It was a day under the Roman sun, when the air tasted of history, and every step echoed through the ages. I walked the streets of Rome as if I were walking on the pages of an old book, and I knew that I was approaching a moment to be remembered for a lifetime.
And then - he appeared.
Colosseum.
Not like on postcards. Not like the textbook pictures. It was there, long ago, like the huge stone heart of the eternal city. There is something about him that makes one pause. To shut up. It's not just a building. It's a witness. Record. The Wound and Pride of the Roman Empire.
I stood in front of it and looked up at the multi-storied arches, damaged by the ravages of time, but still dignified. Like an old man who survived everything - wars, emperors, earthquakes, and people. And it still stands.
Entering was like passing through the gate of the ages. The stone underfoot, the shade of the corridor, the silence among the people. The tourists whispered. The children stopped. Everyone felt that they had entered something that was much more than a tourist attraction. This was a place where life hung in the balance - every day.
I went to the stands. I looked at the valley of sand, the great arena where destinies were broken. Where swords sowed, blood spattered, and thousands of Romans cheered. I imagined gladiators – young, strong, scared, proud. I imagined the look of one of them - a man from some Roman province, perhaps from the Balkans, perhaps from Pannonia or Dalmatia. He had armor, a shield, a sword. And he knew that he might not survive that day.
Under the sand - corridors. Labyrinth of Death. Beasts were waiting there: lions, tigers, bears brought from all over the empire. Slaves, prisoners of war, convicts were waiting there. There was life in its rawest form – bare, short, brutal.
As I looked up, towards the height of the tribunes, I imagined the emperor in his place - in the shade, under the canopy, surrounded by the senate and the guard. Under him - the people. Thousands of people, layers and colors, Romans from all parts of the world. All gathered for the spectacle. Emperor's thumb - life or death.
But it wasn't just death.
There was Rome. Its size. His strength. His obsession with order, fun, control. The Colosseum was a vehicle of power. Give the people bread and games - and they won't ask for anything.
I stayed a long time. I walked through the inner corridors, saw old construction, systems for lifting beasts and people. I saw stone steps worn by millions of steps over the centuries. And every stone told me a story.
At sunrise, the sun was already lower. Shadows stretched across the interior of the arena, like ghosts returning to their place. I sat down next to the wall, kept silent and looked at that miracle of human hands and passion. I imagined what that city looked like back then – full of legionnaires, merchants, poets, slaves and gods.
The Colosseum does not speak. He is silent. But his silence is louder than words. In that silence, I heard everything: cries, songs, and prayers. And I knew I would never look at history the same way again.
Because that day, under the Roman sky, I touched eternity.