</p>
+<p>"It is my command," Tibellus said, shortly. "I would fain know
+the whole of this monstrous tale."</p>
+<p>"I must first tell you, my lord, that though as yet but
+twenty-one years old, I have for four years fought with my
+countrymen against the Romans.</p>
+<p>"You see," he said, pointing to the scars on his head, arms, and
+body, "I have been wounded often and, as you may see for yourself,
+some of these scars are yet unhealed. Others are so old that you
+can scarce see their traces. This is a proof of so much, at least,
+of my story. My companion here and I were, by the protection of our
+God, enabled to escape from Jotapata, when all else save Josephus
+perished there. This was regarded by my countrymen as well-nigh a
+miracle, and as a proof that I had divine favour. In consequence a
+number of young men, when they took up arms, elected me as their
+leader and, for three years, we did what we could to oppose the
+progress of the Roman arms. It was as if a fly should try to stop a
+camel. Still, we did what we could, and any of the Roman officers
+who served under Titus would tell you that, of those who opposed
+them in the field, there was no more active partisan than the
+leader who was generally known as John of Gamala."</p>
+<p>"You, John of Gamala!" Tibellus exclaimed. "In frequent letters
+from my friends with the army I have read that name, and heard how
+incessant was the watchfulness required to resist his attacks, and
+how often small garrisons and parties were cut off by him. It was
+he, too, who burned Vespasian's camp, before Gamala. And you tell
+me, young man, that you are that Jewish hero--for hero he was,
+though it was against Rome he fought?"</p>
+<p>"I tell you so, my lord; and my adopted brother here, who was
+with me through these campaigns, will confirm what I say. I say it
+not boastingly, for my leadership was due to no special bravery on
+my part, but simply because the young men of the band thought that
+God had specially chosen me to lead them."</p>
+<p>"And now, about Titus," Tibellus said briefly, more and more
+convinced that his slave was audaciously inventing this story.</p>
+<p>"Once, near Hebron," John said, "I was passing through a valley,
+alone; when Titus, who was riding from Carmelia in obedience to a
+summons from Vespasian--who was at Hebron--came upon me. He
+attacked me, and we fought--"</p>
+<p>"You and Titus, hand to hand?" Tibellus asked, with a short
+laugh.</p>
+<p>"Titus and I, hand to hand," John repeated, quietly. "He had
+wounded me twice, when I sprang within his guard and closed with
+him. His foot slipped, and he fell. For a moment I could have slain
+him, if I would, but I did not.</p>
+<p>"Then I fainted from loss of blood. Titus was shortly joined by
+some of his men, and he had me carried down to his camp; where I
+was kindly nursed for a week, he himself visiting me several times.
+At the end of that time he dismissed me, giving me his signet ring,
+and telling me that if ever again I fell into the hands of the
+Romans, and wished to see him, I had but to show the ring to a
+Roman, and that he would send me to him."</p>
+<p>"And to him you shall go," Tibellus said, sternly; "and better
+would it have been that you had never been born, than that I should
+send you to him with such a tale as this."</p>
+<p>So saying, he turned away, while John and his companion returned
+to their work. The Roman officer was absolutely incredulous, as to
+the story he had heard; and indignant in the extreme at what he
+considered the audacity of the falsehood. Still, he could not but
+be struck by the calmness with which John told the story, nor could
+he see what motive he could have in inventing it. Its falsity
+would, of course, be made apparent the instant he arrived in Rome;
+whereas had he said, as was doubtless the truth, that he had
+obtained the ring from one who had stolen it from Titus, he might
+have obtained his freedom, and a reward for its restoration.</p>
+<p>After thinking the matter over for a time, he ordered his horse
+and rode into the city. One of the legions from Palestine had
+returned there, while two had accompanied Titus to Rome, and a
+fourth had remained in Judea. Tibellus rode at once to the
+headquarters of the commander of the legion. He had just returned,
+with some of his officers, from a parade of the troops. They had
+taken off their armour, and a slave was pouring wine into goblets
+for them.</p>
+<p>"Ah, Tibellus!" he said, "Is it you? Drink, my friend, and tell
+us what ails you, for in truth you look angered and hot."</p>
+<p>"I have been angered, by one of my slaves," Tibellus said.</p>
+<p>"Then there is no trouble in that," the Roman said, with a
+smile; "throw him to the fishes, and buy another. They are cheap
+enough, for we have flooded the world with slaves and, as we know
+to our cost, they are scarce saleable. We have brought two or three
+thousand with us, and can get no bid for them."</p>
+<p>"Yes, but this matter can't be settled so," Tibellus said; "but
+first, I want to ask you a question or two. You heard, of course,
+of John of Gamala, in your wars in Judea?"</p>
+<p>There was a chorus of assent.</p>
+<p>"That did we, indeed, to our cost," the general said; "save the
+two leaders in Jerusalem, he was the most dangerous; and was by far
+the most troublesome of our foes. Many a score of sleepless nights
+has that fellow caused us; from the time he well-nigh burnt all our
+camp before Gamala, he was a thorn in our side. One never knew
+where he was, or when to expect him. One day we heard of him
+attacking a garrison at the other end of the country, and the next
+night he would fall upon our camp. We never marched through a
+ravine, without expecting to see him and his men appearing on the
+hills, and sending the rocks thundering down among us; and the
+worst of it was, do what we would, we could never get to close
+quarters with him. His men could march three miles to our one; and
+as for our Arabs, if we sent them in pursuit, they would soon come
+flying back to us, leaving a goodly portion of their numbers dead
+behind them. He was the most formidable enemy we had, outside
+Jerusalem; and had all the Jews fought as he did, instead of
+shutting themselves up in their walled towns, we might have been
+years before we subdued that pestilent country."</p>
+<p>"Did you ever see this John of Gamala? Do you know what he was
+like, personally? Was he another giant, like this Simon who was
+executed at the triumph, the other day?"</p>
+<p>"None of us ever saw him--that is, to know which was he, though
+doubtless we may have seen him, in the fights--but all the country
+people we questioned, and such wounded men as fell into our
+hands--for we never once captured one of his band, unharmed--all
+asserted that he was little more than a lad. He was strong, and
+skilful in arms, but in years a youth. They all believed that he
+was a sort of prophet, one who had a mission from their God.</p>
+<p>"But why are you asking?"</p>
+<p>"I will tell you, presently," Tibellus said; "but first answer
+me another question. Was it not your legion that was at Carmelia,
+with Titus, when Vespasian lay at Hebron?"</p>
+<p>There was a general assent.</p>
+<p>"Did you ever hear of a wounded Jew being brought in, and tended
+there by order of Titus?"</p>
+<p>"We did," the general said; "and here is Plancus, who was in
+command of that part of the horse of the legion which formed the
+bodyguard of Titus, and who brought him into the camp. He will tell
+you about it."</p>
+<p>"Titus had received a message from Vespasian that he wished to
+see him," the officer signified by the general said, "and rode off
+at once, telling us to follow him. We armed and mounted, as soon as
+we could; but Titus was well mounted, and had a considerable start.
+We came up to him in a valley. He was standing by the side of his
+dead horse. He was slightly wounded, and his dirtied armour showed
+that he had had a sharp fight. Close by lay a Jew, who seemed to be
+dead. Titus ordered him to be carried back to the camp, and cared
+for by his own leech. That is all I know about it."</p>
+<p>"I can tell you more," the general said, "for Titus himself told
+me that he had had a desperate fight with the Jew; that he had
+wounded him severely, and was on the point of finishing him, when
+the Jew sprang at him suddenly and the sudden shock threw him to
+the ground; and that, strange as it might seem, although knowing
+who he was, the Jew spared his life. It was a strange story, and
+anyone besides Titus would have kept it to himself; and run his
+sword through the body of the Jew, to make sure of his silence; but
+Titus has notions of his own, and he is as generous as he is brave.
+By what he said, I gathered that the Jew abstained from striking,
+believing--as was truly the case--that Titus was more merciful than
+Vespasian, and that he would spare Jerusalem and their Temple, if
+he could.</p>
+<p>"And now, why all these questions?"</p>
+<p>"One more on my part first: what became of the Jew, and what was
+he like?"</p>
+<p>"That is two questions," the general replied; "however, I will
+answer them. Titus let him go free, when he was recovered from his
+wounds. He was a young man, of some twenty years old."</p>
+<p>"And do you know his name?"</p>
+<p>"I know his name was John, for so he told Titus; but as every
+other Jew one comes across is John, that does not tell much."</p>
+<p>"I can tell you his other name," Tibellus said. "It was John of
+Gamala."</p>
+<p>An exclamation of astonishment broke from the officers.</p>
+<p>"So that was John of Gamala, himself!" the general said. "None
+of us ever dreamt of it; and yet it might well have been for, now I
+think of it, the young fellow I saw lying wounded in the tent next
+to that of Titus answered, exactly, to the description we have
+heard of him; and the fact that he overcame Titus, in itself, shows
+that he had unusual strength and bravery.</p>
+<p>"But how do you know about this?"</p>
+<p>"Simply because John of Gamala is, at present, working as a
+slave in my garden."</p>
+<p>"You do not say so!" the general exclaimed. "We have often
+wondered what became of him. We learned, from the deserters, that
+he had entered into Jerusalem, and was fighting there against us.
+They all agreed that the men he had brought with him took no part
+in the atrocities of the soldiers of Simon, and John of Gischala;
+but that they kept together, and lived quietly, and harmed no man.
+It was they, we heard, who did the chief part in the three days'
+fighting at the breach of the lower town; but we never heard what
+became of him, and supposed that he must have fallen in the
+fighting round the Temple.</p>
+<p>"And so, he is your slave, Tibellus! How did you know it was he,
+and what are you going to do? The war is over, now, and there has
+been bloodshed enough and, after all, he was a gallant enemy, who
+fought us fairly and well."</p>
+<p>"He told me, himself, who he was," Tibellus said; "but I
+believed that he was lying to me. I had heard often of John of
+Gamala, and deemed that he was a brave and skilful warrior; and it
+seemed impossible that young man could be he. As to what I am going
+to do with him, I have nothing to do but what he has himself
+demanded--namely, to be sent to Titus. He produced the signet ring
+of Caesar; said that it was given to him by the general, himself;
+and that he told him that, if he presented it to a Roman at any
+time, he would lead him to his presence. I believed that he had
+stolen the ring, or had got it from somebody that had stolen it;
+and he then told me of the story, very much as you have told
+it--save that he said that, when he was well-nigh conquered by
+Titus, and sprang upon him, Caesar's foot slipped, and he
+fell--hinting that his success was the result of accident, rather
+than his own effort. He spoke by no means boastingly of it, but as
+if it was the most natural thing in the world."</p>
+<p>"There he showed discretion, and wisdom," the general said; "but
+truly this is a marvellous story. If he had not appealed to Caesar,
+I should have said, 'Give him his freedom.' You can buy a new slave
+for a few sesterces. This young fellow is too good to be a slave
+and, now that Judea is finally crushed, he could never become
+dangerous; but as he has demanded to be sent to Caesar, you must,
+of course, send him there. Besides, with the ideas that Titus has,
+he may be really glad to see the youth again.</p>
+<p>"But we shall like to see him, also. We all honour a brave
+adversary, and I should like to see him who so long set us at
+defiance."</p>
+<p>"I will bring him down, tomorrow, at this hour," Tibellus said;
+and then, taking leave of the officers, he mounted and rode
+back.</p>
+<p>On reaching home, he at once sent for John.</p>
+<p>"I doubted your story, when you told it to me," he said, "and
+deemed it impossible; but I have been down to the officers of the
+legion which arrived, last week, from Judea. It chances to be the
+very one which was at Carmelia, when Vespasian lay at Hebron; and I
+find that your story is fully confirmed--although, indeed, they did
+not know that the wounded man Titus sent in was John of Gamala--but
+as they admit that he answered, exactly, to the description which
+they have heard of that leader, they doubt not that it was he.</p>
+<p>"However, be assured that your request is granted, and that you
+shall be sent to Rome by the next ship that goes thither."</p>
+<h2><a name="Ch19" id="Ch19">Chapter 19</a>: At Rome.</h2>
+<p>Tibellus at once ordered John to be released from all further
+work, the badge of slavery to be removed, and that he should be
+supplied with handsome garments, removed into the house, and
+assigned an apartment with the freedmen. The bearer of the signet
+of Titus--now that it was ascertained that the signet had been
+really given to him by Caesar--was an important person, and was to
+be received with consideration, if not honour. When these changes
+had been made, John was again brought before Tibellus.</p>
+<p>"Is there anything else that I can do for your comfort, as one
+who has been honoured by Titus, himself, our future emperor? You
+have but to express your wishes, and I shall be glad to carry them
+out."</p>
+<p>"I would ask, then," John said, "that my friend and companion
+may be set free, and allowed to accompany me to Rome. He is my
+adopted brother. He has fought and slept by my side, for the last
+four years; and your bounty to me gives me no pleasure, so long as
+he is labouring as a slave."</p>
+<p>Tibellus at once sent for Philo, and ordered the collar to be
+filed from the neck of Jonas, and for him to be treated in the same
+manner as John.</p>
+<p>The next day Tibellus invited John to accompany him to the
+barracks and, as he would take no excuses, he was obliged to do
+so.</p>
+<p>Tibellus presented him to the general and his officers, who
+received him very cordially; and were much struck with his quiet
+demeanour, and the nobility of his bearing. John had, for four
+years, been accustomed to command; and the belief, entertained by
+his followers, in his special mission had had its effect upon his
+manner. Although simple and unassuming in mind; and always ready,
+on his return to the farm, to become again the simple worker upon
+his father's farm; he had yet, insensibly, acquired the bearing of
+one born to position and authority.</p>
+<p>He was much above the ordinary height; and although his figure
+was slight, it showed signs, which could well be appreciated by the
+Romans, of great activity and unusual strength. His face was
+handsome, his forehead lofty, his eyes large and soft; and in the
+extreme firmness of his mouth and his square chin and jaw were
+there, alone, signs of the determination and steadfastness which
+had made him so formidable a foe to the Romans.</p>
+<p>"So you are John of Gamala!" the general said. "We have,
+doubtless, nearly crossed swords, more than once. You have caused
+us many a sleepless night, and it seemed to us that you and your
+bands were ubiquitous. I am glad to meet you, as are we all. A
+Roman cherishes no malice against an honourable foe, and such we
+always found you; and I trust you have no malice for the past."</p>
+<p>"None," John said. "I regard you as the instruments of God for
+the punishment of my people. We brought our misfortunes upon
+ourselves, by the rebellion--which would have seemed madness had it
+not, doubtless, been the will of God that we should so provoke you,
+and perish. All I ask, now, is to return to my father's farm; and
+to resume my life there. If I could do that, without going to Rome,
+I would gladly do so."</p>
+<p>"That can hardly be," Tibellus said. "The rule is that when one
+appeals to Caesar, to Caesar he must go. The case is at once taken
+out of our hands. Besides, I should have to report the fact to
+Rome, and Titus may wish to see you, and might be ill pleased at
+hearing that you had returned to Galilee without going to see him.
+Besides, it may be some time before all animosity between the two
+peoples dies out there; and you might obtain from him an imperial
+order, which would prove a protection to yourself, and family,
+against any who might desire to molest you. If for this reason,
+alone, it would be well worth your while for you to proceed to
+Rome."</p>
+<p>Three days later, Tibellus told John that a ship would sail,
+next morning; and that a centurion, in charge of some invalided
+soldiers, would go in her.</p>
+<p>"I have arranged for you to go in his charge, and have
+instructed him to accompany you to the palace of Titus, and
+facilitate your having an interview with him. I have given him a
+letter to present to Titus, with greetings, saying why I have sent
+you to him.</p>
+<p>"Here is a purse of money, to pay for what you may require on
+the voyage; and to keep you, if need be, at Rome until you can see
+Titus, who may possibly be absent.</p>
+<p>"You owe me no thanks," he said, as John was about to speak.
+"Titus would be justly offended, were the bearer of his signet ring
+sent to him without due care and honour."</p>
+<p>That evening Tibellus gave a banquet, at which the general and
+several officers were present. The total number present was nine,
+including John and the host--this being the favourite number for
+what they regarded as small, private entertainments. At large
+banquets, hundreds of persons were frequently entertained. After
+the meal John, at the request of Tibellus, related to the officers
+the manner of his escapes from Jotapata and Jerusalem, and several
+of the incidents of the struggle in which he had taken part.</p>
+<p>The next morning, he and Jonas took their places on board the
+ship, and sailed for Rome. It was now far in November, and the
+passage was a boisterous one; and the size of the waves astonished
+John, accustomed, as he was, only to the short choppy seas of the
+Lake of Galilee. Jonas made up his mind that they were lost and,
+indeed, for some days the vessel was in imminent danger. Instead of
+passing through the straits between Sicily and the mainland of
+Italy, they were blown far to the west; and finally took shelter in
+the harbour of Caralis, in Sardinia. Here they remained for a week,
+to refit and repair damages, and then sailed across to Portus
+Augusti, and then up the Tiber.</p>
+<p>The centurion had done his best to make the voyage a pleasant
+one, to John and his companion. Having been informed that the
+former was the bearer of a signet ring of Titus, and would have an
+audience with him, he was anxious to create as good an impression
+as possible; but it was not until Caralis was reached that John
+recovered sufficiently from seasickness to take much interest in
+what was passing round him. The travellers were greatly struck with
+the quantity of shipping entering and leaving the mouth of the
+Tiber; the sea being dotted with the sails of the vessels bearing
+corn from Sardinia, Sicily, and Africa; and products of all kinds,
+from every port in the world.</p>
+<p>The sight of Rome impressed him less than he had expected. Of
+its vastness he could form no opinion; but in strength, and beauty,
+it appeared to him inferior to Jerusalem. When he landed, he saw
+how many were the stately palaces and temples; but of the former
+none were more magnificent than that of Herod. Nor was there one of
+the temples to be compared, for a moment, with that which had so
+lately stood, the wonder and admiration of the world, upon Mount
+Moriah.</p>
+<p>The centurion procured a commodious lodging for him and, finding
+that Titus was still in Rome, accompanied him the next day to the
+palace. Upon saying that he was the bearer of a letter to Titus,
+the centurion was shown into the inner apartments; John being left
+in the great antechamber, which was crowded with officers waiting
+to see Titus, when he came out--to receive orders, pay their
+respects, or present petitions to him.</p>
+<p>The centurion soon returned, and told John to follow him.</p>
+<p>"Titus was very pleased," he whispered, "when he read the letter
+I brought him; and begged me bring you, at once, to his
+presence."</p>
+<p>Titus was alone in a small chamber, whose simplicity contrasted
+strangely with the magnificence of those through which he had
+passed. He rose from a table at which he had been writing.</p>
+<p>"Ah, my good friend," he said, "I am truly glad to see you! I
+made sure that you were dead. You were not among those who came
+out, and gave themselves up, or among those who were captured when
+the city was taken; for I had careful inquiry made, thinking it
+possible that you might have lost my ring, and been unable to
+obtain access to me; then, at last, I made sure that you had
+fallen. I am truly glad to see that it is not so."</p>
+<p>"I was marvellously preserved, then, as at Jotapata," John said;
+"and escaped, after the Temple had fallen, by a secret passage
+leading out beyond the wall of circumvallation. As I made my way
+home, I fell into the hands of some slave dealers, who seized me
+and my companion--who is my adopted brother--and carried us away to
+Alexandria, where I was sold. As you had not yet returned to Rome,
+I thought it better not to produce your signet, which I had
+fortunately managed to conceal.</p>
+<p>"When I heard that you had reached Rome, and had received your
+triumph, I produced the ring to my master Tibellus; and prayed him
+to send me and my companion here to you, in order that I might ask
+for liberty, and leave to return to my home. He treated me with the
+greatest kindness and, but that I had appealed to you, would of
+himself have set us free. It is for this, alone, that I have come
+here; to ask you to confirm the freedom he has given me, and to
+permit me to return to Galilee. Further, if you will give me your
+order that I and mine may live peacefully, without molestation from
+any, it would add to your favours."</p>
+<p>"I will do these, certainly," Titus said, "and far more, if you
+will let me. I shall never forget that you saved my life; and
+believe me, I did my best to save the Temple, which was what I
+promised you. I did not say that I would save it, merely that I
+would do my best; but your obstinate countrymen insisted in
+bringing destruction upon it."</p>
+<p>"I know that you did all that was possible," John said, "and
+that the blame lies with them, and not with you, in any way.
+However, it was the will of God that it should be destroyed; and
+they were the instruments of his will, while they thought they were
+trying to preserve it."</p>
+<p>"But now," Titus said, "you must let me do more for you. Have
+you ambition? I will push you forward to high position, and
+dignity. Do you care for wealth? I have the treasures of Rome in my
+gift. Would you serve in the army? Many of the Alexandrian Jews had
+high rank in the army of Anthony. Two of Cleopatra's best generals
+were your countrymen. I know your bravery, and your military
+talents, and will gladly push you forward."</p>
+<p>"I thank you, Caesar, for your offers," John said, "which far
+exceed my deserts; but I would rather pass my life as a tiller of
+the soil, in Galilee. The very name of a Jew, at present, is
+hateful in the ear of a Roman. All men who succeed by the favour of
+a great prince are hated. I should be still more so, as a Jew. I
+should be hated by my own countrymen, as well as yours, for they
+would regard me as a traitor. There would be no happiness in such a
+life. A thousand times better a home by the Lake of Galilee, with a
+wife and children."</p>
+<p>"If such be your determination, I will say nought against it,"
+Titus said; "but remember, if at any time you tire of such a life,
+come to me and I will give you a post of high honour and dignity.
+There are glorious opportunities for talent and uprightness in our
+distant dependencies--east and west--where there will be no
+prejudices against the name of a Jew.</p>
+<p>"However, for the present let that be. Tomorrow I will have
+prepared for you an imperial order--to all Roman officers, civil
+and military, of Galilee and Judea--to treat you as the friend of
+Titus; also the appointment as procurator of the district lying
+north of the river Hieromax, up to the boundary of Chorazin, for a
+distance of ten miles back from the lake. You will not refuse that
+office, for it will enable you to protect your country people from
+oppression, and to bring prosperity upon the whole district.</p>
+<p>"Lastly, you will receive with the documents a sum of money. I
+know that you will not use it on yourself, but it will be long
+before the land recovers from its wounds. There will be terrible
+misery and distress; and I should like to think that in the
+district, at least, of my friend, there are peace and contentment.
+Less than this Caesar cannot give to the man who spared his
+life."</p>
+<p>John thanked Titus, most heartily, for his favours; which would,
+he saw, ensure his family and neighbours from the oppression and
+tyranny to which a conquered people are exposed, at the hands of a
+rough soldiery. Titus ordered an apartment to be prepared for him,
+in the palace; and begged him to take up his abode there, until a
+vessel should be sailing for Casarea. Slaves were told off to
+attend upon him, and to escort him in the city; and everything was
+done to show the esteem and friendship in which Titus held him.
+Titus had several interviews with him; and learned now, for the
+first time, that he was the John of Gamala who had so long and
+stoutly opposed the Romans.</p>
+<p>"If I had known that," Titus said, with a smile, "when you were
+in my hands, I do not think I should have let you go free; though
+your captivity would have been an honourable one. When you said
+that you would not promise to desist from opposing our arms, I
+thought that one man, more or less, in the ranks of the enemy would
+make little difference; but had I known that it was the redoubtable
+John of Gamala who was in my hands, I should hardly have thought
+myself justified in letting you go free."</p>
+<p>John, at the request of Titus, gave him a sketch of the
+incidents of his life, and of the campaign.</p>
+<p>"So you have already a lady love," Titus said, when he had
+finished. "What shall I send her?</p>
+<p>"Better nothing, at present," he said, after a moment's thought
+and a smile, "beyond yourself. That will be the best and most
+acceptable gift I could send her. Time, and your good report, may
+soften the feelings with which doubtless she, like all the rest of
+your countrywomen, must regard me; though the gods know I would
+gladly have spared Galilee, and Judea, from the ruin which has
+fallen upon them."</p>
+<p>In addition to the two documents which he had promised him,
+Titus thoughtfully gave him another, intended for the perusal of
+his own countrymen only. It was in the form of a letter, saying to
+John that he had appointed him procurator of the strip of territory
+bordering the Lake of Galilee on the east, not from any submission
+on his part, still less at his request; but solely as a proof of
+his admiration for the stubborn and determined manner in which he
+had fought throughout the war, the absence of any cruelty practised
+upon Romans who fell into his hands, of his esteem for his
+character, and as a remembrance of the occasion when they two had
+fought, hand to hand, alone in the valley going down from
+Hebron.</p>
+<p>The gold was sent directly on board a ship. It was in a box,
+which required four strong men to lift. A centurion, with twenty
+men, was put on board the ship; with orders to land with John at
+Casarea, and to escort him to his own home, or as near as he might
+choose to take them. Titus took a cordial leave of him, and
+expressed a hope that John would, some day, change his mind and
+accept his offer of a post; and that, at any rate, he hoped that he
+would, from time to time, come to Rome to see him.</p>
+<p>The voyage to Caesarea was performed without accident.</p>
+<p>"I shall look back at our visit to Rome as a dream," Jonas said,
+one evening, as they sat together on the deck of the ship. "To
+think that I, the goatherd of Jotapata, should have been living in
+the palace of Caesar, at Rome; with you, the friend of Titus,
+himself! It seems marvellous; but I am weary of the crowded
+streets, of the noise, and bustle, and wealth and colour. I long to
+get rid of this dress, in which I feel as if I were acting a part
+in a play.</p>
+<p>"Do not you, John?"</p>
+<p>"I do, indeed," John replied. "I should never accustom myself to
+such a life as that. I am longing for a sight of the lake, and my
+dear home; and of those I love, who must be mourning for me, as
+dead."</p>
+<p>At Caesarea, a vehicle was procured for the carriage of the
+chest, and the party then journeyed until they were within sight of
+Tarichea. John then dismissed his escort, with thanks for their
+attention during the journey, and begged them to go on to the city
+by themselves. When they were out of sight, he and Jonas took off
+their Roman garments, and put on others they had purchased at
+Caesarea, similar to those they were accustomed to wear at home.
+Then they proceeded, with the cart and its driver, into Tarichea;
+and hired a boat to take them up the lake. The boatmen were
+astonished at the weight of John's chest, and thought that it must
+contain lead, for making into missiles for slingers.</p>
+<p>It was evening when the boat approached the well-known spot, and
+John and his companion sprang out on the beach.</p>
+<p>"What shall we do with the chest?" one of the boatmen asked.</p>
+<p>"We will carry it to that clump of bushes, and pitch it in among
+them, until we want it. None will run off with it, and they
+certainly would not find it easy to break it open."</p>
+<p>This reply confirmed the men in their idea that it could contain
+nothing of value and, after helping John and Jonas to carry the
+chest to the point indicated, they returned to their boat and rowed
+away down the lake.</p>
+<p>"Now, Jonas, we must be careful," John said, "how we approach
+the house. It would give them a terrible shock, if I came upon them
+suddenly. I think you had better go up alone, and see Isaac, and
+bring him to me; then we can talk over the best way of breaking it
+to the others."</p>
+<p>It was nearly an hour before Jonas brought Isaac down to the
+spot where John was standing, a hundred yards away from the house;
+for he had to wait some time before he could find an opportunity of
+speaking to him. Jonas had but just broken the news, that John was
+at hand, when they reached the spot where he was standing.</p>
+<p>"Is it indeed you, my dear young master?" the old man said,
+falling on John's neck. "This is unlooked-for joy, indeed. The Lord
+be praised for his mercies! What will your parents say, they who
+have wept for you for months, as dead?"</p>
+<p>"They are well, I hope, Isaac?"</p>
+<p>"They are shaken, greatly shaken," old Isaac said. "The tempest
+has passed over them; the destruction of Jerusalem, the woes of our
+people, and your loss have smitten them to the ground but, now that
+you have returned, it will give them new life."</p>
+<p>"And Mary, she is well, I hope, too?" John asked.</p>
+<p>"The maiden is not ill, though I cannot say that she is well,"
+Isaac said. "Long after your father and mother, and all of us, had
+given up hope, she refused to believe that you were dead; even when
+the others put on mourning, she would not do so--but of late I know
+that, though she has never said so, hope has died in her, too. Her
+cheeks have grown pale, and her eyes heavy; but she still keeps up,
+for the sake of your parents; and we often look, and wonder how she
+can bear herself so bravely."</p>
+<p>"And how are we to break it to the old people?" John asked.</p>
+<p>Isaac shook his head. The matter was beyond him.</p>
+<p>"I should think," Jonas suggested, "that Isaac should go back,
+and break it to them, first, that I have returned; that I have been
+a slave among the Romans, and have escaped from them. He might say
+that he has questioned me, and that I said that you certainly did
+not fall at the siege of Jerusalem; and that I believe that you,
+like me, were sold as a slave by the Romans.</p>
+<p>"Then you can take me in, and let them question me. I will stick
+to that story, for a time, raising some hopes in their breasts;
+till at last I can signify to Mary that you are alive, and leave it
+to her to break it to the others."</p>
+<p>"That will be the best way, by far," John said. "Yes, that will
+do excellently well.</p>
+<p>"Now, Isaac, do you go on, and do your part. Tell them gently
+that Jonas has returned, that he has been a slave, and escaped from
+the Romans; and that, as far as he knows, I am yet alive. Then,
+when they are prepared, bring him in, and let him answer their
+questions."</p>
+<p>The evening meal had been ended before Isaac had left the room
+to feed, with some warm milk, a kid whose dam had died. It was
+while he was engaged upon this duty that Jonas had come upon him.
+When he entered the room Simon was sitting, with the open Bible
+before him, at the head of the table; waiting his return to
+commence the evening prayers.</p>
+<p>"What has detained you, Isaac?" he asked. "Surely it is not
+after all these years you would forget our evening prayers?"</p>
+<p>"I was detained," the old man said, unsteadily and, at the sound
+of his voice, and the sight of his face, as it came within the
+circle of the light from the lamp, Mary rose suddenly to her feet,
+and stood looking at him.</p>
+<p>"What is it?" she asked, in a low voice.</p>
+<p>"Why," Simon asked calmly, "what has detained you, Isaac?"</p>
+<p>"A strange thing has happened," the old man said. "One of our
+wanderers has returned--not he whom we have hoped and prayed for
+most--but Jonas. He has been a slave, but has escaped, and come
+back to us."</p>
+<p>"And what is his news?" Simon asked, rising to his feet; but
+even more imperative was the unspoken question on Mary's white
+face, and parted lips.</p>
+<p>"He gives us hope," Isaac said to her. "So far as he knows, John
+may yet be alive."</p>
+<p>"I knew it, I knew it!" Mary said, in a voice scarcely above a
+whisper.</p>
+<p>"O Lord, I thank thee. Why have I doubted Thy mercy?"</p>
+<p>And she stood, for a moment, with head thrown back and eyes
+upraised; then she swayed suddenly, and would have fallen, had not
+Isaac run forward and supported her until, at Martha's cry, two of
+the maids hastened up and placed her on a seat.</p>
+<p>Some water was held to her lips. She drank a little, and then
+said, faintly, "Tell us more, Isaac."</p>
+<p>"I have not much more to tell," he replied. "Jonas says that
+John certainly did not fall in Jerusalem--as, indeed, we were told
+by the young man of his band who returned--and that he believes
+that, like himself, he was sold as a slave.</p>
+<p>"But Jonas is outside. I thought it better to tell you, first.
+Now, I will call him in to speak for himself."</p>
+<p>When Jonas entered, Martha and Mary were clasped in each other's
+arms. Miriam, with the tears streaming down her cheeks, was
+repeating aloud one of the Psalms of thanksgiving; while Simon
+stood with head bent low, and his hands grasping the table, upon
+which the tears were raining down in heavy drops.</p>
+<p>It was some little time before they could question Jonas
+further. Martha and Mary had embraced him as if he had been the son
+of one, the brother of the other. Simon solemnly blessed him, and
+welcomed him as one from the dead. Then they gathered round to hear
+his story.</p>
+<p>"John and I both escaped all the dangers of the siege," he said.
+"We were wounded several times, but never seriously. God seemed to
+watch over us; and although at the last, of the six hundred men
+with which we entered Jerusalem there were but twelve who remained
+alive, we were among them."</p>
+<p>"Yes, yes, we knew that," Martha said. "News was brought by a
+young man of his band, who belonged to a village on the lake, that
+twelve of you had escaped together on the day the Temple fell. The
+others all returned to their homes, but no news ever came of you;
+and they said that some party of Romans must have killed you--what
+else could have befallen you? And now we are in February--nearly
+six months have passed--and no word of you!"</p>
+<p>"We were carried off as slaves," Jonas said, "and taken, like
+Joseph, to be sold in Egypt."</p>
+<p>"And have you seen him, since?" Simon asked.</p>
+<p>"Yes, I saw him in Egypt."</p>
+<p>"And he was well then?"</p>
+<p>"Quite well," Jonas replied. "I was sent to Rome, and thence
+managed to make my way back by ship."</p>
+<p>"We must purchase him back," Simon said. "Surely that must be
+possible! I have money, still. I will make the journey, myself, and
+buy him."</p>
+<p>And he rose to his feet, as if to start at once.</p>
+<p>"Well, not now," he went on, in answer to the hand which Martha
+laid on his shoulder, "but tomorrow."</p>
+<p>While he was speaking, Mary had touched Jonas, gazing into his
+face with the same eager question her eyes had asked Isaac. The
+thought that Jonas was not alone had flashed across her. He nodded
+slightly, and looked towards the door. In a moment she was
+gone.</p>
+<p>"John!" she cried, as she ran out of the house; at first in a
+low tone, but louder and louder as she ran on. "John! John! Where
+are you?"</p>
+<p>A figure stepped out from among the trees, and Mary fell into
+his arms. A few minutes later, she re-entered the room.</p>
+<p>"Father," she said, going up to Simon, while she took Martha's
+hand in hers, "do you remember you told me, once, that when you
+were a young man you went to hear the preaching of a teacher of the
+sect of the Essenes, whom they afterwards slew. You thought he was
+a good man, and a great teacher; and you said he told a parable,
+and you remembered the very words. I think I remember them,
+now:</p>
+<p>"'And his father saw him, and ran and fell on his neck, and
+kissed him, and said, "Let us be merry, for this my son was dead,
+and is alive again; he was lost and is found."'</p>
+<p>"And so, father, is it even unto us."</p>
+<a id="PicJ" name="PicJ"></a>
+<center><img src="images/j.jpg" alt=
+"Illustration: The Return of John to his House on the Lake." /></center>
+<p>Martha gave a loud cry, and turned to the door and, in another
+moment, was clasped in John's arms. Then his father fell on his
+neck.</p>
+<p>There was no happier household in the land than that which
+joined in the Psalms of thanksgiving that night. The news spread
+quickly to the fishermen's cottages, and the neighbours flocked in
+to congratulate Simon and Martha on the return of their son; and it
+was long since the strains of the songs of joy had floated out so
+clear and strong over the water of Galilee for, for years, strains
+of lamentation and humiliation, alone, had been on the lips of the
+Jewish maidens.</p>
+<p>After the service of song was over, Miriam and the maids loaded
+the table, while Isaac fetched a skin of the oldest wine from the
+cellar, and all who had assembled were invited to join the
+feast.</p>
+<p>When the neighbours had retired, John asked his father and Isaac
+to come down with him, and Jonas, to the side of the lake, to bring
+up a chest that was lying there.</p>
+<p>"It is rather too heavy for Jonas and me to carry, alone."</p>
+<p>"It would have been better, my son, to have asked some of our
+neighbours. They would gladly have assisted you, and Isaac and I
+have not, between us, the strength of one man."</p>
+<p>"I know it, father, but I do not wish that any, besides
+ourselves, should know that the box is here. We will take a pole
+and a rope with us, and can adjust the weight so that your portion
+shall not be beyond your strength."</p>
+<p>On arriving at the spot, Simon was surprised at seeing a small
+box, which it would be thought a woman could have lifted, with
+ease.</p>
+<p>"Is this the box of which you spoke, John? Surely you want no
+aid to carry this up?"</p>
+<p>"We do, indeed, father, as you will see."</p>
+<p>With the assistance of Jonas, John put the rope round the box,
+and slung it to the pole near one end. He and Jonas then took this
+end. Simon and Isaac lifted that farthest from the box, so that but
+a small share of the weight rested upon them. So the chest was
+carried up to the house.</p>
+<p>"What is this you have brought home?" Martha asked, as they laid
+the box down in the principal room.</p>
+<p>"It is gold, mother--gold to be used for the relief of the poor
+and distressed, for those who have been made homeless and
+fatherless in this war. It was a gift to me, as I will tell you,
+tomorrow; but I need not say that I would not touch one penny of
+it, for it is Roman gold. But it will place it in our power to do
+immense good, among the poor. We had best bury it, just beneath the
+floor, so that we can readily get at it when we have need."</p>
+<p>"It is a great responsibility, my son," Simon said; "but truly,
+there are thousands of homeless and starving families who sought
+refuge among the hills, when their towns and villages were
+destroyed by the Romans and, with this store of gold, which must be
+of great value, truly great things can be done towards relieving
+their necessities."</p>
+<p>The next morning, John related to his family the various
+incidents which had befallen him and Jonas since they had last
+parted; and their surprise was unbounded, when he produced the
+three documents with which he had been furnished by Titus. The
+letters, saying that the favour of Caesar had been bestowed upon
+John as a token of admiration, only, for the bravery with which he
+had fought, and ordering that all Romans should treat him as one
+having the favour and friendship of Titus, gave them unbounded
+satisfaction. That appointing him procurator of the whole district
+bordering the lake to the east surprised, and almost bewildered
+them.</p>
+<p>"But what are you going to do, my son? Are you going to leave
+us, and live in a palace, and appear as a Roman officer?"</p>
+<p>"I am not thinking of doing that, father," John said, with a
+smile. "For myself I would much rather that this dignity had not
+been conferred on me by Titus; and I would gladly put this
+commission, with its imperial seal, into the fire. But I feel that
+I cannot do this, for it gives me great power of doing good to our
+neighbours. I shall be able to protect them from all oppression by
+Roman soldiers, or by tax gatherers. There is no occasion for me to
+live in a palace, or to wear the garments of a Roman official. The
+letter of Titus shows that it is to a Jew that he has given this
+power, and as a Jew I shall use it.</p>
+<p>"While journeying here from Rome, I have thought much over the
+matter. At first, I thought of suppressing the order. Then, I felt
+that a power of good had been given into my hands; and that I had
+no right, from selfish reasons, to shrink from its execution.
+Doubtless, at first I shall be misunderstood. They will say that I,
+like Josephus, have turned traitor, and have gone over to the
+Romans. Even were it so, I should have done no more than all the
+people of Tiberias, Sepphoris, and other cities which submitted to
+them.</p>
+<p>"But I do not think this feeling will last long. All those who
+fought with me outside Jerusalem, against the Romans, know that I
+was faithful to the cause of my country. The few survivors of the
+band I led into Jerusalem can testify that I fought until the
+Temple fell, and that I escaped by my own devices, and not from any
+agreement with the Romans.</p>
+<p>"Moreover they will, in time, judge me by my acts. I shall rule,
+as I said, as a Jew, and not as a Roman--rule as did the judges in
+the old times, sitting under my own fig tree, here, and listening
+to the complaints that may be brought to me--and I trust that
+wisdom will be given to me, by the Lord, to judge wisely and justly
+among them."</p>
+<p>"You have decided well, my son," Simon said. "May God's blessing
+be upon you!</p>
+<p>"What think you, little Mary? How do you like the prospect of
+being the wife of the ruler of this district?"</p>
+<p>"I would rather that he had been the ruler only of this farm,"
+Mary said, "but I see that a great power of good has been given
+into his hands, and it is not for me to complain."</p>
+<p>"That reminds me," Simon said, "of what Martha and I were
+speaking together, last night. You have both waited long. There is
+no occasion for longer tarrying. The marriage feast will be
+prepared, and we will summon our neighbours and friends to assemble
+here, this day week.</p>
+<p>"And now, John, what are you going to do?"</p>
+<p>"I am going, father, at once to Hippos, the chief town in the
+district. I shall see the authorities of the town, and the captain
+of the Roman garrison, and lay before them the commission of
+Caesar. I shall then issue a proclamation, announcing to all people
+within the limits of the district that have been marked out that I
+have authority, from Rome, to judge all matters that may come
+before me, in the district; and that all who have causes of
+complaint, or who have been wronged by any, will find me here,
+ready to hear their cause, and to order justice to be rendered to
+them. I shall also say that I shall shortly make a tour through the
+district, to see for myself into the condition of things, and to
+give aid to such as need it."</p>
+<p>Great was the surprise of the Roman and Jewish authorities, in
+Hippos, when John produced the imperial commission. There was,
+however, no doubting or disputing it. The Roman officers at once
+placed themselves under his orders, and issued proclamations of
+their own, in addition to that of John, notifying the fact to all
+the inhabitants of the district.</p>
+<p>Among the Jewish authorities there was, at first, some feeling
+of jealousy that this young man should be placed over them; but
+they felt, nevertheless, the great benefits that would arise from
+the protection which one of their own countrymen, high in the
+favour of Titus, would be able to afford them. When showing his
+commission, John had also produced the letter of Titus, giving his
+reasons for the nomination; and indeed, the younger men in the
+district, many of whom had followed John in his first
+campaigns--and who had hitherto, in accordance with the oath of
+secrecy taken on enrollment, concealed their knowledge that John of
+Gamala was the son of Simon--now proclaimed the fact, and hailed
+his appointment with joy.</p>
+<p>On the appointed day, the marriage of John and Mary took place
+and, as the news had spread through the country, a vast gathering
+assembled, and it was made the occasion of a public demonstration.
+The preparations which Martha and Mary had made for the feast,
+ample as they had been, would have availed but little among such a
+multitude; but Isaac and the menservants drove in and slaughtered
+several cattle and, as those who came for the most part bore
+presents of wine, oil, bread, goats, and other articles, and the
+neighbours lent their assistance in preparing a feast at the great
+fires which were lighted along the shore, while Simon contributed
+all the contents of his wine store, the feast proved ample for all
+assembled.</p>
+<p>John and his wife moved among the throng, receiving
+congratulations and good wishes; Mary blushing, and tearful with
+happiness and pride in the honour paid to John; John himself
+radiant with pleasure, and with satisfaction at the thought of the
+good which the power, so strangely conferred upon him, would enable
+him to effect for his neighbours.</p>
+<p>After that, things went on in their ordinary routine at the
+farm; save that John was frequently away visiting among the
+villages of the district, which was some thirty miles long by ten
+wide. The northern portion was thinly inhabited; but in the south
+the villages were thick, and the people had suffered greatly from
+the excursions of the Roman foragers, at the time of the siege of
+Gamala. Many of the villages had been rebuilt, since that time; but
+there was still great distress, heightened by the number of
+fugitives from the other side of Jordan.</p>
+<p>The aid which John gave enabled most of the fugitives in his
+district to return to their distant villages, and to rebuild their
+homes, where there was now little fear of their being again
+disturbed. The distress in his own district was also relieved. In
+some cases money was given, in others lent, to enable the
+cultivators to till their fields, to replant vineyards, and to
+purchase flocks so that, in the course of a year, the whole
+district was restored to its normal appearance, and the signs of
+the destructive war were almost entirely effaced.</p>
+<p>Then John was able to settle down in his quiet home. In the
+morning he worked with his father. In the afternoon he listened to
+the complaints, or petitions, of those who came before him;
+settling disputes between neighbours, hearing the stories of those
+who considered that they were too hardly pressed upon by the tax
+collector, and doing justice to those who were wronged.</p>
+<p>Soon after he married, mindful of the doctrines he had heard
+during his visit among the community of Nazarites by the Dead Sea,
+John made inquiries and found that many of the sect, who had left
+the land when the troubles with the Romans commenced, had now
+returned; and were preaching their doctrines more openly than
+before, now that those of the ancient religion could no longer
+persecute them. At Tiberias a considerable community of the sect
+soon established themselves; and John, going over, persuaded one of
+their teachers to take up his abode with him, for a time, and to
+expound their doctrines to him and his family. He was astonished at
+the spirit of love, charity, and goodwill which animated the
+teaching of the Christians--still more at the divine spirit that
+breathed in the utterances and animated the life of their
+Master.</p>
+<p>The central idea, that God was the God of the whole world--and
+not, as the Jews had hitherto supposed, a special Deity of their
+own--struck John particularly, and explained many things which had,
+hitherto, been difficult for him to understand. It would have been
+galling to admit as much, in the days of Jewish pride and
+stubbornness; but their spirit was broken, now; and John could
+understand that although, as long as the nation had believed in him
+and served him, God had taken a peculiar interest in them, and had
+revealed to them much of his nature and attributes--while the rest
+of the world had had been left to worship false gods--He yet loved
+all the world, and was now about to extend to all men that
+knowledge of him hitherto confined to the Jews. Above all, John saw
+how vastly higher was the idea of God, as revealed in the new
+teaching, than that which the Jews had hitherto entertained
+regarding him.</p>
+<p>A month after the arrival of the teacher, John and Mary were
+baptized into the new faith; and a few months later Simon and
+Martha, who had been harder to convince, also became converts.</p>
+<p>When Titus was raised to the imperial throne, John, in
+compliance with the request he had made him, journeyed to Rome, and
+remained there for a short time as his guest. Titus received him
+with affection.</p>
+<p>"I shall not try to tempt you with fresh offers of honours," he
+said, "though I regret that you should refuse to accept a sphere of
+wider usefulness. From time to time, I have heard of you from the
+reports of my governors; who say that the district under your
+charge is the most prosperous and contented in all Palestine, that
+there is neither dispute nor litigation there, that there are no
+poor, that the taxes are collected without difficulty; and that,
+save only that you do not keep up the state and dignity which a
+Roman official should occupy, you are in all respects a model
+ruler."</p>
+<p>"I have every reason to be thankful," John said. "I have been
+blessed in every way. My parents still survive. I am happy with my
+wife and children. Your bounty has enabled me to bind up the
+wounds, and relieve the distress caused by the war. My mind has
+been opened to heavenly teaching, and I try humbly to follow in the
+steps of that divine teacher, Jesus of Nazareth."</p>
+<p>"Ah, you have come to believe in him!" Titus said. "There are
+many of his creed, here in Rome, and they say that they are even on
+the increase. I would gladly hear, from you, something of him. I
+have heard somewhat of him from Josephus, who for three years dwelt
+among the Essenes, and who has spoken to me very highly of the
+purity of life, the enlightenment, and religious fervour of that
+sect--to which, I believe, he himself secretly inclines; although,
+from the desire not to offend his countrymen, he makes no open
+confession of his faith."</p>
+<p>John, before he left, explained to the emperor the teachings of
+his Master; and it may be that the wisdom, humanity, and mildness
+which Titus displayed, in the course of his reign, was in no small
+degree the result of the lessons which he learned from John.</p>
+<p>The latter came no more to Rome but, to the end of his life,
+dwelt on the shore of Galilee, wisely governing his little district
+after the manner of the judges of old.</p>
+<p>Jonas never left his friend. He married the daughter of one of
+the fishermen, and lived in a small house which Simon built for
+him, close to his own. At the death of the latter, he became John's
+right hand on the farm; and remained his friend, and brother, to
+the end.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of For the Temple, by G. A. Henty
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of For the Temple, by G. A. Henty
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: For the Temple
+ A Tale of the Fall of Jerusalem
+
+Author: G. A. Henty
+
+Release Date: May 26, 2007 [EBook #21614]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOR THE TEMPLE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Martin Robb.
+
+
+
+
+For the Temple:
+A Tale of the Fall of Jerusalem
+By G. A. Henty.
+
+Contents
+
+Preface.
+Chapter 1: The Lake Of Tiberias.
+Chapter 2: A Storm On Galilee.
+Chapter 3: The Revolt Against Rome.
+Chapter 4: The Lull Before The Storm.
+Chapter 5: The Siege Of Jotapata.
+Chapter 6: The Fall Of The City.
+Chapter 7: The Massacre On The Lake.
+Chapter 8: Among The Mountains.
+Chapter 9: The Storming Of Gamala.
+Chapter 10: Captives.
+Chapter 11: A Tale Of Civil Strife.
+Chapter 12: Desultory Fighting.
+Chapter 13: The Test Of Devotion.
+Chapter 14: Jerusalem.
+Chapter 15: The Siege Is Begun.
+Chapter 16: The Subterranean Passage.
+Chapter 17: The Capture Of The Temple.
+Chapter 18: Slaves.
+Chapter 19: At Rome.
+
+Illustrations
+
+On the Sea of Galilee.
+Heightening the Walls of Jotapata under Shelter of Ox Hides.
+John Incites his Countrymen to Harass the Romans.
+The Roman Camp Surprised and Set on Fire.
+Mary and the Hebrew Women in the Hands of the Romans.
+Titus Brings Josephus to See John.
+John and his Band in Sight of Jerusalem.
+Misery in Jerusalem During the Siege by Titus.
+'Lesbia,' the Roman said, 'I have brought you two more slaves.'
+The Return of John to his House on the Lake.
+
+
+
+Preface.
+
+
+In all history, there is no drama of more terrible interest than
+that which terminated with the total destruction of Jerusalem. Had
+the whole Jewish nation joined in the desperate resistance made, by
+a section of it, to the overwhelming strength of Rome, the world
+would have had no record of truer patriotism than that displayed,
+by this small people, in their resistance to the forces of the
+mistress of the world.
+
+Unhappily, the reverse of this was the case. Except in the defense
+of Jotapata and Gamala, it can scarcely be said that the Jewish
+people, as a body, offered any serious resistance to the arms of
+Rome. The defenders of Jerusalem were a mere fraction of its
+population--a fraction composed almost entirely of turbulent
+characters and robber bands, who fought with the fury of
+desperation; after having placed themselves beyond the pale of
+forgiveness, or mercy, by the deeds of unutterable cruelty with
+which they had desolated the city, before its siege by the Romans.
+They fought, it is true, with unflinching courage--a courage never
+surpassed in history--but it was the courage of despair; and its
+result was to bring destruction upon the whole population, as well
+as upon themselves.
+
+Fortunately the narrative of Josephus, an eyewitness of the events
+which he describes, has come down to us; and it is the storehouse
+from which all subsequent histories of the events have been drawn.
+It is, no doubt, tinged throughout by his desire to stand well with
+his patrons, Vespasian and Titus; but there is no reason to doubt
+the accuracy of his descriptions. I have endeavored to present you
+with as vivid a picture as possible of the events of the war,
+without encumbering the story with details and, except as regards
+the exploits of John of Gamala, of whom Josephus says nothing, have
+strictly followed, in every particular, the narrative of the
+historian.
+
+G. A. Henty.
+
+
+
+Chapter 1: The Lake Of Tiberias.
+
+
+"Dreaming, John, as usual? I never saw such a boy. You are always
+in extremes; either tiring yourself out, or lying half asleep."
+
+"I was not half asleep, mother. I was looking at the lake."
+
+"I cannot see much to look at, John. It's just as it has been ever
+since you were born, or since I was born."
+
+"No, I suppose there's no change, mother; but I am never tired of
+looking at the sun shining on the ripples, and the fishermen's
+boats, and the birds standing in the shallows or flying off, in a
+desperate hurry, without any reason that I can make out. Besides,
+mother, when one is looking at the lake, one is thinking of other
+things."
+
+"And very often thinking of nothing at all, my son."
+
+"Perhaps so, mother; but there's plenty to think of, in these
+times."
+
+"Plenty, John; there are baskets and baskets of figs to be stripped
+from the trees, and hung up to dry for the winter and, next week,
+we are going to begin the grape harvest. But the figs are the
+principal matter, at present; and I think that it would be far more
+useful for you to go and help old Isaac and his son, in getting
+them in, than in lying there watching the lake."
+
+"I suppose it would, mother," the lad said, rising briskly; for his
+fits of indolence were by no means common and, as a rule, he was
+ready to assist at any work which might be going on.
+
+"I do not wonder at John loving the lake," his mother said to
+herself, when the lad had hurried away. "It is a fair scene; and it
+may be, as Simon thinks, that a change may come over it, before
+long, and that ruin and desolation may fall upon us all."
+
+There were, indeed, few scenes which could surpass in tranquil
+beauty that which Martha, the wife of Simon, was looking upon--the
+sheet of sparkling water, with its low shores dotted with towns and
+villages. Down the lake, on the opposite shore, rose the walls and
+citadel of Tiberias, with many stately buildings; for although
+Tiberias was not, now, the chief town of Galilee--for Sepphoris had
+usurped its place--it had been the seat of the Roman authority, and
+the kings who ruled the country for Rome generally dwelt there.
+Half a mile from the spot where Martha was standing rose the
+newly-erected walls of Hippos.
+
+Where the towns and villages did not engross the shore, the rich
+orchards and vineyards extended down to the very edge of the water.
+The plain of Galilee was a veritable garden. Here flourished, in
+the greatest abundance, the vine and the fig; while the low hills
+were covered with olive groves, and the corn waved thickly on the
+rich, fat land. No region on the earth's face possessed a fairer
+climate. The heat was never extreme; the winds blowing from the
+Great Sea brought the needed moisture for the vegetation; and so
+soft and equable was the air that, for ten months in the year,
+grapes and figs could be gathered.
+
+The population, supported by the abundant fruits of the earth, was
+very large. Villages--which would elsewhere be called towns, for
+those containing but a few thousand inhabitants were regarded as
+small, indeed--were scattered thickly over the plain; and few areas
+of equal dimensions could show a population approaching that which
+inhabited the plains and slopes between the Sea of Galilee and the
+Mediterranean. None could then have dreamed of the dangers that
+were to come, or believed that this rich cultivation and teeming
+population would disappear; and that, in time, a few flocks of
+wandering sheep would scarce be able to find herbage growing, on
+the wastes of land which would take the place of this fertile soil.
+
+Certainly no such thought as this occurred to Martha, as she
+re-entered the house; though she did fear that trouble, and ruin,
+might be approaching.
+
+John was soon at work among the fig trees, aiding Isaac and his son
+Reuben--a lad of some fifteen years--to pick the soft, luscious
+fruit, and carry it to the little courtyard, shaded from the rays
+of the sun by an overhead trellis work, covered with vines and
+almost bending beneath the purple bunches of grapes. Miriam--the
+old nurse--and four or five maid servants, under the eye of Martha,
+tied them in rows on strings, and fastened them to pegs driven into
+that side of the house upon which the sun beat down most hotly. It
+was only the best fruit that was so served; for that which had been
+damaged in the picking, and all of smaller size, were laid on trays
+in the sun. The girls chatted merrily as they worked; for Martha,
+although a good housewife, was a gentle mistress and, so long as
+fingers were busy, heeded not if the tongue ran on.
+
+"Let the damsels be happy, while they may," she would say, if
+Miriam scolded a little when the laughter rose louder than usual.
+"Let them be happy, while they can; who knows what lies in the
+future?"
+
+But at present, the future cast no shade upon the group; nor upon a
+girl of about fourteen years old, who danced in and out of the
+courtyard in the highest spirits, now stopping a few minutes to
+string the figs, then scampering away with an empty basket which,
+when she reached the gatherers, she placed on her head and
+supported demurely, for a little while, at the foot of the ladder
+upon which John was perched--so that he could lay the figs in it
+without bruising them. But, long ere the basket was filled she
+would tire of the work and, setting it on the ground, run back into
+the house.
+
+"And so you think you are helping, Mary," John said, laughing, when
+the girl returned for the fourth time, with an empty basket.
+
+"Helping, John! Of course I am--ever so much. Helping you, and
+helping them at the house, and carrying empty baskets. I consider
+myself the most active of the party."
+
+"Active, certainly, Mary! but if you do not help them, in stringing
+and hanging the figs, more than you help me, I think you might as
+well leave it alone."
+
+"Fie, John! That is most ungrateful, after my standing here like a
+statue, with the basket on my head, ready for you to lay the figs
+in."
+
+"That is all very fine!" John laughed; "but before the basket is
+half full, away you go; and I have to get down the ladder, and
+bring up the basket and fix it firmly, and that without shaking the
+figs; whereas, had you left it alone, altogether, I could have
+brought up the empty basket and fixed it close by my hand, without
+any trouble at all."
+
+"You are an ungrateful boy, and you know how bad it is to be
+ungrateful! And after my making myself so hot, too!" Miriam said.
+"My face is as red as fire, and that is all the thanks I get. Very
+well, then, I shall go into the house, and leave you to your own
+bad reflections."
+
+"You need not do that, Mary. You can sit down in the shade there,
+and watch us at work; and eat figs, and get yourself cool, all at
+the same time. The sun will be down in another half hour, and then
+I shall be free to amuse you."
+
+"Amuse me, indeed!" the girl said indignantly, as she sat down on
+the bank to which John had pointed. "You mean that I shall amuse
+you; that is what it generally comes to. If it wasn't for me I am
+sure, very often, there would not be a word said when we are out
+together."
+
+"Perhaps that is true," John agreed; "but you see, there is so much
+to think about."
+
+"And so you choose the time when you are with me to think! Thank
+you, John! You had better think, at present," and, rising from the
+seat she had just taken, she walked back to the house again,
+regardless of John's explanations and shouts.
+
+Old Isaac chuckled, on his tree close by.
+
+"They are ever too sharp for us, in words, John. The damsel is
+younger than you, by full two years; and yet she can always put you
+in the wrong, with her tongue."
+
+"She puts meanings to my words which I never thought of," John
+said, "and is angered, or pretends to be--for I never know which it
+is--at things which she has coined out of her own mind, for they
+had no place in mine."
+
+"Boys' wits are always slower than girls'," the old man said. "A
+girl has more fancy, in her little finger, than a boy in his whole
+body. Your cousin laughs at you, because she sees that you take it
+all seriously; and wonders, in her mind, how it is her thoughts run
+ahead of yours. But I love the damsel, and so do all in the house
+for, if she be a little wayward at times, she is bright and loving,
+and has cheered the house since she came here.
+
+"Your father is not a man of many words; and Martha, as becomes her
+age, is staid and quiet, though she is no enemy of mirth and
+cheerfulness; but the loss of all her children, save you, has
+saddened her, and I think she must often have pined that she had
+not a girl; and she has brightened much since the damsel came here,
+three years ago.
+
+"But the sun is sinking, and my basket is full. There will be
+enough for the maids to go on with, in the morning, until we can
+supply them with more."
+
+John's basket was not full, but he was well content to stop and,
+descending their ladders, the three returned to the house.
+
+Simon of Gadez--for that was the name of his farm, and the little
+fishing village close by, on the shore--was a prosperous and
+well-to-do man. His land, like that of all around him, had come
+down from father to son, through long generations; for the law by
+which all mortgages were cleared off, every seven years, prevented
+those who might be disposed to idleness and extravagance from
+ruining themselves, and their children. Every man dwelt upon the
+land which, as eldest son, he had inherited; while the younger
+sons, taking their smaller share, would settle in the towns or
+villages and become traders, or fishermen, according to their bent
+and means.
+
+There were poor in Palestine--for there will be poor, everywhere,
+so long as human nature remains as it is; and some men are idle and
+self indulgent, while others are industrious and thrifty--but,
+taking it as a whole there were, thanks to the wise provisions of
+their laws, no people on the face of the earth so generally
+comfortable, and well to do. They grumbled, of course, over the
+exactions of the tax collectors--exactions due, not to the
+contribution which was paid by the province to imperial Rome, but
+to the luxury and extravagance of their kings, and to the greed and
+corruption of the officials. But in spite of this, the people of
+rich and prosperous Galilee could have lived in contentment, and
+happiness, had it not been for the factions in their midst.
+
+On reaching the house, John found that his father had just returned
+from Hippos, whither he had gone on business. He nodded when the
+lad entered, with his basket.
+
+"I have hired eight men in the market, today, to come out tomorrow
+to aid in gathering in the figs," he said; "and your mother has
+just sent down, to get some of the fishermen's maidens to come in
+to help her. It is time that we had done with them, and we will
+then set about the vintage. Let us reap while we can, there is no
+saying what the morrow will bring forth.
+
+"Wife, add something to the evening meal, for the Rabbi Solomon Ben
+Manasseh will sup with us, and sleep here tonight."
+
+John saw that his father looked graver than usual, but he knew his
+duty as a son too well to think of asking any questions; and he
+busied himself, for a time, in laying out the figs on trays--knowing
+that, otherwise, their own weight would crush the soft fruit before
+the morning, and bruise the tender skins.
+
+A quarter of an hour later, the quick footsteps of a donkey were
+heard approaching. John ran out and, having saluted the rabbi, held
+the animal while his father assisted him to alight and, welcoming
+him to his house, led him within. The meal was soon served. It
+consisted of fish from the lake, kid's flesh seethed in milk, and
+fruit.
+
+Only the men sat down; the rabbi sitting upon Simon's right hand,
+John on his left, and Isaac and his son at the other end of the
+table. Martha's maids waited upon them, for it was not the custom
+for the women to sit down with the men and, although in the country
+this usage was not strictly observed, and Martha and little Mary
+generally took their meals with Simon and John, they did not do so
+if any guest was present.
+
+In honor of the visitor, a white cloth had been laid on the table.
+All ate with their fingers; two dishes of each kind being placed on
+the table--one at each end. But few words were said during the
+meal. After it was concluded, Isaac and his son withdrew and,
+presently, Martha and Mary, having taken their meal in the women's
+apartments, came into the room. Mary made a little face at John, to
+signify her disapproval of the visitor, whose coming would compel
+her to keep silent all the evening. But though John smiled, he made
+no sign of sympathy for, indeed, he was anxious to hear the news
+from without; and doubted not that he should learn much, from the
+rabbi.
+
+Solomon Ben Manasseh was a man of considerable influence in
+Galilee. He was a tall, stern-looking old man, with bushy black
+eyebrows, deep-set eyes, and a long beard of black hair, streaked
+with gray. He was said to have acquired much of the learning of the
+Gentiles, among whom, at Antioch, he had dwelt for some years; but
+it was to his powers as a speaker that he owed his influence. It
+was the tongue, in those days, that ruled men; and there were few
+who could lash a crowd to fury, or still their wrath when excited,
+better than Solomon Ben Manasseh.
+
+For some time they talked upon different subjects: on the corn
+harvest and vintage, the probable amount of taxation, the marriage
+feast which was to take place, in the following week, at the house
+of one of the principal citizens of Hippos, and other matters. But
+at last Simon broached the subject which was uppermost in all their
+thoughts.
+
+"And the news from Tiberias, you say, is bad, rabbi?"
+
+"The news from Tiberias is always bad, friend Simon. In all the
+land there is not a city which will compare with it, in the
+wrongheadedness of its people and the violence of its seditions;
+and little can be hoped, as far as I can see, so long as our good
+governor, Josephus, continues to treat the malefactors so
+leniently. A score of times they have conspired against his life
+and, as often, has he eluded them; for the Lord has been ever with
+him. But each time, instead of punishing those who have brought
+about these disorders, he lets them go free; trusting always that
+they will repent them of their ways, although he sees that his
+kindness is thrown away, and that they grow even bolder and more
+bitter against him after each failure.
+
+"All Galilee is with him. Whenever he gives the word, every man
+takes up his arms and follows him and, did he but give the order,
+they would level those proud towns Tiberias and Sepphoris to the
+ground, and tear down stone by stone the stronghold of John of
+Gischala. But he will suffer them to do nothing--not a hair of
+these traitors' heads is to be touched; nor their property, to the
+value of a penny, be interfered with.
+
+"I call such lenity culpable. The law ordains punishment for those
+who disturb the people. We know what befell those who rebelled
+against Moses. Josephus has the valor and the wisdom of King David;
+but it were well if he had, like our great king, a Joab by his
+side, who would smite down traitors and spare not."
+
+"It is his only fault," Simon said. "What a change has taken place,
+since he was sent hither from Jerusalem to take up our government!
+All abuses have been repressed, extortion has been put down, taxes
+have been lightened. We eat our bread in peace and comfort, and
+each man's property is his own. Never was there such a change as he
+has wrought and, were it not for John of Gischala, Justus the son
+of Piscus, and Jesus the son of Sapphias, all would go quietly and
+well; but these men are continually stirring up the people--who, in
+their folly, listen to them--and conspiring to murder Josephus, and
+seize upon his government."
+
+"Already he has had, more than once, to reduce to submission
+Tiberias and Sepphoris; happily without bloodshed for, when the
+people of these cities saw that all Galilee was with Josephus, they
+opened their gates and submitted themselves to his mercy. Truly, in
+Leviticus it is said:
+
+"'Thou shalt not avenge, nor bear any grudge against the children
+of thy people; but thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.'
+
+"But Josephus carries this beyond reason. Seeing that his
+adversaries by no means observe this law, he should remember that
+it is also said that 'He that taketh the sword shall fall by the
+sword,' and that the law lays down punishments for the transgressors.
+Our judges and kings slew those who troubled the land, and destroyed
+them utterly; and Josephus does wrong to depart from their teaching."
+
+"I know not where he could have learned such notions of mercy to
+his enemies, and to the enemies of the land," Simon said. "He has
+been to Rome, but it is not among the Romans that he will have
+found that it is right to forgive those who rise up in rebellion."
+
+"Yes, he was in Rome when he was twenty-six years old," Solomon
+said. "He went thither to plead the cause of certain priests who
+had been thrown into bonds, by Felix, and sent to Rome. It was a
+perilous voyage, for his ship was wrecked in the Adriatic and, of
+six hundred men who were on board, only eighty were picked
+up--after floating and swimming all night--by a ship of Cyrene. He
+was not long in Rome for, being introduced to Poppaea, the wife of
+Caesar, he used his interest with her and obtained the release of
+those for whose sake he went there.
+
+"No, if he gained these ideas from anyone, he learned them from one
+Banus--an Ascetic, of the sect of the Essenes, who lived in the
+desert with no other clothing than the bark and leaves of trees,
+and no other food save that which grew wild. Josephus lived with
+him, in like fashion, for three years and, doubtless, learned all
+that was in his heart. Banus was a follower, they say, of that John
+whom Herod put to death; and for aught I know, of that Jesus who
+was crucified, two years afterwards, at Jerusalem, and in whom many
+people believed, and who has many followers, to this day. I have
+conversed with some of them and, from what they tell me, this Jesus
+taught doctrines similar to those which Josephus practices; and
+which he may have learned from Banus, without accepting the
+doctrines which the members of this sect hold, as to their founder
+being the promised Messiah who was to restore Israel."
+
+"I, too, have talked with many of the sect," Simon said; "and have
+argued with them on the folly of their belief, seeing that their
+founder by no means saved Israel, but was himself put to death.
+From what I could see, there was much that was good in the
+doctrines they hold; but they have exaggerated ideas, and are
+opposed to all wars, even to fighting for their country. I hear
+that, since there has been trouble with Rome, most of them have
+departed altogether out of the land, so as to avoid the necessity
+of fighting."
+
+"They are poor creatures," Solomon Ben Manasseh said, scornfully;
+"but we need not talk of them now, for they affect us in no way,
+save that it may be that Josephus has learned somewhat of their
+doctrines, from Banus; and that he is thus unduly and, as I think,
+most unfortunately for the country, inclined too much to mercy,
+instead of punishing the evildoers as they deserve."
+
+"But nevertheless, rabbi, it seems to me that there has been good
+policy, as well, in the mercy which Josephus has shown his foes.
+You know that John has many friends in Jerusalem; and that, if he
+could accuse Josephus of slaughtering any, he would be able to make
+so strong a party, there, that he could obtain the recall of
+Josephus."
+
+"We would not let him go," Solomon said, hotly. "Since the Romans
+have gone, we submit to the supremacy of the council at Jerusalem,
+but it is only on sufferance. For long ages we have had nothing to
+do with Judah; and we are not disposed to put our necks under their
+yoke, now. We submit to unity because, in the Romans, we have a
+common foe; but we are not going to be tyrannized. Josephus has
+shown himself a wise ruler. We are happier, under him, than we have
+been for generations under the men who call themselves kings, but
+who are nothing but Roman satraps; and we are not going to suffer
+him to be taken from us. Only let the people of Jerusalem try that,
+and they will have to deal with all the men of Galilee."
+
+"I am past the age at which men are bound to take up the sword, and
+John has not yet attained it but, if there were need, we would both
+go out and fight. What could they do, for the population of Galilee
+is greater than that of Judah? And while we would fight, every man,
+to the death; the Jews would, few of them, care to hazard their
+lives only to take from us the man we desire to rule over us.
+Still, Josephus does wisely, perhaps, to give no occasion for
+accusation by his enemies.
+
+"There is no talk, is there, rabbi, of any movement on the part of
+the Romans to come against us, in force?"
+
+"None, so far as I have heard," the rabbi replied. "King Agrippa
+remains in his country, to the east; but he has no Roman force with
+him sufficient to attempt any great enterprise and, so long as they
+leave us alone, we are content."
+
+"They will come, sooner or later," Simon said, shaking his head.
+"They are busy elsewhere. When they have settled with their other
+enemies, they will come here to avenge the defeat of Cestius, to
+restore Florus, and to reconquer the land. Where Rome has once laid
+her paw, she never lets slip her prey."
+
+"Well, we can fight," Solomon Ben Manasseh said, sternly. "Our
+forefathers won the land with the sword, and we can hold it by the
+sword."
+
+"Yes," Martha said quietly, joining in the conversation for the
+first time, "if God fights for us, as He fought for our
+forefathers."
+
+"Why should He not?" the rabbi asked sternly. "We are still his
+people. We are faithful to his law."
+
+"But God has, many times in the past, suffered us to fall into the
+hands of our enemies as a punishment for our sins," Martha said,
+quietly. "The tribes were carried away into captivity, and are
+scattered we know not where. The temple was destroyed, and the
+people of Judah dwelt long as captives in Babylon. He suffered us
+to fall under the yoke of the Romans.
+
+"In his right time, He will fight for us again; but can we say that
+that time has come, rabbi, and that He will smite the Romans, as He
+smote the host of Sennacherib?"
+
+"That no man can say," the rabbi answered, gloomily. "Time only
+will show but, whether or no, the people will fight valiantly."
+
+"I doubt not that they will fight," Simon said; "but many other
+nations, to whom we are but as a handful, have fought bravely, but
+have succumbed to the might of Rome. It is said that Josephus, and
+many of the wisest in Jerusalem, were heartily opposed to the
+tumults against the Romans, and that they only went with the people
+because they were in fear of their lives; and even at Tiberias many
+men of worth and gravity, such as Julius Capellus, Herod the son of
+Miarus, Herod the son of Gamalus, Compsus, and others, are all
+strongly opposed to hostility against the Romans.
+
+"And it is the same, elsewhere. Those who know best what is the
+might and power of Rome would fain remain friendly with her. It is
+the ignorant and violent classes have led us into this strait; from
+which, as I fear, naught but ruin can arise."
+
+"I thought better things of you, Simon," the rabbi said, angrily.
+
+"But you yourself have told me," Simon urged, "that you thought it
+a mad undertaking to provoke the vengeance of Rome."
+
+"I thought so, at first," Solomon admitted, "but now our hand is
+placed on the plow, we must not draw back; and I believe that the
+God of our fathers will show his might before the heathen."
+
+"I trust that it may be so," Simon said, gravely. "In His hand is
+all power. Whether He will see fit to put it forth, now, in our
+behalf remains to be seen. However, for the present we need not
+concern ourselves greatly with the Romans. It may be long before
+they bring an army against us; while these seditions, here, are at
+our very door, and ever threaten to involve us in civil war."
+
+"We need fear no civil war," the rabbi said. "The people of all
+Galilee, save the violent and ill disposed in a few of the towns,
+are all for Josephus. If it comes to force, John and his party know
+that they will be swept away, like a straw before the wind. The
+fear is that they may succeed in murdering Josephus; either by the
+knife of an assassin, or in one of these tumults. They would rather
+the latter, because they would then say that the people had torn
+him to pieces, in their fury at his misdoings.
+
+"However, we watch over him, as much as we can; and his friends
+have warned him that he must be careful, not only for his own sake,
+but for that of all the people; and he has promised that, as far as
+he can, he will be on his guard against these traitors."
+
+"The governor should have a strong bodyguard," John exclaimed,
+impetuously, "as the Roman governors had. In another year, I shall
+be of age to have my name inscribed in the list of fighting men;
+and I would gladly be one of his guard."
+
+"You are neither old enough to fight, nor to express an opinion
+unasked," Simon said, "in the presence of your elders."
+
+"Do not check the boy," the rabbi said. "He has fire and spirit;
+and the days are coming when we shall not ask how old, or how
+young, are those who would fight, so that they can but hold arms.
+
+"Josephus is wise not to have a military guard, John, because the
+people love not such appearance of state. His enemies would use
+this as an argument that he was setting himself up above them. It
+is partly because he behaves himself discreetly, and goes about
+among them like a private person, of no more account than
+themselves, that they love him. None can say he is a tyrant,
+because he has no means of tyrannizing. His enemies cannot urge it
+against him at Jerusalem--as they would doubtless do, if they
+could--that he is seeking to lead Galilee away from the rule of
+Jerusalem, and to set himself up as its master for, to do this, he
+would require to gather an army; and Josephus has not a single
+armed man at his service, save and except that when he appears to
+be in danger many, out of love of him, assemble and provide him
+escort.
+
+"No, Josephus is wise in that he affects neither pomp nor state;
+that he keeps no armed men around him, but trusts to the love of
+the people. He would be wiser, however, did he seize one of the
+occasions when the people have taken up arms for him to destroy all
+those who make sedition; and to free the country, once and for all,
+from the trouble.
+
+"Sedition should be always nipped in the bud. Lenity, in such a
+case, is the most cruel course; for it encourages men to think that
+those in authority fear them, and that they can conspire without
+danger; and whereas, at first, the blood of ten men will put an end
+to sedition, it needs, at last, the blood of as many thousands to
+restore peace and order. It is good for a man to be merciful, but
+not for a ruler, for the good of the whole people is placed in his
+hands. The sword of justice is given to him, and he is most
+merciful who uses it the most promptly against those who work
+sedition. The wise ruler will listen to the prayers of his people,
+and will grant their petitions, when they show that their case is
+hard; but he will grant nothing to him who asketh with his sword in
+his hand, for he knows full well that when he yields, once, he must
+yield always; until the time comes, as come it surely will, when he
+must resist with the sword. Then the land will be filled with blood
+whereas, in the beginning, he could have avoided all trouble, by
+refusing so much as to listen to those who spoke with threats.
+
+"Josephus is a good man, and the Lord has given him great gifts. He
+has done great things for the land; but you will see that many woes
+will come, and much blood will be shed, from this lenity of his
+towards those who stir up tumults among the people."
+
+A few minutes later the family retired to bed; the hour being a
+late one for Simon's household, which generally retired to rest a
+short time after the evening meal.
+
+The next day the work of gathering in the figs was carried on,
+earnestly and steadily, with the aid of the workers whom Simon had
+hired in the town and, in two days, the trees were all stripped,
+and strings of figs hung to dry from the boughs of all the trees
+round the house.
+
+Then the gathering of the grapes began. All the inhabitants of the
+little fishing village lent their aid--men as well as women and
+children--for the vintage was looked upon as a holiday; and Simon
+was regarded as a good friend by his neighbors, being ever ready to
+aid them when there was need, judging any disputes which arose
+between them, and lending them money without interest if misfortune
+came upon their boats or nets, or if illness befell them; while the
+women, in times of sickness or trouble, went naturally to Martha
+with their griefs, and were assured of sympathy, good advice, and
+any drugs or dainty food suited to the case.
+
+The women and girls picked the grapes, and laid them in baskets.
+These were carried by men, and emptied into the vat; where other
+men trod them down, and pressed out the juice. Martha and her maids
+saw to the cooking and laying out, on the great tables in the
+courtyard, of the meals; to which all sat down, together. Simon
+superintended the crushing of the grapes; and John worked now at
+one task, and now at another. It was a pretty scene, and rendered
+more gay by the songs of the women and girls, as they worked; and
+the burst of merry laughter which, at times, arose.
+
+It lasted four days, by which time the last bunch, save those on a
+few vines preserved for eating, was picked and crushed; and the
+vats in the cellar, sunk underground for coolness, were full to the
+brim. Simon was much pleased with the result; and declared that
+never, in his memory, had the vine and fig harvest turned out more
+abundant. The corn had long before been gathered, and there
+remained now only the olives; but it would be some little time yet
+before these were fit to be gathered, and their oil extracted, for
+they were allowed to hang on the trees until ready to drop.
+
+The last basket of grapes was brought in with much ceremony; the
+gatherers forming a little procession, and singing a thanksgiving
+hymn as they walked. The evening meal was more bounteous, even,
+than usual; and all who helped carried away with them substantial
+proofs of Simon's thankfulness, and satisfaction.
