Nearly two thousand years ago there was a brave captain whose
name was Julius Cæsar. The soldiers he led to battle were
very strong, and conquered the people wherever they went. They had
no gun or gunpowder then; but they had swords and spears, and, to
prevent themselves from being hurt, they had helmets or brazen caps
on their heads, with long tufts of horse-hair upon them, by way of
ornament, and breast-plates of brass on their breasts, and on their
arms they carried a sort of screen, made of strong leather. One of
them carried a little brass figure of an eagle on a long pole, with
a scarlet flag flying below, and wherever the eagle was seen, they
all followed, and fought so bravely that nothing could long stand
against them.
When Julius Cæsar rode at their head, with his keen, pale
hook-nosed face, and the scarlet cloak that the general always
wore, they were so proud of him, and so fond of him, that there was
nothing they would not do for him.
Julius Cæsar heard that a little way off there was a
country nobody knew anything about, except that the people were
very fierce and savage, and that a sort of pearl was found in the
shells of mussels which lived in the rivers. He could not bear that
there should be any place that his own people, the Romans, did not
know and subdue. So he commanded the ships to be prepared, and he
and his soldiers embarked, watching the white cliffs on the other
side of the sea grow higher and higher as he came nearer and
nearer.
When he came quite up to them, he found the savages were there
in earnest. They were tall men, with long red streaming hair, and
such clothes as they had were woollen, checked like plaid; but many
had their arms and breasts naked, and painted all over in blue
patterns. They yelled and brandished their darts, to make Julius
Cæsar and his Roman soldiers keep away; but he only went on
to a place where the shore was not quite so steep, and there
commanded his soldiers to land. The savages had run along the shore
too, and there was a terrible fight; but at last the man who
carried the eagle jumped down into the middle of the natives,
calling out to his fellows that they must come after him, or they
would lose their eagle. They all came rushing and leaping down, and
thus they managed to force back the savages, and make their way to
the shore.
There was not much worth having when they had made their way
there. Though they came again the next year, and forced their way a
good deal farther into the country, they saw chiefly bare downs, or
heaths, or thick woods. The few houses were little more than piles
of stones, and the people were rough and wild, and could do very
little. The men hunted wild boars, and wolves and stags, and the
women dug the ground, and raised a little corn, which they ground
to flour between two stones to make bread; and they spun the wool
of their sheep, dyed it with bright colors, and wove it into
dresses. They had some strong places in the woods, with trunks of
trees, cut down to shut them in from the enemy, with all their
flocks and cattle; but Caelig;sar did not get into any of these. He
only made the natives give him some of their pearls, and call the
Romans their masters, and then he went back to his ships, and none
of the set of savages who were alive when he came saw him or his
Romans any more.
Do you know who these savages were who fought with Julius
Cæsar? They were called Britons. And the country he came to
see? That was our very own island, England, only it was not called
so then. And the place where Julius Cæsar landed is called
Deal, and, if you look at the map where England and France most
nearly touch one another, I think you will see the name Deal, and
remember it was there Julius Cæsar landed, and fought with
the Britons.
It was fifty-five years before our blessed Saviour was born that
the Romans came. So at the top of this chapter stands B.C. (Before
Christ) 55.
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