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- 109 AD
-
- THE ANNALS
-
- By P. Cornelius Tacitus
-
- translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb
-
- BOOK I, A.D. 14, 15
-
-
- ROME at the beginning was ruled by kings. Freedom and the consulship
- were established by Lucius Brutus. Dictatorships were held for a
- temporary crisis. The power of the decemvirs did not last beyond two
- years, nor was the consular jurisdiction of the military tribunes of
- long duration. The despotisms of Cinna and Sulla were brief; the
- rule of Pompeius and of Crassus soon yielded before Caesar; the arms
- of Lepidus and Antonius before Augustus; who, when the world was
- wearied by civil strife, subjected it to empire under the title of
- "Prince." But the successes and reverses of the old Roman people
- have been recorded by famous historians; and fine intellects were
- not wanting to describe the times of Augustus, till growing sycophancy
- scared them away. The histories of Tiberius, Caius, Claudius, and
- Nero, while they were in power, were falsified through terror, and
- after their death were written under the irritation of a recent
- hatred. Hence my purpose is to relate a few facts about Augustus- more
- particularly his last acts, then the reign of Tiberius, and all
- which follows, without either bitterness or partiality, from any
- motives to which I am far removed.
-
- When after the destruction of Brutus and Cassius there was no longer
- any army of the Commonwealth, when Pompeius was crushed in Sicily, and
- when, with Lepidus pushed aside and Antonius slain, even the Julian
- faction had only Caesar left to lead it, then, dropping the title of
- triumvir, and giving out that he was a Consul, and was satisfied
- with a tribune's authority for the protection of the people,
- Augustus won over the soldiers with gifts, the populace with cheap
- corn, and all men with the sweets of repose, and so grew greater by
- degrees, while he concentrated in himself the functions of the Senate,
- the magistrates, and the laws. He was wholly unopposed, for the
- boldest spirits had fallen in battle, or in the proscription, while
- the remaining nobles, the readier they were to be slaves, were
- raised the higher by wealth and promotion, so that, aggrandised by
- revolution, they preferred the safety of the present to the
- dangerous past. Nor did the provinces dislike that condition of
- affairs, for they distrusted the government of the Senate and the
- people, because of the rivalries between the leading men and the
- rapacity of the officials, while the protection of the laws was
- unavailing, as they were continually deranged by violence, intrigue,
- and finally by corruption.
-
- Augustus meanwhile, as supports to his despotism, raised to the
- pontificate and curule aedileship Claudius Marcellus, his sister's
- son, while a mere stripling, and Marcus Agrippa, of humble birth, a
- good soldier, and one who had shared his victory, to two consecutive
- consulships, and as Marcellus soon afterwards died, he also accepted
- him as his son-in-law. Tiberius Nero and Claudius Drusus, his
- stepsons, he honoured with imperial tides, although his own family was
- as yet undiminished. For he had admitted the children of Agrippa,
- Caius and Lucius, into the house of the Caesars; and before they had
- yet laid aside the dress of boyhood he had most fervently desired,
- with an outward show of reluctance, that they should be entitled
- "princes of the youth," and be consuls-elect. When Agrippa died, and
- Lucius Caesar as he was on his way to our armies in Spain, and Caius
- while returning from Armenia, still suffering from a wound, were
- prematurely cut off by destiny, or by their step-mother Livia's
- treachery, Drusus too having long been dead, Nero remained alone of
- the stepsons, and in him everything tended to centre. He was adopted
- as a son, as a colleague in empire and a partner in the tribunitian
- power, and paraded through all the armies, no longer through his
- mother's secret intrigues, but at her open suggestion. For she had
- gained such a hold on the aged Augustus that he drove out as an
- exile into the island of Planasia, his only grandson, Agrippa
- Postumus, who, though devoid of worthy qualities, and having only
- the brute courage of physical strength, had not been convicted of
- any gross offence. And yet Augustus had appointed Germanicus, Drusus's
- offspring, to the command of eight legions on the Rhine, and
- required Tiberius to adopt him, although Tiberius had a son, now a
- young man, in his house; but he did it that he might have several
- safeguards to rest on. He had no war at the time on his hands except
- against the Germans, which was rather to wipe out the disgrace of
- the loss of Quintilius Varus and his army than out of an ambition to
- extend the empire, or for any adequate recompense. At home all was
- tranquil, and there were magistrates with the same titles; there was a
- younger generation, sprung up since the victory of Actium, and even
- many of the older men had been born during the civil wars. How few
- were left who had seen the republic!
-
- Thus the State had been revolutionised, and there was not a
- vestige left of the old sound morality. Stript of equality, all looked
- up to the commands of a sovereign without the least apprehension for
- the present, while Augustus in the vigour of life, could maintain
- his own position, that of his house, and the general tranquillity.
- When in advanced old age, he was worn out by a sickly frame, and the
- end was near and new prospects opened, a few spoke in vain of the
- blessings of freedom, but most people dreaded and some longed for war.
- The popular gossip of the large majority fastened itself variously
- on their future masters. "Agrippa was savage, and had been exasperated
- by insult, and neither from age nor experience in affairs was equal to
- so great a burden. Tiberius Nero was of mature years, and had
- established his fame in war, but he had the old arrogance inbred in
- the Claudian family, and many symptoms of a cruel temper, though
- they were repressed, now and then broke out. He had also from earliest
- infancy been reared in an imperial house; consulships and triumphs had
- been heaped on him in his younger days; even in the years which, on
- the pretext of seclusion he spent in exile at Rhodes, he had had no
- thoughts but of wrath, hypocrisy, and secret sensuality. There was his
- mother too with a woman caprice. They must, it seemed, be subject to a
- female and to two striplings besides, who for a while would burden,
- and some day rend asunder the State."
-
- While these and like topics were discussed, the infirmities of
- Augustus increased, and some suspected guilt on his wife's part. For a
- rumour had gone abroad that a few months before he had sailed to
- Planasia on a visit to Agrippa, with the knowledge of some chosen
- friends, and with one companion, Fabius Maximus; that many tears
- were shed on both sides, with expressions of affection, and that
- thus there was a hope of the young man being restored to the home of
- his grandfather. This, it was said, Maximus had divulged to his wife
- Marcia, she again to Livia. All was known to Caesar, and when
- Maximus soon afterwards died, by a death some thought to be
- self-inflicted, there were heard at his funeral wailings from
- Marcia, in which she reproached herself for having been the cause of
- her husband's destruction. Whatever the fact was, Tiberius as he was
- just entering Illyria was summoned home by an urgent letter from his
- mother, and it has not been thoroughly ascertained whether at the city
- of Nola he found Augustus still breathing or quite lifeless. For Livia
- had surrounded the house and its approaches with a strict watch, and
- favourable bulletins were published from time to time, till, provision
- having been made for the demands of the crisis, one and the same
- report told men that Augustus was dead and that Tiberius Nero was
- master of the State.
-
- The first crime of the new reign was the murder of Postumus Agrippa.
- Though he was surprised and unarmed, a centurion of the firmest
- resolution despatched him with difficulty. Tiberius gave no
- explanation of the matter to the Senate; he pretended that there
- were directions from his father ordering the tribune in charge of
- the prisoner not to delay the slaughter of Agrippa, whenever he should
- himself have breathed his last. Beyond a doubt, Augustus had often
- complained of the young man's character, and had thus succeeded in
- obtaining the sanction of a decree of the Senate for his banishment.
- But he never was hard-hearted enough to destroy any of his kinsfolk,
- nor was it credible that death was to be the sentence of the
- grandson in order that the stepson might feel secure. It was more
- probable that Tiberius and Livia, the one from fear, the other from
- a stepmother's enmity, hurried on the destruction of a youth whom they
- suspected and hated. When the centurion reported, according to
- military custom, that he had executed the command, Tiberius replied
- that he had not given the command, and that the act must be
- justified to the Senate.
-
- As soon as Sallustius Crispus who shared the secret (he had, in
- fact, sent the written order to the tribune) knew this, fearing that
- the charge would be shifted on himself, and that his peril would be
- the same whether he uttered fiction or truth, he advised Livia not
- to divulge the secrets of her house or the counsels of friends, or any
- services performed by the soldiers, nor to let Tiberius weaken the
- strength of imperial power by referring everything to the Senate,
- for "the condition," he said, "of holding empire is that an account
- cannot be balanced unless it be rendered to one person."
-
- Meanwhile at Rome people plunged into slavery- consuls, senators,
- knights. The higher a man's rank, the more eager his hypocrisy, and
- his looks the more carefully studied, so as neither to betray joy at
- the decease of one emperor nor sorrow at the rise of another, while he
- mingled delight and lamentations with his flattery. Sextus Pompeius
- and Sextus Apuleius, the consuls, were the first to swear allegiance
- to Tiberius Caesar, and in their presence the oath was taken by
- Seius Strabo and Caius Turranius, respectively the commander of the
- praetorian cohorts and the superintendent of the corn supplies. Then
- the Senate, the soldiers and the people did the same. For Tiberius
- would inaugurate everything with the consuls, as though the ancient
- constitution remained, and he hesitated about being emperor. Even
- the proclamation by which he summoned the senators to their chamber,
- he issued merely with the title of Tribune, which he had received
- under Augustus. The wording of the proclamation was brief, and in a
- very modest tone. "He would," it said, "provide for the honours due to
- his father, and not leave the lifeless body, and this was the only
- public duty he now claimed."
-
- As soon, however, as Augustus was dead, he had given the watchword
- to the praetorian cohorts, as commander-in-chief. He had the guard
- under arms, with all the other adjuncts of a court; soldiers
- attended him to the forum; soldiers went with him to the Senate House.
- He sent letters to the different armies, as though supreme power was
- now his, and showed hesitation only when he spoke in the Senate. His
- chief motive was fear that Germanicus, who had at his disposal so many
- legions, such vast auxiliary forces of the allies, and such
- wonderful popularity, might prefer the possession to the expectation
- of empire. He looked also at public opinion, wishing to have the
- credit of having been called and elected by the State rather than of
- having crept into power through the intrigues of a wife and a dotard's
- adoption. It was subsequently understood that he assumed a wavering
- attitude, to test likewise the temper of the nobles. For he would
- twist a word or a look into a crime and treasure it up in his memory.
-
- On the first day of the Senate he allowed nothing to be discussed
- but the funeral of Augustus, whose will, which was brought in by the
- Vestal Virgins, named as his heirs Tiberius and Livia. The latter
- was to be admitted into the Julian family with the name of Augusta;
- next in expectation were the grand and great-grandchildren. In the
- third place, he had named the chief men of the State, most of whom
- he hated, simply out of ostentation and to win credit with
- posterity. His legacies were not beyond the scale of a private
- citizen, except a bequest of forty-three million five hundred thousand
- sesterces "to the people and populace of Rome," of one thousand to
- every praetorian soldier, and of three hundred to every man in the
- legionary cohorts composed of Roman citizens.
-
- Next followed a deliberation about funeral honours. Of these the
- most imposing were thought fitting. The procession was to be conducted
- through "the gate of triumph," on the motion of Gallus Asinius; the
- titles of the laws passed, the names of the nations conquered by
- Augustus were to be borne in front, on that of Lucius Arruntius.
- Messala Valerius further proposed that the oath of allegiance to
- Tiberius should be yearly renewed, and when Tiberius asked him whether
- it was at his bidding that he had brought forward this motion, he
- replied that he had proposed it spontaneously, and that in whatever
- concerned the State he would use only his own discretion, even at
- the risk of offending. This was the only style of adulation which
- yet remained. The Senators unanimously exclaimed that the body ought
- to be borne on their shoulders to the funeral pile. The emperor left
- the point to them with disdainful moderation, he then admonished the
- people by a proclamation not to indulge in that tumultuous
- enthusiasm which had distracted the funeral of the Divine Julius, or
- express a wish that Augustus should be burnt in the Forum instead of
- in his appointed resting-place in the Campus Martius.
-
- On the day of the funeral soldiers stood round as a guard, amid much
- ridicule from those who had either themselves witnessed or who had
- heard from their parents of the famous day when slavery was still
- something fresh, and freedom had been resought in vain, when the
- slaying of Caesar, the Dictator, seemed to some the vilest, to others,
- the most glorious of deeds. "Now," they said, "an aged sovereign,
- whose power had lasted long, who had provided his heirs with
- abundant means to coerce the State, requires forsooth the defence of
- soldiers that his burial may be undisturbed."
-
- Then followed much talk about Augustus himself, and many expressed
- an idle wonder that the same day marked the beginning of his
- assumption of empire and the close of his life, and, again, that he
- had ended his days at Nola in the same house and room as his father
- Octavius. People extolled too the number of his consulships, in
- which he had equalled Valerius Corvus and Caius Marius combined, the
- continuance for thirty-seven years of the tribunitian power, the title
- of Imperator twenty-one times earned, and his other honours which
- had either frequently repeated or were wholly new. Sensible men,
- however, spoke variously of his life with praise and censure. Some
- said "that dutiful feeling towards a father, and the necessities of
- the State in which laws had then no place, drove him into civil war,
- which can neither be planned nor conducted on any right principles. He
- had often yielded to Antonius, while he was taking vengeance on his
- father's murderers, often also to Lepidus. When the latter sank into
- feeble dotage and the former had been ruined by his profligacy, the
- only remedy for his distracted country was the rule of a single man.
- Yet the State had been organized under the name neither of a kingdom
- nor a dictatorship, but under that of a prince. The ocean and remote
- rivers were the boundaries of the empire; the legions, provinces,
- fleets, all things were linked together; there was law for the
- citizens; there was respect shown to the allies. The capital had
- been embellished on a grand scale; only in a few instances had he
- resorted to force, simply to secure general tranquillity."
-
- It was said, on the other hand, "that filial duty and State
- necessity were merely assumed as a mask. It was really from a lust
- of sovereignty that he had excited the veterans by bribery, had,
- when a young man and a subject, raised an army, tampered with the
- Consul's legions, and feigned an attachment to the faction of
- Pompeius. Then, when by a decree of the Senate he had usurped the high
- functions and authority of Praetor when Hirtius and Pansa were
- slain- whether they were destroyed by the enemy, or Pansa by poison
- infused into a wound, Hirtius by his own soldiers and Caesar's
- treacherous machinations- he at once possessed himself of both their
- armies, wrested the consulate from a reluctant Senate, and turned
- against the State the arms with which he had been intrusted against
- Antonius. Citizens were proscribed, lands divided, without so much
- as the approval of those who executed these deeds. Even granting
- that the deaths of Cassius and of the Bruti were sacrifices to a
- hereditary enmity (though duty requires us to waive private feuds
- for the sake of the public welfare), still Pompeius had been deluded
- by the phantom of peace, and Lepidus by the mask of friendship.
- Subsequently, Antonius had been lured on by the treaties of Tarentum
- and Brundisium, and by his marriage with the sister, and paid by his
- death the penalty of a treacherous alliance. No doubt, there was peace
- after all this, but it was a peace stained with blood; there were
- the disasters of Lollius and Varus, the murders at Rome of the Varros,
- Egnatii, and Juli."
-
- The domestic life too of Augustus was not spared. "Nero's wife had
- been taken from him, and there had been the farce of consulting the
- pontiffs, whether, with a child conceived and not yet born, she
- could properly marry. There were the excesses of Quintus Tedius and
- Vedius Pollio; last of all, there was Livia, terrible to the State
- as a mother, terrible to the house of the Caesars as a stepmother.
- No honour was left for the gods, when Augustus chose to be himself
- worshipped with temples and statues, like those of the deities, and
- with flamens and priests. He had not even adopted Tiberius as his
- successor out of affection or any regard to the State, but, having
- thoroughly seen his arrogant and savage temper, he had sought glory
- for himself by a contrast of extreme wickedness." For, in fact,
- Augustus, a few years before, when he was a second time asking from
- the Senate the tribunitian power for Tiberius, though his speech was
- complimentary, had thrown out certain hints as to his manners,
- style, and habits of life, which he meant as reproaches, while he
- seemed to excuse. However, when his obsequies had been duly performed,
- a temple with a religious ritual was decreed him.
-
- After this all prayers were addressed to Tiberius. He, on his
- part, urged various considerations, the greatness of the empire, his
- distrust of himself. "Only," he said, "the intellect of the Divine
- Augustus was equal to such a burden. Called as he had been by him to
- share his anxieties, he had learnt by experience how exposed to
- fortune's caprices was the task of universal rule. Consequently, in
- a state which had the support of so many great men, they should not
- put everything on one man, as many, by uniting their efforts would
- more easily discharge public functions." There was more grand
- sentiment than good faith in such words. Tiberius's language even in
- matters which he did not care to conceal, either from nature or habit,
- was always hesitating and obscure, and now that he was struggling to
- hide his feelings completely, it was all the more involved in
- uncertainty and doubt. The Senators, however, whose only fear was lest
- they might seem to understand him, burst into complaints, tears, and
- prayers. They raised their hands to the gods, to the statue of
- Augustus, and to the knees of Tiberius, when he ordered a document
- to be produced and read. This contained a description of the resources
- of the State, of the number of citizens and allies under arms, of
- the fleets, subject kingdoms, provinces, taxes, direct and indirect,
- necessary expenses and customary bounties. All these details
- Augustus had written with his own hand, and had added a counsel,
- that the empire should be confined to its present limits, either
- from fear or out of jealousy.
-
- Meantime, while the Senate stooped to the most abject
- supplication, Tiberius happened to say that although he was not
- equal to the whole burden of the State, yet he would undertake the
- charge of whatever part of it might be intrusted to him. Thereupon
- Asinius Gallus said, "I ask you, Caesar, what part of the State you
- wish to have intrusted to you?" Confounded by the sudden inquiry he
- was silent for a few moments; then, recovering his presence of mind,
- he replied that it would by no means become his modesty to choose or
- to avoid in a case where he would prefer to be wholly excused. Then
- Gallus again, who had inferred anger from his looks, said that the
- question had not been asked with the intention of dividing what
- could not be separated, but to convince him by his own admission
- that the body of the State was one, and must be directed by a single
- mind. He further spoke in praise of Augustus, and reminded Tiberius
- himself of his victories, and of his admirable deeds for many years as
- a civilian. Still, he did not thereby soften the emperor's resentment,
- for he had long been detested from an impression that, as he had
- married Vipsania, daughter of Marcus Agrippa, who had once been the
- wife of Tiberius, he aspired to be more than a citizen, and kept up
- the arrogant tone of his father, Asinius Pollio.
-
- Next, Lucius Arruntius, who differed but little from the speech of
- Gallus, gave like offence, though Tiberius had no old grudge against
- him, but simply mistrusted him, because he was rich and daring, had
- brilliant accomplishments, and corresponding popularity. For Augustus,
- when in his last conversations he was discussing who would refuse
- the highest place, though sufficiently capable, who would aspire to it
- without being equal to it, and who would unite both the ability and
- ambition, had described Marcus Lepidus as able but contemptuously
- indifferent, Gallus Asinius as ambitious and incapable, Lucius
- Arruntius as not unworthy of it, and, should the chance be given
- him, sure to make the venture. About the two first there is a
- general agreement, but instead of Arruntius some have mentioned Cneius
- Piso, and all these men, except Lepidus, were soon afterwards
- destroyed by various charges through the contrivance of Tiberius.