+
+For the next few days Simon and his men, and Martha's maids, lent
+their assistance in getting in the vintage of their neighbors; for
+each family had its patch of ground, and grew sufficient grapes and
+fruits for its own needs. Those in the village brought their grapes
+to a vat, which they had in common; the measures of the grapes
+being counted as they were put in, and the wine afterwards divided,
+in like proportion--for wine, to be good, must be made in
+considerable quantities.
+
+And now there was, for a time, little to do on the farm. Simon
+superintended the men who were plowing up the corn stubbles, ready
+for the sowing in the spring; sometimes putting his hand to the
+plow, and driving the oxen. Isaac and his son worked in the
+vineyard and garden, near the house; aided to some extent by John
+who, however, was not yet called upon to take a man's share in the
+work of the farm--he having but lately finished his learning, with
+the rabbi, at the school in Hippos. Still, he worked steadily every
+morning and, in the afternoon, generally went out on the lake with
+the fishermen, with whom he was a great favorite.
+
+This was not to last long for, at seventeen, he was to join his
+father, regularly, in the management of the farm and, indeed, the
+Rabbi Solomon, who was a frequent guest, was of opinion that Simon
+gave the boy too much license; and that he ought, already, to be
+doing man's work.
+
+But Simon, when urged by him, said:
+
+"I know that, at his age, I was working hard, rabbi; but the lad
+has studied diligently, and I have a good report of him; and I
+think it well that, at his age, the bow should be unbent somewhat.
+
+"Besides, who knows what is before us! I will let the lad have as
+much pleasure from his life as he can. The storm is approaching;
+let him play, while the sun shines."
+
+
+
+Chapter 2: A Storm On Galilee.
+
+
+One day, after the midday meal, John said:
+
+"Mary, Raphael and his brother have taken the big boat, and gone
+off with fish to Tiberias; and have told me that I can take the
+small boat, if I will. Ask my mother to let you off your task, and
+come out with me. It is a fortnight since we had a row on the lake,
+together."
+
+"I was beginning to think that you were never going to ask me
+again, John; and, only I should punish myself, I would say you nay.
+There have you been, going out fishing every afternoon, and leaving
+me at home to spin; and it is all the worse because your mother has
+said that the time is fast coming when I must give up wandering
+about like a child, and must behave myself like a woman.
+
+"Oh, dear, how tiresome it will be when there will be nothing to do
+but to sit and spin, and to look after the house, and to walk
+instead of running when I am out, and to behave like a grown-up
+person, altogether!"
+
+"You are almost grown up," John said; "you are taller, now, than
+any of the maids except Zillah; but I shall be sorry to see you
+growing staid and solemn. And it was selfish of me not to ask you
+to go out before, but I really did not think of it. The fishermen
+have been working hard, to make up for the time lost during the
+harvest; and I have really been useful, helping them with their
+nets, and this is the last year I shall have my liberty.
+
+"But come, don't let's be wasting time in talking; run in and get
+my mother's permission, and then join me on the shore. I will take
+some grapes down, for you to eat; for the sun is hot today, and
+there is scarce a breath of wind on the water."
+
+A few minutes later, the young pair stood together by the side of
+the boat.
+
+"Your mother made all sorts of objections," Mary said, laughing,
+"and I do think she won't let me come again. I don't think she
+would have done it, today, if Miriam had not stood up for me, and
+said that I was but a child though I was so tall; and that, as you
+were very soon going to work with your father, she thought that it
+was no use in making the change before that."
+
+"What nonsense it all is!" John said. "Besides, you know it is
+arranged that, in a few months, we are to be betrothed according to
+the wishes of your parents and mine. It would have been done, long
+ago, only my father and mother do not approve of young betrothals;
+and think it better to wait, to see if the young ones like each
+other; and I think that is quite right, too, in most cases--only,
+of course, living here, as you have done for the last three
+years--since your father and mother died--there was no fear of our
+not liking each other."
+
+"Well, you see," Mary said, as she sat in the stern of the boat,
+while John rowed it quietly along, "it might have been just the
+other way. When people don't see anything of each other, till they
+are betrothed by their parents, they can't dislike each other very
+much; whereas, when they get to know each other, if they are
+disagreeable they might get to almost hate each other."
+
+"Yes, there is something in that," John agreed. "Of course, in our
+case it is all right, because we do like each other--we couldn't
+have liked each other more, I think, if we had been brother and
+sister--but it seems to me that, sometimes, it must be horrid when
+a boy is told by his parents that he is to be betrothed to a girl
+he has never seen. You see it isn't as if it were for a short time,
+but for all one's life. It must be awful!"
+
+"Awful!" Mary agreed, heartily; "but of course, it would have to be
+done."
+
+"Of course," John said--the possibility of a lad refusing to obey
+his parents' commands not even occurring to him. "Still it doesn't
+seem to me quite right that one should have no choice, in so
+important a matter. Of course, when one's got a father and mother
+like mine--who would be sure to think only of making me happy, and
+not of the amount of dowry, or anything of that sort--it would be
+all right; but with some parents, it would be dreadful."
+
+For some time, not a word was spoken; both of them meditating over
+the unpleasantness of being forced to marry someone they disliked.
+Then, finding the subject too difficult for them, they began to
+talk about other things; stopping, sometimes, to see the fishermen
+haul up their nets, for there were a number of boats out on the
+lake. They rowed down as far as Tiberias and, there, John ceased
+rowing; and they sat chatting over the wealth and beauty of that
+city, which John had often visited with his father, but which Mary
+had never entered.
+
+Then John turned the head of the boat up the lake and again began
+to row but, scarcely had he dipped his oar into the water, when he
+exclaimed:
+
+"Look at that black cloud rising, at the other end of the lake! Why
+did you not tell me, Mary?"
+
+"How stupid of me," she exclaimed, "not to have kept my eyes open!"
+
+He bent to his oars, and made the boat move through the water at a
+very different rate to that at which she had before traveled.
+
+"Most of the boats have gone," Mary said, presently, "and the rest
+are all rowing to the shore; and the clouds are coming up very
+fast," she added, looking round.
+
+"We are going to have a storm," John said. "It will be upon us long
+before we get back. I shall make for the shore, Mary. We must leave
+the boat there, and take shelter for a while, and then walk home.
+It will not be more than four miles to walk."
+
+But though he spoke cheerfully, John knew enough of the sudden
+storms that burst upon the Sea of Galilee to be aware that, long
+before he could cross the mile and a half of water, which separated
+them from the eastern shore, the storm would be upon them; and
+indeed, they were not more than half way when it burst.
+
+The sky was already covered with black clouds. A great darkness
+gathered round them; then came a heavy downpour of rain; and then,
+with a sudden burst, the wind smote them. It was useless, now, to
+try to row, for the oars would have been twisted from his hands in
+a moment; and John took the helm, and told Mary to lie down in the
+bottom of the boat. He had already turned the boat's head up the
+lake, the direction in which the storm was traveling.
+
+The boat sprang forward, as if it had received a blow, when the
+gale struck it. John had, more than once, been out on the lake with
+the fishermen, when sudden storms had come up; and knew what was
+best to be done. When he had laid in his oars, he had put them so
+that the blades stood partly up above the bow, and caught the wind
+somewhat; and he, himself, crouched down in the bottom, with his
+head below the gunwale and his hand on the tiller; so that the
+tendency of the boat was to drive straight before the wind. With a
+strong crew, he knew that he could have rowed obliquely towards the
+shore but, alone, his strength could have done nothing to keep the
+heavy boat off her course.
+
+The sea rose, as if by magic, and the spray was soon dashing over
+them; each wave, as it followed the boat, rising higher and higher.
+The shores were no longer visible; and the crests of the waves
+seemed to gleam, with a pallid light, in the darkness which
+surrounded them. John sat quietly in the bottom of the boat, with
+one hand on the tiller and the other arm round Mary, who was
+crouched up against him. She had made no cry, or exclamation, from
+the moment the gale struck them.
+
+Illustration: On the Sea of Galilee.
+
+"Are we getting near shore?" she asked, at last.
+
+"No, Mary; we are running straight before the wind, which is
+blowing right up the lake. There is nothing to be done but to keep
+straight before it."
+
+Mary had seen many storms on the lake, and knew into what a fury
+its waters were lashed, in a tempest such as was now upon them.
+
+"We are in God's hands, John," she said, with the quiet resignation
+of her race. "He can save us, if He will. Let us pray to him."
+
+John nodded and, for a few minutes, no word was spoken.
+
+"Can I do anything?" Mary asked, presently, as a wave struck the
+stern, and threw a mass of water into the boat.
+
+"Yes," John replied; "take that earthen pot, and bale out the
+water."
+
+John had no great hope that they would live through the gale, but
+he thought it better for the girl to be kept busily employed. She
+bailed steadily but, fast as she worked, the water came in faster;
+for each wave, as it swept past them, broke on board. So rapidly
+were they traveling that John had the greatest difficulty in
+keeping the boat from broaching to--in which case the following
+wave would have filled, or overturned, her.
+
+"I don't think it's any use, John," Mary said, quietly, as a great
+wave broke on board; pouring in as much water, in a second, as she
+could have baled out in ten minutes.
+
+"No use, dear. Sit quietly by me but, first, pull those oars aft.
+Now, tie them together with that piece of rope. Now, when the boat
+goes down, keep tight hold of them.
+
+"Cut off another piece of rope, and give it me. When we are in the
+water, I will fasten you to the oars. They will keep you afloat,
+easily enough. I will keep close to you. You know I am a good
+swimmer and, whenever I feel tired, I can rest my hands on the
+oars, too.
+
+"Keep up your courage, and keep as quiet as you can. These sudden
+storms seldom last long; and my father will be sure to get the
+boats out, as soon as he can, to look for us."
+
+John spoke cheerfully, but he had no great hopes of their being
+able to live in so rough a sea. Mary had still less, but she
+quietly carried out John's instructions. The boat was half-full of
+water, now, and rose but heavily upon the waves.
+
+John raised himself and looked round; in hopes that the wind might,
+unnoticed, have shifted a little and blown them towards the shore.
+As he glanced around, him he gave a shout. Following almost in
+their track, and some fifty yards away, was a large galley; running
+before the wind, with a rag of sail set on its mast.
+
+"We are saved, Mary!" he exclaimed. "Here is a galley, close to
+us."
+
+He shouted loudly, though he knew that his voice could not be
+heard, many yards away, in the teeth of the gale but, almost
+directly, he saw two or three men stand up in the bow of the
+galley. One was pointing towards them, and he saw that they were
+seen.
+
+In another minute the galley came sweeping along, close to the
+boat. A dozen figures appeared over her side, and two or three
+ropes were thrown. John caught one, twisted it rapidly round Mary's
+body and his own, knotted it and, taking her in his arms, jumped
+overboard. Another minute they were drawn alongside the galley, and
+pulled on board. As soon as the ropes were unfastened, John rose to
+his feet; but Mary lay, insensible, on the deck.
+
+"Carry the damsel into the cabin," a man, who was evidently in
+authority said. "She has fainted, but will soon come round. I will
+see to her, myself."
+
+The suddenness of the rescue, the plunge in the water, and the
+sudden revulsion of his feelings affected John so much that it was
+two or three minutes before he could speak.
+
+"Come along with me, lad," one of the sailors said, laying his hand
+on his shoulder. "Some dry clothes, and a draught of wine will set
+you all right again; but you have had a narrow escape of it. That
+boat of yours was pretty nearly water logged and, in another five
+minutes, we should have been too late."
+
+John hastily changed his clothes in the forecastle, took a draught
+of wine, and then hurried back again towards the aft cabin. Just as
+he reached it, the man who had ordered Mary to be carried in came
+out.
+
+"The damsel has opened her eyes," he said, "and you need not be
+uneasy about her. I have given her some woolen cloths, and bade her
+take off her wet garments, and wrap herself in them.
+
+"Why did you not make for the shore, before the tempest broke? It
+was foolish of you, indeed, to be out on the lake, when anyone
+could see that this gale was coming."
+
+"I was rowing down, and did not notice it until I turned," John
+replied. "I was making for the shore, when the gale struck her."
+
+"It was well, for you, that I noticed you. I was, myself, thinking
+of making for the shore although, in so large and well-manned craft
+as this, there is little fear upon the lake. It is not like the
+Great Sea; where I, myself, have seen a large ship as helpless,
+before the waves, as that small boat we picked you from.
+
+"I had just set out from Tiberias, when I marked the storm coming
+up; but my business was urgent and, moreover, I marked your little
+boat, and saw that you were not likely to gain the shore; so I bade
+the helmsman keep his eye on you, until the darkness fell upon us;
+and then to follow straight in your wake, for you could but run
+before the wind--and well he did it for, when we first caught sight
+of you, you were right ahead of us."
+
+The speaker was a man of about thirty years of age; tall, and with
+a certain air of command.
+
+"I thank you, indeed, sir," John said, "for saving my life; and
+that of my cousin Mary, the daughter of my father's brother. Truly,
+my father and mother will be grateful to you, for having saved us;
+for I am their only son.
+
+"Whom are they to thank for our rescue?"
+
+"I am Joseph, the son of Matthias, to whom the Jews have intrusted
+the governorship of this province."
+
+"Josephus!" John exclaimed, in a tone of surprise and reverence.
+
+"So men call me," Josephus replied, with a smile.
+
+It was, indeed, the governor. Flavius Josephus, as the Romans
+afterwards called him, came of a noble Jewish family--his father,
+Matthias, belonging to the highest of the twenty-four classes into
+which the sacerdotal families were divided. Matthias was eminent
+for his attainments, and piety; and had been one of the leading men
+in Jerusalem. From his youth, Josephus had carefully prepared
+himself for public life, mastering the doctrines of the three
+leading sects among the Jews--the Pharisees, Sadducees, and
+Essenes--and having spent three years in the desert, with Banus the
+Ascetic. The fact that, at only twenty-six years of age, he had
+gone as the leader of a deputation to Rome, on behalf of some
+priests sent there by Felix, shows that he was early looked upon as
+a conspicuous person among the Jews; and he was but thirty when he
+was intrusted with the important position of Governor of Galilee.
+
+Contrary to the custom of the times, he had sought to make no gain
+from his position. He accepted neither presents, nor bribes; but
+devoted himself entirely to ameliorating the condition of the
+people, and in repressing the turbulence of the lower classes of
+the great towns; and of the robber chieftains who, like John of
+Gischala, took advantage of the relaxation of authority, caused by
+the successful rising against the Romans, to plunder and tyrannize
+over the people.
+
+The expression of the face of Josephus was lofty and, at the same
+time, gentle. His temper was singularly equable and, whatever the
+circumstances, he never gave way to anger, but kept his passions
+well under control. His address was soft and winning, and he had
+the art of attracting respect and friendship from all who came in
+contact with him. Poppaea, the wife of Nero, had received him with
+much favor and, bravely as he fought against them, Vespasian and
+Titus were, afterwards, as much attached to him as were the Jews of
+Galilee. There can be no doubt that, had he been otherwise placed
+than as one of a people on the verge of destruction, Josephus would
+have been one of the great figures of history.
+
+John had been accustomed to hear his father and his friends speak
+in tones of such admiration for Josephus, as the man who was
+regarded not only as the benefactor of the Jews of Galilee, but as
+the leader and mainstay of the nation, that he had long ardently
+desired to see him; and to find that he had now been rescued from
+death by him, and that he was now talking to him face to face,
+filled him with confusion.
+
+"You are a brave lad," Josephus said, "for you kept your head well,
+in a time when older men might have lost their presence of mind.
+You must have kept your boat dead before the wind; and you were
+quick and ready, in seizing the rope and knotting it round
+yourself, and the maid with you. I feared you might try and fasten
+it to the boat. If you had, full of water as she was, and fast as
+we were sailing before the wind, the rope would barely have stood
+the strain."
+
+"The clouds are breaking," the captain of the boat said, coming up
+to Josephus, "and I think that we are past the worst of the gale.
+And well it is so for, even in so staunch a craft, there is much
+peril in such a sea as this."
+
+The vessel, although one of the largest on the lake, was indeed
+pitching and rolling very heavily; but she was light and buoyant
+and, each time that she plunged bows under, as the following waves
+lifted her stern high in the air, she rose lightly again; and
+scarce a drop fell into her deep waist, the lofty erections, fore
+and aft, throwing off the water.
+
+"Where do you belong, my lad?" Josephus asked. "I fear that it is
+impossible for us to put you ashore, until we reach Capernaum; but
+once there, I will see that you are provided with means to take you
+home."
+
+"Our farm lies three miles above Hippos."
+
+"That is unfortunate," Josephus said, "since it lies on the
+opposite side of the lake to Capernaum. However, we shall see. If
+the storm goes down rapidly, I may be able to get a fishing boat to
+take you across, this evening; for your parents will be in sore
+trouble. If not, you must wait till early morning."
+
+In another hour they reached Capernaum. The wind had, by this time,
+greatly abated; although the sea still ran high. The ship was soon
+alongside a landing jetty, which ran out a considerable distance,
+and formed a breakwater protecting the shipping from the heavy sea
+which broke there when the wind was, as at present, from the south.
+
+Mary came out from the cabin, as the vessel entered the harbor,
+wrapped up from head to foot in the woolen cloths with which she
+had been furnished. John sprang to her side.
+
+"Are you quite well, Mary?"
+
+"Quite well," she said, "only very ashamed of having fainted, and
+very uncomfortable in these wrappings. But, oh! John, how thankful
+we ought to be, to God, for having sent this ship to our aid, just
+when all seemed lost!"
+
+"We ought, indeed, Mary. I have been thanking him, as I have been
+standing here watching the waves; and I am sure you have been doing
+the same, in the cabin."
+
+"Yes, indeed, John. But what am I to do, now? I do not like going
+on shore like this, and the officer told me I was, on no account,
+to put on my wet clothes."
+
+"Do you know, it is Josephus himself, Mary--think of that--the
+great Josephus, who has saved us! He marked our boat before the
+storm broke and, seeing that we could not reach the shore, had his
+vessel steered so as to overtake us."
+
+Mary was too surprised to utter more than an exclamation. The
+thought that the man, who had been talking so kindly and pleasantly
+to her, was the great leader of whom she had heard so much, quite
+took away her breath.
+
+At that moment Josephus, himself, came up.
+
+"I am glad to see you have got your color again, maiden," he said.
+"I am just going to land. Do you, with your cousin, remain on board
+here. I will send a woman down, with some attire for you. She will
+conduct you both to the house where I shall be staying.
+
+"The sea is going down, and the captain tells me that he thinks, in
+another three or four hours, I shall be able to get a boat to send
+you across to your home. It will be late, but you will not mind
+that; for they are sure not to retire to rest, at home, but to be
+up all night, searching for you."
+
+A crowd had assembled on the jetty, for Josephus was expected, and
+the violent storm had excited the fears of all for his safety; and
+the leading inhabitants had all flocked down to welcome him, when
+his vessel was seen approaching.
+
+"Isn't he kind and good?" Mary said, enthusiastically, as she
+watched the greeting which he received, as he landed. "He talked to
+me, just as if he had been of my own family."
+
+"He is grand!" John agreed, with equal enthusiasm. "He is just what
+I pictured to myself that a great leader would be; such as Joshua,
+or Gideon, or the Prince of the Maccabees."
+
+"Yes; but more gentle, John."
+
+"Brave men should always be gentle," John said, positively.
+
+"They ought to be, perhaps," Mary agreed, "but I don't think they
+are."
+
+They chatted, then, about the storm and the anxiety which they
+would be feeling, at home; until an officer, accompanied by a woman
+carrying attire for Mary, came on board. Mary soon came out of the
+cabin, dressed; and the officer conducted them to the house which
+had been placed at the disposal of Josephus. The woman led them up
+to a room, where a meal had been prepared for them.
+
+"Josephus is in council, with the elders," she said. "He bade me
+see that you had all that you required. He has arranged that a bark
+shall start with you, as soon as the sea goes down; but if, by
+eight o'clock, it is still too rough, I shall take the maiden home
+to my house, to sleep; and they will arouse you, as soon as it is
+safe to put out, whatever the hour may be, as your friends will be
+in great anxiety concerning you."
+
+The sun had already set and, just as they finished their meal, the
+man belonging to the boat came to say that it would be midnight
+before he could put out.
+
+Mary then went over with the woman; and John lay down on some mats,
+to sleep, until it was time to start. He slept soundly, until he
+was aroused by the entry of someone, with lights. He started to his
+feet, and found that it was Josephus, himself, with an attendant.
+
+"I had not forgotten you," he said, "but I have been, until now, in
+council. It is close upon midnight, and the boat is in readiness. I
+have sent to fetch the damsel, and have bidden them take plenty of
+warm wraps, so that the night air may do her no harm."
+
+Mary soon arrived; and Josephus, himself, went down with them to
+the shore, and saw them on board the boat--which was a large one,
+with eight rowers. The wind had died away to a gentle breeze, and
+the sea had gone down greatly. The moon was up, and the stars
+shining brightly. Josephus chatted kindly to John, as they made
+their way down to the shore.
+
+"Tell your father," he said, "that I hope he will come over to see
+me, ere long; and that I shall bear you in mind. The time is coming
+when every Jew who can bear arms will be needed in the service of
+his country and, if your father consents, I will place you near my
+person; for I have seen that you are brave and cool, in danger, and
+you will have plenty of opportunities of winning advancement."
+
+With many thanks for his kindness, John and Mary took their places
+in the stern of the boat. Mary enveloped herself in the wraps that
+had been prepared for her, for the nights were chilly. Then the
+sail was hoisted, and the boat sailed away from the land. The wind
+had shifted round, somewhat, to the west, and they were able to lay
+their course across towards Hippos; but their progress was slow,
+and the master bade the crew get out their oars, and aid the sail.
+
+In three hours they neared the land, John pointing out the exact
+position of the village; which was plainly enough marked out, by a
+great fire blazing on the shore. As they approached it, they could
+see several figures and, presently, there came a shout, which John
+recognized as that of Isaac.
+
+"Any news?"
+
+"Here we are, Isaac, safe and well."
+
+There was a confused sound, of shouts and cries of pleasure. In a
+few minutes, the boat grated on the shallow shore. The moment she
+did so, John leaped out over the bow and waded ashore, and was at
+once clasped in his mother's arms; while one of the fishermen
+carried Mary to the land. She received, from Martha, a full share
+of her caresses; for she loved the girl almost as dearly as she did
+her son. Then Miriam and the maids embraced and kissed her, while
+Isaac folded John in his arms.
+
+"The God of Israel be thanked and praised, my children!" Martha
+exclaimed. "He has brought you back to us, as from the dead, for we
+never thought to see you again. Some of the fishermen returned, and
+told us that they saw your boat, far on the lake, before the storm
+burst; and none held out hope that you could have weathered such a
+storm."
+
+"Where is father?" John asked.
+
+"He is out on the lake, as are all the fishermen of the village,
+searching for you.
+
+"That reminds me, Isaac, set fire to the other piles of wood that
+we have prepared.
+
+"If one of the boats returned, with any sure news of you, we were
+to light them to call the others back--one fire if the news was
+bad, two if it was good--but we hardly even dared to hope that the
+second would be required."
+
+A brand from the fire was soon applied to the other piles, and the
+three fires shone out across the lake, with the good news. In a
+quarter of an hour a boat was seen approaching, and soon came a
+shout:
+
+"Is all well?"
+
+"All is well," John shouted, in reply, and soon he was clasped in
+his father's arms.
+
+The other boats came in, one by one; the last to arrive towing in
+the boat--which had been found, bottom upwards, far up the lake,
+its discovery destroying the last hope of its late occupants being
+found alive.
+
+As soon as Simon landed, the party returned to the house. Miriam
+and the maids hurried to prepare a meal--of which all were sorely
+in need, for no food had been eaten since the gale burst on the
+lake; while their three hours in the boat had again sharpened the
+appetite of John and Mary. A quantity of food was cooked, and a
+skin of old wine brought up from the cellar; and Isaac remained
+down on the shore, to bid all who had been engaged in the search
+come up and feast, as soon as they landed.
+
+John related to his parents the adventure which had befallen them,
+and they wondered greatly at the narrowness of their deliverance.
+When the feasting was over, Simon called all together, and solemnly
+returned thanks to God for the mercies which He had given them. It
+was broad daylight before all sought their beds, for a few hours,
+before beginning the work of the day.
+
+A week later Josephus himself came to Hippos, bringing with him two
+nobles, who had fled from King Agrippa and sought refuge with him.
+He had received them hospitably, and had allotted a home to them at
+Tarichea, where he principally dwelt.
+
+He had, just before, had another narrow escape, for six hundred
+armed men--robbers and others--had assembled round his house,
+charging him with keeping some spoils which had been taken, by a
+party of men of that town, from the wife of Ptolemy--King Agrippa's
+procurator--instead of dividing them among the people. For a time,
+he pacified them by telling them that this money was destined for
+strengthening the walls of their town, and for walling other towns
+at present undefended; but the leaders of the evildoers were
+determined to set his house on fire, and slay him.
+
+He had but twenty armed men with him. Closing the doors, he went to
+an upper room, and told the robbers to send in one of their number
+to receive the money. Directly he entered, the door was closed. One
+of his hands was cut off, and hung round his neck; and he was then
+turned out again. Believing that Josephus would not have ventured
+to act so boldly, had he not had a large body of armed men with
+him, the crowd were seized with panic and fled to their homes.
+
+After this, the enemies of Josephus persuaded the people that the
+nobles he had sheltered were wizards; and demanded that they should
+be given up to be slain, unless they would change their religion to
+that of the Jews. Josephus tried to argue them out of their belief,
+saying that there were no such things as wizards and, if the Romans
+had wizards who could work them wrong, they would not need to send
+an army to fight against them; but as the people still clamored, he
+got the men privately on board a ship, and sailed across the lake
+with them to Hippos; where he dismissed them, with many presents.
+
+As soon as the news came that Josephus had come to Hippos, Simon
+set out with Martha, John, and Mary, to see him. Josephus received
+them kindly, and would permit no thanks for what he had done.
+
+"Your son is a brave youth," he said to Simon, "and I would gladly
+have him near me, if you would like to have it so. This is a time
+when there are greater things than planting vineyards, and
+gathering in harvests, to be done; and there is a need for brave
+and faithful men. If, then, you and your wife will give the lad to
+me, I will see to him, and keep him near me. I have need of
+faithful men with me, for my enemies are ever trying to slay me. If
+all goes well with the lad, he will have a good opportunity of
+rising to honor.
+
+"What say you? Do not give an answer hastily, but think it over
+among yourselves and, if you agree to my proposal, send him across
+the lake to me."
+
+"It needs no thought, sir," Simon said. "I know well that there are
+more urgent things, now, than sowing and reaping; and that much
+trouble and peril threaten the land. Right glad am I that my son
+should serve one who is the hope of Israel, and his mother will not
+grudge him for such service. As to advancement, I wish nothing
+better than that he should till the land of his fathers; but none
+can say what the Lord has in store for us, or whether strangers may
+not reap what I have sown. Thus, then, the wisdom which he will
+gain, in being with you, is likely to be a far better inheritance
+than any I can give him.
+
+"What say you, Martha?"
+
+"I say as you do, Simon. It will grieve me to part with him, but I
+know that such an offer as that which my lord Josephus makes is
+greatly for his good. Moreover, the manner in which he was saved
+from death seems to show that the Lord has something for his hand
+to do, and that his path is specially marked out for him. To refuse
+to let him go would be to commit the sin of withstanding God--
+
+"Therefore, my lord, I willingly give up my son to follow you."
+
+"I think that you have decided wisely," Josephus said. "I tarry
+here, for tonight, and tomorrow cross to Tiberias; therefore, let
+him be here by noon."
+
+Mary was the most silent of the party, on the way home. Simon and
+his wife felt convinced the decision they had made was a wise one
+and, although they were not ambitious, they yet felt that the offer
+of Josephus was a most advantageous one, and opened a career of
+honor to their son.
+
+John, himself, was in a state of the highest delight. To be about
+the person of Josephus seemed, to him, the greatest honor and
+happiness. It opened the way to the performance of great actions,
+which would bring honor to his father's name; and although he had
+been, hitherto, prepared to settle down to the life of a cultivator
+of the soil, he had had his yearnings for one of more excitement
+and adventure; and these were now likely to be gratified, to the
+fullest.
+
+Mary, however, felt the approaching loss of her friend and playmate
+greatly, though even she was not insensible to the honor which the
+offer of Josephus conferred upon him.
+
+"You don't seem glad of my good fortune, Mary," John said as, after
+they returned home, they strolled together, as usual, down to the
+edge of the lake.
+
+"It may be your good fortune, but it's not mine," the girl said,
+pettishly. "It will be very dull here, without you. I know what it
+will be. Your mother will always be full of anxiety, and will be
+fretting whenever we get news of any disturbances; and that is
+often enough, for there seem to be disturbances, continually. Your
+father will go about silently, Miriam will be sharper than usual
+with the maids, and everything will go wrong. I can't see why you
+couldn't have said that, in a year or two, you would go with the
+governor; but that, at present, you thought you had better stop
+with your own people."
+
+"A nice milksop he would have thought me!" John laughed. "No, if he
+thought I was man enough to do him service, it would have been a
+nice thing for me to say that I thought I was too young.
+
+"Besides, Mary, after all it is your good fortune, as well as mine;
+for is it not settled that you are to share it? Josephus is all
+powerful and, if I please him and do my duty, he can, in time,
+raise me to a position of great honor. I may even come to be the
+governor of a town, or a captain over troops, or a councilor."
+
+"No, no!" Mary laughed, "not a councilor, John. A governor,
+perhaps; and a captain, perhaps; but never, I should say, a
+councilor."
+
+John laughed good temperedly.
+
+"Well, Mary, then you shall look forward to be the wife of a
+governor, or captain; but you see, I might even fill the place of a
+councilor with credit, because I could always come to you for
+advice before, I give an opinion--then I should be sure to be
+right.
+
+"But, seriously, Mary, I do think it great honor to have had such
+an offer made me, by the governor."
+
+"Seriously, so do I, John; though I wish, in my heart, he had not
+made it. I had looked forward to living here, all my life, just as
+your mother has done; and now there will be nothing fixed to look
+forward to.
+
+"Besides, where there is honor, there is danger. There seem to be
+always tumults, always conspiracies--and then, as your father says,
+above all there are the Romans to be reckoned with and, of course,
+if you are near Josephus you run a risk, going wherever he does."
+
+"I shall never be in greater risk, Mary, than we were, together, on
+the lake the other day. God helped us, then, and brought us through
+it; and I have faith that He will do so, again. It may be that I am
+meant to do something useful, before I die. At any rate, when the
+Romans come, everyone will have to fight; so I shall be in no
+greater danger than any one else."
+
+"I know, John, and I am not speaking quite in earnest. I am sorry
+you are going--that is only natural--but I am proud that you are to
+be near our great leader, and I believe that our God will be your
+shield and protector.
+
+"And now, we had better go in. Your father will, doubtless, have
+much to say to you, this evening; and your mother will grudge every
+minute you are out of her sight."
+
+
+
+Chapter 3: The Revolt Against Rome.
+
+
+That evening the Rabbi Solomon Ben Manasseh came in, and was
+informed of the offer which Josephus had made.
+
+"You were present, rabbi," Simon said, "at the events which took
+place in Jerusalem, and at the defeat of Cestius. John has been
+asking me to tell him more about these matters for, now that he is
+to be with the governor, it is well that he should be well
+acquainted with public affairs."
+
+"I will willingly tell him the history for, as you say, it is right
+that the young man should be well acquainted with the public events
+and the state of parties and, though the story must be somewhat
+long, I will try and not make it tedious.
+
+"The first tumult broke out in Caesarea, and began by frays between
+our people and the Syrian Greeks. Felix the governor took the part
+of the Greeks; and many of our people were killed, and more
+plundered. When Felix was recalled to Rome, we sent a deputation
+there with charges against him; but the Greeks, by means of
+bribery, obtained a decree against us, depriving the Jews of
+Caesarea of rights of equal citizenship. From this constant
+troubles arose but, outside Caesarea, Festus kept all quiet;
+putting down robbers, as well as impostors who led the people
+astray.
+
+"Then there came trouble in Jerusalem. King Agrippa's palace stood
+on Mount Zion, looking towards the Temple; and he built a lofty
+story, from whose platform he could command a view of the courts of
+the Temple, and watch the sacrifices. Our people resented this
+impious intrusion, and built a high wall to cut off the view.
+Agrippa demanded its destruction, on the ground that it intercepted
+the view of the Roman guard. We appealed to Nero, and sent to him a
+deputation; headed by Ismael, the high priest, and Hilkiah, the
+treasurer. They obtained an order for the wall to be allowed to
+stand, but Ismael and Hilkiah were detained at Rome. Agrippa
+thereupon appointed another high priest--Joseph--but, soon
+afterwards, nominated Annas in his place.
+
+"When Festus--the Roman governor--was away, Annas put to death many
+of the sect called Christians, to gratify the Sadducees. The people
+were indignant, for these men had done no harm; and Agrippa
+deprived him of the priesthood and appointed Jesus, son of Damnai.
+Then, unhappily, Festus--who was a just and good governor--died,
+and Albinus succeeded him. He was a man greedy of money, and ready
+to do anything for gain. He took bribes from robbers, and
+encouraged, rather than repressed, evil doers. There was open war,
+in the streets, between the followers of various chief robbers.
+Albinus opened the prisons, and filled the city with malefactors;
+and, at the completion of the works at the Temple, eighteen
+thousand workmen were discharged, and thus the city was filled with
+men ready to sell their services to the highest bidders.
+
+"Albinus was succeeded by Gessius Florus, who was even worse than
+Albinus. This man was a great friend of Cestius Gallus, who
+commanded the Roman troops in Syria; and who, therefore, scoffed at
+the complaints of the people against Florus.
+
+"At this time, strange prodigies appeared in Rome. A sword of fire
+hung above the city, for a whole year. The inner gate of the
+Temple--which required twenty men to move it--opened by itself;
+chariots and armed squadrons were seen in the heavens and, worse
+than all, the priests in the Temple heard a great movement, and a
+sound of many voices, which said:
+
+"'Let us depart hence!'
+
+"So things went on, in Jerusalem, until the old feud at Caesarea
+broke out afresh. The trouble, this time, began about one of our
+synagogues. The land around it belonged to a Greek and, for this,
+our people offered a high price. The heathen who owned it refused
+and, to annoy us, raised mean houses round the synagogue. The
+Jewish youths interrupted the workmen; and the wealthier of the
+community--headed by John, a publican--subscribed eight talents,
+and sent them to Florus as a bribe, that he might order the
+building to be stopped.
+
+"Florus took the money, and made many promises; but the evil man
+desired that a revolt should take place, in order that he might
+gain great plunder. So he went away from Caesarea, and did nothing;
+and a great tumult arose between the heathen and our people. In
+this we were worsted, and went away from the city; while John, with
+twelve of the highest rank, went to Samaria to lay the matter
+before Florus; who threw them into prison--doubtless the more to
+excite the people--and at the same time sent to Jerusalem, and
+demanded seventeen talents from the treasury of the Temple.
+
+"The people burst into loud outcries, and Florus advanced upon the
+city with all his force. But we knew that we could not oppose the
+Romans; and so received Florus, on his arrival, with acclamations.
+But this did not suit the tyrant. The next morning he ordered his
+troops to plunder the upper market, and to put to death all they
+met. The soldiers obeyed, and slew three thousand six hundred men,
+women, and children.
+
+"You may imagine, John, the feelings of grief and rage which filled
+every heart. The next day the multitude assembled in the
+marketplace, wailing for the dead and cursing Florus. But the
+principal men of the city, with the priests, tore their robes and
+went among them, praying them to disperse and not to provoke the
+anger of the governor. The people obeyed their voices, and went
+quietly home.
+
+"But Florus was not content that matters should end so. He sent for
+the priests and leaders, and commanded them to go forth and
+receive, with acclamations of welcome, two cohorts of troops who
+were advancing from Caesarea. The priests called the people
+together in the Temple and, with difficulty, persuaded them to obey
+the order. The troops, having orders from Florus, fell upon the
+people and trampled them down and, driving the multitude before
+them, entered the city; and at the same time Florus sallied out
+from his palace, with his troops, and both parties pressed forward
+to gain the Castle of Antonia, whose possession would lay the
+Temple open to them, and enable Florus to gain the sacred treasures
+deposited there.
+
+"But, as soon as the people perceived their object, they ran
+together in such vast crowds that the Roman soldiers could not cut
+their way through the mass which blocked up the streets; while the
+more active men, going up on to the roofs, hurled down stones and
+missiles upon the troops.
+
+"What a scene was that, John! I was on the portico near Antonia,
+and saw it all. It was terrible to hear the shouts of the soldiers,
+as they strove to hew their way through the defenseless people; the
+war cries of our own youths, the shrieks and wailings of the women.
+While the Romans were still striving, our people broke down the
+galleries connecting Antonia with the Temple; and Florus, seeing
+that he could not carry out his object, ordered his troops to
+retire to their quarters and, calling the chief priests and the
+rulers, proposed to leave the city, leaving behind him one cohort
+to preserve the peace.
+
+"As soon as he had done so, he sent to Cestius Gallus lying
+accounts of the tumults, laying all the blame upon us; while we and
+Bernice, the sister of King Agrippa--who had tried, in vain, to
+obtain mercy for the people from Florus--sent complaints against
+him. Cestius was moving to Jerusalem--to inquire into the matter,
+as he said, but really to restore Florus--when, fortunately, King
+Agrippa arrived from Egypt.
+
+"While he was yet seven miles from the city, a procession of the
+people met him, headed by the women whose husbands had been slain.
+These, with cries and wailings, called on Agrippa for protection;
+and related to a centurion, whom Cestius had sent forward, and who
+met Agrippa on the way, the cruelty of Florus. When the king and
+the centurion arrived in the city, they were taken to the
+marketplace and shown the houses where the inhabitants had been
+massacred.
+
+"Agrippa called the people together and, taking his seat on a lofty
+dais, with Bernice by his side, harangued them. He assured them
+that, when the emperor heard what had been done, he would send a
+better governor to them, in the place of Florus. He told them that
+it was vain to hope for independence, for that the Romans had
+conquered all the nations in the world; and that the Jews could not
+contend against them, and that war would bring about the
+destruction of the city, and the Temple. The people exclaimed they
+had taken up arms, not against the Romans, but against Florus.
+
+"Agrippa urged us to pay our tribute, and repair the galleries.
+This was willingly done. We sent out leading men to collect the
+arrears of tribute, and these soon brought in forty talents. All
+was going on well, until Agrippa tried to persuade us to receive
+Florus, till the emperor should send another governor. At the
+thought of the return of Florus, a mad rage seized the people. They
+poured abuse upon Agrippa, threw stones at him, and ordered him to
+leave the city. This he did, and retired to his own kingdom.
+
+"The upper class, and all those who possessed wisdom enough to know
+how great was the power of Rome, still strove for peace. But the
+people were beyond control. They seized the fortress of Masada--a
+very strong place near the Dead Sea--and put the Roman garrison to
+the sword. But what was even worse, Eleazar--son of Ananias, the
+chief priest--persuaded the priests to reject the offerings
+regularly made, in the name of the emperor, to the God of the
+Hebrews; and to make a regulation that, from that time, no
+foreigner should be allowed to sacrifice in the Temple.
+
+"The chief priests, with the heads of the Pharisees, addressed the
+people in the quadrangle of the Temple, before the eastern gate. I,
+myself, was one of those who spoke. We told them that the Temple
+had long benefited by the splendid gifts of strangers; and that it
+was not only inhospitable, but impious, to preclude them from
+offering victims, and worshiping God, there. We, who were learned
+in the law, showed them that it was an ancient and immemorial usage
+to receive the offerings of strangers; and that this refusal to
+accept the Roman gifts was nothing short of a declaration of war.
+
+"But all we could do, or say, availed nothing. The influence of
+Eleazar was too great. A madness had seized the people, and they
+rejected all our words; but the party of peace made one more
+effort. They sent a deputation--headed by Simon, son of Ananias--to
+Florus, and another to Agrippa, praying them to march upon
+Jerusalem, and reassert their authority, before it was too late.
+Florus made no reply, for things were going just as he wished; but
+Agrippa, anxious to preserve the city, sent three thousand
+horsemen, commanded by Darius and Philip. When these troops
+arrived, the party of peace took possession of the upper city;
+while Eleazar and the war party held the Temple.
+
+"For a week, fighting went on between the two parties. Then, at the
+festival of the Wood Carrying, great numbers of the poorer people
+were allowed by the party of the chief priest to pass through their
+lines; and go, as usual, to the Temple. When there, these joined
+the party of Eleazar, and a great attack was made on the upper
+city. The troops of Darius and Philip gave way. The house of
+Ananias--the high priest--and the palaces of Agrippa and Bernice
+were burned, and also the public archives. Here all the bonds of
+the debtors were registered and, thus, at one blow the power of the
+rich over the poor was destroyed. Ananias himself, and a few
+others, escaped into the upper towers of the palace, which they
+held.
+
+"The next day, Eleazar's party attacked the fortress of Antonia,
+which was feebly garrisoned and, after two days' fighting, captured
+it, and slew the garrison. Manahem, the son of Judas the Zealot,
+arrived two days later, while the people were besieging the palace.
+He was accepted as general, by them; and took charge of the siege.
+Having mined under one of the towers, they brought it to the
+ground, and the garrison asked for terms. Free passage was granted
+to the troops of Agrippa, and the Jews; but none was granted to the
+Roman soldiers, who were few in number and retreated to the three
+great towers, Hippicus, Phasaelus, and Mariamne.
+
+"The palace was entered, and Ananias and Hezekiah--his
+brother--were found in hiding, and put to death. Manahem now
+assumed the state of a king; but Eleazar, unwilling that, after
+having led the enterprise, the fruits should be gathered by
+another, stirred up the people against him, and he was slain. The
+three towers were now besieged; and Metilius--the Roman
+commander--finding he could no longer hold out, agreed to
+surrender, on the condition that his men should deliver up their
+arms, and be allowed to march away, unharmed.
+
+"The terms were accepted and ratified but, as soon as the Roman
+soldiers marched out, and laid down their arms, Eleazar and his
+followers fell upon them and slew them; Metilius himself being,
+alone, spared. After this terrible massacre, a sadness fell on the
+city. All felt that there was no longer any hope of making
+conditions with Rome. We had placed ourselves beyond the pale of
+forgiveness. It was war, to the death, with Rome.
+
+"Up to this time, as I have told you, I was one of those who had
+labored to maintain peace. I had fought in the palace, by the side
+of Ananias; and had left it only when the troops, and we of their
+party, were permitted to march out when it surrendered. But, from
+this time, I took another part. All hope of peace, of concessions,
+or of conditions was at an end. There remained nothing now but to
+fight and, as the vengeance of Rome would fall on the whole Jewish
+people, it was for the whole Jewish people to unite in the struggle
+for existence.
+
+"On the very day and hour in which the Romans were put to death,
+retribution began to fall upon the nation; for the Greeks of
+Caesarea rose suddenly, and massacred the Jews. Twenty thousand
+were slain, in a single day. The news of these two massacres drove
+the whole people to madness. They rose throughout the land, laid
+waste the country all round the cities of Syria--Philadelphia,
+Sebonitis, Gerasa, Pella, and Scythopolis--and burned and destroyed
+many places.
+
+"The Syrians, in turn, fell upon the Jewish inhabitants of all
+their towns; and a frightful carnage, everywhere, took place. Then,
+our people made an inroad into the domains of Scythopolis but,
+though the Jewish inhabitants there joined the Syrians in defending
+their territory, the Syrians doubted their fidelity and, falling
+upon them in the night, slew them all, and seized their property.
+Thirteen thousand perished here. In many other cities, the same
+things were done; in Ascalon, two thousand five hundred were put to
+the sword; in Ptolemais, two thousand were killed. The land was
+deluged with blood, and despair fell upon all.
+
+"Even in Alexandria, our countrymen suffered. Breaking out into a
+quarrel with the Greeks, a tumult arose; and Tiberias Alexander,
+the governor--by faith a Jew--tried to pacify matters; but the
+madness which had seized the people, here, had fallen also upon the
+Jews of Alexandria. They heaped abuse upon Alexander, who was
+forced to send the troops against them. The Jews fought, but
+vainly; and fifty thousand men, women, and children fell.
+
+"While blood was flowing over the land, Cestius Gallus--the
+prefect--was preparing for invasion. He had with him the Twelfth
+Legion, forty-two hundred strong; two thousand picked men, taken
+from the other legions; six cohorts of foot, about twenty-five
+hundred; and four troops of horse, twelve hundred. Of allies he
+had, from Antiochus, two thousand horse and three thousand foot;
+from Agrippa, one thousand horse and three thousand foot; Sohemus
+joined him with four thousand men--a third of whom were horse, the
+rest archers. Thus he had ten thousand Roman troops, and thirteen
+thousand allies; besides many volunteers, who joined him from the
+Syrian cities.
+
+"After burning and pillaging Zebulon, and wasting the district,
+Cestius returned to Ptolemais, and then advanced to Caesarea. He
+sent forward a part of his army to Joppa. The city was open, and no
+resistance was offered; nevertheless, the Romans slew all, to the
+number of eight thousand five hundred. The cities of Galilee opened
+their gates, without resistance, and Cestius advanced against
+Jerusalem.
+
+"When he arrived within six miles of the town, the Jews poured out;
+and fell upon them with such fury that, if the horse and light
+troops had not made a circuit, and fallen upon us in the rear, I
+believe we should have destroyed the whole army. But we were forced
+to fall back, having killed over five hundred. As the Romans moved
+forward, Simon--son of Gioras--with a band, pressed them closely in
+rear; and slew many, and carried off numbers of their beasts of
+burden.
+
+"Agrippa now tried, once more, to make peace, and sent a deputation
+to persuade us to surrender--offering, in the name of Cestius,
+pardon for all that had passed--but Eleazar's party, fearing the
+people might listen to him, fell upon the deputation, slew some,
+and drove the others back.
+
+"Cestius advanced within a mile of Jerusalem and--after waiting
+three days, in hopes that the Jews would surrender, and knowing
+that many of the chief persons were friendly to him--he advanced to
+the attack, took the suburb of Bezetha, and encamped opposite the
+palace in the upper city. The people discovered that Ananias and
+his friends had agreed to open the gates; and so slew them, and
+threw the bodies over the wall. The Romans for five days attacked
+and, on the sixth, Cestius, with the flower of his army made an
+assault; but the people fought bravely and, disregarding the
+flights of arrows which the archers shot against them, held the
+walls, and poured missiles of all kinds upon the enemy; until at
+last, just as it seemed to all that the Romans would succeed in
+mining the walls, and firing the gates, Cestius called off his
+troops.
+
+"Had he not done so, he would speedily have taken the city; for the
+peace party were on the point of seizing one of the gates, and
+opening it. I no longer belonged to this party; for it seemed to me
+that it was altogether too late, now, to make terms; nor could we
+expect that the Romans would keep to their conditions, after we had
+set them the example of breaking faith.
+
+"Cestius fell back to his camp, a mile distant, but he had no rest
+there. Exultant at seeing a retreat from their walls, all the
+people poured out, and fell upon the Romans with fury.
+
+"The next morning Cestius began to retreat; but we swarmed around
+him, pressing upon his rear, and dashing down from the hills upon
+his flanks, giving him no rest. The heavy-armed Romans could do
+nothing against us; but marched steadily on--leaving numbers of
+dead behind them--till they reached their former camp at Gabao, six
+miles away. Here Cestius waited two days but, seeing how the hills
+around him swarmed with our people, who flocked in from all
+quarters, he gave the word for a further retreat; killing all the
+beasts of burden, and leaving all the baggage behind, and taking on
+only those animals which bore the arrows and engines of war. Then
+he marched down the valley, towards Bethoron.
+
+"The multitude felt now that their enemy was delivered into their
+hands. Was it not in Bethoron that Joshua had defeated the
+Canaanites, while the sun stayed his course? Was it not here that
+Judas, the Maccabean, had routed the host of Nicanor? As soon as
+the Romans entered the defile, the Jews rushed down upon them, sure
+of their prey.
+
+"The Roman horse were powerless to act. The men of the legions
+could not climb the rocky sides and, from every point, javelins,
+stones, and arrows were poured down upon them; and all would have
+been slain, had not night come on and hidden them from us, and
+enabled them to reach Bethoron.
+
+"What rejoicings were there not, on the hills that night, as we
+looked down on their camp there; and thought that, in the morning,
+they would be ours! Fires burned on every crest. Hymns of praise,
+and exulting cries, arose everywhere in the darkness; but the watch
+was not kept strictly enough. Cestius left four hundred of his
+bravest men to mount guard, and keep the fires alight--so that we
+might think that all his army was there--and then, with the rest,
+he stole away.
+
+"In the morning, we saw that the camp was well-nigh deserted and,
+furious at the escape of our foes, rushed down, slew the four
+hundred whom Cestius had left behind, and then set out in pursuit.
+But Cestius had many hours' start and, though we followed as far as
+Antipatris, we could not overtake him; and so returned, with much
+rich spoil, and all the Roman engines of war, to Jerusalem--having,
+with scarcely any loss, defeated a great Roman army, and slain five
+thousand three hundred foot, and three hundred and eighty horse.
+
+"Such is the history of events which have brought about the present
+state of things. As you see, there is no hope of pardon, or mercy,
+from Rome. We have offended beyond forgiveness. But the madness
+against which I fought so hard, at first, is still upon the people.
+They provoked the power of Rome; and then, by breaking the terms,
+and massacring the Roman garrison, they went far beyond the first
+offense of insurrection. By the destruction of the army of Cestius,
+they struck a heavy blow against the pride of the Romans. For
+generations, no such misfortune had fallen upon their arms.
+
+"What, then, would a sane people have done since? Surely they would
+have spent every moment in preparing themselves for the struggle.
+Every man should have been called to arms. The passes should have
+been all fortified, for it is among the hills that we can best cope
+with the heavy Roman troops. The cities best calculated for defense
+should have been strongly walled; preparations made for places of
+refuge, among the mountains, for the women and children; large
+depots of provisions gathered up, in readiness for the strife. That
+we could ever, in the long run, hope to resist, successfully, the
+might of Rome was out of the question; but we might so sternly, and
+valiantly, have resisted as to be able to obtain fair terms, on our
+submission.
+
+"Instead of this, men go on as if Rome had no existence; and we
+only show an energy in quarreling among ourselves. At bottom, it
+would seem that the people rely upon our God doing great things for
+us, as he did when he smote the Assyrian army of Sennacherib; and
+such is my hope, also, seeing that, so far, a wonderful success has
+attended us. And yet, how can one expect the Divine assistance, in
+a war so begun and so conducted--for a people who turn their swords
+against each other, who spend their strength in civil feuds, who
+neither humble themselves, nor repent of the wickedness of their
+ways?
+
+"Alas, my son, though I speak brave words to the people, my heart
+is very sad; and I fear that troubles, like those which fell upon
+us when we were carried captive into Babylon, await us now!"
+
+There was silence, as the rabbi finished. John had, of course,
+heard something of the events which had been taking place but, as
+he now heard them, in sequence, the gravity and danger of the
+situation came freshly upon him.
+
+"What can be done?" he asked, after a long pause.
+
+"Nothing, save to pray to the Lord," the rabbi said, sorrowfully.
+"Josephus is doing what he can, towards building walls to the
+towns; but it is not walls, but soldiers that are wanted and, so
+long as the people remain blind and indifferent to the danger,
+thinking of naught save tilling their ground, and laying up money,
+nothing can be done."
+
+"Then will destruction come upon all?" John asked, looking round in
+a bewildered and hopeless way.
+
+"We may hope not," the rabbi said. "Here in Galilee, we have had no
+share in the events in Jerusalem; and many towns, even now, are
+faithful to the Romans. Therefore it may be that, in this province,
+all will not be involved in the lot of Jerusalem. There can be,
+unless a mighty change takes place, no general resistance to the
+Romans; and it may be, therefore, that no general destruction will
+fall upon the people. As to this, none can say.
+
+"Vespasian--the Roman general who has been charged, by Nero, with
+the command of the army which is gathering against us--is said to
+be a merciful man, as well as a great commander. The Roman mercies
+are not tender, but it may be that the very worst may not fall upon
+this province. The men of spirit and courage will, doubtless,
+proceed to Jerusalem to share in the defense of the Holy City. If
+we cannot fight with success, here, it is far better that the men
+should fight at Jerusalem; leaving their wives and families here,
+and doing naught to call down the vengeance of the Romans upon this
+province.
+
+"In Galilee there have, as elsewhere, been risings against the
+Romans; but these will count for little, in their eyes, in
+comparison to the terrible deeds at Jerusalem; and I pray, for the
+sake of all my friends here, that the Romans may march through the
+land, on their way to Jerusalem, without burning and wasting the
+country. Here, on the eastern shore of Galilee, there is much more
+hope of escape than there is across the lake. Not only are we out
+of the line of the march of the army, but there are few important
+cities on this side; and the disposition of the people has not been
+so hostile to the Romans.
+
+"My own opinion is that, when the Romans advance, it will be the
+duty of every Jew who can bear arms to go down to the defense of
+the Holy City. Its position is one of vast strength. We shall have
+numbers, and courage, though neither order nor discipline; and it
+may be that, at the last, the Lord will defend his sanctuary, and
+save it from destruction at the hands of the heathen. Should it not
+be so, we can but die; and how could a Jew better die than in
+defense of God's Temple?"
+
+"It would have been better," Simon said, "had we not, by our evil
+doings, have brought God's Temple into danger."
+
+"He has suffered it," the rabbi said, "and his ways are not the
+ways of man. It may be that He has suffered such madness to fall
+upon, us in order that His name may, at last, be glorified."
+
+"May it be so!" Simon said piously; "and now, let us to bed, for
+the hour is growing late."
+
+The following morning Simon, his wife, and the whole household
+accompanied John to the shore; as Simon had arranged with one of
+the boatmen to take the lad to Hippos. The distance was but short;
+but Simon, when his wife had expressed surprise at his sending John
+in a boat, said:
+
+"It is not the distance, Martha. A half-hour's walk is naught to
+the lad; but I had reasons, altogether apart from the question of
+distance. John is going out to play a man's part. He is young but,
+since my lord Josephus has chosen to place him among those who form
+his bodyguard, he has a right to claim to be regarded as a man.
+That being so, I would not accompany him to Hippos; for it would
+seem like one leading a child, and it were best to let him go by
+himself.
+
+"Again, it were better to have but one parting. Here he will
+receive my blessing, and say goodbye to us all. Doubtless he will
+often be with us, for Tiberias lies within sight and, so long as
+Josephus remains in Galilee, he will never be more than a long
+day's journey from home. The lad loves us, and will come as often
+as he can but, surrounded as Josephus is by dangers, the boy will
+not be able to get away on his own business. He must take the
+duties, as well as the honor of the office; and we must not blind
+ourselves to the fact that, in one of these popular tumults, great
+danger and even death may come upon him.
+
+"This seems to you terrible," he went on, in answer to an
+exclamation of alarm from Martha; "but it does not seem so terrible
+to me. We go on planting, and gathering in, as if no danger
+threatened us, and the evil day were far off; but it is not so. The
+Roman hosts are gathering, and we are wasting our strength, in
+party strife, and are doing naught to prepare against the storm. We
+have gone to war, without counting the cost. We have affronted and
+put to shame Rome, before whom all nations bow and, assuredly, she
+will take a terrible vengeance. Another year, and who can say who
+will be alive, and who dead--who will be wandering over the wasted
+fields of our people, or who will be a slave, in Rome!
+
+"In the times that are at hand, no man's life will be worth
+anything; and therefore I say, wife, that though there be danger
+and peril around the lad, let us not trouble overmuch; for he is,
+like all of us, in God's hands."
+
+Therefore, the parting took place on the shore. Simon solemnly
+blessed John, and his mother cried over him. Mary was a little
+surprised at these demonstrations, at what she regarded as a very
+temporary separation; but her merry spirits were subdued at the
+sight of her aunt's tears, although she, herself, saw nothing to
+cry about.
+
+She brightened up, however, when John whispered, as he said goodbye
+to her:
+
+"I shall come across the lake, as often as I can, to see how you
+are getting on, Mary."
+
+Then he took his place in the stern of the boat. The fishermen
+dipped their oars in the water, and the boat drew away from the
+little group, who stood watching it as it made its way across the
+sparkling water to Hippos.
+
+Upon landing, John at once went to the house where Josephus was
+lodging. The latter gave him in charge to the leader of the little
+group of men who had attached themselves to him, as his bodyguard.
+
+"Joab," he said, "this youth will, henceforth, make one of your
+party. He is brave and, I think, ready and quick witted. Give him
+arms and see that he has all that is needful. Being young, he will
+be able to mingle unsuspected among the crowds; and may obtain
+tidings of evil intended me, when men would not speak, maybe,
+before others whom they might judge my friends. He will be able to
+bear messages, unsuspected; and may prove of great service to the
+cause."
+
+John found, at once, that there was nothing like discipline, or
+regular duties, among the little band who constituted the bodyguard
+of Josephus. They were simply men who, from affection for the
+governor, and a hatred for those who, by their plots and
+conspiracies, would undo the good work he was accomplishing, had
+left their farms and occupations to follow and guard him.
+
+Every Jewish boy received a certain training in the use of weapons,
+in order to be prepared to fight in the national army, when the day
+of deliverance should arrive; but beyond that, the Jews had no
+military training, whatever. Their army would be simply a gathering
+of the men capable of bearing arms, throughout the land--each ready
+to give his life, for his faith and his country; relying, like
+their forefathers, on the sword of the Lord and Israel, but without
+the slightest idea of military drill, discipline, or tactics. Such
+an army might fight bravely, might die nobly, but it could have
+little chance of victory over the well-trained legions of imperial
+Rome.
+
+At noon, Josephus embarked in a galley with his little band of
+followers--eight in number--and sailed across the lake to Tiberias.
+Here they landed, and went up to the house in which Josephus always
+dwelt, when in that city. His stay there was generally short,
+Tarichea being his general abode--for there he felt in safety, the
+inhabitants being devoted to him; while those of Tiberias were ever
+ready to follow the advice of the disaffected, and a section were
+eager for the return of the Romans, and the renewal of the business
+and trade which had brought wealth to the city, before the troubles
+began.
+
+That evening, Josephus sent for John, and said:
+
+"I purpose, in two days, to go to Tarichea, where I shall spend the
+Sabbath. I hear that there is a rumor that many of the citizens
+have, privately, sent to King Agrippa asking him to send hither
+Roman troops, and promising them a good reception. The men with me
+are known, to many in the city, and would be shunned by my enemies,
+and so would hear naught of what is going on; therefore, I purpose
+to leave you here.
+
+"In the morning, go early to the house of Samuel, the son of
+Gideon. He dwells in the street called that of Tarichea, for it
+leadeth in the direction of that town. He is a tanner, by trade;
+and you will have no difficulty in finding it. He has been here,
+this evening, and I have spoken to him about you and, when you
+present yourself to him, he will take you in. Thus, no one will
+know that you are of my company.
+
+"Pass your time in the streets and, when you see groups of people
+assemble, join yourself to them and gather what they are saying. If
+it is ought that is important for me to know, come here and tell me
+or, if it be after I have departed for Tarichea, bring me the news
+there. It is but thirty furlongs distant."
+
+John followed up the instructions given him, and was hospitably
+received by Samuel the tanner.
+
+In the course of the day, a number of the citizens called upon
+Josephus and begged him, at once, to set about building walls for
+the town, as he had already built them for Tarichea. When he
+assured them that he had already made preparations for doing so,
+and that the builders should set to work, forthwith, they appeared
+satisfied; and the city remained perfectly tranquil until Josephus
+left, the next morning, for Tarichea.
+
+
+
+Chapter 4: The Lull Before The Storm.
+
+
+The galley which carried Josephus from Tiberias was scarcely out of
+sight when John, who was standing in the marketplace watching the
+busy scene with amusement, heard the shout raised:
+
+"The Romans are coming!"
+
+At once, people left their business, and all ran to the outskirts
+of the city. John ran with them and, on arriving there, saw a party
+of Roman horsemen riding along, at no great distance. The people
+began to shout loudly to them to come into the town, calling out
+that all the citizens were loyal to King Agrippa and the Romans,
+and that they hated the traitor Josephus.
+
+The Romans halted, but made no sign of entering the town; fearing
+that treachery was intended, and remembering the fate of their
+comrades, who had trusted to Jewish faith when they surrendered the
+towers of Hippicus, Phasaelus, and Mariamne. The movement, however,
+spread through the city. The people assembled in crowds, shouting
+"Death to Josephus!" and exclaiming for the Romans, and King
+Agrippa. Such as were loyal to Josephus did not venture to raise
+their voices, so numerous and furious were the multitude; and the
+whole city was soon in open revolt, the citizens arming themselves
+in readiness for war.
+
+As soon as he saw the course which affairs were taking, John made
+his way out of the town, and ran at the top of his speed to
+Tarichea, where he arrived in a little over half an hour. He was
+directed at once to the house of Josephus, who rose in surprise, at
+the table at which he was seated, writing, at John's entry.
+
+"Scarcely had you left, my lord, than some Roman horsemen
+approached near the town; whereupon the whole city rose in revolt,
+shouting to them to enter and take possession, in the name of the
+king, and breathing out threats against yourself. The Romans had
+not entered, as I came away; but the populace were all in arms, and
+your friends did not venture to lift up a voice. Tiberias has
+wholly revolted to the Romans."
+
+"This is bad news, indeed," Josephus said, gravely. "I have but the
+seven armed men who accompanied me from Tiberias, here. All those
+who were assembled in the city I bade disperse, so soon as I
+arrived; in order that they might go to their towns, or villages,
+for the Sabbath. Were I to send round the country, I could speedily
+get a great force together but, in a few hours, the Sabbath will
+begin; and it is contrary to the law to fight upon the Sabbath,
+even though the necessity be great.
+
+"And yet, if the people of Tiberias march hither, we can hardly
+hope to resist successfully; for the men of the town are too few to
+man the full extent of the walls. It is most necessary to put down
+this rising, before King Agrippa can send large numbers of troops
+into Tiberias; and yet, we can do nothing until the Sabbath is
+past.
+
+"Nor would I shed blood, if it can be avoided. Hitherto I have put
+down every rising, and caused Sepphoris, Tiberias, and other cities
+to expel the evildoers, and return to obedience, by tact--and by
+the great force which I could bring against them--and without any
+need of bloodshed. But this time, I fear, great trouble will come
+of it; since I cannot take prompt measures, and the enemy will have
+time to organize their forces, and to receive help from John of
+Gischala and other robbers--to say nothing of the Romans."
+
+Josephus walked up and down the room, in agitation, and then stood
+looking out into the harbor.
+
+"Ah!" he exclaimed suddenly, "we may yet frighten them into
+submission. Call in Joab."
+
+When Joab entered Josephus explained to him, in a few words, the
+condition of things at Tiberias; and then proceeded:
+
+"Send quickly to the principal men of the town, and bid them put
+trusty men at each of the gates, and let none pass out. Order the
+fighting men to man the walls, in case those of Tiberias should
+come hither, at once. Then let one or two able fellows embark on
+board each of the boats and vessels in the port, taking with them
+two or three of the infirm and aged men. Send a fast galley across
+to Hippos; and bid the fishermen set out, at once, with all their
+boats, and join us off Tiberias. We will not approach close enough
+to the city for the people to see how feebly we are manned but,
+when they perceive all these ships making towards them, they will
+think that I have with me a great army, with which I purpose to
+destroy their city."
+
+The orders were very quickly carried out. Josephus embarked, with
+his eight companions, in one ship and, followed by two hundred and
+thirty vessels, of various sizes, sailed towards Tiberias.
+
+As they approached the town, they saw a great movement among the
+population. Men and women were seen, crowding down to the
+shore--the men holding up their hands, to show that they were
+unarmed; the women wailing, and uttering loud cries of lamentation.
+
+Josephus waited for an hour, until the ships from Hippos also came
+up, and then caused them all to anchor off the town--but at such a
+distance that the numbers of those on board could not be seen. Then
+he advanced, in his own ship, to within speaking distance of the
+land. The people cried out to him to spare the city, and their
+wives and children; saying that they had been misled by evil men,
+and regretted bitterly what they had done.
+
+Josephus told them that, assuredly, they deserved that the city
+should be wholly destroyed; for that now, when there was so much
+that had to be done to prepare for the war which Rome would make
+against the country, they troubled the country with their
+seditions. The people set up a doleful cry for mercy; and Josephus
+then said that, this time, he would spare them; but that their
+principal men must be handed over to him.
+
+To this the people joyfully agreed; and a boat, with ten of their
+senate, came out to the vessel. Josephus had them bound, and sent
+them on board one of the other ships. Another and another boat load
+came off; until all the members of the senate, and many of the
+principal inhabitants, were prisoners. Some of the men had been
+drawn from the other ships, and put on board those with the
+prisoners; and these then sailed away to Tarichea.
+
+The people of Tiberias--terrified at seeing so many taken away, and
+not knowing how many more might be demanded--now denounced a young
+man, named Clitus, as being the leader of the revolt. Seven of the
+bodyguard of Josephus had gone down the lake, with the prisoners;
+and one Levi, alone, remained. Josephus told him to go ashore, and
+to cut off one of the hands of Clitus.
+
+Levi was, however, afraid to land, alone, among such a number of
+enemies; whereupon Josephus addressed Clitus, and told him that he
+was worthy of death, but that he would spare his life, if his two
+hands were sent on board a ship. Clitus begged that he might be
+permitted to keep one hand, to which Josephus agreed. Clitus then
+drew his sword, and struck off his left hand. Josephus now
+professed to be satisfied and, after warning the people against
+again listening to evil advisers, sailed away with the whole fleet.
+Josephus, that evening, entertained the principal persons among the
+prisoners and, in the morning, allowed all to return to Tiberias.
+
+The people there had already learned that they had been duped; but
+with time had come reflection and, knowing that in a day or two
+Josephus could have assembled the whole population of Galilee
+against them, and have destroyed them before any help could come,
+there were few who were not well content that their revolt had been
+so easily, and bloodlessly, repressed; and Josephus rose, in their
+estimation, by the quickness and boldness of the stratagem by which
+he had, without bloodshed save in the punishment of Clitus,
+restored tranquillity.
+
+Through the winter, Josephus was incessantly active. He endeavored
+to organize an army, enrolled a hundred thousand men, appointed
+commanders and captains, and strove to establish something like
+military drill and order. But the people were averse to leaving
+their farms and occupations, and but little progress was made.
+Moreover, a great part of the time of Josephus was occupied in
+suppressing the revolts, which were continually breaking out in
+Sepphoris, Tiberias, and Gamala; and in thwarting the attempts of
+John of Gischala, and his other enemies, who strove by means of
+bribery, at Jerusalem, to have him recalled--and would have
+succeeded, had it not been that the Galileans, save those of the
+great cities, were always ready to turn out, in all their force, to
+defend him and, by sending deputations to Jerusalem, counteracted
+the efforts, there, of his enemies.
+
+John was incessantly engaged, as he accompanied Josephus in his
+rapid journeys through the province, either to suppress the risings
+or to see to the work of organization; and only once or twice was
+he able to pay a short visit to his family.
+
+"You look worn and fagged, John," his cousin said, on the occasion
+of his last visit, when spring was close at hand.
+
+"I am well in health, Mary; but it does try one, to see how all the
+efforts of Josephus are marred by the turbulence of the people of
+Tiberias and Sepphoris. All his thoughts and time are occupied in
+keeping order, and the work of organizing the army makes but little
+progress.
+
+"Vespasian is gathering a great force, at Antioch. His son Titus
+will soon join him, with another legion; and they will, together,
+advance against us."
+
+"But I hear that the walling of the cities is well-nigh finished."
+
+"That is so, Mary, and doubtless many of them will be able to make
+a long defense but, after all, the taking of a city is a mere
+question of time. The Romans have great siege engines, which
+nothing can withstand but, even if the walls were so strong that
+they could not be battered down, each city could, in time, be
+reduced by famine. It is not for me, who am but a boy, to judge the
+doings of my elders; but it seems to me that this walling of cities
+is altogether wrong. They can give no aid to each other and, one by
+one, must fall; and all within perish, or be made slaves, for the
+Romans give no quarter when they capture a city by storm.
+
+"It seems to me that it would be far better to hold Jerusalem,
+only, with a strong force of fighting men; and for all the rest of
+the men capable of carrying arms to gather among the hills, and
+there to fight the Romans. When the legion of Cestius was destroyed
+we showed that, among defiles and on rocky ground, our active,
+lightly-armed men were a match for the Roman soldiers, in their
+heavy armor; and in this way I think that we might check even the
+legions of Vespasian. The women and the old men and children could
+gather in the cities, and admit the Romans when they approached. In
+that case they would suffer no harm; for the Romans are clement,
+when not opposed.
+
+"As it is, it seems to me that, in the end, destruction will fall
+on all alike. Here in Galilee we have a leader, but he is hampered
+by dissensions and jealousies. Samaria stands neutral. Jerusalem,
+which ought to take the lead, is torn by faction. There is war in
+her streets. She thinks only of herself, and naught of the country;
+although she must know that, when the Romans have crushed down all
+opposition elsewhere she must, sooner or later, fall. The country
+seems possessed with madness, and I see no hope in the future."
+
+"Save in the God of Israel," Mary said, gently; "that is what Simon
+and Martha say."
+
+"Save in him," John assented; "but, dear, He suffered us to be
+carried away into Babylon; and how are we to expect His aid
+now--when the people do naught for themselves, when His city is
+divided in itself, when its streets are wet with blood, and its
+very altars defiled by conflict? When evil men are made high
+priests, and all rule and authority is at an end, what right have
+we to expect aid at the hands of Jehovah?
+
+"My greatest comfort, Mary, is that we lie here on the east of the
+lake, and that we are within the jurisdiction of King Agrippa. On
+this side, his authority has never been altogether thrown off;
+though some of the cities have made common cause with those of the
+other side. Still, we may hope that, on this side of Jordan, we may
+escape the horrors of war."
+
+"You are out of spirits, John, and take a gloomy view of things;
+but I know that Simon, too, thinks that everything will end badly,
+and I have heard him say that he, too, is glad that his farm lies
+on this side of the lake; and that he wishes Gamala had not thrown
+off the authority of the king, so that there might be naught to
+bring the Romans across Jordan.
+
+"Our mother is more hopeful. She trusts in God for, as she says,
+though the wealthy and powerful may have forsaken Him, the people
+still cling to Him; and He will not let us fall into the hands of
+our enemies."
+
+"I hope it will be so, Mary; and I own I am out of spirits, and
+look at matters in the worst light. However, I will have a talk
+with father, tonight."
+
+That evening, John had a long conversation with Simon, and repeated
+the forebodings he had expressed to Mary.
+
+"At any rate, father, I hope that when the Romans approach you will
+at least send away my mother, Mary, and the women to a place of
+safety. We are but a few miles from Gamala and, if the Romans come
+there and besiege it, they will spread through the country; and
+will pillage, even if they do not slay, in all the villages. If, as
+we trust, God will give victory to our arms, they can return in
+peace; if not, let them at least be free from the dangers which are
+threatening us."
+
+"I have been thinking of it, John. A fortnight since, I sent old
+Isaac to your mother's brother--whose farm, as you know, lies upon
+the slopes of Mount Hermon, a few miles from Neve, and very near
+the boundary of Manasseh--to ask him if he will receive Martha, and
+Mary, and the women, until the troubles are over. He will gladly do
+so; and I purpose sending them away, as soon as I hear that the
+Romans have crossed the frontier."
+
+"I am, indeed, rejoiced to hear it, father; but do not let them
+tarry for that, let them go as soon as the snows have melted on
+Mount Hermon, for the Roman cavalry will spread quickly over the
+land. Let them go as soon as the roads are fit for travel. I shall
+feel a weight off my mind, when I know that they are safe.
+
+"And does my mother know what you have decided?"
+
+"She knows, John, but in truth she is reluctant to go. She says, at
+present, that if I stay she also will stay."
+
+"I trust, father, that you will overrule my mother; and that you
+will either go with her or, if you stay, you will insist upon her
+going. Should you not overcome her opposition, and finally suffer
+her, with Miriam and the older women, to remain with you, I hope
+that you will send Mary and the young ones to my uncle. The danger,
+with them, is vastly greater. The Romans, unless their blood is
+heated by opposition, may not interfere with the old people--who
+are valueless as slaves--but the young ones--" and he stopped.
+
+"I have thought it over, my son, and even if your mother remains
+here with me, I will assuredly send off Mary, and the young
+maidens, to the mountain. Make your mind easy, on that score. We
+old people have taken root on the land which was our fathers'. I
+shall not leave, whatever may befall--and it may be that your
+mother will tarry here, with me--but the young women shall
+assuredly be sent away, until the danger is over.
+
+"Not that I think the peril is as great as it seems, to you. Our
+people have ever shown themselves courageous, in great danger. They
+know the fate that awaits them, after provoking the anger of Rome.
+They know they are fighting for faith, for country, and their
+families, and will fight desperately. They greatly outnumber the
+Romans--at least, the army by which we shall first be attacked--and
+maybe, if we can resist that, we may make terms with Rome for,
+assuredly, in the long run she must overpower us."
+
+"I should think with you, father," John said, shaking his head, "if
+I saw anything like union among the people; but I lose all heart,
+when I see how divided they are, how blind to the storm that is
+coming against us, how careless as to anything but the trouble of
+the day, how intent upon the work of their farms and businesses,
+how disinclined to submit to discipline, and to prepare themselves
+for the day of battle."
+
+"You are young, my son, and full of enthusiasm; but it is hard to
+stir men, whose lives have traveled in one groove, from their
+ordinary course. In all our history, although we have been ready to
+assemble and meet the foe, we have ever been ready to lay by the
+sword, when the danger is past, and to return to our homes and
+families. We have been a nation of fighting men, but never a nation
+with an army."
+
+"Yes, father, because we trusted in God to give us victory, on the
+day of battle. He was our army. When He fought with us, we
+conquered; when He abstained, we were beaten. He suffered us to
+fall into the hands of the Romans and, instead of repenting of our
+sins, we have sinned more and more.
+
+"The news from Jerusalem is worse and worse. There is civil war in
+its streets. Robbers are its masters. The worst of the people sit
+in high places."
+
+"That is so, my son. God's anger still burns fiercely, and the
+people perish; yet it may be that He will be merciful, in the end."
+
+"I hope so, father, for assuredly our hope is only in Him."
+
+Early in the spring, Vespasian was joined by King Agrippa, with all
+his forces; and they advanced to Ptolemais and, here, Titus joined
+his father, having brought his troops from Alexandria by sea. The
+force of Vespasian now consisted of the Fifth, Tenth, and Fifteenth
+Legions. Besides these he had twenty-three cohorts; ten of which
+numbered a thousand footmen, the rest, each, six hundred footmen
+and a hundred and fifty horse. The allied force, contributed by
+Agrippa and others, consisted of two thousand archers, and a
+thousand horse; while Malchus, King of Arabia, sent a thousand
+horse, and five thousand archers. The total force amounted to sixty
+thousand regular troops, besides great numbers of camp followers--who
+were all trained to military service, and could fight, in case of need.
+
+Vespasian had encountered no resistance, on his march down to
+Ptolemais. The inhabitants of the country through which he passed
+forsook the villages and farms; and retired, according to the
+orders they had received, to the fortified towns. There was no army
+to meet the Romans in the field. The efforts at organization which
+Josephus had made bore no fruit, whatever. No sooner had the
+invader entered the country, than it lay at his mercy; save only
+the walled cities into which the people had crowded.
+
+In the range of mountains stretching across Upper Galilee were
+three places of great strength: Gabara, Gischala, and Jotapata. The
+last named had been very strongly fortified, by Josephus himself;
+and here he intended to take up his own position.
+
+"It is a pitiful sight, truly," Joab remarked to John, as they saw
+the long line of fugitives--men, women, and children--with such
+belongings as they could carry on their own backs, and those of
+their beasts of burden. "It is a pitiful sight, is it not?"
+
+"It is a pitiful sight, Joab, and one that fills me with
+foreboding, as well as with pity. What agonies may not these poor
+people be doomed to suffer, when the Romans lay siege to Jotapata?"
+
+"They can never take it," Joab said, scornfully.
+
+"I wish I could think so, Joab. When did the Romans ever lay siege
+to a place, and fail to capture it? Once, twice, three times they
+may fail but, in the end, they assuredly will take it."
