moderation and serve them eagerly in whatever tasks
should be laid upon them by their owners; and he further
directed them that not long afterwards, on an appointed
day at about midday, when all those who were to be
their masters would most likely be already asleep
after their meal, they should all come to the gate
called Salarian and with a sudden rush kill the guards,
who would have no previous knowledge of the plot, and
open the gates as quickly as possible. After
giving these orders to the youths, Alaric straightway
sent ambassadors to the members of the senate, stating
that he admired them for their loyalty toward their
emperor, and that he would trouble them no longer,
because of their valour and faithfulness, with which
it was plain that they were endowed to a remarkable
degree, and in order that tokens of himself might be
preserved among men both noble and brave, he wished
to present each one of them with some domestics.
After making this declaration and sending the youths
not long afterwards, he commanded the barbarians to
make preparations for the departure, and he let this
be known to the Romans. And they heard his words
gladly, and receiving the gifts began to be exceedingly
happy, since they were completely ignorant of the plot
of the barbarian. For the youths, by being unusually
obedient to their owners, averted suspicion, and in
the camp some were already seen moving from their
positions and raising the siege, while it seemed that
the others were just on the point of doing the very
same thing. But when the appointed day had come,
Alaric armed his whole force for the attack and was
holding them in readiness close by the Salarian Gate;
for it happened that he had encamped there at the
beginning of the siege. And all the youths at
the time of the day agreed upon came to this gate,
and, assailing the guards suddenly, put them to death;
then they opened the gates and received Alaric and
the army into the city at their leisure. [Aug. 24,
410 A.D.] And they set fire to the houses which were
next to the gate, among which was also the house of
Sallust, who in ancient times wrote the history of
the Romans, and the greater part of this house has
stood half-burned up to my time; and after plundering
the whole city and destroying the most of the Romans,
they moved on. At that time they say that the
Emperor Honorius in Ravenna received the message from
one of the eunuchs, evidently a keeper of the poultry,
that Rome had perished. And he cried out and
said, “And yet it has just eaten from my hands!”
For he had a very large cock, Rome by name; and the
eunuch comprehending his words said that it was the
city of Rome which had perished at the hands of Alaric,
and the emperor with a sigh of relief answered quickly:
“But I, my good fellow, thought that my fowl
Rome had perished.” So great, they say,
was the folly with which this emperor was possessed.
But some say that Rome was not captured in this way by Alaric, but that Proba, a woman of very unusual eminence in wealth and in fame among the Roman senatorial class, felt pity for the Romans who were being destroyed by hunger and the other suffering they endured; for they were already even tasting each other’s flesh; and seeing that every good hope had left them, since both the river and the harbour were held by the enemy, she commanded her domestics, they say, to open the gates by night.