- Quintus Haterius too and Mamercus Scaurus ruffled his suspicious
- temper, Haterius by having said- "How long, Caesar, will you suffer
- the State to be without a head?" Scaurus by the remark that there
- was a hope that the Senate's prayers would not be fruitless, seeing
- that he had not used his right as Tribune to negative the motion of
- the Consuls. Tiberius instantly broke out into invective against
- Haterius; Scaurus, with whom he was far more deeply displeased, he
- passed over in silence. Wearied at last by the assembly's clamorous
- importunity and the urgent demands of individual Senators, he gave way
- by degrees, not admitting that he undertook empire, but yet ceasing to
- refuse it and to be entreated. It is known that Haterius having
- entered the palace to ask pardon, and thrown himself at the knees of
- Tiberius as he was walking, was almost killed by the soldiers, because
- Tiberius fell forward, accidentally or from being entangled by the
- suppliant's hands. Yet the peril of so great a man did not make him
- relent, till Haterius went with entreaties to Augusta, and was saved
- by her very earnest intercessions.
-
- Great too was the Senate's sycophancy to Augusta. Some would have
- her styled "parent"; others "mother of the country," and a majority
- proposed that to the name of Caesar should be added "son of Julia."
- The emperor repeatedly asserted that there must be a limit to the
- honours paid to women, and that he would observe similar moderation in
- those bestowed on himself, but annoyed at the invidious proposal,
- and indeed regarding a woman's elevation as a slight to himself, he
- would not allow so much as a lictor to be assigned her, and forbade
- the erection of an altar in memory of her adoption, and any like
- distinction. But for Germanicus Caesar he asked pro-consular powers,
- and envoys were despatched to confer them on him, and also to
- express sympathy with his grief at the death of Augustus. The same
- request was not made for Drusus, because he was consul elect and
- present at Rome. Twelve candidates were named for the praetorship, the
- number which Augustus had handed down, and when the Senate urged
- Tiberius to increase it, he bound himself by an oath not to exceed it.
-
- It was then for the first time that the elections were transferred
- from the Campus Martius to the Senate. For up to that day, though
- the most important rested with the emperor's choice, some were settled
- by the partialities of the tribes. Nor did the people complain of
- having the right taken from them, except in mere idle talk, and the
- Senate, being now released from the necessity of bribery and of
- degrading solicitations, gladly upheld the change, Tiberius
- confining himself to the recommendation of only four candidates who
- were to be nominated without rejection or canvass. Meanwhile the
- tribunes of the people asked leave to exhibit at their own expense
- games to be named after Augustus and added to the Calendar as the
- Augustales. Money was, however, voted from the exchequer, and though
- the use of the triumphal robe in the circus was prescribed, it was not
- allowed them to ride in a chariot. Soon the annual celebration was
- transferred to the praetor, to whose lot fell the administration of
- justice between citizens and foreigners.
-
- This was the state of affairs at Rome when a mutiny broke out in the
- legions of Pannonia, which could be traced to no fresh cause except
- the change of emperors and the prospect it held out of license in
- tumult and of profit from a civil war. In the summer camp three
- legions were quartered, under the command of Junius Blaesus, who on
- hearing of the death of Augustus and the accession of Tiberius, had
- allowed his men a rest from military duties, either for mourning or
- rejoicing. This was the beginning of demoralization among the
- troops, of quarreling, of listening to the talk of every pestilent
- fellow, in short, of craving for luxury and idleness and loathing
- discipline and toil. In the camp was one Percennius, who had once been
- a leader of one of the theatrical factions, then became a common
- soldier, had a saucy tongue, and had learnt from his applause of
- actors how to stir up a crowd. By working on ignorant minds, which
- doubted as to what would be the terms of military service after
- Augustus, this man gradually influenced them in conversations at night
- or at nightfall, and when the better men had dispersed, he gathered
- round him all the worst spirits.
-
- At last, when there were others ready to be abettors of a mutiny, he
- asked, in the tone of a demagogue, why, like slaves, they submitted to
- a few centurions and still fewer tribunes. "When," he said, "will
- you dare to demand relief, if you do not go with your prayers or
- arms to a new and yet tottering throne? We have blundered enough by
- our tameness for so many years, in having to endure thirty or forty
- campaigns till we grow old, most of us with bodies maimed by wounds.
- Even dismissal is not the end of our service, but, quartered under a
- legion's standard we toil through the same hardships under another
- title. If a soldier survives so many risks, he is still dragged into
- remote regions where, under the name of lands, he receives soaking
- swamps or mountainous wastes. Assuredly, military service itself is
- burdensome and unprofitable; ten as a day is the value set on life and
- limb; out of this, clothing, arms, tents, as well as the mercy of
- centurions and exemptions from duty have to be purchased. But indeed
- of floggings and wounds, of hard winters, wearisome summers, of
- terrible war, or barren peace, there is no end. Our only relief can
- come from military life being entered on under fixed conditions,
- from receiving each the pay of a denarius, and from the sixteenth year
- terminating our service. We must be retained no longer under a
- standard, but in the same camp a compensation in money must be paid
- us. Do the praetorian cohorts, which have just got their two denarii
- per man, and which after sixteen years are restored to their homes,
- encounter more perils? We do not disparage the guards of the
- capital; still, here amid barbarous tribes we have to face the enemy
- from our tents."
-
- The throng applauded from various motives, some pointing with
- indignation to the marks of the lash, others to their grey locks,
- and most of them to their threadbare garments and naked limbs. At,
- last, in their fury they went so far as to propose to combine the
- three legions into one. Driven from their purpose by the jealousy with
- which every one sought the chief honour for his own legion, they
- turned to other thoughts, and set up in one spot the three eagles,
- with the ensigns of the cohorts. At the same time they piled up turf
- and raised a mound, that they might have a more conspicuous
- meeting-place. Amid the bustle Blaesus came up. He upbraided them
- and held back man after man with the exclamation, "Better imbrue
- your hands in my blood: it will be less guilt to slay your commander
- than it is to be in revolt from the emperor. Either living I will
- uphold the loyalty of the legions, or Pierced to the heart I will
- hasten on your repentance."
-
- None the less however was the mound piled up, and it was quite
- breast high when, at last overcome by his persistency, they gave up
- their purpose. Blaesus, with the consummate tact of an orator, said,
- "It is not through mutiny and tumult that the desires of the army
- ought to be communicated to Caesar, nor did our soldiers of old ever
- ask so novel a boon of ancient commanders, nor have you yourselves
- asked it of the Divine Augustus. It is far from opportune that the
- emperor's cares, now in their first beginning, should be aggravated.
- If, however, you are bent upon attempting in peace what even after
- your victory in the civil wars you did not demand, why, contrary to
- the habit of obedience, contrary to the law of discipline, do you
- meditate violence? Decide on sending envoys, and give them
- instructions in your presence."
-
- It was carried by acclamation that the son of Blaesus, one of the
- tribunes, should undertake the mission, and demand for the soldiers
- release from service after sixteen years. He was to have the rest of
- their message when the first part had been successful. After the young
- man departure there was comparative quiet, but there was an arrogant
- tone among the soldiers, to whom the fact that their commander's son
- was pleading their common cause clearly showed that they had wrested
- by compulsion what they had failed to obtain by good behaviour.
-
- Meanwhile the companies which previous to the mutiny had been sent
- to Nauportus to make roads and bridges and for other purposes, when
- they heard of the tumult in the camp, tore up the standards, and
- having plundered the neighbouring villages and Nauportus itself, which
- was like a town, assailed the centurions who restrained them with
- jeers and insults, last of all, with blows. Their chief rage was
- against Aufidienus Rufus, the camp-prefect, whom they dragged from a
- waggon, loaded with baggage, and drove on at the head of the column,
- asking him in ridicule whether he liked to bear such huge burdens
- and such long marches. Rufus, who had long been a common soldier, then
- a centurion, and subsequently camp-prefect, tried to revive the old
- severe discipline, inured as he was to work and toil, and all the
- sterner because he had endured.
-
- On the arrival of these troops the mutiny broke out afresh, and
- straggling from the camp they plundered the neighbourhood. Blaesus
- ordered a few who had conspicuously loaded themselves with spoil to be
- scourged and imprisoned as a terror to the rest; for, even as it
- then was, the commander was still obeyed by the centurions and by
- all the best men among the soldiers. As the men were dragged off, they
- struggled violently, clasped the knees of the bystanders, called to
- their comrades by name, or to the company, cohort, or legion to
- which they respectively belonged, exclaiming that all were
- threatened with the same fate. At the same time they heaped abuse on
- the commander; they appealed to heaven and to the gods, and left
- nothing undone by which they might excite resentment and pity, alarm
- and rage. They all rushed to the spot, broke open the guardhouse,
- unbound the prisoners, and were in a moment fraternising with
- deserters and men convicted on capital charges.
-
- Thence arose a more furious outbreak, with more leaders of the
- mutiny. Vibulenus, a common soldier, was hoisted in front of the
- general's tribunal on the shoulders of the bystanders and addressed
- the excited throng, who eagerly awaited his intentions. "You have
- indeed," he said, "restored light and air to these innocent and most
- unhappy men, but who restores to my brother his life, or my brother to
- myself? Sent to you by the German army in our common cause, he was
- last night butchered by the gladiators whom the general keeps and arms
- for the destruction of his soldiers. Answer, Blaesus, where you have
- flung aside the corpse? Even an enemy grudges not burial. When, with
- embraces and tears, I have sated my grief, order me also to be
- slain, provided only that when we have been destroyed for no crime,
- but only because we consulted the good of the legions, we may be
- buried by these men around me."
-
- He inflamed their excitement by weeping and smiting his breast and
- face with his hands. Then, hurling aside those who bore him on their
- shoulders, and impetuously flinging himself at the feet of one man
- after another, he roused such dismay and indignation that some of
- the soldiers put fetters on the gladiators who were among the number
- of Blaesus's slaves, others did the like to the rest of his household,
- while a third party hurried out to look for the corpse. And had it not
- quickly been known that no corpse was found, that the slaves, when
- tortures were applied, denied the murder, and that the man never had a
- brother, they would have been on the point of destroying the
- general. As it was, they thrust out the tribunes and the camp-prefect;
- they plundered the baggage of the fugitives, and they killed a
- centurion, Lucilius, to whom, with soldiers' humour, they had given
- the name "Bring another," because when he had broken one vine-stick on
- a man's back, he would call in a loud voice for another and another.
- The rest sheltered themselves in concealment, and one only was
- detained, Clemens Julius, whom the soldiers considered a fit person to
- carry messages, from his ready wit. Two legions, the eighth and the
- fifteenth, were actually drawing swords against each other, the former
- demanding the death of a centurion, whom they nicknamed Sirpicus,
- while the men of the fifteenth defended him, but the soldiers of the
- ninth interposed their entreaties, and when these were disregarded,
- their menaces.
-
- This intelligence had such an effect on Tiberius, close as he was,
- and most careful to hush up every very serious disaster, that he
- despatched his son Drusus with the leading men of the State and with
- two praetorian cohorts, without any definite instructions, to take
- suitable measures. The cohorts were strengthened beyond their usual
- force with some picked troops. There was in addition a considerable
- part of the Praetorian cavalry, and the flower of the German soldiery,
- which was then the emperor's guard. With them too was the commander of
- the praetorians, Aelius Sejanus, who had been associated with his
- own father, Strabo, had great influence with Tiberius, and was to
- advise and direct the young prince, and to hold out punishment or
- reward to the soldiers. When Drusus approached, the legions, as a mark
- of respect, met him, not as usual, with glad looks or the glitter of
- military decorations, but in unsightly squalor, and faces which,
- though they simulated grief, rather expressed defiance.
-
- As soon as he entered the entrenchments, they secured the gates with
- sentries, and ordered bodies of armed men to be in readiness at
- certain points of the camp. The rest crowded round the general's
- tribunal in a dense mass. Drusus stood there, and with a gesture of
- his hand demanded silence. As often as they turned their eyes back
- on the throng, they broke into savage exclamations, then looking up to
- Drusus they trembled. There was a confused hum, a fierce shouting, and
- a sudden lull. Urged by conflicting emotions, they felt panic and they
- caused the like. At last, in an interval of the uproar, Drusus read
- his father's letter, in which it was fully stated that he had a
- special care for the brave legions with which he had endured a
- number of campaigns; that, as soon as his mind had recovered from
- its grief, he would lay their demands before the Senators; that
- meanwhile he had sent his son to concede unhesitatingly what could
- be immediately granted, and that the rest must be reserved for the
- Senate, which ought to have a voice in showing either favour or
- severity.
-
- The crowd replied that they had delivered their instructions to
- Clemens, one of the centurions, which he was to convey to Rome. He
- began to speak of the soldiers' discharge after sixteen years, of
- the rewards of completed service, of the daily pay being a denarius,
- and of the veterans not being detained under a standard. When Drusus
- pleaded in answer reference to the Senate and to his father, he was
- interrupted by a tumultuous shout. "Why had he come, neither to
- increase the soldiers' pay, nor to alleviate their hardships, in a
- word, with no power to better their lot? Yet heaven knew that all were
- allowed to scourge and to execute. Tiberius used formerly in the
- name of Augustus to frustrate the wishes of the legions, and the
- same tricks were now revived by Drusus. Was it only sons who were to
- visit them? Certainly, it was a new thing for the emperor to refer
- to the Senate merely what concerned the soldier's interests. Was
- then the same Senate to be consulted whenever notice was given of an
- execution or of a battle? Were their rewards to be at the discretion
- of absolute rulers, their punishments to be without appeal?"
-
- At last they deserted the general's tribunal, and to any
- praetorian soldier or friend of Caesar's who met them, they used those
- threatening gestures which are the cause of strife and the beginning
- of a conflict, with special rage against Cneius Lentulus, because they
- thought that he above all others, by his age and warlike renown,
- encouraged Drusus, and was the first to scorn such blots on military
- discipline. Soon after, as he was leaving with Drusus to betake
- himself in foresight of his danger to the winter can they surrounded
- him, and asked him again and again whither he was going; was it to the
- emperor or to the Senate, there also to oppose the interests of the
- legions. At the same moment they menaced him savagely and flung
- stones. And now, bleeding from a blow, and feeling destruction
- certain, he was rescued by the hurried arrival of the throng which had
- accompanied Drusus.
-
- That terrible night which threatened an explosion of crime was
- tranquillised by a mere accident. Suddenly in a clear sky the moon's
- radiance seemed to die away. This the soldiers in their ignorance of
- the cause regarded as an omen of their condition, comparing the
- failure of her light to their own efforts, and imagining that their
- attempts would end prosperously should her brightness and splendour be
- restored to the goddess. And so they raised a din with brazen
- instruments and the combined notes of trumpets and horns, with joy
- or sorrow, as she brightened or grew dark. When clouds arose and
- obstructed their sight, and it was thought she was buried in the
- gloom, with that proneness to superstition which steals over minds
- once thoroughly cowed, they lamented that this was a portent of
- never-ending hardship, and that heaven frowned on their deeds.
-
- Drusus, thinking that he ought to avail himself of this change in
- their temper and turn what chance had offered to a wise account,
- ordered the tents to be visited. Clemens, the centurion was summoned
- with all others who for their good qualities were liked by the
- common soldiers. These men made their way among the patrols,
- sentries and guards of the camp-gates, suggesting hope or holding
- out threats. "How long will you besiege the emperor's son? What is
- to be the end of our strifes? Will Percennius and Vibulenus give pay
- to the soldiers and land to those who have earned their discharge?
- In a word, are they, instead of the Neros and the Drusi, to control
- the empire of the Roman people? Why are we not rather first in our
- repentance as we were last in the offence? Demands made in common
- are granted slowly; a separate favour you may deserve and receive at
- the same moment."
-
- With minds affected by these words and growing mutually
- suspicious, they divided off the new troops from the old, and one
- legion from another. Then by degrees the instinct of obedience
- returned. They quitted the gates and restored to their places the
- standards which at the beginning of the mutiny they had grouped into
- one spot.
-
- At daybreak Drusus called them to an assembly, and, though not a
- practised speaker, yet with natural dignity upbraided them for their
- past and commended their present behaviour. He was not, he said, to be
- conquered by terror or by threats. Were he to see them inclining to
- submission and hear the language of entreaty, he would write to his
- father, that he might be merciful and receive the legions' petition.
- At their prayer, Blaesus and Lucius Apronius, a Roman knight on
- Drusus's staff, with Justus Catonius, a first-rank centurion, were
- again sent to Tiberius. Then ensued a conflict of opinion among
- them, some maintaining that it was best to wait the envoys' return and
- meanwhile humour the soldiers, others, that stronger measures ought to
- be used, inasmuch as the rabble knows no mean, and inspires fear,
- unless they are afraid, though when they have once been overawed, they
- can be safely despised. "While superstition still swayed them, the
- general should apply terror by removing the leaders of the mutiny."
-
- Drusus's temper was inclined to harsh measures. He summoned
- Vibulenus and Percennius and ordered them to be put to death. The
- common account is that they were buried in the general's tent,
- though according to some their bodies were flung outside the
- entrenchments for all to see.
-
- Search was then made for all the chief mutineers. Some as they
- roamed outside the camp were cut down by the centurions or by soldiers
- of the praetorian cohorts. Some even the companies gave up in proof of
- their loyalty. The men's troubles were increased by an early winter
- with continuous storms so violent that they could not go beyond
- their tents or meet together or keep the standards in their places,
- from which they were perpetually tom by hurricane and rain. And
- there still lingered the dread of the divine wrath; nor was it without
- meaning, they thought, that, hostile to an impious host, the stars
- grew dim and storms burst over them. Their only relief from misery was
- to quit an ill-omened and polluted camp, and, having purged themselves
- of their guilt, to betake themselves again every one to his
- winterquarters. First the eighth, then the fifteenth legion
- returned; the ninth cried again and again that they ought to wait
- for the letter from Tiberius, but soon finding themselves isolated
- by the departure of the rest, they voluntarily forestalled their
- inevitable fate. Drusus, without awaiting the envoys' return, as for
- the present all was quiet, went back to Rome.