+
+"Look at its position. See how wild is the country through which
+they will have to march."
+
+"They have made roads over all the world, Joab. They will make very
+short work of the difficulties here. It may take the Romans weeks,
+or months, to besiege each of these strong places; but they will
+assuredly carry them, in the end--and then, better a thousand times
+that the men had, in the first place, slain the women, and rushed
+to die on the Roman swords."
+
+"It seems to me, John," Joab said stiffly, "that you are over bold,
+in thus criticising the plans of our general."
+
+"It may be so," John said, recklessly, "but methinks, when we are
+all risking our lives, each man may have a right to his opinions. I
+am ready, like the rest, to die when the time comes; but that does
+not prevent me having my opinions. Besides, it seems to me that
+there is no heresy in questioning the plans of our general. I love
+Josephus, and would willingly give my life for him. He has shown
+himself a wise ruler, firm to carry out what is right, and to
+suppress all evildoers but, after all, he has not served in war. He
+is full of resources, and will, I doubt not, devise every means to
+check the Romans but, even so, he may not be able to cope, in war,
+with such generals as theirs, who have won their experience all
+over the world. Nor may the general's plan of defense, which he has
+adopted, be the best suited for the occasion.
+
+"Would you have us fight the Romans in the open?" Joab said,
+scornfully. "What has been done in the south? See how our people
+marched out from Jerusalem--under John the Essene, Niger of Peraea,
+and Silas the Babylonian--to attack Ascalon, held by but one cohort
+of Roman foot, and one troop of horse. What happened? Antoninus,
+the Roman commander, charged the army without fear, rode through
+and through them, broke them up into fragments, and slew till night
+time--when ten thousand men, with John and Silas, lay dead.
+
+"Not satisfied with this defeat, in a short time Niger advanced
+again against Ascalon; when Antoninus sallied out again, and slew
+eight thousand of them. Thus, eighteen thousand men were killed, by
+one weak cohort of foot and a troop of horse; and yet you say we
+ought not to hide behind our walls, but to meet them in the open!"
+
+"I would not meet them in the open, where the Roman cavalry could
+charge--at any rate, not until our people have learned discipline.
+I would harass them, and attack them in defiles, as Cestius was
+attacked; harassing them night and day, giving them no peace or
+rest, never allowing them to meet us in the plains, but moving
+rapidly hither and thither among the mountains--leaving the women
+in the cities, which should offer no resistance, so that the Romans
+would have no point to strike at--until at length, when we have
+gained confidence and discipline and order, we should be able to
+take bolder measures, gradually, and fight them hand to hand."
+
+"Maybe you are right, lad," Joab said, thoughtfully. "I like not
+being cooped up in a stronghold, myself; and methinks that a
+mountain warfare, such as you speak of, would suit the genius of
+the people. We are light limbed and active--inured to fatigue, for
+we are a nation of cultivators--brave, assuredly, and ready to give
+our lives.
+
+"They say that, in the fight near Ascalon, not a Jew fled. Fight
+they could not, they were powerless against the rush of the heavy
+Roman horse; but they died as they stood, destroyed but not
+defeated. Gabara and Gischala and Jotapata may fall but, lad, it
+will be only after a defense so desperate that the haughty Romans
+may well hesitate; for if such be the resistance of these little
+mountain towns, what will not be the task of conquering Jerusalem,
+garrisoned by the whole nation?"
+
+"That is true," John said, "and if our deaths here be for the
+safety of Jerusalem, we shall not have died in vain. But I doubt
+whether such men as those who have power in Jerusalem will agree to
+any terms, however favorable, that may be offered.
+
+"It may be that it is God's will that it should be so. Two days
+ago, as I journeyed hither, after going down to Sepphoris with a
+message from the general to some of the principal inhabitants
+there, I met an old man, traveling with his wife and family. I
+asked him whether he was on his way hither, but he said 'No,' he
+was going across Jordan, and through Manasseh, and over Mount
+Hermon into Trachonitis. He said that he was a follower of that
+Christ who was put to death, in Jerusalem, some thirty-five years
+since, and whom many people still believe was the Messiah. He says
+that he foretold the destruction of Jerusalem, by the Romans; and
+warned his followers not to stay in the walled cities, but to fly
+to the deserts when the time came."
+
+"The Messiah was to save Israel," Joab said, scornfully. "Christ
+could not save even himself."
+
+"I know not," John said, simply. "I have heard of him from others;
+and my father heard him preach, several times, near the lake. He
+says that he was a man of wondrous power, and that he preached a
+new doctrine. He says that he did not talk about himself, or claim
+to be the Messiah; but that he simply told the people to be kind
+and good to each other, and to love God and do his will. My father
+said that he thought he was a good and holy man, and full of the
+Spirit of God. He did works of great power, too; but bore himself
+meekly, like any other man. My father always regards him as a
+prophet; and said that he grieved, when he heard that he had been
+put to death at Jerusalem. If he were a prophet, what he said about
+the destruction of Jerusalem should have weight with us."
+
+"All who heard him agreed that he was a good man," Joab assented.
+"I have never known one of those who heard him say otherwise, and
+maybe he was a prophet. Certainly, he called upon the people to
+repent and turn from their sins and, had they done as he taught
+them, these evils might not have fallen upon us, and God would
+doubtless have been ready to aid his people, as of old.
+
+"However, it is too late to think about it, now. We want all our
+thoughts for the matter we have in hand. We have done all that we
+can to put this town into a state of defense and, methinks, if the
+Romans ever penetrate through these mountains and forests, they
+will see that they have a task which will tax all their powers,
+before they take Jotapata."
+
+The position of the town was, indeed, immensely strong. It stood on
+the summit of a lofty mass of rock which, on three sides, fell
+abruptly down into the deep and almost impassable ravines which
+surrounded it. On the north side, alone, where the ridge sloped
+more gradually down, it could be approached. The town extended part
+of the way down this declivity and, at its foot, Josephus had built
+a strong wall. On all sides were lofty mountains, covered with
+thick forests; and the town could not be seen by an enemy, until
+they were close at hand.
+
+As soon as Vespasian had arrived at Ptolemais (on the site of which
+city stands the modern Acre) he was met by a deputation from
+Sepphoris. That city had only been prevented from declaring for the
+Romans by the exertions of Josephus, and the knowledge that all
+Galilee would follow him to attack it, should it revolt. But as
+soon as Vespasian arrived at Ptolemais, which was scarce twenty
+miles away, they sent deputies with their submission to him;
+begging that a force might be sent, to defend them against any
+attack by the Jews.
+
+Vespasian received them with courtesy; and sent Placidus, with a
+thousand horse and six thousand foot, to the city. The infantry
+took up their quarters in the town; but the horsemen made raids
+over the plains, burning the villages, slaying all the men capable
+of bearing arms, and carrying off the rest of the population as
+slaves.
+
+The day after the conversation between Joab and John, a man brought
+the news to Jotapata that Placidus was marching against it.
+Josephus at once ordered the fighting men to assemble and, marching
+out, placed them in ambuscade, in the mountains, on the road by
+which the Romans would approach.
+
+As soon as the latter had fairly entered the pass, the Jews sprang
+to their feet, and hurled their javelins and shot their arrows
+among them. The Romans, in vain, endeavored to reach their
+assailants; and numbers were wounded, as they tried to climb the
+heights, but few were killed--for they were so completely covered,
+by their armor and shields, that the Jewish missiles, thrown from a
+distance, seldom inflicted mortal wounds. They were, however,
+unable to make their way further; and Placidus was obliged to
+retire to Sepphoris, having failed, signally, in gaining the credit
+he had hoped for, from the capture of the strongest of the Jewish
+strongholds in Upper Galilee.
+
+The Jews, on their part, were greatly inspirited by the success of
+their first encounter with the Romans; and returned, rejoicing, to
+their stronghold.
+
+All being ready at Jotapata, Josephus--with a considerable number
+of the fighting men--proceeded to Garis, not far from Sepphoris,
+where the army had assembled. But no sooner had the news arrived,
+that the great army of Vespasian was in movement, than they
+dispersed in all directions; and Josephus was left with a mere
+handful of followers, with whom he fled to Tiberias. Thence he
+wrote earnest letters to Jerusalem; saying that, unless a strong
+army was fitted out and put in the field, it was useless to attempt
+to fight the Romans; and that it would be wiser to come to terms
+with them, than to maintain a useless resistance, which would bring
+destruction upon the nation. He remained a short time, only, at
+Tiberias; and thence hurried up with his followers to Jotapata,
+which he reached on the 14th of May.
+
+Vespasian marched first to Gadara--which was undefended, the
+fighting men having all gone to Jotapata--but, although no
+resistance was offered, Vespasian put all the males to the sword;
+and burned the town and all the villages in the neighborhood, and
+then advanced against Jotapata. For four days, the pioneers of the
+Roman army had labored incessantly--cutting a road through the
+forests, filling up ravines, and clearing away obstacles--and, on
+the fifth day, the road was constructed close up to Jotapata.
+
+On the 14th of May, Placidus and Ebutius were sent forward by
+Vespasian, with a thousand horse, to surround the town and cut off
+all possibility of escape. On the following day Vespasian himself,
+with his whole army, arrived there. The defenders of Jotapata could
+scarcely believe their eyes when they saw the long, heavy
+column--with all its baggage, and siege engines--marching along a
+straight and level road, where they had believed that it would be
+next to impossible for even the infantry of the enemy to make their
+way. If this marvel had been accomplished in five days, what hope
+was there that the city would be able to withstand this force,
+which had so readily triumphed over the defenses of nature?
+
+
+
+Chapter 5: The Siege Of Jotapata.
+
+
+"Well, Joab, what do you think, now?" John said, as he stood on the
+wall with his older companion, watching the seemingly endless
+column of the enemy. "It seems to me that we are caught here, like
+rats in a trap, and that we should have done better, a thousand
+times, in maintaining our freedom of movement among the mountains.
+It is one thing to cut a road; it would be another to clear off all
+the forests from the Anti-Libanus and, so long as there was a
+forest to shelter us, the Romans could never have overtaken us.
+Here, there is nothing to do but to die."
+
+"That is so, John. I own that the counsel you urged would have been
+wiser than this. Here are all the best fighting men in Galilee,
+shut up without hope of succor, or of mercy. Well, lad, we can at
+least teach the Romans the lesson that the Jews know how to die;
+and the capture of this mountain town will cost them as much as
+they reckoned would suffice for the conquest of the whole country.
+Jotapata may save Jerusalem, yet."
+
+John was no coward, and was prepared to fight to the last; but he
+was young, and the love of life was strong within. He thought of
+his old father and mother, who had no children but him; of his
+pretty Mary--far away now, he hoped, on the slopes of Mount
+Hermon--and of the grief that his death would cause to them; and he
+resolved that, although he would do his duty, he would strain every
+nerve to preserve the life so dear to them.
+
+He had no longer any duties to perform, other than those common to
+all able to bear arms. When the Romans attacked, his place would be
+near Josephus or, were a sally ordered, he would issue out with the
+general; but until then, his time was his own. There was no mission
+to be performed, now, no fear of plots against the life of the
+general; therefore, he was free to wander where he liked. Save the
+newly erected wall, across the neck of rock below the town, there
+were no defenses; for it was deemed impossible for man to climb the
+cliffs that fell, sheer down, at every other point.
+
+John strolled quietly round the town; stopping, now and then, to
+look over the low wall that bordered the precipice--erected solely
+to prevent children from falling over. The depth was very great;
+and it seemed to him that there could be no escape, anywhere, save
+on that side which was now blocked by the wall--and which would,
+ere long, be trebly blocked by the Romans.
+
+The town was crowded. At ordinary times, it might contain near
+three or four thousand inhabitants; now, over twenty-five thousand
+had gathered there. Of these, more than half were men; but many had
+brought their wives and children with them. Every vacant foot of
+ground was taken up. The inhabitants shared their homes with the
+strangers, but the accommodation was altogether insufficient; and
+the greater part of the newcomers had erected little tents, and
+shelters, of cloths or blankets.
+
+In the upper part of the town there were, at present, comparatively
+few people about; for the greater part had gone to the slope,
+whence they watched, with terror and dismay, the great Roman column
+as it poured down, in an unbroken line, hour after hour. The news
+of the destruction which had fallen on Gadara had been brought in,
+by fugitives; and all knew that, although no resistance had been
+offered there, every male had been put to death, and the women
+taken captives.
+
+There was naught, then, to be gained by surrender; even had anyone
+dared to propose it. As for victory, over such a host as that which
+was marching to the assault, none could hope for it. For, hold out
+as they might, and repel every assault on the wall, there was an
+enemy within which would conquer them.
+
+For Jotapata possessed no wells. The water had, daily, to be
+fetched by the women from the stream in the ravine and, although
+stores of grain had been collected, sufficient to last for many
+months, the supply of water stored up in cisterns would scarce
+suffice to supply the multitudes gathered on the rock for a
+fortnight.
+
+Death, then, certain and inevitable, awaited them; and yet, an
+occasional wail from some woman, as she pressed her children to her
+breast, alone told of the despair which reigned in every heart. The
+greater portion looked out, silent, and as if stupefied. They had
+relied, absolutely, on the mountains and forests to block the
+progress of the invader. They had thought that, at the worst, they
+would have had to deal with a few companies of infantry, only.
+Thus, the sight of the sixty thousand Roman troops--swelled to nigh
+a hundred thousand, by the camp followers and artificers--with its
+cavalry and machines of war, seemed like some terrible nightmare.
+
+After making the circuit of the rock, and wandering for some time
+among the impromptu camps in the streets, John returned to a group
+of boys whom he had noticed, leaning against the low wall with a
+carelessness, as to the danger of a fall over the precipice, which
+proved that they must be natives of the place.
+
+"If there be any possible way of descending these precipices," he
+said to himself, "it will be the boys who will know of it. Where a
+goat could climb, these boys, born among the mountains, would try
+to follow; if only to excel each other in daring, and to risk
+breaking their necks."
+
+Thus thinking, he walked up to the group, who were from twelve to
+fifteen years old.
+
+"I suppose you belong to the town?" he began.
+
+There was a general assent from the five boys, who looked with
+considerable respect at John--who, although but two years the
+senior of the eldest among them, wore a man's garb, and carried
+sword and buckler.
+
+"I am one of the bodyguard of the governor," John went on, "and I
+dare say you can tell me all sorts of things, about this country,
+that may be useful for him to know. Is it quite certain that no one
+could climb up these rocks from below; and that there is no fear of
+the Romans making a surprise, in that way?"
+
+The boys looked at each other, but no one volunteered to give
+information.
+
+"Come!" John went on, "I have only just left off being a boy,
+myself, and I was always climbing into all sorts of places, when I
+got a chance; and I have no doubt it's the same, with you. When you
+have been down below, there, you have tried how far you can get up.
+
+"Did you ever get up far, or did you ever hear of anyone getting up
+far?"
+
+"I expect I have been up as far as anyone," the eldest of the boys
+said. "I went up after a young kid that had strayed away from its
+mother. I got up a long way--half way up, I should say--but I
+couldn't get any further. I was barefooted, too.
+
+"I am sure no one with armor on could have got up anything like so
+far. I don't believe he could get up fifty feet."
+
+"And have any of you ever tried to get down from above?"
+
+They shook their heads.
+
+"Jonas the son of James did, once," one of the smaller boys said.
+"He had a pet hawk he had tamed, and it flew away and perched, a
+good way down; and he clambered down to fetch it. He had a rope
+tied round him, and some of the others held it, in case he should
+slip. I know he went down a good way, and he got the hawk; and his
+father beat him for doing it, I know."
+
+"Is he here, now?" John asked.
+
+"Yes, he is here," the boy said. "That's his father's house, the
+one close to the edge of the rock. I don't know whether you will
+find him there, now. He ain't indoors more than he can help. His
+own mother's dead, and his father's got another wife, and they
+don't get on well together."
+
+"Well, I will have a chat with him, one of these days. And you are
+all quite sure that there is no possible path up, from below?"
+
+"I won't say there isn't any possible path," the eldest boy said;
+"but I feel quite sure there is not. I have looked, hundreds of
+times, when I have been down below; and I feel pretty sure that, if
+there had been any place where a goat could have got up, I should
+have noticed it. But you see, the rock goes down almost straight,
+in most places. Anyhow, I have never heard of anyone who ever got
+up and, if anyone had done it, it would have been talked about, for
+years and years."
+
+"No doubt it would," John agreed. "So I shall tell the governor
+that he need not be in the least uneasy about an attack, except in
+front."
+
+So saying, he nodded to the boys, and walked away again.
+
+In the evening, the whole of the Roman army had arrived; and
+Vespasian drew up his troops on a hill, less than a mile to the
+north of the city, and there encamped them. The next morning, a
+triple line of embankments was thrown up, by the Romans, around the
+foot of the hill where, alone, escape or issue was possible; and
+this entirely cut off those within the town from any possibility of
+flight.
+
+The Jews looked on at these preparations as wild animals might
+regard a line of hunters surrounding them. But the dull despair of
+the previous day had now been succeeded by a fierce rage. Hope
+there was none. They must die, doubtless; but they would die
+fighting fiercely, till the last. Disdaining to be pent up within
+the walls, many of the fighting men encamped outside, and boldly
+went forward to meet the enemy.
+
+Vespasian called up his slingers and archers, and these poured
+their missiles upon the Jews; while he himself, with his heavy
+infantry, began to mount the slope towards the part of the wall
+which appeared the weakest. Josephus at once summoned the fighting
+men in the town and, sallying at their head through the gate,
+rushed down and flung himself upon the Romans. Both sides fought
+bravely; the Romans strong in their discipline, their skill with
+their weapons, and their defensive armor; the Jews fighting with
+the valor of despair, heightened by the thought of their wives and
+children in the town, above.
+
+The Romans were pushed down the hill, and the fight continued at
+its foot until darkness came on, when both parties drew off. The
+number of killed on either side was small, for the bucklers and
+helmets defended the vital points. The Romans had thirteen killed
+and very many wounded, the Jews seventeen killed and six hundred
+wounded.
+
+John had fought bravely by the side of Josephus. Joab and two
+others of the little band were killed. All the others were wounded,
+more or less severely; for Josephus was always in the front, and
+his chosen followers kept close to him. In the heat of the fight,
+John felt his spirits rise higher than they had done since the
+troubles had begun. He had fought, at first, so recklessly that
+Josephus had checked him, with the words:
+
+"Steady, my brave lad. He fights best who fights most coolly. The
+more you guard yourself, the more you will kill."
+
+More than once, when Josephus--whose commanding figure, and evident
+leadership, attracted the attention of the Roman soldiers--was
+surrounded and cut off, John, with three or four others, made their
+way through to him, and brought him off.
+
+When it became dark, both parties drew off; the Romans sullenly,
+for they felt it a disgrace to have been thus driven back, by foes
+they despised; the Jews with shouts of triumph, for they had proved
+themselves a match for the first soldiers in the world, and the
+dread with which the glittering column had inspired them had passed
+away.
+
+The following day, the Jews again sallied out and attacked the
+Romans as they advanced and, for five days in succession, the
+combat raged--the Jews fighting with desperate valor, the Romans
+with steady resolution. At the end of that time, the Jews had been
+forced back behind their wall, and the Romans established
+themselves in front of it.
+
+Vespasian, seeing that the wall could not be carried by assault, as
+he had expected, called a council of war; and it was determined to
+proceed by the regular process of a siege, and to erect a bank
+against that part of the wall which offered the greatest facility
+for attack. Accordingly the whole army, with the exception of the
+troops who guarded the banks of circumvallation, went into the
+mountains to get materials. Stone and timber, in vast quantities,
+were brought down and, when these were in readiness, the work
+commenced.
+
+A sort of penthouse roofing, constructed of wattles covered with
+earth, was first raised, to protect the workers from the missiles
+of the enemy upon the wall; and here the working parties labored
+securely, while the rest of the troops brought up earth, stone, and
+wood for their use. The Jews did their best to interfere with the
+work, hurling down huge stones upon the penthouse; sometimes
+breaking down the supports of the roof and causing gaps, through
+which they poured a storm of arrows and javelins, until the damage
+had been repaired.
+
+To protect his workmen, Vespasian brought up his siege engines--of
+which he had a hundred and sixty--and, from these, vast quantities
+of missiles were discharged at the Jews upon the walls. The
+catapults threw javelins, balls of fire, and blazing arrows; while
+the ballistae hurled huge stones, which swept lanes through the
+ranks of the defenders. At the same time the light-armed troops,
+the Arab archers, and those of Agrippa and Antiochus kept up a rain
+of arrows, so that it became impossible for the Jews to remain on
+the walls.
+
+But they were not inactive. Sallying out in small parties, they
+fell with fury upon the working parties who, having stripped off
+their heavy armor, were unable to resist their sudden onslaughts.
+Driving out and slaying all before them, the Jews so often applied
+fire to the wattles and timbers of the bank that Vespasian was
+obliged to make his work continuous, along the whole extent of the
+wall, to keep out the assailants.
+
+But, in spite of all the efforts of the Jews, the embankment rose
+steadily, until it almost equaled the height of the wall; and the
+struggle now went on between the combatants on even terms, they
+being separated only by the short interval between the wall and
+bank. Josephus found that in such a conflict the Romans--with their
+crowd of archers and slingers, and their formidable machines--had
+all the advantage; and that it was absolutely necessary to raise
+the walls still higher.
+
+He called together a number of the principal men, and pointed out
+the necessity for this. They agreed with him, but urged that it was
+impossible for men to work, exposed to such a storm of missiles.
+Josephus replied that he had thought of that. A number of strong
+posts were prepared and, at night, these were fixed securely,
+standing on the wall. Along the top of these, a strong rope was
+stretched; and on this were hung, touching each other, the hides of
+newly-killed oxen. These formed a complete screen, hiding the
+workers from the sight of those on the embankment.
+
+Illustration: Heightening the Walls of Jotapata under Shelter of Ox
+Hides.
+
+The hides, when struck with the stones from the ballistae, gave way
+and deadened the force of the missiles; while the arrows and
+javelins glanced off from the slippery surface. Behind this
+shelter, the garrison worked night and day, raising the posts and
+screens as their work proceeded, until they had heightened the wall
+no less than thirty-five feet; with a number of towers on its
+summit, and a strong battlement facing the Romans.
+
+The besiegers were much discouraged at their want of success, and
+enraged at finding the efforts of so large an army completely
+baffled by a small town, which they had expected to carry at the
+first assault; while the Jews proportionately rejoiced. Becoming
+more and more confident, they continually sallied out in small
+parties, through the gateway or by ladders from the walls, attacked
+the Romans upon their embankment, or set fire to it. And it was the
+desperation with which these men fought, even more than their
+success in defending the wall, that discouraged the Romans; for the
+Jews were utterly careless of their lives, and were well content to
+die, when they saw that they had achieved their object of setting
+fire to the Roman works.
+
+Vespasian, at length, determined to turn the siege into a blockade;
+and to starve out the town which he could not capture. He
+accordingly contented himself by posting a strong force to defend
+the embankment, and withdrew the main body of the army to their
+encampment. He had been informed of the shortness of the supply of
+water; and had anticipated that, in a very short time, thirst would
+compel the inhabitants to yield.
+
+John had taken his full share in the fighting, and had frequently
+earned the warm commendation of Josephus. His spirits had risen
+with the conflict; but he could not shut his eyes to the fact that,
+sooner or later, the Romans must become masters of the place. One
+evening, therefore, when he had done his share of duty on the
+walls, he went up to the house which had been pointed out to him as
+that in which lived the boy who had descended the face of the
+rocks, for some distance.
+
+At a short distance from the door, a lad of some fifteen years old,
+with no covering but a piece of ragged sackcloth round the loins,
+was crouched up in a corner, seemingly asleep. At the sound of
+John's footsteps, he opened his eyes in a quick, watchful way, that
+showed that he had not been really asleep.
+
+"Are you Jonas, the son of James?" John asked.
+
+"Yes I am," the boy said, rising to his feet. "What do you want
+with me?"
+
+"I want to have a talk with you," John said. "I am one of the
+governor's bodyguard; and I think, perhaps, you may be able to give
+us some useful information."
+
+"Well, come away from here," the boy said, "else we shall be having
+her--" and he nodded to the house, "--coming out with a stick."
+
+"You have rather a hard time of it, from what I hear," John began,
+when they stopped at the wall, a short distance away from the
+house.
+
+"I have that," the boy said. "I look like it, don't I?"
+
+"You do," John agreed, looking at the boy's thin, half-starved
+figure; "and yet, there is plenty to eat in the town."
+
+"There may be," the boy said; "anyhow, I don't get my share. Father
+is away fighting on the wall, and so she's worse than ever. She is
+always beating me, and I dare not go back, now. I told her, this
+morning, the sooner the Romans came in, the better I should be
+pleased. They could only kill me, and there would be an end of it;
+but they would send her to Rome for a slave, and then she would see
+how she liked being cuffed and beaten, all day."
+
+"And you are hungry, now?" John asked.
+
+"I am pretty near always hungry," the boy said.
+
+"Well, come along with me, then. I have got a little room to
+myself, and you shall have as much to eat as you like."
+
+The room John occupied had formerly been a loft over a stable, in
+the rear of the house in which Josephus now lodged; and it was
+reached by a ladder from the outside. He had shared it, at first,
+with two of his comrades; but these had both fallen, during the
+siege. After seeing the boy up into it, John went to the house and
+procured him an abundant meal; and took it, with a small horn of
+water, back to his quarters.
+
+"Here's plenty for you to eat, Jonas, but not much to drink. We are
+all on short allowance, the same as the rest of the people; and I
+am afraid that won't last long."
+
+There was a twinkle of amusement in the boy's face but, without a
+word, he set to work at the food, eating ravenously all that John
+had brought him. The latter was surprised to see that he did not
+touch the water; for he thought that if his stepmother deprived him
+of food, of which there was abundance, she would all the more
+deprive him of water, of which the ration to each person was so
+scanty.
+
+"Now," John said, "you had better throw away that bit of sackcloth,
+and take this garment. It belonged to a comrade of mine, who has
+been killed."
+
+"There's too much of it," the boy said. "If you don't mind my
+tearing it in half, I will take it."
+
+"Do as you like with it," John replied; and the boy tore the long
+strip of cotton in two, and wrapped half of it round his loins.
+
+"Now," he said, "what do you want to ask me?"
+
+"They tell me, Jonas, that you are a first-rate climber, and can go
+anywhere?"
+
+The boy nodded.
+
+"I can get about, I can. I have been tending goats, pretty well
+ever since I could walk and, where they can go, I can."
+
+"I want to know, in the first place, whether there is any possible
+way by which one can get up and down from this place, except by the
+road through the wall?"
+
+The boy was silent.
+
+"Now look here, Jonas," John went on, feeling sure that the lad
+could tell something, if he would, "if you could point out a way
+down, the governor would be very pleased; and as long as the siege
+lasts you can live here with me, and have as much food as you want,
+and not go near that stepmother of yours, at all."
+
+"And nobody will beat me, for telling you?" the boy asked.
+
+"Certainly not, Jonas."
+
+"It wouldn't take you beyond the Romans. They have got guards, all
+round."
+
+"No, but it might enable us to get down to the water," John urged,
+the sight of the unemptied horn causing the thought to flash
+through his mind that the boy had been in the habit of going down,
+and getting water.
+
+"Well, I will tell you," the boy said. "I don't like to tell,
+because I don't think there's anyone here knows it, but me. I found
+it out, and I never said a word about it, because I was able to
+slip away when I liked; and no one knows anything about it. But it
+doesn't make much difference, now, because the Romans are going to
+kill us all. So I will tell you.
+
+"At the end of the rock, you have to climb down about fifty feet.
+It's very steep there, and it's as much as you can do to get down;
+but when you have got down that far, you get to the head of a sort
+of dried-up water course, and it ain't very difficult to go down
+there and, that way, you can get right down to the stream. It don't
+look, from below, as if you could do it; and the Romans haven't put
+any guards on the stream, just there. I know, because I go down
+every morning, as soon as it gets light. I never tried to get
+through the Roman sentries; but I expect one could, if one tried.
+
+"But I don't see how you are to bring water up here, if that's what
+you want. I tell you, it is as much as you can do to get up and
+down, and you want both your hands and your feet; but I could go
+down and bring up a little water for you, in a skin hanging round
+my neck, if you like."
+
+"I am afraid that wouldn't be much good, Jonas," John said; "but it
+might be very useful to send messages out, that way."
+
+"Yes," the boy said; "but you see I have always intended, when the
+Romans took the place, to make off that way. If other people go,
+it's pretty sure to be found out, before long; and then the Romans
+will keep watch. But it don't much matter. I know another place
+where you and I could lie hidden, any time, if we had got enough to
+eat and drink. I will show you but, mind, you must promise not to
+tell anyone else. There's no room for more than two; and I don't
+mean to tell you, unless you promise."
+
+"I will promise, Jonas. I promise you, faithfully, not to tell
+anyone."
+
+"Well, the way down ain't far from the other one. I will show it
+you, one of these days. I went down there, once, to get a hawk I
+had taken from the nest, and tamed. I went down, first, with a rope
+tied round me; but I found I could have done it without that--but I
+didn't tell any of the others, as I wanted to keep the place to
+myself.
+
+"You climb down about fifty feet, and then you get on a sort of
+ledge, about three feet wide and six or seven feet long. You can't
+see it from above, because it's a hollow, as if a bit of rock had
+fallen out. Of course, if you stood up you might be seen by someone
+below, or on the hill opposite; but it's so high it is not likely
+anyone would notice you. Anyhow, if you lie down there, no one
+would see you. I have been down there, often and often, since. When
+she gets too bad to bear, I go down there and take a sleep; or lie
+there and laugh, when I think how she is hunting about for me to
+carry down the pails to the stream, for water."
+
+"I will say nothing about it, Jonas, you may be quite sure. That
+place may save both our lives. But the other path I will tell
+Josephus about. He may find it of great use."
+
+Josephus was indeed greatly pleased, when he heard that a way
+existed by which he could send out messages. Two or three active
+men were chosen for the work; but they would not venture to descend
+the steep precipice, by which Jonas made his way down to the top of
+the water course, but were lowered by ropes to that point. Before
+starting they were sewn up in skins so that, if a Roman sentry
+caught sight of them making their way down the water course, on
+their hands and feet, he would take them for dogs, or some other
+animals. Once at the bottom, they lay still till night, and then
+crawled through the line of sentries.
+
+In this way Josephus was able to send out dispatches to his friends
+outside, and to Jerusalem; imploring them to send an army, at once,
+to harass the rear of the Romans, and to afford an opportunity for
+the garrison of Jotapata to cut their way out. Messages came back
+by return and, for three weeks, communications were thus kept up;
+until one of the messengers slipped while descending the ravine
+and, as he rolled down, attracted the attention of the Romans who,
+after that, placed a strong guard at the foot of the water course.
+
+Until this discovery was made, Jonas had gone down regularly, every
+morning, and drank his fill; and had brought up a small skin of
+water to John, who had divided it among the children whom he saw
+most in want of it--for the pressure of thirst was now heavy. The
+Romans, from rising ground at a distance, had noticed the women
+going daily with jugs to the cistern, whence the water was doled
+out; and the besiegers directed their missiles to that point, and
+many were killed, daily, while fetching water.
+
+A dull despair now seized the Jews. So long as they were fighting,
+they had had little time to think of their situation; but now that
+the enemy no longer attacked, and there was nothing to do but to
+sit down and suffer, the hopelessness of their position stared them
+in the face. But there was no thought of surrender. They knew too
+well the fate that awaited them, at the hands of the Romans.
+
+They were therefore seized with rage, and indignation, when they
+heard that Josephus and some of the principal men were thinking of
+making an endeavor to escape. John, who had hitherto regarded his
+leader with a passionate devotion--although he thought that he had
+been wrong in taking to the fortified towns, instead of fighting
+among the mountains--shared in the general indignation at the
+proposed desertion.
+
+"It is he who has brought us all here," he said to Jonas--who had
+attached himself to him with dog-like fidelity--"and now he
+proposes to go away, and leave everyone here to be massacred! I
+cannot believe it."
+
+The news was, however, well founded for, when the inhabitants
+crowded down to the house--the women weeping and wailing, the men
+sullen and fierce--to beg Josephus to abandon his intention, the
+governor attempted to argue that it was for the public good that he
+should leave them. He might, he said, hurry to Jerusalem, and bring
+an army to the rescue. The people, however, were in no way
+convinced.
+
+"If you go," they said, "the Romans will speedily capture the city.
+We are ready to die, all together--to share one common fate--but do
+not leave us."
+
+As Josephus saw that, if he did not accede to the prayers of the
+women, the men would interfere by force to prevent his carrying out
+his intentions, he told them he would remain with them; and
+tranquillity was at once restored. The men, however, came again and
+again to him, asking to be led out to attack the Romans.
+
+"Let us die fighting," was the cry. "Let us die among our foes, and
+not with the agonies of thirst."
+
+"We must make them come up to attack us, again," Josephus said. "We
+shall fight to far greater advantage, so, than if we sallied out to
+attack them in their own intrenchments--when we should be shot down
+by their archers and slingers, before ever we should reach them."
+
+"But how are we to make them attack us? We want nothing better."
+
+"I will think it over," Josephus said, "and tell you in the
+morning."
+
+In the morning, to the surprise of the men, they were ordered to
+dip large numbers of garments into the precious supply of water,
+and to hang them on the walls. Loud were the outcries of the women,
+as they saw the scanty store of water, upon which their lives
+depended, so wasted; but the orders were obeyed, and the Romans
+were astonished at seeing the long line of dripping garments on the
+wall.
+
+The stratagem had its effect. Vespasian thought that the news he
+had received, that the place was ill supplied with water, must be
+erroneous; and ordered the troops again to take their station on
+the walls, and renew the attack. Great was the exultation among the
+Jews, when they saw the movement among the troops; and Josephus,
+ordering the fighting men together, said that now was their
+opportunity. There was no hope of safety, in passive resistance;
+therefore they had best sally out and, if they must die, leave at
+least a glorious example to posterity.
+
+The proposal was joyfully received, and he placed himself at their
+head. The gates were suddenly opened, and they poured out to the
+attack. So furious was their onslaught that the Romans were driven
+from the embankment. The Jews pursued them, crossed the lines of
+circumvallation, and attacked the Romans in their camp; tearing up
+the hides and penthouses behind which the Romans defended
+themselves, and setting fire to the lines in many places.
+
+The fight raged all day. The Jews then retired to the city, only to
+sally out again, the following morning. For three days the attacks
+were continued; the Jews driving in the Romans, each day, and
+retiring when Vespasian brought up heavy columns--who were unable,
+from the weight of their armor, to follow their lightly-armed
+assailants. Vespasian then ordered the regular troops to remain in
+camp, the assaults being repelled by the archers and slingers.
+
+Finding that the courage of the Jews was unabated, and that his
+troops were losing heavily in this irregular fighting, he
+determined to renew the siege, at all hazards, and bring the matter
+to a close. The heavy-armed troops were ordered to be in readiness,
+and to advance against the walls with the battering ram. This was
+pushed forward by a great number of men; being covered, as it
+advanced, with a great shield constructed of wattles and hides. As
+it was brought forward, the archers and slingers covered its
+advance by a shower of missiles against the defenders of the wall;
+while all the war machines poured in their terrible shower.
+
+The Jews, unable to show themselves above the battlements, or to
+oppose the advance of the terrible machine, crouched in shelter
+until the battering ram was placed in position.
+
+Then the ropes by which it swung from the framework overhead were
+seized, by a number of soldiers, and the first blow was delivered
+at the wall. It quivered beneath the terrible shock, and a cry of
+dismay arose from the defenders. Again and again the heavy ram
+struck, in the same place. The wall tottered beneath the blows; and
+would soon have fallen, had not Josephus ordered a number of sacks
+to be filled with straw, and let down by ropes from the walls, so
+as to deaden the blows of the ram.
+
+For a time the Romans ceased work; and then, fastening scythes to
+the ends of long poles, cut the ropes. The Jews were unable to show
+themselves above the walls, or to interfere with the men at work.
+In a few minutes the sacks were cut down, and the ram recommenced
+its work of destruction.
+
+
+
+Chapter 6: The Fall Of The City.
+
+
+The Roman soldiers--seeing the wall of Jotapata tremble beneath the
+blows of the battering ram, whose iron head pounded to powder the
+stones against which it struck--redoubled their efforts when,
+suddenly, from three sally ports which they had prepared, the Jews
+burst out; carrying their weapons in their right hands, and blazing
+torches in their left. As on previous occasions, their onslaught
+was irresistible. They swept the Romans before them; and set fire
+to the engines, the wattles, and the palisades, and even to the
+woodwork of the embankment. The timber had by this time dried and,
+as bitumen and pitch had been used as cement in the construction of
+the works, the flames spread with great rapidity; and the work of
+many days was destroyed, in an hour. All the engines and
+breastworks of the Fifth and Tenth Legions were entirely consumed.
+
+Just as the attack began, Eleazar--the son of Sameas, a
+Galilean--with an immense stone from the wall, struck the iron head
+of the battering ram, and knocked it off. He then leaped down from
+the wall, seized the iron head, and carried it back into the city.
+He was pierced by five arrows. Still, he pressed on and regained
+the walls; and held up the iron head in the sight of all, and then
+fell down dead.
+
+Such was the spirit with which the Jews were animated; and the
+Roman soldiers, trained as they were to conflict among many
+peoples, were yet astounded by the valor displayed by the race that
+they had considered as unwarlike peasants. But the Romans were not
+discouraged. Heavy masses of troops were brought up, the Jews were
+driven within their walls and, towards evening, the ram was again
+in position.
+
+While Vespasian was directing the attack, he was struck by a
+javelin in the heel. The Romans ceased from the attack and crowded
+round their general but, as soon as they ascertained that his wound
+was not serious, they returned to the attack with redoubled fury.
+
+All that night, the contest raged unceasingly. The Roman engines
+swept the walls with missiles. The towers came crashing down, under
+the blows of the huge stones; while the javelins, arrows, and the
+stones from the slings created terrible havoc among the defenders
+of the wall. But, as fast as these fell, fresh combatants took
+their places; and they continued hurling down stones, and blazing
+brands, upon the freshly-erected wattles round the battering ram.
+The Romans had the advantage in this strife for, while the fires on
+the walls--at which the Jews lighted their brands, and boiled the
+pitch and sulphur in which these were dipped--enabled them to aim
+accurately, they themselves worked in deep shadow, at the foot of
+the wall.
+
+The night was a terrible one. The bolts, stones, and arrows which
+passed over the wall spread ruin and death over the town. The din
+was unceasing. The thundering noise of the great stones; the dull,
+deep sound as the ram struck the wall; the fierce shouts of the
+combatants, as they fought hand to hand--for the corpses were, in
+places, piled so thick that the assailants could mount upon them to
+the top of the walls--the shrieks of the women, and the screams of
+the children, combined in one terrible and confused noise; which
+was echoed back, and multiplied, by the surrounding mountains.
+
+Morning was just breaking when the shaken wall gave way, and fell,
+with a crash. Vespasian called off his weary troops, and allowed
+them a short time for refreshment; then he prepared to storm the
+breach. He brought up, first, a number of his bravest horsemen;
+dismounted, and clad in complete armor. They were provided with long
+pikes, and were to charge forward, the instant the machines for
+mounting the breach were fixed. Behind these were the best of his
+infantry, while in their rear were the archers and slingers. Other
+parties, with scaling ladders, were to attack the uninjured part of
+the wall, and to draw off the attention of the besiegers. The rest
+of the horse extended all over the hills round the town, so that
+none might make their escape.
+
+Josephus prepared to receive the attack. He placed the old, infirm,
+and wounded to repel the attack on the uninjured parts of the wall.
+He then chose the five strongest and bravest men and, with them,
+took his place to form the front line of the defenders of the
+breach. He told them to kneel down and cover their heads with their
+bucklers, until the enemy's archers had emptied their quivers and,
+when the Romans had fixed the machines for mounting, they were to
+leap down among the enemy and fight to the last; remembering that
+there was now no hope of safety, naught but to revenge the fate
+which was impending over them, their wives and children.
+
+As the Romans mounted to the assault, a terrible cry broke out from
+the women. They saw the Romans still manning the lines which cut
+off all escape, and they believed that the end was now at hand.
+Josephus, fearing that their cries would dispirit the men, ordered
+them all to be locked up in their houses, and then calmly awaited
+the assault.
+
+The trumpet of the legion sounded, and the whole Roman host set up
+a terrible shout while, at the same moment, the air was darkened by
+the arrows of their bowmen. Kneeling beneath their bucklers, the
+Jews remained calm and immovable; and then, before the Romans had
+time to set foot upon the breach, with a yell of fury they rushed
+upon them, and threw themselves into the midst of their assailants.
+For a time, the Romans could make no way against the desperate
+courage of the Jews but, as fast as the leading files fell, fresh
+troops took their places; while the Jews, who were vastly reduced
+by their losses, had no fresh men to take the place of those who
+died.
+
+At last, the solid phalanx of the Romans drove back the defenders,
+and entered the breach. But as they did so, from the walls above
+and from the breach in front, vessels filled with boiling oil were
+hurled down upon them. The Roman ranks were broken; and the men, in
+agony, rolled on the ground, unable to escape the burning fluid
+which penetrated through the joints of their armor. Those who turned
+to fly were pierced by the javelins of the Jews; for the Romans
+carried no defensive armor on their backs, which were never
+supposed to be turned towards an enemy.
+
+Fresh troops poured up the breach, to take the place of their
+agonized comrades; but the Jews threw down, upon the planks,
+vessels filled with a sort of vegetable slime. Unable to retain
+their footing upon the slippery surface, the Romans fell upon each
+other, in heaps. Those rolling down carried others with them, and a
+terrible confusion ensued, the Jews never ceasing to pour their
+missiles upon them.
+
+When evening came, Vespasian called off his men. He saw that, to
+overcome the desperate resistance of the defenders, fresh steps
+must be taken before the assault was repeated; and he accordingly
+gave orders that the embankment should be raised, much higher than
+before; and that upon it three towers, each fifty feet high and
+strongly girded with iron, should be built.
+
+This great work was carried out, in spite of the efforts of the
+besieged. In the towers, Vespasian placed his javelin men, archers,
+and light machines and, as these now looked down upon the wall,
+they were enabled to keep up such a fire upon it that the Jews
+could no longer maintain their footing; but contented themselves
+with lying behind it, and making desperate sallies whenever they
+saw any parties of Romans approaching the breach.
+
+In the meantime, a terrible calamity had befallen the neighboring
+town of Japha. Emboldened by the vigorous defense of Jotapata, it
+had closed its gates to the Romans. Vespasian sent Trajan, with two
+thousand foot and a thousand horse, against it.
+
+The city was strongly situated, and surrounded by a double wall.
+Instead of waiting to be attacked, the people sallied out and fell
+upon the Romans. They were, however, beaten back; and the Romans,
+pressing on their heels, entered with them through the gates of the
+outside walls. The defenders of the gates through the inner walls,
+fearing that these, too, would be carried by the mob, closed them;
+and all those who had sallied out were butchered by the Romans.
+
+Trajan, seeing that the garrison must now be weak, sent to
+Vespasian, and asked him to send his son to complete the victory.
+Titus soon arrived, with a thousand foot and five hundred horse
+and, at once, assaulted the inner walls. The defense was feeble.
+The Romans effected their entry but, inside the town, a desperate
+conflict took place; the inhabitants defending every street, with
+the energy of despair, while the women aided their efforts by
+hurling down stones, and missiles, from the roofs. The battle
+lasted six hours, when all who could bear arms were slain. The rest
+of the male population were put to death, the women taken as
+slaves. In all, fifteen thousand were killed, two thousand one
+hundred and thirty taken prisoners.
+
+In another direction, a heavy blow had also been struck by the
+Romans. The Samaritans had not openly joined the revolt, but had
+gathered in great force on Mount Gerizim. Cerealis was sent by
+Vespasian, with three thousand infantry and six hundred horse,
+against them. He surrounded the foot of the mountain, and abstained
+from an assault until the Samaritans were weakened by thirst--many
+dying from want of water. Cerealis then mounted the hill, and sent
+to them to throw down their arms. On their refusal, he charged them
+from all sides, and put every soul--in number, eleven thousand six
+hundred--to the sword.
+
+The situation of the defenders of Jotapata was now pitiable,
+indeed. Scarce a man but had received wounds, more or less severe,
+in the desperate combats. All were utterly worn out with fatigue;
+for they were under arms, day and night, in readiness to repel the
+expected attack. Numbers of the women and children had died of
+thirst, and terror. Save the armed men lying in groups near the
+foot of the wall, in readiness to repel an assault, scarce a soul
+was to be seen in the lately-crowded streets.
+
+The houses were now ample to contain the vastly diminished number.
+Here the women and children crouched, in utter prostration. The
+power of suffering was almost gone. Few cared how soon the end
+came.
+
+The siege had now continued for forty-seven days; and the Roman
+army, strong in numbers, in discipline, and in arms, and commanded
+by one of its best generals, had yet failed to capture the little
+town--which they had expected to take within a few hours of their
+appearance before it--and so fierce was the valor of the besieged,
+that Vespasian did not venture to order his legions forward to
+renew the assault. But now, a deserter informed him that the
+garrison was greatly exhausted, that the men on guard could not
+keep awake; and that the breach could be carried, at night, by a
+sudden assault.
+
+Vespasian prepared for the assault, which was to take place at
+daybreak. A thick mist enveloped the town, and the sleeping
+sentries were not aroused by the silent steps of the approaching
+Romans. Titus was the first to enter the breach, followed by a
+small number of troops. These killed the sleeping guards, and the
+main body of the Romans then poured in. Before the Jews were
+conscious of their danger, the whole of the Roman army was upon
+them.
+
+Then the slaughter commenced. Many of the Jews killed each other,
+rather than fall into the hands of the Romans. Many threw
+themselves over the precipices, numbers took refuge in the deep
+caverns under the city. That day, all in the streets or houses were
+killed; the next, the Romans searched the caverns and underground
+passages, slaughtering all the men and boys, and sparing none but
+infants and women. During the siege and capture, forty thousand men
+fell. Only twelve hundred women and children were spared. So
+complete was the surprise, and so unresistingly did the Jews submit
+to slaughter, that only one Roman was killed.
+
+This was Antoninus, a centurion. He came upon a Jew in a deep
+cavern, and told him he would spare his life, if he would
+surrender. The Jew asked him to give him his hand, as a pledge of
+his faith, and to help him out of the cave. Antoninus did so, and
+the Jew at once ran him through with a spear.
+
+John was asleep when the Romans entered. He was aroused by Jonas
+rushing into the room. The boy was at all times restless, and
+suffered less than most of those within the walls; for there was an
+abundance of grain up to the end of the siege and, until the Romans
+had discovered the way down to the water, he had not suffered in
+any way from thirst. He was considered too young to take part in
+the actual fighting; but had labored with the rest in repairing the
+defenses, carrying food to men on the walls, and carrying away the
+dead and wounded.
+
+"Get up, John!" he exclaimed. "In the mist I have just run upon a
+mass of Roman soldiers, ranged in order. The town is taken. Quick,
+before they scatter and begin to slay!"
+
+John caught up his sword, and ran out. Just as he did so, a
+terrible shout was heard, followed by shrieks and cries. The work
+of butchery had begun.
+
+John's plans had been laid for some time. At night Jonas had
+frequently descended to the ledge, taking with him food, and jars
+of the water he brought up from below; and once or twice John had
+descended, Jonas fastening a rope round his body, and lowering it
+gradually for, active as he was, John could not get down without
+such assistance. Indeed, to any one who looked casually over the
+top, the descent appeared absolutely impossible.
+
+At the top of their speed, the lads ran to the spot at which the
+descent had to be made. The rope was hidden close at hand. John
+slipped the noose at the end over his shoulders. Jonas twisted the
+rope once round a stunted tree, which grew close by, and allowed it
+to go out gradually. As soon as the strain upon it ceased, and he
+knew John was upon the ledge, he loosened the rope and dropped the
+end over; and then began, himself, to descend, his bare feet and
+hands clinging to every inequality, however slight, in the rock.
+
+He presently stood by the side of John. The latter had coiled up
+the rope, and laid it by him; and had then thrown himself down, and
+was sobbing bitterly. Jonas sat down quietly beside him, till he
+had recovered his composure.
+
+"It is no use fretting," he said, philosophically. "There's no one
+you care about, particularly, up there; and I am sure there's no
+one I care about--only I should like to have peeped in, and have
+seen her face, when the Romans burst open the door. I don't suppose
+she was very sorry, though, for it will be better to be a Roman
+slave than to be going through what they have been, for the last
+month."
+
+"It is horrible!" John said, "Horrible! However, Jonas, let us
+thank God for having thus preserved our lives, when all besides are
+in such terrible danger of death."
+
+For a time, the two lads sat silent. John was the first to speak.
+
+"I am thankful," he said, "that, owing to our being down the face
+of the rock, the sound is carried away above our heads, and we can
+hear but little of what is going on there. It seems a confusion of
+sounds, and comes to us rather as an echo from the hills, yonder,
+than directly from above."
+
+Sometimes, indeed, thrilling screams and shouts were heard but, for
+the most part, the sounds were so blended together that they could
+not be distinguished one from another. As soon as the mist cleared
+off, the lads lay down, as far back from the ledge as they could
+get.
+
+"We must not lift up a head, today," John said. "The guards below,
+and on the hills, will have their eyes fixed on the rock, on the
+lookout for fugitives and, until nighttime, we must not venture to
+sit up. Fortunately, that outer edge of the shelf is a good deal
+higher than it is, back here; and I don't think that even those on
+the mountain, opposite, could see us as we lie."
+
+"I should think a good many may escape, like us," Jonas said,
+presently. "There are numbers of caverns and passages, from which
+they have dug the stone for the building of the houses. A lot of
+the people are sure to hide away, there."
+
+"I daresay they will," John agreed; "but I fear the Romans will
+hunt them all out."
+
+"How long do you think we shall have to stay here, John?"
+
+"Till the Romans go, whether it is one week or two; but I do not
+think they will stay here many days. The town is so full of dead
+that, in this hot weather, it will be unbearable before long. At
+any rate, we shall be able to pass a good deal of time in sleep. We
+have not had much of it, lately. Till last night, I have not been
+in the house, at night, for over a fortnight. But I felt, last
+night, as if I must have a sleep, whatever came of it. I suppose
+the guards at the breach must have felt the same, or the Romans
+could never have got in without the alarm being given."
+
+For a few minutes, John lay thinking of the terrible scenes that
+must be passing, on the rock above; then his drowsiness overcame
+him, and he was soon fast asleep.
+
+It was dark when he woke. As he moved, Jonas spoke.
+
+"Are you awake, John? Because if you are, let us have something to
+eat. I have been awake the last four hours, and I have been wishing
+you would stir."
+
+"There was no occasion to wait for my waking, Jonas. There are the
+grain and the water, close at hand; and no cooking is required."
+
+"I wasn't going to eat till you woke, if it had been all night,"
+Jonas said. "Still, I am glad you are awake; they are quiet now, up
+above, and I have heard the Roman trumpets sounding. I expect that
+most of them have marched back to their camp."
+
+The next day passed like the first. Occasionally cries of agony
+were heard. Sometimes bodies were hurled from the top of the rock,
+but a short distance from where they were lying.
+
+The next two days passed more quietly, but upon that following a
+murmur, as of a multitude of men working, was heard. From time to
+time there were heavy crashes, as masses of stones, hurled down the
+precipice, struck against its face as they fell; and then bounded,
+far out beyond the stream, at its foot. All these sounds were
+echoed back by the surrounding hills, until it seemed as if a storm
+was raging, far away in the heart of the mountains.
+
+"They are destroying the town," John said, in answer to his
+companion's question as to the cause of the uproar. "That is the
+best thing possible for us. Had it remained standing, they might
+have left a garrison here, to prevent our people reoccupying it. If
+they destroy it, it is a sign that they intend to march away,
+altogether."
+
+Several times Jonas wished to climb up, at night, to ascertain what
+was going on; but John would not hear of it.
+
+"There is nothing to find out, Jonas. We know what they did at
+Gadara, where they slew all the males and carried off all the
+women, although no resistance was offered. We may be sure that
+there will be no more mercy shown at Jotapata, which has affronted
+the Roman power by keeping their great army at bay, for nearly
+seven weeks, and whose capture has cost them thousands of men. We
+know what has happened--they have slain every soul, save a few
+young women, who were worth money as slaves. Now they are leveling
+the town to its foundations. The place that defied them will cease
+to exist.
+
+"And yet, they talk of Roman magnanimity! Would we had five
+thousand fighting men, hidden here with us. We would climb then,
+Jonas, and fall upon them in the night, and take a mighty vengeance
+for the woes they have inflicted. But, being alone, we will remain
+here till we have reason to believe that the last Roman has left.
+Did one of them catch sight of you, our fate would be sealed. They
+have no boys among them, and the slightest glimpse of your figure
+would be enough to tell them that you were a Jew who had been in
+hiding and, in their fear that one man should escape their
+vengeance, they would hunt you down, as a pack of wolves might hunt
+down a solitary lamb."
+
+"They could never get down here, John."
+
+"Not by the way you came; but they would lower a cage full of armed
+men, from above, and slay us without pity."
+
+"But if I were found out, John, I would not lead them here. I would
+throw myself over the precipice, rather than that risk should come
+to you!"
+
+"But I don't want you to throw yourself over the precipice, Jonas.
+I want to keep you with me: in the first place because we are great
+friends now; in the second because, if you were killed, I might as
+well throw myself over, at once--for I do not think I could ever
+climb up this rock, without your assistance."
+
+"It is much easier going up than coming down, John."
+
+"That may be and, indeed, I have no doubt it is so; but I would
+rather not put the matter to the test. No; we have provision and
+water here, enough to last us for ten days and, until they are
+consumed, it were best not to stir from here."
+
+Four days later, however, they heard the sound of the Roman
+trumpets and, on raising their heads carefully a few inches, saw
+that the guards on the opposite hills had all been withdrawn.
+Having now less fear of being seen, they raised their heads still
+further, and looked up the valley to the great camp on the hillside
+where, at night, they had seen the fires of the Romans, blazing
+high.
+
+"They are going!" Jonas exclaimed, joyously. "Look at the sun
+sparkling on the long lines of arms and armor. Not a sound is to be
+heard, above--the work is done. They are about to march away."
+
+"Do not let us expose ourselves further," John said. "It may be
+that they have left a few watchers, to see if any who have eluded
+their search may show themselves, believing that they have gone. I
+have no doubt they are going and, by tomorrow, it will be safe for
+us to move."
+
+All day they heard the sound of trumpets, for the great host took a
+long time getting into motion but, gradually, the sound grew
+fainter and fainter, as the rear guard of the army took the road
+which they had cut through the mountains, eight weeks before.
+
+That night, when darkness fell, and the two lads sat up on their
+ledge and looked round, not a light was to be seen; and not a sound
+broke the silence of the night.
+
+"At daybreak tomorrow, Jonas, as soon as it becomes light enough
+for you to see your way, you shall go up and look round. They may
+have left a guard behind, but I should hardly think so. After the
+wholesale slaughter at Gadara, and here, the hatred of the Romans
+will be so intense that, confident as they are in their arms and
+discipline, they would hardly venture to leave a small body of men,
+in the heart of these mountains."
+
+As soon as it was daylight, Jonas prepared to climb up to the
+plateau above. He took with him the rope; arranging that, if he
+found that the place was absolutely deserted, he would lower one
+end to John and fasten the other to the tree above; and that he
+would then aid John, as much as his strength would permit, in
+making his way up the rock.
+
+John watched his companion making his way up, and observed exactly
+where he placed his feet and hands, until he was out of sight. Then
+he waited. In about a quarter of an hour, the end of the rope fell
+in front of him. He fastened it securely under his arms and then,
+taking off his sandals, began the ascent. It was not so difficult
+as it had looked; and the steady strain which Jonas kept on the
+rope, from above, aided him and gave him confidence. In three or
+four minutes, he gained the top of the rock.
+
+"There is not a soul to be seen," Jonas said. "The town has gone,
+and the people, and the Romans. All is desolation!"
+
+The scene was indeed changed, since John had last looked upon it.
+Not a wall, in the so-lately busy little town, had been left
+standing. The whole area was covered, three or four feet deep with
+a chaos of stones, mortar, and beams; forming a great grave, below
+which lay the bodies of forty thousand of the defenders of the
+place. The walls so bravely defended had disappeared; and the
+embankment, whose erection had cost the Romans so much labor and
+bloodshed, had been destroyed by fire. A dead silence hung over the
+place, and the air was tainted with a terrible odor of corruption.
+
+The desolation and solitude of the scene overpowered John, and he
+sat down on a fragment of masonry and wept, unrestrainedly, for
+some time. He roused himself, at last, as Jonas touched him.
+
+"I shall go down again, and get what grain there is left," the boy
+said. "There is no chance of finding anything to eat within a day's
+march of here. The Roman horse will have destroyed every village
+within a wide circuit."
+
+"But I cannot let you go down again, Jonas. The danger is too
+great."
+
+"But I have been up and down, lots of times," Jonas said.
+
+"That may be, Jonas, but you might be dashed to pieces, this time."
+
+"Well, if you like I will fasten the rope round me; then, if I
+should slip, I shall be safe."
+
+John consented with some reluctance, but he was so nervous and
+shaken that he walked some distance away, and did not turn round
+until he heard Jonas' footsteps again approaching him.
+
+"Now we can start," the boy said. "We have got grain here, enough
+for three days; and tonight we will crush it, and cook it. I have
+had enough of eating raw grain, for a long time to come."
+
+The boy's cheerfulness restored the tone of John's nerves
+and--making their way with some difficulty over the chaos of stone
+and timber, until they arrived at the pile of charred timber, which
+marked the spot where the Roman embankment had stood--they stepped
+out briskly, descended the hill, crossed the deserted lines of
+circumvallation; and then began to ascend the mountains, which had,
+for some distance, been stripped of their timber for the purposes
+of the siege. In another hour's walking they reached the forest,
+and pressed on until the afternoon. Not that there was any need for
+speed, now, but John felt a longing to place as wide a gap as
+possible between himself and the great charnel ground which, alone,
+marked the spot where Jotapata had stood.
+
+At length, Jonas urged the necessity for a halt, for rest and food.
+They chose a spot at the foot of a great tree, and then set to work
+to collect a store of firewood. John took out the box of tinder
+which, in those days, everyone carried about with him, and a fire
+was soon lighted. Jonas then looked for two large flat stones, and
+set to work to grind some grain.
+
+The halting place had been chosen from the vicinity of a little
+spring, which rose a few yards distant. With this the pounded grain
+was moistened and, after kneading it up, Jonas rolled it in balls
+and placed them in the hot ashes of the fire. In half an hour they
+were cooked, and the meal was eaten with something like
+cheerfulness.
+
+Another day's walking brought them to a little village, nestled in
+the forest. Here they were kindly received, though the people
+scarce believed them when they said that they were survivors of the
+garrison of Jotapata. The news of the capture of the town, and the
+destruction of its defenders, had already spread through the
+country; and John now learned, for the first time, the fate which
+had befallen Japha and the Samaritans on Mount Gerizim--events
+which filled him with consternation.
+
+The folly of the tactics which had been pursued--of cooping all the
+fighting men up in the walled cities, to be destroyed one after the
+other by the Romans--was more than ever apparent. He had never,
+from the first, been very hopeful of the result of the struggle;
+but it seemed, now, as if it could end in nothing but the total
+destruction of the Jewish race of Palestine.
+
+John stayed for two days in the little mountain village and then,
+with a store of provisions sufficient to last him for some days,
+pursued his way; following the lines of the Anti-Libanus, until
+that range of hills joined the range of Mount Hermon, north of the
+sources of the Jordan.
+
+He had stopped for a day at Dan, high up among the hills. Here the
+people had no fear of Roman vengeance; for the insurrection had not
+extended so far north, and the Roman garrison of Caesarea Philippi
+overawed the plains near the upper waters of the Jordan.
+Determined, however, to run no unnecessary risks, John and his
+companion pursued their way on the lower slopes of the hills until,
+after six days' walking, they arrived at Neve.
+
+Here they learned where the farm of John's kinsman was situated,
+and made their way thither. As they came up to the house a woman
+came out, gazed intently at John and, with a scream of terror, ran
+back into the house. It was one of Martha's maids. John stood
+irresolute, fearing that his sudden appearance might startle the
+other inmates when, suddenly, Mary appeared at the door, looking
+pale but resolute. She, too, gazed fixedly at John; and her lips
+moved, but no sound came from them.
+
+"Don't you know me, Mary?" John said.
+
+The girl gave a scream of joy, and threw herself into his arms. A
+moment later Martha, followed by Miriam and the other servants,
+came out.
+
+"It is no spirit, mother, it is John, himself," Mary exclaimed and,
+the next moment, John was clasped in his mother's arms.
+
+It was not surprising that the first who saw John had thought that
+he was a spirit. The news had already been received that the whole
+of the garrison of Jotapata had been put to the sword; and John's
+appearance was changed so greatly, within the last three months,
+that he would scarce have been known. Fatigue, anxiety, and the
+loss of blood--from several wounds which he had received, in the
+course of the siege--had so pulled him down that he was but a
+shadow of his former self. His clothes were in rags. He had washed
+them at the village where he had first stopped for, before that,
+they had been stiffened with blood; and even now, stained and
+ragged as they were, they gave him the appearance of a mendicant.
+
+Jonas had held back a little, while the first joyful greeting was
+going on, but John soon turned to him.
+
+"Mother," he said, "this must be as another son to you for, next to
+the protection of God, it is to him I owe my life."
+
+Martha welcomed the young stranger affectionately.
+
+"Before you tell us aught that has befallen you, John, go and
+change your garments, and wash, while we prepare a meal for you.
+The clothes of your uncle's son Silas, who is about your age, will
+fit you; and those of his younger brother will do for your friend."
+
+"Was the last news of my father good?" John asked.
+
+"Yes, the Lord be praised, he was well when we heard of him, a week
+since!"
+
+The travelers were at once conducted to a room, and supplied with
+water and clean garments. By the time they had changed, and
+returned to the general room, John's uncle and cousin had been
+fetched in from the farm, and he received another hearty welcome.
+
+It almost seemed to him, as he sat down to a comfortable meal, with
+Mary and his mother waiting upon him, that the events of the past
+two months had been a hideous dream; and that he had never left his
+comfortable home on the shore of the Lake of Galilee. As to Jonas,
+unaccustomed to kind treatment, or to luxury of any kind, he was
+too confused to utter a word. When the meal was over, John was
+asked to tell his news; and he related all the stirring incidents
+of the siege, and the manner in which he and his companion had
+effected his escape.
+
+"We are, no doubt," he concluded, "the sole male survivors of the
+siege."
+
+"Not so, my son," Martha said. "There is a report that Josephus has
+survived the siege; and that he is a prisoner, in the hands of the
+Romans."
+
+"It may be that they have spared him, to grace Vespasian's triumph,
+at Rome," John said. "It is their custom, I believe, to carry the
+generals they may take in war to Rome, to be slain there."
+
+It was not until some time afterwards that John learned the
+particulars of the capture of Josephus. When he saw that all was
+lost, Josephus had leaped down the shaft of a dry well, from the
+bottom of which a long cavern led off, entirely concealed from the
+sight of those above. Here he found forty of the leading citizens,
+who had laid in a store of food sufficient to last for many days.
+Josephus, at least, who gives his account of all these circumstances,
+says that he quite unexpectedly found these forty citizens in hiding
+there; but this is improbable in the extreme, and there can be little
+doubt that he had, long before, prepared this refuge with them, when
+he found that the people would not allow them to attempt to make
+their escape from the city.
+
+At night Josephus came up from the well and tried to make his
+escape but, finding the Romans everywhere vigilant, he returned to
+the place of concealment. On the third day a woman, who was aware
+of the hiding place, informed the Romans of it--probably in return
+for a promise of freedom, for the Romans were searching high and
+low for Josephus; who could not, they were convinced, have escaped
+through their lines. Vespasian immediately sent two tribunes,
+Paulinus and Gallicanus, to induce him to surrender by promise of
+his life.
+
+Josephus refused to come out, and Vespasian sent another tribune,
+Nicanor, a personal friend of Josephus, to assure him of his
+safety, if he would surrender. In the account Josephus gives of the
+transaction, he says that at this moment he suddenly remembered a
+dream--in which it was revealed to him that all these calamities
+should fall upon the Jews, that he himself should be saved, and
+that Vespasian should become emperor--and that, therefore, if he
+passed over to the Romans he would do so not as a renegade, but in
+obedience to the voice of God.
+
+It was certainly a happy coincidence that the dream should have
+occurred to him, at this moment. He at once announced his readiness
+to surrender; but his forty companions did not see the matter in
+the same light. The moment Josephus left them, the Roman soldiers
+would throw combustibles down the well, and suffocate them, if they
+did not come out and submit to slaughter.
+
+They urged upon Josephus that he was their leader; that they had
+all followed his orders, and cast in their lot with his; and that
+it would be treacherous and base, in the extreme, for him now to
+save his life by going over to the Romans, when all the inferior
+people had slain themselves, or had submitted to slaughter, rather
+than beg their lives of the Romans. Josephus argued with them, at
+length, but they were not convinced and, drawing their swords,
+threatened to kill him, if he tried to leave them. They would all
+die together, they said.
+
+Josephus then proposed that, in order to avoid the sin of suicide,
+they should draw lots which should kill each other. To this they
+assented; and they continued to draw lots as to which should slay
+the other, until only Josephus and one other remained alive.
+
+This is the story that Josephus tells. He was, of course,
+endeavoring to put his own case in the best light, and to endeavor
+to prove that he was not--as the Jews universally regarded him--a
+traitor to his country. It need hardly be said that the story is
+improbable, in the extreme; and that, had any one of the forty men
+survived and written the history, he would probably have told a
+very different tale.
+
+The conduct of Josephus, from the first outbreak of the trouble,
+showed that he was entirely adverse to the rising against the
+Romans. He himself, having been to Rome, had seen her power and
+might; and had been received with great favor by Poppaea, the wife
+of Nero, and had made many friends there. He had, therefore, at the
+outset, opposed as far as he was able, without going so far as to
+throw suspicion on his patriotism, the rebellion against the
+Romans. During the events in Galilee, he had shown himself anxious
+to keep in favor with the Romans. He had rebuked those who had
+attacked the soldiers traveling as an escort, with a large amount
+of treasure belonging to King Agrippa; and would have sent back the
+spoils taken, had not the people risen against it. He affected
+great indignation at the plunder of Agrippa's palace at Tiberias
+and, gathering all he could of the spoils, had handed them over to
+the care of the chief of Agrippa's friends there. He had protected
+the two officers of Agrippa, whom the Jews would have killed--had
+released and sent them back to the king; and when John of Gischala
+wished to carry off large quantities of grain, stored by the Romans
+in Upper Galilee, Josephus refused to allow him to do so, saying
+that it should be kept for its owners.
+
+It is almost certain that Josephus must, in some way, have entered
+into communication with the Romans; for how otherwise could he,
+with the principal inhabitants, have proposed to make their escape,
+when every avenue was closed? Josephus was a man of great talent
+and energy, full of resources, and of great personal bravery--at
+least, if his own account of his conduct during the siege is to be
+believed. But no one can read his labored excuses for his own
+conduct without feeling sure that he had, all along, been in
+correspondence with the Romans; and that he had, beforehand, been
+assured that his life should be spared.
+
+He had, from the first, despaired of successful resistance to the
+Romans; and his conduct in throwing himself, at the last moment,
+into a town about to be besieged and, as he must have known,
+captured--for the want of water, alone, rendered its fall a mere
+question of time--when his presence and leadership was so urgently
+required among the people to whose command he had been appointed,
+seems to prove that he wished to fall into their hands.
+
+It would not be just to brand Josephus as a traitor. He had done
+his best to induce the Galileans to form themselves into an army,
+and to defend the province; and it was only when that army
+dispersed, at the approach of the Romans, that he went to Jotapata.
+It was his leadership that enabled that city to continue its heroic
+defense. It cannot, therefore, be said that Josephus in any way
+betrayed the trust confided to him by the council at Jerusalem. But
+the conclusion can hardly be avoided that, from the first,
+foreseeing that utter ruin and destruction would fall upon the
+Jews, he had set himself to work to prepare a way of pardon and
+escape, for himself; and that he thought a position of honor, among
+the Romans, vastly preferable to an unknown grave among the
+mountains of Galilee.
+
+Upon being taken out of the well, Josephus was taken to Vespasian
+and, in the presence only of the general, his son Titus, and two
+other officers, announced that he was endowed with prophetic
+powers, and that he was commissioned by God to tell Vespasian that
+he would become emperor, and that he would be succeeded by his son
+Titus. The prophecy was one that required no more penetration than
+for any person, in the present day, to predict that the most rising
+man in a great political party would one day become prime minister.
+The emperor was hated, and it was morally certain that his fall
+would not long be delayed; and in that case the most popular
+general in the Roman army would, almost certainly, be chosen to
+succeed him.
+
+Vespasian, himself, was not greatly affected by the prophecy. But
+Josephus declared that he had, all along, predicted the success of
+the Romans, the fall of the town after forty-six days' siege, and
+his own safety; and as some of the female captives were brought up
+and, on Josephus appealing to them whether this was not so,
+naturally replied in the affirmative, Josephus says that Vespasian
+was then satisfied of his prisoner's divine mission, and henceforth
+treated him with great honor.
+
+It is much more easy to believe that an agreement already existed
+between Vespasian and Josephus; and that the latter only got up
+this story to enable him to maintain that he was not a traitor to
+his country, but acting in accordance with the orders of God.
+Certain it is that no similar act of clemency was shown, by
+Vespasian, to any other Jew; that no other thought of pity or mercy
+entered his mind, during the campaign, that he spared no man who
+fell alive into his hands, and that no more ruthless and wholesale
+extermination than that which he inflicted upon the people of
+Palestine was ever carried out, by the most barbarous of
+conquerors.
+
+To this day, the memory of Josephus is hated among the Jews.
+
+
+
+Chapter 7: The Massacre On The Lake.
+
+
+John remained for three weeks at his uncle's. A messenger, with the
+news of his safe arrival there, had been sent off to his father;
+who came up to see him, three days later. The formal act of
+betrothal between John and his cousin took place. Simon and Martha
+would have been willing that the full ceremony of marriage should
+take place, and the latter even urged this upon her son.
+
+"You are now more than seventeen, John, and have taken your place
+among men; and may well take to yourself a wife. Mary is nigh
+fifteen, and many maidens marry earlier. You love each other. Why,
+then, should you not be married? It would cheer the old age of your
+father, and myself, to see our grandchildren growing up around us."
+
+"Had the times been different, mother, I would gladly have had it
+so; but with the land torn by war, with our brethren being
+slaughtered everywhere, with Jerusalem and the Temple in danger, it
+is no time for marrying and giving in marriage. Besides, the law
+says that, for a year after marriage, a man shall not go to the war
+or journey upon business; but shall remain at home, quiet, with his
+wife. I could not do that, now. Did the news come, tomorrow, that
+the Romans were marching upon Jerusalem, assuredly I should do my
+duty, and take up arms and go to the defense of the Holy City; and
+maybe Mary would be left a widow, before the days of rejoicing for
+the marriage were over.
+
+"No, mother; the life of no man who can wield a weapon is his own,
+at present. The defense of the Temple is the first, and greatest,
+of duties. If I fall there, you will adopt Mary as your child; and
+marry her to someone who will take my place, and be a son to you.
+Mary will grieve for me, doubtless, for a time; but it will be the
+grief of a sister for a brother, not that of a wife for her husband
+and, in time, she will marry the man to whom you shall give her,
+and will be happy. Even for myself, I would rather that it were so
+left. I shall feel more free from cares and responsibilities; and
+though, if you and my father lay your orders upon me, I shall of
+course obey them, I pray you that, in this matter, you will suffer
+me to have my way."
+
+Martha talked the matter over with her husband; and they agreed
+that John's wishes should be carried out, and that the marriage
+should be postponed until the troubles were over. Neither of them
+believed that John would fall in the struggle. They regarded his
+escape from Jotapata as well-nigh miraculous, and felt assured that
+God, having specially protected him through such great danger,
+would continue to do so to the end.
+
+Contrary to expectation, Vespasian had not followed up his success
+at Jotapata by a march against Jerusalem. His army had suffered
+very heavy losses in the siege; and the desperate valor which the
+defenders of the town had shown had, doubtless, impressed upon his
+mind the formidable nature of the task he had undertaken.
+
+If a little mountain town had cost him so dearly, what would not be
+the loss which would be entailed by the capture of a city like
+Jerusalem, with its position of vast natural strength, its solid
+and massive fortifications; and defended, as it would be, by the
+whole strength of the Jewish nation, fighting with the fury of
+religious fanaticism and despair! His army, strong as it was, would
+doubtless capture the city, but at such a cost that it might be
+crippled for further action; and Vespasian was keeping one eye upon
+Rome, and wished to have his army complete, and in perfect order,
+in readiness for anything that might occur there.
+
+Therefore, after the fall of Jotapata he marched first to Caesarea
+and, after a short halt there, passed north to Caesarea
+Philippi--where the climate, cooled by the breezes from the
+mountains, was pleasant and healthful--and here he gave the army
+twenty days to rest, and recover from their wounds and fatigues. He
+then marched south again to Scythopolis, or Bethsan, lying just
+within the borders of Samaria, and not far from the Jordan. Here
+Titus, with a detached force, joined him; and they prepared to
+reduce the cities near the lake.
+
+Simon had by this time returned home, accompanied by John and
+Jonas. Simon tried to persuade his son to remain with his mother,
+but John had entreated that he might accompany him.
+
+"The war may last for a long time, father; and the land must be
+tilled, else why should you yourself return home? We are in the
+province of King Agrippa and, after what has befallen Jotapata and
+Japha, it is not likely that the people of Hippos, or of other
+towns, will venture to show disaffection--therefore there is no
+reason why the Romans should carry fire and sword through Agrippa's
+country, east of Jordan. It is well that my mother and Mary should
+not return for, if evil days should come, they could not save
+themselves by rapid flight; besides we risk but death, and death
+were a thousand times better than slavery among the Romans. If we
+find that they are approaching, and are wasting the land, we can
+fly. The boats are close by; and we can take to the lake, and land
+where we will, and make our way back here."
+
+"And you will not seek, John, when the Romans approach, to enter
+Tiberias or Gamala, or any other cities that may hold out against
+the Romans?"
+
+"No, father. I have had my share of defending a walled city and,
+save for Jerusalem, I will fight no more in cities. All these
+places must fall, sooner or later, if the Romans sit down before
+them. I will not be cooped up again. If any leader arises, and
+draws together a band in the mountains to harass and attack the
+Romans, I will join him--for it has always seemed to me that in
+that way, only, can we successfully fight against them--but if not,
+I will aid you in the labors of the farm, until the Romans march
+against Jerusalem."
+
+Simon yielded to his son's wishes, for the events of the last year
+had aged him much, and he felt the need of assistance on the farm.
+The men who had worked for him had--save Isaac, and one or two of
+the older men--gone away to Jerusalem, or to Gamala, or one or
+other of the fortified towns. The time for the harvest was at hand,
+and there would be few to gather it in.
+
+Martha would fain have accompanied them, but Simon would not hear
+of this.
+
+"You are in a safe refuge here, wife, and rather than that you
+should leave it, I would abandon our farm, altogether. If you come,
+Mary and the women must come also and, even for us men, the danger
+would be greater than were we alone."
+
+Mary also tried her power of persuasion, but Simon was not to be
+moved; and the three set off together--for Jonas, as a matter of
+course, accompanied John wherever he went.
+
+The three weeks' kindness, rest, and good feeding had done wonders
+for him. The wild, reckless expression, which John had noticed when
+he had first met him, had well-nigh disappeared; his bones had
+become better covered, and his cheeks filled out and, comfortably
+clothed as he now was, few would have recognized in him the wild
+goatherd of Jotapata.
+
+Simon was mounted on a donkey, the others walked.
+
+"It is well that I am off again," Jonas said. "Another month there,
+and I should have got fat and lazy, and should have almost
+forgotten how to run and climb, and should have grown like the
+dwellers on the plains."
+
+"There will be plenty of work for you, on the farm, Jonas," Simon
+said. "You need not be afraid of growing fat and lazy, there."
+
+"I don't think I am fond of work," Jonas said, thoughtfully, "not
+of steady work, but I will work hard now, Simon; you have all been
+so good to me that I would work till I dropped for you. I wouldn't
+have worked before, not if they had beaten me ever so much; because
+they were always unkind to me, and why should one work, for those
+who do nothing for you but beat and ill-use you?"
