The two men sat in the shade of an olive grove just outside the Servian Wall, the late afternoon sun filtering gold through the leaves. Marcus Tullius, once a centurion in Hispania, now gray at the temples, poured thin wine from a clay jug into their cups. Across from him lounged Gaius Aemilius, a former quaestor whose family estates still clung to the hills of Latium despite the tax collectors’ endless appetite.
“I tell you, Marcus,” Gaius said, swirling the cup without drinking, “what keeps me awake is not the Parthians or the Germans. Those we can meet with iron and discipline. No—it is the grandchildren yet unborn who frighten me most. I see a world where men no longer know the weight of a pilum in their hand, where they bargain their honor for bread handed out by the state, where the Forum is silent because no one dares speak against the mob or the emperor. I fear a Rome that forgets how to be Roman: a city of soft men who worship machines of bronze and glass instead of the gods, who travel the skies in chariots of fire and yet cannot look another in the eye without fear. What use is conquering the stars if the soul itself has been conquered?”
Marcus stared at the dust motes dancing in the sunlight, then gave a short, bitter laugh. “You speak of machines and skies, Gaius, but I see something darker still. I fear the day when virtus is laughed at as an old man’s tale, when courage is called cruelty and loyalty treason. I dread a future where every man carries his own little Senate in his palm—endless voices shouting opinions, none of them tested by blood or hardship—yet no one leads, no one sacrifices, no one stands alone against the storm. Worst of all, I fear we will reach that day and not even notice we have fallen. We will call it progress, call it peace, call it freedom. And our descendants will live in towers taller than the Capitoline, richer than Crassus dreamed, yet hollow as the masks we wear at funerals—beautiful, empty, and already dead.”
He drained his cup in one long swallow and set it down hard enough to crack the clay. “To the gods, then,” he muttered, “that they let us die before we see it.”
Is this a copy pasta? Also reads as some rich warlords mad that their trade of bloodshed isn’t gonna be relevant anymore