-
- About the same time, from the same causes, the legions of Germany
- rose in mutiny, with a fury proportioned to their greater numbers,
- in the confident hope that Germanicus Caesar would not be able to
- endure another's supremacy and offer himself to the legions, whose
- strength would carry everything before it. There were two armies on
- the bank of the Rhine; that named the upper army had Caius Silius
- for general; the lower was under the charge of Aulus Caecina. The
- supreme direction rested with Germanicus, then busily employed in
- conducting the assessment of Gaul. The troops under the control of
- Silius, with minds yet in suspense, watched the issue of mutiny
- elsewhere; but the soldiers of the lower army fell into a frenzy,
- which had its beginning in the men of the twenty-first and fifth
- legions, and into which the first and twentieth were also drawn. For
- they were all quartered in the same summer-camp, in the territory of
- the Ubii, enjoying ease or having only light on hearing of the death
- of Augustus, a rabble of city slaves, who had been enlisted under a
- recent levy at Rome, habituated to laxity and impatient of hardship,
- filled the ignorant minds of the other soldiers with notions that
- the time had come when the veteran might demand a timely discharge,
- the young, more liberal pay, all, an end of their miseries, and
- vengeance on the cruelty of centurions.
-
- It was not one alone who spoke thus, as did Percennius among the
- legions of Pannonia, nor was it in the ears of trembling soldiers, who
- looked with apprehension to other and mightier armies, but there was
- sedition in many a face and voice. "The Roman world," they said, was
- in their hand; their victories aggrandised the State; it was from them
- that emperors received their titles."
-
- Nor did their commander check them. Indeed, the blind rage of so
- many had robbed him of his resolution., In a sudden frenzy they rushed
- with drawn swords on the centurions, the immemorial object of the
- soldiers' resentment and the first cause of savage fury. They threw
- them to the earth and beat them sorely, sixty to one, so as to
- correspond with the number of centurions. Then tearing them from the
- ground, mangled, and some lifeless, they flung them outside the
- entrenchments or into the river Rhine. One Septimius, who fled to
- the tribunal and was grovelling at Caecina's feet, was persistently
- demanded till he was given up to destruction. Cassius Chaerea, who won
- for himself a memory with posterity by the murder of Caius Caesar,
- being then a youth of high spirit, cleared a passage with his sword
- through the armed and opposing throng. Neither tribune nor
- camp-prefect maintained authority any longer. Patrols, sentries, and
- whatever else the needs of the time required, were distributed by
- the men themselves. To those who could guess the temper of soldiers
- with some penetration, the strongest symptom of a wide-spread and
- intractable commotion, was the fact that, instead of being divided
- or instigated by a few persons, they were unanimous in their fury
- and equally unanimous in their composure, with so uniform a
- consistency that one would have thought them to be under command.
-
- Meantime Germanicus, while, as I have related, he was collecting the
- taxes of Gaul, received news of the death of Augustus. He was
- married to the granddaughter of Augustus, Agrippina, by whom he had
- several children, and though he was himself the son of Drusus, brother
- of Tiberius, and grandson of Augusta, he was troubled by the secret
- hatred of his uncle and grandmother, the motives for which were the
- more venomous because unjust. For the memory of Drusus was held in
- honour by the Roman people, and they believed that had he obtained
- empire, he would have restored freedom. Hence they regarded Germanicus
- with favour and with the same hope. He was indeed a young man of
- unaspiring temper, and of wonderful kindliness, contrasting strongly
- with the proud and mysterious reserve that marked the conversation and
- the features of Tiberius. Then, there were feminine jealousies,
- Livia feeling a stepmother's bitterness towards Agrippina, and
- Agrippina herself too being rather excitable, only her purity and love
- of her husband gave a right direction to her otherwise imperious
- disposition.
-
- But the nearer Germanicus was to the highest hope, the more
- laboriously did he exert himself for Tiberius, and he made the
- neighbouring Sequani and all the Belgic states swear obedience to him.
- On hearing of the mutiny in the legions, he instantly went to the
- spot, and met them outside the camp, eyes fixed on the ground, and
- seemingly repentant. As soon as he entered the entrenchments, confused
- murmurs became audible. Some men, seizing his hand under pretence of
- kissing it, thrust his fingers into their mouths, that he might
- touch their toothless gums; others showed him their limbs bowed with
- age. He ordered the throng which stood near him, as it seemed a
- promiscuous gathering, to separate itself into its military companies.
- They replied that they would hear better as they were. The standards
- were then to be advanced, so that thus at least the cohorts might be
- distinguished. The soldiers obeyed reluctantly. Then beginning with
- a reverent mention of Augustus, he passed on to the victories and
- triumphs of Tiberius, dwelling with especial praise on his glorious
- achievements with those legions in Germany. Next, he extolled the
- unity of Italy, the loyalty of Gaul, the entire absence of
- turbulence or strife. He was heard in silence or with but a slight
- murmur.
-
- As soon as he touched on the mutiny and asked what had become of
- soldierly obedience, of the glory of ancient discipline, whither
- they had driven their tribunes and centurions, they all bared their
- bodies and taunted him with the scars of their wounds and the marks of
- the lash. And then with confused exclamations they spoke bitterly of
- the prices of exemptions, of their scanty pay, of the severity of
- their tasks, with special mention of the entrenchment, the fosse,
- the conveyance of fodder, building-timber, firewood, and whatever else
- had to be procured from necessity, or as a check on idleness in the
- camp. The fiercest clamour arose from the veteran soldiers, who, as
- they counted their thirty campaigns or more, implored him to relieve
- worn-out men, and not let them die under the same hardships, but
- have an end of such harassing service, and repose without beggary.
- Some even claimed the legacy of the Divine Augustus, with words of
- good omen for Germanicus, and, should he wish for empire, they
- showed themselves abundantly willing. Thereupon, as though he were
- contracting the pollution of guilt, he leapt impetuously from the
- tribunal. The men opposed his departure with their weapons,
- threatening him repeatedly if he would not go back. But Germanicus
- protesting that he would die rather than cast off his loyalty, plucked
- his sword from his side, raised it aloft and was plunging it into
- his breast, when those nearest him seized his hand and held it by
- force. The remotest and most densely crowded part of the throng,
- and, what almost passes belief, some, who came close up to him,
- urged him to strike the blow, and a soldier, by name Calusidius,
- offered him a drawn sword, saying that it was sharper than his own.
- Even in their fury, this seemed to them a savage act and one of evil
- precedent, and there was a pause during which Caesar's friends hurried
- him into his tent.
-
- There they took counsel how to heal matters. For news was also
- brought that the soldiers were preparing the despatch of envoys who
- were to draw the upper army into their cause; that the capital of
- the Ubii was marked out for destruction, and that hands with the stain
- of plunder on them would soon be daring enough for the pillage of
- Gaul. The alarm was heightened by the knowledge that the enemy was
- aware of the Roman mutiny, and would certainly attack if the Rhine
- bank were undefended. Yet if the auxiliary troops and allies were to
- be armed against the retiring legions, civil war was in fact begun.
- Severity would be dangerous; profuse liberality would be scandalous.
- Whether all or nothing were conceded to the soldiery, the State was
- equally in jeopardy.
-
- Accordingly, having weighed their plans one against each other, they
- decided that a letter should be written in the prince's name, to the
- effect that full discharge was granted to those who had served in
- twenty campaigns; that there was a conditional release for those who
- had served sixteen, and that they were to be retained under a standard
- with immunity from everything except actually keeping off the enemy;
- that the legacies which they had asked, were to be paid and doubled.
-
- The soldiers perceived that all this was invented for the
- occasion, and instantly pressed their demands. The discharge from
- service was quickly arranged by the tribunes. Payment was put off till
- they reached their respective winterquarters. The men of the fifth and
- twenty-first legions refused to go till in the summer-camp where
- they stood the money was made up out of the purses of Germanicus
- himself and his friends, and paid in full. The first and twentieth
- legions were led back by their officer Caecina to the canton of the
- Ubii, marching in disgrace, since sums of money which had been
- extorted from the general were carried among the eagles and standards.
- Germanicus went to the Upper Army, and the second, thirteenth, and
- sixteenth legions, without any delay, accepted from him the oath of
- allegiance. The fourteenth hesitated a little, but their money and the
- discharge were offered even without their demanding it.
-
- Meanwhile there was an outbreak among the Chauci, begun by some
- veterans of the mutinous legions on garrison duty. They were quelled
- for a time by the instant execution of two soldiers. Such was the
- order of Mennius, the camp-prefect, more as a salutary warning than as
- a legal act. Then, when the commotion increased, he fled and having
- been discovered, as his hiding place was now unsafe, he borrowed a
- resource from audacity. "It was not," he told them, "the camp-prefect,
- it was Germanicus, their general, it was Tiberius, their emperor, whom
- they were insulting." At the same moment, overawing all resistance, he
- seized the standard, faced round towards the river-bank, and
- exclaiming that whoever left the ranks, he would hold as a deserter,
- he led them back into their winter-quarters, disaffected indeed, but
- cowed.
-
- Meanwhile envoys from the Senate had an interview with Germanicus,
- who had now returned, at the Altar of the Ubii. Two legions, the first
- and twentieth, with veterans discharged and serving under a
- standard, were there in winter-quarters. In the bewilderment of terror
- and conscious guilt they were penetrated by an apprehension that
- persons had come at the Senate's orders to cancel the concessions they
- had extorted by mutiny. And as it is the way with a mob to fix any
- charge, however groundless, on some particular person, they reproached
- Manatius Plancus, an ex-consul and the chief envoy, with being the
- author of the Senate's decree. At midnight they began to demand the
- imperial standard kept in Germanicus's quarters, and having rushed
- together to the entrance, burst the door, dragged Caesar from his bed,
- and forced him by menaces of death to give up the standard. Then
- roaming through the camp-streets, they met the envoys, who on
- hearing of the tumult were hastening to Germanicus. They loaded them
- with insults, and were on the point of murdering them, Plancus
- especially, whose high rank had deterred him from flight. In his peril
- he found safety only in the camp of the first legion. There clasping
- the standards and the eagle, he sought to protect himself under
- their sanctity. And had not the eagle-bearer, Calpurnius, saved him
- from the worst violence, the blood of an envoy of the Roman people, an
- occurrence rare even among our foes, would in a Roman camp have
- stained the altars of the gods.
-
- At last, with the light of day, when the general and the soldiers
- and the whole affair were clearly recognised, Germanicus entered the
- camp, ordered Plancus to be conducted to him, and received him on
- the tribunal. He then upbraided them with their fatal infatuation,
- revived not so much by the anger of the soldiers as by that of heaven,
- and explained the reasons of the envoys' arrival. On the rights of
- ambassadors, on the dreadful and undeserved peril of Plancus, and also
- on the disgrace into which the legion had brought itself, he dwelt
- with the eloquence of pity, and while the throng was confounded rather
- than appeased, he dismissed the envoys with an escort of auxiliary
- cavalry.
-
- Amid the alarm all condemned Germanicus for not going to the Upper
- Army, where he might find obedience and help against the rebels.
- "Enough and more than enough blunders," they said, "had been made by
- granting discharges and money, indeed, by conciliatory measures.
- Even if Germanicus held his own life cheap, why should he keep a
- little son and a pregnant wife among madmen who outraged every human
- right? Let these, at least, be restored safely to their grandsire
- and to the State."
-
- When his wife spurned the notion, protesting that she was a
- descendant of the Divine Augustus and could face peril with no
- degenerate spirit, he at last embraced her and the son of their love
- with many tears, and after long delay compelled her to depart.
- Slowly moved along a pitiable procession of women, a general's
- fugitive wife with a little son in her bosom, her friends' wives
- weeping round her, as with her they were dragging themselves from
- the camp. Not less sorrowful were those who remained.
-
- There was no appearance of the triumphant general about
- Germanicus, and he seemed to be in a conquered city rather than in his
- own camp, while groans and wailings attracted the ears and looks
- even of the soldiers. They came out of their tents, asking "what was
- that mournful sound? What meant the sad sight? Here were ladies of
- rank, not a centurion to escort them, not a soldier, no sign of a
- prince's wife, none of the usual retinue. Could they be going to the
- Treveri, to be subjects of the foreigner?" Then they felt shame and
- pity, and remembered his father Agrippa, her grandfather Augustus, her
- father-in-law Drusus, her own glory as a mother of children, her noble
- purity. And there was her little child too, born in the camp,
- brought up amid the tents of the legions, whom they used to call in
- soldiers' fashion, Caligula, because he often wore the shoe so called,
- to win the men's goodwill. But nothing moved them so much as
- jealousy towards the Treveri. They entreated, stopped the way, that
- Agrippina might return and remain, some running to meet her, while
- most of them went back to Germanicus. He, with a grief and anger
- that were yet fresh, thus began to address the throng around him-
-
- "Neither wife nor son are dearer to me than my father and the State.
- But he will surely have the protection of his own majesty, the
- empire of Rome that of our other armies. My wife and children whom,
- were it a question of your glory, I would willingly expose to
- destruction, I now remove to a distance from your fury, so that
- whatever wickedness is thereby threatened, may be expiated by my blood
- only, and that you may not be made more guilty by the slaughter of a
- great-grandson of Augustus, and the murder of a daughter-in-law of
- Tiberius. For what have you not dared, what have you not profaned
- during these days? What name shall I give to this gathering? Am I to
- call you soldiers, you who have beset with entrenchments and arms your
- general's son, or citizens, when you have trampled under foot the
- authority of the Senate? Even the rights of public enemies, the sacred
- character of the ambassador, and the law of nations have been violated
- by you. The Divine Julius once quelled an army's mutiny with a
- single word by calling those who were renouncing their military
- obedience 'citizens.' The Divine Augustus cowed the legions who had
- fought at Actium with one look of his face. Though I am not yet what
- they were, still, descended as I am from them, it would be a strange
- and unworthy thing should I be spurned by the soldiery of Spain or
- Syria. First and twentieth legions, you who received your standards
- from Tiberius, you, men of the twentieth who have shared with me so
- many battles and have been enriched with so many rewards, is not
- this a fine gratitude with which you are repaying your general? Are
- these the tidings which I shall have to carry to my father when he
- hears only joyful intelligence from our other provinces, that his
- own recruits, his own veterans are not satisfied with discharge or
- pay; that here only centurions are murdered, tribunes driven away,
- envoys imprisoned, camps and rivers stained with blood, while I am
- myself dragging on a precarious existence amid those who hate me?
-
- "Why, on the first day of our meeting, why did you, my friends,
- wrest from me, in your blindness, the steel which I was preparing to
- plunge into my breast? Better and more loving was the act of the man
- who offered me the sword. At any rate I should have perished before
- I was as yet conscious of all the disgraces of my army, while you
- would have chosen a general who though he might allow my death to pass
- unpunished would avenge the death of Varus and his three legions.
- Never indeed may heaven suffer the Belgae, though they proffer their
- aid, to have the glory and honour of having rescued the name of Rome
- and quelled the tribes of Germany. It is thy spirit, Divine
- Augustus, now received into heaven, thine image, father Drusus, and
- the remembrance of thee, which, with these same soldiers who are now
- stimulated by shame and ambition, should wipe out this blot and turn
- the wrath of civil strife to the destruction of the foe. You too, in
- whose faces and in whose hearts I perceive a change, if only you
- restore to the Senate their envoys, to the emperor his due allegiance,
- to myself my wife and son, do you stand aloof from pollution and
- separate the mutinous from among you. This will be a pledge of your
- repentance, a guarantee of your loyalty."
-
- Thereupon, as suppliants confessing that his reproaches were true,
- they implored him to punish the guilty, pardon those who had erred,
- and lead them against the enemy. And he was to recall his wife, to let
- the nursling of the legions return and not be handed over as a hostage
- to the Gauls. As to Agrippina's return, he made the excuse of her
- approaching confinement and of winter. His son, he said, would come,
- and the rest they might settle themselves. Away they hurried hither
- and thither, altered men, and dragged the chief mutineers in chains to
- Caius Caetronius commander of the first legion, who tried and punished
- them one by one in the following fashion. In front of the throng stood
- the legions with drawn swords. Each accused man was on a raised
- platform and was pointed out by a tribune. If they shouted out that he
- was guilty, he was thrown headlong and cut to pieces. The soldiers
- gloated over the bloodshed as though it gave them absolution. Nor
- did Caesar check them, seeing that without any order from himself
- the same men were responsible for all the cruelty and all the odium of
- the deed.
-
- The example was followed by the veterans, who were soon afterwards
- sent into Raetia, nominally to defend the province against a
- threatened invasion of the Suevi but really that they might tear
- themselves from a camp stamped with the horror of a dreadful remedy no
- less than with the memory of guilt. Then the general revised the
- list of centurions. Each, at his summons, stated his name, his rank,
- his birthplace, the number of his campaigns, what brave deeds he had
- done in battle, his military rewards, if any. If the tribunes and
- the legion commended his energy and good behaviour, he retained his
- rank; where they unanimously charged him with rapacity or cruelty,
- he was dismissed the service.
-
- Quiet being thus restored for the present, a no less formidable
- difficulty remained through the turbulence of the fifth and
- twenty-first legions, who were in winter quarters sixty miles away
- at Old Camp, as the place was called. These, in fact, had been the
- first to begin the mutiny, and the most atrocious deeds had been
- committed by their hands. Unawed by the punishment of their
- comrades, and unmoved by their contrition, they still retained their
- resentment. Caesar accordingly proposed to send an armed fleet with
- some of our allies down the Rhine, resolved to make war on them should
- they reject his authority.
-
- At Rome, meanwhile, when the result of affairs in Illyrium was not
- yet known, and men had heard of the commotion among the German
- legions, the citizens in alarm reproached Tiberius for the
- hypocritical irresolution with which he was befooling the senate and
- the people, feeble and disarmed as they were, while the soldiery
- were all the time in revolt, and could not be quelled by the yet
- imperfectly-matured authority of two striplings. "He ought to have
- gone himself and confronted with his imperial majesty those who
- would have soon yielded, when they once saw a sovereign of long
- experience, who was the supreme dispenser of rigour or of bounty.
- Could Augustus, with the feebleness of age on him, so often visit
- Germany, and is Tiberius, in the vigour of life, to sit in the
- Senate and criticise its members' words? He had taken good care that
- there should be slavery at Rome; he should now apply some soothing
- medicine to the spirit of soldiers, that they might be willing to
- endure peace."
-
- Notwithstanding these remonstrances, it was the inflexible purpose
- of Tiberius not to quit the head-quarters of empire or to imperil
- himself and the State. Indeed, many conflicting thoughts troubled him.
- The army in Germany was the stronger; that in Pannonia the nearer; the
- first was supported by all the strength of Gaul; the latter menaced
- Italy. Which was he to prefer, without the fear that those whom he
- slighted would be infuriated by the affront? But his sons might
- alike visit both, and not compromise the imperial dignity, which
- inspired the greatest awe at a distance. There was also an excuse
- for mere youths referring some matters to their father, with the
- possibility that he could conciliate or crush those who resisted
- Germanicus or Drusus. What resource remained, if they despised the
- emperor? However, as if on the eve of departure, he selected his
- attendants, provided his camp-equipage, and prepared a fleet; then
- winter and matters of business were the various pretexts with which he
- amused, first, sensible men, then the populace, last, and longest of
- all, the provinces.