+
+"You should always do your duty, Jonas," Simon said. "If others do
+not do their duty to you, so much the worse for them; but that is
+no excuse for your not doing your duty, as far as you can."
+
+Jonas, being a little behind Simon, made a little face expressive
+of his disagreement with this opinion; but he said nothing.
+
+They followed the course of the river Hieromax down to Capitolias;
+where they slept, that night, in the house of some friends of Simon
+and, on the following evening, arrived at the farm. John received a
+hearty greeting, from Isaac and the other men; and several of the
+fishermen, when they heard of his return, came in to see him.
+
+For the next fortnight, John and Jonas worked from daylight till
+dark and, by the end of that time, the greater part of the corn was
+gathered in the granary. A portion was stored away in a deep pit,
+straw being laid over it when the hole was nearly full, and earth
+being thrown in level to the surface; so that, should the Romans
+come and sack the granary, there should still remain a store which
+would carry them on until the next harvest.
+
+Then the news came, from across the lake, that the Romans were
+breaking up their camp at Scythopolis, and were moving towards
+Tiberias. No resistance was expected to be offered there. The
+greater part of the inhabitants had, all along, been well affected
+to the Romans; and had only been compelled, by a small faction in
+the city and by the fear of the country people of Galilee, to join
+in the insurrection. It was, too, the richest city in the dominions
+of King Agrippa for, although these lay for the most part east of
+Jordan, the towns of Tiberias and Tarichea were included in them.
+
+Tiberias was, in fact, his chief city. Here he had his richest
+palace; and the city, which greatly benefited by being the seat of
+his government, was Roman rather than Jewish in its hopes and
+feelings. So confident was Vespasian that no resistance would be
+offered that, when he arrived within half a mile of the town, he
+sent forward an officer, with fifty horse, to exhort the people to
+open their gates.
+
+When he got near the town, the officer dismounted and went forward
+to speak; when a party of the war faction, headed by Jesus the son
+of Shaphat, charged out upon him. The officer, having had no orders
+to fight the Jews, fled on foot; with five of his men, who had also
+dismounted. Their assailants seized the horses, and carried them in
+triumph into the city.
+
+The senate of Tiberias at once issued out from the city, and
+hurried to the camp of Vespasian; and implored him not to visit the
+crime of a small body of desperate men upon the whole city, whose
+inhabitants had always been favorably disposed towards Rome.
+Agrippa added his entreaties to theirs; and Vespasian, who had just
+given orders for the troops to advance to storm and sack the city,
+recalled them. The insurgents under Jesus fled to Tarichea and, the
+gates being opened, the Romans entered Tiberias; Vespasian issuing
+strict orders against plundering, and the ill treatment of the
+inhabitants.
+
+At Tarichea were assembled not only the insurgents from Tiberias,
+but fighting men from all the towns on the lake, and from the
+country on the east. The city had been carefully fortified by
+Josephus and, as the inhabitants had a very large number of vessels
+in the port, they relied upon these for escape, in case the town
+should be reduced to extremities. No sooner did the Romans appear
+before their walls, and begin to lay out their siege works, than
+the Tiberians and others, under the command of Jesus, sallied out
+and dispersed the workmen.
+
+When the Roman troops advanced, in regular order, some of the Jews
+retired into the city. Others made for their boats, which were
+ranged along on the shore; and in these, putting out a little
+distance, they cast anchor, and opened fire with their missiles
+upon the Romans.
+
+In the meantime, a large number of Jews had just arrived from the
+farther side of Jordan. Vespasian sent Titus, with six hundred
+chosen horse, to disperse them. The number of the Jews was so large
+that Titus sent for further succor, and was reinforced by Trajan,
+with four hundred horse; while Antonius Silo, with two thousand
+archers, was sent by Vespasian to the side of a hill opposite the
+city, to open fire thence upon the defenders of the walls, and thus
+prevent them from harassing the Roman horsemen as they advanced.
+
+The Jews resisted the first charge of the cavalry; but they could not
+long withstand the long spears, and the weight and impetus of the
+horses, and fled in disorder towards the town. The cavalry pursued
+and tried to cut them off from it but, although great numbers were
+slaughtered, the rest--by pure weight of numbers--broke through,
+and reached the city.
+
+A great dissension arose within the walls. The inhabitants of the
+town--dismayed by the defeat inflicted, by a small number of
+Romans, upon the multitude in the field--were unwilling to draw
+upon themselves the terrible fate which had befallen the towns
+which had resisted the Romans, and therefore clamored for instant
+surrender. The strangers--great numbers of whom were mountaineers
+from Peraea, Ammonitis, and the broken country of Mount Galaad and
+the slopes of Hermon, who knew little of what had been passing in
+Galilee--were for resistance, and a fray arose in the town.
+
+The noise of the tumult reached Titus; who called upon his men to
+seize the moment, while the enemy were engaged in civil discord, to
+attack. Then, leading his men, he dashed on horseback into the
+lake, passed round the end of the wall, and entered the city.
+
+Consternation seized the besieged. The inhabitants attempted no
+resistance, still hoping that their peaceful character would save
+them from ill treatment; and many allowed themselves to be
+slaughtered, unresistingly. Jesus and his followers, however,
+fought gallantly; striving, but in vain, to make their way down to
+the ships in the port. Jesus himself, and many of his men, were
+killed.
+
+Titus opened the gates, and sent word to his father that the city
+was captured; and the Roman army at once entered. Vespasian placed
+a number of his troops in the large vessels in the port, and sent
+them off to attack those who had first fled to the boats. These
+were, for the most part, fishermen from the various towns on the
+lake. The cavalry were sent all round the lake, to cut off and slay
+those who sought to gain the land.
+
+The battle--or rather the slaughter--went on for some time. The
+fishermen, in their light boats, could do nothing against the
+soldiers in the large vessels. These slew them with arrows or
+javelins, from a distance; or ran them down, and killed them as
+they struggled in the water. Many of the boats were run ashore; but
+the occupants were slain, there, by the soldiers on the lookout for
+them. Altogether, six thousand perished in the slaughter.
+
+In the meantime, Vespasian had set up a tribunal in Tarichea. The
+inhabitants of the town were separated from the strangers.
+Vespasian himself was, as Josephus said, unwilling to shed more
+blood--as he had promised, when he had entered the city, to spare
+the lives of all--but he yielded to the arguments of those who said
+that the strangers were mountain robbers, the foes of every man.
+Accordingly, they were ordered to leave the city, by the road to
+Tiberias.
+
+As soon as they had left the town, the troops surrounded them,
+headed by Vespasian in person. Twelve hundred of the aged and
+helpless he ordered to be slain, at once; six thousand of the most
+able-bodied he sent to Nero, to be employed on the canal he was
+digging across the isthmus of Corinth; thirty thousand four hundred
+were sold as slaves; and a large number were bestowed upon Agrippa,
+who also sold them as slaves. This act, after the formal promise of
+pardon, disgraces the memory of Vespasian even more than the
+wholesale massacres of the garrisons of the towns which resisted to
+the last.
+
+The news of this act of wholesale vengeance spread such terror
+through the land that the whole of the cities of Galilee at once
+opened their gates; and sent deputations to Vespasian to offer
+their submission, and ask for pardon. Gamala, Gischala, and
+Itabyrium--a town on Mount Tabor, which had been strongly fortified
+by Josephus--alone held out. Itabyrium lay some ten miles to the
+west of Tiberias.
+
+Standing back among the trees, at a short distance from the lake,
+Simon, John, and the workers on the farm watched with horror the
+slaughter of the fishermen on the lake. None of their neighbors
+were among those who had gone out to aid in the defense of
+Tarichea; for Simon had gone among them, to dissuade them from
+launching their boats and joining the flotilla, as it proceeded
+down the lake in the morning. He urged upon them that, if they took
+part in the affair, they would only bring down vengeance upon
+themselves and their families.
+
+"There is no lack of men," he said, "in Tiberias and Tarichea. Such
+aid as you can give would be useless and, whether the cities fall
+at once, or whether they resist, the vengeance of the Romans will
+fall upon you. In a few hours, their horsemen can ride round the
+shores of the lake, and cut off all who are absent from returning
+to their homes, and give the villages to fire and sword. Those who
+can point to their boats, drawn up at the side of the lake, will be
+able to give proof to the Romans that they have not taken part
+against them. So far, we have escaped the horrors of war on this
+side of Jordan.
+
+"If the strong cities of Galilee cannot resist the Roman arms, what
+hope should we have on this side, where the population is
+comparatively scanty, and where there are few strong places? Do not
+let us provoke the Romans, my friends. If they go up against
+Jerusalem, let those who will, go, and die in defense of the
+Temple; but it would be worse than folly to provoke the wrath of
+the Romans, by thrusting yourselves into the quarrel here."
+
+Warmly did the fishermen congratulate themselves, when they saw the
+combat proceeding on the lake, and when a strong body of Roman
+horse rode along the shore, leaving parties at regular intervals to
+cut off those who might try and land. A body of twenty were posted
+down by the boats, and two came into the village and demanded food
+for the party. Simon, when he saw them coming, ordered all the
+able-bodied men to retire, and remain in the olive groves on the
+slopes, at a distance from the lake, until the Romans had gone;
+while he, and Isaac, and some other old men, went down and met the
+soldiers.
+
+"Are any of the people of this place out there on the lake?" the
+officer in command of the twenty men asked; as Simon and his party,
+bringing bread, fruit, and wine, came down to the waterside.
+
+"No, sir," Simon replied. "We have but eight boats belonging to the
+village, and they are all there. We are peaceable people, who till
+the soil and fish the lake, and take no part in the doings of the
+great towns. We are subjects of King Agrippa, and have no cause for
+discontent with him."
+
+"A great many other people have no cause for discontent, old man,"
+the officer said; "but they have, nevertheless, risen in rebellion.
+However, as your boats are here, and your people seem to have taken
+no part in this matter, I have naught to say against you;
+especially as your wine is good, and you have brought down plenty
+of it."
+
+Simon and his companions withdrew and, with aching hearts, watched
+from a distance the massacre upon the lake. The fury, however,
+produced among the men in the towns and villages on the shore, at
+the sight of the numerous corpses washed ashore, was so great that
+many of the young men left their avocations and started for Gamala;
+which, relying upon the strength of its position--which was even
+stronger than that of Jotapata--was resolved to resist to the last.
+
+Several of the young men of the village, and many from the villages
+near, were determined to take this course, maddened by the
+slaughter of many friends and relations. John himself was as
+furious as any, especially when the news came of the violation of
+faith at Tarichea, and of the selling of nigh forty thousand men
+into slavery.
+
+"Father," he said, that evening, "I had thought to stay quietly
+with you, until the Romans advanced against Jerusalem; but I find I
+cannot do so. The massacre at Jotapata was bad enough, but the
+slaughter of defenseless men, on the lake, is worse. I pray you,
+let me go."
+
+"Would you go into Gamala, and die there, John?" Simon asked.
+"Better to die at the Temple, than to throw away your life here."
+
+"I do not intend to go into Gamala, father, nor to throw away my
+life--though I care little for it, except for the sake of you and
+my mother and Mary--but I would do something; and I would save the
+sons of our neighbors, and others, from the fate that assuredly
+waits them if they enter Gamala. They know not, as I do, how surely
+the walls will go down before the Roman engines; but even did they
+know it, so determined are they to fight these slayers of our
+countrymen that they would still go.
+
+"What I propose to do is to carry out what I have always believed
+to be the true way of fighting the Romans. I will collect a band,
+and take to the mountains, and harass them whenever we may find
+opportunity. I know the young men from our village will follow me,
+if I will lead them; and they will be able to get their friends
+along the shore to do the like. In that way the danger will not be
+so great for, in the mountains, the Romans would have no chance of
+overtaking us while, if we are successful, many will gather round
+us, and we may do good service."
+
+"I will not stay you, John, if you feel that the Lord has called
+upon you to go; and indeed, you may save, as you say, the lives of
+many of our neighbors, by persuading them to take to the hills with
+you, instead of shutting themselves up in Gamala. Go down, then, to
+the village, and talk to them; and see what they say to your plan."
+
+John had little doubt as to his proposal being accepted by the
+younger men of the village. The fact that he had been chosen as one
+of the bodyguard of Josephus had, at once, given him importance in
+the eyes of his neighbors; and that he should have passed through
+the siege of Jotapata, and had escaped, had caused them to regard
+him not only as a valiant fighter, but as one under the special
+protection of God. Since his return, scarce an evening had passed
+without parties coming, from one or other of the villages along the
+shore, to hear from his lips the story of the siege.
+
+As soon, then, as he went down to the fishing village, and told the
+young men who had determined to leave for Gamala that he thought
+badly of such action--but that he intended to raise a band, and
+take to the mountains and harass the Romans--they eagerly agreed to
+follow him, and to obey his orders. There were eight of them, and
+John at once made them take an oath of obedience and fellowship;
+swearing in all things to obey his orders, to be true to each other
+to death, to be ready to give their lives, when called upon, for
+the destruction of the Romans; and never, if they fell into the
+hands of the enemy, to betray the secrets of the band, whatever
+might be the tortures to which they were exposed.
+
+John could have obtained more than eight men in the village, but he
+would only take quite young men.
+
+"I want only men who can undergo fatigue and watching; who can
+climb mountains, and run as fast as the Roman horse can gallop.
+Besides, for work like this it is necessary that there should be
+one leader, and that he should be promptly obeyed. If I take older
+men, they will naturally wish to have a voice in the ordering of
+things. I have seen enough of military matters to know that, for
+prompt decision and swift execution, one head--and one head
+only--is necessary. Besides, we may find difficulties in the way of
+getting food and, at first, I wish for only a small band. If
+success attends us, we shall increase rapidly. Twenty will be quite
+enough, to begin with."
+
+As soon as the eight young men--of whom all but two were under
+twenty years old--had taken the oath, they started at once to the
+villages round.
+
+"Do each of you gather in two, but no more," John said; "and let
+them be those whom you know to be strong and active. Do not bring
+more; and if four of you bring but one, so much the better. If you
+find many more eager to join, you can tell them that we will send
+for them, when the time comes, to increase our numbers; and pray
+them to abide here, and not to go into Gamala.
+
+"Let each bring his arms and a bag of meal; and meet me, tomorrow
+evening at sundown, on the Hieromax River, three miles below
+Capitolias--that will be opposite to Abila, which lies on the
+mountain side. Let all travel singly, for the Roman horse may be
+about. However, as we shall be walking east, while Gamala lies to
+the west of south, they will not take us--should we come upon
+them--for men going thither to aid in the defense of the town."
+
+The young men started at once on their missions, full of confidence
+in John; and feeling certain that, under his leadership, they
+should soon come to blows with the Romans; being also, in their
+hearts, well satisfied that their warfare would be in the open
+country, and they should not be called upon to fight pent up in
+walls from which there was no escape.
+
+Having seen his followers off, John returned home, and told Simon
+the progress he had made. The old man sighed.
+
+"I do not seek to keep you, John; for your duty to your country
+stands, now, in the first rank of all; and it may be that the Lord
+preserved you, at Jotapata, because he intends you to do great
+deeds for him, here. I do not say spare yourself, or avoid danger,
+for our sakes. I only say, do not throw away your life by rashness.
+Remember that, young as you are, you are a leader, and be prudent
+as well as brave.
+
+"After Gamala has fallen--as fall I fear it will--and the Romans
+have moved away from these parts--as they will then do, for there
+is no resistance to them, on this side of Jordan, save at that
+town--I shall bring your mother and Mary back again; and you will
+find us waiting here to welcome you, if you return. If not, my son,
+I shall mourn for you, as Jacob mourned for Joseph--and more,
+seeing that you are the only prop of my old age--but I shall have
+the consolation of knowing that you died for your country."
+
+"You will find in Mary a daughter, father; and you must find a
+husband for her, who will take my place. But it may be that if the
+Romans march not direct upon Jerusalem--and they say that Vespasian
+has arranged that two of the legions shall winter on the sea coast,
+at Caesarea, and the third at Scythopolis--it is probable that he
+will not move against Jerusalem till the spring. In that case I may
+be often here, during the winter. For I will not go down to
+Jerusalem until the last thing; for there all is turmoil and
+disturbance and, until the time comes when they must lay aside
+their private feuds and unite to repel the invader, I will not go
+down."
+
+Father and son talked until late in the night. In the morning John
+made his preparations for departure. He had told Jonas of his
+intentions. The boy listened silently, only saying, "Wherever you
+go, John, I am ready to go with you; it makes no difference to me;"
+and afterwards went down to the lake side, where he filled his
+pouch with smooth pebbles, each of which he selected with great
+care for, when herding his goats among the mountains, Jonas had
+been always practicing with a sling, and many a cony had fallen
+before his unerring aim.
+
+All the lads in the mountains were accustomed to the use of the
+sling, but none in Jotapata had approached Jonas in their skill
+with this weapon. During the siege he had often astonished John by
+the accuracy of his aim; and had several times compelled the Romans
+to cease working one of their machines, which specially harassed
+the defenders of the wall, by striking down one after another of
+those who directed it--his stones seldom failing to strike them
+full in the face, the only spot unprotected by their armor.
+
+In the morning, John prepared to start. He and Jonas each carried a
+small sack, supported by a strap passing over the shoulders, and
+containing some eight pounds of meal and a gourd of water. Jonas
+carried no weapon, save a long knife hidden under his garment, and
+his sling and pouch of stones. John carried a sword and buckler,
+and a horn. Before they started, John knelt before his father and
+received his blessing; and Simon, as he bade him adieu, gave him a
+small bag of money.
+
+"You will need to buy things in the mountains, lad; and I would not
+that you should be driven, like the robber bands, to take food by
+force. It is true that they who go not to the war should support
+those who risk their lives for their country; but there are many
+aged men who, like myself, cannot fight, there are many women whose
+husbands are away in Gamala or Jerusalem, and these may not be able
+to afford to assist others. Therefore, it is well that you should
+have means of paying for what you require; otherwise the curse of
+the widow and fatherless may fall upon you.
+
+"And now, farewell, my son! May God have you in his keeping, and
+send you home safe to your mother and me!"
+
+
+
+Chapter 8: Among The Mountains.
+
+
+Jonas was in high spirits as they started from the farm. He was
+leaving no friends behind and, so long as he had John with him, he
+was perfectly contented. He was delighted to be on the move again
+for, although he had worked steadily in getting in the harvest,
+regular labor was distasteful to him and, accustomed as he had been
+to wander, for weeks, free and unchecked with his goats among the
+mountains, the regular life and order of the farm were irksome to
+him.
+
+John, on the other hand, was silent; replying briefly to the boy's
+questions. He felt the danger of the enterprise upon which he had
+embarked, and his responsibility as leader; and the thought of the
+grief which his father and mother would feel, did ought befall him,
+weighed on his mind. Presently, however, he roused himself.
+
+"Now, Jonas, you must keep a sharp lookout round for, if we see any
+Roman soldiers in the distance, I must hide my sword and buckler
+before they discover us, and you must stow away your sling and
+pouch; then we will walk quietly on. If they question us, we are
+going to stay with friends at Capitolias and, as there will be
+nothing suspicious about us, they will not interfere with us. After
+they have passed on, we will go back for our arms. We are not
+traveling in the direction of Gamala, and they will have no reason
+to doubt our story."
+
+They did not, however, meet any of the parties of Roman horse who
+were scouring the country, carrying off grain and cattle for the
+use of the army; and they arrived, in the afternoon, on the bank of
+the Hieromax. Upon the other side of the river rose the steep
+slopes of Mount Galaad, high up on whose side was perched the
+little town of Abila.
+
+"Here we can wait, Jonas. We are nearly opposite the town. The
+others will, doubtless, soon be here."
+
+It was not long before the band made their appearance, coming along
+in twos and threes as they had met on the river bank. By sunset the
+last had arrived, and John found that each of his first recruits
+had brought two others.
+
+He looked with satisfaction at the band. The greater part of them
+had been fishermen. All were strong and active; and John saw that
+his order that young men, only, should be taken had been obeyed,
+for not one of them was over the age of twenty-three and, as he had
+laid it down, as an absolute rule, all were unmarried. All were,
+like himself, armed with sword and buckler; and several had brought
+with them bags with javelin heads, to be fitted to staves, later
+on. All their faces bore a look of determination and, at the same
+time, of gladness.
+
+The massacre on the lake had excited the inhabitants of the shore
+to fury, and even those who had hitherto held back from the
+national cause were now eager to fight against the Romans; but many
+shrunk from going to Gamala--which was, indeed, already as full of
+fighting men as it could hold--and John's proposal to form a band,
+for warfare in the mountains, had exactly suited the more
+adventurous spirits.
+
+All present were known to John, personally. Many of them were sons
+of friends of Simon; and the others he had met at village
+gatherings, or when fishing on the lake. There were warm greetings,
+as each accession to the party arrived; and each member of the band
+felt his spirits rise higher, at finding that so many of those he
+knew, personally, were to be his comrades in the enterprise.
+
+When the last comer had arrived, John said:
+
+"We will now be moving forward. We had best get well up the
+mountain, before night falls. It matters not much where we camp,
+tonight; tomorrow we can choose a good spot for our headquarters."
+
+It being now the height of the dry season, the river was low, and
+they had no difficulty in wading across. Then they struck up the
+hill, to the right of Abila, until they had fairly entered the
+forests which clothed the lower slopes of the mountains. Then John
+gave the word for a halt.
+
+Dead wood was soon collected, and a fire made. Cakes of meal were
+baked in the ashes and, after these had been eaten, the party lay
+round the fire and, a few minutes later, John rose to his feet.
+
+Illustration: John Incites his Countrymen to Harass the Romans.
+
+"You all know the reason for which we are gathered together here.
+We all long for vengeance on the oppressors of our country, the
+murderers of our kinsmen and friends, the men who carry off our
+women to shame and slavery in Rome. We are all ready to die, for
+our country and our God; but we would fain die doing as much harm
+to the Romans as we can, fighting like freemen in the open, instead
+of rats slaughtered in a cage. That is why, instead of going into
+Gamala, we have gathered here.
+
+"I am the youngest among you; but I have so far assumed the
+leadership because, in the first place, I have been much with
+Josephus, who--although he may now, most unworthily, have gone over
+to the Romans to save his life--was yet a wise governor, and a
+great leader. From him, I have learned much of the Romans. In the
+second place, I have seen more of their warfare than any of you,
+having passed through the terrible siege of Jotapata. Lastly, I
+believe that God, having saved me almost alone of all the host that
+defended the town, has intended me as an instrument for his
+service.
+
+"Therefore have I taken upon myself the command, in the first
+place, of this band; but at the same time, if you think that I am
+too young, and would rather place another at your head, I will
+stand aside, and release from their oath those who have already
+sworn. I am not self seeking. I crave not the leadership over you,
+and will obey whomsoever you may choose for your chief. But to
+whomsoever is the leader, prompt obedience must be given; for there
+must, even in a band like this, be order and discipline. We work
+for a common good, but we must yield to the direction of one will,
+and one head.
+
+"Now, what say you? I will walk away, to leave you free to consult
+one with another; and will abide by your decision, whatever it be.
+Only the decision, once made, must be adhered to. There must be no
+after grumbling, no hesitation or drawing back. You must have
+absolute confidence, and give absolute obedience, to him whom you
+choose. For only so can we hope to succeed in our enterprises."
+
+John had gone but a short way among the trees, when he was called
+back again. All had come prepared to follow him. His father had
+always been a man of weight and position among the villagers on the
+shore and, democratic as were the Jewish institutions, there was
+yet a certain respect paid to those of position above their
+fellows. John's experience and, especially, his escape from
+Jotapata, seemed specially to mark him as one destined to play an
+important part. And his quiet resolute bearing, now--the feeling
+that he knew what was to be done, and how to do it; that he was, in
+fact, their natural leader--came home to all, and it was with
+sincerity that they assured him that they accepted him as their
+leader.
+
+"Very well," John said, quietly. "Then let those who have not
+already taken the oath stand up, and do so."
+
+This was done, and John then said:
+
+"Now, I will tell you more of my plans; although these, of course,
+cannot be in any way settled until we see how things turn out. It
+is by watching for opportunities and seizing the right moment,
+only, that we can hope for success. We are all ready to give our
+lives for our country, but we do not wish to throw them away. We
+want each of us to do as much as possible. We want to live, so as
+to share in the defense of the Temple; therefore, we have to
+combine prudence with daring.
+
+"As for an attack upon any strong body of Roman troops, it would be
+impossible--unless they attempt to follow us among the mountains.
+One of our first duties will be to learn the country well, so that
+we may know where to defend ourselves, should they come up after
+us; where, from eminences, we can cast down rocks upon them; where
+there are crags which we can climb, but up which their heavy-armed
+soldiers cannot follow us. This is our first task for, as yet, they
+have not commenced the siege of Gamala. When they do so, we must
+draw down near them and hide ourselves, mark the position of their
+camp, see how their tents are arranged, and where their sentries
+are placed.
+
+"Then we can begin work: sometimes falling upon their guards; at
+other times creeping in past their sentries, scattering through the
+camp and, at a given signal, firing their tents with the brands
+from their fires; slaying those who first rush out, and then making
+off again to the hills.
+
+"Then, too, they will be sending great numbers of men up the hills,
+to cut timber and branches for their embankments, their
+breastworks, and the construction of the wattles to protect their
+machines. We shall be in hiding and, when a party of men separates
+from the rest, we will fall upon these; we will harass their
+workers from a distance, always avoiding a regular combat, but
+hindering their work, and wearing them out. Thus we may do better
+service, to the defenders of Gamala, than if we were within the
+walls.
+
+"At present we have only swords, but we must get bows and arrows.
+It would not have been safe to have carried them across the plains;
+but we can procure them at Abila, or Jabez Galaad. I fear that we
+shall not be able to interfere with the provisioning of the
+army--for upon the plains we shall have no chance with their
+cavalry--but, here in these mountains, stretching away over Peraea
+into Arabia and Moab, we can laugh at pursuit by the Romans; and
+even Agrippa's light-armed Arabs will have difficulty in following
+us, and of them we need have little fear. At Jotapata we proved
+ourselves a match for the Romans; and their light-armed troops will
+not care to venture against us, alone, as they will not know our
+numbers, and will fear being led into ambushes.
+
+"There is one question which we have to consider, and that is food;
+as to flesh, we shall have it in abundance. There will be many
+flocks of goats, belonging to those in Gamala, straying among the
+mountains without an owner; therefore of goats' milk and flesh we
+can take abundance, but there will be a scarcity of grain. I have
+some money with me, with which we can purchase it at Abila, and the
+villages. As for Jabez Galaad, it is too close to Gamala; and the
+Romans will probably ascend the hill and destroy it, or place a
+guard there. At any rate, the money will be sufficient to purchase
+meal for us, for some time--much longer, probably, than Gamala will
+be able to hold out--and when that has fallen, it will be time to
+arrange about the future. Only let us take nothing without payment;
+let us not be like the robber bands, which prey upon the people,
+until they long for the Romans as masters.
+
+"Only we must remember that, while we desire now to do the Romans
+as much harm as possible, this is but the beginning of our work;
+and that we must save ourselves for the future. Gamala is but one
+town; and we shall have plenty of opportunities for striking at the
+enemy, in the future. We have put our hands to the plow now and, so
+long as the war lasts, we will not look back. It may be that our
+example may lead others to follow it and, in that case, the Romans'
+difficulties will thicken, every day. Were there scores of bands of
+determined men, like us, hanging around them; ready to attack small
+bodies, whenever they venture away from their camps to gather in
+provisions and forage, and to harass them, at night, by constant
+alarms, we could wear them out.
+
+"Only, we must always avoid a pitched battle. In irregular fighting
+we are as good as they--better, for we can move more quickly--but
+when it comes to fighting in order of battle, we have no chance
+with them, whatever. Their cavalry, the other day outside Tarichea,
+were like wolves among a flock of sheep. Nothing but disaster can
+come of fighting in the plain. Every people should fight in the way
+that suits them best, and an attempt to meet an enemy in their own
+way of fighting is sure to lead to disaster. Let the Roman keep the
+plain, with his cavalry and his heavy infantry; let the Jew, light
+footed and swift, keep to the hills. He is as much superior, there,
+as is the Roman in the plains.
+
+"And now, we must establish signals. We will get horns, at Abila;
+and I will fix upon signals. One long note will mean, gather to me;
+two, fall back gradually; three, retire at once with all speed, to
+the spot agreed upon, before setting out in the morning. Two short
+notes will mean, advance and attack in the manner arranged; one
+short note, oft repeated, will tell you the Romans are advancing,
+sound your horns--for it were well that each provided himself with
+a cow's horn, so that the signals can be repeated. If we are
+scattered over a hillside among the trees, and the Romans hear
+horns sounded in many quarters, they will think that there must be
+a large body of men assembled. This will make them slow and
+cautious in all their movements; will force many to stand prepared,
+with their arms, to guard those at work; and will altogether
+confuse and puzzle them.
+
+"And now, we will lie down and sleep; as soon as it is dawn, we
+will be on foot again."
+
+The next two days were spent in exploring that part of the
+mountains: examining the direction, and extent, of each valley and
+ravine; seeing where steep precipices afforded an opportunity for
+rolling down rocks upon an enemy passing along the valley, or
+trying to storm the height; in searching for pools in dried
+watercourses; and in deciding upon a spot favorable for the camp.
+They fixed upon a spot high up on the mountains, two miles east of
+Abila, as their headquarters. It was in a pass between two peaks,
+and gave them the option of descending either to the north or
+south, or of skirting along the mountains towards the sources of
+the Jabbok river, and thence crossing the Hermon range beyond the
+limits of Peraea.
+
+Jonas was sent, the first thing, to discover whether the Romans had
+taken possession of Jabez Galaad; which lay but five miles from
+Gamala, and on the southern side of the range of hills on whose
+western spur Gamala was built. He returned, in a short time, saying
+that he had found the inhabitants in a state of great alarm; for
+that a Roman force could be seen, coming up the road from the
+plain. Most of the fighting men of the town were in Gamala; the
+rest, with the young women, were leaving, so that only old people
+and children would be found in the town when the Romans arrived.
+Jonas also brought word that Vespasian's whole army was moving
+against Gamala.
+
+John had given Jonas money, before he started, to purchase bows and
+arrows. He had brought back bows for the whole party, and as many
+arrows as he could carry.
+
+"I paid nothing for them," he said, as he threw them down. "The man
+who sold them was praying those who were leaving the town to take
+them--for he thought that, if the Romans found them in his house,
+they would destroy it--but no one listened. All were too busy, in
+carrying off such of their household goods as they could take, to
+burden themselves further; so he gladly gave me as many as I could
+take. I carried off nearly all his bows; and I left him breaking up
+the rest, and his store of arrows, in order to burn them before the
+Romans arrived.
+
+"A boy, carrying a bag of arrowheads, came with me some little
+distance. I paid the man for them, and they are now hidden in the
+forest. You can fetch them when you will, but I could not carry
+more with me than I have got."
+
+"You have done well, Jonas," John said, as the men seized each a
+bow, and divided the arrows among them; and then stood waiting,
+expecting orders from John to proceed, at once, to harass the Roman
+column as it ascended the hill.
+
+John said, in answer to their looks:
+
+"We will not meddle with them, today. Did we shoot at them, they
+would suppose that we belonged to Jabez Galaad; and would, in
+revenge, destroy the town and all those they may find within it;
+and our first essay against them would bring destruction upon
+thousands of our countrymen."
+
+The others saw the justness of his reasoning, and their faith in
+him as their leader was strengthened by his calmness, and readiness
+of decision.
+
+"Is the bag of arrowheads heavy, Jonas?"
+
+"It is as much as the boy, who was about my own age, could carry,"
+Jonas replied.
+
+"Then do you, Phineas, and you, Simeon, go with Jonas to the place
+where the bag is hidden, and carry it to the place we have fixed
+upon for our camp. If, on the way, you come across a herd of goats,
+shoot two or three of them and take them with you, and get fires
+ready. The day is getting on, but we will go across the mountains,
+and see where the Romans are pitching their camp and, by sunset, we
+will be with you."
+
+Making their way along the mountain the band came, after an hour's
+walking, to a point where they could obtain a view of Gamala. The
+city stood on the western extremity of the hill which, after
+sloping gradually down, rose suddenly in a sharp ridge like the
+hump of a camel--from which the town had its name, Gamala. On both
+sides, this rock ended abruptly in a precipitous chasm; in which
+ran the two branches of the Hieromax, which met at the lower end of
+the ridge, and ran together into the end of the lake at Tarichea,
+three miles away.
+
+Thus, Gamala was only accessible from behind, where the ridge
+joined the mountains. Across this neck of land a deep fosse had
+been dug, so as to cut off all approach. The houses were crowded
+thickly on the steep slope of the ridge, which was so abrupt that
+the houses seemed to overhang one another. On the southern crag,
+which was of immense height, was the citadel of the town. There was
+a spring, supplying abundance of water, within the walls. Had it
+been defended by a garrison as brave and numerous as that of
+Jotapata, it would have been well-nigh impregnable; but Cheres and
+Joseph, who commanded, had none of the genius of Josephus, although
+they were brave and determined.
+
+The city was crowded with fugitives from all parts; and had
+already, for seven months, resisted a besieging force which Agrippa
+had sent against it. It was impossible to blockade the whole
+circuit of the town; but Vespasian took possession of all the
+neighboring heights, and established his camp, with that of the
+Fifteenth Legion, on the hill facing the city to the east. The
+Fifth Legion threw up works, opposite the center of the city; while
+the Tenth set to work to fill up ditches and ravines, in order to
+facilitate the approaches.
+
+Agrippa approached the wall, to persuade the inhabitants to
+surrender; but was struck on the right elbow by a stone from a
+sling, and forced to retire. This insult to the native king, who
+came in the character of an ambassador, enraged the Romans; and
+they set about the operations for the siege with great vigor. In
+spite of the efforts of the Jews, the fosse which protected the
+wall on the east was speedily filled up; and the Romans then began,
+as at Jotapata, to raise an embankment facing the wall.
+
+The day after the Romans had established their camp, John and his
+followers advanced along the mountain until they could look down
+upon it and, for a long time, watched the Romans at work, and
+learned all the details of the camp.
+
+"You must fix them in your minds," John said, "in order that, even
+on a dark night, you may be able to make your way about it without
+difficulty; so that you may be able, after striking a blow, to fly
+directly to the mountain--for any who get confused, and miss their
+way, will assuredly be killed. You see, the enemy have placed a
+strong guard, halfway up the hillside, in order to protect
+themselves from surprise; but it will be possible, by moving down
+to the streams, and then mounting again, to reach the camp without
+passing through them. And by the same way we must make our retreat
+for, if we succeed in setting the camp on fire, the flames will
+enable the guard on the mountains to see us approaching them.
+
+"I had hoped that we might be able to penetrate, unobserved, to the
+tent of Vespasian, and to slay him and some of his generals but, by
+the bustle that we see round that tower on the hillside, and by the
+strong force of cavalry picketed round it, it is evident that he
+has taken up his quarters there and, indeed, from the top of the
+tower he can look down upon the town, and on all that is passing
+there, and issue his directions to his troops accordingly; so we
+must give up that idea. Another time, we may be more fortunate.
+
+"But see, a great number of troops are ascending the hill towards
+us, doubtless to cut timber for their works. As soon as they are at
+work, we will attack them."
+
+The party retired into the forest and, as soon as they heard the
+sound of the Roman axes, they crept quietly forward; moving
+noiselessly, with their sandaled feet, among the trees. When within
+a short distance of the Romans, John ordered them to halt; and
+crept forward, with Jonas, to reconnoiter. There was little fear of
+their being heard, for several hundred men were at work, felling
+trees; a line of sentries, at ten paces apart, standing under arms
+to prevent a surprise. The Romans were working too thickly to
+permit of any successful action, by so small a party; and John saw
+that the idea of an attack must be abandoned, and that he must
+confine himself, for the present, to harassing the sentries.
+
+Rejoining his men, he told them what he had discovered; and bade
+them scatter along the line and, crawling up under the protection
+of the trees, to approach as near as they could to the line of
+sentries; and then to shoot at them--or at the workmen, many of
+whom, having thrown off their heavy armor to enable them the better
+to work, offered more favorable marks for the arrows than the
+sentries--whose faces, only, were exposed.
+
+They were on no account to come to close quarters with the Romans.
+If the latter advanced, they were instantly to retire, approaching
+again as soon as the Romans recommenced their work; and so to
+continue, until he blew the signal for them to draw off,
+altogether. They were not to begin until they heard his signal for
+attack.
+
+After allowing some little time to elapse for the men to get into
+position, John blew his horn. A moment, and cries and shouts were
+heard along the whole Roman line. The sound of chopping instantly
+ceased, and the Roman trumpets blew to arms.
+
+John had advanced sufficiently near to see the Roman workmen before he
+gave the signal. Jonas was a little in advance of him and, as the horn
+sounded, he saw him step out from behind a tree, whirl his sling round
+his head and discharge a stone and, almost simultaneously, a Roman
+sentinel, some forty paces away, fell with a crash upon the ground.
+
+The Roman soldiers who had retained their armor ran instantly
+forward, to support their sentries. The others hastily buckled on
+their breastplates, caught up their bucklers and helmets, and
+joined their comrades. Arrows continued to fall among them from
+their invisible foes and, although most of these fell harmless from
+their armor, several soldiers fell, in addition to the seven or
+eight who had been killed by the first volley.
+
+The centurion in command soon saw that the number of his assailants
+was small but, afraid of being drawn into an ambush, he hesitated
+to give orders for an advance; but dispatched a messenger instantly
+to camp, contenting himself with throwing out strong parties a
+hundred yards in advance of his line. These now became the objects
+of attack, while arrows ceased to fall among the main body of the
+troops.
+
+John moved round the flank, till he gained a position whence he
+could observe the camp. The trumpets above had been heard there,
+and the troops had already taken up their position under arms. As
+he looked on, he saw the messenger run up to a party of mounted
+officers. A minute later a trumpet sounded, and a strong body of
+Arabian archers advanced, at a run, up the slope. John at once
+withdrew to his first position, and sounded the order for instant
+retreat; and then, hurrying back half a mile, sounded the note for
+his followers to assemble at the spot where he was standing.
+
+In a few minutes, all had joined him. They were in high spirits at
+the success of this first skirmish; and wondered why they had been
+so suddenly called off, when the Romans had shown no signs of
+advancing against them.
+
+"There are fully a thousand Arab archers in the forest, by this
+time," John said. "They are as fleet of foot as we are, and it
+would be madness to remain. We have stopped their work, for a time;
+and have killed many, without a scratch to ourselves. That is well
+enough, for today. Tomorrow we will beat them up, again."
+
+At daybreak, two of the party were sent forward to the edge of the
+wood, to see with what force the Romans went out to work. They
+brought back the report that they were accompanied by a strong body
+of archers; and that, as soon as they reached the forest, the
+archers were scattered in front of them for a long distance, and
+that it would be impossible to approach them, unobserved.
+
+On the previous afternoon, John had dispatched Jonas to Abila, and
+he had returned with a number of cows' horns. Round the fire in the
+evening, the men had set to work to pierce the points with heated
+arrowheads, and had converted them into instruments capable of
+giving a deep, prolonged sound. On the return of the scouts, John
+set his men in motion.
+
+"We cannot fight them, today, but we can hinder their work. We will
+scatter through the forest and, as we approach them, each is to
+sound his horn; and continue to do so, from time to time. The
+Romans will think that a great force is advancing against them."
+
+This was done, with the effect John had anticipated. Hearing the
+sound of horns, all over the mountainside, the Romans concluded
+that a great force was advancing to attack them; and the archers
+were at once recalled. The troops all stood to arms and, for
+several hours, remained waiting an attack. Then, after strong
+bodies of heavy-armed troops--preceded by the archers, skirmishing
+before them--had pushed some distance into the forest without
+meeting with an enemy, the work recommenced; a considerable number
+still standing to their arms, as protectors to the rest.
+
+Although a certain amount of time had been gained, for the city, by
+the interruption of the work of bringing in timber, John had
+undertaken these sham attacks rather with the purpose of
+accustoming his band to work together, and to give them confidence,
+than with the view of troubling the Romans. In this he was
+perfectly successful. The band, when they reached their camp, that
+evening, were in high spirits. They had, for two days, puzzled and
+baffled a large Roman force; had inflicted some loss upon them, and
+forced them to desist from their work. They were pleased with
+themselves, and their leader; and had lost much of the dread of the
+Romans which the capture of Jotapata, Japha, and Tarichea, and the
+tales of their cruelty and ferocity, had excited among the whole
+population.
+
+A reverse, at the commencement of their work, would have been
+fatal; and John had felt that, however earnest the men were, in
+their determination to die fighting for their country, the loss of
+a few of their number at the outset would have so dispirited the
+rest that the probability was that the band would disperse--or
+would, at any rate, be unwilling to undertake any desperate
+operation. But in their present mood they were ready for any
+enterprise upon which he might lead them; and he, accordingly, told
+them that he should abstain, next day, from a continuance of his
+attacks upon the working party; but that, at night, he would carry
+out the design of setting fire to their camp.
+
+Accordingly, the following day, the Romans pursued their work
+unmolested; although they still continued the precaution of keeping
+a force of archers, and parties of heavy-armed troops, in advance
+of those working in the wood. John did not move till the afternoon;
+and then, descending the hill to the right, he skirted along in the
+lower forest until within two miles of Gamala. Here he halted until
+nightfall.
+
+While waiting for the hour of action, he gave final instructions to
+his men, and assigned to them the order in which they should ascend
+from the river towards the rear of the camp. When they approached
+the spot where they would probably find Roman sentries posted, they
+were to advance singly, crawling along upon the ground. Those who
+first went through were to keep straight on until they reached the
+further end of the camp; stopping, as near as they could judge,
+fifty paces apart. They were then to wait for half an hour, so as
+to be sure that all would have gained their allotted positions.
+Then, when they saw a certain star sink below the horizon (a method
+of calculating time to which all were accustomed) they were to
+creep forward into the Roman camp; and each to make his way, as
+noiselessly as possible, until he came within a few paces of one of
+the smoldering fires of the Romans, and to wait until they heard a
+single note from John's horn.
+
+Each was at once to spring forward, seize a lighted brand and fire
+the nearest tent; and then to crawl away--cutting, as they went,
+the ropes of the tents, so as to bring them down, and create as
+much confusion as possible. Then, either by crawling or, if
+discovered, by leaping to their feet and making a sudden rush, all
+were to make their way down to the river again; to follow its banks
+for half a mile, and then wait in a body for an hour. At the end of
+that time they were to make their way back to their camp in the
+mountain; certain, by that time, that all who were alive would have
+rejoined them. Should he himself not be with the party, they were
+at once to proceed to the election of another leader.
+
+At about ten o'clock they again moved forward and, descending to
+the river, followed its banks until they arrived at the spot they
+had fixed on; then, in single file, they began to climb the hill.
+John placed himself in the middle of the line, in order to have a
+central position when the attack began. As soon as they reached the
+top of the slope, they lay down and, one by one, crawled forward
+into the darkness; two or three minutes being allowed to elapse
+between the departure of each man. They could hear the call of the
+Roman sentries as they answered each other, every half hour; and
+knew that the line was but a hundred yards or so in front of them.
+The night was very dark, and no sudden shout proclaimed that those
+ahead had been noticed.
+
+When John's turn came to advance, Jonas was to follow next behind
+him. All had left their bows, arrows, bucklers, and swords behind
+them, and carried only their knives; for they had not come to
+fight, and the knives were required only for cutting the tent ropes
+or, in case of discovery, to enable them to take a life or two
+before they fell, fighting. Each had sworn to kill himself, if he
+found escape impossible, in order to escape a death by torture if
+he fell alive into the hands of the Romans.
+
+John, on approaching the line of sentries, was guided by sound,
+only, in trying to avoid them. He could not see their figures; but
+could hear the sound of their footsteps, and the clash of their
+arms, as they tramped a few yards backwards and forwards. He was,
+like his comrades, stripped to the waist--having only on a short
+garment, reaching halfway down the knee--as it was upon speed, and
+activity, that his life would depend.
+
+Without interruption, he crawled through the lines of sentries and
+continued his course until he was, as near as he could tell,
+opposite the center of the long line of tents; then he lay quiet,
+watching the setting of the star. No sound was heard from the camp
+in front; although from down the hillside beyond it came a confused
+noise, as of a host of men at work; and the glare of many fires
+reddened the skies for, there, five thousand men were at work
+raising the embankment against the doomed city; while the archers
+and slingers maintained a never-ceasing conflict, of missiles, with
+the defenders on the walls.
+
+The star seemed, to John, as if it hung on its course; so long was
+it in sinking to the horizon. But at last it sank; and John,
+crawling noiselessly forward, made his way into the Roman camp. It
+was arranged with wide and regular streets, laid out with
+mechanical accuracy. Here and there, in front of a tent of a
+commanding officer, sentries paced to and fro; the sound of their
+footsteps and the clash of their arms, each time they turned,
+giving warning of their positions. In the center of the streets the
+fires--round which the soldiers had, shortly before, been
+gathered--still glowed and flickered for, although the days were
+hot, the cold at night rendered fires desirable; and there was an
+abundance of fuel to be obtained, from the hills.
+
+John crawled along with the greatest care. He had no fear of being
+seen, but had he come roughly against a tent-rope he might have
+brought out some wakeful occupant of the tent to see who was
+moving.
+
+He continued his course until he found himself opposite a fire, in
+which some of the brands were burning brightly; while there was no
+sentry on guard, within a distance of fifty yards. So far,
+everything had gone well; neither in passing through the lines of
+the sentries, nor in making their way into the camp, had any of the
+band been observed. It was certain now that some, at least, would
+succeed in setting fire to the tents, before they were discovered;
+and the wind, which was blowing briskly from the mountains, would
+speedily spread the flames; and a heavy blow would be inflicted
+upon the enemy.
+
+
+
+Chapter 9: The Storming Of Gamala.
+
+
+At last, John made sure that all his followers must have taken up a
+favorable position. Rising to his feet he sounded a short note on
+his horn; then sprang forward and seized one of the blazing brands,
+and applied it to a tent. The canvas, dried by the scorching sun,
+lit in an instant and, as the flame leaped up, John ran further
+among the tents, lighted another and, leaving the brand there,
+sprang twenty yards away and then threw himself down.
+
+By this time, although not twenty seconds had elapsed since he had
+given the signal, a sudden uproar had succeeded the stillness which
+had reigned in the camp. The sentries had started on their posts,
+as they heard the note of the horn; but had stood a moment,
+irresolute, not knowing what it meant. Then, as the first flash of
+flame shot up, a simultaneous shout had arisen from every man on
+guard; rising louder and louder as the first flame was followed,
+almost instantly, by a score of others in different parts of the
+camp.
+
+It was but a few seconds later that the first trumpeter who rushed
+from his tent blew the alarm. Before its notes ceased, it was
+answered all over the camp and, with a start, the sleeping soldiers
+sprang up, caught up their arms, and rushed out of their tents.
+Startled, as they were, with the suddenness of the awaking, and the
+sight of the blazing tents, there was none of that confusion that
+would have occurred among troops less inured to warfare. Each man
+did his duty and--buckling on their arms as best they might,
+stumbling over the tent ropes in the darkness, amazed by the sound
+of the fall of tents, here and there, expecting every moment to be
+attacked by their unseen foe--the troops made their way speedily to
+the wide streets, and there fell in together, in military array,
+and waited for orders.
+
+These were not long in coming. As soon as the generals reached the
+spot, they told off a number of men to endeavor to extinguish the
+flames; sent other parties to scour the camp, and search for the
+enemy; while the rest, in solid order, awaited any attack that
+might be made upon them.
+
+But, short as was the time that had elapsed since the first alarm,
+it had sufficed to give the flames such hold and power that they
+were beyond control. With extraordinary rapidity the fire had
+leaped from tent to tent, and threatened to overwhelm the whole
+camp. The soldiers tried, in vain, to arrest the progress of the
+flames; rushing among the blazing tents, cutting the ropes to bring
+them to the ground, and trying to beat out the masses of fire as
+they fell. Many were terribly burnt, in their endeavors, but in
+vain; and the officers soon called them off, and set them to work
+pulling down the tents which the fire had not yet reached. But even
+this was useless: the flakes of fire, driven before the wind, fell
+on the heaps of dried canvas; and the flames spread almost as
+rapidly as they had done when the tents were standing.
+
+Nor were the parties in search of the incendiaries more successful.
+John had lain quiet, where he threw himself down, for a minute or
+two; by which time the tents had emptied of their occupants. Then,
+pausing only occasionally to circle a tent and cut away its ropes,
+he made his way to the edge of the camp. By this time the sheet of
+flame had extended well-nigh across the camp; extending high above
+it, and lighting it almost as if by day. But between him and the
+fire lay, still, a dark mass of tents; for the wind was blowing in
+the opposite direction and, light as it was elsewhere, in the black
+shadow of the tents it was still dark in the extreme.
+
+John made his way along, until he came to the end of the next
+street, and then paused. Already, three or four active figures had
+run past him at the top of their speed, and he wished to be the
+last to retreat. He stayed till he heard the tramp of troops coming
+down--driven out by the spreading flames--and then sprang across
+the end of the road and dashed along at full speed, still keeping
+close to the line of tents.
+
+A shout, which rose from the leading files of the Roman column,
+showed that he was seen. As he neared the end of the next opening,
+the Roman soldiers were pouring out; and he turned in among the tents
+again. Through these he made his way; dashing across the open spaces
+and, once, rushing through the midst of a Roman column--through which
+he passed before the troops had time to strike at, or seize him.
+
+At last, he reached the extremity of the camp. The slope down to
+the river was but fifty yards away and, once over the brow, he
+would be in darkness and safe from pursuit. But already the Romans
+had drawn up a column of men along the edge of the plateau, to cut
+off any who might try to pass. John paused among the last row of
+the tents, hesitating what course to adopt. He could not make
+directly up the mountain, for the space between it and the camp was
+now covered by the Roman cavalry--the greater portion of their
+infantry being still engaged in trying to save at least some
+portion of the camp.
+
+Suddenly he heard a footstep among the tents, close behind him. He
+drew back into the tent by which he was standing, and peered
+cautiously out. A Roman soldier came hastily along, and entered the
+next tent--doubtless to fetch some article of value, which he had
+left behind him as he rushed out, on the first alarm.
+
+A sudden idea flashed across John's brain. He waited till the
+soldier came out, followed him with silent steps; and then sprang
+upon him at a bound, hurling him to the ground, and burying his
+knife again and again in his body.
+
+Illustration: The Roman Camp Surprised and Set on Fire.
+
+Not a cry had escaped the Roman. The instant he was sure he was
+dead, John rose to his feet, placed the helmet of the fallen man on
+his head, secured the breastplate by a single buckle round his
+neck, took up his buckler and sword; and then, emerging from one of
+the tents, ran towards the Roman line, making for one of the narrow
+openings between the different companies. Several other
+soldiers--who had, like the man whom John had killed, gone back to
+their tents to fetch armor, or arms, left there--were also hurrying
+to take their places in the ranks. Therefore, no special attention
+was paid to John until he was within a few yards of the opening.
+
+Then a centurion at the end of the line said sternly:
+
+"You will be punished, tomorrow, for not being in your place. What
+is your name?" for, as John was between him and the sheet of flame
+rising from the camp, the Roman was unable to see his face.
+
+Instead of halting, as he expected, John sprang past him and,
+throwing down his helmet and buckler, dashed through the space
+between the companies.
+
+"Seize him! Cut him down!" the centurion shouted; but John was
+already descending the slope.
+
+As he ran, he swung the loosely buckled breastplate round on to his
+back; and it was well he did so for, a moment later, a Roman
+javelin rang against it, the force of the blow almost throwing him
+on his face. But, in a moment, he continued his course. He was in
+total darkness now and, though the javelins were flying around him,
+they were thrown at random. But the descent had now become so steep
+he was obliged to pause in his course, and to make his way
+cautiously.
+
+He undid the buckle, and left the breastplate behind him; threw
+down the sword; and climbed down until he stood by the side of the
+river. He could hear shouts above him, and knew that the Romans
+were searching the hillside, hoping that he had been killed or
+wounded by their darts. But he had no fear of pursuit. He swam the
+river--for he had struck upon a deep spot--and then, at full speed,
+ran along on the bank--knowing that some of the Roman cavalry were
+encamped upon the plain, and would soon be on the spot.
+
+However, all was quiet, and he met no one until he arrived opposite
+the place where it had been arranged that the party should meet.
+Then he waded across.
+
+"Is that you, John?" a voice exclaimed.
+
+"It is I, Jonas. Thank God, you have got back safely! How many are
+with you?"
+
+There was a loud cry of satisfaction and, as he made his way up the
+bank, a number of his followers crowded round him; all in the
+highest state of delight at his return. Jonas threw his arms round
+his neck, crying with joy.
+
+"I thought you must have fallen, John. I have been here ten
+minutes. Most of the others were here before me. Only three have
+arrived since and, for the last five minutes, none have come."
+
+"I fear no more will come," John said. "The Romans have cut off all
+retreat.
+
+"How many are missing?"
+
+"We were nineteen, here, before you came," one of the men replied.
+
+"Then there are six missing," John said. "We will not give them up.
+Some may have made their way straight up the mountain, fearing to
+be seen as they passed the ends of the open spaces. Some may have
+made their way, down the opposite slope, to the other arm of the
+river. But, even if all are killed, we need not repine. They have
+died as they wished--taking vengeance upon the Romans.
+
+"It has been a glorious success. More than half the Roman camp is
+assuredly destroyed; and they must have lost a prodigious quantity
+of stores, of all kinds.
+
+"Who are missing?"
+
+He heard the names of those absent.
+
+"I trust we may see some of them, yet," he said; "but if not,
+Jonas, tomorrow, shall carry to their friends the news of their
+death. They will be wept; but their parents will be proud that
+their sons have died in striking so heavy a blow upon our
+oppressors. They will live, in the memory of their villages, as men
+who died doing a great deed; and women will say:
+
+"'Had all done their duty, as they did, the Romans would never have
+enslaved our nation.'
+
+"We will wait another half hour, here; but I fear that no more will
+join us, for the Romans are drawn up all along the line where,
+alone, a descent could be made in the valley."
+
+"Then how did you escape, John," Jonas asked; "and how is it that
+you were not here, before? Several of those who were in the line
+beyond you have returned."
+
+"I waited till I hoped that all had passed," John said. "Each one
+who ran past the open spaces added to the danger--for the Romans
+beyond could not but notice them, as they passed the spaces lighted
+by the flames--and it was my duty, as leader, to be the last to
+go."
+
+"Six of those who were beyond you have joined us," one of the men
+said. "The other six are those that are missing."
+
+"That is what I feared," John answered. "I felt sure that those
+behind me would have got safely away, before the Romans recovered
+from their first confusion. The danger was, of course, greater in
+proportion to the distance from the edge of the slope."
+
+"But how did you get through, John, since you say that all escape
+is cut off?"
+
+John related how he had slain the Roman soldier, and escaped with
+his armor; and the recital raised him still higher in the
+estimation of his followers--for the modern feeling, that it is
+right to kill even the bitterest enemy only in fair fight, was
+wholly unknown in those days when, as was done by the Romans at
+Jotapata, men would cut the throat of a sleeping foe, with no more
+compunction than if they were slaughtering a fowl.
+
+Perceiving, by John's narration, that there was no chance of any of
+their comrades getting through to join them, now, the party struck
+off into the hills and, after three hours' march, reached their
+encampment. They gave a shout of joy, as they approached it; for a
+fire was burning brightly, and they knew that some of their
+comrades must have reached the spot before them.
+
+Four men rose, as they approached, and joyful greetings were
+exchanged. Their stories were soon told. As soon as they heard--by
+the shouts of the Romans on the hillside, and of the outer
+sentries--that they were discovered as they passed the spaces lit
+up by flames, they had turned back. Two of them had made their way
+up a deep watercourse, past the Roman guard on the hill--the
+attention of the soldiers being fixed upon the camp. The other two
+had climbed down the precipitous rocks on the other side of the
+hill.
+
+"It was terrible work, in the darkness," one of them said. "I fell,
+once, and thought I had broken my leg; but, fortunately, I had
+caught on a ledge, and was able to go on after a time. I think two
+of our party must have perished there; for twice, as I was
+descending, I heard a sudden cry, and then a sound as of a body
+falling from rock to rock."
+
+"Better so than to have fallen into the hands of the Romans," John
+said, "and to have been forced to slay themselves by their own
+hands, as we agreed to do.
+
+"Well, my friends, we have done a glorious deed. We have begun
+well. Let us trust that we may strike many more such blows against
+our tyrants. Now, let us thank God that he has fought by our hands,
+and that He has brought so many of us back from so great a danger!
+
+"Simeon, you are the oldest of the party; do you lift up your voice
+for us all."
+
+The party all stood listening reverently, while Simeon said a
+prayer of thanksgiving. Then one of them broke out into one of the
+psalms of triumph, and all joined at once. When this was done, they
+gathered round the fire, prepared their cakes of meal, and put meat
+on long skewers on the flames. Having eaten, they talked for hours,
+each in turn giving his account of his share in the adventure.
+
+They then talked of their missing friends; those from the same
+village telling what they knew of them, and what relations they had
+left behind. At last, just as morning was breaking, they retired
+into the little bowers of boughs that had been erected to keep off
+the cold--which was, at this elevation, sharp at nights. They were
+soon fast asleep.
+
+The first thing the next morning, Jonas set off to explore the foot
+of the precipices on the south side of the Roman camp, and to
+search for the bodies of their two missing comrades. He found one,
+terribly crushed; of the other he could find no sign, whatever. On
+his returning to the mountain camp, one of the young men was sent
+off to bear, to the relatives of the man whose body had been found,
+the certain news of his death; and to inquire, of the friends of
+the other, whether he had any relations living near the mountains
+to whom he might have made his way, if hurt or disabled by his
+fall.
+
+The messenger returned, on the following day, with the news that
+their missing comrade had already arrived at his home. His fall had
+not been a very deep one and, when he recovered consciousness, some
+hours before daybreak, he found that one of his legs was useless,
+and an arm broken. Thinking that, in the morning, the Romans might
+search the foot of the precipices, he dragged himself with the
+greatest difficulty a few hundred yards and, there, concealed
+himself among some bushes.
+
+A man came along, in search of an ass that had strayed. He called
+to him and, on the man hearing that he was one of the party who had
+caused the great fire in the Roman camp--the sight of whose flames
+had caused such exultation in the heart of every Jew in the plains
+around--he hurried away, and fetched another with a donkey. Upon
+this the injured man was lifted, and carried down to the lake;
+passing, on the way, several parties of Roman soldiers, to whom the
+idea did not occur that the sick man was one of the party who had
+inflicted such a terrible blow upon them on the previous night.
+Once by the side of the lake, there was no difficulty in getting
+him on board a boat, in which he was carried to his native village.
+
+The Romans were furious at the blow which had been struck them.
+More than half their camp and camp equipage had been destroyed; a
+great part of the baggage of the officers and soldiers had been
+burned, and each man had to deplore losses of his own, as well as
+the destruction of the public property. But, more than this, they
+felt the blow to their pride. There was not a soldier but felt
+humiliated at the thought that a number of the enemy--for, from the
+fire breaking out simultaneously, it was certain at least a score
+of men must have been engaged in the matter--should penetrate
+unseen into the midst of their camp; and worse still that, after
+effecting all this damage, all should have succeeded in making
+their escape--for, so far as they knew, the whole of the Jews got
+safely away.
+
+But not for a moment did they relax their siege operations. The
+troops engaged upon the embankment were relieved at the usual hour;
+and half a legion went up into the mountains, as usual, to procure
+timber; while four thousand archers, divided into parties two
+hundred strong, extended themselves all over the hills, and
+searched the forest for miles for some sign of their enemy--who
+were, they were now convinced, comparatively few in numbers.
+
+The news of the daring attack on the Roman camp spread far and wide
+among the towns and villages of the plains; and aroused the
+drooping spirits of the people, who had begun to think that it
+would be worse than useless to offer any opposition to the Roman
+power. Whence came the party which had accomplished the deed, or
+who was its leader, none knew; and the inhabitants of the villages
+near Hippos who, alone, could have enlightened them, were careful
+to maintain an absolute silence; for they knew that if, by any
+chance, a rumor reached the Romans of the locality from which their
+assailants had come, they would have carried fire and sword among
+all the villages by the lake.
+
+Titus was away, being absent on a mission in Syria; and Vespasian
+himself went among the troops, exhorting them not to be downcast at
+the disaster that had befallen them, for that the bravest men were
+subject to sudden misfortunes of this kind; and exhorted them to
+push on the siege with all the more vigor, in order that they might
+the sooner remove to camping grounds where they would not be
+exposed to such attacks by a lurking foe.
+
+The soldiers replied with cheers; and the next day, the embankment
+being completed, they opened so terrible a fire from their war
+engines upon the defenders of the walls that these were forced to
+retire into the city. The Romans at once pushed forward their
+battering rams to the walls and, setting to work with the greatest
+vigor, speedily made three breaches; through which they rushed,
+with exulting shouts. The Jews ran down to oppose them, and a
+desperate conflict took place in the narrow streets; but the
+Romans, pouring in in great numbers through the breaches, pressed
+them step by step up the steep hill.
+
+The Jews, animated by despair, again turned, and fell upon them
+with such fury that the Romans could not withstand the assault, and
+were driven down the steep lanes and paths, with great slaughter.
+But those who fled were stopped by the crowd of their own men,
+pressing up the hill from below; and the Roman soldiers--jammed, as
+it were, between the Jews above, and their own countrymen
+below--took refuge in the houses, in great numbers.
+
+But these were not constructed to bear the weight of so many men,
+in heavy armor. The floors fell in and, as many of the Romans
+climbed up on to the flat roofs, these also fell, bringing the
+walls down with them. Standing, as they did, almost one above
+another, each house that fell brought down the one below it and,
+thus, the ruin spread--as one house of cards brings down
+another--until the whole of the town standing on the steep
+declivity, on its eastern side, was a mass of ruins.
+
+The confusion was tremendous. The dust of the falling houses so
+thickened the air that men could not see a yard in front of them.
+Hundreds of the Roman soldiers were buried among the ruins. Some
+were killed, at once. Others, jammed between fallen timbers, strove
+in vain to extricate themselves, and shouted to their comrades to
+come to their assistance; but these--enveloped in darkness,
+ignorant of the ground, half suffocated with dust--were powerless
+to aid them.
+
+In the confusion, Romans fell by the swords of Romans. Many who
+could not extricate themselves slew themselves, with their own
+swords; while the exulting Jews--seeing, in this terrible disaster,
+a miracle effected in their favor--crowded down from above, slaying
+with their swords, hurling masses of stone down on the foe, killing
+those unable to retreat, and adding to the confusion and terror
+with their yells of triumph, which rose high above the confused
+shouts of the Romans.
+
+Vespasian himself, who had entered the town with his soldiers, and
+had pushed forward with them up the hill, was nearly involved in
+the common destruction; but, as the houses came crashing down
+around him, he shouted loudly to the soldiers near to gather round
+him, and to lock their shields together to form a testudo.
+Recognizing the voice of their beloved general, the soldiers near
+rallied round him and, sheltered beneath their closely-packed
+shields, resisted the storm of darts and stones from above and,
+gradually and in good order, made their way down over the ruins and
+issued safely from the walls.
+
+The loss of the Romans was great. The soldiers were greatly
+dispirited by their defeat, and especially by the thought that they
+had deserted their general in their retreat. Vespasian, however,
+was wise enough to see that this was no time for rebuke; and he
+accordingly addressed them in language of approbation. He said that
+their repulse was in no way due to want of valor on their part, but
+to an accident such as none could foresee; and which had been
+brought about, to some extent, by their too impetuous ardor, which
+led them to fight rather with the desperate fury of the Jews than
+with the steady discipline that distinguished Roman soldiers.
+
+The defenders of the city were full of exultation at their success
+and, setting to work with ardor, soon repaired the breaches and
+strengthened the walls. But all knew that, in spite of their
+momentary success, their position was desperate, for their
+provisions were almost exhausted. The stores which had been laid up
+were very large; but the siege had lasted for many months before
+the arrival of the Romans, and the number of the people assembled
+within the walls far exceeded the usual population.
+
+The Romans, on their part, increased the height of their
+embankment, and prepared for a second assault.
+
+In the meantime, Itabyrium had fallen. The hill of Tabor was
+inaccessible, except on the north side; and the level area, on the
+top, was surrounded by a strong wall. Placidus had been sent, with
+six hundred horse, against the place; but the hill was so steep,
+and difficult, that he hesitated to attack it. Each party pretended
+to be anxious to treat, each intending to take advantage of the
+other. Placidus invited the garrison to descend the hill, and
+discuss terms with him. The Itabyrians accepted the invitation,
+with the design of assailing the Romans, unawares. Placidus, who
+was on his guard, feigned a retreat. The Itabyrians boldly pursued
+on to the plain; when the Roman horse, wheeling round, dashed among
+them, inflicting terrible slaughter and cutting off their retreat
+towards the city. Those who escaped the slaughter fled to
+Jerusalem.
+
+The town, weakened by the loss of so many fighting men, and being
+much distressed by want of water, again opened negotiations; and
+surrendered upon the promise that the lives of all within it should
+be spared.
+
+Hunger was now doing its work among the people of Gamala. The
+inhabitants suffered terribly, for the provisions were all taken
+for the use of the fighting men; and the rest had to subsist, as
+best they could, on any little hoards they might have hidden away,
+or on garbage of all kinds. Numbers made their escape through the
+sewers and passages which led into the ravines, where the Romans
+had placed no guards.
+
+Still the assaults of the Romans were bravely repelled until, on
+the night of the 22d of September, two soldiers of the Fifteenth
+Legion contrived to creep, unobserved, to the foot of one of the
+highest towers of the wall; and began, silently, to undermine its
+foundations. Before morning broke, they had got in so far that they
+could not be perceived from the walls. Still they worked in,
+leaving a few stones in their place, to support the tower until the
+last moment. Then they struck these away, and ran for their lives.
+
+The tower fell with a terrible crash, with the guards upon it. In
+their terror, the defenders of the walls leaped up and fled in all
+directions; and many were killed by the Romans' darts--among them
+Josephus, one of their two leaders--while Chares, who was lying in
+the height of a fever, expired from the excitement of the calamity.
+
+The confusion in the town was terrible. Deprived of their two
+leaders, and with the town open to assault, none knew what was to
+be done. All expected instant destruction, and the air was filled
+with the screams and wailings of the women; but the Romans, mindful
+of their last repulse, did not at once advance to the assault. But
+in the afternoon Titus--who had now returned--taking two hundred
+horse, and a force of infantry, crossed the breach and entered the
+town.
+
+Some of the defenders rushed to meet him. Others, catching up their
+children, ran with their wives to the citadel. The defenders fought
+bravely, but were driven steadily up the hill by the Romans--who
+were now reinforced by the whole strength of the army, led by
+Vespasian. Quarter was neither asked nor given. The defenders
+contested every foot of the hill, until the last defender of
+Gamala, outside, the citadel had fallen.
+
+Then Vespasian led his men against the citadel itself. It stood on
+a rugged rock, of great height, offering tremendous difficulties to
+the assailants. The Jews stood upon the summit, rolling down great
+stones and darts upon the Romans, as they strove to ascend. But the
+very heavens seemed to fight against the unfortunate Jews, for a
+terrific tempest suddenly broke upon the city. So furious was the
+wind that the Jews could no longer stand on the edge of the crag,
+or oppose the progress of the enemy; while the Romans, sheltered
+from the wind by the rock, itself, were able to press upwards.
+
+The platform once gained, they rushed upon the Jews, slaying all
+they met, men, women, and children. Vast numbers of the Jews, in
+their despair, threw themselves headlong, with their wives and
+children, over the precipices and, when the butchery was complete,
+five thousand bodies were found at the foot of the rocks. Four
+thousand lay dead on the platform above. Of all those in Gamala
+when the Romans entered, two women, alone, escaped. They were the
+sisters of Philip, a general in Agrippa's army. They managed to
+conceal themselves until the carnage was over, and the fury of the
+Romans had subsided; and then showed themselves, and proclaimed who
+they were.
+
+Gischala now, alone of the cities of Galilee, defied the Roman
+arms. The people themselves were, for the most part, tillers of the
+soil, and were anxious to make their submission; but John--the
+rival and bitter enemy of Josephus--with the robber band he had
+collected, was master of the town, and refused to allow any talk of
+submission. The city had none of the natural strength of Jotapata
+and Gamala, and Vespasian sent Titus against it with a thousand
+horse; while he ordered the Tenth Legion to take up its winter
+quarters at Scythopolis; and himself moved, with the other two
+legions, to Caesarea.
+
+Titus, on his arrival before Gischala, saw that the city could be
+easily taken by assault but, desirous of avoiding any more shedding
+of blood, and learning that the inhabitants were desirous of
+surrendering, he sent an officer before it to offer terms of
+capitulation. The troops of John of Gischala manned the walls and,
+when the summons of Titus was proclaimed, John answered that the
+garrison accepted willingly the generous terms that were offered;
+but that, the day being the Sabbath, nothing could be concluded,
+without an infringement of the law, until the next day.
+
+Titus at once granted the delay, and drew off his troops to a
+neighboring town. In the night, John of Gischala marched away with
+all his armed men; followed by many of the inhabitants, with their
+wives and children--fearing to remain in the city, exposed to the
+anger of Titus, when he found he had been duped. The women and
+children soon began to drop behind; but the men pressed on, leaving
+the helpless and despairing women behind them.
+
+In the morning, when Titus appeared before the town, it opened its
+gates to him at once; the people hailing him as their deliverer
+from the oppression they had so long suffered, at the hands of John
+and his bands of ruffians. Titus entered Gischala amidst the
+acclamations of the people; and behaved with great moderation,
+injuring no one, and contenting himself with throwing down a
+portion of the walls; and warning the inhabitants that, if they
+again rose in rebellion, the same mercy would not be extended to
+them.
+
+He had at once dispatched a troop of horse in pursuit of the
+fugitives. They overtook them, and slew six thousand of the men,
+and brought three thousand women and children back into the city.
+John himself, with the strongest of his band, were not overtaken,
+but made their way to Jerusalem.
+
+The fame of the successful exploit, of the destruction of the Roman
+camp, brought large numbers of young men flocking to the hills, as
+soon as the Romans retired from Gamala, all eager to join the band;
+and John could have recruited his numbers to any extent but, now
+that all Galilee had fallen, and the Romans retired to their winter
+quarters, he did not see that there was anything to be done, until
+the spring. It would be madness to attack either of the great Roman
+camps, at Scythopolis or Caesarea; and although, doubtless, the
+garrisons left in Tiberias, Tarichea, and other towns might have
+been driven out, this would only have brought upon those cities the
+anger of the Romans, and involved them in ruin and destruction.
+
+Still less would it have been of any advantage to go down, at
+present, into Judea. That province was suffering woes, as great as
+the Romans could inflict upon it, from the action of the factions.
+Under the pretense of punishing all who were supposed to be
+favorable to making terms with Rome, bands of armed men pervaded
+the whole country, plundering and slaying the wretched inhabitants.
+
+Law and order were at an end. Those in Jerusalem who claimed, for
+themselves, the chief authority in the country had done nothing to
+assist their countrymen, in the north, in their struggle with the
+Romans. Not a man had been dispatched to Galilee. The leaders were
+occupied in their own desperate feuds, and battles took place in
+the streets of the city. The peaceful inhabitants were plundered
+and ill treated, and the condition of those within the walls was as
+terrible as was that of those without. Anarchy, plunder, and
+carnage extended throughout Judea and, while the destruction of
+Jerusalem was threatened by the Roman army in the north, the Jews
+made no preparation, whatever, for its defense, but spent their
+whole time and energy in civil strife.
+
+When, therefore, the numerous band who had now gathered round him
+urged him to lead them down to Jerusalem, John refused to do so.
+Getting upon an elevated spot, where his voice could be heard by
+them all, he said:
+
+"My friends, you have heard, as well as I, what is taking place in
+Jerusalem and the country round it. Did we go down there, what good
+could we do? We should be drawn into the strife, on one side or
+another; and the swords which should be kept for the defense of the
+Temple against the Romans would be stained with Jewish blood.
+Moreover, we should aid to consume the food stored away in the
+granaries.
+
+"Nor can we, through the winter, attempt any enterprise against the
+Romans here. The woes of Galilee are over. Tens of thousands have
+fallen, but those that survive can go about their business and till
+their fields in peace. Were we to renew the war, here, we should
+bring upon them a fresh outburst of the Roman vengeance.
+
+"Therefore, there is naught for us to do, now; but in the spring,
+when the Romans get into motion against Jerusalem, we will march to
+its defense. We have naught to do with the evil deeds that are being
+performed there; we have but to do our duty, and the first duty of
+every Jew is to die, if need be, in the defense of the Temple.
+Therefore, let us now disperse to our homes. When the first news
+comes that the Romans are stirring, those of you who are disposed
+to follow me, and obey my orders, can assemble here.
+
+"But let only such come. Let the rest make their way, singly, to
+Jerusalem. I am resolved to have only such with me who will follow
+me as one man. You know how the factions rage in the city. A
+compact body of men, true to themselves and their leader, can
+maintain themselves aloof from the strife, and make themselves
+respected by both parties; but single men must take sides with one
+faction or other, or be ill treated by both.
+
+"We are wanted, at home. The fields are lying untilled, for want of
+hands; therefore let us lay aside our arms until the spring, and do
+our duty to our families until we are called upon to aid in the
+defense of the Temple. When the hour comes, I shall be ready to
+lead, if you are ready to follow."
+
+John's address received general approval, and the gathering
+dispersed; all vowing that they would assemble in the spring, and
+follow John wherever he chose to lead them--for he was already
+regarded with an almost superstitious admiration in the country
+around. His deliverance at Jotapata and the success that he, alone
+of the Jewish leaders, had gained over the Romans, marked him in
+their eyes as one specially chosen by God to lead them to victory;
+and in a few hours the hill above Gamala was deserted, and John and
+his followers were all on their way towards their homes.
+
+
+
+Chapter 10: Captives.
+
+
+John was received with great joy by his father; who had already
+heard the story brought by the injured member of the band from
+Gamala, and was filled with pride that his son should so have
+distinguished himself. He at once agreed to John's proposal that he
+should start, on the following day, to fetch the women from Neve,
+as there was no longer any fear of trouble from the Romans. Galilee
+was completely subdued and, whatever events might take place in
+Judea, those in the north would be unaffected by them.
+
+The day after his return, then, John set out with Jonas for Neve.
+John charged his companion on no account to say anything of their
+doings at the siege of Gamala; and as communication was difficult,
+and they had not heard from Simon since John had left him, his
+friends at Neve were not aware that he had been absent from the
+farm. Martha and Mary were delighted to see him, and to hear that
+all was well at home. They had been greatly alarmed at the news of
+the slaughter of the fishermen on the lake, fearing that John might
+have gone across to Tarichea with some of his friends in the
+village. Their fears on this head, however, abated as time passed
+on and they did not hear from Simon; who, they felt assured, would
+have brought the news to Martha, had aught happened to their son.
+
+They had mourned over the siege and massacre of Gamala, and had
+been filled with joy when the news had arrived, three days before,
+that the Roman army had marched away to take up its quarters for
+the winter; and they had looked for the summons, which John
+brought, for their return home.
+
+"And does your father think, John, that there will be trouble again
+in the spring? Shall we have to leave home again, as soon as the
+winter is past?"
+
+"He hopes not, mother. Gamala was the only town on this side of the
+Jordan that resisted the Roman authority and, as all the
+territories of Agrippa are now peaceful, there is no reason why the
+Romans should enter these again; and indeed, all Galilee has now
+surrendered. As Vespasian moved towards the sea, deputies came to
+him from every town and village; and I think, now, that there will
+be no more trouble there."
+
+"It has been terrible enough, my son. What tens of thousands of men
+have perished, what destruction has been wrought! We have been
+mourning, for months now, for the woes which have fallen upon our
+people."
+
+"It has been most terrible, mother; and yet, it might have been
+worse. Nigh a hundred and fifty thousand have fallen, at Gadara,
+Jotapata, Japha, Tarichea, and Gamala; besides those who were slain
+in the villages that had been sacked, and destroyed. Still,
+considering all things, it might have been worse and, were it all
+over now--did no more dangers threaten our nation--we might even
+rejoice that no greater evils have befallen us, for our revolt
+against Rome. But what has been done is but a preparation for the
+siege of Jerusalem.
