them in the manner which I have described, although
they had previously done him no wrong at all, he saw,
while the city was being captured, a comely woman and
one not of lowly station being dragged by her left
hand with great violence by one of the barbarians;
and the child, which she had only lately weaned, she
was unwilling to let go, but was dragging it with her
other hand, fallen, as it was, to the ground since
it was not able to keep pace with that violent running.
And they say that he uttered a pretended groan, and
making it appear to all who were present at that time
including Anastasius the ambassador that he was all
in tears, he prayed God to exact vengeance from the
man who was guilty of the troubles which had come
to pass. Now Justinian, the Emperor of the Romans,
was the one whom he wished to have understood, though
he knew well that he himself was most responsible
for everything. Endowed with such a singular nature
Chosroes both became King of the Persians (for ill
fortune had deprived Zames of his eye, he who in point
of years had first right to the kingdom, at any rate
after Caoses, whom Cabades for no good reason hated),
and with no difficulty he conquered those who revolted
against him, and all the harm which he purposed to
do the Romans he accomplished easily. For every
time when Fortune wishes to make a man great, she does
at the fitting times those things which she has decided
upon, with no one standing against the force of her
will; and she neither regards the man’s station,
nor purposes to prevent the occurrence of things which
ought not to be, nor does she give heed that many will
blaspheme against her because of these things, mocking
scornfully at that which has been done by her contrary
to the deserts of the man who receives her favour;
nor does she take into consideration anything else
at all, if only she accomplish the thing which has
been decided upon by her. But as for these matters,
let them be as God wishes.
Chosroes commanded the army to capture and enslave
the survivors of the population of Antioch, and to
plunder all the property, while he himself with the
ambassadors descended from the height to the sanctuary
which they call a church. There Chosroes found
stores of gold and silver so great in amount that,
though he took no other part of the booty except these
stores, he departed possessed of enormous wealth.
And he took down from there many wonderful marbles
and ordered them to be deposited outside the fortifications,
in order that they might convey these too to the land
of Persia. When he had finished these things,
he gave orders to the Persians to burn the whole city.
And the ambassadors begged him to withhold his hand
only from the church, for which he had carried away
ransom in abundance. This he granted to the ambassadors,
but gave orders to burn everything else; then, leaving
there a few men who were to fire the city, he himself
with all the rest retired to the camp where they had
previously set up their tents.