-
- Germanicus meantime, though he had concentrated his army and
- prepared vengeance against the mutineers, thought that he ought
- still to allow them an interval, in case they might, with the late
- warning before them, regard their safety. He sent a despatch to
- Caecina, which said that he was on the way with a strong force, and
- that, unless they forestalled his arrival by the execution of the
- guilty, he would resort to an indiscriminate massacre. Caecina read
- the letter confidentially to the eagle and standardbearers, and to all
- in the camp who were least tainted by disloyalty, and urged them to
- save the whole army from disgrace, and themselves from destruction.
- "In peace," he said, "the merits of a man's case are carefully
- weighed; when war bursts on us, innocent and guilty alike perish."
-
- Upon this, they sounded those whom they thought best for their
- purpose, and when they saw that a majority of their legions remained
- loyal, at the commander's suggestion they fixed a time for falling
- with the sword on all the vilest and foremost of the mutineers.
- Then, at a mutually given signal, they rushed into the tents, and
- butchered the unsuspecting men, none but those in the secret knowing
- what was the beginning or what was to be the end of the slaughter.
-
- The scene was a contrast to all civil wars which have ever occurred.
- It was not in battle, it was not from opposing camps, it was from
- those same dwellings where day saw them at their common meals, night
- resting from labour, that they divided themselves into two factions,
- and showered on each other their missiles. Uproar, wounds,
- bloodshed, were everywhere visible; the cause was a mystery. All
- else was at the disposal of chance. Even some loyal men were slain,
- for, on its being once understood who were the objects of fury, some
- of the worst mutineers too had seized on weapons. Neither commander
- nor tribune was present to control them; the men were allowed
- license and vengeance to their heart's content. Soon afterwards
- Germanicus entered the camp, and exclaiming with a flood of tears,
- that this was destruction rather than remedy, ordered the bodies to be
- burnt.
-
- Even then their savage spirit was seized with desire to march
- against the enemy, as an atonement for their frenzy, and it was felt
- that the shades of their fellow-soldiers could be appeased only by
- exposing such impious breasts to honourable scars. Caesar followed
- up the enthusiasm of the men, and having bridged over the Rhine, he
- sent across it 12,000 from the legions, with six-and-twenty allied
- cohorts, and eight squadrons of cavalry, whose discipline had been
- without a stain during the mutiny.
-
- There was exultation among the Germans, not far off, as long as we
- were detained by the public mourning for the loss of Augustus, and
- then by our dissensions. But the Roman general in a forced march,
- cut through the Caesian forest and the barrier which had been begun by
- Tiberius, and pitched his camp on this barrier, his front and rear
- being defended by intrenchments, his flanks by timber barricades. He
- then penetrated some forest passes but little known, and, as there
- were two routes, he deliberated whether he should pursue the short and
- ordinary route, or that which was more difficult unexplored, and
- consequently unguarded by the enemy. He chose the longer way, and
- hurried on every remaining preparation, for his scouts had brought
- word that among the Germans it was a night of festivity, with games,
- and one of their grand banquets. Caecina had orders to advance with
- some light cohorts, and to clear away any obstructions from the woods.
- The legions followed at a moderate interval. They were helped by a
- night of bright starlight, reached the villages of the Marsi, and
- threw their pickets round the enemy, who even then were stretched on
- beds or at their tables, without the least fear, or any sentries
- before their camp, so complete was their carelessness and disorder;
- and of war indeed there was no apprehension. Peace it certainly was
- not- merely the languid and heedless ease of half-intoxicated people.
-
- Caesar, to spread devastation widely, divided his eager legions into
- four columns, and ravaged a space of fifty miles with fire and
- sword. Neither sex nor age moved his compassion. Everything, sacred or
- profane, the temple too of Tamfana, as they called it, the special
- resort of all those tribes, was levelled to the ground. There was
- not a wound among our soldiers, who cut down a half-asleep, an
- unarmed, or a straggling foe. The Bructeri, Tubantes, and Usipetes,
- were roused by this slaughter, and they beset the forest passes
- through which the army had to return. The general knew this, and he
- marched, prepared both to advance and to fight. Part of the cavalry,
- and some of the auxiliary cohorts led the van; then came the first
- legion, and, with the baggage in the centre, the men of the
- twenty-first closed up the left, those of the fifth, the right
- flank. The twentieth legion secured the rear, and, next, were the rest
- of the allies.
-
- Meanwhile the enemy moved not till the army began to defile in
- column through the woods, then made slight skirmishing attacks on
- its flanks and van, and with his whole force charged the rear. The
- light cohorts were thrown into confusion by the dense masses of the
- Germans, when Caesar rode up to the men of the twentieth legion, and
- in a loud voice exclaimed that this was the time for wiping out the
- mutiny. "Advance," he said, "and hasten to turn your guilt into
- glory." This fired their courage, and at a single dash they broke
- through the enemy, and drove him back with great slaughter into the
- open country. At the same moment the troops of the van emerged from
- the woods and intrenched a camp. After this their march was
- uninterrupted, and the soldiery, with the confidence of recent
- success, and forgetful of the past, were placed in winter-quarters.
-
- The news was a source of joy and also of anxiety to Tiberius. He
- rejoiced that the mutiny was crushed, but the fact that Germanicus had
- won the soldiers' favour by lavishing money, and promptly granting the
- discharge, as well as his fame as a soldier, annoyed him. Still, he
- brought his achievements under the notice of the Senate, and spoke
- much of his greatness in language elaborated for effect, more so
- than could be believed to come from his inmost heart. He bestowed a
- briefer praise on Drusus, and on the termination of the disturbance in
- Illyricum, but he was more earnest, and his speech more hearty. And he
- confirmed, too, in the armies of Pannonia all the concessions of
- Germanicus.
-
- That same year Julia ended her days. For her profligacy she had
- formerly been confined by her father Augustus in the island of
- Pandateria, and then in the town of the Regini on the shores of the
- straits of Sicily. She had been the wife of Tiberius while Caius and
- Lucius Caesar were in their glory, and had disdained him as an unequal
- match. This was Tiberius's special reason for retiring to Rhodes. When
- he obtained the empire, he left her in banishment and disgrace,
- deprived of all hope after the murder of Postumus Agrippa, and let her
- perish by a lingering death of destitution, with the idea that an
- obscurity would hang over her end from the length of her exile. He had
- a like motive for cruel vengeance on Sempronius Gracchus, a man of
- noble family, of shrewd understanding, and a perverse eloquence, who
- had seduced this same Julia when she was the wife of Marcus Agrippa.
- And this was not the end of the intrigue. When she had been handed
- over to Tiberius, her persistent paramour inflamed her with
- disobedience and hatred towards her husband; and a letter which
- Julia wrote to her father, Augustus, inveighing against Tiberius,
- was supposed to be the composition of Gracchus. He was accordingly
- banished to Cercina, where he endured an exile of fourteen years. Then
- the soldiers who were sent to slay him, found him on a promontory,
- expecting no good. On their arrival, he begged a brief interval in
- which to give by letter his last instructions to his wife Alliaria,
- and then offered his neck to the executioners, dying with a courage
- not unworthy of the Sempronian name, which his degenerate life had
- dishonoured. Some have related that these soldiers were not sent
- from Rome, but by Lucius Asprenas, proconsul of Africa, on the
- authority of Tiberius, who had vainly hoped that the infamy of the
- murder might be shifted on Asprenas.
-
- The same year witnessed the establishment of religious ceremonies in
- a new priesthood of the brotherhood of the Augustales, just as in
- former days Titus Tatius, to retain the rites of the Sabines, had
- instituted the Titian brotherhood. Twenty-one were chosen by lot
- from the chief men of the State; Tiberius, Drusus, Claudius, and
- Germanicus, were added to the number. The Augustal game's which were
- then inaugurated, were disturbed by quarrels arising out of rivalry
- between the actors. Augustus had shown indulgence to the entertainment
- by way of humouring Maecenas's extravagant passion for Bathyllus,
- nor did he himself dislike such amusements, and he thought it
- citizenlike to mingle in the pleasures of the populace. Very different
- was the tendency of Tiberius's character. But a people so many years
- indulgently treated, he did not yet venture to put under harsher
- control.
-
- In the consulship of Drusus Caesar and Caius Norbanus, Germanicus
- had a triumph decreed him, though war still lasted. And though it
- was for the summer campaign that he was most vigorously preparing,
- he anticipated it by a sudden inroad on the Chatti in the beginning of
- spring. There had, in fact, sprung up a hope of the enemy being
- divided between Arminius and Segestes, famous, respectively, for
- treachery and loyalty towards us. Arminius was the disturber of
- Germany. Segestes often revealed the fact that a rebellion was being
- organized, more especially at that last banquet after which they
- rushed to arms, and he urged Varus to arrest himself and Arminius
- and all the other chiefs, assuring him that the people would attempt
- nothing if the leading men were removed, and that he would then have
- an opportunity of sifting accusations and distinguishing the innocent.
- But Varus fell by fate and by the sword of Arminius, with whom
- Segestes, though dragged into war by the unanimous voice of the
- nation, continued to be at feud, his resentment being heightened by
- personal motives, as Arminius had married his daughter who was
- betrothed to another. With a son-in-law detested, and fathers-in-law
- also at enmity, what are bonds of love between united hearts became
- with bitter foes incentives to fury.
-
- Germanicus accordingly gave Caecina four legions, five thousand
- auxiliaries, with some hastily raised levies from the Germans dwelling
- on the left bank of the Rhine. He was himself at the head of an
- equal number of legions and twice as many allies. Having established a
- fort on the site of his father's entrenchments on Mount Taunus he
- hurried his troops in quick marching order against the Chatti, leaving
- Lucius Apronius to direct works connected with roads and bridges. With
- a dry season and comparatively shallow streams, a rare circumstance in
- that climate, he had accomplished, without obstruction, rapid march,
- and he feared for his return heavy rains and swollen rivers. But so
- suddenly did he come on the Chatti that all the helpless from age or
- sex were at once captured or slaughtered. Their able-bodied men had
- swum across the river Adrana, and were trying to keep back the
- Romans as they were commencing a bridge. Subsequently they were driven
- back by missiles and arrows, and having in vain attempted for peace,
- some took refuge with Germanicus, while the rest leaving their cantons
- and villages dispersed themselves in their forests.
-
- After burning Mattium, the capital of the tribe, and ravaging the
- open country, Germanicus marched back towards the Rhine, the enemy not
- daring to harass the rear of the retiring army, which was his usual
- practice whenever he fell back by way of stratagem rather than from
- panic. It had been the intention of the Cherusci to help the Chatti;
- but Caecina thoroughly cowed them, carrying his arms everywhere, and
- the Marsi who ventured to engage him, he repulsed in a successful
- battle.
-
- Not long after envoys came from Segestes, imploring aid against
- the violence of his fellow-countrymen, by whom he was hemmed in, and
- with whom Arminius had greater influence, because he counselled war.
- For with barbarians, the more eager a man's daring, the more does he
- inspire confidence, and the more highly is he esteemed in times of
- revolution. With the envoys Segestes had associated his son, by name
- Segimundus, but the youth hung back from a consciousness of guilt. For
- in the year of the revolt of Germany he had been appointed a priest at
- the altar of the Ubii, and had rent the sacred garlands, and fled to
- the rebels. Induced, however, to hope for mercy from Rome, he
- brought his father's message; he was graciously received and sent with
- an escort to the Gallic bank of the Rhine.
-
- It was now worth while for Germanicus to march back his army. A
- battle was fought against the besiegers and Segestes was rescued
- with a numerous band of kinsfolk and dependents. In the number were
- some women of rank; among them, the wife of Arminius, who was also the
- daughter of Segestes, but who exhibited the spirit of her husband
- rather than of her father, subdued neither to tears nor to the tones
- of a suppliant, her hands tightly clasped within her bosom, and eyes
- which dwelt on her hope of offspring. The spoils also taken in the
- defeat of Varus were brought in, having been given as plunder to
- many of those who were then being surrendered.
-
- Segestes too was there in person, a stately figure, fearless in
- the remembrance of having been a faithful ally. His speech was to this
- effect. "This is not my first day of steadfast loyalty towards the
- Roman people. From the time that the Divine Augustus gave me the
- citizenship, I have chosen my friends and foes with an eye to your
- advantage, not from hatred of my fatherland (for traitors are detested
- even by those whom they prefer) but because I held that Romans and
- Germans have the same interests, and that peace is better than war.
- And therefore I denounced to Varus, who then commanded your army,
- Arminius, the ravisher of my daughter, the violater of your treaty.
- I was put off by that dilatory general, and, as I found but little
- protection in the laws, I urged him to arrest myself, Arminius, and
- his accomplices. That night is my witness; would that it had been my
- last. What followed, may be deplored rather than defended. However,
- I threw Arminius into chains and I endured to have them put on
- myself by his partisans. And as soon as give opportunity, I show my
- preference for the old over the new, for peace over commotion, not
- to get a reward, but that I may clear myself from treachery and be
- at the same time a fit mediator for a German people, should they
- choose repentance rather than ruin, For the youth and error of my
- son I entreat forgiveness. As for my daughter, I admit that it is by
- compulsion she has been brought here. It will be for you to consider
- which fact weighs most with you, that she is with child by Arminius or
- that she owes her being to me."
-
- Caesar in a gracious reply promised safety to his children and
- kinsfolk and a home for himself in the old province. He then led
- back the army and received on the proposal of Tiberius the title of
- Imperator. The wife of Arminius gave birth to a male child; the boy,
- who was brought up at Ravenna, soon afterwards suffered an insult,
- which at the proper time I shall relate.
-
- The report of the surrender and kind reception of Segestes, when
- generally known, was heard with hope or grief according as men
- shrank from war or desired it. Arminius, with his naturally furious
- temper, was driven to frenzy by the seizure of his wife and the
- foredooming to slavery of his wife's unborn child. He flew hither
- and thither among the Cherusci, demanding "war against Segestes, war
- against Caesar." And he refrained not from taunts. "Noble the father,"
- he would say, "mighty the general, brave the army which, with such
- strength, has carried off one weak woman. Before me, three legions,
- three commanders have fallen. Not by treachery, not against pregnant
- women, but openly against armed men do I wage war. There are still
- to be seen in the groves of Germany the Roman standards which I hung
- up to our country's gods. Let Segestes dwell on the conquered bank;
- let him restore to his son his priestly office; one thing there is
- which Germans will never thoroughly excuse, their having seen
- between the Elbe and the Rhine the Roman rods, axes, and toga. Other
- nations in their ignorance of Roman rule, have no experience of
- punishments, know nothing of tributes, and, as we have shaken them
- off, as the great Augustus, ranked among dieties, and his chosen
- heir Tiberius, departed from us, baffled, let us not quail before an
- inexperienced stripling, before a mutinous army. If you prefer your
- fatherland, your ancestors, your ancient life to tyrants and to new
- colonies, follow as your leader Arminius to glory and to freedom
- rather than Segestes to ignominious servitude."
-
- This language roused not only the Cherusci but the neighbouring
- tribes and drew to their side Inguiomerus, the uncle of Arminius,
- who had long been respected by the Romans. This increased Caesar's
- alarm. That the war might not burst in all its fury on one point, he
- sent Caecina through the Bructeri to the river Amisia with forty Roman
- cohorts to distract the enemy, while the cavalry was led by its
- commander Pedo by the territories of the Frisii. Germanicus himself
- put four legions on shipboard and conveyed them through the lakes, and
- the infantry, cavalry, and fleet met simultaneously at the river
- already mentioned. The Chauci, on promising aid, were associated
- with us in military fellowship. Lucius Stertinius was despatched by
- Germanicus with a flying column and routed the Bructeri as they were
- burning their possessions, and amid the carnage and plunder, found the
- eagle of the nineteenth legion which had been lost with Varus. The
- troops were then marched to the furthest frontier of the Bructeri, and
- all the country between the rivers Amisia and Luppia was ravaged,
- not far from the forest of Teutoburgium where the remains of Varus and
- his legions were said to lie unburied.
-
- Germanicus upon this was seized with an eager longing to pay the
- last honour to those soldiers and their general, while the whole
- army present was moved to compassion by the thought of their
- kinsfolk and friends, and, indeed, of the calamities of wars and the
- lot of mankind. Having sent on Caecina in advance to reconnoitre the
- obscure forest-passes, and to raise bridges and causeways over
- watery swamps and treacherous plains, they visited the mournful
- scenes, with their horrible sights and associations. Varus's first
- camp with its wide circumference and the measurements of its central
- space clearly indicated the handiwork of three legions. Further on,
- the partially fallen rampart and the shallow fosse suggested the
- inference that it was a shattered remnant of the army which had
- there taken up a position. In the centre of the field were the
- whitening bones of men, as they had fled, or stood their ground,
- strewn everywhere or piled in heaps. Near, lay fragments of weapons
- and limbs of horses, and also human heads, prominently nailed to
- trunks of trees. In the adjacent groves were the barbarous altars,
- on which they had immolated tribunes and first-rank centurions. Some
- survivors of the disaster who had escaped from the battle or from
- captivity, described how this was the spot where the officers fell,
- how yonder the eagles were captured, where Varus was pierced by his
- first wound, where too by the stroke of his own ill-starred hand he
- found for himself death. They pointed out too the raised ground from
- which Arminius had harangued his army, the number of gibbets for the
- captives, the pits for the living, and how in his exultation he
- insulted the standards and eagles.
-
- And so the Roman army now on the spot, six years after the disaster,
- in grief and anger, began to bury the bones of the three legions,
- not a soldier knowing whether he was interring the relics of a
- relative or a stranger, but looking on all as kinsfolk and of their
- own blood, while their wrath rose higher than ever against the foe. In
- raising the barrow Caesar laid the first sod, rendering thus a most
- welcome honour to the dead, and sharing also in the sorrow of those
- present. This Tiberius did not approve, either interpreting
- unfavourably every act of Germanicus, or because he thought that the
- spectacle of the slain and unburied made the army slow to fight and
- more afraid of the enemy, and that a general invested with the
- augurate and its very ancient ceremonies ought not to have polluted
- himself with funeral rites.
-
- Germanicus, however, pursued Arminius as he fell back into trackless
- wilds, and as soon as he had the opportunity, ordered his cavalry to
- sally forth and scour the plains occupied by the enemy. Arminius
- having bidden his men to concentrate themselves and keep close to
- the woods, suddenly wheeled round, and soon gave those whom he had
- concealed in the forest passes the signal to rush to the attack.
- Thereupon our cavalry was thrown into disorder by this new force,
- and some cohorts in reserve were sent, which, broken by the shock of
- flying troops, increased the panic. They were being pushed into a
- swamp, well known to the victorious assailants, perilous to men
- unacquainted with it, when Caesar led forth his legions in battle
- array. This struck terror into the enemy and gave confidence to our
- men, and they separated without advantage to either.
-
- Soon afterwards Germanicus led back his army to the Amisia, taking
- his legions by the fleet, as he had brought them up. Part of the
- cavalry was ordered to make for the Rhine along the sea-coast.