+
+"However, do not let us begin to mourn over the future. The storm
+has, for the present, passed away from us and, whatever misfortunes
+have befallen our countrymen, we have happily escaped. The farm
+stands uninjured, and no harm has come to any of us."
+
+"And all the villagers have escaped, John? Did none of our
+neighbors go out in their boats to Tarichea? We feared, when we
+heard of the sea fight, that some must have fallen."
+
+"No, mother. Fortunately, they listened to the counsels of my
+father, who implored them not to put out on the lake for that, did
+they do so, they would only bring misfortune and ruin upon
+themselves."
+
+"And have you heard, John," Mary asked, "anything of the champion
+who they say has arisen? We have heard all sorts of tales of
+him--how he harassed the Romans before Gamala and, with his
+followers, burned their camp one night and well nigh destroyed
+them; and how, when he goes into the fight, the Roman javelins drop
+off without harming him; and how, when he strikes, the Romans fall
+before his blows like wheat before a sickle."
+
+John burst into a laugh.
+
+"I wonder, Mary, that the reports didn't say also that he could fly
+through the air when he chose; could render himself invisible to
+the enemy; and could, by a wave of his hand, destroy them as the
+hosts of Sennacherib were destroyed. The Romans were harassed
+somewhat, at Gamala, by John and his followers, who crept into
+their camp at night and set it on fire, and had a few skirmishes
+with their working parties; but when you have said that, you have
+said all that there is to say about it."
+
+"That is not like you, John," Mary said, indignantly, for the tales
+that had circulated through the province had fired her imagination.
+"Everyone is talking of what he has done. He, alone of all our
+leaders, has checked the Romans; and has shown wisdom, as well as
+valor, in fighting. I should have thought you would have been one
+of the first to praise him. Everyone is talking about him and,
+since we heard of what he has been doing, mother and I pray for
+him, daily, as we pray for you and your father; and now you want to
+make out he has done nothing."
+
+"I do not want to make out that he has done nothing, Mary, for
+doubtless the Lord has been with him, and has enabled him to give
+some trouble to the Romans; but I was laughing at the fables you
+have heard about him, and at the reports which had converted his
+skirmishes with the Romans into all sorts of marvelous actions."
+
+"I believe they were marvelous actions," Mary said. "Why should
+what people say be all wrong?
+
+"We believe in him, don't we, mother?"
+
+"Yes, Mary. It is true that the tales we have heard may be, as John
+says, exaggerated; but assuredly this new champion of our people
+must be a man of wisdom and valor, and I see not why, as God raised
+up champions for Israel in the old time, he should not do so now,
+when our need is so great."
+
+"There is no reason, mother," John said, more quietly, "but I fear
+that the champion of Israel is not yet forthcoming. We have heard
+of the doings of this John and, as I said, he has merely had some
+skirmishes with the Romans--his band being too small to admit of
+any regular fighting. He interrupted their work, and gave them some
+trouble; and his men, creeping down into the camp, set it on fire,
+and so caused them a good deal of loss; but more than this cannot
+be said of him."
+
+"At any rate," Mary said disdainfully, "he has done more than your
+Josephus, John--for he brought ruin on all who took his advice, and
+went into the cities he had fortified. It may please you to make
+little of what this champion has done. Others do not think so.
+Everywhere he is talked of, and praised--the old men are talking of
+him, the Jewish maidens are singing songs in his honor. I heard
+them, yesterday, gathered round a well near Neve. His father must
+rejoice, and his mother be proud of him, if they are alive.
+
+"What do they say down by the lake, Jonas, of this captain? Are not
+the tales we have heard believed, there?"
+
+"I have heard nothing about the Roman javelins not harming him,"
+Jonas said; "but he certainly got safely out of the hands of the
+Romans, when they had well-nigh taken him; and all say that he is
+brave and prudent, and men have great confidence and trust in him."
+
+"Ridiculous, Jonas!" John exclaimed angrily, and Mary and his
+mother looked at him in surprise.
+
+"Truly, John," his mother said, "what Mary said is just. This is
+not like you. I should have thought you would have been one of the
+first to admire this new leader, seeing that he is fighting in the
+way I have heard you advocate as being that in which the Romans
+should be fought, instead of the Jews being shut up in the cities."
+
+"Quite so, mother! No doubt he is adopting the proper way of
+fighting, and therefore has naturally had some success. I am only
+saying that he has done nothing wonderful; but has given the Romans
+some trouble by refusing to fight, and by merely trying to harass
+them. If there were a thousand men who would gather small bands
+together, and harass the Romans night and day in the same manner,
+they would render it well-nigh impossible for them to make any
+progress. As it was, he merely aided in delaying the fall of Gamala
+by a day or two.
+
+"And now, let us talk of something else. Our father has succeeded
+in getting in the principal part of the harvest, but I fear that
+this year you will be short of fruit. We have had no time to gather
+in the figs, and they have all fallen from the trees; and although
+we have made enough wine for our own use, there will be but little
+to sell."
+
+"It matters not at all," Martha said. "God has been very merciful
+towards us and, so that we have but bread to eat and water to
+drink, until next harvest, we shall have nothing to repine about,
+when ruin and destruction have fallen upon so many."
+
+That evening, when Mary and Martha had retired to their apartments,
+the former, who had been very silent all the evening, said:
+
+"I cannot understand, mother, why John speaks so coldly of the
+doings of this brave leader; and why he was almost angry at our
+praises of him. It seems altogether unlike him."
+
+"It is unlike him, Mary; but you must never be surprised at men,
+they do not like to hear each other praised; and though I should
+have thought, from what I know of my son, that he was above the
+feeling of jealousy, I cannot but think that he showed some signs
+of that feeling today."
+
+"But it seems absurd, mother. I can understand John being jealous
+of any one his own age who surpassed him in any exercises--though I
+never saw him so for, when in rowing on the lake, or in shooting
+with bows and arrows, or in other sports, some of our neighbors'
+sons have surpassed him, he never seemed to mind at all; and it
+seems almost absurd to think that he could be jealous of a great
+leader, who has done brave deeds for our people."
+
+"It does seem so, Mary, and I wonder myself; but it has been ever
+one of our national faults to be jealous of our leaders. From the
+time the people vexed Moses and Aaron, in the wilderness, it has
+ever been the same. I grieve to see it in John, who has
+distinguished himself greatly for his age, and of whom we are
+proud; but no one is perfect, my child, and you must not trouble
+because you find that your betrothed husband is not free from all
+weaknesses."
+
+"I don't expect him to be free from all weaknesses, mother; but
+this is one of the last weaknesses I should have expected to find
+in him, and it troubles me. When everything seemed so dark, it was
+a pleasure to think that a hero, perhaps a deliverer, had arisen;
+and now John seems to say that he has done nothing."
+
+"My dear child," Martha said, "something may have occurred to vex
+John on the way and, when men are put out, they will often show it
+in the strangest manner. Probably John will, another time, speak
+just as warmly in praise of our new leader as you would, yourself."
+
+"Perhaps it may be so, mother," Mary assented. "I can hardly
+believe that John is jealous--it does seem so unlike himself."
+
+"I would not speak on the subject again, Mary, if I were you;
+unless he, himself, brings it up. A wise woman keeps silence on
+subjects which may lead to disagreement. You will learn, when you
+have married, that this is the easiest and best way."
+
+"I suppose so, mother," Mary said, in a tone of disappointment;
+"but somehow it never seemed to me, before, that John and I could
+have any subject on which there would be disagreement."
+
+"My dear Mary," Martha said, smiling, "John and you are both
+mortal; and although you may truly love each other--and will, I
+trust, be very happy as husband and wife--subjects will occur upon
+which you will differ; and then, as you know, the wisest plan is
+for the wife to be silent. It is the wife's duty always to give way
+to the husband."
+
+Mary gave a little shrug of her shoulders, as if to intimate that
+she did not regard altogether favorably this view of a wife's
+duties; however, she said no more, but kissed Martha, and retired
+to bed.
+
+The next morning they started early, and journeyed to Capitolias,
+where they stayed at the house of some friends. In the evening, the
+talk again turned upon the new leader, who had burned the Roman
+camp. When they did so, John at once made some excuse, and went
+out. He regretted, now, that he had not at once told his mother
+what he had been doing. He had intended, in the first place, to
+give her a little surprise; but had no idea of the exaggerated
+reports that had been spread about and, when Mary broke out into
+praise of the unknown leader, it seemed to him that it would have
+been absurd to say that he, himself, was the person of whom she had
+formed so fantastically exalted an opinion. Not having said so at
+first, he did not see how he could say so, afterwards; and so left
+the matter as it stood, until they should return home.
+
+While John was out, he heard news which caused him some uneasiness.
+It was said that parties of Roman horse, from Scythopolis, had been
+scouring the country; burning many villages--under the pretext that
+some Roman soldiers, who had straggled away marauding on their own
+account, had been killed by the peasants--slaughtering the people,
+and carrying off as slaves such young women and men as were likely
+to fetch good prices.
+
+He told his mother what he had heard; and asked her whether she did
+not think that it would be better to stay where they were, for a
+time, or return to Neve. But Martha was anxious to be at home,
+again; and the friend with whom they were stopping said that these
+reports were a week old, and that doubtless the Romans had returned
+to their camp. She determined, therefore, that she and Mary would
+continue their journey; but that the maids should remain with their
+friend, at Capitolias, until the Roman excursions ceased.
+
+They accordingly set out in the morning, as before--the two women
+riding, and John and Jonas walking by the side of the donkeys.
+Following the road by the side of the Hieromax they kept on,
+without meeting anything to cause alarm, until they reached the
+angle of the stream, where the road to Hippos branched off from
+that which followed the river down to Tarichea. They had gone but a
+short distance, when they saw a cloud of dust rising along the road
+in front of them, and the sparkle of arms in the sun.
+
+"Turn aside, mother," John exclaimed. "Those must be the Romans
+ahead."
+
+Turning aside, they rode towards some gardens and orchards at no
+great distance but, before they reached them, two Roman soldiers
+separated themselves from the rest, and galloped after them.
+
+"Fly, John!" Martha said, hurriedly. "You and Jonas can escape."
+
+"It would only ensure evil to you if we did, mother. No, we will
+keep together."
+
+The Roman soldiers rode up, and roughly ordered the party to
+accompany them back to the main body, which consisted of fifty men.
+The leader, a young officer whose garments and armor showed that he
+belonged to a family of importance, rode forward a few paces to
+meet them.
+
+"Some more of this accursed race of rebels!" he exclaimed.
+
+"We are quiet travelers," John said, "journeying from Capitolias to
+Tarichea. We have harmed no one, my lord."
+
+"You are all the same," the Roman said, scowling. "You speak us
+fair one day, and stab us in the back the next.
+
+"Pomponius," he said to a sergeant, "put these two lads with the
+rest. They ought to fetch a good price, for they are strong and
+active. As to the girl, I will make a present of her, to the
+general, to send to his wife in Rome. She is the prettiest Jewess I
+have seen, since I entered the country. The old woman can go. She
+is of no use to anyone."
+
+Illustration: Mary and the Hebrew Women in the Hands of the Romans.
+
+Martha threw her arms round Mary; and would have striven to resist,
+with her feeble strength, the carrying out of the order, when John
+said in Hebrew:
+
+"Mother, you will ruin us all, and lose your own life! Go home
+quietly, and trust to me to save Mary."
+
+The habit of submitting to her husband's will, which Martha had
+practiced all her life, asserted itself. She embraced Mary
+passionately, and drew aside as the Roman soldiers approached; and
+then, tottering away a short distance, sank weeping on the ground.
+Mary shed no tear but, pale as death, walked by the side of a
+soldier, who led her to the rear of the cavalcade, where four or
+five other young women were standing, in dejected attitudes.
+
+John and Jonas were similarly placed, with some young men, in the
+midst of the Roman soldiers. Their hands were tied behind them, and
+the troop resumed its way. They were traveling by the road along
+which the little party had just come. Whenever a house or small
+village was seen, half of the troop galloped off. Flames were soon
+seen to rise, and parties of wretched captives were driven in.
+
+When about halfway to Capitolias, the troop halted. The horses were
+turned into a field of ripe corn, to feed. Half the men sat down to
+a meal, while the remainder stood on guard over the captives. John
+had whispered to Jonas to work his hands so as to loosen his cords,
+if possible; and the lad, whose bones were very small, soon said
+that he could slip the ropes off without difficulty.
+
+It was harder work for John and, indeed, while on the march he did
+not venture to exert himself, fearing that the movements would be
+noticed by his guards. But when they halted, he got into the middle
+of the group of captives, and tried his best to loosen the cords.
+Jonas was close beside him.
+
+"It is of no use, Jonas," he said. "The cords are cutting into my
+flesh, and they will not yield in the slightest."
+
+"Let me try, John.
+
+"Stand round close," Jonas said to the other captives, in Hebrew.
+"I want to loosen my friend's knots. If he can get away, he will
+bring rescue to you all."
+
+The others moved so as to completely cover the movements of Jonas;
+and the lad, stooping down, applied his teeth to the knot in John's
+cords, and soon succeeded in loosening it.
+
+"That will be enough, Jonas. I can draw my hand through, now."
+
+Jonas again stood up.
+
+"When I make an effort to escape, Jonas, do you dash between the
+horsemen, and run for it. In the confusion you will get a start,
+and they will not overtake you until you are across the river. Once
+on the hill, you are safe. If you remain behind and I get away, as
+likely as not one of the soldiers would send a javelin through you,
+as being my companion."
+
+After half an hour's halt, the Romans again mounted their horses
+and turned to retrace their steps. Two Romans rode on either side
+of the captives, who were about fifty in number; and John gradually
+made his way to the front of the party, between the two leading
+horsemen.
+
+The officer, talking to his sergeant, rode a few paces ahead, in
+the middle of the road. Since the cords had been loosened, John had
+continued to work his fingers until the circulation was restored.
+Suddenly he slipped his hands from their fastenings, gave three
+bounds forward, and vaulted on to the back of the horse behind the
+officer. He had drawn the knife which had been hidden in his
+girdle; and he threw one arm round the officer, while he struck the
+knife deep into the horse's flank. The animal reared in the air and
+then, at a second application of the knife, sprang forward at the
+top of his speed, before the astonished Roman knew what had
+happened. John held him in his arms like a vice and, exerting all
+his strength, lifted him from the saddle and hurled him headlong to
+the ground; where he lay, bleeding and insensible.
+
+John had now time to look round. Struck with astonishment at the
+sudden incident which had passed under their eyes, the Romans had,
+at first, instinctively reined in their horses. The sergeant had
+been the first to recover himself and, shouting to the five leading
+soldiers on each side to follow him, had spurred in pursuit, just
+as his officer was hurled to the ground. But John was already some
+fifty yards away, and felt sure that he could not be overtaken.
+
+He had remarked the horse ridden by the officer, while they were
+eating; and saw that it was of far higher blood and swifter pace
+than any of those ridden by the soldiers. His own weight, too, was
+far less than that of the heavy-armed men in pursuit of him and,
+with a shout of scornful defiance, and a wave of his hand, he
+continued his course. Before a mile had been passed he had left his
+pursuers far in the rear and, seeing the hopelessness of the
+pursuit, they presently reined up and returned to the main body.
+
+Jonas had carried out John's instructions and, the instant the
+latter sprang on the officer, he slipped under the belly of the
+horse next to him and ran, at the top of his speed, for the river.
+It was but a hundred yards away, and he had gone three quarters the
+distance before any of the soldiers--confused at the attack upon
+their officer, doubtful whether the whole of the captives were not
+about to fall upon them, and without orders how to act, set out in
+pursuit.
+
+Jonas plunged into the stream, dived to the other side, and then
+sprang forward again, just as three or four soldiers reached the
+bank he had left. Their javelins were hurled after him, but without
+effect and, with a shout of triumph, he sprang up the hillside, and
+was soon safe from pursuit.
+
+As soon as he saw that the Romans had turned back, John sprang from
+his horse, unstrapped the heavy armor which covered its chest and
+sides, and flung it away; and then, mounting, resumed his course.
+At the first house he came to he borrowed a shepherd's horn and, as
+he approached the first village, sounded his signal for the assembly.
+
+Two or three young men ran out from their houses, as he dashed up;
+for there was not a village in those parts from which some of the
+young men had not gone up to the mountains to join him, after the
+fall of Gamala, and all were ready to follow him anywhere. He
+rapidly gave them orders to go to all the villages round; and
+instruct the young men to assemble, with all speed possible, at
+their old trysting place near Jabez Galaad; and to spread the news
+as they went, some from each village being sent as messengers to
+others. Then he pursued his way at full speed and, by sunset, had
+issued his orders in some twenty villages.
+
+Being convinced that, by night, a sufficient number of men would
+have gathered in the mountain for his purpose, he rode back to the
+river, swam his horse across; and then, leaving it to shift for
+itself, made his way up the mountain. Some seventy or eighty men
+had already arrived at the appointed place, and fresh parties were
+coming in every minute. Jonas was already there, John having
+arranged with him to watch the movements of the Romans until the
+sun set, and then to bring word to the place of meeting as to their
+movements.
+
+"Well, Jonas, what is your news?"
+
+"The Romans have halted, for the night, at a spot about a mile this
+side of where we left them. They remained where they were, until
+the party who had ridden after you returned; then they went slowly
+back, after having made a litter with their spears, on which four
+of them carried the officer you threw from his horse--what a crash
+he made! I heard the clang of his arms, as I was running. They
+stopped near one of the villages they burned as we went past; and
+when I turned to make my way here their fires were burning, so
+there's no doubt they mean to halt there for the night."
+
+"That is good news, indeed!" John said. "Before morning we will
+rouse them up in a way they little expect."
+
+John's followers arrived eager for the fight, for the news of the
+devastations committed by this party of Romans had roused the whole
+district to fury. As a rule the Romans, except when actually on a
+campaign, abstained from all ill treatment of the inhabitants--the
+orders against plundering and injuring the people being here, as in
+other countries held by the Roman arms, very stringent. In the
+present case, there was no doubt that Roman soldiers had been
+killed; but these had brought their fate upon themselves, by their
+ill treatment and insult of the villagers, and no notice would have
+been taken of the slaying of men while acting in disobedience of
+orders, had it not been that they belonged to the company of
+Servilius Maro.
+
+He was a young noble, possessed of great influence in Rome, and of
+a ferocious and cruel disposition; and he had urged the general so
+strongly to allow him to go out, to inflict punishment upon the
+country people, that consent had reluctantly been given. But even
+at this time, although the Jews were not aware of it, a messenger
+was on his way to Servilius with peremptory orders to him to return
+at once to Scythopolis, as most serious reports as to his cruelty
+to peaceful inhabitants had come to the general's ears.
+
+But that message Servilius was never to receive. By midnight,
+upwards of four hundred men had gathered at the rendezvous in the
+mountains. John divided the force into four bodies, and gave each
+their orders as to the part that they were to take; and then
+marched down the hill, crossed the river, and advanced towards the
+Roman bivouac.
+
+When within a quarter of a mile of the fires, the band broke up
+into sections and proceeded to surround the enemy. When each
+company reached the position John had marked out for it, the men
+began to crawl slowly forward towards the Romans. John sounded a
+note on his horn and, with a shout, the whole band rushed to their
+feet and charged down upon the enemy. Before the latter could
+spring to their feet, and mount their horses, the Jews were among
+them.
+
+John, with a picked band of twenty men, at once made his way to the
+center of the camp; where the captives, ignorant of the cause of
+this sudden alarm, stood huddled together. Placing his men around
+them, to prevent any Roman soldier injuring them, John joined in
+the fray.
+
+It was short. Taken by surprise, unable to get together and form in
+order of defense, the Roman soldiers were surrounded and cut down,
+each man fighting stubbornly to the last. One of the first to fall
+was their leader who, springing to his feet at the alarm, had
+rushed just as he was, without helmet or armor, among his soldiers,
+and was stabbed in a dozen places before he had time to draw his
+sword.
+
+The moment the conflict was over, and the last Roman had fallen,
+John ordered his men to disperse, at once.
+
+"Regain your homes before morning," he said. "There may be other
+parties of Romans out, and it is as well that none, even of your
+friends, should see you return; and then the Romans will have no
+clue as to those who have taken part in this night's business. Take
+not any of their arms, or spoils. We have fought for vengeance, and
+to relieve our friends, not for plunder. It is well that the Romans
+should see that, when they hear of the disaster and march out to
+bury the dead."
+
+The men were already crowding round the captives, relieving them
+from their bonds and, in many cases, embracing and weeping on their
+necks, for among them were many friends and relations of the
+rescuing party.
+
+John soon found Mary.
+
+"Is this a miracle you have performed, John?" the girl said. "Can
+it be true that our captors have been slain, and that we are free?"
+
+"Yes, dear, we can continue our journey."
+
+"But how has it happened, John; how has it all come about?"
+
+"Jonas and I escaped, as I suppose you know, Mary."
+
+"There was a great confusion and stir upon the road," Mary said,
+"but I did not know what had happened, until we got here. Then some
+of the men said that two of the captives had escaped; and that one
+of them jumped on to the horse of the officer and overthrew him,
+and had ridden off. They said they were both young and, as I missed
+you both from among the party, I thought it must have been you.
+
+"But how did all these men come together?"
+
+"I rode round the country, calling upon the young men in the
+villages to take up arms, to rescue their friends who had been
+carried away captive into slavery, and to revenge the destruction
+which this band of ruffians had caused. There were plenty of brave
+men ready to undertake the task and, as you see, we have carried it
+out.
+
+"And now, Mary, we had best be going. You see, the others are
+dispersing fast; and it is as well to be as far from here, by
+morning, as possible. A troop of Roman horse may come along,
+journeying between Scythopolis and Capitolias; and if they came
+upon this camp, they might scour all the country."
+
+"I am ready, John. What a fate you have saved me from! I have
+seemed in a dream, ever since the Romans met us this afternoon. I
+have tried to think of what my life was going to be, but could not.
+When we got here I tried to weep, but no tears would come. I have
+been sitting there, as still and cold as if frozen, till I heard
+the notes of a horn.
+
+"Oh, John, do you know John of Gamala was there?"
+
+"How do you know, Mary?" John asked, in surprise.
+
+"One of the young men who was a captive was lying near, and he
+leaped to his feet when the horn sounded, and shouted, 'There is
+John of Gamala's horn; we are saved.' Did you know he was with
+you?"
+
+"Yes, I knew he was," John said.
+
+"You won't say anything against him, again," Mary said. "Why did
+you not bring him here to us, that we might thank him?"
+
+"Certainly I will not say anything against him, in future, Mary.
+
+"And now, let us be going. I am very anxious about my poor mother.
+We will follow the road to the spot where we left her. By the time
+we get there, morning will be breaking. We will inquire for her, at
+every village we pass through; for I am sure she cannot have gone
+far. The Romans did not take the asses but, even with them, she
+could not have traveled far, and probably took shelter at the first
+place which she came to."
+
+This proved to be the case. At the first village they arrived at
+after passing the spot at which they had been taken captives, they
+heard that, late the evening before, a woman had arrived in sore
+distress. She was leading two asses, which she seemed too feeble to
+mount. She stated that her son and daughter had been carried away
+by the Romans; and she had been received, for the night, in the
+principal house in the village.
+
+Martha's delight, when John and Mary entered the house where she
+had been sheltered, was beyond words. She fell on their neck and
+kissed them, with broken sentences of thankfulness to God at their
+deliverance; and it was some time before she was sufficiently calm
+to hear how their escape had been effected, by the night attack
+upon the Romans by the country people. She was scarcely surprised
+when she heard that John had effected his escape, and summoned the
+people to rise to rescue them.
+
+"You told me to trust to you to save Mary, John; and I have kept on
+saying your words, over and over again, to myself. It seemed to me
+as if I did not quite understand them, and yet there was comfort in
+them. I could not even think what you could do to help Mary; and
+yet it appeared as if you, yourself, must have some hope."
+
+As soon as Martha was sufficiently recovered from her emotions to
+resume their journey, the party again started. They made a detour
+to avoid Hippos for, as John said, there might be inquiries as to
+everyone who was noticed coming from the direction of the scene of
+the struggle. They made many halts by the way, for Martha was
+scarcely able to retain her seat on the donkey, and even Mary was
+greatly shaken by the event of her captivity and rescue. During the
+heat of the day they remained under the shade of some trees, and
+the sun was setting when they approached the farm.
+
+Simon and the men hurried out, when the sound of the asses' feet
+was heard. Martha burst into tears, as he assisted her to alight.
+
+"What ails you, wife? I trust that no evil has befallen you by the
+way. Where are the maids?
+
+"Why, Mary, my child, you look pale, too!"
+
+"No wonder, uncle, that aunt is shaken, and that I look pale. For
+John, and I, and Jonas were taken captives by the Romans, who
+carried us off to sell as slaves, leaving poor mother behind."
+
+"And how then have you escaped, child?"
+
+"John and Jonas got away from them, and raised all the country; for
+the Romans had done much harm, killing, and carrying away captives,
+and burning. So when he called them the men took up arms, and fell
+upon the Romans at night and slew them all, and rescued me, and
+some fifty other captives who had fallen into their hands."
+
+Simon asked no further questions, for the time, but helped Martha
+into the house, and then handed her over to the care of Mary and,
+half an hour later, she had recovered sufficiently to return to the
+room; and sit there, holding Simon's hand in quiet happiness, and
+watching Mary as she resumed her accustomed tasks, and assisted old
+Isaac in preparing supper.
+
+"Everything looks just as it was, mother. I could hardly have
+believed things would have got on so well, without me to look after
+them. And there are quantities of grapes on the vines, still. They
+are too ripe for wine, but they will last us, for eating, for
+months, and that is ever so much better than making them into
+wine--"
+
+She stopped, for Simon had taken his place at the head of the
+table; and offered up thanks, in the name of the whole household,
+for the mercies that had been vouchsafed to them; and especially
+that they were all, once again, assembled together in their house,
+without there being one vacant place.
+
+Then the meal began. While it was eaten, many questions were asked,
+on both sides; Simon inquiring about his brother-in-law, and his
+family, and the life they had led at the farm; Martha asking after
+their neighbors--who had suffered, and who had escaped without loss
+or harm. When Isaac and the men retired, Jonas rose also to go, but
+Simon stopped him.
+
+"Remain with us, Jonas. Your life has been strangely cast in that
+of John's, and I would that, henceforth, you take your place as one
+of the family. You saved his life at Jotapata, and you will
+henceforth be as an adopted son to me.
+
+"Martha, I know that you will spare some of your affection for the
+lad, who is as a younger brother to John; and who would, I
+believe--nay I feel sure--if need be, give his life for his
+friend."
+
+"I would do so, indeed," Jonas said, simply. "He found me an
+outcast, whom none cared for. He has treated me like a brother, and
+I would gladly die for him."
+
+Martha said a few kind words to Jonas, whose quiet and somewhat
+subdued manner, and whose evident affection for John, had greatly
+pleased her; and Mary gave him a little nod, which signified that
+she gladly accepted him as one of the family.
+
+"And now, Martha," Simon said, "you have not yet told me how proud
+you must feel, in the doings of our son. Our friends here are never
+weary of congratulating me; and truly I feel thankful that a son of
+mine should have done such deeds, and that the Lord should have
+chosen him, to use him as an instrument of his will."
+
+"My dear father," John interrupted, "I have told you that there is
+nothing at all out of the way in what we have done. Jonas and the
+others did just as much as I did, and methinks that some of them
+make much more than is needful of our skirmishes, and praise me
+because in so doing they praise themselves, who did as much as I
+did."
+
+"But I do not understand you, Simon," Martha said. "I know that
+John fought bravely at Jotapata, and that it was marvelous that he
+and Jonas escaped, when so many fell. Is it this that you are
+speaking of?"
+
+"What! Has John said nothing about what he has been doing, since?"
+Simon asked, in surprise.
+
+"No, father, I said nothing about it," John said, before his mother
+could speak. "I thought, in the first place, that you would like to
+tell them; and in the next, the people there had heard such
+magnified reports that I could not, for very shame, lay claim to be
+the hero they had pictured to themselves."
+
+"But what has he done?" Martha asked, more and more surprised;
+while Mary, at his last words, sprang to her feet, and stood
+looking at him with an intent and eager face.
+
+"He should have told you, Martha," Simon said. "It is no light
+thing that this son of ours has done. Young as he is, the eyes of
+the people are upon them. For with a small band, which he gathered
+here, he harassed the enemy several days and, boldly entering their
+camp, destroyed it by fire."
+
+"Oh, John!" Mary said, in a low voice; while Martha exclaimed:
+
+"What! Is the John, of whom we have heard so much--the young man,
+of whom the people speak as their future leader--our boy? You
+cannot mean it, Simon!"
+
+"There is no mistake about it, Martha. The lad came to me; and said
+he thought that, with a small band, he could cause much trouble to
+the Romans. So I told him he could go, not knowing whether he spoke
+from the restlessness of youth, or because it was the will of the
+Lord that he should go and fight for the country. Indeed, it seemed
+to many that his marvelous escape from Jotapata showed that God had
+need of him. So I did not withstand him. There were many from the
+villages round who were ready to join themselves to him, and follow
+him, for the fame of his escape had made him much talked of.
+
+"So he went, with twenty-four followers and, of course, Jonas here;
+and truly he did, as all men say, great things. And though he saved
+not Gamala--as indeed could not have been done, save by a miracle
+of God, with so small a band--he did much and, by the burning of
+their camp, not only struck a heavy blow upon the Romans, but he
+inspired the people with hope.
+
+"Before, it seemed that to resist the Romans was to bring certain
+destruction upon those who adventured it; now men see that with
+prudence, united with bravery, much may be done and, in the spring,
+John will be followed by a great gathering of fighting men, from
+all the country round."
+
+Martha sat, in speechless surprise, looking at her son.
+
+"My dear mother," John said, "what I told you before, when you were
+praising the unknown John, is equally true now that it is John your
+son. We acted with common sense which, so far, no one seems to have
+exercised in our struggle with the Romans. We just kept out of
+their reach, and took good care never to come to actual blows with
+them. We constantly threatened them; and compelled them, who knew
+nothing of our numbers or strength, to cease working.
+
+"As to the burning their camp, of course there was a certain amount
+of danger in it, but one cannot make war without danger. We crept
+through their sentries into the camp, in the night, and set it on
+fire; and then made our escape, as best we could. As only one of
+our number was killed; and he from falling over a precipice, and
+not by the sword of the Romans, you see the peril could not have
+been very great.
+
+"It was just as I said, that because we did not throw away our
+lives, but were prudent and cautious, we succeeded. People have
+made a great fuss about it, because it is the only success, however
+small, that we have gained over the Romans but, as my father says,
+it has certainly had a good effect. It has excited a feeling of
+hopefulness and, in the spring, many will take the field with the
+belief that, after all, the Romans are not invincible; and that
+those who fight against them are not merely throwing away their
+lives."
+
+It was some time before Martha could realize that the hero, of
+which she had heard so much, was the quiet lad standing before
+her--her own son John.
+
+"Simon," she said, at last, "morning and night I have prayed God to
+protect him of whom we heard so much, little thinking that it was
+my own son I was praying for. Tonight, I will thank him that he has
+so blessed me. Assuredly, God's hand is with him. The dangers he
+has run and the success that he has gained may, as he says, be
+magnified by report; nevertheless he has assuredly withstood the
+Romans, even as David went out against Goliath. Tomorrow I will
+hear more of this; but I feel shaken with the journey, and with
+this strange news.
+
+"Come, Mary, let us to bed!"
+
+But Mary had already stolen away, without having said a single
+word, after her first exclamation.
+
+John was at work soon after daybreak, next morning, for there was
+much to be done. The men were plowing up the stubble, ready for the
+sowing, Jonas had gone off, with Isaac, to drive in some cattle
+from the hills; and John set to work to dig up a patch of garden
+ground, near the house. He had not been long at work, when he saw
+Mary approaching. She came along quietly and slowly, with a step
+altogether unlike her own.
+
+"Why, Mary, is that you?" he said, as she approached. "Why, Miriam
+herself could not walk slower.
+
+"Are you ill this morning, child?" he asked, with a change of
+voice, as he saw how pale she was looking.
+
+Mary did not speak until she came quite close; then she stopped,
+and looked at him with eyes full of tears.
+
+"Oh, John," she began, "what can I say?"
+
+"Why, my dear Mary, what on earth is the matter with you?" he said,
+throwing down his spade, and taking her hands in his.
+
+"I am so unhappy, John."
+
+"Unhappy!" John repeated. "What is making you unhappy, child?"
+
+"It is so dreadful," she said, "to think that I, who ought to have
+known you so well--I, your betrothed wife--have been thinking that
+you were so mean as to be jealous; for I did think it was that,
+John, when you made light of the doings of the hero I had been
+thinking about so much, and would not allow that he had done
+anything particular. I thought that you were jealous, John; and now
+I know what you have done, and why you spoke so, I feel I am
+altogether unworthy of you."
+
+"Well, Mary, I never thought you were a little goose, before. What
+nonsense you are talking! It was only natural you should have
+thought I was jealous; and I should have been jealous, if it had
+been anyone else you were praising so much. It was my fault, for
+not telling you at once. Concealments are always stupid; but I had
+thought that it would give you a pleasant surprise, when you got
+home, to hear about it; but instead of causing you pleasure, I have
+caused you pain. I was not vexed, in the slightest; I was rather
+amused, when you answered me so curtly."
+
+"I think it was cruel of you, John, to let me go on thinking badly
+of you, and showing yourself in so unworthy a light. That does not
+make it any the less wrong of me. I ought to have believed in you."
+
+"You are making a mountain out of a molehill, Mary, and I won't
+hear any such nonsense. You heard an absurd story, as to what
+someone had been doing, and you naturally made a hero of him. You
+were hurt by my speaking slightingly of this hero of yours, and
+naturally thought I was jealous at hearing such praises of another
+from my betrothed wife. It was all perfectly natural. I was not in
+the least offended with you, or put out in any way; except that I
+was vexed with myself for not telling you, at once, that all these
+fables related to your cousin John.
+
+"Now, dry your eyes, and don't think any more about it. Go and pick
+two of the finest bunches of grapes you can find, and we will eat
+them together."
+
+But it was some time before Mary recovered her brightness. The
+changes which the last few months had made almost depressed her. It
+was but a year ago that John and she had been boy and girl,
+together; now he had become a man, had done great deeds, was looked
+upon by many as one chosen for the deliverance of the nation. Mary
+felt that she, too, had aged; but the change in her was as nothing
+to that in her old playfellow. It was but a year ago she had been
+gravely advising him; treating him, sometimes, as if she had been
+the elder.
+
+She would have treated him now, if he would have let her, with
+something of the deference and respect which a Jewish maiden would
+usually pay to a betrothed husband--one who was shortly to become
+her lord. But the first time he detected this manner, John simply
+laughed at her, and said:
+
+"My dear Mary, do not let us have any nonsense of this sort. We
+have been always equals, you and I; friends and companions. You
+know, just as well as I do, that in all matters which we have had
+in common, you have always had quite as much sense as I and, on a
+great many matters, more sense.
+
+"Nothing has occurred since then to alter that. I have grown into a
+young man, you into a young woman; but we have advanced equally. On
+matters concerning warfare, I have gained a good deal of knowledge;
+in other matters, doubtless, you have gained knowledge. And if,
+dear, it is God's will that I pass through the troubles and dangers
+that lie before us, and we become man and wife, I trust that we
+shall always be the friends and comrades that we have been, as boy
+and girl together.
+
+"It is all very well, when young men and maidens have seen nothing
+of each other until their parents bring them together as man and
+wife, for the bride to affect a deep respect--which I have not the
+least doubt she is generally far from feeling, in her heart--for
+the man to whom she is given. Happily, this has not been the way
+with us. We have learned to know each other well; and to know that,
+beyond the difference in strength which a man has over a woman,
+there is no difference between us--that one will rule the house,
+and the other will rule the farm, but that in all things, I trust,
+we shall be companions and equals. I do hope, Mary, that there will
+be no change in our ways, the few months we have to be together,
+now.
+
+"In the spring, I go up to help to defend Jerusalem; and it is no
+use hiding the fact from ourselves that there is but little chance
+of my returning. We know what has befallen those who have,
+hitherto, defended cities against the Romans; and what has happened
+at Jotapata, and Gamala, will probably happen at Jerusalem. But for
+this reason, let us have no change; let us be as brother and sister
+to one another, as we have been, all along. If God brings me back
+safe to you, and you become my wife, there will be plenty of time
+to settle exactly how much deference you shall pay me; but I shall
+expect that, when the novelty of affecting the wifely obedience,
+which is enjoined upon the females of our race, is past, you will
+be quite ready to take up that equality which is, after all, the
+rule in practice."
+
+"I shall remember your words," Mary said, saucily, "when the time
+comes. It may be you will regret your expressions about equality,
+some day."
+
+So, during the winter, Mary tried to be bright and cheerful; and
+Martha, whose heart was filled with anxiety as to the dangers and
+trials which lay before them--Jerusalem and the Temple threatened,
+and John away, engaged in desperate enterprises--often wondered to
+herself, when she heard the girl's merry laugh as she talked with
+John, and saw how completely she seemed to put aside every sort of
+anxiety; but she did not know how Mary often spent the entire night
+in weeping and prayer, and how hard was her struggle to keep up the
+brave appearance which was, she knew, a pleasure to John.
+
+He was not much at home, being often absent for days together.
+Strangers came and went, frequently. John had long conversations
+with them; and sometimes went away with them, and did not return
+for three or four days. No questions were asked, by his parents, as
+to these visitors or his absence. They knew that they had reference
+to what they considered his mission; and as, when he returned home,
+he evidently wished to lay aside all thought of other things, and
+to devote himself to his life with them, they asked no questions as
+to what he was doing.
+
+He spoke, sometimes, of these things to Mary, when they were
+together alone. She knew that numbers of young men were only
+waiting his signal to join him; that parties of them met him among
+the hills, and were there organized into companies, each with
+officers of their own choice over them; and that, unknown to the
+Romans at Scythopolis, there were daily held, throughout the
+country on both sides of the Jordan, meetings where men practiced
+with their arms, improved their skill with the bow and arrow, and
+learned to obey the various signals of the bugle, which John had
+now elaborated.
+
+John was resolute in refusing to accept any men with wives and
+families. There were other leaders, he said, under whom these could
+fight; he was determined to have none but men who were ready to
+sacrifice their lives, and without the care of others dependent
+upon them. He was ready to accept youths of fifteen, as well as men
+of five-and-twenty; believing that, in point of courage, the one
+were equal to the other. But each candidate had to be introduced by
+others, who vouched for his activity, hardihood, and courage.
+
+One of his objects was to avoid increasing his band to too great
+dimensions. The number of those ready to go up to defend Jerusalem,
+and eager to enroll themselves as followers of this new
+leader--whose mission was now generally believed in, in that part
+of the country--was very large; but John knew that a multitude
+would be unwieldy; that he would find it impossible to carry out,
+with thousands of men, tactics dependent for success upon celerity
+of movement; and, moreover, that did he arrive in Jerusalem with so
+great a following, he would at once become an object of jealousy to
+the leaders of the factions there.
+
+He therefore limited the number to four hundred men; urging upon
+all others who presented themselves, or sent messages to him, to
+form themselves into similar bands; to choose leaders, and to act
+as independent bodies, hanging upon the rear of the Romans,
+harassing them with frequent night alarms, cutting off their
+convoys, attacking their working parties; and always avoiding
+encounters with strong bodies of the Romans, by retreating into the
+hills. He said that, although he would not receive more men into
+his own force than he thought could be easily handled, he should be
+glad to act in concert with the other leaders so that, at times,
+the bands might all unite in a common enterprise; and especially
+that, if they entered Jerusalem, they might hold together, and thus
+be enabled to keep aloof from the parties of John of Gischala, or
+Eleazar, who were contending for the mastery of the city.
+
+His advice was taken, and several bands similar to his own were
+formed; but their leaders felt that they needed the prestige and
+authority which John had gained, and that their followers would not
+obey their orders with the faith which was inspired, in the members
+of John's own band, by their belief in his special mission. Their
+representations on this subject were so urgent that John, at their
+request, attended a meeting at which ten of these chiefs were
+present.
+
+It was held in a farmhouse, not far from the spot where Gamala had
+stood. John was embarrassed at the respect which these men, all of
+them several years older than himself, paid him; but he accepted
+the position quietly, for he felt that the belief that existed, as
+to his having a special mission, added greatly to his power of
+utility. He listened to their representations as to their want of
+authority, and to the rivalries and jealousies which already
+existed among those who had enrolled themselves. When they had
+finished, he said:
+
+"I have been thinking the matter well over. I am convinced that it
+is absolutely necessary that none of the commands shall exceed the
+numbers I have fixed upon--namely, four hundred men, divided into
+eight companies, each with a captain--but at the same time, I do
+not see any reasons why all our corps should not be nominally under
+one leader. If, then, you think it will strengthen your position, I
+am ready to accept the general leadership, and to appoint you each
+as commanders of your troops. Then you will hold my commissions;
+and I will support you, in your commands, with any authority I may
+have.
+
+"At the same time you will understand that you will, in reality,
+act altogether independently of me; save and except when, it seems
+to me, that we can unite in any enterprise. If we enter Jerusalem,
+we will then hold together for mutual protection from the factions;
+but even there you will each command independently for, did I
+assume a general command, it would excite the jealousy of the
+leaders of the factions, and we should be forced to take part in
+the civil strife which is devastating the city."
+
+A cordial consent to this proposition was given by the other
+leaders, who said that the knowledge that they were John's officers
+would add immensely to their authority; and would also raise the
+courage and devotion of their men, who would not believe that they
+were being led to victory, unless they were acting under the orders
+of John, himself.
+
+"Remember," John said, "that if misfortune befalls us, I have never
+laid claim to any divine commission. We are all agents of God, and
+it may be that he has specially chosen me as one of his
+instruments; but this I cannot say, beyond the fact that, so far, I
+have been carried safely through great dangers, and have been
+enabled to win successes over the Romans. But I do not set up as a
+specially-appointed leader.
+
+"I say this for two reasons: in the first place, that you should
+not think that I am claiming authority and command on grounds which
+may not be justified; and in the second place that, if I should
+fall early in the fighting, others should not be disheartened, and
+believe that the Lord has deserted them.
+
+"I am but a lad among you, and I recognize that it is God who has
+so strangely brought me into eminence but, having done that much,
+he may now choose some other instrument. If this should be so--if,
+as may well be, one of you should obtain far greater success than
+may attend me--I shall be only too glad to lay aside this authority
+over the rest, with which you are willing to invest me, and to
+follow him as cheerfully as you now propose to follow me."
+
+The meeting soon afterwards broke up, and the news that John of
+Gamala--as he was generally called, from the success he had gained
+over the Romans before that town--had assumed the supreme command
+of the various bands which were being raised, in eastern Galilee
+and on the east of Jordan, spread rapidly; and greatly increased
+the popular feeling of hope, and confidence. Fresh bands were
+formed, the leaders all receiving their appointments from him.
+Before the spring arrived, there were twenty bands formed and
+organized, in readiness to march down towards Jerusalem, as soon as
+the Roman legions got into motion.
+
+
+
+Chapter 11: A Tale Of Civil Strife.
+
+
+Towards the spring, Simon and his family were surprised by a visit
+from the Rabbi Solomon Ben Manasseh. It was a year since they had
+last seen him, when he called to take leave of them, on starting
+for Jerusalem. They scarcely recognized him as he entered, so old
+and broken did he look.
+
+"The Lord be praised that I see you all, safe and well!" he said,
+as they assisted him to dismount from the donkey that he rode. "Ah,
+my friends, you are happy, indeed, in your quiet farm; free from
+all the distractions of this terrible time! Looking round here, and
+seeing you just as I left you--save that the young people have
+grown, somewhat--I could think that I left you but yesterday, and
+that I have been passing through a hideous nightmare.
+
+"Look at me! My flesh has fallen away, and my strength has gone. I
+can scarce stand upon my legs, and a young child could overthrow
+me. I have wept, till my tears are dried up, over the misfortunes
+of Jerusalem; and yet no enemy has come within sight of her walls,
+or dug a trench against her. She is devoured by her own children.
+Ruin and desolation have come upon her."
+
+The old man was assisted into the house, and food and wine placed
+before him. Then he was led into the guest chamber, and there slept
+for some hours. In the evening, he had recovered somewhat of his
+strength, and joined the party at their meal.
+
+When it was concluded, and the family were alone, he told them what
+had happened in Jerusalem during the past year. Vague rumors of
+dissension, and civil war, had reached them; but a jealous watch
+was set round the city, and none were suffered to leave, under the
+pretext that all who wished to go out were deserters who sought to
+join the Romans.
+
+"I passed through, with difficulty," the rabbi said, "after bribing
+John of Gischala, with all my worldly means, to grant me a pass
+through the guards; and even then should not have succeeded, had he
+not known me in old times, when I looked upon him as one zealous
+for the defense of the country against the Romans--little thinking,
+then, that the days would come when he would grow into an oppressor
+of the people, tenfold as cruel and pitiless as the worst of the
+Roman tribunes.
+
+"Last autumn when, with the band of horsemen, with steeds weary
+with hard riding, he arrived before the gates of Jerusalem--saying
+that they had come to defend the city, thinking it not worth while
+to risk their lives in the defense of a mere mountain town, like
+Gischala--the people poured out to meet him, and do him honor.
+Terrible rumors of slaughter and massacre, in Galilee, had reached
+us, but none knew the exact truth. Moreover, John had been an enemy
+of Josephus and, since Josephus had gone over to the Romans, his
+name was hated and accursed among the people; and thus they were
+favorably inclined towards John.
+
+"I don't think anyone was deceived by the story he told, for it was
+evident that John and his men had fled before the Romans. Still,
+the tidings he brought were reassuring, and he was gladly received
+in the city. He told us that the Romans had suffered very heavily
+at the sieges of Jotapata and Gamala, that they were greatly
+dispirited by the desperate resistance they had met with, that a
+number of their engines of war had been destroyed, and that they
+were in no condition to undertake the siege of a strong city like
+Jerusalem. But though all outwardly rejoiced, many in their hearts
+grieved at the news, for they thought that even an occupation by
+the Romans would be preferable to the suffering they were
+undergoing.
+
+"For months, bands of robbers, who called themselves Zealots, had
+ravaged the whole country; pillaging, burning, and slaying, under
+the pretense that those they assaulted were favorable to the cause
+of Rome. Thus, gradually, the country people all forsook their
+homes, and fled to Jerusalem for refuge and, when the country was
+left a desert and no more plunder was to be gained, these robber
+bands gradually entered Jerusalem. As you know, the gates of the
+holy city were always open to all the Jewish people; and none
+thought of excluding the strangers who entered, believing that
+every armed man would add to the power of resistance, when the
+Romans appeared before it.
+
+"The robbers, who came singly or in small parties from all parts of
+the country, soon gathered themselves together in the city, and
+established a sort of terror over the peaceable inhabitants. Men
+were robbed, and murdered, openly in the street; houses were broken
+open, and pillaged; none dare walk in the street, without the risk
+of insult or assault. Antipas, Levias, and Saphias--all of royal
+blood--were seized, thrown into prison, and there murdered; and
+many others of the principal people were slain.
+
+"Then the robbers proceeded to further lengths. They took upon
+themselves to appoint a high priest; selected a family which had no
+claim whatever to the distinction and, drawing lots among them,
+chose as high priest one Phannias--a country priest, ignorant,
+boorish, and wholly unable to discharge the function of the office.
+Hitherto, the people had submitted to the oppression of the
+Zealots, but this desecration of the holy office filled them with
+rage and indignation; and Ananus--the oldest of the chief priests,
+a man of piety and wisdom--was the head of the movement and,
+calling the people together, exhorted them to resist the tyranny
+which oppressed them, and which was now desecrating the Temple--for
+the Zealots had taken refuge there, and made the holy place their
+headquarters.
+
+"The people seized their arms, but before they were ready for the
+attack the Zealots, learning what was going on, took the initiative
+and fell upon them. The people were less accustomed to arms than
+their foes, but they had the superiority of numbers, and fought
+with fury. At first the Zealots gained the advantage, but the
+people increased in numbers. Those behind pressed those in front
+forward, and the Zealots were driven back into the Temple, and the
+Quadrangle of the Gentiles was taken.
+
+"The Zealots fled into the inner court, and closed the gates.
+Thither their wounded had already been carried, and the whole place
+was defiled with their blood. But Ananus, having the fear of God
+before his eyes, did not like to attack them there and, leaving six
+thousand chosen men on guard in the cloisters, and arranging that
+these should be regularly relieved, retired.
+
+"Such was the state of things, when John of Gischala arrived. He at
+once professed complete agreement with the party of Ananus, and was
+admitted into all their councils; but all the time, as we
+afterwards learned, he was keeping up a secret correspondence with
+the Zealots, and betrayed to them all that took place at the
+council. There was some distrust of him but, in addition to the
+party that had entered the city with him, he had speedily gathered
+together many others and, distracted as we already were with our
+troubles, none cared to add to the number of their enemies by
+openly distrusting John--who took many solemn oaths of fidelity to
+the cause of order.
+
+"He at length volunteered to enter the inner Temple, on a mission
+to the Zealots; and to persuade them to surrender, and leave the
+city. But no sooner was he among them than he threw off the mask,
+and told the Zealots that the offers to allow them to depart in
+peace were blinds, and that they would at once be massacred if they
+surrendered. He therefore advised them to resist, and to send for
+assistance without--recommending them especially to send to the
+Idumeans. Eleazar and Zacharias--the chiefs of the Zealots--felt
+sure that they, above all, would be sacrificed if they surrendered;
+and they embraced John's counsel, and sent off swift-footed
+messengers to the Idumeans, urging them to come to their
+assistance.
+
+"The Idumeans had, since their conquest by Hyrcanus, been
+incorporated with the Jews. They were a fierce and warlike
+people--of Arab descent--and, immediately the messengers of the
+Zealots arrived, they embraced the proposal, anticipating the
+acquisition of great plunder in Jerusalem. Marching with all speed,
+they appeared, twenty thousand strong, before the walls of
+Jerusalem.
+
+"Although taken completely by surprise--for none knew that
+messengers had gone over to the Idumeans--the people manned the
+walls; and Jesus, a colleague of Ananus, addressed the Idumeans. He
+asked them to take one of three courses: either to unite with the
+people, in punishing the notorious robbers and assassins who were
+desecrating the Temple; or to enter the city unarmed, and arbitrate
+between the conflicting parties; or to depart, and leave the city
+to settle its own difficulties. Simon, the leader of the Idumeans,
+answered that they came to take the part of the true patriots,
+against men who were conspiring basely to sell the people into the
+hands of the Romans.
+
+"At this answer Jesus left the wall, and we held debate upon the
+situation. Before the arrival of this new enemy, we felt certain of
+overpowering the Zealots; and Ananus would, ere long, have been
+persuaded to lay aside his scruples and attack them for, as they
+were desecrating the sanctuary, it would be better to shed their
+blood there and, when these wicked men were slain, to offer up
+atonement and purify the Temple--as had been done before, in the
+days of the Maccabees, after the Temple had been defiled.
+
+"We redoubled our guards round the Temple, so that none could issue
+out thence to communicate with the Idumeans. At night a terrible
+storm set in, with lightning, thunder, and rain, so that the very
+earth seemed to shake. A great awe fell upon all, within and
+without the city. To all, it seemed a sign of the wrath of God at
+the civil discords; but though, doubtless, it was the voice of the
+Almighty, it was rather a presage of further evils.
+
+"Under shelter of the storm--which drove all the guards to take
+refuge--some of the Zealots cut asunder the bars of the gate, and
+crept along the street to the wall. Then they sawed through the
+bars of the gate that faced the Idumeans, who were trembling with
+terror in the storm. Unseen by anyone, the Idumeans entered the
+gate, marched through the city, and approached the Temple. Then
+they fell upon our guards, while the Zealots attacked them from
+behind.
+
+"Furious at the hours they had passed exposed to the tempest,
+ashamed of their fears, and naturally pitiless and cruel, the
+Idumeans gave no quarter; and a terrible carnage took place among
+the ten thousand men who had been placed in the outer court of the
+Temple. Some fought desperately, others threw themselves down from
+the wall into the city and, when morning dawned, eight thousand
+five hundred of our best fighting men had been slain.
+
+"As soon as it was daylight, the Idumeans broke into the city,
+pillaging and slaying. The high priests, Ananus and Jesus, were
+among those who were slain; and in that terrible night were
+extinguished the last hopes of saving Jerusalem.
+
+"Ananus was a man of the highest character. He had labored
+unceasingly to place the city in a posture of defense; believing,
+and rightly, that the stronger were its walls, and the more
+formidable the resistance it could offer, the better chance there
+was of obtaining favorable terms from the Romans. Ananus was the
+leader and hope of the peace party, which comprised all the
+respectable classes, and all the older and wiser men in Jerusalem.
+His death left the conduct of affairs in the hands of the
+thoughtless, the rash, and the desperate.
+
+"The massacre continued for days, the Idumeans hunting the citizens
+in the streets. Vast numbers were killed, without question. The
+young men of the upper classes were dragged to prison, and were
+there scourged and tortured to force them to join the Zealots, but
+not one would do so. All preferred death. Thus perished twelve
+thousand of the best and wisest in Jerusalem.
+
+"Then the Zealots set up a tribunal and, by proclamation, assembled
+seventy of the principal citizens remaining to form a court; and
+before it brought Zacharias, the son of Baruch--an upright,
+patriotic, and wealthy man. Him they charged with entering into
+correspondence with the Romans, but produced no shadow of evidence
+against him. Zacharias defended himself boldly, clearly
+establishing his own innocence, and denouncing the iniquities of
+his accusers. The seventy unanimously acquitted the prisoner,
+preferring to die with him, to condemning an innocent man. The
+Zealots rushed forward, with cries of rage, and slew Zacharias and,
+with blows and insults, turned the judges out of the Temple.
+
+"The Idumeans at length began to weary of massacre, and were sated
+with pillage and, declaring that they had been deceived by the
+Zealots, and that they believed no treason had been intended, they
+left the city; first opening the prisons, and releasing two
+thousand persons confined there, who fled to Simon the son of
+Gioras, who was wasting the country toward Idumea.
+
+"The Zealots, after their departure, redoubled their iniquities;
+and seemed as if they would leave none alive, save the lowest of
+the people. Gorion, a great and distinguished man, was among the
+slain. Niger of Peraea, who had been the leader in the attack on
+the Romans at Ascalon--a noble and true-hearted patriot--was also
+murdered. He died calling upon the Romans to come to avenge those
+who had been thus murdered; and denouncing famine, pestilence, and
+civil massacre, as well as war, against the accursed city.
+
+"I had lain hidden, with an obscure family, with whom I had lodged
+during these terrible times. So great was the terror and misery in
+the city that those who lived envied the dead. It was death to bury
+even a relative, and both within and without the city lay heaps of
+bodies, decaying in the sun.
+
+"Even among the Zealots themselves, factions arose. John of
+Gischala headed one party, and that the more violent. Over these he
+ruled with absolute authority, and occupied one portion of the
+city. The other party acknowledged no special leader. Sometimes,
+then, the factions fought among themselves; but neither side ceased
+from plundering and murdering the inhabitants.
+
+"Such, my friends, was the condition of Jerusalem when I left it;
+having, as I told you, purchased a permission from John of Gischala
+to pass through the guards at the gates.
+
+"As I traveled here, I learned that another danger threatens us.
+The sect called the Assassins, as you know, seized the strong
+fortress of Masada, near the Dead Sea, at the beginning of the
+troubles. Until lately, they have been content to subsist on the
+plunder of the adjacent country but, on the night of the Passover,
+they surprised Engaddi, dispersed all who resisted, and slew seven
+hundred women and children who could not escape. They carried off
+the contents of the granaries, and are now wasting the whole
+region.
+
+"What hope can there be of success, my friends, when, with an enemy
+close to their gates, the Jews are slaying more of their fellow
+countrymen than the Romans themselves? Did ever a country present
+so humiliating and terrible a spectacle? Were such atrocities ever
+perpetrated by men upon their brothers? And yet, the madmen still
+believe that the Almighty will deliver them--will save from
+destruction that Temple which they have polluted, the altars that
+they have deluged with blood."
+
+When the rabbi had finished his narration, there was a long
+silence. Martha was in tears, at the recital of the misery which
+was endured by the inhabitants of Jerusalem; Simon sat with his
+face covered with his hands; John had scarce moved, since the rabbi
+had begun his story, but sat with a heavy frown on his face,
+looking straight before him; while Mary anxiously watched him, to
+see the effect of the recital upon him.
+
+Simon was the first to speak.
+
+"It is a tale of mourning, lamentation, and woe that you have told
+us, rabbi. Not even in the days of our captivity in Babylon were
+the Jewish people fallen so low. Let us to bed now. These things
+are too terrible to speak of, until we have laid them before the
+Lord, and asked his guidance. I wonder not, now, rabbi, that years
+seem to have rolled over your head since we last met."
+
+The others rose. Mary, as she passed John, laid her hands on his
+shoulder with a caressing action--which was very rare to her, for
+she generally behaved to him as to a brother, holding any
+exhibition of greater affection unmaidenly, until the days of
+betrothal were ended. The action seemed to recall John from his
+gloomy thought, and he smiled down at her anxious face; then, when
+the others went off to their apartments, he went out into the night
+air and stood for hours, nearly immovable, with his eyes fixed on
+the stars.
+
+In the morning, Mary joined him in the garden; as had come to be
+their custom, this being the only time in the day when they were
+alone together.
+
+"Well, John?" she asked.
+
+He understood her question.
+
+"I have thought it over, Mary, in every way; but I cannot see that
+my duty is changed by what we heard last night. Affection for you,
+and my parents, would keep me here; and I wish that I could see
+that my duty could go hand in hand with my wishes. I have been
+sorely tempted to yield--to resign the struggle, to remain here in
+peace and quiet--but I should never be happy. I do not believe that
+I am, as so many think, specially called to be a deliverer--though
+God has assuredly specially protected and aided me--but, did I draw
+back now, it would be a grievous discouragement to many. I have put
+my hand to the plow, and cannot look back.
+
+"God has permitted these miseries to fall upon Jerusalem,
+doubtless, as a punishment for the sins of the people. It may be
+yet that his wrath will be abated, and that he will remember the
+mercies of old. He has suffered his Temple to be profaned, but it
+may not be his purpose to allow it to be destroyed, utterly. The
+evil doings, therefore, of evil men do not release us from our
+duty; and it has always been held the chief duty of all Jews to
+die, if need be, in defense of the Temple. Never, so long as that
+stands, can we say that the Lord has wholly turned his face from
+us--that he purposes another period of exile, and captivity, to
+befall his people.
+
+"Therefore, Mary, I shall go on as I have intended; warring against
+the Romans, and doing what I can to hinder their advance against
+Jerusalem. I think that the war may last longer than I had
+expected. Vespasian will have heard--from those who, like the
+rabbi, have escaped from Jerusalem--what is going on within the
+city; and knowing the great strength of its walls; and judging,
+from what he saw at Jotapata and Gamala, how desperate would be its
+resistance, were he to appear before it, he may well decide to
+leave it for the present; suffering the population to prey upon
+each other, to consume their provisions and waste their strength
+till, when he marches against it, there will be no longer men left
+to man the walls."
+
+"I thought you would decide so, John," Mary said, quietly; "and
+much as I love you--for I do love you, John--I would rather part
+with you so, never to see you again, than that you should draw back
+now. I set you up on a pedestal, before I knew that it was you who
+was my hero; and I would not have it said that he, of whom such
+high hopes were cherished, drew back from the enterprise he had
+taken up. Rather would I mourn for you, all my life, than that men
+should say of you:
+
+"'This is he of whom we said, he is the deliverer; but who shrank
+from the dangers of battle, and threw down his country's sword.'"
+
+"Thank you, Mary. I am glad to hear you say so. I thought that I
+was right, but it was very hard so to decide. And, now that you
+agree with me, my chief cause for hanging back is removed.
+Henceforth, I shall trouble no more over it. My conscience tells me
+that I am right to go. You say go, also. Therefore now, whatever
+betides, I shall not blame myself; but shall feel that I could not
+have taken any other course."
+
+"I have faith, John, that you will come back to me, when the
+troubles are over. I believe that, whatever may happen at
+Jerusalem, you will be spared to me. I think that it was either for
+the country, or for me, that your life was spared, alone of all
+those that fought at Jotapata; and I mean to keep on thinking so.
+It will keep up my spirits, while you are away, and will help me to
+cheer our mother."
+
+"If the Romans do not move upon Jerusalem, I may be able to be
+often at home. Our policy will be to strike a blow; and then, when
+the Romans gather in force, to scatter and disappear; so that I may
+often be home, until the time comes when the enemy gather round
+Jerusalem.
+
+"But at any rate, Mary, I shall try and believe that your hope is
+well founded; and that, in the end, I shall return alive to you.
+Certainly I shall not spare my life; for, when one takes up the
+post of a leader of his fellows, he must never hang back from
+danger, but must be always in the front. At the same time, I shall
+never forget that you are thinking and praying for me, and will
+never throw away my life recklessly; and if the time comes when I
+see that all is lost--that fighting is no longer of avail--I will
+neither rush into the enemy's ranks to die, nor will I throw down
+my arms and die unresisting, nor will I slay myself with my own
+weapons; but I will strive, in every way, to save my life for your
+sake, having done all that I could for our country, and the
+Temple."
+
+"That is all I ask, John. I am quite content to wait here, until
+the day comes that you shall return; and then, though our cause be
+lost, our country ruined, and God's Temple destroyed, we can yet
+feel that God has been good and merciful to us--even if we be
+driven out of our home, and have to become exiles, in a far land."
+
+A week later, the news came that the Romans were preparing to take
+the field. The young men of the village at once started, as
+messengers, through the country. At night, a vast pile of brushwood
+was lighted on the hill above Gamala; and answering fires soon
+blazed out from other heights. At the signal, men left their homes
+on the shores of Galilee, in the cities of the plains, in the
+mountains of Peraea and Batanaea. Capitolias, Gerisa and Pella,
+Sepphoris, Caphernaum and Tiberias--and even the towns and villages
+almost within sight of Caesar's camp, at Caesarea--sent their
+contingents and, in twenty-four hours, eight thousand armed men
+were gathered on the slopes of Mount Galaad.
+
+Each man brought with him grain, sufficient for a week's
+consumption; and all had, according to their means, brought money,
+in accordance with the instructions John and the other commanders
+had issued. For John held that although--as they were fighting for
+the country--they must, if necessary, live upon the country; yet
+that, as far as possible, they should abstain from taking food
+without payment, and so run the risk of being confounded with the
+bands who, under the cloak of patriotism, plundered and robbed the
+whole country.
+
+The bands assembled, each under their leaders. It was easy to see
+that they had come from different localities. Tarichea and Tiberias
+had both sent two companies, and the aspect of these differed
+widely from that of the companies of peasants, raised in the
+villages on the slopes of Hermon or among the mountains of Peraea;
+but all seemed animated by an equal feeling of devotion, and of
+confidence in their young leader.
+
+John, after carefully inspecting his own band, visited the camps of
+the other companies; and was everywhere received with acclamations.
+He addressed each company in turn--not only urging them to show
+bravery, for that every Jew had shown, who had fought against the
+Romans--but pointing out that far more than this was required.
+While they must be ready to give their lives, when need be; they
+must be equally ready to shun the fight, to scatter and fly, when
+their leaders gave the orders. It was not by bravery that they
+could hope to overcome the Romans; but by harassing them night and
+day, by attacking their camps, cutting off their convoys, and
+giving them no rest. Above all, obedience was required.
+
+"Look at the Roman soldiers," he said. "They have no wills of their
+own. They advance, or retreat; they attack, when they know that
+those who first attack must die; they support all hardships and
+fatigues; they accomplish marvels, in the way of work; they give
+themselves up, in fact, to obey the orders given them, never
+questioning whether those orders are the best, but blindly obeying
+them; and so it must be, here, if we are to fight the Romans with a
+chance of success.
+
+"The most useful man here--the man who will do best service to his
+country--is not he who is strongest, or bravest, but he who is most
+prompt in his obedience to orders. The true hero is he who gives up
+his will and, if need be, his life, at the order of his leader. You
+have chosen your own officers, and I have confirmed the choice that
+you have made. It is for you, now, to give them your support and
+assistance. There will be hardships, these must be borne without
+complaint; there will be delays, these must be supported with
+patience; there will be combats and dangers, these must be met with
+confidence and courage--believing that God will give you success;
+and that, although the issue of the strife is in his hands, each of
+you should do his best, by his conduct and courage, to gain
+success.
+
+"We shall not act in one great body, for we could not find food, in
+the villages, for so large a number. Moreover, to do so would be to
+give the Romans an opportunity of massing their forces against us,
+of surrounding and destroying us. On great occasions, and for a
+great object, we may gather together and unite our forces. At other
+times, although acting upon a general plan, and in concert with
+each other, each company will work independently. So we shall elude
+the Romans. When they strike at us, we shall be gone. When they try
+to inclose us, we shall disperse. When they pursue one body, others
+will fall upon them. When they think that we are in one part of the
+country, we will be striking a blow in another. When they fancy
+themselves in security, we will fall upon them. We will give them
+no rest, or peace."
+
+John's addresses were received with shouts of approval. By the
+great majority of those present, he was now seen for the first
+time; but his appearance, the tone of authority with which he
+spoke, his air of confidence, and the manner in which he had
+evidently thought out the plans of action, and prepared for all
+contingencies, confirmed the reports which they had heard of him;
+and the conviction that he was a specially appointed leader was
+deepened, and strengthened. How otherwise could one who was a mere
+youth speak with such firmness, and authority?
+
+The memories of the Jews were stored with legends of the prowess of
+Judas the Maccabean, and his brothers; and of other leaders who
+had, from time to time, arisen and enabled them to clear their
+country of oppressors; and they were thus prepared to accept,
+willingly, those who appeared to them specially sent as leaders,
+and the question of age and experience weighed but little with
+them. Moreover, as none had been trained as soldiers, there were
+none who had to set aside superior claims.
+
+Samuel had been chosen as a child, Saul was the youngest of his
+brethren, and David a lad when he slew the champion of the
+Philistines. Such being the case, the youth of John was no
+drawback, in the eyes of his followers; and indeed the fact that,
+being still a youth, he had yet escaped from Jotapata, where all
+his elders had died; and that he had inflicted a heavy blow upon
+the Romans, when all others who had opposed them had perished,
+seemed in itself a proof that he was under special protection.
+
+John probably believed in himself less than did any man among his
+followers. Piously and devoutly brought up, he saw in the two
+escapes that he had had, from death at the hands of the Romans,
+signs of a special protection of God. But, while he hoped that he
+might be able to do the Romans much harm, he had not any conviction
+that he was destined to deliver his country. He had none of the
+fervent enthusiasm of men who are convinced that they have a divine
+mission, and that miracles would be wrought in his favor.
+
+He had seen the tremendous strength of the Roman army, as it
+defiled from the mountains before Jotapata. He had learned the
+power of their war engines, and had evidence of their discipline,
+their bravery and perseverance; and had no idea that such a force
+as that gathered round him could cope with the legions of Rome.
+Still, that firm and pious belief, which was so deeply ingrained in
+the heart of the Jews, that God specially interested himself in
+them--that he personally directed everything that befell them, and
+intervened in every incident of their history--had its natural
+effect upon him.
+
+His training taught him that he was an instrument in God's hands
+and, although he hardly even hoped that he was destined to be a
+deliverer of Jerusalem, he thought that God might intend him to do
+great things for his people. At any rate, while never claiming any
+special authority--or to have, more than those around him, any
+special mission--he was careful not to damp the enthusiasm of his
+followers, by disclaiming the mission they attributed to him;
+knowing how much such a belief added to his authority, and to the
+efficiency of the force under his command.
+
+
+
+Chapter 12: Desultory Fighting.
+
+
+After having gone through the camps of the whole of the companies,
+John assembled the leaders round him, and held a council as to
+future operations. It was agreed that it would be best to leave
+alone, for the present, the legion at Scythopolis; for rumors of
+the gathering would almost certainly have reached that city, and
+the Romans might be on their guard against attack. It was resolved,
+therefore, to cross the Jordan a few miles below Tarichea, to
+traverse the hills between Endor and Gelbus and, by a long march,
+to gain the range of hills extending from Carmel to Samaria, and
+forming the boundary between the latter province and Galilee. They
+would then be looking down upon the camp of Vespasian, at Caesarea.
+
+The country, between these hills and the city, was too flat for
+them to engage with any hopes of success; for although, by a
+surprise, they might inflict great damage on the Romans, they would
+be wholly unable to withstand the charges of the Roman horse. They
+would, therefore, maintain a lookout from the mountains; and attack
+the Roman camp the first time it was pitched on ground whence a
+rapid retreat could be effected, to the hills.
+
+As the Jordan was unfordable, between Scythopolis and the lake, all
+who could not swim were ordered to carry with them, on their march
+down to the river, logs of light wood sufficient to support them in
+crossing. Those who could swim were to assist in piloting over
+those unable to do so. This would be a work of no great difficulty,
+for the width of the Jordan is not great, and it was only for a
+short distance in the center that it would be unfordable. As was to
+be expected, the companies raised near the shores of the lake
+contained but few men unable to swim, while those from the mountain
+districts were almost wholly ignorant of the art.
+
+The bands were, therefore, linked together for the purpose of
+crossing; one of those from the plains, and a company of
+mountaineers, marching down to the stream together. The
+preparations were all complete by the afternoon and, just as it was
+becoming twilight, the leading bands arrived on the banks of the
+Jordan. The crossing was effected without difficulty and, in two
+hours, all were over. Then the companies formed up under their
+leaders, and started independently; men who knew the country well
+being assigned, as guides, to each.
+
+They crossed the hill between Endor and Gelbus, marched through
+Jezrael; and then, just as morning was breaking, ascended the
+slopes of Mount Carmel, leaving Legio on their right. It was a
+march of about fifty miles; but the men were all active and
+vigorous, lightly armed, and sustained by enthusiasm and
+excitement, and not a man dropped behind during the journey. Once
+among the hills, they threw themselves down for a rest of some
+hours. From the crest of the hill, it was but some twelve miles
+down to Caesarea; and the blue line of the sea extended, right and
+left, as far as the eye could reach.
+
+In the afternoon Jonas was sent down to the city, to learn how
+matters stood there, and when Vespasian was going to move. He was
+to remain there that night, and return with the news on the
+following morning. He came back, however, at midnight; saying that
+the Romans had marched on the previous day, that they had taken the
+southern road which skirted the mountains for some distance, and
+would probably cross the central range at Sichem, and either
+proceed to Scythopolis, or join the legion thence on the plain of
+Aulon, west of the Jordan.
+
+This was a disappointment but, at daybreak, the companies were
+afoot. It was decided they should march separately; each taking its
+own line to the east, following unfrequented roads, and keeping
+among the hills as far as possible, so that no report of the
+passage of any large gathering of men should reach the Romans.
+Although no time had been lost, John, when he approached the
+Jordan, learned that Vespasian had already joined the legion from
+Scythopolis, and had crossed the river into Peraea, and was
+marching with all speed against Gadara, its chief city.
+
+Halting for the night near the Jordan; John crossed the river by a
+ford, next morning, and then moved forward, cautiously, to commence
+operations as soon as the Romans were engaged upon the siege of the
+city. But, ere many hours had passed, he learned that the
+inhabitants had sent forward a deputation to Vespasian; and that
+the war party, taken by surprise by the rapid advance of the
+Romans, had hastily evacuated the city, after slaying many of those
+who were willing to admit the Romans. When Vespasian arrived, he
+had been received with acclamations by the inhabitants; who had
+already destroyed a portion of their walls, to prove that they
+never thought of resistance.
+
+Having thus established the Roman authority in Peraea, Vespasian
+left a garrison there; and set out, with the main body of his army,
+for Caesarea, leaving a garrison in the town; and dispatching
+Placidus, with five hundred horse and three thousand foot, in
+pursuit of the fugitives who had fled from Gadara before he entered
+it.
+
+As Vespasian marched back, the band under John began their work.
+Wherever the road led through the mountains, they rolled down rocks
+upon the column. The light-armed allies of the Romans were sent out
+on each flank and, climbing the hills, attacked their assailants.
+As soon, however, as they neared the crests--which were, as they
+believed, held by small parties, only, of the enemy--the Jews
+rushed upon them with fury, overthrew them, and drove them down the
+hills; until the heavy-armed troops were obliged to advance to
+their assistance, upon which the Jews at once fell back to the
+higher slopes.
+
+Growing bolder by success, they even ventured to rush down upon the
+baggage; breaking through its guard, and killing great numbers of
+the animals. A party of Roman horse which came up at full gallop
+was charged, just as they reached the spot, by two more companies
+from the hill; and these, before the Romans could face about and
+oppose their line of long spears to their assailants, were among
+them--stabbing the horses, leaping up behind the soldiers and
+slaying them with their knives, and throwing the whole into
+confusion. Then the sound of a horn was heard on the hillside, and
+the whole of the Jews instantly relinquished their work and took to
+the mountains, just as a large body of cavalry, headed by Titus,
+came thundering up.
+
+At night, the Romans were disturbed by constant alarms. Men crept
+up to the sentries, and slew them in the darkness. Numbers of the
+enemy penetrated into the camp; killing the soldiers as they slept,
+hocking the horses, and setting fire to the camp in several places;
+and it was not until the whole army got under arms that the attack
+ceased. The next day, they were similarly harassed upon the march;
+and it was not until they had crossed the mountains, and descended
+on to the western plain, that the Jews drew off, highly satisfied
+with the result of their first encounter with the Romans.
+
+Their loss had been slight--not more than twenty having
+fallen--while they had killed more than two hundred of the
+light-armed troops, had inflicted some loss upon the Romans
+themselves, had slain numbers of baggage animals; and had shown the
+enemy that, however formidable the Roman soldiers might be on the
+plains, the legions of Vespasian were no more invincible than was
+that of Cestius, among the hills.
+
+They regretted however that, instead of engaging the main army,
+they had not followed the force under Placidus--of whose dispatch
+from Gadara they had not learned, until it was too late. The
+fugitives, of whom Placidus was in pursuit, had taken possession of
+the village of Bethennabris. He pursued the stratagem which had
+already succeeded so well. He feigned a retreat, and the Jews
+sallied out and attacked him. He cut off the greater part from
+returning to the village and, at night, attacked Bethennabris,
+captured it, and put all within it to the sword.
+
+Those who had escaped were joined by great numbers of the country
+people; and made for the Jordan, intending to cross by the ford
+opposite Jericho. But the river was swollen with rain, and they
+were unable to cross. Placidus overtook and attacked them. Vast
+numbers were killed, and more were driven into the river and
+drowned. Fifteen thousand fell. Two thousand five hundred were
+taken prisoners, with a vast number of animals, of all kinds.
+Placidus then reduced the whole of Peraea, and the coast of the
+Dead Sea, as far as Machaerus.
+
+Vespasian soon moved down from Caesarea, keeping near the sea, and
+capturing Antipatris, Lydda, and Thamna, and blocking Emmaus. Then,
+continuing his course southward, he wasted the country to the
+frontier of Idumea, and captured the towns Betaris and Caphartobas,
+putting to the sword about ten thousand men. Then he marched back,
+by Emmaus and Sichem, descended the hills and marched to Jericho;
+where he was joined by Placidus, with the troops from Peraea.
+
+The city had been deserted by its inhabitants, and the Roman army
+rested here for some time until, just as Vespasian was about to
+march upon Jerusalem, the news arrived of the death of Nero and,
+unwilling to weaken his army by besieging the city--strong in
+itself, and defended by a host--Vespasian withdrew to Caesarea and,
+for another two years, Jerusalem had time for preparation, or
+submission.
+
+As Vespasian's march had, except when he was crossing the mountains
+from Emmaus to Sichem, lain entirely in the plains, John had been
+able to do but little. Half the force had been sent across the
+Jordan, and its operations had greatly added to the difficulties
+Placidus had met with in subduing Peraea. The other companies had
+closely followed the march of Vespasian, had made many attacks upon
+parties dispatched to pillage the country and, after the Romans
+marched north again, besieged and captured some of the small places
+in which they had left garrisons.
+
+They had united when the two Roman armies met at Jericho; and were
+prepared to defend, desperately, the rugged mountain roads leading
+thence to Jerusalem when, to their surprise, they saw the Roman
+host moving away to the north again.
