Horatius Swimming To Shore
These Etruscans, a thick-set race with long, black hair, seem to have had an eastern origin. We do not yet
know much about them, as they have left no literature and we cannot yet understand their inscriptions.
They seem to have been descendants of Lydians or even Hittites who had emigrated to the far west. At any
rate they had a higher standard of civilisation than the native tribes of Italy, and we can assume that under
their rule early Rome made great progress.
The legends tell us how the last king of Rome, Tarquin the Proud, by his harshness and arrogance goaded
the Romans into rebellion, and they drove him out. Of course, he made determined efforts to get back,
helped by his friends and kinsmen among the Etruscan chiefs. You must have heard of at least one story
concerning that struggle, how Horatius and his two friends defended the wooden bridge over the Tiber, the
only one in those days, against the royalist invaders suddenly pouring down from the Janiculan hill. In
"Lays of Ancient Rome" (by Macaulay) the heroic spirit of those early days of the republic is wonderfully
revived. You remember how the bridge began to collapse with Horatius still on it, for the Romans had
feverishly cut through its supports at their end, and how with a prayer he jumped into the river and swam,
fully armed, to the bank, so that "even the ranks of Tuscany could scarce forbear to cheer."
Before we go any further with the history of Rome, a problem must be stated, and in the rest of the chapter
you must look for different parts of the answer, which is not a simple one. The problem is this— why did
the Romans become first, masters of Italy, then lords of nearly the whole of the world known in their
days? They began as one of many Italian city-states, and not a specially well-situated or enterprising one at
that. At the period when our story begins, no one would have dreamt that the small town on the Tiber,
about fifteen miles from its mouth, was destined to be mistress of the world. The Etruscans in their strong
towns were masters of a large, rich province immediately to the north of them. The largest of these towns,
Veii, was only twelve miles from Rome. And to the south lay Capua, also founded by Etruscans, a large
and flourishing city in the fertile province of Campania.
In the early days, the Capuans, living their easy and luxurious lives, must have despised the Romans, who
were content with simple living and drudgery.
In the north of Italy, in what we to-day call Piedmont and Lombardy, lived large numbers of Gauls, tall,
mostly fair, and warlike people, an important branch of the Celtic race which in the Bronze and Early Iron
Age occupied a good deal of north-western Europe. Even to-day in north Italy you will frequently come
across fair, blue-eyed Italians. Fierce fighting took place between the Romans and the Gauls before the
war-loving northern hordes submitted. The Romans never regarded the northern plain as really Italian. To
them it was a continuation of the country we call France. Italy began officially not at the Alps but at the
first part of the Apennine range that slants across the peninsula from the Gulf of Genoa to the Adriatic.
The great river basin between the Alps and the Apennines they called "Gaul on our side of the Alps." On
the shores of what we call the French and Italian Rivieras and in the limestone hills behind, as well as in
Corsica, lived very fierce tribes known as Ligurians.
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