- Caecina, who commanded a division of his own, was advised, though he
- was returning by a route which he knew, to pass Long Bridges with
- all possible speed. This was a narrow road amid vast swamps, which had
- formerly been constructed by Lucius Domitius; on every side were
- quagmires of thick clinging mud, or perilous with streams. Around were
- woods on a gradual slope, which Arminius now completely occupied, as
- soon as by a short route and quick march he had outstripped troops
- heavily laden with baggage and arms. As Caecina was in doubt how he
- could possibly replace bridges which were ruinous from age, and at the
- same time hold back the enemy, he resolved to encamp on the spot, that
- some might begin the repair and others the attack.
-
- The barbarians attempted to break through the outposts and to
- throw themselves on the engineering parties, which they harassed,
- pacing round them and continually charging them. There was a
- confused din from the men at work and the combatants. Everything alike
- was unfavourable to the Romans, the place with its deep swamps,
- insecure to the foot and slippery as one advanced, limbs burdened with
- coats of mail, and the impossibility of aiming their javelins amid the
- water. The Cherusci, on the other hand, were familiar with fighting in
- fens; they had huge frames, and lances long enough to inflict wounds
- even at a distance. Night at last released the legions, which were now
- wavering, from a disastrous engagement. The Germans whom success
- rendered unwearied, without even then taking any rest, turned all
- the streams which rose from the slopes of the surrounding hills into
- the lands beneath. The ground being thus flooded and the completed
- portion of our works submerged, the soldiers' labour was doubled.
-
- This was Caecina's fortieth campaign as a subordinate or a
- commander, and, with such experience of success and peril, he was
- perfectly fearless. As he thought over future possibilities, he
- could devise no plan but to keep the enemy within the woods, till
- the wounded and the more encumbered troops were in advance. For
- between the hills and the swamps there stretched a plain which would
- admit of an extended line. The legions had their assigned places,
- the fifth on the right wing, the twenty-first on the left, the men
- of the first to lead the van, the twentieth to repel pursuers.
-
- It was a restless night for different reasons, the barbarians in
- their festivity filling the valleys under the hills and the echoing
- glens with merry song or savage shouts, while in the Roman camp were
- flickering fires, broken exclamations, and the men lay scattered along
- the intrenchments or wandered from tent to tent, wakeful rather than
- watchful. A ghastly dream appalled the general. He seemed to see
- Quintilius Varus, covered with blood, rising out of the swamps, and to
- hear him, as it were, calling to him, but he did not, as he
- imagined, obey the call; he even repelled his hand, as he stretched it
- over him. At daybreak the legions, posted on the wings, from panic
- or perversity, deserted their position and hastily occupied a plain
- beyond the morass. Yet Arminius, though free to attack, did not at the
- moment rush out on them. But when the baggage was clogged in the mud
- and in the fosses, the soldiers around it in disorder, the array of
- the standards in confusion, every one in selfish haste and all ears
- deaf to the word of command he ordered the Germans to charge,
- exclaiming again and again, "Behold a Varus and legions once more
- entangled in Varus's fate." As he spoke, he cut through the column
- with some picked men, inflicting wounds chiefly on the horses.
- Staggering in their blood on the slippery marsh, they shook off
- their riders, driving hither and thither all in their way, and
- trampling on the fallen. The struggle was hottest round the eagles,
- which could neither be carried in the face of the storm of missiles,
- nor planted in the miry soil. Caecina, while he was keeping up the
- battle, fell from his horse, which was pierced under him, and was
- being hemmed in, when the first legion threw itself in the way. The
- greed of the foe helped him, for they left the slaughter to secure the
- spoil, and the legions, towards evening, struggled on to open and firm
- ground.
-
- Nor did this end their miseries. Entrenchments had to be thrown
- up, materials sought for earthworks, while the army had lost to a
- great extent their implements for digging earth and cutting turf.
- There were no tents for the rank and file, no comforts for the
- wounded. As they shared their food, soiled by mire or blood, they
- bewailed the darkness with its awful omen, and the one day which yet
- remained to so many thousand men.
-
- It chanced that a horse, which had broken its halter and wandered
- wildly in fright at the uproar, overthrew some men against whom it
- dashed. Thence arose such a panic, from the belief that the Germans
- had burst into the camp, that all rushed to the gates. Of these the
- decuman gate was the point chiefly sought, as it was furthest from the
- enemy and safer for flight. Caecina, having ascertained that the alarm
- was groundless, yet being unable to stop or stay the soldiers by
- authority or entreaties or even by force, threw himself to the earth
- in the gateway, and at last by an appeal to their pity, as they
- would have had to pass over the body of their commander, closed the
- way. At the same moment the tribunes and the centurions convinced them
- that it was a false alarm.
-
- Having then assembled them at his headquarters, and ordered them
- to hear his words in silence, he reminded them of the urgency of the
- crisis. "Their safety," he said, "lay in their arms, which they
- must, however, use with discretion, and they must remain within the
- entrenchments, till the enemy approached closer, in the hope of
- storming them; then, there must be a general sortie; by that sortie
- the Rhine might be reached. Whereas if they fled, more forests, deeper
- swamps, and a savage foe awaited them; but if they were victorious,
- glory and renown would be theirs." He dwelt on all that was dear to
- them at home, all that testified to their honour in the camp,
- without any allusion to disaster. Next he handed over the horses,
- beginning with his own, of the officers and tribunes, to the bravest
- fighters in the army, quite impartially, that these first, and then
- the infantry, might charge the enemy.
-
- There was as much restlessness in the German host with its hopes,
- its eager longings, and the conflicting opinions of its chiefs.
- Arminius advised that they should allow the Romans to quit their
- position, and, when they had quitted it, again surprise them in swampy
- and intricate ground. Inguiomerus, with fiercer counsels, heartily
- welcome to barbarians, was for beleaguering the entrenchment in
- armed array, as to storm them would, he said, be easy, and there would
- be more prisoners and the booty unspoilt. So at daybreak they trampled
- in the fosses, flung hurdles into them, seized the upper part of the
- breastwork, where the troops were thinly distributed and seemingly
- paralysed by fear. When they were fairly within the fortifications,
- the signal was given to the cohorts, and the horns and trumpets
- sounded. Instantly, with a shout and sudden rush, our men threw
- themselves on the German rear, with taunts, that here were no woods or
- swamps, but that they were on equal ground, with equal chances. The
- sound of trumpets, the gleam of arms, which were so unexpected,
- burst with all the greater effect on the enemy, thinking only, as they
- were, of the easy destruction of a few half-armed men, and they were
- struck down, as unprepared for a reverse as they had been elated by
- success. Arminius and Inguiomerus fled from the battle, the first
- unhurt, the other severely wounded. Their followers were
- slaughtered, as long as our fury and the light of day lasted. It was
- not till night that the legions returned, and though more wounds and
- the same want of provisions distressed them, yet they found
- strength, healing, sustenance, everything indeed, in their victory.
-
- Meanwhile a rumour had spread that our army was cut off, and that
- a furious German host was marching on Gaul. And had not Agrippina
- prevented the bridge over the Rhine from being destroyed, some in
- their cowardice would have dared that base act. A woman of heroic
- spirit, she assumed during those days the duties of a general, and
- distributed clothes or medicine among the soldiers, as they were
- destitute or wounded. According to Caius Plinius, the historian of the
- German wars, she stood at the extremity of the bridge, and bestowed
- praise and thanks on the returning legions. This made a deep
- impression on the mind of Tiberius. "Such zeal," he thought, "could
- not be guileless; it was not against a foreign foe that she was thus
- courting the soldiers. Generals had nothing left them when a woman
- went among the companies, attended the standards, ventured on bribery,
- as though it showed but slight ambition to parade her son in a
- common soldier's uniform, and wish him to be called Caesar Caligula.
- Agrippina had now more power with the armies than officers, than
- generals. A woman had quelled a mutiny which the sovereign's name
- could not check." All this was inflamed and aggravated by Sejanus,
- who, with his thorough comprehension of the character of Tiberius,
- sowed for a distant future hatreds which the emperor might treasure up
- and might exhibit when fully matured.
-
- Of the legions which he had conveyed by ship, Germanicus gave the
- second and fourteenth to Publius Vitellius, to be marched by land,
- so that the fleet might sail more easily over a sea full of shoals, or
- take the ground more lightly at the ebb-tide. Vitellius at first
- pursued his route without interruption, having a dry shore, or the
- waves coming in gently. After a while, through the force of the
- north wind and the equinoctial season, when the sea swells to its
- highest, his army was driven and tossed hither and thither. The
- country too was flooded; sea, shore, fields presented one aspect,
- nor could the treacherous quicksands be distinguished from solid
- ground or shallows from deep water. Men were swept away by the waves
- or sucked under by eddies; beasts of burden, baggage, lifeless
- bodies floated about and blocked their way. The companies were mingled
- in confusion, now with the breast, now with the head only above water,
- sometimes losing their footing and parted from their comrades or
- drowned. The voice of mutual encouragement availed not against the
- adverse force of the waves. There was nothing to distinguish the brave
- from the coward, the prudent from the careless, forethought from
- chance; the same strong power swept everything before it. At last
- Vitellius struggled out to higher ground and led his men up to it.
- There they passed the night, without necessary food, without fire,
- many of them with bare or bruised limbs, in a plight as pitiable as
- that of men besieged by an enemy. For such, at least, have the
- opportunity of a glorious death, while here was destruction without
- honour. Daylight restored land to their sight, and they pushed their
- way to the river Visurgis, where Caesar had arrived with the fleet.
- The legions then embarked, while a rumour was flying about that they
- were drowned. Nor was there a belief in their safety till they saw
- Caesar and the army returned.
-
- By this time Stertinius, who had been despatched to receive the
- surrender of Segimerus, brother of Segestes, had conducted the
- chief, together with his son, to the canton of the Ubii. Both were
- pardoned, Segimerus readily, the son with some hesitation, because
- it was said that he had insulted the corpse of Quintilius Varus.
- Meanwhile Gaul, Spain, and Italy vied in repairing the losses of the
- army, offering whatever they had at hand, arms, horses, gold.
- Germanicus having praised their zeal, took only for the war their arms
- and horses, and relieved the soldiers out of his own purse. And that
- he might also soften the remembrance of the disaster by kindness, he
- went round to the wounded, applauded the feats of soldier after
- soldier, examined their wounds, raised the hopes of one, the
- ambition of another, and the spirits of all by his encouragement and
- interest, thus strengthening their ardour for himself and for battle.
-
- That year triumphal honours were decreed to Aulus Caecina, Lucius
- Apronius, Caius Silius for their achievements under Germanicus. The
- title of "father of his country," which the people had so often thrust
- on him, Tiberius refused, nor would he allow obedience to be sworn
- to his enactments, though the Senate voted it, for he said
- repeatedly that all human things were uncertain, and that the more
- he had obtained, the more precarious was his position. But he did
- not thereby create a belief in his patriotism, for he had revived
- the law of treason, the name of which indeed was known in ancient
- times, though other matters came under its jurisdiction, such as the
- betrayal of an army, or seditious stirring up of the people, or, in
- short, any corrupt act by which a man had impaired "the majesty of the
- people of Rome." Deeds only were liable to accusation; words went
- unpunished. It was Augustus who first, under colour of this law,
- applied legal inquiry to libellous writings provoked, as he had
- been, by the licentious freedom with which Cassius Severus had defamed
- men and women of distinction in his insulting satires. Soon
- afterwards, Tiberius, when consulted by Pompeius Macer, the praetor,
- as to whether prosecutions for treason should be revived, replied that
- the laws must be enforced. He too had been exasperated by the
- publication of verses of uncertain authorship, pointed at his cruelty,
- his arrogance, and his dissensions with his mother.
-
- It will not be uninteresting if I relate in the cases of Falanius
- and Rubrius, Roman knights of moderate fortune, the first
- experiments at such accusations, in order to explain the origin of a
- most terrible scourge, how by Tiberius's cunning it crept in among us,
- how subsequently it was checked, finally, how it burst into flame
- and consumed everything. Against Falanius it was alleged by his
- accuser that he had admitted among the votaries of Augustus, who in
- every great house were associated into a kind of brotherhood, one
- Cassius, a buffoon of infamous life, and that he had also in selling
- his gardens included in the sale a statue of Augustus. Against Rubrius
- the charge was that he had violated by perjury the divinity of
- Augustus. When this was known to Tiberius, he wrote to the consuls
- "that his father had not had a place in heaven decreed to him, that
- the honour might be turned to the destruction of the citizens.
- Cassius, the actor, with men of the same profession, used to take part
- in the games which had been consecrated by his mother to the memory of
- Augustus. Nor was it contrary to the religion of the State for the
- emperor's image, like those of other deities, to be added to a sale of
- gardens and houses. As to the oath, the thing ought to be considered
- as if the man had deceived Jupiter. Wrongs done to the gods were the
- gods' concern."
-
- Not long afterwards, Granius Marcellus, proconsul of Bithynia, was
- accused of treason by his quaestor, Caepio Crispinus, and the charge
- was supported by Romanus Hispo. Crispinus then entered on a line of
- life afterwards rendered notorious by the miseries of the age and
- men's shamelessness. Needy, obscure, and restless, he wormed himself
- by stealthy informations into the confidence of a vindictive prince,
- and soon imperilled all the most distinguished citizens; and having
- thus gained influence with one, hatred from all besides, he left an
- example in following which beggars became wealthy, the
- insignificant, formidable, and brought ruin first on others, finally
- on themselves. He alleged against Marcellus that he had made some
- disrespectful remarks about Tiberius, a charge not to be evaded,
- inasmuch as the accuser selected the worst features of the emperor's
- character and grounded his case on them. The things were true, and
- so were believed to have been said.
-
- Hispo added that Marcellus had placed his own statue above those
- of the Caesars, and had set the bust of Tiberius on another statue
- from which he had struck off the head of Augustus. At this the
- emperor's wrath blazed forth, and, breaking through his habitual
- silence, he exclaimed that in such a case he would himself too give
- his vote openly on oath, that the rest might be under the same
- obligation. There lingered even then a few signs of expiring
- freedom. And so Cneius Piso asked, "In what order will you vote,
- Caesar? If first, I shall know what to follow; if last, I fear that
- I may differ from you unwillingly." Tiberius was deeply moved, and
- repenting of the outburst, all the more because of its
- thoughtlessness, he quietly allowed the accused to be acquitted of the
- charges of treason. As for the question of extortion, it was
- referred to a special commission.
-
- Not satisfied with judicial proceedings in the Senate, the emperor
- would sit at one end of the Praetor's tribunal, but so as not to
- displace him from the official seat. Many decisions were given in
- his presence, in opposition to improper influence and the
- solicitations of great men. This, though it promoted justice, ruined
- freedom. Pius Aurelius, for example, a senator, complained that the
- foundations of his house had been weakened by the pressure of a public
- road and aqueduct, and he appealed to the Senate for assistance. He
- was opposed by the praetors of the treasury, but the emperor helped
- him, and paid him the value of his house, for he liked to spend
- money on a good purpose, a virtue which he long retained, when he cast
- off all others. To Propertius Celer, an ex-praetor, who sought because
- of his indigence to be excused from his rank as a senator, he gave a
- million sesterces, having ascertained that he had inherited poverty.
- He bade others, who attempted the same, prove their case to the
- Senate, as from his love of strictness he was harsh even where he
- acted on right grounds. Consequently every one else preferred
- silence and poverty to confession and relief.
-
- In the same year the Tiber, swollen by continuous rains, flooded the
- level portions of the city. Its subsidence was followed by a
- destruction of buildings and of life. Thereupon Asinius Gallus
- proposed to consult the Sibylline books. Tiberius refused, veiling
- in obscurity the divine as well as the human. However, the devising of
- means to confine the river was intrusted to Ateius Capito and Lucius
- Arruntius.
-
- Achaia and Macedonia, on complaining of their burdens, were, it
- was decided, to be relieved for a time from proconsular government and
- to be transferred to the emperor. Drusus presided over a show of
- gladiators which he gave in his own name and in that of his brother
- Germanicus, for he gloated intensely over bloodshed, however cheap its
- victims. This was alarming to the populace, and his father had, it was
- said, rebuked him. Why Tiberius kept away from the spectacle was
- variously explained. According to some, it was his loathing of a
- crowd, according to others, his gloomy temper, and a fear of
- contrast with the gracious presence of Augustus. I cannot believe that
- he deliberately gave his son the opportunity of displaying his
- ferocity and provoking the people's disgust, though even this was
- said.
-
- Meanwhile the unruly tone of the theatre which first showed itself
- in the preceding year, broke out with worse violence, and some
- soldiers and a centurion, besides several of the populace, were
- killed, and the tribune of a praetorian cohort was wounded, while they
- were trying to stop insults to the magistrates and the strife of the
- mob. This disturbance was the subject of a debate in the Senate, and
- opinions were expressed in favour of the praetors having authority
- to scourge actors. Haterius Agrippa, tribune of the people, interposed
- his veto, and was sharply censured in a speech from Asinius Gallus,
- without a word from Tiberius, who liked to allow the Senate such shows
- of freedom. Still the interposition was successful, because Augustus
- had once pronounced that actors were exempt from the scourge, and it
- was not lawful for Tiberius to infringe his decisions. Many enactments
- were passed to fix the amount of their pay and to check the disorderly
- behaviour of their partisans. Of these the chief were that no
- Senator should enter the house of a pantomime player, that Roman
- knights should not crowd round them in the public streets, that they
- should exhibit themselves only in the theatre, and that the praetors
- should be empowered to punish with banishment any riotous conduct in
- the spectators.
-
- A request from the Spaniards that they might erect a temple to
- Augustus in the colony of Tarraco was granted, and a precedent thus
- given for all the provinces. When the people of Rome asked for a
- remission of the one per cent. tax on all saleable commodities,
- Tiberius declared by edict "that the military exchequer depended on
- that branch of revenue, and, further, that the State was unequal to
- the burden, unless the twentieth year of service were to be that of
- the veteran's discharge." Thus the ill-advised results of the late
- mutiny, by which a limit of sixteen campaigns had been extorted,
- were cancelled for the future.
-
- A question was then raised in the Senate by Arruntius and Ateius
- whether, in order to restrain the inundations of the Tiber, the rivers
- and lakes which swell its waters should be diverted from their
- courses. A hearing was given to embassies from the municipal towns and
- colonies, and the people of Florentia begged that the Clanis might not
- be turned out of its channel and made to flow into the Arnus, as
- that would bring ruin on themselves. Similar arguments were used by
- the inhabitants of Interamna. The most fruitful plains of Italy,
- they said, would be destroyed if the river Nar (for this was the
- plan proposed) were to be divided into several streams and overflow
- the country. Nor did the people of Reate remain silent. They
- remonstrated against the closing up of the Veline lake, where it
- empties itself into the Nar, "as it would burst in a flood on the
- entire neighbourhood. Nature had admirably provided for human
- interests in having assigned to rivers their mouths, their channels,
- and their limits, as well as their sources. Regard, too, must be
- paid to the different religions of the allies, who had dedicated
- sacred rites, groves, and altars to the rivers of their country. Tiber
- himself would be altogether unwilling to be deprived of his
- neighbour streams and to flow with less glory." Either the
- entreaties of the colonies, or the difficulty of the work or
- superstitious motives prevailed, and they yielded to Piso's opinion,
- who declared himself against any change.