+
+As soon as they ascertained that Vespasian had, for the present,
+entirely abandoned the idea of attacking Jerusalem, and that his
+troops had gone into permanent quarters, John held a council with
+the other commanders. Some were in favor of remaining in arms, and
+of constantly attacking the Roman garrisons. Others were for
+scattering and returning to their homes--from which they had now
+been absent three months--until the Romans again set themselves in
+motion against Jerusalem. Opinions were about equally divided, and
+John remained silent until all had spoken. Then he said:
+
+"I think that we had better disperse. If we remained in arms, we
+might gain some successes, we might surprise and slay some Roman
+garrisons; but the others would speedily prepare themselves against
+attack, by strengthening their walls and taking every precaution.
+But, did we succeed in destroying the garrisons in every one of the
+towns they have captured, of what benefit would it be? It would
+rather excite the Romans yet more against the people. Yet more
+would they march through the land, burning, destroying, and
+slaying. They would turn the country into a desert; and either
+slay, or carry away all the people captives. We should irritate
+without seriously injuring the Romans; and the very people, whose
+sufferings we should heighten by our work, would turn against us.
+
+"Now that the whole country has been scoured, all the towns which
+have resisted destroyed, and all the men who defended them put to
+the sword, there may be breathing space for the land, until the
+Romans advance against Jerusalem. It may be that those in Jerusalem
+may come to terms with the Romans, in which case there need not be
+any more bloodshed. Therefore, I say that it seems to me that it
+would be wrong to continue the war, so long as the Romans rest
+peacefully in their camps; but should Jerusalem have need of us in
+her defense, every one of us will again take the field."
+
+John's counsel was finally adopted. Many of the men were longing to
+return to their homes, where they knew that they would be welcomed,
+and honored, for the deeds they had performed; for although they
+had achieved no grand successes, they had done much by compelling
+the Romans to keep together, and had thus saved many towns from
+plunder and destruction. Their operations, too, had created a fresh
+sensation of hope, and had aroused the people from the dull despair
+in which they were sinking.
+
+Had messengers been now sent out on all sides, a great multitude of
+men would have collected; but John knew well that numbers would be
+of no avail, and that in a pitched battle the Romans could defeat
+many times their number of the undisciplined and ill-armed Jews.
+
+John himself stood even higher, in the estimation of his followers,
+than he did at the commencement of the campaign. His own band had
+been particularly successful, and had several times encountered
+parties of the Romans almost equal to themselves in numbers. His
+plans had been always well laid, and on no occasion had the Romans
+cut off and killed any numerous parties. Altogether, the justness
+of his views had been established by experience, the men had gained
+confidence in themselves and in him, and now only regretted that
+they had had no opportunity of attacking the Romans in anything
+like equal numbers.
+
+Therefore, when the news spread that John was of opinion that the
+wisest course was for them to return to their homes, and there to
+hold themselves in readiness to reassemble, whenever the Romans
+moved against Jerusalem; the decision was willingly accepted and, a
+few hours after the Roman column had marched out from Jericho, the
+Jewish companies started for their respective homes, all promising
+to take up arms again, when the signal was given. Although the
+success that had attended them had not been so great as they had
+hoped, it had been sufficiently marked to inspire them with
+confidence in themselves, and their leader. But few lives had been
+lost; and they had learned that, so long as they persisted in the
+tactics their leader had laid down, there was but little chance of
+the Romans striking a heavy blow at them.
+
+Surprise was mingled with joy, in the greetings John received on
+his return home.
+
+"No disaster has befallen your bands, I hope, John?" Simon asked,
+anxiously. "We heard that the Romans had reached Jericho; and we
+have been praying the Lord, night and day, for his protection for
+you--believing that you would doubtless fall upon the enemy, as
+they marched through the mountains towards Jerusalem."
+
+"We should have done so, father, and already had taken up a
+position on the heights commanding the roads; but there was no
+fighting, simply because Vespasian has marched away with his army
+to Caesarea, and will not, as we believe, make any movement against
+Jerusalem this year."
+
+"The Lord be praised!" Simon said, piously. "There is time yet for
+the city to repent, in sackcloth and ashes, for its sins; and to
+come to such terms with the Romans as may save the Temple."
+
+"So far as I have heard, father, Jerusalem is little likely either
+to repent or to negotiate. The news of what is passing there is
+even worse than that which the Rabbi Solomon told us; but I will
+not pain you by talking of these matters, now.
+
+"You have heard what we have been doing. We have done no great
+deeds, but we have harassed the Romans sorely, so that they could
+not say that they held the country beyond the flight of their
+arrows. We have taken many cities where they had left small
+garrisons. We have cut off very many small parties, have captured
+many flocks and herds which they had carried off, and have lost but
+few men while inflicting much damage. Moreover, we have gained
+experience and confidence and, when the time comes for fighting
+hand-to-hand with the Romans, we shall enter upon the struggle
+without fear."
+
+"But what can have induced the Romans to retire, when almost within
+sight of Jerusalem?"
+
+"Partly, no doubt, because Vespasian considered it better to let
+the Jews go on slaying each other, than to waste his strength in
+killing them; but partly, I believe, because of news from Rome. We
+heard a rumor that a messenger had arrived in the Roman camp, with
+news that Nero is dead; and Vespasian may well wish to keep his
+army together, to watch the course of events."
+
+This was, indeed, Vespasian's main object in retiring; and for
+nearly two years he kept his army in hand, waiting for his
+opportunity, while Galba, Otho, and Vitellius in turn gained and
+lost the imperial crown. John remained at home, except that he went
+out with the companies in the spring of 69; when Vespasian, for a
+time, set his troops in motion. As before, the Romans marched down
+into the south of Judea, and reduced the country on the western
+shore of the Dead Sea; while Cerealis entered Idumea and completely
+subdued it, so that there now remained only the towns of Herodium,
+Masada, Machaerus, and Jerusalem itself which still remained
+unconquered.
+
+John's troops had pursued precisely the same tactics as in the
+previous year; and had contented themselves with harassing the
+Romans whenever the latter entered difficult country, and in
+preventing them from sending out small foraging parties. John
+himself would not have called his men under arms, as he saw that no
+real advantage was gained; but the men were eager to go, and he saw
+that there was a considerable advantage in their continued practice
+in arms, in the quickness with which they worked together, and in
+the confidence which they had in themselves.
+
+The company suffered but slight loss in the operations; but John,
+himself, had an adventure which nearly cost him his life.
+Vespasian, with the bulk of his army, was encamped at Hebron; while
+Titus was at Carmelia, near the Dead Sea. John's company were in
+the hills near Hebron; and he, wishing to examine the Roman
+position at Carmelia, and the road between the two towns, started
+by himself. He carried, as usual, his buckler, two light javelins,
+and a sword. The road led down a series of precipitous valleys; and
+John, knowing that he could instantly gain the hills, out of reach
+of danger, did not hesitate to descend into it.
+
+He was now nineteen, strong, active, and sinewy. The position in
+which he had been placed had given him the habit of command, and
+the heavy responsibility which had devolved upon him had added two
+or three years to his apparent age. He was taller than most of his
+countrymen, broad across the shoulders, and a match for any single
+man under his command.
+
+As he walked along, he heard the sound of a horse's footsteps,
+coming up the valley. He sprang a short distance up the craggy
+hillside, and then paused as a single horseman came in sight. As he
+came a little nearer John saw, by the splendor of his armor, and
+that of the horse he was riding, that he was an officer of rank and
+distinction. John scorned to fly before a single foe, and stood
+quietly watching him, till he came nearly abreast of him. The
+horseman reined up his charger and, without a word, seized his
+javelin and hurled it at the armed figure, standing on the hillside
+some thirty feet above him. John sprang lightly aside, and the
+missile struck the rock with a sharp clang, close to him. In
+return, he threw a javelin at the Roman, which struck him on the
+armor and fell, blunted.
+
+"Well thrown!" the Roman said, calmly, and hurled a second javelin.
+
+The stroke was too swift to avoid; but John threw up his buckler so
+as to receive it at an angle, and the javelin glanced off, and flew
+far up the hillside. This time John sprang down the rocks, with the
+activity of a goat, till within a few feet of the Roman. Then he
+threw his javelin at the horse, with so true an aim that it struck
+at a spot unprotected by armor, and the animal fell.
+
+With an exclamation of anger, the Roman threw himself off, as the
+animal sank beneath his legs. He had already drawn his sword, as
+John approached, and stood at once on the defensive. Without a
+moment's hesitation John sprang at him, and the combat commenced.
+John trusted to his activity, while the Roman had an immense
+advantage in his heavy armor--John being unprotected, save by his
+buckler. The Roman stood calm and confident, while John
+attacked--moving quickly, round and round him; springing in to
+deliver a blow, and then bounding out of reach of the sweep of the
+heavy Roman sword. For some time the combat continued. John had
+received two or three severe wounds while, although the Roman was
+bleeding, his armor protected him from any serious hurt.
+
+Suddenly John sprang in at the Roman, throwing himself with all his
+force against him. He partially warded, with his sword, the blow
+which the Roman struck at him as he came in; but his weapon was
+beaten down, and the Roman blade cut through his thick headdress.
+But the impetus of his spring was sufficient. The Roman, taken by
+surprise by this sudden attack, tottered, and then fell with a
+crash, John falling on the top of him.
+
+John was almost blinded by the blood which streamed down his
+forehead, from the blow he had last received; but he dashed it
+aside, seized his long knife and, in another moment, would have
+slain his enemy, had not the latter exclaimed:
+
+"Strike, Jew! I am Titus."
+
+John was confused by the last blow he had received, but a thousand
+thoughts whirled in his brain. For an instant he grasped the knife
+more firmly, to slay the son of the chief enemy of his country;
+then the possibility of carrying him away a captive occurred to
+him, but he saw that this was out of the question. Then another
+thought dashed across his brain.
+
+"Swear," he said, in Greek, for he was ignorant of Latin, "by your
+gods, to spare the Temple, or I will kill you."
+
+There was a moment's hesitation. The knife was already descending,
+when Titus exclaimed, in the same language:
+
+"I swear to do all in my power to save the Temple."
+
+John's knife fell from his hand. He tried to rise to his feet; then
+everything seemed to swim round, and he fell, insensible. Titus
+rose to his feet. He was shaken by the fall; and he, too, had lost
+much blood. Panting from his exertions, he looked down upon his
+prostrate foe; and the generosity which was the prevailing feature
+of his character, except when excited in battle, mastered him.
+
+"By Hercules," he exclaimed, "that is a gallant youth; though he is
+a Jew, and he has well-nigh made an end of me! What will Vespasian
+say, when he hears that I have been beaten in fair fight, and owe
+my life to the mercy of a Jew? How they think of their temple,
+these Jews! Why, I would not injure it, were it in my power to do
+so. Have not our emperors sent offerings there? Besides, we war not
+with the gods of the people we conquer.
+
+"Ah, here come Plancus and the others! This will be a lesson to me
+not to trust myself, alone, among these mountains again. It is the
+first time I have done so, and it shall be the last."
+
+A messenger had, in fact, arrived at Carmelia, with an order from
+Vespasian for him to go to Hebron--as he had a desire to speak with
+him--and ordering Plancus, a centurion, to follow with his troop,
+Titus had sprung on his horse, and ridden off at once.
+
+The Romans were soon upon the spot, and were loud in exclamation of
+surprise and grief at seeing their commander covered with dust, and
+bleeding from several wounds, while his horse lay dead beside him.
+To their inquiries whether he was seriously wounded, Titus replied,
+lightly:
+
+"I am more dirty than hurt. Though, had it not been for my armor,
+there would have been a different tale to tell, for these Jews
+fight like demons. As you see, he first slew my horse with his
+javelin, and then we fought it out on foot."
+
+"Was there only this one?" the centurion asked, in surprise,
+pointing to John's body.
+
+"Only that one," Titus said, "and he nearly got the best of it.
+Fighting with these Jews is like fighting with wild cats, so fierce
+are they in the attack, and so quick are their movements. I tell
+you that, for a moment, my life was at his mercy.
+
+"See if he is dead, Plancus."
+
+"No, he breathes," Plancus said, stooping over him.
+
+"Let four of the men make a litter, with their spears," Titus said;
+"and take him down to Carmelia, and let my own leech attend him. I
+would gladly save his life, if I can. I began the fray and, truly,
+he has shown himself so gallant a young man that I would not that
+he should die."
+
+Accordingly, when John opened his eyes, he found himself lying in a
+Roman tent, where an old man was sitting by his couch; and a Roman
+sentry pacing, backwards and forwards, before the entrance of the
+tent.
+
+"Drink this," the old man said, placing a cordial to his lips. "You
+need have no fear, you are in the camp of Titus; and he, himself,
+has ordered that all attention shall be paid to you."
+
+John was too weak from loss of blood, and confused from the effects
+of the blow on his head, even to feel the sensation of wonder. He
+drank the potion, and closed his eyes again, and went off into a
+sleep which lasted for many hours. It was not until the next day
+that he thoroughly awoke. The leech continued to attend him and, at
+the end of four days, he was able to sit up.
+
+Illustration: Titus Brings Josephus to See John.
+
+In the afternoon, he heard a clash of arms as the sentry gave the
+military salute and, a moment later, Titus entered, accompanied by
+one whom John instantly recognized as Josephus. John rose to his
+feet.
+
+"I told you he was but a young man," Titus said to Josephus; "but
+now that I can see him more nearly or, at any rate, more calmly, I
+can see that he is little more than a lad; and yet, as you have
+heard me say, he is a man of valor, and defeated me in fair fight."
+
+"I seem to know his face," Josephus said, and then addressed John
+in Hebrew.
+
+"Who are you, young man?"
+
+"I am that John whom you saved in the storm, on the Sea of Galilee,
+and who fought with you at Jotapata."
+
+"Is it possible?" Josephus exclaimed, in surprise. "I thought that
+I, alone, was saved there."
+
+"I lay hidden with the boy Jonas, who told us of the track down to
+the water," John said, quietly, "and have since then been fighting
+the Romans. While you--"
+
+"While I have been their prisoner," Josephus broke in. "I know that
+all my countrymen are enraged against me but, truly, without a
+cause."
+
+Josephus then translated to Titus what John had told him, adding
+that the young man had served him with zeal and devotion, and that
+he had an affection for him.
+
+"Then I am the more glad that he has not lost his life," Titus
+said, courteously.
+
+"And now, my antagonist," he said, in Greek, to John, "I would tell
+you that I bear you no malice; though you have shed my blood, and
+brought somewhat of disgrace upon me--for truly it is a disgrace
+for a Roman soldier, in heavy armor, to be overthrown by one who
+carries but a light buckler as his protection. But I love a brave
+man, even though he be a foe; and I honor those who are fighting
+for what they believe to be the cause of their country. If I let
+you go free, will you promise me not to bear arms again, against
+Rome?"
+
+"I could not promise that, Titus," John said, quietly, "even were
+you to order me, now, to be taken out and slain. It is the first
+duty of all Jews to fight for the Holy City and, so long as I live,
+and the Holy City is in danger, so long I must fight for her. These
+are the commands of my religion; and I cannot, even to save my
+life, disobey them."
+
+"I will not press you to do so," Titus said; "though Josephus,
+here, will tell you that Rome is not an unkind lord, even to those
+who have most withstood it. When you are well enough to leave us,
+you shall go unharmed; though, could you have seen your way to
+desist from hostility to us, I would have been a good friend to
+you; and have promoted you to posts of honor, and that in countries
+where you would not have been opposed to your countrymen. But if
+you will not have it so, you are free to go; and remember that, at
+any time, you have a friend in Titus; and that when this war is
+over, and peace restored, if you come to me I will repeat the offer
+that I have now made.
+
+"Moreover, you may rely upon it that, in the last extremity, I will
+do all in my power to save the Temple; and indeed, in no case would
+I have injured a building so venerable and holy."
+
+Titus then left the tent, but Josephus remained for some time,
+talking with John.
+
+"I suppose you, like all others, have looked upon me as a traitor,
+John?" he began.
+
+"Not so," John replied. "I knew that you fought bravely, at
+Jotapata; and risked your life many times in its defense I knew,
+too, that you from the first opposed the revolt against the Romans,
+and it is not for me to judge as to your position among them."
+
+"I am a prisoner," Josephus said. "I am kindly treated, indeed, and
+Vespasian frequently asks my opinion of matters connected with the
+country; but surely I am doing more good to my countrymen, by
+softening his heart towards them, than if I had died at
+Jotapata--still more if I had been, like John of Gischala, a
+scourge to it. I trust even yet that, through my influence,
+Jerusalem may be saved. When the time comes Vespasian will, I hope,
+grant terms; and my only fear is that the madness of the people
+will lead them to refuse all accommodation, and so force him into
+taking the city by storm--in which case it cannot but be that
+terrible misery will fall upon it, and that vast numbers will lose
+their lives.
+
+"And now, tell me how you are, at home, and what you have been
+doing since I last saw you."
+
+John thought it as well not to mention, to Josephus, the prominent
+part which he had taken among those who had so harassed the Romans;
+but he said that he had joined the bands raised in Galilee, and had
+been among those who had hung upon the Roman flank and rear,
+wherever they marched.
+
+"The Jews have behaved with prudence and valor," Josephus said,
+"and I now see that it would have been far better had I trusted
+more in mountain warfare, than in fenced cities; but it would have
+been the same, in the end. I know the Jews. They would have fought
+bravely, for a time; but the thought of each would have turned to
+his farm and his vineyard, and they would never have kept the field
+for any length of time. The Romans therefore would, in the end,
+have tired them out and, perhaps, the fate which has befallen the
+cities that resisted would have fallen upon all the land.
+
+"And now remember that, although but a prisoner, I have much
+influence with Vespasian; and that at any time, should you fall
+into their hands again, I will exert that influence in your favor."
+
+John remained about ten days at Carmelia. Titus had several
+interviews with him, and at the last of these said:
+
+"I have conceived a strong friendship for you, young man, and would
+willingly do you service. Take this signet ring. At all times, and
+in all places, it will pass you to my presence. If a Roman sword be
+raised to strike you, and you show this ring, it will be lowered.
+That you should fight against us to the last is, as you believe,
+your duty; and as I myself would so fight for Rome, I seek not
+further to dissuade you. But when resistance is at an end, and it
+is useless any longer to hold the sword, your death cannot benefit
+your country. Therefore, when that time comes--if not before--use
+this ring, and come to me; and I will grant you not only your own
+life, but that of such friends as you may wish to save.
+
+"I do not forget that you had my life in your hands, and that you
+spared it. It is a life that may yet be valuable to Rome; and
+though even now, when I speak of it, my cheek flushes with
+humiliation, I am none the less grateful. It pleases me to see
+that, in the conversations you have had with my officers, you have
+borne yourself so modestly, and have made no mention of this; for
+although I, myself, do not hesitate to speak of the mishap which
+befell me, it is pleasant for me that it is not spoken of by
+others. Believe me, then, that at all times you will find a sincere
+friend in Titus."
+
+John replied in suitable terms; thanking Titus for the promises he
+had made, and disclaiming any merit in his success--which was but
+the last effort of a beaten man, and was the result of the sudden
+surprise, and not of any skill or bravery.
+
+Upon the following morning, Titus furnished him with an escort far
+beyond the confines of the camp; and then, taking to the hills,
+John rejoined his companions, who had long since given him up as
+dead. They could scarce credit him, when he told them that he had
+been lying wounded, in the hands of the Romans; and were still more
+surprised at hearing that he had been engaged in a personal
+encounter with Titus. Of this John gave no details, beyond the fact
+that, after throwing their javelins, the horse of Titus had fallen,
+and they had fought hand to hand until, at last, he had fallen,
+bleeding from a severe wound; and that Titus himself had been
+wounded.
+
+"But how was it he did not slay you?" was the question. "It seems
+almost a miracle, especially after wounding Titus, himself."
+
+"Doubtless the Lord put it into his heart to spare me," John said.
+"Titus only said that he preserved my life as that of a brave foe.
+The Romans esteem bravery and, as I had withstood Titus for some
+time, he was pleased to think that I had done well."
+
+"Ah, if you had killed him, what rejoicings there would have been
+in the land!"
+
+"No," John said earnestly, "there would have been mourning. You may
+be sure that Vespasian would have avenged his blood upon all the
+people. It would have been a misfortune, indeed, had Titus fallen.
+It is well that it ended as it did."
+
+John was, however, far too weak to be able to accompany his band
+upon its rapid marches; and therefore, for a time, resigned its
+command to one of his captains. He determined to go, until his
+strength returned to him, to a small community of which he had
+heard as dwelling in an almost inaccessible valley on the shore of
+the Dead Sea. He was told that they took no part in the commotion
+of the times, and that they lived in such poverty that even the
+robbers of Simon had not cared to interfere with them. They
+practiced hospitality to strangers, and spent their lives in
+religious observances. As John had often heard from his father of
+this sect--which was at one time numerous in the land, but had been
+sorely persecuted by the priests and Pharisees--he determined to
+stop for a time among them, and learn somewhat of their doctrines.
+
+Accompanied by Jonas, he made his way across the mountains to the
+valley where they dwelt. As wounded, and a stranger, he was
+received without question among them; and a little hut, similar to
+that in which they all lived, was placed at his disposal. These
+huts were ranged in a square, in the center of which stood a larger
+building, used as their synagogue. Here John remained nearly a
+month; and was greatly struck by their religious fervor, the
+simplicity and austerity of their lives, and the doctrines which
+they held. He learned that the more rigorous of the sect abstained,
+altogether, from the use of meat and wine; and that celibacy was
+strictly enjoined. Those who married did not separate themselves
+from the sect, but were considered as occupying an inferior
+position in it. Their food was of the simplest kind, and only
+sufficient to sustain life. The community raised the grain and
+vegetables necessary for their use.
+
+But it was the religious doctrines which they held which most
+greatly surprised John. They attached no importance, whatever, to
+the ceremonial law of the Jewish Scriptures; maintaining, in the
+first place, that the Scriptures had a spiritual signification
+wholly apart from the literal meaning, alone understood by the
+world; and that this spiritual meaning could only be attained by
+those who, after long probation, were initiated into the inner
+mysteries of the sect.
+
+In the second place, they held that the written law had been
+altogether superseded by the coming of the great prophet, Christ,
+who had been put to death by the Jewish priests. John learned that
+there were already large numbers of Jews who had accepted the
+doctrines taught by this Christ, although they did not all embrace
+the strict rules and modes of life of the ascetics. John was
+greatly struck with their doctrines, although he did not hear
+enough to do more than to dimly understand their meaning. He
+determined however that, if he went safely through the war, he
+would inquire further into these mysteries.
+
+At the end of the four weeks, his strength being comparatively
+restored, he took his leave of the community, and rejoined his
+band.
+
+
+
+Chapter 13: The Test Of Devotion.
+
+
+Although John was able to join his companions, he was still far
+from strong; and was glad to have a valid excuse for handing over
+his command to his lieutenant, and returning home. The campaign was
+nearly over; and he could not have followed those rapid marches
+through the hills which enabled the band to appear, now on one
+side, now on the other of the Romans, and to keep them in a
+constant state of watchfulness.
+
+At the same time, he was glad of the excuse to leave for, although
+he had declared to Titus that he would fight again in defense of
+Jerusalem, he felt that, after the kind treatment he had met with,
+he could not take part in the daily skirmishes with the Romans.
+
+Mounting a donkey, which was among the many animals captured in the
+attacks upon the Romans' baggage train, John bade adieu to his
+comrades; and with Jonas, now grown into a sturdy young fellow,
+started for home. He journeyed by the road to the west of
+Jerusalem, in order to avoid the bandits of Simon son of Gioras;
+who still scourged the neighborhood of Masada and Herodium, lying
+between Jerusalem and the Dead Sea. He avoided all the towns in
+which there were Roman garrisons; for the bandages on his head
+would have shown, at once, that he had been engaged in fighting. He
+traveled slowly, and was six days before he arrived home.
+
+"This time, my son, you have not come home unharmed," Simon said.
+"Truly you are a shadow of your former self."
+
+"I shall soon be strong again, father; and these are honorable
+scars, for I had them in single combat with Titus, himself, in the
+valley between Hebron and Carmelia."
+
+"Then how is it that you live to tell the tale, my son?" Simon
+asked, while exclamations of wonder broke from Mary and Martha.
+"Surely God did not deliver him into your hands?"
+
+"I wish not to boast, father, and I have told the true story to
+none; but truly God did deliver him into my hands."
+
+"And he is dead?" Simon exclaimed.
+
+"No, father, he lives, for I spared him."
+
+"Spared him!" Simon exclaimed. "What, you did not avenge the
+miseries of our people upon the son of the oppressor?"
+
+"No, father; and I rejoice that I did not for, had I done so,
+surely the Romans would have avenged his death upon all the land.
+But I thought not of that, at the time. I was sore wounded, and
+bleeding, and my sense was well-nigh gone; but as I knelt upon him,
+and lifted my hand to slay him, a thought--surely sent by God,
+himself--came into my mind, and I said:
+
+"'Swear by your gods that you will spare the Temple, or I slay
+you;' and he swore that, so far as lay in his power, he would spare
+the Temple."
+
+An exclamation of joy burst from his hearers, and Simon said:
+
+"Verily, my son, God has raised you up as a deliverer of his
+Temple; not, as some hoped, by defeating our oppressors, but by
+binding one of their mightiest ones to do it no harm."
+
+"I pray, father, say naught of this to anyone. It is between
+ourselves, and Titus, and the Lord; and I would not that any man
+should know of it. Moreover, Titus behaved with the greatest
+generosity to me.
+
+"My victory over him was but a surprise. I was sorely wounded,
+while he was almost unharmed, when I sprang upon him and, by the
+sudden impulse, threw him to the ground, he being burdened with his
+heavy armor I had but strength to hear him swear, and then I fell
+as one dead. Titus might have slain me, as I lay; but he not only
+did me no harm but, when his soldiers came up, he gave me into
+their care, and directed me to be carried down to his camp, placed
+in a tent, and tended by his own leech and, when I recovered, he
+let me go free."
+
+"Truly it is a marvelous tale, John. That you should have fallen
+into the hands of the Romans, and come forth unharmed after
+discomfiting their leader, is as marvelous to me as Daniel coming
+unharmed from the lions' den. We will say naught of your story, my
+son. Tell us only what you told your own companions, so that we may
+know what to say, when we are questioned."
+
+"I told them the truth, father, although not all the truth. I said
+that I met Titus, and fought with him; that I wounded him somewhat;
+but that, by virtue of his armor, I did him no great harm, while he
+wounded me so seriously that I fell down as one dead; that he,
+feeling that I had fought like a brave foeman, had me carried to
+his tent, and tended and cared for until I was able to go forth;
+when he sent me away free, and unharmed."
+
+"Truly men say of Titus that he is clement and merciful, and
+therein differs much from Vespasian his father; and the clemency
+which he showed to the people of Gischala, and other places which
+he has taken, proves that is so; but this deed of his to you shows
+that he must have a great heart, for few men of rank, and warlike
+fame, who had been discomfited by one yet scarce a man, but would
+have left him by the road to die, so that none might know what had
+happened."
+
+"Titus made no secret of it, father," John said. "He told Josephus,
+in my hearing, that I had spared his life. He said naught of the
+oath which he had taken; but I know that he will keep it as far, as
+he said, lies in his power."
+
+"What is he like?" Mary asked.
+
+"He is not of very tall stature, but stoutly built, and strong. His
+face--clean shaved, as is their custom--has a pleasant and kindly
+expression, that tallies with his disposition, for he is greatly
+beloved by his soldiers. In action they say he is brave to
+rashness, quick to anger, but as quickly appeased. Had he been in
+command of the Roman legions, they would have been not less
+formidable in the fight and, perhaps, when the passions of Titus
+were roused, not less savage; but they would not have wrought such
+wholesale cruelty and destruction as they have done."
+
+"It is rarely that pity enters into the heart of a Roman," Simon
+said; "and yet, it is hardly for us to complain for, when we
+crossed over the Jordan and conquered Canaan, we put all to the
+sword, and spared none. It may be that in future times, if wars do
+not altogether cease in the world, they will be waged in another
+spirit; but so far, from the commencement of the world until now,
+it has ever been the same--war has brought desolation and
+destruction upon the vanquished."
+
+The next morning John went early into the garden; not that he was
+strong enough for heavy work, but in order that Mary might, as
+usual, join him there.
+
+"Do you know, John," she said, after their first greeting, "you
+have made me happier than I have been, for some time."
+
+"How is that, Mary?"
+
+"It seemed to me, John, that you were getting away from me."
+
+"Getting away, Mary!" he repeated; "how do you mean?"
+
+"You were becoming a great leader, John. I was proud that it should
+be so, proud to think that you might become a deliverer of the
+nation; and then it would have been meet and right that you should
+take to yourself, as a wife, a daughter of one of the great ones of
+the land."
+
+"Mary!" John exclaimed, indignantly.
+
+"It might have been necessary, John. The tillers of the soil can
+marry where they please. Those who have power must wed for other
+reasons than that of love. They must make alliances that will
+strengthen their position, and it would have been your duty to have
+sacrificed your love for the sake of your country. I should have
+been the first to bid you do so. I should have been content to make
+my sacrifice, too, on the altar of our country; content with
+knowing that you, the deliverer of Israel, would have chosen me
+from among all other women, had you only had your own pleasure and
+happiness to consult.
+
+"But after what you told us yesterday, I think, perhaps, that this
+need not be so; and that the way in which you were to save the
+Temple was not the way we thought. Your mission has been
+fulfilled--not by great victories, which would have made you the
+hero of Israel--but in that contest in the valley, where no eyes
+but those of God beheld you; and should the Temple be saved, no one
+will know that you were its savior, save we who love you.
+Therefore, John, once again I can look forward to the time when you
+and I can dwell, together, in the house of your fathers."
+
+Mary was so earnest that John did not attempt to laugh her out of
+her fancies, as was his usual way. He only said, quietly:
+
+"Perhaps you are right, Mary, as to my mission; but I do not think,
+dear, that even had I been made ruler of Israel, I would have gone
+elsewhere for a wife; but as you say, circumstances might have been
+too strong for me and, at any rate, I am well pleased that there is
+no chance of my happiness being set in one scale, and the good of
+my country in another."
+
+"And now, John, I believe that you will come back to me, even if
+Jerusalem falls. This is the third time your life has been spared
+and, if we count that day when we were so nearly drowned together
+on the lake, we may say that four times your life has been saved,
+when it seemed all but lost; and I believe, now, that it will be
+saved to the end."
+
+"I hope for your sake, Mary, and for my father and mother's, that
+it may be so. I have so much to make my life happy that I will
+assuredly do all in my power to save it. As you know, I have never
+held with those who would destroy themselves, when all seemed lost.
+My idea is: a man should fight until the last; but should, if
+possible, provide some way of escape, when fighting is no longer of
+avail.
+
+"Fortunately, if I do not fall in battle, I have a talisman which
+will bring me safe to you. Titus has given me a signet ring which
+will, at all times, procure me access to him. He has promised that,
+at all times, he will be my friend and, should I fall into the
+hands of his soldiers again, he will let me go free, and will give
+me the lives of any who may be dear to me."
+
+"This Titus must be a noble enemy," Mary said, with tears in her
+eyes. "He is strong, and kind, and generous. Had such a man been
+raised up as the leader of our people, instead of the leader of our
+foes, how different it might have been!"
+
+"Yes, indeed," John agreed; "truly we are sheep without a shepherd;
+nay, we are sheep whose leaders are ravening wolves, who devour
+their own flock."
+
+The time passed, quietly and happily save for the grief which the
+tidings of the terrible doings in Jerusalem caused. The two years'
+respite which the city had obtained, when Vespasian marched away
+from Jericho, instead of being turned to good account, had brought
+even greater evils than before. Simon son of Gioras, having wasted
+all the country towards Idumea, began to threaten Jerusalem. The
+Zealots marched out against him, but were driven back to the city.
+Simon--thinking that the Idumeans, believing him to be occupied
+with Jerusalem, would have grown careless--suddenly entered their
+country at the head of twenty thousand men.
+
+The Idumeans flew to arms, and met him with twenty-five thousand
+men; and a furious battle ensued, in which neither party gained the
+advantage. Simon retreated, and the Idumeans dispersed. Simon
+raised an even larger force than before, and advanced with forty
+thousand irregular troops, besides his heavy-armed soldiers. They
+took Hebron, and wasted Idumea with fire and sword.
+
+The Zealots, in Simon's absence, succeeded in capturing his wife;
+and carried her off to Jerusalem, hoping by this means to force him
+to come to terms. On receiving the news he hurried back with his
+forces, surrounded Jerusalem, and slew everyone who ventured to
+leave the city--except some whom he sent back, having cut off their
+hands, to tell those within that, unless his wife were returned, he
+would storm the city and slay every man within it. Even the Zealots
+were alarmed at his threats and fury, and restored his wife;
+whereupon he withdrew.
+
+This had happened in the previous year, before Cerealis and
+Vespasian had entered Idumea. As soon as the Romans had retired,
+Simon again sallied forth from Masada, collected a great number of
+Idumeans, and drove them before him into Jerusalem. Then he
+encamped before the city, and slew all who quitted the protection
+of its walls.
+
+Thus, within, John of Gischala and his followers tyrannized over
+the people, murdering and plundering till they were sated with
+blood, and knew not what to do with their booty; while Simon cut
+off all flight beyond its walls. But at length the party of John
+became divided. The Idumeans, who were in considerable numbers in
+the city, rose and drove John and the Zealots into the palace built
+by Grapte; which had served them as their headquarters, and the
+storehouse where they piled up the treasure which they had amassed
+by the plunder of the people. But the Idumeans attacked them here,
+and drove them into the Temple--which adjoined the palace--and took
+possession of all the plunder that they had amassed. The Zealots,
+however, were in great force in the Temple, and threatened to pour
+out and destroy the whole city by fire. The Idumeans called an
+assembly of the chief priests, and they decided to admit Simon
+within the gates.
+
+The high priest, Matthias, went out in person to invite him to
+enter and, amidst the joyful greetings of the population, Simon
+marched through the gates with his followers, and took possession
+of the upper city. This was the last and most fatal mistake of the
+people of Jerusalem. The sheep had invited a tiger to save them
+from a wolf; and now two tyrants, instead of one, lorded it over
+the city. As soon as Simon entered, he proceeded to attack the
+Zealots in the Temple; but the commanding position of that building
+enabled them to defend themselves with success.
+
+To obtain still further advantage, they reared four strong towers;
+and on these placed their military engines and bowmen, and so swept
+the approaches to the Temple that Simon was forced to desist from
+the attack. All through the winter, fighting went on without
+intermission, and the streets of Jerusalem ran with blood.
+
+A further division took place among the Zealots. Eleazar--who had
+been their head before the arrival of John of Gischala--jealous of
+the supremacy of that leader, got together a party and suddenly
+seceded from the main band, and seized the inner court of the
+Temple. Now, fighting went on within as well as without the holy
+buildings. The party of Eleazar were well supplied with provisions,
+for the stores in the Temple were of immense extent. They were too
+few in numbers to sally out to attack the party of John; but they
+were strong enough to defend the walls of the inner court, which
+looked down upon the rest of the Temple, and enabled them to
+command the positions of John's troops.
+
+Day and night the struggle went on. The inner court of the Temple
+was desecrated by blood--dying men lay on the steps of the altar,
+and the shouts and songs of the savage soldiery rose, where the
+hymns of praise of the Levites had been wont to ascend.
+
+John's troops continued their attacks upon the inner court, while
+they successfully resisted the assaults of Simon; who tried to take
+advantage of the internecine strife raging between the two parties
+of Zealots, but the superior height of the positions held by John's
+men enabled them to defend themselves as successfully as did those
+of Eleazar against their attacks.
+
+And yet, during all this terrible strife, the services of the
+Temple were continued, in the midst of blood and carnage. Free
+ingress and egress were, as at all times, permitted to the pious;
+who made their way unharmed through the fierce combatants, passed
+over the pavement slippery with blood, and laid their offering on
+the altars--often paying with their lives for their pious services,
+being smitten down, even as they prayed at the altar, by the
+missiles which the followers of John poured incessantly into the
+inner court.
+
+Sometimes, drunk with the wine obtained from the abundant stores of
+the Temple, the followers of Eleazar would sally out against John.
+Sometimes John would pour out against Simon, wasting and destroying
+the city as far as his troops could penetrate. Thus, the Temple
+became surrounded by a waste of ruins, held in turn by one or other
+of the factions. Even the rites of burial, so dear to the Jews,
+were neglected; and the bodies of the slain lay, unburied, where
+they fell, And yet, the forces of the three factions which thus
+desolated the city were comparatively small and, had the wretched
+population who were tyrannized over by them possessed any
+unanimity, or been led by any man of courage, they could easily
+have overthrown them all; for Simon's force amounted to about
+fifteen thousand, that of John to six thousand, while Eleazar could
+count but two thousand four hundred men, and yet in Jerusalem were
+gathered a population amounting, with the original inhabitants and
+the fugitives from the country around, to over a million people.
+
+At length, the long interval of suspense was drawing to an end. At
+the death of Vitellius, Vespasian had been called upon, by the
+general voice of the people, to ascend the throne; and had, some
+time before, left for Rome to assume the imperial purple. He was
+joyfully acknowledged by the whole Roman empire; who had groaned
+under a succession of brutal tyrants, and now hailed the accession
+of one who was, at once, a great general and an upright and able
+man; and who would rule the empire with a firm, just, and moderate
+hand. When winter was over, Vespasian sent Titus--who had, in the
+meantime, gone to Egypt--back to Palestine, and ordered him to
+complete the conquest of Judea.
+
+The Twelfth Legion--that which had been defeated, when under the
+command of Cestius--was ordered to reinforce the three already in
+Judea; and the gaps made in the ranks during the war, and by the
+withdrawal of the men who had accompanied Vespasian to Rome, were
+filled by an addition of two thousand picked troops from
+Alexandria, and three thousand from the legions stationed on the
+Euphrates. The Syrian kings sent large contingents; and Tiberius
+Alexander--an intimate friend of Titus, a man of wisdom and
+integrity--was appointed to high command. His knowledge of the
+country, which he had once governed, added to his value in the
+Roman councils.
+
+As soon as the news spread that the Roman army was collecting for
+its march against Jerusalem, the signal fires were kindled on the
+hills above Gamala; and John, after a tender farewell to his
+parents and Mary, set out with Jonas. In twenty-four hours, the
+band had again assembled. When they were gathered, John addressed
+them. He pointed out to them that the campaign that they were now
+about to undertake differed widely from those which had preceded
+it.
+
+"Hitherto," he said "you have but skirmished around the Romans, and
+have run but comparatively little danger; but now, those who go
+with me must make up their minds that they are going to Jerusalem
+to die. It may be that the Lord will yet deliver the Holy City from
+her enemies, as he delivered it in days of old. But you know what
+has been doing in Jerusalem, for the last four years; that not only
+the streets, but the altar itself have been flooded with the blood
+of the people, how the Jews themselves have desecrated the Temple,
+and how wickedness of all kinds has prevailed in the city.
+
+"Thus, you can judge for yourselves what chance there is that God
+will interfere on behalf of the people who have forsaken and
+insulted him. If he does not interfere, in my opinion the fate of
+the city is sealed. I have seen the Romans at work, at Jotapata and
+Gamala; and I know how the strongest walls go down before their
+engines and battering rams. Moreover I hear that, in the wars which
+have been raging within the gates, the magazines--which contain
+sufficient food to last even her great population for years--have
+been entirely destroyed; and thus those who go to defend her have
+to face not the Roman sword only, but famine.
+
+"Therefore, I say that those who go up to defend the Temple must
+make up their minds that they go to die for the Temple. It is for
+each of you to ask yourselves whether you are ready to do this. I
+ask no one to go with me. Let each, before it is too late, ask
+himself whether he is ready to do this thing. I blame none who find
+the sacrifice too great. It is between them and their conscience.
+
+"Therefore, I pray you, let all tonight disperse among the hills,
+each by himself, so that you may think over what I have said; and
+let all who may come to the conclusion that they are not called
+upon to go to certain death, in defense of the Temple, depart to
+their homes without reproach from their comrades. Each man here has
+done his duty, so long as hope remained. Now it is for each to
+decide, for himself, whether he feels called upon to give his life
+for the Temple."
+
+Silently the crowd dispersed, and John joined the captains, and
+passed the night with them.
+
+"I fear we shall have but a small gathering in the morning," one of
+them said, as they sat down by the fire. "Many will fight as long
+as there is hope, but few will go down to certain death."
+
+"It is better so," John said. "Misery and ruin have fallen upon the
+country. As you saw for yourselves, Judea and Idumea are but
+deserts, and more have fallen by famine and misery than by the
+sword. We would not have our nation blotted out; and as, in the
+days after the captivity in Babylon, God again collected his people
+and restored their land to them, so it may be his intention to do,
+now, when they have paid the full penalty of their disobedience and
+wickedness. Therefore, I would not that any should go down to die,
+save those who feel that God has called them to do so.
+
+"Already the victims who have fallen in these four years are
+well-nigh countless; and in Jerusalem there are a million
+people--sufficient, if they have spirit and strength and the Lord
+is with them--to defend the walls. Thus, then, however small the
+number of those who may gather tomorrow, I shall be content. Had
+the Romans advanced against Jerusalem at the commencement of the
+war, there was not a Jew capable of bearing arms but would have
+gone up to the defense of the Holy City; but now, their spirit is
+broken by the woes that have come upon them, and still more by the
+civil wars in Jerusalem herself. A spirit of hopelessness and
+despair has come upon us. It is not that men fear to die, or that
+they care to live; it is that they say:
+
+"'What matters it whether we live or die? All is lost. Why should
+we trouble as to what may come upon us?'"
+
+"Then you no longer believe in your mission, John?" one of the
+party said, gloomily.
+
+"I have never proclaimed a mission," John said. "Others have
+proclaimed it for me. I simply invited a score of men to follow me,
+to do what we could to hinder the Romans; and because God gave us
+success, others believed that I was sent as a deliverer.
+
+"And yet, I believe that I had a mission, and that mission has been
+fulfilled. I told you not, before; but I tell you now, for your
+comfort, what happened between me and Titus--but I wish not that it
+should be told to others. I told you that I fought with him; and
+that, being wounded and insensible, I was carried into his
+tent--but that was not all. When we fought, although sorely
+wounded, I sprang upon him and we fell to the ground, I uppermost.
+I drew my knife, and would have slain him; when the Lord put a
+thought into my mind, and I called upon him to swear that he would
+spare the Temple.
+
+"He swore that, if it lay in his power, he would do so. Then he was
+but in inferior command. Now he is general of the army, and should
+be able to keep his oath. Thus, if I had a mission to save the
+Temple, I trust that I have fulfilled it; and that, whatever fate
+may fall upon the city, the Temple will yet remain erect and
+unharmed."
+
+John's words gave new life and energy to the before dispirited men
+gathered round him. It seemed to them not only that the Temple
+would be saved, but that their belief in their leader's mission as
+a deliverer was fully justified; and a feeling of enthusiasm
+succeeded that of depression.
+
+"Why did you not tell us before? Why did you not let all your
+followers know what a great thing you had done, John?" one of them
+asked, presently.
+
+"For two reasons," John replied. "I did not wish to seem to exalt
+myself, or to boast of the success which God had given me over the
+Roman; for it was assuredly his strength, and not mine, for I
+myself could do naught against the strength and skill of Titus and,
+as I told you, was wounded nigh to death, while he received small
+hurt. In the next place I thought that, if I made it public, it
+would be noised abroad through the land; and that Titus, when he
+heard that all men knew that he had been worsted in fight with a
+Jew, might repent of his oath--or might even ask to be sent to some
+other command, so that he might not be called upon to keep it."
+
+John's companions agreed that the second reason was a valid one,
+though they did not agree that the first should have weighed with
+him.
+
+"It is not by hiding a light under a bushel," one of them said,
+"that men gain the confidence of their followers. The more men
+believe in their leaders, the more blindly will they follow him,
+the greater the efforts they will make for him. It was the belief
+in your mission which gathered eight thousand men on these
+mountains to follow you; and the proof that you have given us that
+that belief was well founded, and that you had a mission to save
+the Temple--the knowledge that you had, single handed, forced the
+Roman general to swear an oath to save the Temple--would have so
+heightened that enthusiasm that they would have followed you, had
+you bidden them attack the whole Roman army. I agree that, for your
+second reason, it was wise to say nothing of what took place; but
+your first was, I think, a mistaken one."
+
+"At any rate," another said, "the hand of God is plainly marked in
+the matter; for it has placed Titus in full command, and has thus
+given him the power of carrying out the oath which he swore. Now,
+my friends, we can go up with light hearts with John to Jerusalem
+for, though we may die, yet do we feel assured that the Lord
+purposes to save the Temple; and that, one day, he will restore the
+glories of Judah."
+
+In the morning, as John had expected, the number of those who
+gathered at the sound of the trumpet was comparatively small. The
+night's reflection, the feeling that the sacrifice of their lives
+would be of no avail, and the dull despair that had seized the
+whole nation had had their effect and, of the eight thousand men
+who had gathered there the night before, but six hundred now obeyed
+the summons.
+
+These gathered, stern and silent, but with an expression of
+desperate resolution on their faces. At the earnest request of his
+captains, John allowed them to go among the men and to tell them
+that, although the manner in which it was done was a secret, John
+had given to them undoubted proofs that he had a mission from God;
+and that they believed that, whatever might happen to Jerusalem, it
+was the Lord's will that the Temple should be saved. The joyous
+expression of their leaders' faces, even more than their words,
+assured their followers of their sincerity. Their spirit rose, and
+a renewed feeling of enthusiasm seized them; and when, an hour
+later, John took his place on a rock to address them, the shouts of
+greeting which broke forth showed him how great was the change in
+their spirit.
+
+"My friends," he said, "I greet you who have decided to die with
+me, if need be, in defense of Jerusalem. I blame not those who have
+gone. They would not have gone, had the Lord required them to stay;
+but to you he has spoken, and has told you that he has need of your
+services. Henceforward, we will act as one band--a band of men
+inspired with one thought, and one aim. And now, though our numbers
+may not be great, yet a force so composed of men who hold their
+lives as naught may do wonders. You remember how Gideon sent the
+greater part of his army away and, with a mere handful, defeated
+the hosts of the enemy!
+
+"We look not for victory; but we will show the Romans what men can
+do to avenge their bleeding country--what deeds Jews can perform,
+when fighting for the Temple. We shall go into Jerusalem. There we
+will hold aloof from all parties. If we are attacked, we will
+defend ourselves. But our aim will be to act as a body apart from
+others, ready to undertake the most desperate services, and to set
+an example of courage and devotion.
+
+"Now let us count our numbers, and arrange ourselves anew into
+companies."
+
+It was found that the bands composed of men from Tiberias, and the
+other cities of the lake, had entirely disappeared; and that those
+who had stayed were principally hardy dwellers among the hills.
+They were again divided into twenty companies of thirty men each
+and, after examining their arms, and seeing that all were well
+provided, John gave the order, and the band set off.
+
+Keeping on the eastern side of Jordan they stopped at a large
+village, near the ford opposite Jericho; and here a quantity of
+grain was purchased, and was made up into sacks, each weighing
+fifty pounds.
+
+"The granaries that remain will be principally in the hands of the
+troops of John, or Simon," John said; "and it is as well that we
+should have our own store to depend upon. So long as we can buy
+food, we will do so; and we can fall back upon our own magazine, if
+necessary. It will be best for two or three of us to go into the
+city, first, and find a quarter where we can lodge close together,
+and as far removed as possible from the factions. Simon holds the
+upper town, and John the Temple; therefore we will establish
+ourselves in the lower town. We will not go in in a body, for they
+might refuse us admittance; but as the Romans approach there will
+be a stream of fugitives entering the city. We will mingle with
+them, and pass in unobserved.
+
+"Many of the fugitives will be carrying the goods they most value;
+and many, doubtless, will take in provisions with them. Therefore,
+our sacks of grain will not excite attention."
+
+It was five years since John had journeyed up with his parents to
+Jerusalem, and he therefore knew but little of the city. Some of
+his followers, however, had been there more recently; and he picked
+out four of these, one of whom was a captain of a company, to enter
+the city and find a suitable post for them. The whole band crossed
+the Jordan together, and made a detour to avoid Jericho, where the
+Tenth Legion had been quartered during the winter. Then they took
+their way up the steep road through the hills until, passing
+through Bethany, they came out on the crest of the hill looking
+down upon the Valley of Jehoshaphat; with the Temple rising
+immediately opposite to them, and the palace of Agrippa, and the
+crowded houses of the city, in the background.
+
+Illustration: John and his Band in Sight of Jerusalem.
+
+The men laid down their sacks, and stood for a long time, looking
+at Jerusalem. Many were moved to tears, as they looked on the
+stately beauty of the Holy City, and thought how low it had fallen;
+with civil tumult within, and a terrible enemy approaching from
+without. Even now, there is no fairer scene in the world than the
+view of Jerusalem from the spot where they were standing--called
+then, as now, the Mount of Olives--and it must have been superb,
+indeed, in the days when the Temple stood intact, and the palaces
+of Agrippa and Herod rose on the brow of Mount Zion.
+
+After a long pause they resumed their way, crossed the upper end of
+the Valley of Jehoshaphat, and established themselves for the night
+in a grove of trees near the Grotto of Jeremiah; four chosen men at
+once entering the city, by the Old Gate on the north side of the
+city. The country here--and indeed, all the hills around
+Jerusalem--were covered with the houses of the wealthy, surrounded
+by gardens and orchards. They belonged not only to the Jews of the
+city; but to those who dwelt in foreign countries, and who were
+accustomed each year to come to Jerusalem for the Passover, and to
+spend some time there before they returned to their distant homes.
+Even now, undismayed by the dangers of the times, and the knowledge
+that the Romans would shortly besiege the city, pilgrims were
+arriving from all the cities of Asia Minor, Greece, and Egypt, for
+the time of the Passover was close at hand.
+
+At the foot of the walls, and on the slopes around, large numbers
+of pilgrims were encamped--the rich in gorgeous tents, the poor in
+shelters constructed of boughs or carpets. This overflow of people
+was an occurrence which was witnessed every year, on the same
+occasion; but its proportions were this time of greater magnitude
+than usual, partly owing to the difficulty of procuring lodgings in
+the town, owing to the crowds of fugitives there, partly because
+many thought it safer to camp outside, and to enter the city only
+to pay their devotions, and take part in the ceremonial, than to
+put themselves wholly into the power of the ruffians of Simon and
+John.
+
+In the following morning the men returned, and reported that they
+had found a spot in the inner lower town, between the Corner Gate
+and the Gate of Ephraim in the second wall, where was a large
+house, inhabited now but by two or three persons. Here a great
+number of them could take up their quarters, while the others could
+find lodging near. The reason why so many houses were empty there
+was that it was somewhat exposed to the irruptions of Simon's men
+from the upper town, as they frequently came down and robbed those
+who entered the city at the Damascus Gate, from which led the great
+north road.
+
+Crowds of fugitives were making their way by this road to the city,
+flying before the advance of the Romans; who were, they said, but a
+few hours' march in their rear. Many were men, coming to take their
+part in the defense of the city; but the great proportion were old
+men, women, and children, flying for refuge. John shook his head,
+as he watched the stream of fugitives, for he well knew the horrors
+that would befall the besieged town.
+
+"Better a thousand times," he said to Jonas, "that these poor
+people should have remained in their villages. They have nothing
+which would tempt the cupidity of the Roman soldiers, and no evil
+might have befallen them; whereas now they will perish by famine or
+disease, or be slain by the Romans, besides consuming the food
+which would have sustained the fighting men. Were I master of
+Jerusalem I would, when I heard the Romans were approaching, have
+cleared out from the city all who could not aid in the defense. It
+would have seemed a harsh action; but it would have been a merciful
+one, and would greatly strengthen the power of resistance."
+
+
+
+Chapter 14: Jerusalem.
+
+
+Mingling with the crowd, John and his followers made their way
+through the Damascus Gate into Jerusalem, and followed the Damascus
+Street to the Gate of Ephraim. An air of sombre misery pervaded the
+whole population. In their hearts the greater portion of the
+population had, for many months, been longing for the approach of
+the Romans. Even death would be preferable to the misery which they
+suffered. There were but few people in the streets; for all
+remained in their houses, with closed doors, save when necessity
+drove them out to make purchases. Turning sharp round by the wall,
+the members of the band made their way along by it, until they were
+met by one or other of those who had gone on in advance, and were
+conducted to the house which had been hired for them.
+
+The inhabitants of the houses near looked out of their windows in
+alarm, when they saw so many armed men arriving; but they gained
+courage, on observing their quiet and orderly demeanor; and doors
+were presently unbolted, and men came out to inquire who were the
+newcomers. When they were told that they were from Galilee and
+Peraea, and had come down only to fight for the Holy City--that
+they would harm no one, and had nothing in common with any of the
+factions--confidence was restored, and offers were at once made to
+take in ten, fifteen, or twenty men, according to the size of the
+houses; for the people soon saw that the new arrivals would prove a
+protection from the attacks and insults of small numbers of Simon's
+men--who had hitherto pervaded the lower town, breaking into
+houses, robbing and murdering wheresoever they chose.
+
+The grain was all stored in the house that had been hired; and here
+John took up his quarters, with the men of his own company and
+those of Asher, one of his bravest and most determined captains.
+The rest were all accommodated in houses in the same street. And as
+this, like most of the streets of Jerusalem, was very narrow, John
+felt that it could be defended against an attack by a greatly
+superior force.
+
+It was but half an hour after the band had been settled in their
+quarters that a shriek was heard at the end of the street. John ran
+out in time to see a woman struck down; while a body of some twenty
+half-drunken soldiers, with drawn swords, were trying to force in
+the door of a house. John sounded his bugle, and there was a rush
+of armed men into the street. John put himself at the head of the
+two companies with him, and advanced against the soldiers, and
+sternly ordered them to desist. The soldiers, astonished by the
+sudden appearance of so large a body of armed men, drew back in
+astonishment.
+
+"Who are you?" one, who seemed to be their leader, asked.
+
+"It matters not who I am," John said, quietly. "It is enough, as
+you see, that I have a force here sufficiently strong to make
+myself obeyed. This street, henceforth, is mine; and beware of
+attempting plunder or violence here, for whoever does so surely
+dies!"
+
+Muttering threats below their breath, the soldiers sullenly
+withdrew. An hour later, one of the inhabitants ran in to inform
+John that a large body of men were coming down from the upper city.
+John immediately called his men to arms and, at their head, took up
+his position at the end of the street.
+
+Ere long, a crowd of soldiers were seen approaching. At their head
+strode one whom John at once guessed to be Simon, himself. When he
+arrived within ten paces Simon stopped, surprised at the compact
+order and resolute appearance of the band which filled the street.
+
+"Who are you?" he asked John, imperiously.
+
+"My name is John, and I am generally called John of Gamala,
+although that is not my birthplace."
+
+Simon uttered an exclamation of astonishment; for the tales of
+John's attack upon the Roman camp at Gamala, and of his subsequent
+actions against the Romans, were well known in Jerusalem.
+
+"You are but a lad," Simon said, contemptuously, "and John of
+Gamala must be a warrior!"
+
+"I am John of Gamala," John repeated, quietly, "and these men are
+part of my band. We have come down to defend Jerusalem, since there
+is no more to be done in the open country. We wish to interfere
+with none, to take part with no faction, but simply to defend the
+city. We war with the Romans, and not with Jews. We assault no one,
+but woe be to him who assaults us! Here are six hundred of us, each
+man ready to die; and though you have twenty men to one, yet will
+we withstand you, if you meddle with us.
+
+"By tonight, the Romans will be outside the walls. Is this the time
+that Jews should fall upon each other, like wild beasts?"
+
+Simon hesitated. The idea of opposition excited him, as usual, to
+fury but, upon the other hand, he saw that this determined body
+were not to be overcome, save with great loss, and he wanted his
+men for his struggles with the Zealots.
+
+"You are not in correspondence with John of Gischala?" he asked,
+doubtfully.
+
+"I am in correspondence with none," John said. "As I have told you,
+we come only to fight for Jerusalem; and will take no part, on one
+side or other, in your dissensions. We have taken up this street,
+between this gate and the Corner Gate, and this street we will
+hold."
+
+Simon still hesitated. He saw that, round this nucleus of
+determined men, the whole of the citizens of the lower town might
+gather; and that he might be forced to confine himself to the upper
+town. This, however, would be of no great importance, now. The
+inner, lower town was the poor quarter of Jerusalem. Here dwelt the
+artisans and mechanics, in the narrow and tortuous lanes; while the
+wealthier classes resided either in the upper town, where stood the
+palaces of the great; or in the new town, between the second and
+third walls.
+
+The new town had, indeed, until lately been a suburb outside the
+walls. Agrippa had begun the third wall--which was to inclose
+this--and, had he been allowed to build it according to his design,
+he would have made Jerusalem absolutely impregnable, save by
+famine; but the authorities at Rome, knowing how turbulent were the
+population of Jerusalem, and foreseeing that at some time they
+might have to lay siege to the city, had forbidden its construction;
+and the new wall had been hastily erected by the Jews, themselves,
+after they had risen and defeated Cestius, four years before. This
+wall inclosed a vast number of villas, with gardens and open spaces,
+now thickly tenanted by the temporary habitations of the fugitives
+and pilgrims.
+
+The lower town, then, contained but little to tempt the cupidity of
+Simon's troops. Its houses had, indeed, been ransacked over and
+over again; and Simon reflected that, even should his men be
+prevented from descending into it, it would matter but little
+while, as it was separated from the upper town by the Tyropoeon
+Valley, and the first wall, no rising there could be a formidable
+danger to him. Still, it galled him to be resisted and, had it not
+been that the Romans were close at hand, he would at once have
+given his men orders to attack the strangers.
+
+He stood for some minutes, stroking his beard, and then said:
+
+"I will give you no answer, now. I will think over what you say,
+till tomorrow, then we will talk again."
+
+"I doubt not what your decision will be," John said. "You are a
+brave man, Simon; and although you have done much harm to the Jews,
+yet I know that you will defend Jerusalem, to the end, against the
+Romans. You need feel no jealousy of me. I aspire to no leadership,
+or power. I am here only to fight, and six hundred such men as mine
+are not to be despised in the day of trial. Should the Romans march
+away, baffled, before the walls, I, too, shall leave; and you, who
+remain, can resume your mad struggles, if you will. But I think
+that, in the presence of the enemy, all strife within the city
+should cease; and that we should be as one man, in the face of the
+Romans."
+
+Simon looked with surprise, and some admiration, at the young man
+who so boldly addressed him. Savage and cruel as he was, Simon was
+a man of the greatest bravery. He had none of the duplicity and
+treachery which characterized John of Gischala, but was
+straightforward and, in his way, honest. As only his picture has
+come down to us, as described by the pen of Josephus who, at the
+time of his writing his history, had become thoroughly a Roman, and
+who elevated Titus and his troops at the expense of his own
+countrymen, great allowance must be made for the dark colors in
+which he is painted. The fact that he was regarded with affection
+and devotion by his troops, who were willing to go to certain death
+at his orders, shows that at least there must have been many good
+qualities in him; and history records no instance of more desperate
+and sustained bravery than he exhibited in defense of Jerusalem.
+
+The frankness of John's speech, instead of angering him, pleased
+him much.
+
+"Enough," he said. "I need no further time to reflect. A man who
+had thought of treachery would not speak so boldly, and fearlessly,
+as you do. Let us be friends.
+
+"I have often wondered what sort of man was the John of Gamala of
+whom I have heard so much, and who has so long kept the field
+against the Romans; and although I wonder greatly at seeing you so
+young a man, yet I rejoice that so valiant a fighter should be
+here, to aid us in the struggle. Here is my hand, in token of
+amity."
+
+John took the hand held out to him, and a shout of satisfaction
+rose from the armed men on either side--the followers of John being
+rejoiced that they would not be called upon to engage in civil
+strife, those of Simon well satisfied that they were not to be
+called upon to attack a body of men who looked such formidable
+antagonists.
+
+Just at this moment, a man rode in at the gate, saying that the
+Romans were but two miles distant, and would speedily make their
+appearance over the Hill of Scopus. Simon ordered a party of his
+men to proceed at once to Damascus Gate, and to close it as soon as
+the Romans were visible. Then he turned again to John.
+
+"Come up with me," he said, "to the Palace of Herod. From its
+summit, we can see the enemy approaching."
+
+Giving orders to his men to lay aside their arms, and calling Jonas
+to accompany him, John without hesitation turned to accompany
+Simon. The latter had hardly expected him to accept his invitation,
+and the readiness with which he did so at once pleased and
+gratified him. It was a proof of fearlessness, and a testimony to
+John's belief in his faith and honor. John of Gischala, treacherous
+himself, would not have placed himself in his power, whatever the
+guarantee he gave for his safety; while he himself would not have
+confided himself to John of Gischala, though the latter had sworn
+to his safety with his hand on the altar.
+
+John, himself, was struck with the rugged grandeur of Simon's
+appearance. He was far above the stature of ordinary men, and of
+immense strength; and there was, nevertheless, an ease and
+lightness in his carriage which showed that he was no less active
+than strong. His face was leonine in expression. His long hair fell
+back from his forehead, his eyebrows were heavy, his eyes were gray
+and clear; with a fierce and savage expression when his brows met
+in a frown, and his lips were firmly set; but at other times frank,
+open, and straightforward in their look. The mouth was set and
+determined, without being hard; and a pleasant smile, at times, lit
+up his features. He was a man capable of strong affections, and
+generous impulses.
+
+He was cruel, at times; but it was an age of cruelty; and Titus
+himself, who is held up as a magnanimous general, was guilty of far
+more hideous cruelties than any committed by Simon. Had the latter
+been master of Jerusalem from the first, and had not the granaries
+been destroyed in the civil war, the legions of Titus would never
+have achieved the conquest of the city.
+
+Ascending the steep slope of the valley, they passed through the
+gate in the first wall and, turning to the right, entered the
+Palace of Herod, which was at once a royal dwelling, and a fortress
+of tremendous strength. Much as John's thoughts were otherwise
+occupied, he could not help being struck by the magnificence and
+splendor of this noble building; but he said nothing as Simon
+strode along through the forum, passed out beyond the palace
+itself, entered the strong and lofty tower of Phasaelus, and
+ascended to its summit.
+
+An involuntary exclamation burst from John, as he gained the
+platform. From the point on which he stood, he commanded a view of
+the whole city, and of the country round. Far below, at his feet,
+lay the crowded streets of the inner town; between which and the
+outer wall the ground was thickly occupied by houses of the better
+class, standing half-embowered in trees. Close beside him rose the
+stately towers of Hippicus and Mariamne. Behind him was the Palace
+of Herod, standing on the ground once occupied by the Castle of
+David. On the east the Palace of Agrippa partly obscured the view
+of the Temple; but a portion of the building could be seen,
+standing on its platform on the summit of Mount Moriah. To its
+left, and connected with it by two lines of cloisters, was the
+castle of Antonia while, still further along, was the fort known as
+Acra. Behind the Palace of Herod, and its superb gardens, were
+scattered the palaces and mansions of the wealthy Jews and
+strangers which, with their gardens, occupied the whole of the
+upper part of Mount Zion. On the lower slope of Mount Moriah, lying
+between the Valley of Jehoshaphat and that of the Tyropoeon, was a
+densely-populated suburb known as the New Town. Westward, beyond
+the Tower of Hippicus, lay the valley of Hinnom, with the Dragon
+Pool glistening in the sun while, at a distance of four or five
+miles, to the southward could be seen the village of Bethlehem. The
+whole country outside the walls was a garden, with countless
+villas, mansions, and groves of trees.
+
+For some minutes, John looked round in admiration of the scene,
+while Simon stood with his eyes fixed upon the road crossing Mount
+Scopus. Suddenly he uttered an exclamation, and John joined him,
+and looked in the direction in which he was gazing. The white line
+of the road was darkened by a moving mass, sparkling as the sun
+shone on arms and armor.
+
+"They come, at last," Simon said and, as he spoke, cries of wailing
+and lamentation were heard from the walls, far below them.
+
+The four years that had elapsed, since danger first threatened
+Jerusalem, had deepened the impression in the minds of the Jews
+that the enemy would not be permitted to approach the Holy City. It
+was true that their faith had been sorely shaken, by many strange
+prodigies. A strange light had shone about the altar and the
+Temple, and it was said that voices had been heard from the Holy of
+Holies, saying, "Let us depart hence." The Beautiful Gate of the
+Temple, which required the strength of twenty men to close it, had
+opened of its own accord. War chariots and armies had been seen
+contending in the clouds; and for months a great comet, in shape
+like a flaming sword, had hung over the city. Still men had hoped,
+and the cry from the watchers that the Roman army was in sight
+struck dismay among the inhabitants. There were still many without
+the walls. Some of these rushed wildly into the gates, and entered
+the city; while the wiser fled away to the hills, and made their
+way to their homes.
+
+Titus, as he reached the brow of Mount Scopus, reined in his horse
+and looked for some time, in silence, at the great and magnificent
+city which extended before him; and there can be little doubt that
+he would fain have spared it, had it been possible. Even a Roman
+could not gaze on the massive beauty of the Temple, unmoved. It was
+the most famous religious edifice in the world. From all parts,
+pilgrims flocked to it; and kings made offerings to it. It was
+believed by the Jews to be the special seat of their deity; and the
+Romans, partly from policy, partly from superstition, paid respect
+and reverence to the gods of all the nations they subdued, and
+annual offerings had been sent by Rome to the Temple.
+
+Titus may well have wished to spare the city the ruin and misery of
+a siege, to preserve the Temple intact, and to hand over to King
+Agrippa, uninjured, his palace and capital. In all the wide
+dominions of Rome, there was not a city which approached Jerusalem
+in beauty and grandeur; and Titus must have felt that whatever
+honor would accrue to him, from its conquest, would be dearly
+purchased by the linking of his name, to all time, as the destroyer
+of so magnificent a city. Similar emotions were felt by the group
+of officers who rode with Titus, and who reined up their horses as
+he did so. With them, the military point of view was doubtless the
+most prominent; and as they saw, from their lofty vantage ground,
+how the deep valleys of Hinnom and Jehoshaphat girt the city in on
+either side, and how stately and strong were the walls and towers,
+they may well have felt how mighty was the task which they had
+before them.
+
+The scene was calm and peaceful. No sound of warlike trumpets came
+from the walls, no signs of an enemy appeared without; and Titus
+rode on, past the deserted villas and beautiful grounds that
+bordered the road, until he neared the Damascus Gate. He was
+accompanied by six hundred horse, for the legions had encamped in
+the Valley of Thorns, near the village of Gaboth Saul, some four
+miles from Jerusalem.
+
+The walls appeared deserted; but Titus, having experience of the
+desperate courage of the Jews, paused at some little distance from
+the gate and, turning to the right, entered a lane which ran
+parallel to the wall, and made his way towards the Tower of
+Psephinus--or the Rubble Tower--at the north-eastern angle of the
+outer wall. Suddenly, a gate near the Tower of the Women was thrown
+open, and a crowd of armed men dashed out. Rushing forward at the
+top of their speed, some threw themselves across the road which
+Titus was following; but most of them rushed in behind him, cutting
+him off from the main body of his cavalry, and leaving him isolated
+with but a few followers.
+
+The main body of Roman cavalry, furiously assailed, and ignorant
+that Titus was cut off from them, turned and fled. Titus hesitated
+a moment. In front of him was an unknown country. He knew not
+whither the lane he was following led. Hedges rose on either side
+and, even did he burst through the crowd in front of him, he might
+be overwhelmed by missiles, as he rode on. Therefore, calling upon
+his men to follow him, he turned round and dashed into the crowd
+which barred his retreat.
+
+He wore neither helmet nor breastplate for, as he had only advanced
+to reconnoiter, and with no thought of fighting, these had been
+left behind. Yet, though javelins flew around him in showers, and
+arrows whizzed close to him, not one touched him as he struck,
+right and left, among those who barred his passage; while his
+warhorse, excited by the shouts and tumult, trampled them under his
+feet.
+
+In vain the Jews, astonished at his bravery, and still more so at
+his immunity from harm amid the shower of missiles, strove to seize
+him. He and his little band cut his way onward, those in front
+drawing back with almost superstitious fear from his attack. Two,
+only, of his followers were slain. One fell, pierced with numerous
+javelins. Another was pulled from his horse and killed but, with
+the rest, he emerged unharmed from among his assailants, and
+reached his camp in safety.
+
+The soldiers of Simon--for it was his men who guarded this part of
+the wall--returned with mingled feelings. They were triumphant that
+they had caused the son of Caesar, himself, to fly before them.
+They were humiliated that so great a prize should have escaped
+them, when he seemed in their hands; and they had a superstitious
+feeling that he had been divinely protected from their assaults.
+
+From their lookout, Simon and John had seen the Roman cavalry turn
+off from the Damascus road into the lane, and had then lost sight
+of them. Then they heard the sudden din of battle, and the shouts
+of the combatants, and saw the Roman cavalry riding off in full
+speed; but the clamor had continued and, in a short time, another
+little party of horsemen were seen to issue from the lane, and
+follow their companions.
+
+Simon laughed, grimly.
+
+"We have taught the Romans, early, that the wasps have stings and
+that, if they think they are going to take the nest without
+trouble, they will be mistaken.
+
+"And now, John, what do you advise? You were, they say, at Jotapata
+and Gamala; and you have since shown how well you understand the
+Roman tactics. I am a soldier, with an arm to strike but, so far, I
+have not had experience in the Roman tactics at sieges. Tell me,
+what would you do first, were you commander of this city?"
+
+"There is no doubt what is the first thing to be done," John said.
+"It is the duty of all within this city to lay aside their feuds,
+and unite in her defense. It is for you, as the strongest, to make
+the first advance; and to send at once to John and Eleazar to
+propose that, so long as the Romans are before the city, there
+shall be a truce between you; and to arrange which part of the
+walls shall be held by the soldiers of each. You must also arrange
+to unite for common action, both in the defense and in attacking
+them without the walls; for it is only by disturbing them at their
+work, and by hindering them as they bring forward their engines of
+war, that you can hope to hold the city. Strong as your walls may
+be, they will crumble to ruins when the battering rams once begin
+their work against them."
+
+Simon was silent for a minute, then he said:
+
+"Your advice is good. I will send at once to John and Eleazar, and
+ask them to meet me on the bridge across the Tyropoeon, which
+separates our forces."
+
+The sun was already setting, but the distance was short. Simon
+advanced to the bridge and, hailing the Zealots on the other side,
+said that he desired an interview with John, in reference to the
+defense of the city; and that he pledged his solemn oath that no
+harm should come to him. He sent a similar message to Eleazar. John
+shortly appeared for, from the summit of Antonia, he too had
+watched the advancing Romans, and felt the necessity for common
+action for defense of the town.
+
+Eleazar refused to come. He would have trusted Simon, but to reach
+the meeting place he would have had to pass through the outer
+courts of the Temple held by John, and he knew that no confidence
+could be reposed in any oath that the latter might take. He sent
+word, however, that he was willing to abstain from all hostilities,
+and to make common cause with the others for the defense of the
+city.
+
+John of Gischala advanced alone on to the bridge, a wide and
+stately edifice carried on lofty arches across the Tyropoeon
+valley, from a point near the Palace of Agrippa to the platform of
+the Temple.
+
+"Come with me," Simon said to his companion.
+
+John of Gischala paused in his advance, as he saw that Simon was
+not alone.
+
+"Let one of your men come with you, if you like," Simon said, with
+a grim laugh at his hesitation; "or two, or six, if you like."
+
+But John of Gischala knew that the eyes of the soldiers on both
+sides of the bridge were upon him and, having faith in the oath of
+Simon, he again advanced.
+
+John looked with curiosity at the man of whom he had heard so much;
+and who, having been a scourge to Upper Galilee with his horde of
+robbers, had now brought such misery upon Jerusalem. Without
+approaching his rival in size and strength, John of Gischala was a
+powerfully-built man. He did not shrink from danger, and had upon
+occasion shown great bravery; but he relied upon craft, more than
+force, to gain his ends. He possessed great power of oratory, could
+rouse men's passions or calm them, at will. He could cajole or
+threaten, persuade or deceive, with equal facility; was always
+ready to break an oath, if it was inconvenient to keep it. Although
+fond of power, he was still more greedy of gain. But in one
+respect, he and Simon agreed: both hated the Romans, with an
+intense and bitter hatred; both were ready to die in defense of
+Jerusalem.
+
+"I think it is time, John," Simon said, "to cease from our strife,
+for the present, and to make common cause against the enemy. If we
+continue our dissensions, and the Romans in consequence take the
+city, our names will be accursed, in all generations, as the men
+who gave Jerusalem into the hands of the Romans."
+
+"I am ready to agree to a truce," John of Gischala said. "It is you
+who have been attacking me, not I who have been attacking you; but
+we need not talk of that, now. Is it to be an understood thing
+that, if the Romans retire, we shall both occupy the positions we
+hold now, whatever changes may have taken place; and we can then
+either come to an understanding, or fight the matter out?"
+
+"Yes, that is what I would propose," Simon replied. "Whatever
+changes may take place, when the Romans retire we occupy exactly
+the positions we hold now. Will you swear to that, by the Temple?"
+
+"I will," John said.
+
+The two men each took a solemn oath to carry out the terms they
+agreed upon and, throughout the siege, to put aside all enmity
+towards each other; and to act together, in all things, for the
+defense of the city. They then arranged as to the portion of the
+wall which each should occupy, these corresponding very nearly to
+the lines which they at present held.
+
+Simon held the whole of the third wall which, commencing from
+Hippicus, the tower at the north corner of the high town, ran
+northward to Psephinus--or the Rubble Tower--then eastward to the
+Valley of Jehoshaphat, and again south to the Temple platform. The
+second wall, inclosing the inner low town--or Inner Acra, as it was
+sometimes called--was divided between the two. Simon also held the
+first wall, from Hippicus right round at the foot of Zion across
+the lower end of the Tyropoeon Valley, and round the outer low town
+as far as the platform of the Temple. John held the Temple
+platform, the middle low town, and some parts of the city
+immediately adjacent, both on the south slope of Mount Moriah--or
+Ophel, as this portion of the hill was called--and part of the
+inner low town.
+
+The line, therefore, which Simon had to defend was vastly greater
+than that held by John's troops but, in fact, the whole line
+bordering the valleys of Hinnom and Jehoshaphat was practically
+unassailable--the wall being built along the edge of precipices,
+where it could not be attacked either with battering rams or by
+escalade--and it was really the north face of the city, only, that
+was exposed to serious assault. The outer wall on this side--that
+against which the assault would first be made--was entirely
+occupied by Simon's troops; but it was not anticipated that any
+successful resistance could be made here, for the walls, hastily
+raised by the Jews after turning out the Romans, were incapable of
+offering a long resistance to such a force as was now to assail it.
+It was, then, at the second wall that the first great stand would
+be made; and John and Simon's troops divided this between them, so
+that the division was fair enough, when it was considered that
+Simon's force was more than double that of John.
+
+When this matter had been arranged, John of Gischala said to Simon:
+
+"Who is this young man who accompanies you?"
+
+"He is one who has done much more for the cause than either you or
+I, John of Gischala; and indeed, hitherto it may be doubted whether
+we have not been the two worst enemies of Jerusalem. This is John
+of Gamala, of whom we have heard so often, during the last three
+years."
+
+"This, John of Gamala!" John repeated, in a tone of incredulity;
+"you are mocking me, Simon."
+
+"I mock no one," Simon said, sternly. "I tell you this is John of
+Gamala; and when we think that you and I--men of war--have as yet
+struck no single blow against the Romans, since I aided in the
+defeat of the legion of Cestius--for you fled from Gischala like a
+coward, at night, while I have been fighting for my own land, down
+here--we may well feel ashamed, both of us, in the presence of this
+youth; who has for three years harassed the Romans, burning their
+camps, driving out small garrisons, hindering pillagers from
+straying over the country, cutting off their convoys, and forcing
+them to keep ever on the watch.
+
+"I tell you, John, I feel ashamed beside him. He has brought here
+six hundred men of his band, all picked and determined fellows, for
+the defense of the city. I tell you they will be no mean
+assistance; and you would say so, also, had you seen how they drew
+up today, in solid order, ready to withstand the whole of my force.
+He is not of my party, or of yours; he comes simply to fight
+against the Romans and, as I understand him, when the Romans
+retire, he will leave, also."
+
+"That is certainly my intention," John said, quietly; "but before I
+go, I hope that I shall be able to act as mediator between you
+both, and to persuade you to come to some arrangement which may
+free Jerusalem from a renewal of the evils which, between you, you
+have inflicted upon her. If you beat back the Romans, you will have
+gained all the honor that men could desire; and your names will go
+down to all posterity as the saviors of Jerusalem and the Temple.
