Then Cæsar cleared the audience-room and sat
Deliberating with his counsellor,
And said thus to that priest: “This suppliant
Hath made choice of ourselves to refuge with:
What shall we do that he may gather strength,
And feel no more his subject's insolence?”
The counsellor thus answered: “What we need
Is that a few shrewd-hearted men of those
That are our well-advised philosophers
Shall act with us herein.”
So famous Cæsar
Dispatched a messenger and four arrived
Of those philosophers, two young, two old,
All Rúman-born, and thus they spake at large:—
“The Íránians, since Sikandar passed away,
Have deeply wounded us by frequent raiding,
By war and strife, and causeless, reckless bloodshed;
Now holy God requiteth their ill deeds
In kind. Since the Sásánians' fortune halteth
Forbear to intervene. Khusrau Parwíz,
If he shall gain the royal crown and raise