-
- Poppaeus Sabinus was continued in his government of the province
- of Moesia with the addition of Achaia and Macedonia. It was part of
- Tiberius' character to prolong indefinitely military commands and to
- keep many men to the end of their life with the same armies and in the
- same administrations. Various motives have been assigned for this.
- Some say that, out of aversion to any fresh anxiety, he retained
- what he had once approved as a permanent arrangement; others, that
- he grudged to see many enjoying promotion. Some, again, think that
- though he had an acute intellect, his judgment was irresolute, for
- he did not seek out eminent merit, and yet he detested vice. From
- the best men he apprehended danger to himself, from the worst,
- disgrace to the State. He went so far at last in this irresolution,
- that he appointed to provinces men whom he did not mean to allow to
- leave Rome.
-
- I can hardly venture on any positive statement about the consular
- elections, now held for the first time under this emperor, or, indeed,
- subsequently, so conflicting are the accounts we find not only in
- historians but in Tiberius' own speeches. Sometimes he kept back the
- names of the candidates, describing their origin, their life and
- military career, so that it might be understood who they were.
- Occasionally even these hints were withheld, and, after urging them
- not to disturb the elections by canvassing, he would promise his own
- help towards the result. Generally he declared that only those had
- offered themselves to him as candidates whose names he had given to
- the consuls, and that others might offer themselves if they had
- confidence in their influence or merit. A plausible profession this in
- words, but really unmeaning and delusive, and the greater the disguise
- of freedom which marked it, the more cruel the enslavement into
- which it was soon to plunge us.
-
- BOOK II, A.D. 16-19
-
-
- IN the consulship of Sisenna Statilius Taurus and Lucius Libo
- there was a commotion in the kingdoms and Roman provinces of the East.
- It had its origin among the Parthians, who disdained as a foreigner
- a king whom they had sought and received from Rome, though he was of
- the family of the Arsacids. This was Vonones, who had been given as an
- hostage to Augustus by Phraates. For although he had driven before him
- armies and generals from Rome, Phraates had shown to Augustus every
- token of reverence and had sent him some of his children, to cement
- the friendship, not so much from dread of us as from distrust of the
- loyalty of his countrymen.
-
- After the death of Phraates and the succeeding kings in the
- bloodshed of civil wars, there came to Rome envoys from the chief
- men of Parthia, in quest of Vonones, his eldest son. Caesar thought
- this a great honour to himself, and loaded Vonones with wealth. The
- barbarians, too, welcomed him with rejoicing, as is usual with new
- rulers. Soon they felt shame at Parthians having become degenerate, at
- their having sought a king from another world, one too infected with
- the training of the enemy, at the throne of the Arsacids now being
- possessed and given away among the provinces of Rome. "Where," they
- asked, "was the glory of the men who slew Crassus, who drove out
- Antonius, if Caesar's drudge, after an endurance of so many years'
- slavery, were to rule over Parthians."
-
- Vonones himself too further provoked their disdain, by his
- contrast with their ancestral manners, by his rare indulgence in the
- chase, by his feeble interest in horses, by the litter in which he was
- carried whenever he made a progress through their cities, and by his
- contemptuous dislike of their national festivities. They also
- ridiculed his Greek attendants and his keeping under seal the
- commonest household articles. But he was easy of approach; his
- courtesy was open to all, and he had thus virtues with which the
- Parthians were unfamiliar, and vices new to them. And as his ways were
- quite alien from theirs they hated alike what was bad and what was
- good in him.
-
- Accordingly they summoned Artabanus, an Arsacid by blood, who had
- grown to manhood among the Dahae, and who, though routed in the
- first encounter, rallied his forces and possessed himself of the
- kingdom. The conquered Vonones found a refuge in Armenia, then a
- free country, and exposed to the power of Parthia and Rome, without
- being trusted by either, in consequence of the crime of Antonius, who,
- under the guise of friendship, had inveigled Artavasdes, king of the
- Armenians, then loaded him with chains, and finally murdered him.
- His son, Artaxias, our bitter foe because of his father's memory,
- found defence for himself and his kingdom in the might of the
- Arsacids. When he was slain by the treachery of kinsmen, Caesar gave
- Tigranes to the Armenians, and he was put in possession of the kingdom
- under the escort of Tiberius Nero. But neither Tigranes nor his
- children reigned long, though, in foreign fashion, they were united in
- marriage and in royal power.
-
- Next, at the bidding of Augustus, Artavasdes was set on the
- throne, nor was he deposed without disaster to ourselves. Caius Caesar
- was then appointed to restore order in Armenia. He put over the
- Armenians Ariobarzanes, a Mede by birth, whom they willingly accepted,
- because of his singularly handsome person and noble spirit. On the
- death of Ariobarzanes through a fatal accident, they would not
- endure his son. Having tried the government of a woman named Erato and
- having soon afterwards driven her from them, bewildered and
- disorganised, rather indeed without a ruler than enjoying freedom,
- they received for their king the fugitive Vonones. When, however,
- Artabanus began to threaten, and but feeble support could be given
- by the Armenians, or war with Parthia would have to be undertaken,
- if Vonones was to be upheld by our arms, the governor of Syria,
- Creticus Silanus, sent for him and kept him under surveillance,
- letting him retain his royal pomp and title. How Vonones meditated
- an escape from this mockery, I will relate in the proper place.
-
- Meanwhile the commotion in the East was rather pleasing to Tiberius,
- as it was a pretext for withdrawing Germanicus from the legions
- which knew him well, and placing him over new provinces where he would
- be exposed both to treachery and to disasters. Germanicus, however, in
- proportion to the strength of the soldiers' attachment and to his
- uncle's dislike, was eager to hasten his victory, and he pondered on
- plans of battle, and on the reverses or successes which during more
- than three years of war had fallen to his lot. The Germans, he knew,
- were beaten in the field and on fair ground; they were helped by
- woods, swamps, short summers, and early winters. His own troops were
- affected not so much by wounds as by long marches and damage to
- their arms. Gaul had been exhausted by supplying horses; a long
- baggage-train presented facilities for ambuscades, and was
- embarrassing to its defenders. But by embarking on the sea, invasion
- would be easy for them, and a surprise to the enemy, while a
- campaign too would be more quickly begun, the legions and supplies
- would be brought up simultaneously, and the cavalry with their
- horses would arrive, in good condition, by the rivermouths and
- channels, at the heart of Germany.
-
- To this accordingly he gave his mind, and sent Publius Vitellius and
- Caius Antius to collect the taxes of Gaul. Silius, Anteius, and
- Caecina had the charge of building a fleet. It seemed that a
- thousand vessels were required, and they were speedily constructed,
- some of small draught with a narrow stem and stern and a broad centre,
- that they might bear the waves more easily; some flat-bottomed, that
- they might ground without being injured; several, furnished with a
- rudder at each end, so that by a sudden shifting of the oars they
- might be run into shore either way. Many were covered in with decks,
- on which engines for missiles might be conveyed, and were also fit for
- the carrying of horses or supplies, and being equipped with sails as
- well as rapidly moved by oars, they assumed, through the enthusiasm of
- our soldiers, an imposing and formidable aspect.
-
- The island of the Batavi was the appointed rendezvous, because of
- its easy landing-places, and its convenience for receiving the army
- and carrying the war across the river. For the Rhine after flowing
- continuously in a single channel or encircling merely insignificant
- islands, divides itself, so to say, where the Batavian territory
- begins, into two rivers, retaining its name and the rapidity of its
- course in the stream which washes Germany, till it mingles with the
- ocean. On the Gallic bank, its flow is broader and gentler; it is
- called by an altered name, the Vahal, by the inhabitants of its shore.
- Soon that name too is changed for the Mosa river, through whose vast
- mouth it empties itself into the same ocean.
-
- Caesar, however, while the vessels were coming up, ordered Silius,
- his lieutenant-general, to make an inroad on the Chatti with a
- flying column. He himself, on hearing that a fort on the river
- Luppia was being besieged, led six legions to the spot. Silius owing
- to sudden rains did nothing but carry off a small booty, and the
- wife and daughter of Arpus, the chief of the Chatti. And Caesar had no
- opportunity of fighting given him by the besiegers, who dispersed on
- the rumour of his advance. They had, however, destroyed the barrow
- lately raised in memory of Varus's legions, and the old altar of
- Drusus. The prince restored the altar, and himself with his legions
- celebrated funeral games in his father's honour. To raise a new barrow
- was not thought necessary. All the country between the fort Aliso
- and the Rhine was thoroughly secured by new barriers and earthworks.
-
- By this time the fleet had arrived, and Caesar, having sent on his
- supplies and assigned vessels for the legions and the allied troops,
- entered "Drusus's fosse," as it was called. He prayed Drusus his
- father to lend him, now that he was venturing on the same
- enterprise, the willing and favourable aid of the example and wi
- memory of his counsels and achievements, and he arrived after a
- prosperous voyage through the lakes and the ocean as far as the
- river Amisia. His fleet remained there on the left bank of the stream,
- and it was a blunder that he did not have it brought up the river.
- He disembarked the troops, which were to be marched to the country
- on the right, and thus several days were wasted in the construction of
- bridges. The cavalry and the legions fearlessly crossed the first
- estuaries in which the tide had not yet risen. The rear of the
- auxiliaries, and the Batavi among the number, plunging recklessly into
- the water and displaying their skill in swimming, fell into
- disorder, and some were drowned. While Caesar was measuring out his
- camp, he was told of a revolt of the Angrivarii in his rear. He at
- once despatched Stertinius with some cavalry and a light armed
- force, who punished their perfidy with fire and sword.
-
- The waters of the Visurgis flowed between the Romans and the
- Cherusci. On its banks stood Arminius with the other chiefs. He
- asked whether Caesar had arrived, and on the reply that he was
- present, he begged leave to have an interview with his brother. That
- brother, surnamed Flavus, was with our army, a man famous for his
- loyalty, and for having lost an eye by a wound, a few years ago,
- when Tiberius was in command. The permission was then given, and he
- stepped forth and was saluted by Arminius, who had removed his
- guards to a distance and required that the bowmen ranged on our bank
- should retire. When they had gone away, Arminius asked his brother
- whence came the scar which disfigured his face, and on being told
- the particular place and battle, he inquired what reward he had
- received. Flavus spoke of increased pay, of a neck chain, a crown, and
- other military gifts, while Arminius jeered at such a paltry
- recompense for slavery.
-
- Then began a controversy. The one spoke of the greatness of Rome,
- the resources of Caesar, the dreadful punishment in store for the
- vanquished, the ready mercy for him who surrenders, and the fact
- that neither Arminius's wife nor his son were treated as enemies;
- the other, of the claims of fatherland, of ancestral freedom, of the
- gods of the homes of Germany, of the mother who shared his prayers,
- that Flavus might not choose to be the deserter and betrayer rather
- than the ruler of his kinsfolk and relatives, and indeed of his own
- people.
-
- By degrees they fell to bitter words, and even the river between
- them would not have hindered them from joining combat, had not
- Stertinius hurried up and put his hand on Flavus, who in the full tide
- of his fury was demanding his weapons and his charger. Arminius was
- seen facing him, full of menaces and challenging him to conflict. Much
- of what he said was in Roman speech, for he had served in our camp
- as leader of his fellow-countrymen.
-
- Next day the German army took up its position on the other side of
- the Visurgis. Caesar, thinking that without bridges and troops to
- guard them, it would not be good generalship to expose the legions
- to danger, sent the cavalry across the river by the fords. It was
- commanded by Stertinius and Aemilius, one of the first rank
- centurions, who attacked at widely different points so as to
- distract the enemy. Chariovalda, the Batavian chief, dashed to the
- charge where the stream is most rapid. The Cherusci, by a pretended
- flight, drew him into a plain surrounded by forest-passes. Then
- bursting on him in a sudden attack from all points they thrust aside
- all who resisted, pressed fiercely on their retreat, driving them
- before them, when they rallied in compact array, some by close
- fighting, others by missiles from a distance. Chariovalda, after
- long sustaining the enemy's fury, cheered on his men to break by a
- dense formation the onset of their bands, while he himself, plunging
- into the thickest of the battle, fell amid a shower of darts with
- his horse pierced under him, and round him many noble chiefs. The rest
- were rescued from the peril by their own strength, or by the cavalry
- which came up with Stertinius and Aemilius.
-
- Caesar on crossing the Visurgis learnt by the information of a
- deserter that Arminius had chosen a battle-field, that other tribes
- too had assembled in a forest sacred to Hercules, and would venture on
- a night attack on his camp. He put faith in this intelligence, and,
- besides, several watchfires were seen. Scouts also, who had crept
- close up to the enemy, reported that they had heard the neighing of
- horses and the hum of a huge and tumultuous host. And so as the
- decisive crisis drew near, that he ought thoroughly to sound the
- temper of his soldiers, he considered with himself how this was to
- be accomplished with a genuine result. Tribunes and centurions, he
- knew, oftener reported what was welcome than what was true; freedmen
- had slavish spirits, friends a love of flattery. If an assembly were
- called, there too the lead of a few was followed by the shout of the
- many. He must probe their inmost thoughts, when they were uttering
- their hopes and fears at the military mess, among themselves, and
- unwatched.
-
- At nightfall, leaving his tent of augury by a secret exit, unknown
- to the sentries, with one companion, his shoulders covered with a wild
- beast's skin, he visited the camp streets, stood by the tents, and
- enjoyed the men's talk about himself, as one extolled his noble
- rank, another, his handsome person, nearly all of them, his endurance,
- his gracious manner and the evenness of his temper, whether he was
- jesting or was serious, while they acknowledged that they ought to
- repay him with their gratitude in battle, and at the same time
- sacrifice to a glorious vengeance the perfidious violators of peace.
- Meanwhile one of the enemy, acquainted with the Roman tongue,
- spurred his horse up to the entrenchments, and in a loud voice
- promised in the name of Arminius to all deserters wives and lands with
- daily pay of a hundred sesterces as long as war lasted. The insult
- fired the wrath of the legions. "Let daylight come," they said, "let
- battle be given. The soldiers will possess themselves of the lands
- of the Germans and will carry off their wives. We hail the omen; we
- mean the women and riches of the enemy to be our spoil." About
- midday there was a skirmishing attack on our camp, without any
- discharge of missiles, when they saw the cohorts in close array before
- the lines and no sign of carelessness.
-
- The same night brought with it a cheering dream to Germanicus. He
- saw himself engaged in sacrifice, and his robe being sprinkled with
- the sacred blood, another more beautiful was given him by the hands of
- his grandmother Augusta. Encouraged by the omen and finding the
- auspices favourable, he called an assembly, and explained the
- precautions which wisdom suggested as suitable for the impending
- battle. "It is not," he said, "plains only which are good for the
- fighting of Roman soldiers, but woods and forest passes, if science be
- used. For the huge shields and unwieldly lances of the barbarians
- cannot, amid trunks of trees and brushwood that springs from the
- ground, be so well managed as our javelins and swords and closefitting
- armour. Shower your blows thickly; strike at the face with your
- swords' points. The German has neither cuirass nor helmet; even his
- shield is not strengthened with leather or steel, but is of osiers
- woven together or of thin and painted board. If their first line is
- armed with spears, the rest have only weapons hardened by fire or very
- short. Again, though their frames are terrible to the eye and
- formidable in a brief onset, they have no capacity of enduring wounds;
- without, any shame at the disgrace, without any regard to their
- leaders, they quit the field and flee; they quail under disaster, just
- as in success they forget alike divine and human laws. If in your
- weariness of land and sea you desire an end of service, this battle
- prepares the way to it. The Elbe is now nearer than the Rhine, and
- there is no war beyond, provided only you enable me, keeping close
- as I do to my father's and my uncle's footsteps, to stand a
- conqueror on the same spot."
-
- The general's speech was followed by enthusiasm in the soldiers, and
- the signal for battle was given. Nor were Arminius and the other
- German chiefs slow to call their respective clansmen to witness that
- "these Romans were the most cowardly fugitives out of Varus's army,
- men who rather than endure war had taken to mutiny. Half of them
- have their backs covered with wounds; half are once again exposing
- limbs battered by waves and storms to a foe full of fury, and to
- hostile deities, with no hope of advantage. They have, in fact, had
- recourse to a fleet and to a trackless ocean, that their coming
- might be unopposed, their flight unpursued. But when once they have
- joined conflict with us, the help of winds or oars will be
- unavailing to the vanquished. Remember only their greed, their
- cruelty, their pride. Is anything left for us but to retain our
- freedom or to die before we are enslaved?
-
- When they were thus roused and were demanding battle, their chiefs
- led them down into a plain named Idistavisus. It winds between the
- Visurgis and a hill range, its breadth varying as the river banks
- recede or the spurs of the hills project on it. In their rear rose a
- forest, with the branches rising to a great height, while there were
- clear spaces between the trunks. The barbarian army occupied the plain
- and the outskirts of the wood. The Cherusci were posted by
- themselves on the high ground, so as to rush down on the Romans during
- the battle.
-
- Our army advanced in the following order. The auxiliary Gauls and
- Germans were in the van, then the foot-archers, after them, four
- legions and Caesar himself with two praetorian cohorts and some picked
- cavalry. Next came as many other legions, and light-armed troops
- with horse-bowmen, and the remaining cohorts of the allies. The men
- were quite ready and prepared to form in line of battle according to
- their marching order.
-
- Caesar, as soon as he saw the Cheruscan bands which in their
- impetuous spirit had rushed to the attack, ordered the finest of his
- cavalry to charge them in flank, Stertinius with the other squadrons
- to make a detour and fall on their rear, promising himself to come
- up in good time. Meanwhile there was a most encouraging augury.
- Eight eagles, seen to fly towards the woods and to enter them,
- caught the general's eye. "Go," he exclaimed, "follow the Roman birds,
- the true deities of our legions." At the same moment the infantry
- charged, and the cavalry which had been sent on in advance dashed on
- the rear and the flanks. And, strange to relate, two columns of the
- enemy fled in opposite directions, that, which had occupied the
- wood, rushing into the open, those who had been drawn up on the
- plains, into the wood. The Cherusci, who were between them, were
- dislodged from the hills, while Arminius, conspicuous among them by
- gesture, voice, and a wound he had received, kept up the fight. He had
- thrown himself on our archers and was on the point of breaking through
- them, when the cohorts of the Raeti, Vendelici, and Gauls faced his
- attack. By a strong bodily effort, however, and a furious rush of
- his horse, he made his way through them, having smeared his face
- with his blood, that he might not be known. Some have said that he was
- recognised by Chauci serving among the Roman auxiliaries, who let
- him go.