+If you desire treasure, there is not a Jew but that will be ready
+to contribute, to the utmost of his power. If you desire power,
+Palestine is wide enough for you to divide it between you--only
+beware, lest by striving longer against each other, your names go
+down as those who have been the tyrants of the land; names to be
+accursed, as long as the Hebrew tongue remains."
+
+The two men were silent. Bold as they were, they felt abashed
+before the outspoken rebuke of this stripling. They had heard him
+spoken of as one under the special protection of Jehovah. They knew
+that he had had marvelous escapes, and that he had fought
+single-handed with Titus; and the air of authority with which he
+spoke, his entire disregard of their power, his fearlessness in the
+presence of men before whom all Jerusalem trembled, confirmed the
+stories they had heard, and created an impression almost to awe.
+
+"If we three are alive, when the Romans depart from before the
+city," Simon said, in his deep voice, "it shall be as you say; and
+I bind myself, beforehand, to agree to whatever you shall decide is
+just and right.
+
+"Therefore, John of Gischala, henceforth I shall regard this not as
+a truce, but as the beginning of peace between us; and our rivalry
+shall be who shall best defend the Holy City against her foes."
+
+"So be it!" John of Gischala replied; "but I would that Eleazar
+were here. He is an enemy in my midst; and just as, whenever I was
+fighting with you, he fell upon me from behind; so will it be that,
+while I am struggling with the Romans, he may be attacking me from
+the inner Temple. He has none of the outer walls to defend; and
+will, therefore, be free to choose the moment when he can fall upon
+me, unawares."
+
+"Make peace with him, at any price," John said, "only put an end to
+this strife, and let there be no more bloodshed in the Temple. How
+can we hope for God's assistance, in defending the city, when his
+altars are being daily desecrated with blood?"
+
+"I will see what I can do," John said. "Somehow or other, this
+strife must be brought to an end; and it shall be done without
+bloodshed, if possible."
+
+"There is another thing, John," Simon said. "Our comrade here has
+been telling me that, from what he saw at Jotapata and Gamala, he
+is convinced that by passive resistance, only, we cannot defeat the
+Romans, but that we must sally out and attack them in their camps,
+and at their work; and therefore let us agree that we will meet
+here, from time to time, and arrange that, issuing together through
+the gates in our portions of the wall, we may unite in falling upon
+the Romans."
+
+"The counsel is good," John of Gischala said. "It will keep up the
+courage of men, to fight in the open. Whenever an opportunity
+presents itself, my men shall act with yours. You have given Titus
+a lesson, today. The next time, we will divide the honor."
+
+
+
+Chapter 15: The Siege Is Begun.
+
+
+The Fifth Legion--which had been stationed at Emmaus, halfway
+between Jerusalem and Jaffa--marching the greater part of the
+night, joined the Twelfth and Fifteenth at their halting place at
+Gaboth Saul and, the next morning, the three advanced together. The
+Twelfth and Fifteenth marched halfway down the Hill of Scopus, and
+encamped together on a knoll; while the Fifth Legion encamped three
+furlongs to their rear so that, in case of an attack by the Jews,
+its weary soldiers should not have to bear the brunt of the
+conflict. As these legions were marking out their camp, the Tenth
+Legion--which had marched up from Jericho--appeared on the Mount of
+Olives, and Titus sent word for them to encamp there. Thus
+Jerusalem was overlooked, throughout its length and breadth, by the
+Roman camps on the hills to the north and east sides.
+
+John had, at the earnest request of Simon, taken up his residence
+with him in the Palace of Herod and, from the top of the Tower of
+Phasaelus, watched the Roman legions at work.
+
+"It seems to me," he said to Simon, "that now is the time for us to
+make an assault. The Romans raise veritable fortifications round
+their camp and, when once these are completed, we can scarcely hope
+to storm them; whereas, if we fall suddenly upon them, now, we can
+fight on even terms. The legion on the Mount of Olives is widely
+separated from the rest; and we might overcome it, before the
+others could come to its assistance."
+
+"I agree with you," Simon said; "let us strike a blow, at once."
+
+Simon at once sent off to John, to propose that the latter should
+issue out from the Golden Gate in the middle of the Temple
+platform; while he, himself, would lead out his troops by the gate
+to the north of that platform. In accordance with the suggestion of
+John, he requested John of Gischala to place a watchman on a
+conspicuous position on the wall, with orders to wave his mantle as
+a signal to both parties to charge as, from his position, he would
+be better able than they to see what the Romans were doing; and
+both parties could see him, while they might be invisible to each
+other.
+
+John of Gischala sent back, at once, to say that he approved of the
+plan, and would join in it. Simon called his troops together
+and--leaving the outer wall strongly manned, lest the Twelfth and
+Fifteenth Legions might take advantage of the absence of so large a
+portion of the garrison to make a sudden attack upon it--marched
+towards the northeastern gate; being joined on the way by John,
+with his band. They waited until a messenger came from John of
+Gischala, saying that he was ready; then the gates were thrown
+open, and the troops poured out.
+
+John had given strict orders to his men to keep together in their
+companies, each under his commander; and not to try to maintain
+regular order as one band, for this would be next to impossible,
+fighting on such hilly and broken ground. Besides, they would be
+sure to get mixed up with the masses of Simon's troops.
+
+At the same moment that Simon's force poured through the
+northeastern gate, that of John of Gischala issued from the Temple
+platform and, in rivalry with each other, both dashed down the
+steep declivity into the bottom of the Valley of Jehoshaphat, and
+then climbed the sharp slope of the Mount of Olives. Then with loud
+shouts they fell, in wild disorder, each as he reached the spot,
+upon the Tenth Legion.
+
+The Romans, anticipating no attack, and many of them unarmed as
+they worked at the intrenchments, were unable to resist the fierce
+onslaught. Accustomed to regular warfare, this rush of armed men
+from all sides upon them surprised and disconcerted them. Every
+moment added to the number of their assailants, as fresh combatants
+continued to pour out from the city and, fighting stubbornly and
+sullenly, the Romans were driven out of their half-formed
+intrenchments up the slope, and over the crest of the Mount of
+Olives.
+
+The Jews fought, regardless of life. Single men dashed into the
+midst of the Romans and fell there, fighting fiercely. John's
+compact companies hurled themselves upon the line, and broke it.
+Simon fought desperately at the head of his men, cutting down all
+who stood in his way. The Romans were wavering, and would soon have
+broken into open flight, when rescue arrived. The general in
+command had, immediately the Jews had been seen issuing out, sent
+off a horseman to Titus with the news; and he, putting himself at
+the head of his bodyguard, started instantly to their assistance.
+
+Falling suddenly upon the flank of the Jews, he bore them down by
+the impetuosity and weight of the charge. In vain, Simon and John
+of Gischala tried to rally their men; and John's bands, gathering
+round him at the sound of his bugle, opposed a firm and steady
+resistance. The Roman legion rallied and, ashamed of having been
+driven back before the very eyes of Titus, attacked the Jews with
+fury; and the latter were driven down the hill into the valley.
+
+Here, John's band refused to retire further. Simon and John of
+Gischala rallied their troops, and an obstinate contest ensued; the
+Romans being unable to push the Jews farther back, now that the
+latter were, in turn, fighting with the ground in their favor. For
+some time the battle raged. Then Titus, seeing that he could not
+drive the Jews back into the city, ordered a portion of the Tenth
+Legion to reascend the Mount of Olives, and complete the work of
+fortifying their camp; so that, at the end of the day, the legion
+could fall back to a place of safety.
+
+The watchman on the wall saw the movement, and thought that the
+Romans were retreating. He waved his mantle wildly and, at the
+signal, the Jews again burst down upon their foes, and fresh forces
+poured down from the gates to their assistance. In vain, the Roman
+line tried to hold the bottom of the valley. The Jews burst through
+them, and drove them in disorder up the hill; Titus alone, with a
+few followers, making a stand on the lower slopes. The Jews,
+rushing on, surrounded his party and fell upon him from all sides,
+while their main body swarmed up the hill, and the Romans, panic
+stricken, dispersed in all directions.
+
+Victory seemed in the hands of the Jews, when some of the Romans
+discovered that Titus was not with them; but was cut off, and
+surrounded, at the bottom of the hill. They shouted to others, and
+the news rapidly spread through the fugitives. Overwhelmed with
+shame at having deserted their general, and knowing the severe
+punishment which, according to Roman military law, would befall
+them for their cowardice, the Romans paused in their flight.
+
+Their discipline came to their aid, and they quickly fell in, in
+companies and, with a shout of fury, advanced upon the scattered
+Jews; who, although vastly superior in numbers, had no order or
+formation which would enable them to resist the downward impetus of
+the solid masses of heavy-armed Romans. Again they were driven down
+the hill; and the Romans, pressing upon them, found to their
+delight that Titus and his band had successfully resisted the
+attacks of their foes.
+
+The Jews were driven some distance up the side of the slope; and
+there the combat was renewed until, seeing that they could make no
+further impression upon the enemy, the Jews retired sullenly
+through their gates into the city. They were, however, well
+satisfied with their day's work. Numbers had fallen, but they had
+inflicted heavy loss upon the Romans. They had forced one of the
+legions to retreat, in fair fight; had all but captured Titus; and
+had proved, to the Romans, the formidable nature of the task they
+had undertaken.
+
+The next day, the 13th of April, was the day of the Passover; and
+all Jerusalem prepared, as usual, to celebrate the day of the great
+sacrifice. The gates of the Temple were, as usual, thrown open; and
+the multitude thronged in to worship. John of Gischala had sworn to
+Eleazar, as he had to Simon, to lay aside all hostility but, as
+usual, he did not allow his oath to prevent him from carrying out
+his designs. A number of his men concealed their arms under their
+garments, and entered the Temple with the worshipers.
+
+At a signal, the swords were drawn and the cry of battle was
+raised. Eleazar and his followers at once fled, in dismay, to the
+vaults under the Temple. The multitude in the courts above, panic
+stricken at the threatened conflict, strove to escape. Many were
+trampled under foot and killed. Some were wantonly slain by John's
+followers, to whom murder had become a pastime.
+
+When order was restored, John of Gischala went to the entrance of
+the vaults, and shouted to Eleazar that he desired to keep his
+oath, and would do him no harm; but that, for the general safety of
+the city, he could be no longer permitted to hold the inner Temple
+but must, with his men, take his share in the defense of the walls.
+If Eleazar would agree to do this, he promised that no harm,
+whatever, should be done to him or his followers. Eleazar, being at
+the mercy of his foe, accepted the terms and, with his followers,
+ascended into the Temple.
+
+For once, John of Gischala kept his word. Eleazar was permitted to
+retain the command of his own two thousand men, but his force
+henceforth formed a part of the Zealot army of John. Thus, from
+this time forward, there were but two factions in the city.
+
+Josephus, always the bitter enemy of John of Gischala, speaks in
+terms of the utmost reprobation of his conduct on this occasion;
+and the occasion and manner in which the deed was effected cannot,
+for a moment, be defended. At the same time, it must be admitted
+that the occasion was an urgent one, that the existence of this
+enemy in his midst crippled John of Gischala's power to defend his
+portion of the city; and that the suppression of Eleazar's faction,
+and the conversion of his troops from enemies into allies, was an
+act of high policy, and was indeed a necessity, if Jerusalem was to
+be successfully defended.
+
+The desecration of the Temple, however, upon so sacred an occasion
+as the feast of the Passover, filled all pious Jews with horror;
+and caused John to be regarded with even greater detestation than
+before. For the opinion of the unarmed multitude, however, he cared
+little. He had crushed the faction of Eleazar, had added two
+thousand men to his strength; and was now ready, without fear of
+trouble within, to face the Roman enemy without.
+
+The desperate sortie of the Jews had convinced Titus that, if
+Jerusalem was to be taken, it must be by means of regular siege
+operations, conducted with the greatest care and caution and,
+having made a circuit of the city, he perceived that it was
+impregnable, save on the north and northwestern sides--that is, the
+part defended by the third wall. He therefore, reluctantly, gave
+orders that all the villas, mansions, gardens, and groves standing
+between that wall and the foot of Mount Scopus should be destroyed
+and, placing strong bodies of troops opposite the gates, to prevent
+any sortie of the defenders, he set the whole of the three legions
+encamped on that side to carry out the work of destruction.
+
+A feeling of grief and dismay filled the city, at the sight of the
+devastation that was being wrought; and there were very many among
+the multitude who would gladly have avoided further evils, by
+submitting to the Romans. But such an idea did not enter the heads
+of the military leaders, and Simon determined upon another sortie.
+
+A number of the citizens were ordered to take their places upon the
+walls, and to cry out to the Romans that they desired peace, and to
+implore them to enter the town and take possession. In the
+meantime, a number of Simon's men issued out from the Women's Gate
+in confusion, as if expelled by the peace party. They appeared to
+be in a state of extreme terror: sometimes advancing towards the
+Romans, as if to submit to them; at other times retreating towards
+the wall, as if afraid of putting themselves into the hands of the
+Romans--but, as they neared the walls, they were assailed by a
+shower of missiles from above.
+
+Titus suspected that a trick was being played, and ordered the
+troops to stand fast; but the battalion facing the gate, seeing it
+stand open, were unable to resist the impulse to rush in and take
+possession. They therefore advanced, through the crowd of Jews
+outside, until close to the gate. Then Simon's men drew out their
+concealed weapons, and fell upon them in the rear; while a fresh
+body of armed men rushed out from the gate, and attacked them in
+front while, from the two flanking towers, a storm of javelins,
+arrows, and stones was poured upon them. The Romans fought
+desperately, but numbers of them were slain; and the rest took to
+flight, pursued by the Jews, and did not halt until they reached
+the tombs of Helen, half a mile from the walls; while the Jews,
+with shouts of triumph, re-entered the city.
+
+John had taken no part in this sortie. He had lost more than fifty
+men, in the fight on the Mount of Olives; and determined to hold
+the rest in reserve, until they were needed in a moment of extreme
+peril. The manner in which the bands had held together, and had
+steadfastly resisted the Roman attacks, had greatly excited the
+admiration of Simon.
+
+"I see now," he said, on the evening of the sortie, when talking
+the matter over with John, "the secret of the successes you have
+gained over the Romans. Your men fight as steadily, and with as
+much discipline as they do; while they are far quicker in their
+movements. They unite the activity of my men with the steadiness of
+the Romans. I wish, now, that I had spent the last year in training
+and disciplining my men, to act with equal steadiness and order;
+but it is too late to try to do so, now. Each will do his best, and
+will die fighting but, were I to attempt, now, to introduce
+regularity among them, they would lose the fierce rush with which
+they assault the Romans; without acquiring sufficient discipline to
+enable them to keep their order, as yours do, in the confusion of
+the battle."
+
+"Mine are all picked men," John said. "I had eight thousand under
+my orders, during the last two years of fighting; but I bade all
+leave me, when I advanced to Jerusalem, save those who were ready
+and prepared to die. Therefore, I can rely upon every man, as upon
+myself.
+
+"Unless I see some exceptional opportunity, I do not think I shall
+lead them out beyond the walls again. The time will come, as the
+siege goes on, when you will need a body of men to hold a breach,
+or arrest the advance of a Roman column; men who will die, rather
+than give way a foot. When that time comes, my band shall fill the
+gap."
+
+"I think you are right," Simon agreed. "Your men are too good to be
+wasted in desultory fighting. They shall be kept as a last
+resource; and I know that, when the time comes, they can be relied
+upon."
+
+The clearing of the ground occupied four days; and Titus then
+determined to advance his camp nearer to the city, and fixed upon a
+spot which was the highest on the plateau--a quarter of a mile to
+the northwest of the Rubble Tower. Before moving into it, the
+position was strongly fortified and, so much impressed was Titus,
+by the sallies which the Jews had made, that he formed up his whole
+army along the north and northwest side of the city. The
+heavy-armed troops, three deep, were the first line. Behind them
+came a rank of archers, and behind these the cavalry, three deep.
+
+Brave as were the Jews, they did not venture to sally out to
+endeavor to break through this living wall; which stood all day,
+immovable, while the baggage animals--aided by a great crowd of
+artisans and camp followers--moved the war engines, reserves, and
+baggage of the army from Mount Scopus down to the new camp. Here
+the Twelfth and Fifteenth Legions, under Titus himself, took up
+their position. The Fifth Legion, under the command of Cerealis,
+formed their camp on a knoll, a quarter of a mile from the Jaffa
+Gate, and divided from it by the Valley of Hinnom which is, here,
+of no great depth. It lay about a third of a mile south of the camp
+of Titus. The Tenth Legion remained on the Mount of Olives. Their
+camp had now been very strongly fortified, and was in a position to
+repel any attack that might be made against it.
+
+Now that his dispositions were complete, Titus determined to save
+the city, if possible, from the horrors of siege. He therefore sent
+Nicanor and Josephus, with a flag of truce, towards the walls to
+offer them terms. No sooner had they come within bow shot than an
+arrow was discharged from the wall, and struck Nicanor upon the
+shoulder. The ambassador at once retired; and Titus, indignant
+alike at the insult to his messengers, and the violation of the
+flag of truce, immediately began to make preparations for the
+siege.
+
+Could the population of the city have been consulted, they would
+have declared, by an immense majority of voices, for surrender; but
+Simon and John of Gischala, whose men held the walls, were absolute
+masters of the city; and the inhabitants were to pay now, as they
+had paid in the past, for their cowardice in allowing themselves to
+be tyrannized over by a body of men whom they outnumbered by ten to
+one.
+
+Titus, after a careful examination of the walls, determined to
+attack at a spot between the Jaffa Gate and Psephinus. In former
+times, all assaults of the enemy had been directed against the
+north; and it was here, consequently, that the wall was strongest.
+At its foot, too, a wide and deep fosse had been cut in the solid
+rock: rendering it impossible for the assailants to advance to the
+attack, until this was filled up. But, on the northwest, the walls
+had not been made equally strong; nor had the fosse been continued
+from Psephinus to the Jaffa Gate. It had no doubt been considered
+that the projecting angle of the wall at Psephinus, and the
+fortifications of the Palace of Herod, covered this portion of the
+wall--which was, moreover, to some extent protected by the Valley
+of Hinnom But between the top of the slope of that valley, and the
+foot of the walls, was a level space of ground sufficiently wide
+for the establishment of machines for breaching the wall.
+
+Here, therefore, Titus determined to make his attack. On the 22nd
+of April, the troops began the work. Each legion was to erect a
+bank, mount a battering ram, and construct a tower. A vast quantity
+of timber was required, and the desolation already effected between
+the north wall and Scopus was now widely extended; the whole of the
+trees, for a great distance round Jerusalem, being cut down and
+brought to the spot. The towers were constructed about ninety feet
+in height, and with a wide face. They were put together beyond the
+range of the missiles of the defenders; and were to be advanced,
+upon wheels, up the bank until they neared the wall. As the three
+banks approached the wall, hurdles covered with hides were erected
+to protect the workers; and on each side javelin men and archers
+were posted, together with the war engines for casting missiles.
+
+Simon was not idle. He possessed the war engines taken when Antonia
+was surrendered by the Romans, and those captured from the legion
+of Cestius; but his men had no experience in the working of these
+machines. They could only manipulate them slowly, and their aim was
+bad. They were able, therefore, to interfere but little with the
+work of the Romans. The archers and slingers, however, did greater
+damage, and killed many while, at times, the gate would be thrown
+open, and Simon would dash out at the head of his men, and do much
+damage before the Romans could drive him back within the walls.
+
+The Tenth Legion did more injury to the defenders than did the
+others, being provided with more powerful war machines. Their
+ballistae threw stones, weighing a hundred weight, a distance of a
+quarter of a mile. The Jewish watchmen on the walls kept a vigilant
+watch upon these machines and, each time a stone was coming,
+shouted a warning; and the defenders threw themselves on their
+faces, until the stone passed over. Even at night, the whiteness of
+the newly-cut rock rendered the masses visible, as they flew
+through the air; and Titus then ordered the stones to be painted
+black, before they were discharged, and thus added to their effect,
+as their approach could be no longer seen.
+
+Night and day, the Romans toiled at the work; night and day the
+Jews, with missiles and sorties, hindered their approach; until the
+banks had approached so close to the walls that the battering rams
+would be within striking distance. Then the towers were brought up
+and the rams began to strike their mighty blows upon the wall
+while, from the top of the lofty towers, and from the stories
+below, the archers and war machines poured a storm of missiles down
+upon the defenders of the walls.
+
+As it was evident, now, that the danger lay solely in this quarter;
+and that the whole strength of the besieged was needed here; Simon
+sent to John of Gischala, to urge that the line of demarcation
+agreed upon by them between their respective troops should no
+longer be observed. John would not trust himself in the power of
+Simon, but gave leave to his soldiers to go down and aid in the
+defense; and they, who had been chafing at their forced inactivity,
+while Simon's men were bearing the brunt of the fighting, went down
+to take their share in the struggle.
+
+Regardless of the storm of missiles, the Jews maintained their
+place upon the walls, shooting blazing arrows and hurling
+combustibles down upon the Roman works; and executing such frequent
+and desperate sorties that Titus was obliged to keep the greater
+part of his force constantly under arms, and to gather round the
+towers large bodies of archers and horsemen, to repel the attacks.
+At length, a corner tower fell before one of the battering rams;
+but the wall behind stood firm, and no breach was effected.
+Nevertheless, the Jews appeared dispirited at this proof of the
+power of the battering rams, and fell back into the city.
+
+The Roman legionaries, under the belief that the fighting was over,
+for the evening, were drawn back into their camps. Suddenly, from a
+small gate hitherto unnoticed by the Romans--situated at the foot
+of the tower of Hippicus--the Jews poured out, with flaming brands
+in their hands, and dashed at the Roman banks; sweeping the
+defenders of the works before them, swarming up the banks, and
+surrounding the towers, to which they endeavored to set fire. They
+were, however, plated with iron outside, and the beams inside were
+of so massive a description that the Jews were unable to set light
+to them.
+
+While some of the Jews were striving to do this, the rest fell with
+such fury upon the Roman troops--who hurried up to the protection
+of their works--that they were driven back. A body of Alexandrian
+troops only, posted near the towers, maintained themselves against
+the attacks; until Titus with his cavalry charged down upon the
+Jews who, although a match for the Roman infantry, were never,
+throughout the war, able to resist the charges of the bodies of
+heavy horsemen. Titus is said to have killed twelve Jews with his
+own hand and, fighting desperately to the end, the assailants were
+driven back into the city. One prisoner only was taken; and him
+Titus, with the barbarity which afterwards distinguished his
+proceedings during the siege, ordered to be crucified close to the
+walls.
+
+Among those killed on the Jewish side was John, the commander of
+the Idumeans, who formed part of Simon's force. He was shot by an
+Arab, while he was parleying with a Roman soldier. He was a man of
+great courage and excellent judgment, and his loss was a serious
+one for the besieged.
+
+At night all was still, and silent. Both parties were exhausted
+with their long and desperate struggle, and even the machines
+ceased to hurl their missiles. Suddenly a terrific crash was heard,
+and the very ground seemed to shake. Both parties sprang to arms:
+the Jews, fearing that the wall had fallen; the Romans, not knowing
+what had happened, but apprehensive of another of the sorties--which
+they had begun to hold in high respect.
+
+Something like a panic seized them; until Titus, riding about among
+them, reassured them by his presence and words. They knew, indeed,
+that a repetition of the defeats they had suffered at the Jewish
+hands would not be forgiven. The battalion which had been defeated,
+at the sortie at the Women's Gate, had been sternly rebuked by
+Titus; who had ordered the military law to be carried into effect,
+and a certain number of the soldiers to be executed; and had only
+pardoned them upon the intercession of the whole army on their
+behalf. Therefore, the legionaries now fell into their ranks, at
+the order of Titus, and drew up in order of battle; while parties
+were sent forward to ascertain what had happened.
+
+It was found that a serious misfortune had befallen them. The Jews,
+in their attack, had been unable to set fire to the towers; but
+they had worked so vigorously, in their attempt to destroy the
+bank, that they had weakened that portion of it upon which one of
+the towers stood. This had given way, beneath the tremendous weight
+resting upon it; and the great tower had fallen, with a crash, to
+the ground.
+
+In the morning the combat recommenced but, although the Jews
+exposed their lives on the walls unflinchingly, they were unable to
+withstand the terrible shower of missiles poured upon them from the
+remaining towers, or to interrupt the steady swing of the huge rams
+which, day and night, beat against the walls. One of these,
+especially, did material damage; and the Jews themselves christened
+it "Nico," or the Conqueror.
+
+At length, wearied out by their efforts, disheartened by the
+failure of their attempts to interfere with the work of
+destruction, and knowing that the inner lines were vastly stronger
+than those without, the Jews abandoned the defense of the tottering
+wall, and retired behind their next line of defense The Romans soon
+discovered that they were unopposed, and scaled the wall. As soon
+as they found that the whole space between it and the second wall
+was abandoned, they set to work and threw down a large portion of
+the third wall, and took up their post inside. Titus established
+himself at the spot known as the camp of the Assyrians, at the foot
+of the Tower of Psephinus.
+
+As soon as his arrangements were completed, he gave orders for the
+assault to be recommenced. The date of the capture of the outer
+wall was on the 6th of May, fifteen days after the commencement of
+the siege. The capture of Bezetha, or the new town, enabled the
+Romans to make an attack directly on the Palace of Herod, on the
+one side, and Mount Moriah upon the other; without first assaulting
+the second wall, which defended the inner lower town. But two or
+three days' fighting convinced Titus that these positions could not
+be successfully attacked, until the lower town was in his power.
+
+The three great towers Phasaelus, Hippicus, and
+Mariamne--desperately defended by Simon's soldiers--formed an
+impregnable obstacle on the one side; while Antonia, and the steep
+ascent up to the Temple platform, was defended with equal
+stubbornness, and success, by the soldiers of John of Gischala.
+Titus therefore prepared for the assault of the second wall. The
+point selected for the attack was the middle tower on the northern
+face, close to which were the wool mart, the clothes mart, and the
+braziers' shops.
+
+There were no natural obstacles to the approach, and the battering
+ram was soon placed in position, while a strong body of archers
+prevented the defenders showing themselves above the parapet. The
+wall was of far less strength than that which the Romans had before
+encountered, and soon began to totter before the blows of the
+battering ram. The Jews, indeed, were indifferent as to its fall;
+for they knew that the possession of the inner town was of slight
+importance to them, and that its fall would not greatly facilitate
+the attack upon what was the natural line of defense--namely, the
+heights of Zion and Moriah.
+
+For a short time, the Roman advance was delayed by the proceedings
+of Castor, the Jewish officer commanding the tower which they had
+assaulted. He, with ten men, alone had remained there when the rest
+of the defenders had retired; and he got up a sham battle among his
+men--the Romans suspending operations, under the belief that a
+party of the defenders were anxious to surrender. Castor himself
+stood on the parapet, and offered Titus to surrender. Titus
+promised him his life and, when an archer standing near sent an
+arrow which pierced Castor's nose, he sternly rebuked him.
+
+He then asked Josephus, who was standing beside him, to go forward
+and assure Castor and his companions that their lives should be
+spared. Josephus, however, knew the way of his countrymen too well,
+and declined to endanger his life. But, upon Castor offering to
+throw down a bag of gold, a man ran forward to receive it, when
+Castor hurled a great stone down at him; and Titus, seeing that he
+was being fooled, ordered the battering ram to recommence its work.
+Just before the tower fell, Castor set fire to it; and leaped with
+his companions--as the Romans supposed into the flames--but really
+into a vault, whence they made their escape into the city.
+
+As soon as the tower fell, Titus entered the breach, with his
+bodyguard and a thousand heavy-armed troops. The inhabitants,
+almost entirely of the poorer class, surrendered willingly; and
+Titus gave orders that none, save those found with arms upon them,
+should be killed. The Romans dispersed through the narrow and
+winding streets when, suddenly, Simon and his men poured down from
+the upper city; and John, at the head of his band, issued from his
+quarters.
+
+While some fell upon the Romans in the streets, others entered the
+houses and rained missiles upon them from above; while another
+party, issuing from the gate by Phasaelus, attacked the Romans
+between the second and third walls, and drove them into their camp.
+For a time, Titus and those in the lower town suffered terribly;
+but at last Titus posted archers, to command the lanes leading
+towards the breach, and managed--but with considerable loss--to
+withdraw his troops through it.
+
+The Jews at once manned the wall, and formed in close order behind
+the breach. Titus led his heavy-armed troops against it, but John
+and Simon defended it with the greatest valor and, for three days
+and nights, beat back the continued attacks of the Roman soldiers;
+but at the end of that time they were utterly exhausted, while the
+Romans incessantly brought up fresh troops. Even Simon--who had
+fought desperately at the head of his men, and had performed
+prodigies of valor--could no longer continue the struggle and,
+slowly and in good order, the defenders of the breach fell back to
+the upper city, and the lower town remained in the possession of
+the Romans.
+
+In order to avoid a recurrence of the disaster which had befallen
+them, Titus ordered a considerable portion of the second wall to be
+leveled; so that the troops could, if necessary, pour in or out
+without difficulty. But Simon had no thought of repeating his
+sortie. A large number of his best men had already fallen, and he
+determined to reserve his force for the defense of the almost
+impregnable position of the upper city.
+
+Two hundred of John's band had fallen round the breach, he himself
+had received several wounds, and the fighting strength of his band
+was now but one-half of what it was at the commencement of the
+siege. He had, before the Romans first entered the inner town, had
+the remainder of his store of grain removed to the building in the
+upper town which Simon had assigned to his band. It had as yet been
+but little trenched upon, as Simon had ordered that rations,
+similar to those issued to his own men, from the few granaries
+which had escaped destruction, should be given to John's band.
+
+"What do you think, now, of the prospect?" Simon asked, as John and
+he stood together on the Tower of Phasaelus, on the day after the
+Romans had taken possession of the lower town.
+
+"I think, as I did at first," John said, "that nothing but a
+miracle can save the Temple."
+
+"But the difficulties that the Romans have overcome," Simon said,
+"are as nothing to those still before them."
+
+"That is quite true," John agreed, "and, had we but a good supply
+of food, I believe that we might hold out for months; but the grain
+is already nearly exhausted, and cannot support even the fighting
+men much longer, while the inhabitants are dying from hunger. Well
+and strong, we might resist every attack that the Romans can make
+but, when we can no longer lift our swords, they must overcome us.
+Still, as long as I can fight I am ready to do so, in hopes that
+God may yet have mercy upon us, and deliver his Temple."
+
+
+
+Chapter 16: The Subterranean Passage.
+
+
+For a few days after the capture of the lower city, the Jews had a
+respite. Titus knew that famine was sapping the strength of the
+defenders, and that every day weakened their power of resistance.
+He saw that the assault upon their strong position would be
+attended with immense difficulty, and loss, and he was desirous of
+saving the city from destruction. He ordered, therefore, a grand
+review of the troops to take place; and for four days the great
+army at his command--the splendid cavalry, the solid masses of the
+Roman infantry, and the light-armed troops and cavalry of the
+allies, defiled before him. The Jews from the height of the city
+watched, with a feeling of dull despair, the tremendous power
+assembled against them; and felt the hopelessness of further
+resistance.
+
+An intense desire for peace reigned, throughout the multitude, but
+John of Gischala and Simon had no thought of yielding. They
+believed that, whatever mercy Titus might be ready to grant to the
+inhabitants of the town, for them and their followers there was no
+hope, whatever, of pardon; and they were firmly resolved to resist
+until the last. Titus, finding that no offers of submission came
+from the city, sent Josephus to parley with the defenders.
+
+He could not have made a worse choice of an ambassador. Divided as
+the Jews were, among themselves, they were united in a common
+hatred for the man whom they regarded as a traitor to his country;
+and the harangue of Josephus, to the effect that resistance was
+unavailing, and that they should submit themselves to the mercy of
+Titus, was drowned by the execrations from the walls. In fact, in
+no case could his words have reached any large number of the
+inhabitants; for he had cautiously placed himself out of bow shot
+of the walls, and his words could scarcely have reached those for
+whom they had been intended, even if silence had been observed. His
+mission, therefore, was altogether unavailing.
+
+Illustration: Misery in Jerusalem During the Siege by Titus.
+
+John felt his own resolution terribly shaken, by the sights which
+he beheld in the city. The inhabitants moved about like specters,
+or fell and died in the streets. He felt, now, that resistance had
+been a mistake; and that it would have been far better to have
+thrown open the gates, when Titus appeared before them--in which
+case the great proportion, at least, of those within would have
+been spared, and the Temple and the city itself would have escaped
+destruction. He even regretted that he had marched down to take
+part in the defense. Had he known how entirely exhausted were the
+granaries, he would not have done so. He had thought that, at
+least, there would have been sufficient provisions for a siege of
+some months, and that the patience of the Romans might have been
+worn out.
+
+He felt, now, that the sacrifice had been a useless one; but
+although he, himself, would now have raised his voice in favor of
+surrender, he was powerless. Even his own men would not have
+listened to his voice. Originally the most fervent and ardent
+spirits of his band, they were now inspired by a feeling of
+desperate enthusiasm, equal to that which animated Simon and John
+of Gischala; and his authority would have been at once overthrown,
+had he ventured to raise his voice in favor of surrender.
+
+Already, he had once been made to feel that there were points as to
+which his influence failed to have any effect, whatever. He had,
+the morning after they retired to the upper city, spoken to his men
+on the subject of their store of grain. He had urged on them the
+horrors which were taking place before their eyes--that women and
+children were expiring in thousands, and that the inhabitants were
+suffering the extreme agonies of starvation--and had concluded by
+proposing that their store should be distributed among the starving
+women. His words had been received in silence, and then one of the
+captains of the companies had risen.
+
+"What you say, John, of the sufferings which the people are
+undergoing is felt by us all; but I, for one, cannot agree to the
+proposal that we should give up our store of food. Owing to the
+number of us that have fallen, there are still well-nigh fifty
+pounds a man left, which will keep us in health and strength for
+another two months. Were we to give it out, it would not suffice
+for a single meal, for a quarter of the people assembled here, and
+would delay their death but a few hours; thus it would profit them
+nothing, while it will enable us to maintain our strength--and
+maybe, at a critical moment, to hurl back the Romans from the very
+gates of the Temple.
+
+"It would be wickedness, not charity, to part with our store. It
+would defeat the object for which we came here, and for which we
+are ready to die, without any real benefit to those on whom we
+bestowed the food."
+
+A general chorus of approval showed that the speaker represented
+the opinion of his comrades. After a pause, he went on:
+
+"There is another reason why we should keep what we, ourselves,
+have brought in here. You know how the soldiers of Simon persecute
+the people--how they torture them to discover hidden stores of
+food, how they break in and rob them as they devour, in secret, the
+provisions they have concealed. I know not whether hunger could
+drive us to act likewise, but we know the lengths to which famished
+men can be driven. Therefore, I would that we should be spared the
+necessity for such cruelties, to keep life together. We are all
+ready to die, but let it be as strong men, facing the enemy, and
+slaying as we fall."
+
+Again, the murmur of approval was heard; and John felt that it
+would be worse than useless to urge the point. He admitted to
+himself that there was reason in the argument; and that, while a
+distribution of their food would give the most temporary relief,
+only, to the multitude, it would impair the efficiency of the band.
+The result showed him that, implicit as was the obedience given to
+him in all military matters, his influence had its limits; and
+that, beyond a certain point, his authority ceased.
+
+Henceforth he remained in the house, except when he went to his
+post on the walls immediately adjoining; and he therefore escaped
+being harrowed by the sight of sufferings that he could not
+relieve. Each day, however, he set apart the half of his own
+portion of grain; and gave it to the first starving woman he met,
+when he went out. The regulation issue of rations had now ceased.
+The granaries were exhausted and, henceforth, Simon's troops lived
+entirely upon the food they extorted from the inhabitants.
+
+John of Gischala's followers fared better. Enormous as had been the
+destruction of grain, the stores in the Temple were so prodigious
+that they were enabled to live in comparative abundance, and so
+maintained their strength and fighting power.
+
+But the sufferings of the people increased daily, and great numbers
+made their escape from the city--either sallying out from unguarded
+posterns, at night; or letting themselves down from the lower part
+of the walls, by ropes. Titus allowed them to pass through; but
+John of Gischala and Simon, with purposeless cruelty, placed guards
+on all the walls and gates, to prevent the starving people leaving
+the city--although their true policy would have been to facilitate,
+in every way, the escape of all save the fighting men; and thus to
+husband what provisions still remained for the use of the defenders
+of the city.
+
+In the daytime, when the gates were open, people went out and
+collected vegetables and herbs from the gardens between the walls
+and the Roman posts; but on their return were pitilessly robbed by
+the rough soldiers, who confiscated to their own use all that was
+brought in. The efforts to escape formed a fresh pretext, to Simon
+and John of Gischala, to plunder the wealthy inhabitants who, under
+the charge of intending to fly to the Romans, were despoiled of all
+they had, tortured and executed.
+
+Titus soon changed his policy and, instead of allowing the
+deserters to make their way through, seized them and those who went
+out from the city to seek food, scourged, tortured, and crucified
+them before the walls. Sometimes as many as five hundred were
+crucified in a single day. This checked the desertion; and the
+multitude, deeming it better to die of hunger than to be tortured
+to death by the Romans, resigned themselves to the misery of
+starvation.
+
+For seventeen days, the Romans labored at their embankments, and
+only one attack was made upon the walls. This was carried out by
+the son of the King of Commagene, who had just joined the army with
+a chosen band, armed and attired in the Macedonian fashion. As soon
+as he arrived, he loudly expressed his surprise at the duration of
+the siege. Titus, hearing this, told him that he was at perfect
+liberty to assault the city, if he liked. This he and his men at
+once did, and fought with great valor; but with no success
+whatever, a great number of them being killed, and scarcely one
+escaping uninjured.
+
+For a fortnight, John had bestowed the half of his ration upon a
+poor woman, whose child was sick; and who stood at the door of her
+house, every morning, to wait his passing. One day, she begged him
+to enter.
+
+"I shall need no more food," she said. "Thanks to God, who sent you
+to our aid, my child is recovered, and can now walk; and I intend
+to fly, tonight, from this terrible place."
+
+"But there is no escape," John said. "The soldiers allow none to
+pass and, if you could pass through them, the Romans would slay
+you."
+
+"I can escape," the woman said, "and that is why I have called you
+in.
+
+"My husband--who was killed by Simon's robbers, three months
+ago--was for many years employed in working in the underground
+passages of the city, and in repairing the conduits which carry the
+water from the springs. As I often carried down his food to him,
+when he was at work, I know every winding and turn of the
+underground ways.
+
+"As you know, the ground beneath the city is honeycombed by
+passages whence stone was, in the old time, obtained for buildings.
+There are many houses which have entrance, by pits, into these
+places. This is one of them, and my husband took it for that
+convenience. From here, I can find my way down to the great conduit
+which was built, by King Hezekiah, to bring the water from the
+upper springs of the river Gihon down into the city. Some of these
+waters supply the pool known as the Dragon Pool, but the main body
+runs down the conduit in the line of the Tyropoeon Valley; and
+those from the Temple could, in old times, go down and draw water,
+thence, should the pools and cistern fail. But that entrance has
+long been blocked up for, when the Temple was destroyed and the
+people carried away captives, the ruins covered the entrance, and
+none knew of it.
+
+"My husband when at work once found a passage which ran, for some
+distance, by the side of some massive masonry of old time. One of
+the great stones was loose; and he prised it out, to see what might
+lie behind it. When he did so he heard the sound of running water
+and, passing through the hole, found himself in a great conduit.
+This he afterwards followed up; and found that it terminated, at
+the upper end of the Valley of Hinnom, in a round chamber, at the
+bottom of which springs bubbled up. There was an entrance to this
+chamber from without, through a passage. The outer exit of this was
+well-nigh filled up with earth, and many bushes grew there; so that
+none passing by would have an idea of its existence.
+
+"When the troubles here became great, he took me and showed me the
+conduit; and led me to the exit, saying that the time might come
+when I might need to fly from Jerusalem. The exit lies far beyond
+the camps that the Romans have planted on either side of the Valley
+of Hinnom; and by going out at night, I and my child can make our
+way, unseen, to the hills. Since you have saved our lives, I tell
+you of this secret; which is known, I think, to none but myself
+for, after showing me the place, my husband closed up the entrance
+to the passage--which was, before, well-nigh filled up with stones.
+
+"It may be that the time may come when you, too, will need to save
+yourself by flight. Now, if you will come with me, I will show you
+the way. See, I have mixed here a pot of charcoal and water, with
+which we can mark the turnings and the passages; so that you will
+afterwards be able to find your way for, without such aid, you
+would never be able to follow the path, through its many windings,
+after only once going through it."
+
+John thanked the woman warmly for her offer, and they at once
+prepared to descend into the pit. This was situated in a cellar
+beneath the house; and was boarded over so that plunderers,
+entering to search for provisions, would not discover it. Upon
+entering the cellar, the woman lit two lamps.
+
+"They are full of oil," she said, "and I have often been sorely
+tempted to drink it; but I have kept it untouched, knowing that my
+life might some day depend upon it."
+
+Rough steps were cut in the side of the pit and, after descending
+some thirty feet, John found himself in a long passage. The woman
+led the way. As they went on, John was surprised at the number and
+extent of these passages, which crossed each other in all
+directions--sometimes opening into great chambers, from which large
+quantities of stone had been taken--while he passed many shafts,
+like that by which they had descended, to the surface above. The
+woman led the way with an unfaltering step, which showed how
+thorough was her acquaintance with the ground; pausing, when they
+turned down a fresh passage, to make a smear at the corner of the
+wall with the black liquid.
+
+Presently, the passages began to descend rapidly.
+
+"We are now under the Palace of King Agrippa," she said, "and are
+descending by the side of the Tyropoeon Valley."
+
+Presently, turning down a small side passage, they found their way
+arrested by a pile of stones and rubbish. They clambered up this,
+removed some of the upper stones, and crawled along underneath the
+roof. The rubbish heap soon slanted down again, and they continued
+their way, as before. Another turn, and they were in a wider
+passage than those they had latterly traversed.
+
+"This is the wall of the conduit," the woman said, touching the
+massive masonry on her right hand. "The opening is a little further
+on."
+
+Presently they arrived at a great stone, lying across a passage,
+corresponding in size to a gap in the wall on the right. They made
+their way through this, and found themselves in the Conduit of King
+Hezekiah. A stream of water, ankle deep, was running through it.
+
+"We need not go further," the woman said. "Once here, you cannot
+miss your way. It will take nigh an hour's walking through the
+water before you arrive at the chamber of the springs, from which
+there is but the one exit."
+
+"I will come down again with you, tonight," John said, "and will
+carry your child to the entrance. You will both need all your
+strength, when you sally out; so as to get well beyond the Romans,
+who are scattered all over the country, cutting wood for their
+embankments. Moreover, I shall be able to see, as I come down with
+you, whether all the marks are plainly visible, and that there is
+no fear of mistake for, once lost in these passages, one would
+never find one's way again; and there would be the choice between
+dying of hunger, and of being found by the Romans--who will
+assuredly search all these passages for fugitives, as they did at
+Jotapata.
+
+"Truly, I thank you with all my heart; I feel you have given me the
+means of saving my life--that is, if I do not fall in the
+fighting."
+
+As they made their way back to the house, John examined the marks
+at every turning, and added to those that were not sufficiently
+conspicuous to catch the eye at once. When they had gained the
+cellar, and replaced the boards, the woman said:
+
+"Why should you not also leave the city, tonight? All say that
+there is no hope of resistance; and that John of Gischala and Simon
+are only bringing destruction, upon all in the city, by thus
+holding out against the Romans. Why should you throw away your life
+so uselessly?"
+
+"I have come here to defend the Temple," John said, "and so long as
+the Temple stands I will resist the enemy. It may be it is useless,
+but no one can say what is the purpose of God, or whether He does
+not yet intend to save his Holy Seat. But when the Temple has
+fallen, I shall have no more to fight for; and will then, if I can,
+save my life, for the sake of those who love me."
+
+That evening, on his return from the wall, John proceeded to the
+house of the woman. She was in readiness for the journey. The
+child, who was seven or eight years old, was dressed; and the
+mother had a little bundle with her valuables by her. As soon as
+they descended into the passage below, John offered to carry the
+child, but her mother refused.
+
+"She can walk well," she said, "for a time, and you could not carry
+her upon your shoulder; for the passages are, in many places, but
+just high enough for you to pass under without stooping. At any
+rate, she can walk for a time."
+
+It was not long, however, before the child, weakened by its
+illness, began to drag behind; and John swung her up on to his
+back. The marks, he found, were easily made out; and in half an
+hour they arrived at the entrance to the conduit. Here they were
+forced to walk, slowly. In some places the water, owing to the
+channel having sunk, deepened to the knee; at other times stones
+had fallen from the roof, and impeded their passage; and it was
+nearly two hours before they reached the arched chamber, at the
+termination of the conduit. There was a stone pavement round the
+edge of the pool, and upon this they sat down to rest, for an hour,
+for both John and the woman were exhausted by the labor they had
+undergone.
+
+"It is time for me to be moving," the woman said, rising. "It must
+be nigh midnight, and I must be some miles on my way before
+morning. The child has walked but a short distance, yet; and will
+do her best, now, when she knows that those wicked Romans will kill
+her--and her mother--if they catch them.
+
+"Won't you, Mariamne?"
+
+The child nodded. The Romans were the bogey with which Jewish
+children had, for the last five years, been frightened; and she
+announced her intention of walking till her feet fell off.
+
+"I will carry you, as much as I can," her mother said, "but it can
+only be for a short distance at a time; for I, too, am weak, and
+your weight is too much for me.
+
+"And now, God bless you, my friend," she said, turning to John;
+"and may He keep you safe through the dangers of the siege, and
+lead you to your home and parents again!"
+
+They made their way to the end of the passage together; climbed
+over the rubbish, which nearly blocked the entrance; crawled
+through the hole, and found themselves in the outer air. Thick low
+bushes covered the ground around them, and no sound was to be
+heard.
+
+John rose to his feet, and looked round. Behind him, at the
+distance of more than a quarter of a mile, the light of the Roman
+watch fires showed where the legions were encamped. Beyond and
+above could be seen, here and there, a light in the city. No sound
+was to be heard, save the occasional call of a Roman sentinel. On
+the other side, all was dark; for the working parties always
+returned to camp, at night, in readiness to repel any sortie the
+Jews might make against the camps or working parties.
+
+"It is a very dark night," John said, doubtfully. "Do you think you
+can find your way?"
+
+"There are the stars," the woman replied, confidently. "Besides, I
+was born at Bethlehem, and know the country well. I shall keep on
+west for a while, and then turn off into the deep valleys leading
+down towards Masada.
+
+"God be with you!" and, taking the child's hand, she emerged from
+the bushes, and glided noiselessly away into the darkness.
+
+John set out on his return journey--which he found very much
+shorter than he had done coming, for the weight of a child for two
+hours, when walking over difficult ground, is trying even to a
+strong and active man. He carefully replaced the boards across the
+mouth of the pit, placed the lamps in a position so that he could
+find them in the dark and, upon going out of the house, closed the
+door carefully.
+
+The next morning, that of the 29th of May, the Roman attack began.
+The Fifth and Twelfth Legions had raised embankments near the
+Struthion--or Soapwort--Pool, facing the Castle of Antonia; while
+the Tenth and Fifteenth raised theirs facing the great towers of
+Hippicus, Phasaelus, and Mariamne. They had not carried out their
+work unmolested, for the Jews had now learned the art of
+constructing and managing war machines; and had made three hundred
+scorpions for throwing arrows, and forty ballistae for hurling
+stones and, with these, they had caused terrible annoyance and
+great loss to the Romans.
+
+But now, all was prepared. On the evening of the 28th, the last
+stroke had been given to the embankment; and on the following
+morning the engines were mounted, and the troops stood in readiness
+for the attack. Suddenly a smoke was seen, stealing up round the
+embankments facing Antonia; and the Roman officers called back
+their men, not knowing what was going to occur. Then a series of
+mighty crashes was heard. The great embankments, with their engines
+and battering rams, tottered and fell. Dense smoke shot up in
+columns, followed rapidly by tongues of fire, and soon the vast
+piles of materials, collected and put together with so much pains,
+were blazing fiercely; while the Jews laughed, and shouted in
+triumph, upon the walls.
+
+The moment John of Gischala perceived where the Romans were going
+to construct their embankments, he had begun to run a mine from
+behind the walls towards them. When the gallery was extended under
+them, a great excavation was hollowed out; the roof being supported
+by huge beams, between which were piled up pitch and other
+combustibles. When the Romans were seen advancing to the attack,
+fire was applied and, as soon as the supports of the roof were
+burned away, the ground, with the embankments upon it, fell in.
+
+Simon, on his side, was equally ready to receive the enemy, but he
+trusted rather to valour than stratagem; and as soon as the Roman
+engines facing the towers began to shake the walls, Tepthaus,
+Megassar, and Chagiras rushed out, with torches in their hands,
+followed by a crowd of Simon's soldiers. They drove the Romans
+before them, and set fire to the great machine.
+
+The Romans crowded up to the assistance of the working parties but,
+as they advanced, they were received with showers of missiles from
+the walls; and attacked fiercely by the Jews, who poured out from
+the city in a continuous stream. The flames spread rapidly and,
+seeing no hope of saving their engines and embankments, the Romans
+retreated to their camp. The triumphant Jews pressed hard on their
+rear, rushed upon the intrenchments, and assailed the guards.
+Numbers of these were killed, but the rest fought resolutely, while
+the engines on the works poured showers of missiles among the Jews.
+
+Careless of death, the assailants pressed forward, stormed the
+intrenchment; and the Romans were on the point of flight when
+Titus, who had been absent upon the other side, arrived with a
+strong body of troops, and fell upon the Jews. A desperate contest
+ensued, but the Jews were finally driven back into the city.
+
+Their enterprise had, however, been crowned with complete success.
+The embankments, which had occupied the Romans seventeen days in
+building, were destroyed; and with them the battering rams, and the
+greater part of their engines. The work of reconstruction would be
+far more difficult and toilsome than at first, for the country had
+been denuded of timber, for many miles off. Moreover, the soldiers
+were becoming greatly disheartened by the failure of all their
+attacks upon the city.
+
+Titus summoned a council, and laid before them three plans: one for
+an attempt to take the city by storm; the second to repair the
+works and rebuild the engines; the third to blockade the city, and
+starve it into surrender. The last was decided upon and, as a first
+step, the whole army was set to work, to build a trench and wall
+round the city. The work was carried on with the greatest zeal; and
+in three days the wall, nearly five miles in circumference, was
+completed. Thus there was no longer any chance of escape to the
+inhabitants; no more possibility of going out, at night, to search
+for food.
+
+Now the misery of the siege was redoubled. Thousands died daily. A
+mournful silence hung over the city. Some died in their houses,
+some in the streets. Some crawled to the cemeteries, and expired
+there. Some sat upon their housetops, with their eyes fixed upon
+the Temple, until they sank back dead. No one had strength to dig
+graves, and the dead bodies were thrown from the walls into the
+ravines below.
+
+The high priest Matthias, who had admitted Simon and his followers
+into the city, was suspected of being in communication with the
+Romans; and he and his three sons were led out on to the wall, and
+executed in sight of the besiegers, while fifteen of the members of
+the Sanhedrin were executed at the same time. These murders caused
+indignation even on the part of some of Simon's men, and one Judas,
+with ten others, agreed to deliver one of the towers to the enemy;
+but the Romans--rendered cautious by the treachery which had before
+been practised--hesitated to approach and, before they were
+convinced that the offer was made in good faith, Simon discovered
+what was going on, and the eleven conspirators were executed upon
+the walls, and their bodies thrown over.
+
+Despair drove many, again, to attempt desertion. Some of these, on
+reaching the Roman lines, were spared; but many more were killed,
+for the sake of the money supposed to be concealed upon them. Up to
+the 1st of July, it was calculated that well-nigh six hundred
+thousand had perished, in addition to the vast numbers buried in
+the cemetery, and the great heaps of dead before the walls. Great
+numbers of the houses had become tombs, the inhabitants shutting
+themselves up, and dying quietly together.
+
+But, while trusting chiefly to famine, the Romans had laboured
+steadily on at their military engines--although obliged to fetch
+the timber for ten miles--and, at the beginning of July, the
+battering rams began to play against Antonia. The Jews sallied out,
+but this time with less fury than usual; and they were repulsed
+without much difficulty by the Romans. All day long the battering
+rams thundered against the wall; while men, protected by hurdles
+and penthouses, laboured to dislodge the stones at the foot of the
+walls, in spite of the storm of missiles hurled down from above.
+
+By nightfall, they had got out four large stones. It happened that
+these stones stood just over the part under which John of Gischala
+had driven his mine, when he destroyed the Roman embankments; and
+thus, doubly weakened, the wall fell with a crash during the night.
+John, however, had built another wall in the rear and, when the
+Romans rushed to the assault of the breach, in the morning, they
+found a new line of defence confronting them.
+
+Titus addressed the troops, and called for volunteers. Sabinus, a
+Syrian, volunteered for the attack, and eleven men followed him. In
+spite of the storm of missiles he reached the top of the wall. The
+Jews, believing that many were behind him, turned to fly; but his
+foot slipped and he fell and, before he could regain his feet, the
+Jews turned round upon him and slew him. Three of his companions
+fell beside him, on the top of the wall; and the rest were carried
+back, wounded, to camp.
+
+Two days later, in the middle of the night, twenty Roman soldiers,
+with a standard bearer and trumpeter, crept silently up to the
+breach, surprised, and slew the watch. The trumpeter blew the
+charge; and the Jews, believing that the whole Roman army was upon
+them, fled in a sudden panic. Titus at once advanced with his men,
+stormed the new wall, entered the Castle of Antonia, and then
+advanced along the cloisters which connected it with the Temple;
+but John of Gischala had by this time arrived at the spot, and
+opposed a desperate resistance to the assault; until Simon,
+crossing from the upper city by the bridge, came to his assistance;
+and John, finding that the Temple was attacked, also led his band
+across.
+
+For ten hours, the struggle raged. Vast numbers fell, on both
+sides; till the dead formed a bank between the combatants. Titus,
+finding that even the courage and discipline of his troops did not
+avail, against the desperate resistance of the Jews, at last called
+them off from the assault--well satisfied with having captured
+Antonia.
+
+During the fight the Romans had, several times, nearly penetrated
+into the Temple. Indeed, a centurion named Julian--a man of great
+strength, courage, and skill at arms--had charged the Jews with
+such fury that he had made his way, alone, as far as the inner
+court; when his mailed shoes slipped on the marble pavement, and he
+fell; and the Jews, rushing back, slew him--after a desperate
+resistance, to the end.
+
+Titus commanded that the fortress of Antonia should be levelled to
+the ground; and then sent Josephus with a message to John of
+Gischala, offering him free egress for himself and his men, if he
+would come out to fight outside, in order that the Temple might be
+saved further defilement. John replied by curses upon Josephus,
+whom he denounced as a traitor; and concluded that he feared not
+that the city should be taken, for it was the city of God. Then
+Titus sent for a number of persons of distinction who had, from
+time to time, made their escape from the city; and these attempted,
+in vain, to persuade the people--if not to surrender--at least to
+spare the Temple from defilement and ruin. Even the Roman soldiers
+were adverse to an attack upon a place so long regarded as
+pre-eminently holy, and Titus himself harangued the Jews.
+
+"You have put up a barrier," he said, "to prevent strangers from
+polluting your Temple. This the Romans have always respected. We
+have allowed you to put to death all who violated its precincts;
+yet you defile it, yourselves, with blood and carnage. I call on
+your gods--I call on my whole army--I call upon the Jews who are
+with me--I call on yourselves--to witness that I do not force you
+to this crime. Come forth and fight, in any other place, and no
+Roman shall violate your sacred edifice."
+
+But John of Gischala, and the Zealots, would hear of no surrender.
+They doubted whether Titus would keep his promise, and feared to
+surrender the stronghold which was now their last hope. Above all,
+they still believed that God would yet interfere to save his
+Temple.
+
+Titus, finding that the garrison were obstinate, raised his voice
+and called out:
+
+"John--whom I met near Hebron--if you be there, bear witness that I
+have striven to keep my oath. I will strive to the end; but blame
+me not if, not through my fault, but by the obstinacy of these men,
+destruction comes upon the Temple."
+
+John, who was standing within hearing, called out:
+
+"I am here, Titus, and I bear witness; yet, I pray you, strive to
+the end to keep the oath which you swore to me."
+
+"What is this oath, John?" Simon, who was standing close by, asked.
+"What compact have you with the Roman general?"
+
+"We met in battle, alone," John said, quietly, "and it chanced that
+he fell. I might have slain him, but it came to me that it were
+better to try to save the Temple, than to slay one of its enemies;
+and therefore swore him to save the Temple, if it lay in his power.
+He has offered to spare it. It lay with you, and John of Gischala,
+to save the Temple from destruction by accepting his terms. You
+have not done so. If the Temple is destroyed, it is by the
+obstinacy of its defenders, not by the cruelty of the Romans."
+
+"It would be madness to accept his offer," Simon said, angrily.
+"Titus knows well that, in the plains, we should be no match for
+his troops. Did you ever hear, before, of a garrison giving up a
+position so strong that it could not be taken from them, and going
+out to fight beyond the walls? Besides, who can tell that the
+Romans will keep their promises? Once we are at their mercy, they
+might level the Temple."
+
+"In that case, the sin would be upon their heads. Besides, there is
+no occasion to retire beyond the walls. Why should not all the
+fighting men retire into the upper city, and leave the Temple to
+God? If it is his will that the Romans should destroy it, they will
+do so. If it is his will that they should respect it, they will do
+so. He can save, or destroy, at his will. If we retreat to the
+upper town, and break down the bridge after us, they could never
+take it."
+
+"And how long could we hold out?" Simon said, with a hard laugh.
+"Is there a day's food left, in the city? If there is, my men are
+less sharp than I give them credit for. No, we will fight here, to
+the end, for the Temple; and the sooner the Romans attack, the
+better, for if they delay many days, there is not a single man will
+have strength enough to lift a sword."
+
+
+
+Chapter 17: The Capture Of The Temple.
+
+
+Although abhorring the general conduct of Simon and John of
+Gischala, and believing that conditions could be made with the
+Romans which would save the Temple, John still retained the
+hope--cherished by every Jew--that God would yet, himself, save
+Jerusalem, as in the old times. He was conscious that the people
+had forfeited all right to expect his aid; that, by their
+wickedness and forgetfulness of him--and more especially by the
+frightful scenes which had desecrated the city and Temple, during
+the last four years--they must have angered God beyond all hope of
+forgiveness. Still, the punishment which had been inflicted was
+already so terrible that he, like others, hoped that God's anger
+might yet relent, as it had done in old times, and that a remnant
+might yet be spared.
+
+But above all, their hope lay in the belief that the Temple was the
+actual abode of the Lord; and that, though he might suffer the
+whole people to perish for their sins, he would yet protect, at the
+last, his own sanctuary. Surely, John thought, as he stood on the
+roof of the Temple, this glorious building can never be meant to be
+destroyed.
+
+The Temple occupied a square, six hundred feet every way. The lofty
+rock on which it stood had been cased with solid masonry, so that
+it rose perpendicularly from the plain. On the top of this massive
+foundation was built a strong and lofty wall, round the whole area.
+Within this wall was a spacious double cloister, fifty-two and one
+half feet broad, supported by one hundred and sixty-two columns. On
+the south side the cloister was one hundred and five feet
+wide--being a triple cloister--and was here called the King's
+Cloister. Within the area surrounded by the cloisters was an open
+court, paved with marble; this was the Court of the Gentiles, and
+was separated from the second court--that of the Jews--by a stone
+railing, five feet high.
+
+An ascent of fourteen steps led to a terrace, seventeen and one
+half feet wide, beyond which rose the wall of the inner court. This
+wall was seventy feet high on the outside, forty-four feet on the
+inside. Round the inner court was another range of cloisters. There
+were ten gates into the inner court. The doors of nine of these
+gateways were fifty-two and one half feet high, and half that
+breadth. The gateways rose to the height of seventy feet. The
+tenth, usually called the Beautiful Gate of the Temple, was larger
+than the rest; the gateway being eighty-seven and one half feet in
+height, the doors seventy feet. In the centre of the inner court
+was the Temple, itself. The great porch was one hundred and
+seventy-five feet in width, the gateway tower one hundred and
+thirty-two feet high and forty-three feet wide, and through it was
+seen the Beautiful Gate. The Temple itself was built of white
+marble, and the roof was covered with sharp golden spikes.
+
+Now that it was evident that on the side of the Temple, alone,
+could the enemy make an attack, the division between Simon and John
+of Gischala's men was no longer kept up. All gathered for the
+defence of the Temple. The Jews kept up a vigilant watch, for the
+Romans could assemble in great force in Antonia, unseen by them;
+and could advance, under cover, by the cloisters which flanked the
+platform connecting Antonia with the Temple, on either side. The
+interval between Antonia and the Temple was but three hundred feet.
+The cloisters were considered to form part of the Temple, and the
+Jews were therefore reluctant to destroy them, although they
+greatly facilitated the attack of the Romans.
+
+Finding that his offers were all rejected, Titus spent seven days
+in the destruction of a large portion of Antonia, and then prepared
+for a night attack. As the whole army could not make the assault,
+thirty men were picked from each hundred. Tribunes were appointed
+over each thousand, Cerealis being chosen to command the whole.
+Titus himself mounted a watchtower in Antonia, in order that he
+might see and reward each act of bravery.
+
+The assault began between two and three o'clock in the morning. The
+Jews were on the watch and, as soon as the massive columns moved
+forward, the cries of the guards gave the alarm; and the Jews,
+sleeping in and around the Temple, seized their arms and rushed
+down to the defence. For a time, the Romans had the advantage. The
+weight of their close formation enabled them to press forward
+against the most obstinate resistance and, even in the darkness,
+there was no fear of mistaking friend for foe; while the Jews,
+fighting in small parties, often mistook each other for enemies,
+and as many fell by the swords of their friends as by those of the
+enemy. The loss was all the greater, since the troops of John of
+Gischala and Simon had no common password and, coming suddenly upon
+each other, often fought desperately before they discovered their
+mistake; but as daylight began to break, these mistakes became less
+frequent. The presence and example of their leaders animated the
+Jews to the greatest exertions, while the knowledge that Titus was
+watching them inspired the Romans with even more than their usual
+courage and obstinacy. For nine hours, the conflict raged; and then
+the Romans, unable to make the slightest impression upon the
+resistance of the Jews, fell back again into Antonia.
+
+Finding that, in hand-to-hand conflict, his soldiers could not overcome
+the Jews, Titus ordered the erection of small embankments--two on the
+platform between the cloisters, the other two outside the cloister walls.
+But the work proceeded slowly, owing to the difficulty of procuring wood.
+The Jews, as usual, hindered the work as much as possible, with showers
+of missiles; and attempted to create a diversion, by a sortie and attack
+upon the camp of the Tenth Legion, on the Mount of Olives. This, however,
+was repulsed by the Romans, without great difficulty.
+
+As the cloisters leading to Antonia afforded great assistance to
+the Romans, in their attacks, the Jews set fire to the end of the
+cloisters touching the Temple wall; and a length of from twenty to
+thirty feet of each cloister was destroyed. The Romans destroyed a
+further portion, so as to afford more room for the men at work upon
+the embankments. The action of the Jews was, to a certain extent, a
+necessity; but it depressed the spirits of the inhabitants, for
+there was a prophecy: "When square the walls, the Temple falls!"
+Hitherto, Antonia and the connecting cloisters had been considered
+as forming part of the Temple, and had given it an irregular form;
+but the destruction of these cloisters left the Temple standing a
+massive square.
+
+The embankments presently rose above the height of the wall, and it
+was evident that this would soon be taken. The Jews retired from the
+roof of the cloister facing the embankment, as if despairing of
+further resistance; but they had previously stored great quantities
+of combustibles in the space between the cedar roof of the cloisters
+and the upper platform. The Romans on the embankment--seeing that the
+Jews had retired--without waiting for orders ran down and, planting
+ladders, scaled the wall.
+
+The Jews set up cries, as if of despair; and the Romans poured up
+on to the wall until a great mass of men were collected on the roof
+of the cloister. Then, on a sudden, flames shot up in all
+directions beneath their feet, and they found themselves enveloped
+in a sea of fire. Many were burned, or smothered by the smoke. Some
+stabbed themselves with their swords. Some leaped down into the
+outer court, and were there killed by the Jews. Many jumped down
+outside the walls, and were picked up dead or with broken limbs.
+Others ran along upon the top of the walls, until they were shot
+down by the Jewish missiles.
+
+But one man seems to have escaped. A soldier named Artorius,
+standing on the wall, shouted to the Romans below, "Whoever catches
+me shall be my heir."
+
+A soldier ran forward to accept the terms. Artorius jumped down
+upon him; killing him by his fall, but himself escaping unhurt.
+
+The fire extended along the whole of the western cloister; and the
+northern cloister was, next day, burned by the Romans and, thus, on
+the west and north sides the inner Temple was now exposed to the
+invader.
+
+All this time, famine had been continuing its work. The fighting
+men were so weakened that they had scarcely strength to drag their
+limbs along, or to hold their weapons; while horrible tales are
+told of the sufferings of such of the inhabitants who still
+survived--one woman, maddened by despair, cooking and eating her
+own infant. Occasionally a baggage animal or a Roman cavalry horse
+strayed near the walls, when a crowd of famishing wretches would
+pour out, kill and devour it. Titus, however, cut off even this
+occasional supply; by ordering a soldier, whose horse had thus
+fallen into the hands of the Jews, to be put to death for his
+carelessness.
+
+John's band had been greatly diminished in number, in the two days
+they had been fighting opposite Antonia. The stores they had
+brought to the city were now exhausted; although, for a long time,
+only the smallest amount had been issued, daily, to eke out the
+handful of grain still served out to each of the fighting men. A
+few only had, in their sufferings, refused to obey the orders of
+John and their officers, and had joined the bands of Simon and John
+of Gischala in the revolting cruelties which they practised, to
+extort food from the inhabitants. These had not been allowed to
+rejoin the band; which was now reduced to a little over fifty
+stern, gaunt, and famine-worn figures--but still unshaken in their
+determination to fight to the end.
+
+The Romans now pushed on a bank, from the western wall across the
+smouldering ruins of the cloister and inner court; and a battering
+ram began to play against the inner Temple but, after six days'
+efforts, and bringing up their heaviest battering ram, the Romans
+gave it up in despair; for the huge stones which formed the masonry
+of the wall defied even the ponderous machines which the Romans
+brought to play against it. An embankment, from the northern side,
+was also carried across the outer court to the foot of the most
+easterly of the four northern gates of the inner Temple.
+
+Still anxious to save the Temple itself, and its cloisters if
+possible, Titus would not resort to the use of fire; but ordered
+his men to force the gate, with crowbars and levers. After great
+efforts, a few of the stones of the threshold were removed; but the
+gates, supported by the massive walls and the props behind, defied
+all their efforts.
+
+Titus now ordered his soldiers to carry the walls by storm. Ladders
+were brought up; and the soldiers, eager for revenge upon the foe
+who had so long baffled and humiliated them, sprang to the assault
+with shouts of exultation. The Jews offered no resistance, until
+the Romans reached the top of the wall but, as they leaped down on
+to the roof of the cloister, they threw themselves upon them.
+Numbers were slain, as they stepped off the ladders on to the wall;
+and many of the ladders were hurled backward, crushing the soldiers
+crowded upon them on the pavement beneath.
+
+Then Titus ordered the standards of the legions to be carried up,
+thinking that the soldiers would rally round these, the emblems of
+military honour. The Jews, however, permitted the standards and
+numbers of the legionaries to ascend on to the roof of the
+cloisters; and then again fell upon them, with such fury that the
+Romans were overpowered, the standards were taken, and their
+defenders killed. Not one of the Romans who had mounted the wall
+retired from it.
+
+Titus could no longer resist the appeals of his infuriated soldiers
+who, maddened by the losses they had suffered, and the disgrace of
+the loss of the standards, could not understand why this loss was
+entailed upon them--when such an easy way of destroying the gate,
+and entering the Temple, was in their power. Most reluctantly,
+Titus gave the permission they clamoured for, and allowed his
+troops to set fire to the gate. The dry woodwork caught like
+tinder, and the flames mounted instantly. The silver plates which
+covered the woodwork melted, and ran down in streams; and the fire
+at once communicated with the cloisters inside the wall.
+
+Appalled at the sight of the inner court in flames, the Jews stood
+despairing; while the shouts of triumph of the Romans rose high in
+the air. During the rest of the day, and all through the night, the
+conflagration continued and extended all round the cloisters. Thus
+the Temple, itself, was surrounded by a ring of fire.
+
+The next day, the 4th of August, Titus called a council of his
+generals, to deliberate on the fate of the Temple. There were
+present, besides Titus, Tiberias Alexander, the second in command;
+the commanders of the Fifth, Tenth, and Fifteenth Legions; Fronto,
+the commander of the Alexandrian troops; and Marcus Antonius
+Julianus, the procurator of Judea.
+
+Some were for levelling the Temple to the ground. Others advised
+that, if abandoned by the Jews, it might be preserved; but if
+defended as a citadel, it ought to be destroyed. Titus listened to
+the opinions of the others; and then declared his own--which was
+that, whatever the use the Jews made of it, it ought to be
+preserved. Alexander, Cerealis, and Fronto went over to the opinion
+of Titus; and therefore, by a majority of one, it was agreed that
+the Temple should be spared, however fiercely the Jews might
+resist. Orders were given to prevent the fire spreading to the
+Temple, and to clear the ground for an assault against it.
+
+The 5th of August broke. It was on that day that the Temple of
+Solomon had been burned, by Nebuchadnezzar; but the courage of the
+Jews was not depressed by the omen. The brief pause had enabled
+them to recover from the despair which they had felt, in seeing the
+inner cloister in flames; and at eight o'clock in the morning,
+sallying from the Eastern Gate, they rushed down upon the Romans.
+The latter formed in close order and, covered by their shields,
+received the onslaught calmly. But so desperately did the Jews
+fight, and in such numbers did they pour out from the Temple, that
+the Romans had begun to give way; when Titus arrived, with great
+reinforcements. But even then, it was not until one o'clock that
+the Jews were driven back, again, into the walls of the inner
+Temple.
+
+Titus, having seen his troops victorious, retired to his tent; and
+the soldiers continued their work of clearing the platform, and
+extinguishing the smouldering fire of the cloisters. Suddenly the
+Jewish bands burst out again, and another deadly struggle
+commenced. Then one of the Roman soldiers, seizing a burning brand
+from the cloisters, hurled it into the window of one of the side
+chambers that inclosed the Temple on the north.
+
+In the furious struggle that was going on, none noticed the action;
+and it was not until the flames were seen, rushing out of the
+window, that the Jews perceived what had happened. With a cry of
+anguish, they discontinued the conflict, and rushed back to try and
+extinguish the flames. But the woodwork, dried by the intense heat
+of the August sun, was ripe for burning and, in spite of the most
+desperate efforts, the fire spread rapidly.
+
+The news that the Temple was on fire reached Titus and, starting
+up, accompanied by his bodyguard of spearmen--commanded by
+Liberatus--he hastened to the spot. His officers followed him and,
+as the news spread, the whole of the Roman legionaries rushed, with
+one accord, to the spot. Titus pushed forward into the first court
+of the inner Temple--the Court of the Women--and then into the
+inner court and, by shouts and gestures, implored his own soldiers,
+and the Jews alike, to assist in subduing the flames.
+
+But the clamour and din drowned his voice. The legionaries, pouring
+in after him, added to the confusion. So great was the crowd that
+many of the soldiers were crushed to death; while many fell among
+the ruins of the still smouldering cloisters, and were either
+smothered or burned. Those who reached the sanctuary paid no
+attention to the remonstrances, commands, or even threats of Titus;
+but shouted to those in front of them to complete the work of
+destruction.
+
+Titus pressed forward, with his guards, to the vestibule; and then
+entered, first the Holy, and then the Holy of Holies. After one
+glance at the beauty and magnificence of the marvellous shrine, he
+rushed back and again implored his soldiers to exert themselves to
+save it; and ordered Liberatus to strike down any who disobeyed.
+But the soldiers were now altogether beyond control, and were mad
+with triumph, fury, and hate. One of the bodyguard, as Titus left
+the sanctuary, seized a brand and applied it to the woodwork. The
+flames leaped up, and soon the whole Temple was wrapped in fire.
+
+The soldiers spread through the building, snatching at the golden
+ornaments and vessels, and slaying all they met--unarmed men,
+priests in their robes, women and children. Many of the Jews threw
+themselves into the flames. Some of the priests found their way on
+to the broad wall of the inner Temple; where they remained, until
+compelled by famine to come down, when they were all executed. Six
+thousand of the populace took refuge on the roof of the Royal
+Cloister, along the south side of the outer Temple. The Romans set
+fire to this, and every soul upon it perished.
+
+As soon as they felt that their efforts to extinguish the fire were
+vain, and that the Temple was indeed lost, John of Gischala, Simon,
+and John called their men together and, issuing out, fell with the
+fury of desperation upon the dense ranks of the Roman soldiers in
+the inner court and, in spite of their resistance, cut their way
+through to the outer court; and gained the bridge leading from the
+southwest corner, across the Valley of the Tyropceon, to the upper
+city; and were therefore, for a time, in safety.
+
+John, bewildered, exhausted, and heartbroken from the terrible
+events of the past few days, staggered back to his house, and threw
+himself on his couch; and lay there for a long time, crushed by the
+severity of the blow. Until now he had hoped that Titus would, in
+the end, spare the Temple; but he recognized, now, that it was the
+obstinacy of the Jews that had brought about its destruction.
+
+"It was God's will that it should perish," he said, to himself;
+"and Titus could no more save it than I could do."
+
+After some hours, he roused himself and descended to the room now
+occupied by the remnant of the band. Jonas and ten others, alone,
+were gathered there. Some had thrown themselves down on the ground.
+Some sat in attitudes of utter dejection. Several were bleeding
+from wounds received in the desperate fight of the morning. Others
+were badly burned in the desperate efforts they had made to
+extinguish the flames. Exhausted by want of food, worn out by their
+exertions, filled with despair at the failure of their last hopes,
+the members of the little band scarce looked up when their leader
+entered.
+
+"My friends," he said, "listen to me, if but for the last time. We,
+at least, have nothing to reproach ourselves with. We have fought
+for the Temple, to the last; and if we failed to save it, it is
+because it was the will of God that it should perish. At any rate,
+our duty is done. God has not given us our lives, and preserved
+them through so many fights, that we should throw them away. It is
+our duty, now, to save our lives, if we can. Now that the Temple
+has fallen, we are called upon to do no more fighting.
+
+"Let the bands of John of Gischala, and Simon, fight to the last.
+They are as wild beasts, inclosed in the snare of the hunter; and
+they merit a thousand deaths, for it is they who have brought
+Jerusalem to this pass, they who have robbed and murdered the
+population, they who have destroyed the granaries which would have
+enabled the city to exist for years, they who refused the terms by
+which the Temple might have been saved, they who have caused its
+destruction in spite of the efforts of Titus to preserve it. They
+are the authors of all this ruin and woe. They have lived as wild
+beasts, so let them die!
+
+"But there is no reason why we should die with them, for their
+guilt is not upon our heads. We have done our duty in fighting for
+the Temple, and have robbed and injured none. Therefore, I say, let
+us save our lives."
+
+"Would you surrender to the Romans?" one of the band asked,
+indignantly. "Do you, whom we have followed, counsel us to become
+traitors?"
+
+"It is not treachery to surrender, when one can no longer resist,"
+John said, quietly. "But I am not thinking of surrendering. I am
+thinking of passing out of the city, into the country around.
+
+"But first, let us eat. I see you look surprised but, although the
+store we brought hither is long since exhausted, there is still a
+last reserve. I bought it, with all the money that I had with me,
+from one of Simon's men, upon the day when we came hither from the
+lower town. He had gained it, doubtless, in wanton robbery for, at
+that time, the fighting men had plenty of food; but as it was his,
+I bought it, thinking that the time might come when one meal might
+mean life to many of us. I have never touched it, but it remains
+where I hid it, in my chamber. I will fetch it, now."
+
+John ascended to his chamber, and brought down a bag containing
+about fifteen pounds of flour.
+
+"Let us make bread of this," he said. "It will give us each a good
+meal, now; and there will be enough left to provide food for each,
+during the first day's journey."
+
+The exhausted men seemed inspired with new life, at the sight of
+the food. No thought of asking how they were to pass through the
+Roman lines occurred to them. The idea of satisfying their hunger
+overpowered all other feelings.
+
+The door was closed to keep out intruders. Dough was made, and a
+fire kindled with pieces of wood dry as tinder, so that no smoke
+should attract the eye of those who were constantly on the lookout
+for such a sign that some family were engaged in cooking. The flat
+dough cakes were placed over the glowing embers, the whole having
+been divided into twenty-four portions. Some of the men would
+hardly wait until their portions were baked; but John urged upon
+them that, were they to eat it in a half-cooked state, the
+consequences might be very serious, after their prolonged fast.
+Still, none of them could resist breaking off little pieces, to
+stay their craving.
+
+"Let us eat slowly," John said, when the food was ready. "The more
+slowly we eat, the further it will go. When it is eaten, we will
+take a sleep for four hours, to regain our strength. There is no
+fear of our being called upon to aid in the defence. The Romans
+must be as exhausted as we are; and they will need thought, and
+preparation, before they attack our last stronghold, which is far
+stronger than any they have yet taken. If we had food, we could
+hold Mount Zion against them for months."
+
+As soon as the meal was over, all lay down to sleep. None had asked
+any question as to how their escape was to be effected. The
+unexpected meal, which John's forethought had prepared for them,
+had revived all their confidence in him; and they were ready to
+follow him, wherever he might take them.
+
+It was night when John called them to awake, but the glare of the
+vast pile of the burning Temple lit up every object. The brightness
+almost equalled that of day.
+
+"It is time," John said, as the men rose to their feet and grasped
+their arms. "I trust that we shall have no occasion to use weapons;
+but we will carry them so that, if we should fall into the hands of
+the Romans, we may fall fighting, and not die by the torments that
+they inflict upon those who fall into their hands. If I could
+obtain a hearing, so as to be brought before Titus, he might give
+us our lives; but I will not trust to that. In the first place,
+they would cut us down like hunted animals, did they come upon us;
+and in the second, I would not, now, owe my life to the clemency of
+the Romans."
+
+A fierce assent was given by his followers.
+
+"Now," John went on, "let each take his piece of bread, and put it
+in his bosom. Leave your bucklers and javelins behind you, but take
+your swords.
+
+"Jonas, bring a brand from the fire.
+
+"Now, let us be off."
+
+None of those with him, except Jonas, had the least idea where he
+was going; but he had instructed the lad in the secret of the pit
+and, one day, had taken him down the passages to the aqueduct.
+
+"You and I found safety before, Jonas, together, and I trust may do
+so again; but should anything happen to me, you will now have the
+means of escape."
+
+"If you die, I will die with you, master," Jonas said.
+
+And indeed, in the fights he had always kept close to John,
+following every movement, and ready to dash forward when his leader
+was attacked by more than one enemy; springing upon them like a
+wildcat, and burying his knife in their throats. It was to his
+watchful protection and ready aid that John owed it that he had
+passed through so many combats, comparatively unharmed.
+
+"Not so, Jonas," he said, in answer to the lad's declaration that
+he would die with him. "It would be no satisfaction to me that you
+should share my fate, but a great one to know that you would get
+away safely. If I fall, I charge you to pass out by this
+underground way; and to carry to my father, and mother, and Mary,
+the news that I have fallen, fighting to the last, in the defence
+of the Temple. Tell them that I thought of them to the end, and
+that I sent you to them to be with them; and to be to my father and
+mother a son, until they shall find for Mary a husband who may fill
+my place, and be the stay of their old age. My father will treat
+you as an adopted son, for my sake; and will bestow upon you a
+portion of his lands.
+
+"You have been as a brother to me, Jonas; and I pray you, promise
+me to carry out my wishes."
+
+Jonas had reluctantly given the pledge but, from that hour until
+John had declared that he would fight no more, Jonas had been moody
+and silent. Now, however, as he walked behind his friend, his face
+was full of satisfaction. There was no chance, now, that he would
+have to take home the news of his leader's death. Whatever befell
+them, they would share together.
+
+They soon reached the door of the house in which the pit was
+situated. It was entered, and the door closed behind them. The
+lamps were then lit. John led the way to the cellar, and bade the
+men remove the boards.
+
+"I will go first, with one of the lamps," he said. "Do you, Jonas,
+take the other, and come last in the line.
+
+"Keep close together, so that the light may be sufficient for all
+to see."
+
+Strengthened by the meal, and by their confidence in John's promise
+to lead them through the Romans, the band felt like new men; and
+followed John with their usual light, active gait, as he led the
+way. Not a word was spoken, till they reached the hole leading into
+the aqueduct.
+
+"This is the Conduit of King Hezekiah," John said. "When we emerge
+at the other end, we shall be beyond the Roman lines."
+
+Exclamations of satisfaction burst from the men. Each had been
+wondering, as he walked, where their leader was taking them. All
+knew that the ground beneath Jerusalem was honeycombed by caves and
+passages; but that their leader could not intend to hide there was
+evident, for they had but one meal with them. But that any of these
+passages should debouch beyond the Roman lines had not occurred to
+them.
+
+Each had thought that the passages they were following would
+probably lead out, at the foot of the wall, into the Valley of
+Hinnom or of Jehoshaphat; and that John intended to creep with them
+up to the foot of the Roman wall, and to trust to activity and
+speed to climb it, and make their way through the guard placed
+there to cut off fugitives. But none had even hoped that they would
+be able to pass the wall of circumvallation without a struggle.
+
+An hour's walking brought them to the chamber over the springs.
+
+"Now," John said, "we will rest for half an hour, before we sally
+out. Let each man eat half the food he has brought with him. The
+rest he must keep till tomorrow, for we shall have to travel many
+miles before we can reach a spot that the Romans have not laid
+desolate, and where we may procure food.
+
+"I trust," he went on, "that we shall be altogether unnoticed. The
+sentries may be on the alert, on their wall, for they will think it
+likely that many may be trying to escape from the city; but all
+save those on duty will be either asleep after their toils, or
+feasting in honour of their success. The fact, too, of the great
+glare of light over Jerusalem will render the darkness more
+intense, when they look in the other direction.
+
+"But if we should be noticed, it is best that we should separate,
+and scatter in the darkness; each flying for his life, and making
+his way home as best he may. If we are not seen, we will keep
+together. There is no fear of meeting with any Roman bands, when we
+are once fairly away. The parties getting wood will have been
+warned, by the smoke, of what has taken place; and will have
+hurried back, to gain their share of the spoil."
+
+At the end of the half hour, John rose to his feet and led the way
+along the passage to the entrance. When he came to the spot where
+it was nearly blocked up, he blew out his light, and crawled
+forward over the rubbish, until he reached the open air. The others
+followed, until all were beside him. Then he rose to his feet. The
+Temple was not visible, but the whole sky seemed on fire above
+Jerusalem; and the outline of the three great towers of the Palace
+of Herod, and of the buildings of the upper city, stood black
+against the glare.
+
+There was no sign of life or movement near as, with a quick,
+noiseless step, the little party stole away. None of them knew more
+than the general direction which they had to follow, but the glare
+of the great fire served as a guide as to their direction and, even
+at this distance, made objects on the ground plainly visible; so
+that they were enabled to pick their way among the stumps of the
+fallen plantations and orchards, through gardens, and by ruined
+villas and houses, until they reached the edge of the plateau, and
+plunged down into the valleys descending to the Dead Sea. After
+walking for two hours, John called a halt.
+
+"We can walk slowly now," he said, "and avoid the risk of breaking
+our legs among the rocks. We are safe, here; and had best lie down
+until morning, and then resume our way. There is no fear, whatever,
+of the Romans sending out parties, for days. They have the upper
+city to take, yet, and the work of plunder and division of the
+spoil to carry out. We can sleep without anxiety."
+
+It was strange, to them all, to lie down to sleep among the
+stillness of the mountains, after the din and turmoil of the siege
+when, at any moment, they might be called upon to leap up to repel
+an attack. But few of them went off to sleep, for some time. The
+dull feeling of despair, the utter carelessness of life, the desire
+for death and the end of trouble which had so long oppressed
+them--these had passed away, now that they were free, and in the
+open air; and the thoughts of the homes they had never thought to
+see again, and of the loved ones who would greet them, on their
+return, as men who had almost come back from the dead, fell upon
+them. They could go back with heads erect, and clear consciences.
+They had fought, so long as the Temple stood. They had, over and
+over again, faced the Romans hand to hand, without giving way a
+foot. They had taken no share in the evil deeds in the city, and
+had wronged and plundered no one. They did not return as
+conquerors, but that was the will of God, and no fault of theirs.
+
+At daybreak they were on their feet again, and now struck off more
+to the left; following mountain paths among the hills until, at
+last, they came down to the plain, within half a mile of the upper
+end of the Dead Sea. John here called his companions round him.
+
+"Here, my friends," he said, "I think it were best that we
+separated; laying aside our swords and, singly or in pairs, finding
+the way back to our homes. We know not in what towns there may be
+Roman garrisons, or where we may meet parties of their soldiers
+traversing the country. Alone, we shall attract no attention. One
+man may conceal himself behind a tree, or in the smallest bush; but
+the sight of a party, together, would assuredly draw them upon us.
+Therefore, it were best to separate. Some of you will find it
+shorter to cross the ford of the Jordan, three miles away; while
+others had best follow this side of the river."
+
+All agreed that this would be the safer plan and, after a short
+talk, each took leave of his leader and comrades, and strode away;
+until Jonas, alone, remained with John.
+
+"Will you cross the river, John, or follow this side?" Jonas asked.
+
+"I think we had best keep on this side, Jonas. On the other the
+country is hilly, and the villages few. Here, at least, we can
+gather fruit and corn, as we go, from the deserted gardens and
+fields; and two days' walking will take us to Tarichea. We can
+cross there, or take a boat up the lake."
+
+After waiting until the last of their comrades had disappeared from
+sight, John and his companion continued their way, keeping about
+halfway between Jericho and the Jordan. They presently bore to the
+left, until on the great road running north from Jericho. This they
+followed until nightfall, rejoicing in the grapes and figs which
+they picked by the roadside where, but a few months since, little
+villages had nestled thickly.
+
+Just before darkness fell they came upon a village which, although
+deserted, had not been burned--probably owing to some body of Roman
+soldiers having taken up their post there for a time. They entered
+one of the houses, lay down, and were soon fast asleep.
+
+
+
+Chapter 18: Slaves.
+
+
+John was roused from sleep by being roughly shaken. He sprang to
+his feet, and found a number of men--some of whom were holding
+torches--in the room. Two of these had the appearance of merchants.
+The others were armed and, by their dress, seemed to be Arabs.
+
+"What are you doing here?" one of the men asked him.
+
+"We are peaceful travellers," John said, "injuring no one, and came
+in here to sleep the night."
+
+"You look like peaceful travellers!" the man replied. "You have two
+wounds yet unhealed on your head. Your companion has one of his
+arms bandaged. You are either robbers, or some of the cutthroats
+who escaped from Jerusalem. You may think it Iucky you have fallen
+into my hands, instead of that of the Romans, who would have
+finished you off without a question.
+
+"Bind them," he said, turning to his men.
+
+Resistance was useless. The hands of John and Jonas were tied
+behind their backs, and they were taken outside the house. Several
+fires were burning in the road, and lying down were three or four
+hundred men and women; while several men, with spears and swords,
+stood as a guard over them. John saw, at once, that he had fallen
+into the hands of a slave dealer--one of the many who had come,
+from various parts, to purchase the Jews whom the Romans sold as
+slaves--and already the multitude sold was so vast that it had
+reduced the price of slaves throughout Italy, Egypt, and the East
+to one-third of their former value. There were, however,
+comparatively few able-bodied men among them. In almost every case
+the Romans had put these to the sword, and the slave dealers,
+finding John and Jonas, had congratulated themselves on the
+acquisition; knowing well that no complaint that the captives might
+make would be listened to, and that their story would not be
+believed, even if they could get to tell it to anyone of authority.
+
+John and Jonas were ordered to lie down with the rest, and were
+told that, if they made any attempt to escape, they would be
+scourged to death.
+
+"The villains!" Jonas muttered, as they lay down. "Is it not enough
+to drive one mad to think that, after having escaped the Romans, we
+should fall into the hands of these rogues!"
+
+"We must not grumble at fate. Hitherto, Jonas, we have been
+marvellously preserved. First of all, we two were alone saved from
+Jotapata; then we, with ten others, alone out of six hundred
+escaped alive from Jerusalem. We have reason for thankfulness,
+rather than repining. We have been delivered out of the hands of
+death; and remember that I have the ring of Titus with me, and
+that--when the time comes--this will avail us."
+
+From the day the siege had begun, John had carried the signet ring
+of Titus; wearing it on his toe, concealed by the bands of his
+sandals. He knew that, were he to fall into the hands of the
+Romans, he would get no opportunity of speaking but, even if not
+killed at once, would be robbed of any valuable he might possess;
+and that his assertion that the ring was a signet, which Titus
+himself had given him would, even if listened to, be received with
+incredulity. He had therefore resolved to keep it concealed, and to
+produce it only when a favourable opportunity seemed to offer.
+
+"At any rate, Jonas, let us practise patience, and be thankful that
+we are still alive."
+
+In the morning, the cavalcade got into motion. John found that the
+majority of his fellow captives were people who had been taken
+captive when Titus, for the second time, obtained possession of the
+lower city. They had been sent up to Tiberias, and there sold, and
+their purchaser was now taking them down to Egypt. The men were
+mostly past middle age, and would have been of little value as
+slaves, had it not been that they were all craftsmen--workers in
+stone or metal--and would therefore fetch a fair price, if sold to
+masters of these crafts. The rest were women and children.
+
+The men were attached to each other by cords, John and Jonas being
+placed at some distance apart; and one of the armed guards placed
+himself near each, as there was far more risk of active and
+determined young men trying to make their escape than of the others
+doing so, especially after the manner in which they had been
+kidnapped. All their clothes were taken from them, save their
+loincloths; and John trembled lest he should be ordered also to
+take off his sandals, for his present captors would have no idea of
+the value of the ring, but would seize it for its setting.
+
+Fortunately, however, this was not the case. The guards all wore
+sandals and had, therefore, no motive in taking those of the
+captives, especially as they were old and worn. The party soon
+turned off from the main road, and struck across the hills to the
+west; and John bitterly regretted that he had not halted, for the
+night, a few miles further back than he did, in which case he would
+have avoided the slave dealers' caravan.
+
+The heat was intense, and John pitied the women and children,
+compelled to keep up with the rest. He soon proposed, to a woman
+who was burdened with a child about two years old, to place it on
+his shoulders; and as the guard saw in this a proof that their new
+captives had no idea of endeavouring to escape, they offered no
+objection to the arrangement which, indeed, seemed so good to them
+that, as the other mothers became fatigued, they placed the
+children on the shoulders of the male prisoners; loosing the hands
+of the latter, in order that they might prevent the little ones
+from losing their balance.
+
+The caravan halted for the night at Sichem, and the next day
+crossed Mount Gerizim to Bethsalisa, and then went on to Jaffa.
+Here the slave dealers hired a ship, and embarked the slaves. They
+were crowded closely together, but otherwise were not unkindly
+treated, being supplied with an abundance of food and water--for it
+was desirable that they should arrive in the best possible
+condition at Alexandria, whither they were bound.
+
+Fortunately the weather was fine and, in six days, they reached
+their destination. Alexandria was at that time the largest city,
+next to Rome herself, upon the shores of the Mediterranean. It had
+contained a very large Jewish population prior to the great
+massacre, five years before and, even now, there were a
+considerable number remaining. The merchant had counted upon this
+and, indeed, had it not been for the number of Jews scattered among
+the various cities of the East, the price of slaves would have
+fallen even lower than it did. But the Jewish residents, so far as
+they could afford it, came forward to buy their country men and
+women, in order to free them from slavery.
+
+When, therefore, the new arrivals were exposed in the market, many
+assuring messages reached them from their compatriots; telling them
+to keep up their courage, for friends would look after them. The
+feeling against the Jews was still too strong for those who
+remained in Alexandria to appear openly in the matter, and they
+therefore employed intermediaries, principally Greeks and Cretans,
+to buy up the captives. The women with children were the first
+purchased, as the value of these was not great. Then some of the
+older men, who were unfit for much work, were taken. Then there was
+a pause, for already many cargoes of captives had reached
+Alexandria, and the resources of their benevolent countrymen were
+becoming exhausted.
+
+No one had yet bid for John or Jonas, as the slave dealers had
+placed a high price upon them as being strong and active, and
+fitted for hard work. Their great fear was that they should be
+separated; and John had, over and over again, assured his companion
+that should he, as he hoped, succeed in getting himself sent to
+Titus, and so be freed, he would, before proceeding home, come to
+Egypt and purchase his friend's freedom.
+
+The event they feared, however, did not happen. One day a Roman,
+evidently of high rank, came into the market and, after looking
+carelessly round, fixed his eyes upon John and his companion, and
+at once approached their master. A few minutes were spent in
+bargaining; then the dealer unfastened the fetters which bound
+them, and the Roman briefly bade them follow him.
+
+He proceeded through the crowded streets, until they were in the
+country outside the town. Here, villas with beautiful gardens lined
+the roads. The Roman turned in at the entrance to one of the
+largest of these mansions. Under a colonnade, which surrounded the
+house, a lady was reclining upon a couch. Her two slave girls were
+fanning her.
+
+Illustration: 'Lesbia,' the Roman said, 'I have brought you two
+more slaves.'
+
+"Lesbia," the Roman said, "you complained, yesterday, that you had
+not enough slaves to keep the garden in proper order, so I have
+bought you two more from the slave market. They are Jews, that
+obstinate race that have been giving Titus so much trouble. Young
+as they are, they seem to have been fighting, for both of them are
+marked with several scars."
+
+"I dare say they will do," the lady said. "The Jews are said to
+understand the culture of the vine and fig better than other
+people, so they are probably accustomed to garden work."
+
+The Roman clapped his hands, and a slave at once appeared.
+
+"Send Philo here."
+
+A minute later a Greek appeared.
+
+"Philo, here are two slaves I have brought from the market. They
+are for work in the garden. See that they do it, and let me know
+how things go on. We shall know how to treat them, if they are
+troublesome."
+
+Philo at once led the two new slaves to the shed, at a short
+distance from the house, where the slaves employed out of doors
+lodged.
+
+"Do you speak Greek?" he asked.
+
+"As well as my native language," John replied.
+
+"My lord Tibellus is a just and good master," Philo said, "and you
+are fortunate in having fallen into his hands. He expects his
+slaves to work their best and, if they do so, he treats them well;
+but disobedience and laziness he punishes, severely. He is an
+officer of high rank in the government of the city. As you may not
+know the country, I warn you against thinking of escape. The Lake
+of Mareotis well-nigh surrounds the back of the city and, beyond
+the lake, the Roman authority extends for a vast distance, and none
+would dare to conceal runaway slaves."
+
+"We shall not attempt to escape," John said, quietly, "and are well
+content that we have fallen in such good hands. I am accustomed to
+work in a garden, but my companion has not had much experience at
+such work; therefore, I pray you be patient with him, at first."
+
+John had agreed with Jonas that, if they had the good fortune to be
+sold to a Roman, they would not, for a time, say anything about the
+ring. It was better, they thought, to wait until Titus returned to
+Rome--which he would be sure to do, after the complete conquest of
+Jerusalem. Even were they sent to him there, while he was still
+full of wrath and bitterness against the Jews--for the heavy loss
+that they had inflicted upon his army, and for the obstinacy which
+compelled him to destroy the city which he would fain have
+preserved, as a trophy of his victory--they might be less
+favourably received than they would be after there had been some
+time for the passions awakened by the strife to abate; especially
+after the enjoyment of the triumph which was sure to be accorded to
+him, on his return after his victory.
+
+The next day the ring, the badge of slavery, was fastened round the
+necks of the two new purchases. John had already hidden in the
+ground the precious ring, as he rightly expected that he would have
+to work barefooted. They were at once set to work in the garden.
+John was surprised at the number and variety of the plants and
+trees which filled it; and at the beauty and care with which it was
+laid out, and tended. Had it not been for the thought of the grief
+that they would be suffering, at home, he would--for a time--have
+worked contentedly. The labour was no harder than that on his
+father's farm; and as he worked well and willingly Philo, who was
+at the head of the slaves employed in the garden--which was a very
+extensive one--did not treat him with harshness.
+
+Jonas, although less skilful, also gave satisfaction; and two
+months passed without any unpleasant incident. The Roman slaves,
+save in exceptional instances, were all well treated by their
+masters, although these had power of life and death over them. They
+were well fed and, generally, had some small money payment made
+them. Sometimes, those who were clever at a handicraft were let out
+to other masters, receiving a portion of the wages they earned; so
+that they were frequently able, in old age, to purchase their
+freedom.
+
+There were four other slaves who worked in the garden. Two of these
+were Nubians, one a Parthian, the other a Spaniard. The last died,
+of homesickness and fever, after they had been there six weeks; and
+his place was filled up by another Jew, from a cargo freshly
+arrived.
+
+From him, John learned what had taken place after he had left
+Jerusalem. The bands of Simon and John of Gischala were so much
+weakened, by death and desertion, and were so enfeebled by famine,
+that they could not hope to withstand the regular approaches of the
+Roman arms, for any length of time. The two leaders therefore
+invited Titus to a parley; and the latter, being desirous of
+avoiding more bloodshed, of saving the Palace of Herod and the
+other great buildings in the upper city, and of returning to Rome
+at once, agreed to meet them. They took their places at opposite
+ends of the bridge across the Tyropceon Valley.
+
+Titus spoke first, and expostulated with them on the obstinacy
+which had already led to the destruction of the Temple, and the
+greater part of the city. He said that all the world, even to the
+distant Britons, had done homage to the Romans, and that further
+resistance would only bring destruction upon them. Finally, he
+offered their lives to all, if they would lay down their arms and
+surrender themselves as prisoners of war.
+
+Simon and John replied that they and their followers had bound
+themselves, by a solemn oath, never to surrender themselves into
+the hands of the Romans; but they expressed their willingness to
+retire, with their wives and families, into the wilderness, and
+leave the Romans in possession of the city. Titus considered this
+language, for men in so desperate a position, to be a mockery; and
+answered sternly that, henceforth, he would receive no deserters,
+and show no mercy, and that they might fight their hardest. He at
+once ordered the destruction of all the buildings standing round
+the Temple.
+
+The flames spread as far as the Palace of Helena, on Ophel, to the
+south of the Temple platform. Here the members of the royal family
+of Adiabene dwelt, and also in the Palaces of Grapte and Monobazus;
+and the descendants of Helena now went over to the Romans, and
+Titus, although he had declared that he would in future spare none,
+did not take their lives, seeing that they were of royal blood.
+
+Simon and John of Gischala, when they heard that the Adiabene
+princes had gone over to the Romans, rushed to the Palace of
+Helena, sacked it, and murdered all who had taken refuge in the
+building--seven thousand in number. They then sacked the rest of
+the outer lower town, and retired with their booty into the high
+town.
+
+Titus, furious at this conduct, ordered all the outer lower town to
+be burned; and soon, from the Temple platform to the Fountain of
+Siloam, a scene of desolation extended. The Roman soldiers then
+commenced to throw up banks, the one against Herod's Palace, the
+other near the bridge across the valley close to the Palace of
+Agrippa.
+
+The Idumeans, under Simon, were opposed to further resistance, and
+five of their leaders opened communication with Titus, who was
+disposed to treat with them; but the conspiracy was discovered by
+Simon, and the five leaders executed. Still, in spite of the
+watchfulness of Simon and John, large numbers of the inhabitants
+made their escape to the Romans who, tired of slaying, spared their
+lives, but sold the able-bodied as slaves, and allowed the rest to
+pass through their lines.
+
+On the 1st of September, after eighteen days' incessant labour, the
+bank on the west against Herod's Palace was completed, and the
+battering rams commenced their work. The defenders were too
+enfeebled, by famine, to offer any serious resistance and, the next
+day, a long line of the wall fell to the ground.
+
+Simon and John at first thought of cutting their way through the
+Roman ranks but, when they saw how small was the body of followers
+gathered round them, they gave up the attempt. They hesitated, for
+a moment, whether they should throw themselves into the three great
+towers, and fight to the last; or endeavour to fight their way
+through the wall of circumvallation.
+
+They chose the latter course, hurried down to the lower end of the
+upper city and, sallying out from the gate, they rushed at the
+Roman wall; but they had no engines of war to batter it, they were
+few in number and weakened by famine; and when they tried to scale
+the wall the Roman guards, assembling in haste, beat them back; and
+they returned into the city and, scattering, hid themselves in the
+underground caves.
+
+The Romans advanced to the great towers, and found them deserted.
+Titus stood amazed at their strength and solidity; and exclaimed
+that God, indeed, was on their side for that by man, alone, these
+impregnable towers could never have been taken.
+
+All resistance having now ceased, the Romans spread themselves
+through the city, slaughtering all whom they met, without
+distinction of age or sex. They were, however, aghast at the
+spectacle which the houses into which they burst presented. Some of
+these had been used as charnel houses, and had been filled with
+dead bodies. In others were found the remains of whole families
+who, with their servants, had shut themselves up to die of hunger.
+Everywhere the dead far outnumbered the living.
+
+The next day, Titus issued an order that only such as possessed
+arms should be slain, and that all others should be taken
+prisoners; but the Roman soldiers were too infuriated at the losses
+and defeats they had suffered even to obey the orders of Titus, and
+all save the able-bodied, who would be of value as slaves, were
+slaughtered. A vast number of those fit for slaves were confined in
+the charred remains of the Women's Court and, so weakened were
+these, by the ravages of famine, that eleven thousand of them are
+said to have perished. Of the survivors, some were selected to
+grace the triumphal procession at Rome. Of the remainder, all under
+the age of seventeen were sold as slaves. A part of those above
+that age were distributed, among the amphitheatres of Syria, to
+fight as gladiators against the wild beasts; and the rest were
+condemned to labour in the public works, in Egypt, for the rest of
+their lives.
+
+When all above the surface had been slain, or made prisoners, the
+Romans set to work methodically to search the conduits, sewers, and
+passages under the city. Multitudes of fugitives were found here,
+and all were slain as soon as discovered. Then the army was set to
+work, to raze the city to the ground. Every building and wall were
+thrown down, the only exception being a great barrack adjoining
+Herod's Palace--which was left for the use of one of the legions,
+which was to be quartered there for a time--and the three great
+towers--Hippicus, Phasaelus, and Mariamne--which were left
+standing, in order that they might show to future generations how
+vast had been the strength of the fortifications which Roman valour
+had captured.
+
+John of Gischala and Simon had both so effectually concealed
+themselves that for a time, they escaped the Roman searchers. At
+the end of some days, however, John was compelled by famine to come
+out, and surrender. Simon was much longer, before he made his
+appearance. He had taken with him into his hiding place a few of
+his followers, and some stone masons with their tools, and an
+effort was made to drive a mine beyond the Roman outposts. The rock
+however was hard, and the men enfeebled by famine; and the
+consequence was that Simon, like his fellow leader, was compelled
+to make his way to the surface.
+
+The spot where he appeared was on the platform of the Temple, far
+from the shaft by which he had entered the underground galleries.
+He appeared at night, clad in white, and the Roman guards at first
+took him for a spectre; and he thus escaped instant death, and had
+time to declare who he was. Titus had already left; but Terentius
+Rufus--who commanded the Tenth Legion, which had been left
+behind--sent Simon in chains to Titus, at Caesarea; and he, as well
+as John of Gischala, were taken by the latter to Rome, to grace his
+triumph.
+
+"It is strange," John said, when he heard the story, "that the two
+men who have brought all these woes upon Jerusalem should have both
+escaped with their lives. The innocent have fallen, and the guilty
+escaped--yet not escaped, for it would have been better for them to
+have died fighting, in the court of the Temple, than to live as
+slaves in the hands of the Romans."
+
+A month later, John learned the fate that had befallen the two
+Jewish leaders. Both were dragged in the triumphal procession of
+Titus through the streets of Rome; then, according to the cruel
+Roman custom, Simon was first scourged and then executed, as the
+bravest of the enemies of Rome, while John of Gischala was
+sentenced to imprisonment for life.
+
+The day after the news of the return to Rome and triumph of Titus
+arrived, John asked Philo to tell Tibellus that he prayed that he
+would hear him, as he wished to speak to him on a subject connected
+with Titus. Wondering what his Jewish slave could have to say about
+the son of the emperor, Tibellus, upon hearing from Philo of the
+request, at once ordered John to be brought to him.
+
+"Let me bring my companion, also, with me," John said to Philo. "He
+is my adopted brother, and can bear evidence to the truth of my
+statements."
+
+When they reached the colonnade Philo told them to stop there and,
+a minute later, Tibellus came out.
+
+"Philo tells me that you have something to say to me, concerning
+Titus."
+
+"I have, my lord," John said, and he advanced and held out the
+ring.
+
+The Roman took it, and examined it.
+
+"It is a signet ring of Titus!" he said, in surprise. "How came you
+by this? This is a grave matter, slave; and if you cannot account
+satisfactorily as to how you came possessed of this signet, you had
+better have thrown yourself into the sea, or swallowed poison, than
+have spoken of your possession of this signet."
+
+"It was given to me by Titus, himself." John said.
+
+The Roman made a gesture of anger.
+
+"It is ill jesting with the name of Caesar," he said, sternly.
+"This is Caesar's ring. Doubtless it was stolen from him. You may
+have taken it from the robber by force, or fraud, or as a gift--I
+know not which--but do not mock me with such a tale as that Caesar
+gave one of his signets to you, a Jew."
+
+"It is as I said," John replied, calmly. "Titus himself bestowed
+that ring upon me; and said that, if I desired to come to him at
+any time, and showed it to a Roman, it would open all doors, and
+bring me to his presence."
+
+"You do not speak as if you were mad," Tibellus said, "and yet your
+tale is not credible.
+
+"Are you weary of life, Jew? Do you long to die by torture? Philo
+has spoken well to me of you and your young companion. You have
+laboured well, and cheerfully, he tells me; and are skilled at your
+work. Do you find your lot so hard that you would die to escape it,
+and so tell me this impossible story? For death, and a horrible
+death, will assuredly be your portion. If you persist in this tale
+and, showing me this ring, say: 'I demand that you send me and my
+companion to Titus,' I should be bound to do so; and then torture
+and death will be your portion, for mocking the name of Caesar."
+
+"My lord," John said, calmly, "I repeat that I mock not the name of
+Caesar, and that what I have told you is true. I am not weary of
+life, or discontented with my station. I have been kindly treated
+by Philo, and work no harder than I should work at my father's
+farm, in Galilee; but I naturally long to return home. I have
+abstained from showing you this ring before, because Titus had not
+as yet conquered Jerusalem; but now that I hear he has been
+received in triumph, in Rome, he would have time to give me an
+audience; and therefore I pray that I may be sent to him."
+
+"But how is it possible that Titus could have given you this ring?"
+Tibellus asked, impressed by the calmness of John's manner, and yet
+still unable to believe a statement which appeared to him
+altogether incredible.
+
+"I will tell you, my lord, but I will tell you alone; for although
+Titus made no secret of it at the time, he might not care for the
+story to be generally told."
+
+Tibellus waved his hand to Philo, who at once withdrew.
+
+"You have found it hard to believe what I have told you, my lord,"
+John went on. "You will find it harder, still, to believe what I
+now tell you; but if it is your command, I am bound to do so."
+
+"It is my command," Tibellus said, shortly. "I would fain know the
+whole of this monstrous tale."
+
+"I must first tell you, my lord, that though as yet but twenty-one
+years old, I have for four years fought with my countrymen against
+the Romans.
+
+"You see," he said, pointing to the scars on his head, arms, and
+body, "I have been wounded often and, as you may see for yourself,
+some of these scars are yet unhealed. Others are so old that you
+can scarce see their traces. This is a proof of so much, at least,
+of my story. My companion here and I were, by the protection of our
+God, enabled to escape from Jotapata, when all else save Josephus
+perished there. This was regarded by my countrymen as well-nigh a
+miracle, and as a proof that I had divine favour. In consequence a
+number of young men, when they took up arms, elected me as their
+leader and, for three years, we did what we could to oppose the
+progress of the Roman arms. It was as if a fly should try to stop a
+camel. Still, we did what we could, and any of the Roman officers
+who served under Titus would tell you that, of those who opposed
+them in the field, there was no more active partisan than the
+leader who was generally known as John of Gamala."
+
+"You, John of Gamala!" Tibellus exclaimed. "In frequent letters
+from my friends with the army I have read that name, and heard how
+incessant was the watchfulness required to resist his attacks, and
+how often small garrisons and parties were cut off by him. It was
+he, too, who burned Vespasian's camp, before Gamala. And you tell
+me, young man, that you are that Jewish hero--for hero he was,
+though it was against Rome he fought?"
+
+"I tell you so, my lord; and my adopted brother here, who was with
+me through these campaigns, will confirm what I say. I say it not
+boastingly, for my leadership was due to no special bravery on my
+part, but simply because the young men of the band thought that God
+had specially chosen me to lead them."
+
+"And now, about Titus," Tibellus said briefly, more and more
+convinced that his slave was audaciously inventing this story.
+
+"Once, near Hebron," John said, "I was passing through a valley,
+alone; when Titus, who was riding from Carmelia in obedience to a
+summons from Vespasian--who was at Hebron--came upon me. He
+attacked me, and we fought--"
+
+"You and Titus, hand to hand?" Tibellus asked, with a short laugh.
+
+"Titus and I, hand to hand," John repeated, quietly. "He had
+wounded me twice, when I sprang within his guard and closed with
+him. His foot slipped, and he fell. For a moment I could have slain
+him, if I would, but I did not.
+
+"Then I fainted from loss of blood. Titus was shortly joined by
+some of his men, and he had me carried down to his camp; where I
+was kindly nursed for a week, he himself visiting me several times.
+At the end of that time he dismissed me, giving me his signet ring,
+and telling me that if ever again I fell into the hands of the
+Romans, and wished to see him, I had but to show the ring to a
+Roman, and that he would send me to him."
+
+"And to him you shall go," Tibellus said, sternly; "and better
+would it have been that you had never been born, than that I should
+send you to him with such a tale as this."
+
+So saying, he turned away, while John and his companion returned to
+their work. The Roman officer was absolutely incredulous, as to the
+story he had heard; and indignant in the extreme at what he
+considered the audacity of the falsehood. Still, he could not but
+be struck by the calmness with which John told the story, nor could
+he see what motive he could have in inventing it. Its falsity
+would, of course, be made apparent the instant he arrived in Rome;
+whereas had he said, as was doubtless the truth, that he had
+obtained the ring from one who had stolen it from Titus, he might
+have obtained his freedom, and a reward for its restoration.
+
+After thinking the matter over for a time, he ordered his horse and
+rode into the city. One of the legions from Palestine had returned
+there, while two had accompanied Titus to Rome, and a fourth had
+remained in Judea. Tibellus rode at once to the headquarters of the
+commander of the legion. He had just returned, with some of his
+officers, from a parade of the troops. They had taken off their
+armour, and a slave was pouring wine into goblets for them.
+
+"Ah, Tibellus!" he said, "Is it you? Drink, my friend, and tell us
+what ails you, for in truth you look angered and hot."
+
+"I have been angered, by one of my slaves," Tibellus said.
+
+"Then there is no trouble in that," the Roman said, with a smile;
+"throw him to the fishes, and buy another. They are cheap enough,
+for we have flooded the world with slaves and, as we know to our
+cost, they are scarce saleable. We have brought two or three
+thousand with us, and can get no bid for them."
+
+"Yes, but this matter can't be settled so," Tibellus said; "but
+first, I want to ask you a question or two. You heard, of course,
+of John of Gamala, in your wars in Judea?"
+
+There was a chorus of assent.
+
+"That did we, indeed, to our cost," the general said; "save the two
+leaders in Jerusalem, he was the most dangerous; and was by far the
+most troublesome of our foes. Many a score of sleepless nights has
+that fellow caused us; from the time he well-nigh burnt all our
+camp before Gamala, he was a thorn in our side. One never knew
+where he was, or when to expect him. One day we heard of him
+attacking a garrison at the other end of the country, and the next
+night he would fall upon our camp. We never marched through a
+ravine, without expecting to see him and his men appearing on the
+hills, and sending the rocks thundering down among us; and the
+worst of it was, do what we would, we could never get to close
+quarters with him. His men could march three miles to our one; and
+as for our Arabs, if we sent them in pursuit, they would soon come
+flying back to us, leaving a goodly portion of their numbers dead
+behind them. He was the most formidable enemy we had, outside
+Jerusalem; and had all the Jews fought as he did, instead of
+shutting themselves up in their walled towns, we might have been
+years before we subdued that pestilent country."
+
+"Did you ever see this John of Gamala? Do you know what he was
+like, personally? Was he another giant, like this Simon who was
+executed at the triumph, the other day?"
+
+"None of us ever saw him--that is, to know which was he, though
+doubtless we may have seen him, in the fights--but all the country
+people we questioned, and such wounded men as fell into our
+hands--for we never once captured one of his band, unharmed--all
+asserted that he was little more than a lad. He was strong, and
+skilful in arms, but in years a youth. They all believed that he
+was a sort of prophet, one who had a mission from their God.
+
+"But why are you asking?"
+
+"I will tell you, presently," Tibellus said; "but first answer me
+another question. Was it not your legion that was at Carmelia, with
+Titus, when Vespasian lay at Hebron?"
+
+There was a general assent.
+
+"Did you ever hear of a wounded Jew being brought in, and tended
+there by order of Titus?"
+
+"We did," the general said; "and here is Plancus, who was in
+command of that part of the horse of the legion which formed the
+bodyguard of Titus, and who brought him into the camp. He will tell
+you about it."
+
+"Titus had received a message from Vespasian that he wished to see
+him," the officer signified by the general said, "and rode off at
+once, telling us to follow him. We armed and mounted, as soon as we
+could; but Titus was well mounted, and had a considerable start. We
+came up to him in a valley. He was standing by the side of his dead
+horse. He was slightly wounded, and his dirtied armour showed that
+he had had a sharp fight. Close by lay a Jew, who seemed to be
+dead. Titus ordered him to be carried back to the camp, and cared
+for by his own leech. That is all I know about it."
+
+"I can tell you more," the general said, "for Titus himself told me
+that he had had a desperate fight with the Jew; that he had wounded
+him severely, and was on the point of finishing him, when the Jew
+sprang at him suddenly and the sudden shock threw him to the
+ground; and that, strange as it might seem, although knowing who he
+was, the Jew spared his life. It was a strange story, and anyone
+besides Titus would have kept it to himself; and run his sword
+through the body of the Jew, to make sure of his silence; but Titus
+has notions of his own, and he is as generous as he is brave. By
+what he said, I gathered that the Jew abstained from striking,
+believing--as was truly the case--that Titus was more merciful than
+Vespasian, and that he would spare Jerusalem and their Temple, if
+he could.
+
+"And now, why all these questions?"
+
+"One more on my part first: what became of the Jew, and what was he
+like?"
+
+"That is two questions," the general replied; "however, I will
+answer them. Titus let him go free, when he was recovered from his
+wounds. He was a young man, of some twenty years old."
+
+"And do you know his name?"
+
+"I know his name was John, for so he told Titus; but as every other
+Jew one comes across is John, that does not tell much."
+
+"I can tell you his other name," Tibellus said. "It was John of
+Gamala."
+
+An exclamation of astonishment broke from the officers.
+
+"So that was John of Gamala, himself!" the general said. "None of
+us ever dreamt of it; and yet it might well have been for, now I
+think of it, the young fellow I saw lying wounded in the tent next
+to that of Titus answered, exactly, to the description we have
+heard of him; and the fact that he overcame Titus, in itself, shows
+that he had unusual strength and bravery.
+
+"But how do you know about this?"
+
+"Simply because John of Gamala is, at present, working as a slave
+in my garden."
+
+"You do not say so!" the general exclaimed. "We have often wondered
+what became of him. We learned, from the deserters, that he had
+entered into Jerusalem, and was fighting there against us. They all
+agreed that the men he had brought with him took no part in the
+atrocities of the soldiers of Simon, and John of Gischala; but that
+they kept together, and lived quietly, and harmed no man. It was
+they, we heard, who did the chief part in the three days' fighting
+at the breach of the lower town; but we never heard what became of
+him, and supposed that he must have fallen in the fighting round
+the Temple.
+
+"And so, he is your slave, Tibellus! How did you know it was he,
+and what are you going to do? The war is over, now, and there has
+been bloodshed enough and, after all, he was a gallant enemy, who
+fought us fairly and well."
+
+"He told me, himself, who he was," Tibellus said; "but I believed that
+he was lying to me. I had heard often of John of Gamala, and deemed
+that he was a brave and skilful warrior; and it seemed impossible that
+young man could be he. As to what I am going to do with him, I have
+nothing to do but what he has himself demanded--namely, to be sent to
+Titus. He produced the signet ring of Caesar; said that it was given
+to him by the general, himself; and that he told him that, if he
+presented it to a Roman at any time, he would lead him to his presence.
+I believed that he had stolen the ring, or had got it from somebody
+that had stolen it; and he then told me of the story, very much as you
+have told it--save that he said that, when he was well-nigh conquered by
+Titus, and sprang upon him, Caesar's foot slipped, and he fell--hinting
+that his success was the result of accident, rather than his own effort.
+He spoke by no means boastingly of it, but as if it was the most natural
+thing in the world."
+
+"There he showed discretion, and wisdom," the general said; "but
+truly this is a marvellous story. If he had not appealed to Caesar,
+I should have said, 'Give him his freedom.' You can buy a new slave
+for a few sesterces. This young fellow is too good to be a slave
+and, now that Judea is finally crushed, he could never become
+dangerous; but as he has demanded to be sent to Caesar, you must,
+of course, send him there. Besides, with the ideas that Titus has,
+he may be really glad to see the youth again.
+
+"But we shall like to see him, also. We all honour a brave
+adversary, and I should like to see him who so long set us at
+defiance."
+
+"I will bring him down, tomorrow, at this hour," Tibellus said; and
+then, taking leave of the officers, he mounted and rode back.
+
+On reaching home, he at once sent for John.
+
+"I doubted your story, when you told it to me," he said, "and
+deemed it impossible; but I have been down to the officers of the
+legion which arrived, last week, from Judea. It chances to be the
+very one which was at Carmelia, when Vespasian lay at Hebron; and I
+find that your story is fully confirmed--although, indeed, they did
+not know that the wounded man Titus sent in was John of Gamala--but
+as they admit that he answered, exactly, to the description which
+they have heard of that leader, they doubt not that it was he.
+
+"However, be assured that your request is granted, and that you
+shall be sent to Rome by the next ship that goes thither."
+
+
+
+Chapter 19: At Rome.
+
+
+Tibellus at once ordered John to be released from all further work,
+the badge of slavery to be removed, and that he should be supplied
+with handsome garments, removed into the house, and assigned an
+apartment with the freedmen. The bearer of the signet of Titus--now
+that it was ascertained that the signet had been really given to
+him by Caesar--was an important person, and was to be received with
+consideration, if not honour. When these changes had been made,
+John was again brought before Tibellus.
+
+"Is there anything else that I can do for your comfort, as one who
+has been honoured by Titus, himself, our future emperor? You have
+but to express your wishes, and I shall be glad to carry them out."
+
+"I would ask, then," John said, "that my friend and companion may
+be set free, and allowed to accompany me to Rome. He is my adopted
+brother. He has fought and slept by my side, for the last four
+years; and your bounty to me gives me no pleasure, so long as he is
+labouring as a slave."
+
+Tibellus at once sent for Philo, and ordered the collar to be filed
+from the neck of Jonas, and for him to be treated in the same
+manner as John.
+
+The next day Tibellus invited John to accompany him to the barracks
+and, as he would take no excuses, he was obliged to do so.
+
+Tibellus presented him to the general and his officers, who
+received him very cordially; and were much struck with his quiet
+demeanour, and the nobility of his bearing. John had, for four
+years, been accustomed to command; and the belief, entertained by
+his followers, in his special mission had had its effect upon his
+manner. Although simple and unassuming in mind; and always ready,
+on his return to the farm, to become again the simple worker upon
+his father's farm; he had yet, insensibly, acquired the bearing of
+one born to position and authority.
+
+He was much above the ordinary height; and although his figure was
+slight, it showed signs, which could well be appreciated by the
+Romans, of great activity and unusual strength. His face was
+handsome, his forehead lofty, his eyes large and soft; and in the
+extreme firmness of his mouth and his square chin and jaw were
+there, alone, signs of the determination and steadfastness which
+had made him so formidable a foe to the Romans.
+
+"So you are John of Gamala!" the general said. "We have, doubtless,
+nearly crossed swords, more than once. You have caused us many a
+sleepless night, and it seemed to us that you and your bands were
+ubiquitous. I am glad to meet you, as are we all. A Roman cherishes
+no malice against an honourable foe, and such we always found you;
+and I trust you have no malice for the past."
+
+"None," John said. "I regard you as the instruments of God for the
+punishment of my people. We brought our misfortunes upon ourselves,
+by the rebellion--which would have seemed madness had it not,
+doubtless, been the will of God that we should so provoke you, and
+perish. All I ask, now, is to return to my father's farm; and to
+resume my life there. If I could do that, without going to Rome, I
+would gladly do so."
+
+"That can hardly be," Tibellus said. "The rule is that when one
+appeals to Caesar, to Caesar he must go. The case is at once taken
+out of our hands. Besides, I should have to report the fact to
+Rome, and Titus may wish to see you, and might be ill pleased at
+hearing that you had returned to Galilee without going to see him.
+Besides, it may be some time before all animosity between the two
+peoples dies out there; and you might obtain from him an imperial
+order, which would prove a protection to yourself, and family,
+against any who might desire to molest you. If for this reason,
+alone, it would be well worth your while for you to proceed to
+Rome."
+
+Three days later, Tibellus told John that a ship would sail, next
+morning; and that a centurion, in charge of some invalided
+soldiers, would go in her.
+
+"I have arranged for you to go in his charge, and have instructed
+him to accompany you to the palace of Titus, and facilitate your
+having an interview with him. I have given him a letter to present
+to Titus, with greetings, saying why I have sent you to him.
+
+"Here is a purse of money, to pay for what you may require on the
+voyage; and to keep you, if need be, at Rome until you can see
+Titus, who may possibly be absent.
+
+"You owe me no thanks," he said, as John was about to speak. "Titus
+would be justly offended, were the bearer of his signet ring sent
+to him without due care and honour."
+
+That evening Tibellus gave a banquet, at which the general and
+several officers were present. The total number present was nine,
+including John and the host--this being the favourite number for
+what they regarded as small, private entertainments. At large
+banquets, hundreds of persons were frequently entertained. After
+the meal John, at the request of Tibellus, related to the officers
+the manner of his escapes from Jotapata and Jerusalem, and several
+of the incidents of the struggle in which he had taken part.
+
+The next morning, he and Jonas took their places on board the ship,
+and sailed for Rome. It was now far in November, and the passage
+was a boisterous one; and the size of the waves astonished John,
+accustomed, as he was, only to the short choppy seas of the Lake of
+Galilee. Jonas made up his mind that they were lost and, indeed,
+for some days the vessel was in imminent danger. Instead of passing
+through the straits between Sicily and the mainland of Italy, they
+were blown far to the west; and finally took shelter in the harbour
+of Caralis, in Sardinia. Here they remained for a week, to refit
+and repair damages, and then sailed across to Portus Augusti, and
+then up the Tiber.
+
+The centurion had done his best to make the voyage a pleasant one,
+to John and his companion. Having been informed that the former was
+the bearer of a signet ring of Titus, and would have an audience
+with him, he was anxious to create as good an impression as
+possible; but it was not until Caralis was reached that John
+recovered sufficiently from seasickness to take much interest in
+what was passing round him. The travellers were greatly struck with
+the quantity of shipping entering and leaving the mouth of the
+Tiber; the sea being dotted with the sails of the vessels bearing
+corn from Sardinia, Sicily, and Africa; and products of all kinds,
+from every port in the world.
+
+The sight of Rome impressed him less than he had expected. Of its
+vastness he could form no opinion; but in strength, and beauty, it
+appeared to him inferior to Jerusalem. When he landed, he saw how
+many were the stately palaces and temples; but of the former none
+were more magnificent than that of Herod. Nor was there one of the
+temples to be compared, for a moment, with that which had so lately
+stood, the wonder and admiration of the world, upon Mount Moriah.
+
+The centurion procured a commodious lodging for him and, finding
+that Titus was still in Rome, accompanied him the next day to the
+palace. Upon saying that he was the bearer of a letter to Titus,
+the centurion was shown into the inner apartments; John being left
+in the great antechamber, which was crowded with officers waiting
+to see Titus, when he came out--to receive orders, pay their
+respects, or present petitions to him.
+
+The centurion soon returned, and told John to follow him.
+
+"Titus was very pleased," he whispered, "when he read the letter I
+brought him; and begged me bring you, at once, to his presence."
+
+Titus was alone in a small chamber, whose simplicity contrasted
+strangely with the magnificence of those through which he had
+passed. He rose from a table at which he had been writing.
+
+"Ah, my good friend," he said, "I am truly glad to see you! I made
+sure that you were dead. You were not among those who came out, and
+gave themselves up, or among those who were captured when the city
+was taken; for I had careful inquiry made, thinking it possible
+that you might have lost my ring, and been unable to obtain access
+to me; then, at last, I made sure that you had fallen. I am truly
+glad to see that it is not so."
+
+"I was marvellously preserved, then, as at Jotapata," John said;
+"and escaped, after the Temple had fallen, by a secret passage
+leading out beyond the wall of circumvallation. As I made my way
+home, I fell into the hands of some slave dealers, who seized me
+and my companion--who is my adopted brother--and carried us away to
+Alexandria, where I was sold. As you had not yet returned to Rome,
+I thought it better not to produce your signet, which I had
+fortunately managed to conceal.
+
+"When I heard that you had reached Rome, and had received your
+triumph, I produced the ring to my master Tibellus; and prayed him
+to send me and my companion here to you, in order that I might ask
+for liberty, and leave to return to my home. He treated me with the
+greatest kindness and, but that I had appealed to you, would of
+himself have set us free. It is for this, alone, that I have come
+here; to ask you to confirm the freedom he has given me, and to
+permit me to return to Galilee. Further, if you will give me your
+order that I and mine may live peacefully, without molestation from
+any, it would add to your favours."
+
+"I will do these, certainly," Titus said, "and far more, if you
+will let me. I shall never forget that you saved my life; and
+believe me, I did my best to save the Temple, which was what I
+promised you. I did not say that I would save it, merely that I
+would do my best; but your obstinate countrymen insisted in
+bringing destruction upon it."
+
+"I know that you did all that was possible," John said, "and that
+the blame lies with them, and not with you, in any way. However, it
+was the will of God that it should be destroyed; and they were the
+instruments of his will, while they thought they were trying to
+preserve it."
+
+"But now," Titus said, "you must let me do more for you. Have you
+ambition? I will push you forward to high position, and dignity. Do
+you care for wealth? I have the treasures of Rome in my gift. Would
+you serve in the army? Many of the Alexandrian Jews had high rank
+in the army of Anthony. Two of Cleopatra's best generals were your
+countrymen. I know your bravery, and your military talents, and
+will gladly push you forward."
+
+"I thank you, Caesar, for your offers," John said, "which far
+exceed my deserts; but I would rather pass my life as a tiller of
+the soil, in Galilee. The very name of a Jew, at present, is
+hateful in the ear of a Roman. All men who succeed by the favour of
+a great prince are hated. I should be still more so, as a Jew. I
+should be hated by my own countrymen, as well as yours, for they
+would regard me as a traitor. There would be no happiness in such a
+life. A thousand times better a home by the Lake of Galilee, with a
+wife and children."
+
+"If such be your determination, I will say nought against it,"
+Titus said; "but remember, if at any time you tire of such a life,
+come to me and I will give you a post of high honour and dignity.
+There are glorious opportunities for talent and uprightness in our
+distant dependencies--east and west--where there will be no
+prejudices against the name of a Jew.
+
+"However, for the present let that be. Tomorrow I will have
+prepared for you an imperial order--to all Roman officers, civil
+and military, of Galilee and Judea--to treat you as the friend of
+Titus; also the appointment as procurator of the district lying
+north of the river Hieromax, up to the boundary of Chorazin, for a
+distance of ten miles back from the lake. You will not refuse that
+office, for it will enable you to protect your country people from
+oppression, and to bring prosperity upon the whole district.
+
+"Lastly, you will receive with the documents a sum of money. I know
+that you will not use it on yourself, but it will be long before
+the land recovers from its wounds. There will be terrible misery
+and distress; and I should like to think that in the district, at
+least, of my friend, there are peace and contentment. Less than
+this Caesar cannot give to the man who spared his life."
+
+John thanked Titus, most heartily, for his favours; which would, he
+saw, ensure his family and neighbours from the oppression and
+tyranny to which a conquered people are exposed, at the hands of a
+rough soldiery. Titus ordered an apartment to be prepared for him,
+in the palace; and begged him to take up his abode there, until a
+vessel should be sailing for Casarea. Slaves were told off to
+attend upon him, and to escort him in the city; and everything was
+done to show the esteem and friendship in which Titus held him.
+Titus had several interviews with him; and learned now, for the
+first time, that he was the John of Gamala who had so long and
+stoutly opposed the Romans.
+
+"If I had known that," Titus said, with a smile, "when you were in
+my hands, I do not think I should have let you go free; though your
+captivity would have been an honourable one. When you said that you
+would not promise to desist from opposing our arms, I thought that
+one man, more or less, in the ranks of the enemy would make little
+difference; but had I known that it was the redoubtable John of
+Gamala who was in my hands, I should hardly have thought myself
+justified in letting you go free."
+
+John, at the request of Titus, gave him a sketch of the incidents
+of his life, and of the campaign.
+
+"So you have already a lady love," Titus said, when he had
+finished. "What shall I send her?
+
+"Better nothing, at present," he said, after a moment's thought and
+a smile, "beyond yourself. That will be the best and most
+acceptable gift I could send her. Time, and your good report, may
+soften the feelings with which doubtless she, like all the rest of
+your countrywomen, must regard me; though the gods know I would
+gladly have spared Galilee, and Judea, from the ruin which has
+fallen upon them."
+
+In addition to the two documents which he had promised him, Titus
+thoughtfully gave him another, intended for the perusal of his own
+countrymen only. It was in the form of a letter, saying to John
+that he had appointed him procurator of the strip of territory
+bordering the Lake of Galilee on the east, not from any submission
+on his part, still less at his request; but solely as a proof of
+his admiration for the stubborn and determined manner in which he
+had fought throughout the war, the absence of any cruelty practised
+upon Romans who fell into his hands, of his esteem for his
+character, and as a remembrance of the occasion when they two had
+fought, hand to hand, alone in the valley going down from Hebron.
+
+The gold was sent directly on board a ship. It was in a box, which
+required four strong men to lift. A centurion, with twenty men, was
+put on board the ship; with orders to land with John at Casarea,
+and to escort him to his own home, or as near as he might choose to
+take them. Titus took a cordial leave of him, and expressed a hope
+that John would, some day, change his mind and accept his offer of
+a post; and that, at any rate, he hoped that he would, from time to
+time, come to Rome to see him.
+
+The voyage to Caesarea was performed without accident.
+
+"I shall look back at our visit to Rome as a dream," Jonas said,
+one evening, as they sat together on the deck of the ship. "To
+think that I, the goatherd of Jotapata, should have been living in
+the palace of Caesar, at Rome; with you, the friend of Titus,
+himself! It seems marvellous; but I am weary of the crowded
+streets, of the noise, and bustle, and wealth and colour. I long to
+get rid of this dress, in which I feel as if I were acting a part
+in a play.
+
+"Do not you, John?"
+
+"I do, indeed," John replied. "I should never accustom myself to
+such a life as that. I am longing for a sight of the lake, and my
+dear home; and of those I love, who must be mourning for me, as
+dead."
+
+At Caesarea, a vehicle was procured for the carriage of the chest,
+and the party then journeyed until they were within sight of
+Tarichea. John then dismissed his escort, with thanks for their
+attention during the journey, and begged them to go on to the city
+by themselves. When they were out of sight, he and Jonas took off
+their Roman garments, and put on others they had purchased at
+Caesarea, similar to those they were accustomed to wear at home.
+Then they proceeded, with the cart and its driver, into Tarichea;
+and hired a boat to take them up the lake. The boatmen were
+astonished at the weight of John's chest, and thought that it must
+contain lead, for making into missiles for slingers.
+
+It was evening when the boat approached the well-known spot, and
+John and his companion sprang out on the beach.
+
+"What shall we do with the chest?" one of the boatmen asked.
+
+"We will carry it to that clump of bushes, and pitch it in among
+them, until we want it. None will run off with it, and they
+certainly would not find it easy to break it open."
+
+This reply confirmed the men in their idea that it could contain
+nothing of value and, after helping John and Jonas to carry the
+chest to the point indicated, they returned to their boat and rowed
+away down the lake.
+
+"Now, Jonas, we must be careful," John said, "how we approach the
+house. It would give them a terrible shock, if I came upon them
+suddenly. I think you had better go up alone, and see Isaac, and
+bring him to me; then we can talk over the best way of breaking it
+to the others."
+
+It was nearly an hour before Jonas brought Isaac down to the spot
+where John was standing, a hundred yards away from the house; for
+he had to wait some time before he could find an opportunity of
+speaking to him. Jonas had but just broken the news, that John was
+at hand, when they reached the spot where he was standing.
+
+"Is it indeed you, my dear young master?" the old man said, falling
+on John's neck. "This is unlooked-for joy, indeed. The Lord be
+praised for his mercies! What will your parents say, they who have
+wept for you for months, as dead?"
+
+"They are well, I hope, Isaac?"
+
+"They are shaken, greatly shaken," old Isaac said. "The tempest has
+passed over them; the destruction of Jerusalem, the woes of our
+people, and your loss have smitten them to the ground but, now that
+you have returned, it will give them new life."
+
+"And Mary, she is well, I hope, too?" John asked.
+
+"The maiden is not ill, though I cannot say that she is well,"
+Isaac said. "Long after your father and mother, and all of us, had
+given up hope, she refused to believe that you were dead; even when
+the others put on mourning, she would not do so--but of late I know
+that, though she has never said so, hope has died in her, too. Her
+cheeks have grown pale, and her eyes heavy; but she still keeps up,
+for the sake of your parents; and we often look, and wonder how she
+can bear herself so bravely."
+
+"And how are we to break it to the old people?" John asked.
+
+Isaac shook his head. The matter was beyond him.
+
+"I should think," Jonas suggested, "that Isaac should go back, and
+break it to them, first, that I have returned; that I have been a
+slave among the Romans, and have escaped from them. He might say
+that he has questioned me, and that I said that you certainly did
+not fall at the siege of Jerusalem; and that I believe that you,
+like me, were sold as a slave by the Romans.
+
+"Then you can take me in, and let them question me. I will stick to
+that story, for a time, raising some hopes in their breasts; till
+at last I can signify to Mary that you are alive, and leave it to
+her to break it to the others."
+
+"That will be the best way, by far," John said. "Yes, that will do
+excellently well.
+
+"Now, Isaac, do you go on, and do your part. Tell them gently that
+Jonas has returned, that he has been a slave, and escaped from the
+Romans; and that, as far as he knows, I am yet alive. Then, when
+they are prepared, bring him in, and let him answer their
+questions."
+
+The evening meal had been ended before Isaac had left the room to
+feed, with some warm milk, a kid whose dam had died. It was while
+he was engaged upon this duty that Jonas had come upon him. When he
+entered the room Simon was sitting, with the open Bible before him,
+at the head of the table; waiting his return to commence the
+evening prayers.
+
+"What has detained you, Isaac?" he asked. "Surely it is not after
+all these years you would forget our evening prayers?"
+
+"I was detained," the old man said, unsteadily and, at the sound of
+his voice, and the sight of his face, as it came within the circle
+of the light from the lamp, Mary rose suddenly to her feet, and
+stood looking at him.
+
+"What is it?" she asked, in a low voice.
+
+"Why," Simon asked calmly, "what has detained you, Isaac?"
+
+"A strange thing has happened," the old man said. "One of our
+wanderers has returned--not he whom we have hoped and prayed for
+most--but Jonas. He has been a slave, but has escaped, and come
+back to us."
+
+"And what is his news?" Simon asked, rising to his feet; but even
+more imperative was the unspoken question on Mary's white face, and
+parted lips.
+
+"He gives us hope," Isaac said to her. "So far as he knows, John
+may yet be alive."
+
+"I knew it, I knew it!" Mary said, in a voice scarcely above a
+whisper.
+
+"O Lord, I thank thee. Why have I doubted Thy mercy?"
+
+And she stood, for a moment, with head thrown back and eyes
+upraised; then she swayed suddenly, and would have fallen, had not
+Isaac run forward and supported her until, at Martha's cry, two of
+the maids hastened up and placed her on a seat.
+
+Some water was held to her lips. She drank a little, and then said,
+faintly, "Tell us more, Isaac."
+
+"I have not much more to tell," he replied. "Jonas says that John
+certainly did not fall in Jerusalem--as, indeed, we were told by
+the young man of his band who returned--and that he believes that,
+like himself, he was sold as a slave.
+
+"But Jonas is outside. I thought it better to tell you, first. Now,
+I will call him in to speak for himself."
+
+When Jonas entered, Martha and Mary were clasped in each other's
+arms. Miriam, with the tears streaming down her cheeks, was
+repeating aloud one of the Psalms of thanksgiving; while Simon
+stood with head bent low, and his hands grasping the table, upon
+which the tears were raining down in heavy drops.
+
+It was some little time before they could question Jonas further.
+Martha and Mary had embraced him as if he had been the son of one,
+the brother of the other. Simon solemnly blessed him, and welcomed
+him as one from the dead. Then they gathered round to hear his
+story.
+
+"John and I both escaped all the dangers of the siege," he said.
+"We were wounded several times, but never seriously. God seemed to
+watch over us; and although at the last, of the six hundred men
+with which we entered Jerusalem there were but twelve who remained
+alive, we were among them."
+
+"Yes, yes, we knew that," Martha said. "News was brought by a young
+man of his band, who belonged to a village on the lake, that twelve
+of you had escaped together on the day the Temple fell. The others
+all returned to their homes, but no news ever came of you; and they
+said that some party of Romans must have killed you--what else
+could have befallen you? And now we are in February--nearly six
+months have passed--and no word of you!"
+
+"We were carried off as slaves," Jonas said, "and taken, like
+Joseph, to be sold in Egypt."
+
+"And have you seen him, since?" Simon asked.
+
+"Yes, I saw him in Egypt."
+
+"And he was well then?"
+
+"Quite well," Jonas replied. "I was sent to Rome, and thence
+managed to make my way back by ship."
+
+"We must purchase him back," Simon said. "Surely that must be
+possible! I have money, still. I will make the journey, myself, and
+buy him."
+
+And he rose to his feet, as if to start at once.
+
+"Well, not now," he went on, in answer to the hand which Martha
+laid on his shoulder, "but tomorrow."
+
+While he was speaking, Mary had touched Jonas, gazing into his face
+with the same eager question her eyes had asked Isaac. The thought
+that Jonas was not alone had flashed across her. He nodded
+slightly, and looked towards the door. In a moment she was gone.
+
+"John!" she cried, as she ran out of the house; at first in a low
+tone, but louder and louder as she ran on. "John! John! Where are
+you?"
+
+A figure stepped out from among the trees, and Mary fell into his
+arms. A few minutes later, she re-entered the room.
+
+"Father," she said, going up to Simon, while she took Martha's hand
+in hers, "do you remember you told me, once, that when you were a
+young man you went to hear the preaching of a teacher of the sect
+of the Essenes, whom they afterwards slew. You thought he was a
+good man, and a great teacher; and you said he told a parable, and
+you remembered the very words. I think I remember them, now:
+
+"'And his father saw him, and ran and fell on his neck, and kissed
+him, and said, "Let us be merry, for this my son was dead, and is
+alive again; he was lost and is found."'
+
+"And so, father, is it even unto us."
+
+Illustration: The Return of John to his House on the Lake.
+
+Martha gave a loud cry, and turned to the door and, in another
+moment, was clasped in John's arms. Then his father fell on his
+neck.
+
+There was no happier household in the land than that which joined
+in the Psalms of thanksgiving that night. The news spread quickly
+to the fishermen's cottages, and the neighbours flocked in to
+congratulate Simon and Martha on the return of their son; and it
+was long since the strains of the songs of joy had floated out so
+clear and strong over the water of Galilee for, for years, strains
+of lamentation and humiliation, alone, had been on the lips of the
+Jewish maidens.
+
+After the service of song was over, Miriam and the maids loaded the
+table, while Isaac fetched a skin of the oldest wine from the
+cellar, and all who had assembled were invited to join the feast.
+
+When the neighbours had retired, John asked his father and Isaac to
+come down with him, and Jonas, to the side of the lake, to bring up
+a chest that was lying there.
+
+"It is rather too heavy for Jonas and me to carry, alone."
+
+"It would have been better, my son, to have asked some of our
+neighbours. They would gladly have assisted you, and Isaac and I
+have not, between us, the strength of one man."
+
+"I know it, father, but I do not wish that any, besides ourselves,
+should know that the box is here. We will take a pole and a rope
+with us, and can adjust the weight so that your portion shall not
+be beyond your strength."
+
+On arriving at the spot, Simon was surprised at seeing a small box,
+which it would be thought a woman could have lifted, with ease.
+
+"Is this the box of which you spoke, John? Surely you want no aid
+to carry this up?"
+
+"We do, indeed, father, as you will see."
+
+With the assistance of Jonas, John put the rope round the box, and
+slung it to the pole near one end. He and Jonas then took this end.
+Simon and Isaac lifted that farthest from the box, so that but a
+small share of the weight rested upon them. So the chest was
+carried up to the house.
+
+"What is this you have brought home?" Martha asked, as they laid
+the box down in the principal room.
+
+"It is gold, mother--gold to be used for the relief of the poor and
+distressed, for those who have been made homeless and fatherless in
+this war. It was a gift to me, as I will tell you, tomorrow; but I
+need not say that I would not touch one penny of it, for it is
+Roman gold. But it will place it in our power to do immense good,
+among the poor. We had best bury it, just beneath the floor, so
+that we can readily get at it when we have need."
+
+"It is a great responsibility, my son," Simon said; "but truly,
+there are thousands of homeless and starving families who sought
+refuge among the hills, when their towns and villages were
+destroyed by the Romans and, with this store of gold, which must be
+of great value, truly great things can be done towards relieving
+their necessities."
+
+The next morning, John related to his family the various incidents
+which had befallen him and Jonas since they had last parted; and
+their surprise was unbounded, when he produced the three documents
+with which he had been furnished by Titus. The letters, saying that
+the favour of Caesar had been bestowed upon John as a token of
+admiration, only, for the bravery with which he had fought, and
+ordering that all Romans should treat him as one having the favour
+and friendship of Titus, gave them unbounded satisfaction. That
+appointing him procurator of the whole district bordering the lake
+to the east surprised, and almost bewildered them.
+
+"But what are you going to do, my son? Are you going to leave us,
+and live in a palace, and appear as a Roman officer?"
+
+"I am not thinking of doing that, father," John said, with a smile.
+"For myself I would much rather that this dignity had not been
+conferred on me by Titus; and I would gladly put this commission,
+with its imperial seal, into the fire. But I feel that I cannot do
+this, for it gives me great power of doing good to our neighbours.
+I shall be able to protect them from all oppression by Roman
+soldiers, or by tax gatherers. There is no occasion for me to live
+in a palace, or to wear the garments of a Roman official. The
+letter of Titus shows that it is to a Jew that he has given this
+power, and as a Jew I shall use it.
+
+"While journeying here from Rome, I have thought much over the
+matter. At first, I thought of suppressing the order. Then, I felt
+that a power of good had been given into my hands; and that I had
+no right, from selfish reasons, to shrink from its execution.
+Doubtless, at first I shall be misunderstood. They will say that I,
+like Josephus, have turned traitor, and have gone over to the
+Romans. Even were it so, I should have done no more than all the
+people of Tiberias, Sepphoris, and other cities which submitted to
+them.
+
+"But I do not think this feeling will last long. All those who
+fought with me outside Jerusalem, against the Romans, know that I
+was faithful to the cause of my country. The few survivors of the
+band I led into Jerusalem can testify that I fought until the
+Temple fell, and that I escaped by my own devices, and not from any
+agreement with the Romans.
+
+"Moreover they will, in time, judge me by my acts. I shall rule, as
+I said, as a Jew, and not as a Roman--rule as did the judges in the
+old times, sitting under my own fig tree, here, and listening to
+the complaints that may be brought to me--and I trust that wisdom
+will be given to me, by the Lord, to judge wisely and justly among
+them."
+
+"You have decided well, my son," Simon said. "May God's blessing be
+upon you!
+
+"What think you, little Mary? How do you like the prospect of being
+the wife of the ruler of this district?"
+
+"I would rather that he had been the ruler only of this farm," Mary
+said, "but I see that a great power of good has been given into his
+hands, and it is not for me to complain."
+
+"That reminds me," Simon said, "of what Martha and I were speaking
+together, last night. You have both waited long. There is no
+occasion for longer tarrying. The marriage feast will be prepared,
+and we will summon our neighbours and friends to assemble here,
+this day week.
+
+"And now, John, what are you going to do?"
+
+"I am going, father, at once to Hippos, the chief town in the
+district. I shall see the authorities of the town, and the captain
+of the Roman garrison, and lay before them the commission of
+Caesar. I shall then issue a proclamation, announcing to all people
+within the limits of the district that have been marked out that I
+have authority, from Rome, to judge all matters that may come
+before me, in the district; and that all who have causes of
+complaint, or who have been wronged by any, will find me here,
+ready to hear their cause, and to order justice to be rendered to
+them. I shall also say that I shall shortly make a tour through the
+district, to see for myself into the condition of things, and to
+give aid to such as need it."
+
+Great was the surprise of the Roman and Jewish authorities, in
+Hippos, when John produced the imperial commission. There was,
+however, no doubting or disputing it. The Roman officers at once
+placed themselves under his orders, and issued proclamations of
+their own, in addition to that of John, notifying the fact to all
+the inhabitants of the district.
+
+Among the Jewish authorities there was, at first, some feeling of
+jealousy that this young man should be placed over them; but they
+felt, nevertheless, the great benefits that would arise from the
+protection which one of their own countrymen, high in the favour of
+Titus, would be able to afford them. When showing his commission,
+John had also produced the letter of Titus, giving his reasons for
+the nomination; and indeed, the younger men in the district, many
+of whom had followed John in his first campaigns--and who had
+hitherto, in accordance with the oath of secrecy taken on
+enrollment, concealed their knowledge that John of Gamala was the
+son of Simon--now proclaimed the fact, and hailed his appointment
+with joy.
+
+On the appointed day, the marriage of John and Mary took place and,
+as the news had spread through the country, a vast gathering
+assembled, and it was made the occasion of a public demonstration.
+The preparations which Martha and Mary had made for the feast,
+ample as they had been, would have availed but little among such a
+multitude; but Isaac and the menservants drove in and slaughtered
+several cattle and, as those who came for the most part bore
+presents of wine, oil, bread, goats, and other articles, and the
+neighbours lent their assistance in preparing a feast at the great
+fires which were lighted along the shore, while Simon contributed
+all the contents of his wine store, the feast proved ample for all
+assembled.
+
+John and his wife moved among the throng, receiving congratulations
+and good wishes; Mary blushing, and tearful with happiness and
+pride in the honour paid to John; John himself radiant with
+pleasure, and with satisfaction at the thought of the good which
+the power, so strangely conferred upon him, would enable him to
+effect for his neighbours.
+
+After that, things went on in their ordinary routine at the farm;
+save that John was frequently away visiting among the villages of
+the district, which was some thirty miles long by ten wide. The
+northern portion was thinly inhabited; but in the south the
+villages were thick, and the people had suffered greatly from the
+excursions of the Roman foragers, at the time of the siege of
+Gamala. Many of the villages had been rebuilt, since that time; but
+there was still great distress, heightened by the number of
+fugitives from the other side of Jordan.
+
+The aid which John gave enabled most of the fugitives in his
+district to return to their distant villages, and to rebuild their
+homes, where there was now little fear of their being again
+disturbed. The distress in his own district was also relieved. In
+some cases money was given, in others lent, to enable the
+cultivators to till their fields, to replant vineyards, and to
+purchase flocks so that, in the course of a year, the whole
+district was restored to its normal appearance, and the signs of
+the destructive war were almost entirely effaced.
+
+Then John was able to settle down in his quiet home. In the morning
+he worked with his father. In the afternoon he listened to the
+complaints, or petitions, of those who came before him; settling
+disputes between neighbours, hearing the stories of those who
+considered that they were too hardly pressed upon by the tax
+collector, and doing justice to those who were wronged.
+
+Soon after he married, mindful of the doctrines he had heard during
+his visit among the community of Nazarites by the Dead Sea, John
+made inquiries and found that many of the sect, who had left the
+land when the troubles with the Romans commenced, had now returned;
+and were preaching their doctrines more openly than before, now
+that those of the ancient religion could no longer persecute them.
+At Tiberias a considerable community of the sect soon established
+themselves; and John, going over, persuaded one of their teachers
+to take up his abode with him, for a time, and to expound their
+doctrines to him and his family. He was astonished at the spirit of
+love, charity, and goodwill which animated the teaching of the
+Christians--still more at the divine spirit that breathed in the
+utterances and animated the life of their Master.
+
+The central idea, that God was the God of the whole world--and not,
+as the Jews had hitherto supposed, a special Deity of their
+own--struck John particularly, and explained many things which had,
+hitherto, been difficult for him to understand. It would have been
+galling to admit as much, in the days of Jewish pride and
+stubbornness; but their spirit was broken, now; and John could
+understand that although, as long as the nation had believed in him
+and served him, God had taken a peculiar interest in them, and had
+revealed to them much of his nature and attributes--while the rest
+of the world had had been left to worship false gods--He yet loved
+all the world, and was now about to extend to all men that
+knowledge of him hitherto confined to the Jews. Above all, John saw
+how vastly higher was the idea of God, as revealed in the new
+teaching, than that which the Jews had hitherto entertained
+regarding him.
+
+A month after the arrival of the teacher, John and Mary were
+baptized into the new faith; and a few months later Simon and
+Martha, who had been harder to convince, also became converts.
+
+When Titus was raised to the imperial throne, John, in compliance
+with the request he had made him, journeyed to Rome, and remained
+there for a short time as his guest. Titus received him with
+affection.
+
+"I shall not try to tempt you with fresh offers of honours," he
+said, "though I regret that you should refuse to accept a sphere of
+wider usefulness. From time to time, I have heard of you from the
+reports of my governors; who say that the district under your
+charge is the most prosperous and contented in all Palestine, that
+there is neither dispute nor litigation there, that there are no
+poor, that the taxes are collected without difficulty; and that,
+save only that you do not keep up the state and dignity which a
+Roman official should occupy, you are in all respects a model
+ruler."
+
+"I have every reason to be thankful," John said. "I have been
+blessed in every way. My parents still survive. I am happy with my
+wife and children. Your bounty has enabled me to bind up the
+wounds, and relieve the distress caused by the war. My mind has
+been opened to heavenly teaching, and I try humbly to follow in the
+steps of that divine teacher, Jesus of Nazareth."
+
+"Ah, you have come to believe in him!" Titus said. "There are many
+of his creed, here in Rome, and they say that they are even on the
+increase. I would gladly hear, from you, something of him. I have
+heard somewhat of him from Josephus, who for three years dwelt
+among the Essenes, and who has spoken to me very highly of the
+purity of life, the enlightenment, and religious fervour of that
+sect--to which, I believe, he himself secretly inclines; although,
+from the desire not to offend his countrymen, he makes no open
+confession of his faith."
+
+John, before he left, explained to the emperor the teachings of his
+Master; and it may be that the wisdom, humanity, and mildness which
+Titus displayed, in the course of his reign, was in no small degree
+the result of the lessons which he learned from John.
+
+The latter came no more to Rome but, to the end of his life, dwelt
+on the shore of Galilee, wisely governing his little district after
+the manner of the judges of old.
+
+Jonas never left his friend. He married the daughter of one of the
+fishermen, and lived in a small house which Simon built for him,
+close to his own. At the death of the latter, he became John's
+right hand on the farm; and remained his friend, and brother, to
+the end.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of For the Temple, by G. A. Henty
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