-
- Inguiomerus owed his escape to similar courage or treachery. The
- rest were cut down in every direction. Many in attempting to swim
- across the Visurgis were overwhelmed under a storm of missiles or by
- the force of the current, lastly, by the rush of fugitives and the
- falling in of the banks. Some in their ignominious flight climbed
- the tops of trees, and as they were hiding themselves in the boughs,
- archers were brought up and they were shot for sport. Others were
- dashed to the ground by the felling of the trees.
-
- It was a great victory and without bloodshed to us. From nine in the
- morning to nightfall the enemy were slaughtered, and ten miles were
- covered with arms and dead bodies, while there were found amid the
- plunder the chains which the Germans had brought with them for the
- Romans, as though the issue were certain. The soldiers on the battle
- field hailed Tiberius as Imperator, and raised a mound on which arms
- were piled in the style of a trophy, with the names of the conquered
- tribes inscribed beneath them.
-
- That sight caused keener grief and rage among the Germans than their
- wounds, their mourning, and their losses. Those who but now were
- preparing to quit their settlements and to retreat to the further side
- of the Elbe, longed for battle and flew to arms. Common people and
- chiefs, young and old, rushed on the Roman army, and spread
- disorder. At last they chose a spot closed in by a river and by
- forests, within which was a narrow swampy plain. The woods too were
- surrounded by a bottomless morass, only on one side of it the
- Angrivarii had raised a broad earthwork, as a boundary between
- themselves and the Cherusci. Here their infantry was ranged. Their
- cavalry they concealed in neighbouring woods, so as to be on the
- legions' rear, as soon as they entered the forest.
-
- All this was known to Caesar. He was acquainted with their plans,
- their positions, with what met the eye, and what was hidden, and he
- prepared to turn the enemy's stratagems to their own destruction. To
- Seius Tubero, his chief officer, he assigned the cavalry and the
- plain. His infantry he drew up so that part might advance on level
- ground into the forest, and part clamber up the earthwork which
- confronted them. He charged himself with what was the specially
- difficult operation, leaving the rest to his officers. Those who had
- the level ground easily forced a passage. Those who had to assault the
- earthwork encountered heavy blows from above, as if they were
- scaling a wall. The general saw how unequal this close fighting was,
- and having withdrawn his legions to a little distance, ordered the
- slingers and artillerymen to discharge a volley of missiles and
- scatter the enemy. Spears were hurled from the engines, and the more
- conspicuous were the defenders of the position, the more the wounds
- with which they were driven from it. Caesar with some praetorian
- cohorts was the first, after the storming of the ramparts, to dash
- into the woods. There they fought at close quarters. A morass was in
- the enemy's rear, and the Romans were hemmed in by the river or by the
- hills. Both were in a desperate plight from their position; valour was
- their only hope, victory their only safety.
-
- The Germans were equally brave, but they were beaten by the nature
- of the fighting and of the weapons, for their vast host in so confined
- a space could neither thrust out nor recover their immense lances,
- or avail themselves of their nimble movements and lithe frames, forced
- as they were to a close engagement. Our soldiers, on the other hand,
- with their shields pressed to their breasts, and their hands
- grasping their sword-hilts, struck at the huge limbs and exposed faces
- of the barbarians, cutting a passage through the slaughtered enemy,
- for Arminius was now less active, either from incessant perils, or
- because he was partially disabled by his recent wound. As for
- Inguiomerus, who flew hither and thither over the battlefield, it
- was fortune rather than courage which forsook him. Germanicus, too,
- that he might be the better known, took his helmet off his head and
- begged his men to follow up the slaughter, as they wanted not
- prisoners, and the utter destruction of the nation would be the only
- conclusion of the war. And now, late in the day, he withdrew one of
- his legions from the field, to intrench a camp, while the rest till
- nightfall glutted themselves with the enemy's blood. Our cavalry
- fought with indecisive success.
-
- Having publicly praised his victorious troops, Caesar raised a
- pile of arms with the proud inscription, "The army of Tiberius Caesar,
- after thoroughly conquering the tribes between the Rhine and the Elbe,
- has dedicated this monument to Mars, Jupiter, and Augustus." He
- added nothing about himself, fearing jealousy, or thinking that the
- conciousness of the achievement was enough. Next he charged Stertinius
- with making war on the Angrivarii, but they hastened to surrender.
- And, as suppliants, by refusing nothing, they obtained a full pardon.
-
- When, however, summer was at its height some of the legions were
- sent back overland into winter-quarters, but most of them Caesar put
- on board the fleet and brought down the river Amisia to the ocean.
- At first the calm waters merely sounded with the oars of a thousand
- vessels or were ruffled by the sailing ships. Soon, a hailstorm
- bursting from a black mass of clouds, while the waves rolled hither
- and thither under tempestuous gales from every quarter, rendered clear
- sight impossible, and the steering difficult, while our soldiers,
- terrorstricken and without any experience of disasters on the sea,
- by embarrassing the sailors or giving them clumsy aid, neutralized the
- services of the skilled crews. After a while, wind and wave shifted
- wholly to the south, and from the hilly lands and deep rivers of
- Germany came with a huge line of rolling clouds, a strong blast, all
- the more frightful from the frozen north which was so near to them,
- and instantly caught and drove the ships hither and thither into the
- open ocean, or on islands with steep cliffs or which hidden shoals
- made perilous. these they just escaped, with difficulty, and when
- the tide changed and bore them the same way as the wind, they could
- not hold to their anchors or bale out the water which rushed in upon
- them. Horses, beasts of burden, baggage, were thrown overboard, in
- order to lighten the hulls which leaked copiously through their sides,
- while the waves too dashed over them.
-
- As the ocean is stormier than all other seas, and as Germany is
- conspicuous for the terrors of its climate, so in novelty and extent
- did this disaster transcend every other, for all around were hostile
- coasts, or an expanse so vast and deep that it is thought to be the
- remotest shoreless sea. Some of the vessels were swallowed up; many
- were wrecked on distant islands, and the soldiers, finding there no
- form of human life, perished of hunger, except some who supported
- existence on carcases of horses washed on the same shores.
- Germanicus's trireme alone reached the country of the Chauci. Day
- and night, on those rocks and promontories he would incessantly
- exclaim that he was himself responsible for this awful ruin, and
- friends scarce restrained him from seeking death in the same sea.
-
- At last, as the tide ebbed and the wind blew favourably, the
- shattered vessels with but few rowers, or clothing spread as sails,
- some towed by the more powerful, returned, and Germanicus, having
- speedily repaired them, sent them to search the islands. Many by
- that means were recovered. The Angrivarii, who had lately been
- admitted to our alliance, restored to us several had ransomed from the
- inland tribes. Some had been carried to Britain and were sent back
- by the petty chiefs. Every one, as he returned from some far-distant
- region, told of wonders, of violent hurricanes, and unknown birds,
- of monsters of the sea, of forms half-human, half beast-like, things
- they had really seen or in their terror believed.
-
- Meanwhile the rumoured loss of the fleet stirred the Germans to hope
- for war, as it did Caesar to hold them down. He ordered Caius Silius
- with thirty thousand infantry and three thousand cavalry to march
- against the Chatti. He himself, with a larger army, invaded the Marsi,
- whose leader, Mallovendus, whom we had lately admitted to surrender,
- pointed out a neighbouring wood, where, he said, an eagle of one of
- Varus's legions was buried and guarded only by a small force.
- Immediately troops were despatched to draw the enemy from his position
- by appearing in his front, others, to hem in his rear and open the
- ground. Fortune favoured both. So Germanicus, with increased energy,
- advanced into the country, laying it waste, and utterly ruining a
- foe who dared not encounter him, or who was instantly defeated
- wherever he resisted, and, as we learnt from prisoners, was never more
- panic-stricken. The Romans, they declared, were invincible, rising
- superior to all calamities; for having thrown away a fleet, having
- lost their arms, after strewing the shores with the carcases of horses
- and of men, they had rushed to the attack with the same courage,
- with equal spirit, and, seemingly, with augmented numbers.
-
- The soldiers were then led back into winter-quarters, rejoicing in
- their hearts at having been compensated for their disasters at sea
- by a successful expedition. They were helped too by Caesar's bounty,
- which made good whatever loss any one declared he had suffered. It was
- also regarded as a certainty that the enemy were wavering and
- consulting on negotiations for peace, and that, with an additional
- campaign next summer the war might be ended. Tiberius, however, in
- repeated letters advised Germanicus to return for the triumph
- decreed him. "He had now had enough of success, enough of disaster. He
- had fought victorious battles on a great scale; he should also
- remember those losses which the winds and waves had inflicted, and
- which, though due to no fault of the general, were still grievous
- and shocking. He, Tiberius, had himself been sent nine times by
- Augustus into Germany, and had done more by policy than by arms. By
- this means the submission of the Sugambri had been secured, and the
- Suevi with their king Maroboduus had been forced into peace. The
- Cherusci too and the other insurgent tribes, since the vengeance of
- Rome had been satisfied, might be left to their internal feuds."
-
- When Germanicus requested a year for the completion of his
- enterprise, Tiberius put a severer pressure on his modesty by offering
- him a second consulship, the functions of which he was to discharge in
- person. He also added that if war must still be waged, he might as
- well leave some materials for renown to his brother Drusus, who, as
- there was then no other enemy, could win only in Germany the
- imperial title and the triumphal laurel. Germanicus hesitated no
- longer, though he saw that this was a pretence, and that he was
- hurried away through jealousy from the glory he had already acquired.
-
- About the same time Libo Drusus, of the family of Scribonii, was
- accused of revolutionary schemes. I will explain, somewhat minutely,
- the beginning, progress, and end of this affair, since then first were
- originated those practices which for so many years have eaten into the
- heart of the State. Firmius Catus, a senator, an intimate friend of
- Libo's, prompted the young man, who was thoughtless and an easy prey
- to delusions, to resort to astrologers' promises, magical rites, and
- interpreters of dreams, dwelling ostentatiously on his
- great-grandfather Pompeius, his aunt Scribonia, who had formerly
- been wife of Augustus, his imperial cousins, his house crowded with
- ancestral busts, and urging him to extravagance and debt, himself
- the companion of his profligacy and desperate embarrassments,
- thereby to entangle him in all the more proofs of guilt.
-
- As soon as he found enough witnesses, with some slaves who knew
- the facts, he begged an audience of the emperor, after first
- indicating the crime and the criminal through Flaccus Vescularius, a
- Roman knight, who was more intimate with Tiberius than himself.
- Caesar, without disregarding the information, declined an interview,
- for the communication, he said, might be conveyed to him through the
- same messenger, Flaccus. Meanwhile he conferred the praetorship on
- Libo and often invited him to his table, showing no unfriendliness
- in his looks or anger in his words (so thoroughly had he concealed his
- resentment); and he wished to know all his saying and doings, though
- it was in his power to stop them, till one Junius, who had been
- tampered with by Libo for the purpose of evoking by incantations
- spirits of the dead, gave information to Fulcinius Trio. Trio's
- ability was conspicuous among informers, as well as his eagerness
- for an evil notoriety. He at once pounced on the accused, went to
- the consuls, and demanded an inquiry before the Senate. The Senators
- were summoned, with a special notice that they must consult on a
- momentous and terrible matter.
-
- Libo meanwhile, in mourning apparel and accompanied by ladies of the
- highest rank, went to house after house, entreating his relatives, and
- imploring some eloquent voice to ward off his perils; which all
- refused, on different pretexts, but from the same apprehension. On the
- day the Senate met, jaded with fear and mental anguish, or, as some
- have related, feigning illness, he was carried in a litter to the
- doors of the Senate House, and leaning on his brother he raised his
- hands and voice in supplication to Tiberius, who received him with
- unmoved countenance. The emperor then read out the charges and the
- accusers' names, with such calmness as not to seem to soften or
- aggravate the accusations.
-
- Besides Trio and Catus, Fonteius Agrippa and Caius Vibius were among
- his accusers, and claimed with eager rivalry the privilege of
- conducting the case for the prosecution, till Vibius, as they would
- not yield one to the other, and Libo had entered without counsel,
- offered to state the charges against him singly, and produced an
- extravagantly absurd accusation, according to which Libo had consulted
- persons whether he would have such wealth as to be able to cover the
- Appian road as far as Brundisium with money. There were other
- questions of the same sort, quite senseless and idle; if leniently
- regarded, pitiable. But there was one paper in Libo's handwriting,
- so the prosecutor alleged, with the names of Caesars and of
- Senators, to which marks were affixed of dreadful or mysterious
- significance. When the accused denied this, it was decided that his
- slaves who recognised the writing should be examined by torture. As an
- ancient statute of the Senate forbade such inquiry in a case affecting
- a master's life, Tiberius, with his cleverness in devising new law,
- ordered Libo's slaves to be sold singly to the State-agent, so that,
- forsooth, without an infringement of the Senate's decree, Libo might
- be tried on their evidence. As a consequence, the defendant asked an
- adjournment till next day, and having gone home he charged his
- kinsman, Publius Quirinus, with his last prayer to the emperor.
-
- The answer was that he should address himself to the Senate.
- Meanwhile his house was surrounded with soldiers; they crowded noisily
- even about the entrance, so that they could be heard and seen; when
- Libo, whose anguish drove him from the very banquet he had prepared as
- his last gratification, called for a minister of death, grasped the
- hands of his slaves, and thrust a sword into them. In their confusion,
- as they shrank back, they overturned the lamp on the table at his
- side, and in the darkness, now to him the gloom of death, he aimed two
- blows at a vital part. At the groans of the falling man his freedmen
- hurried up, and the soldiers, seeing the bloody deed, stood aloof. Yet
- the prosecution was continued in the Senate with the same persistency,
- and Tiberius declared on oath that he would have interceded for his
- life, guilty though he was, but for his hasty suicide.
-
- His property was divided among his accusers, and praetorships out of
- the usual order were conferred on those who were of senators' rank.
- Cotta Messalinus then proposed that Libo's bust should not be
- carried in the funeral procession of any of his descendants; and
- Cneius Lentulus, that no Scribonius should assume the surname of
- Drusus. Days of public thanksgiving were appointed on the suggestion
- of Pomponius Flaccus. Offerings were given to Jupiter, Mars, and
- Concord, and the 13th day of September, on which Libo had killed
- himself, was to be observed as a festival, on the motion of Gallus
- Asinius, Papius Mutilus, and Lucius Apronius. I have mentioned the
- proposals and sycophancy of these men, in order to bring to light this
- old-standing evil in the State.
-
- Decrees of the Senate were also passed to expel from Italy
- astrologers and magicians. One of their number, Lucius Pituanius,
- was hurled from the Rock. Another, Publius Marcius, was executed,
- according to ancient custom, by the consuls outside the Esquiline
- Gate, after the trumpets had been bidden to sound.
-
- On the next day of the Senate's meeting much was said against the
- luxury of the country by Quintus Haterius, an ex-consul, and by
- Octavius Fronto, an ex-praetor. It was decided that vessels of solid
- gold should not be made for the serving of food, and that men should
- not disgrace themselves with silken clothing from the East. Fronto
- went further, and insisted on restrictions being put on plate,
- furniture, and household establishments. It was indeed still usual
- with the Senators, when it was their turn to vote, to suggest anything
- they thought for the State's advantage. Gallus Asinius argued on the
- other side. "With the growth of the empire private wealth too," he
- said, "had increased, and there was nothing new in this, but it
- accorded with the fashions of the earliest antiquity. Riches were
- one thing with the Fabricii, quite another with the Scipios. The State
- was the standard of everything; when it was poor, the homes of the
- citizens were humble; when it reached such magnificence, private
- grandeur increased. In household establishments, and plate, and in
- whatever was provided for use, there was neither excess nor
- parsimony except in relation to the fortune of the possessor. A
- distinction had been made in the assessments of Senators and
- knights, not because they differed naturally, but that the superiority
- of the one class in places in the theatre, in rank and in honour,
- might be also maintained in everything else which insured mental
- repose and bodily recreation, unless indeed men in the highest
- position were to undergo more anxieties and more dangers, and to be at
- the same time deprived of all solace under those anxieties and
- dangers." Gallus gained a ready assent, under these specious
- phrases, by a confession of failings with which his audience
- symphathised. And Tiberius too had added that this was not a time
- for censorship, and that if there were any declension in manners, a
- promoter of reform would not be wanting.
-
- During this debate Lucius Piso, after exclaiming against the
- corruption of the courts, the bribery of judges, the cruel threats
- of accusations from hired orators, declared that he would depart and
- quit the capital, and that he meant to live in some obscure and
- distant rural retreat. At the same moment he rose to leave the
- Senate House. Tiberius was much excited, and though he pacified Piso
- with gentle words, he also strongly urged his relatives to stop his
- departure by their influence or their entreaties.
-
- Soon afterwards this same Piso gave an equal proof of a fearless
- sense of wrong by suing Urgulania, whom Augusta's friendship had
- raised above the law. Neither did Urgulania obey the summons, for in
- defiance of Piso she went in her litter to the emperor's house; nor
- did Piso give way, though Augusta complained that she was insulted and
- her majesty slighted. Tiberius, to win popularity by so humouring
- his mother as to say that he would go to the praetor's court and
- support Urgulania, went forth from the palace, having ordered soldiers
- to follow him at a distance. He was seen, as the people thronged about
- him, to wear a calm face, while he prolonged his time on the way
- with various conversations, till at last when Piso's relatives tried
- in vain to restrain him, Augusta directed the money which was
- claimed to be handed to him. This ended the affair, and Piso, in
- consequence, was not dishonoured, and the emperor rose in
- reputation. Urgulania's influence, however, was so formidable to the
- State, that in a certain cause which was tried by the Senate she would
- not condescend to appear as a witness. The praetor was sent to
- question her at her own house, although the Vestal virgins,
- according to ancient custom, were heard in the courts, before
- judges, whenever they gave evidence.
-
- I should say nothing of the adjournment of public business in this
- year, if it were not worth while to notice the conflicting opinions of
- Cneius Piso and Asinius Gallus on the subject. Piso, although the
- emperor had said that he would be absent, held that all the more ought
- the business to be transacted, that the State might have honour of its
- Senate and knights being able to perform their duties in the
- sovereign's absence. Gallus, as Piso had forestalled him in the
- display of freedom, maintained that nothing was sufficiently
- impressive or suitable to the majesty of the Roman people, unless done
- before Caesar and under his very eyes, and that therefore the
- gathering from all Italy and the influx from the provinces ought to be
- reserved for his presence. Tiberius listened to this in silence, and
- the matter was debated on both sides in a sharp controversy. The
- business, however, was adjourned.
-
- A dispute then arose between Gallus and the emperor. Gallus proposed
- that the elections of magistrates should be held every five years, and
- that the commanders of the legions who before receiving a
- praetorship discharged this military service should at once become
- praetorselect, the emperor nominating twelve candidates every year. It
- was quite evident that this motion had a deeper meaning and was an
- attempt to explore the secrets of imperial policy. Tiberius,
- however, argued as if his power would be thus increased. "It would,"
- he said, "be trying to his moderation to have to elect so many and
- to put off so many. He scarcely avoided giving offence from year to
- year, even though a candidate's rejection was solaced by the near
- prospect of office. What hatred would be incurred from those whose
- election was deferred for five years! How could he foresee through
- so long an interval what would be a man's temper, or domestic
- relations, or estate? Men became arrogant even with this annual
- appointment. What would happen if their thoughts were fixed on
- promotion for five years? It was in fact a multiplying of the
- magistrates five-fold, and a subversion of the laws which had
- prescribed proper periods for the exercise of the candidate's activity
- and the seeking or securing office. With this seemingly conciliatory
- speech he retained the substance of power.
-
- He also increased the incomes of some of the Senators. Hence it
- was the more surprising that he listened somewhat disdainfully to
- the request of Marcus Hortalus, a youth of noble rank in conspicuous
- poverty. He was the grandson of the orator Hortensius, and had been
- induced by Augustus, on the strength of a gift of a million sesterces,
- to marry and rear children, that one of our most illustrious
- families might not become extinct. Accordingly, with his four sons
- standing at the doors of the Senate House, the Senate then sitting
- in the palace, when it was his turn to speak he began to address
- them as follows, his eyes fixed now on the statue of Hortensius
- which stood among those of the orators, now on that of Augustus:-
- "Senators, these whose numbers and boyish years you behold I have
- reared, not by my own choice, but because the emperor advised me. At
- the same time, my ancestors deserved to have descendants. For
- myself, not having been able in these altered times to receive or
- acquire wealth or popular favour, or that eloquence which has been the
- hereditary possession of our house, I was satisfied if my narrow means
- were neither a disgrace to myself nor burden to others. At the
- emperor's bidding I married. Behold the offspring and progeny of a
- succession of consuls and dictators. Not to excite odium do I recall
- such facts, but to win compassion. While you prosper, Caesar, they
- will attain such promotion as you shall bestow. Meanwhile save from
- penury the great-grandsons of Quintus Hortensius, the
- foster-children of Augustus."
-
- The Senate's favourable bias was an incitement to Tiberius to
- offer prompt opposition, which he did in nearly these words:- "If
- all poor men begin to come here and to beg money for their children,
- individuals will never be satisfied, and the State will be bankrupt.
- Certainly our ancestors did not grant the privilege of occasionally
- proposing amendments or of suggesting, in our turn for speaking,
- something for the general advantage in order that we might in this
- house increase our private business and property, thereby bringing
- odium on the Senate and on emperors whether they concede or refuse
- their bounty. In fact, it is not a request, but an importunity, as
- utterly unreasonable as it is unforeseen, for a senator, when the
- house has met on other matters, to rise from his place and, pleading
- the number and age of his children, put a pressure on the delicacy
- of the Senate, then transfer the same constraint to myself, and, as it
- were, break open the exchequer, which, if we exhaust it by improper
- favouritism, will have to be replenished by crimes. Money was given
- you, Hortalus, by Augustus, but without solicitation, and not on the
- condition of its being always given. Otherwise industry will
- languish and idleness be encouraged, if a man has nothing to fear,
- nothing to hope from himself, and every one, in utter recklessness,
- will expect relief from others, thus becoming useless to himself and a
- burden to me."
-
- These and like remarks, though listened to with assent by those
- who make it a practice to eulogise everything coming from
- sovereigns, both good and bad, were received by the majority in
- silence or with suppressed murmurs. Tiberius perceived it, and
- having paused a while, said that he had given Hortalus his answer, but
- that if the senators thought it right, he would bestow two hundred
- thousand sesterces on each of his children of the male sex. The others
- thanked him; Hortalus said nothing, either from alarm or because
- even in his reduced fortunes he clung to his hereditary nobility.
- Nor did Tiberius afterwards show any pity, though the house of
- Hortensius sank into shameful poverty.
-
- That same year the daring of a single slave, had it not been
- promptly checked, would have ruined the State by discord and civil
- war. A servant of Postumus Agrippa, Clemens by name, having
- ascertained that Augustus was dead, formed a design beyond a slave's
- conception, of going to the island of Planasia and seizing Agrippa
- by craft or force and bringing him to the armies of Germany. The
- slowness of a merchant vessel thwarted his bold venture. Meanwhile the
- murder of Agrippa had been perpetrated, and then turning his
- thoughts to a greater and more hazardous enterprise, he stole the
- ashes of the deceased, sailed to Cosa, a promontory of Etruria, and
- there hid himself in obscure places till his hair and beard were long.
- In age and figure he was not unlike his master. Then through
- suitable emissaries who shared his secret, it was rumoured that
- Agrippa was alive, first in whispered gossip, soon, as is usual with
- forbidden topics, in vague talk which found its way to the credulous
- ears of the most ignorant people or of restless and revolutionary
- schemers. He himself went to the towns, as the day grew dark,
- without letting himself be seen publicly or remaining long in the same
- places, but, as he knew that truth gains strength by notoriety and
- time, falsehood by precipitancy and vagueness, he would either
- withdraw himself from publicity or else forestall it.
-
- It was rumoured meanwhile throughout Italy, and was believed at
- Rome, that Agrippa had been saved by the blessing of Heaven. Already
- at Ostia, where he had arrived, he was the centre of interest to a
- vast concourse as well as to secret gatherings in the capital, while
- Tiberius was distracted by the doubt whether he should crush this
- slave of his by military force or allow time to dissipate a silly
- credulity. Sometimes he thought that he must overlook nothing,
- sometimes that he need not be afraid of everything, his mind
- fluctuating between shame and terror. At last he entrusted the
- affair to Sallustius Crispus, who chose two of his dependants (some
- say they were soldiers) and urged them to go to him as pretended
- accomplices, offering money and promising faithful companionship in
- danger. They did as they were bidden; then, waiting for an unguarded
- hour of night, they took with them a sufficient force, and having
- bound and gagged him, dragged him to the palace. When Tiberius asked
- him how he had become Agrippa, he is said to have replied, "As you
- became Caesar." He could not be forced to divulge his accomplices.
- Tiberius did not venture on a public execution, but ordered him to
- be slain in a private part of the palace and his body to be secretly
- removed. And although many of the emperor's household and knights
- and senators were said to have supported him with their wealth and
- helped him with their counsels, no inquiry was made.
-
- At the close of the year was consecrated an arch near the temple
- of Saturn to commemorate the recovery of the standards lost with
- Varus, under the leadership of Germanicus and the auspices of
- Tiberius; a temple of Fors Fortuna, by the Tiber, in the gardens which
- Caesar, the dictator, bequeathed to the Roman people; a chapel to
- the Julian family, and statues at Bovillae to the Divine Augustus.
-
- In the consulship of Caius Caecilius and Lucius Pomponius,
- Germanicus Caesar, on the 26th day of May, celebrated his triumph over
- the Cherusci, Chatti, and Angrivarii, and the other tribes which
- extend as far as the Elbe. There were borne in procession spoils,
- prisoners, representations of the mountains, the rivers and battles;
- and the war, seeing that he had been forbidden to finish it, was taken
- as finished. The admiration of the beholders was heightened by the
- striking comeliness of the general and the chariot which bore his five
- children. Still, there was a latent dread when they remembered how
- unfortunate in the case of Drusus, his father, had been the favour
- of the crowd; how his uncle Marcellus, regarded by the city populace
- with passionate enthusiasm, had been snatched from them while yet a
- youth, and how short-lived and ill-starred were the attachments of the
- Roman people.
-
- Tiberius meanwhile in the name of Germanicus gave every one of the
- city populace three hundred sesterces, and nominated himself his
- colleague in the consulship. Still, failing to obtain credit for
- sincere affection, he resolved to get the young prince out of the way,
- under pretence of conferring distinction, and for this he invented
- reasons, or eagerly fastened on such as chance presented.
-
- King Archelaus had been in possession of Cappadocia for fifty years,
- and Tiberius hated him because he had not shown him any mark of
- respect while he was at Rhodes. This neglect of Archelaus was not
- due to pride, but was suggested by the intimate friends of Augustus,
- because, when Caius Caesar was in his prime and had charge of the
- affairs of the East, Tiberius's friendship was thought to be
- dangerous. When, after the extinction of the family of the Caesars,
- Tiberius acquired the empire, he enticed Archelaus by a letter from
- his mother, who without concealing her son's displeasure promised
- mercy if he would come to beg for it. Archelaus, either quite
- unsuspicious of treachery, or dreading compulsion, should it be
- thought that he saw through it, hastened to Rome. There he was
- received by a pitiless emperor, and soon afterwards was arraigned
- before the Senate. In his anguish and in the weariness of old age, and
- from being unused, as a king, to equality, much less to degradation,
- not, certainly, from fear of the charges fabricated against him, he
- ended his life, by his own act or by a natural death. His kingdom
- was reduced into a province, and Caesar declared that, with its
- revenues, the one per cent. tax could be lightened, which, for the
- future, he fixed at one-half per cent.
-
- During the same time, on the deaths of Antiochus and Philopator,
- kings respectively of the Commageni and Cilicians, these nations
- became excited, a majority desiring the Roman rule, some, that of
- their kings. The provinces too of Syria and Judaea, exhausted by their
- burdens, implored a reduction of tribute.
-
- Tiberius accordingly discussed these matters and the affairs of
- Armenia, which I have already related, before the Senate. "The
- commotions in the East," he said, "could be quieted only by the
- wisdom, of Germanicus; own life was on the decline, and Drusus had not
- yet reached his maturity." Thereupon, by a decree of the Senate, the
- provinces beyond sea were entrusted to Germanicus, with greater powers
- wherever he went than were given to those who obtained their provinces
- by lot or by the emperor's appointment.
-
- Tiberius had however removed from Syria Creticus Silanus, who was
- connected by a close tie with Germanicus, his daughter being betrothed
- to Nero, the eldest of Germanicus's children. He appointed to it
- Cneius Piso, a man of violent temper, without an idea of obedience,
- with indeed a natural arrogance inherited from his father Piso, who in
- the civil war supported with the most energetic aid against Caesar the
- reviving faction in Africa, then embraced the cause of Brutus and
- Cassius, and, when suffered to return, refrained from seeking
- promotion till, he was actually solicited to accept a consulship
- offered by Augustus. But beside the father's haughty temper there
- was also the noble rank and wealth of his wife Plancina, to inflame
- his ambition. He would hardly be the inferior of Tiberius, and as
- for Tiberius's children, he looked down on them as far beneath him. He
- thought it a certainty that he had been chosen to govern Syria in
- order to thwart the aspirations of Germanicus. Some believed that he
- had even received secret instructions from Tiberius, and it was beyond
- a question that Augusta, with feminine jealousy, had suggested to
- Plancina calumnious insinuations against Agrippina. For there was
- division and discord in the court, with unexpressed partialities
- towards either Drusus or Germanicus. Tiberius favoured Drusus, as his.
- son and born of his own blood. As for Germanicus, his uncle's
- estrangement had increased the affection which all others felt for
- him, and there was the fact too that he had an advantage in the
- illustrious rank of his mother's family, among whom he could point
- to his grandfather Marcus Antonius and to his great-uncle Augustus.
- Drusus, on the other hand, had for his great-grandfather a Roman
- knight, Pomponius Atticus, who seemed to disgrace the ancestral images
- of the Claudii. Again, the consort of Germanicus, Agrippina, in number
- of children and in character, was superior to Livia, the wife of
- Drusus. Yet the brothers were singularly united, and were wholly
- unaffected by the rivalries of their kinsfolk.
-
- Soon afterwards Drusus was sent into Illyricum to be familiarised
- with military service, and to win the goodwill of the army. Tiberius
- also thought that it was better for the young prince, who was being
- demoralised by the luxury of the capital, to serve in a camp, while he
- felt himself the safer with both his sons in command of legions.
- However, he made a pretext of the Suevi, who were imploring help
- against the Cherusci. For when the Romans had departed and they were
- free from the fear of an invader, these tribes, according to the
- custom of the race, and then specially as rivals in fame, had turned
- their arms against each other. The strength of the two nations, the
- valour of their chiefs were equal. But the title of king rendered
- Maroboduus hated among his countrymen, while Arminius was regarded
- with favour as the champion of freedom.
-
- Thus it was not only the Cherusci and their allies, the old soldiers
- of Arminius, who took up arms, but even the Semnones and Langobardi
- from the kingdom of Maroboduus revolted to that chief. With this
- addition he must have had an overwhelming superiority, had not
- Inguiomerus deserted with a troop of his dependants to Maroboduus,
- simply for the reason that the aged uncle scorned to obey a
- brother's youthful son. The armies were drawn up, with equal
- confidence on both sides, and there were not those desultory attacks
- or irregular bands, formerly so common with the Germans. Prolonged
- warfare against us had accustomed them to keep close to their
- standards, to have the support of reserves, and to take the word of
- command from their generals. On this occasion Arminius, who reviewed
- the whole field on horseback, as he rode up to each band, boasted of
- regained freedom, of slaughtered legions, of spoils and weapons
- wrested from the Romans, and still in the hands of many of his men. As
- for Maroboduus, he called him a fugitive, who had no experience of
- battles, who had sheltered himself in the recesses of the Hercynian
- forest and then with presents and embassies sued for a treaty; a
- traitor to his country, a satellite of Caesar, who deserved to be
- driven out, with rage as furious as that with which they had slain
- Quintilius Varus. They should simply remember their many battles,
- the result of which, with the final expulsion of the Romans,
- sufficiently showed who could claim the crowning success in war.
-
- Nor did Maroboduus abstain from vaunts about himself or from
- revilings of the foe. Clasping the hand of Inguiomerus, he protested
- "that in the person before them centred all the renown of the
- Cherusci, that to his counsels was due whatever had ended
- successfully. Arminius in his infatuation and ignorance was taking
- to himself the glory which belonged to another, for he had
- treacherously surprised three unofficered legions and a general who
- had not an idea of perfidy, to the great hurt of Germany and to his
- own disgrace, since his wife and his son were still enduring
- slavery. As for himself, he had been attacked by twelve legions led by
- Tiberius, and had preserved untarnished the glory of the Germans,
- and then on equal terms the armies had parted. He was by no means
- sorry that they had the matter in their own hands, whether they
- preferred to war with all their might against Rome, or to accept a
- bloodless peace."
-
- To these words, which roused the two armies, was added the
- stimulus of special motives of their own. The Cherusci and
- Langobardi were fighting for ancient renown or newly-won freedom;
- the other side for the increase of their dominion. Never at any time
- was the shock of battle more tremendous or the issue more doubtful, as
- the right wings of both armies were routed. Further fighting was
- expected, when Maroboduus withdrew his camp to the hills. This was a
- sign of discomfiture. He was gradually stripped of his strength by
- desertions, and, having fled to the Marcomanni, he sent envoys to
- Tiberius with entreaties for help. The answer was that he had no right
- to invoke the aid of Roman arms against the Cherusci, when he had
- rendered no assistance to the Romans in their conflict with the same
- enemy. Drusus, however, was sent as I have related, to establish
- peace.
-
- That same year twelve famous cities of Asia fell by an earthquake in
- the night, so that the destruction was all the more unforeseen and
- fearful. Nor were there the means of escape usual in, such a disaster,
- by rushing out into the open country, for there people were
- swallowed up by the yawning earth. Vast mountains, it is said,
- collapsed; what had been level ground seemed to be raised aloft, and
- fires blazed out amid the ruin. The calamity fell most fatally on
- the inhabitants of Sardis, and it attracted to them the largest
- share of sympathy. The emperor promised ten million sesterces, and
- remitted for five years all they paid to the exchequer or to the
- emperor's purse. Magnesia, under Mount Sipylus, was considered to come
- next in loss and in need of help. The people of Temnus, Philadelpheia,
- Aegae, Apollonis, the Mostenians, and Hyrcanian Macedonians, as they
- were called, with the towns of Hierocaesarea, Myrina, Cyme, and
- Tmolus, were; it was decided, to be exempted from tribute for the same
- time, and some one was to be sent from the Senate to examine their
- actual condition and to relieve them. Marcus Aletus, one of the
- expraetors, was chosen, from a fear that, as an exconsul was
- governor of Asia, there might be rivalry between men of equal rank,
- and consequent embarrassment.
-
- To his splendid public liberality the emperor added bounties no less
- popular. The property of Aemilia Musa, a rich woman who died
- intestate, on which the imperial treasury had a claim, he handed
- over to Aemilius Lepidus, to whose family she appeared to belong;
- and the estate of Patuleius, a wealthy Roman knight, though he was
- himself left in part his heir, he gave to Marcus Servilius, whose name
- he discovered in an earlier and unquestioned will. In both these cases
- he said that noble rank ought to have the support of wealth. Nor did
- he accept a legacy from any one unless he had earned it by friendship.
- Those who were strangers to him, and who, because they were at
- enmity with others, made the emperor their heir, he kept at a
- distance. While, however, he relieved the honourable poverty of the
- virtuous, he expelled from the Senate or suffered voluntarily to
- retire spendthrifts whose vices had brought them to penury, like
- Vibidius Varro, Marius Nepos, Appius Appianus, Cornelius Sulla, and
- Quintus Vitellius.
-
- About the same time he dedicated some temples of the gods, which had
- perished from age or from fire, and which Augustus had begun to
- restore. These were temples to Liber, Libera, and Ceres, near the
- Great Circus, which last Aulus Postumius, when Dictator, had vowed;
- a temple to Flora in the same place, which had been built by Lucius
- and Marcus Publicius, aediles, and a temple to Janus, which had been
- erected in the vegetable market by Caius Duilius, who was the first to
- make the Roman power successful at sea and to win a naval triumph over
- the Carthaginians. A temple to Hope was consecrated by Germanicus;
- this had been vowed by Atilius in that same war.
-
- Meantime the law of treason was gaining strength. Appuleia
- Varilia, grand-niece of Augustus, was accused of treason by an
- informer for having ridiculed the Divine Augustus, Tiberius, and
- Tiberius's mother, in some insulting remarks, and for having been
- convicted of adultery, allied though she was to Caesar's house.
- Adultery, it was thought, was sufficiently guarded against by the
- Julian law. As to the charge of treason, the emperor insisted that
- it should be taken separately, and that she should be condemned if she
- had spoken irreverently of Augustus. Her insinuations against
- himself he did not wish to be the subject of judicial inquiry. When
- asked by the consul what he thought of the unfavourable speeches she
- was accused of having uttered against his mother, he said nothing.
- Afterwards, on the next day of the Senate's meeting, he even begged in
- his mother's name that no words of any kind spoken against her might
- in any case be treated as criminal. He then acquitted Appuleia of
- treason. For her adultery, he deprecated the severer penalty, and
- advised that she should be removed by her kinsfolk, after the
- example of our forefathers, to more than two hundred miles from
- Rome. Her paramour, Manlius, was forbidden to live in Italy or Africa.
-
- A contest then arose about the election of a praetor in the room
- of Vipstanus Gallus, whom death had removed. Germanicus and Drusus
- (for they were still at Rome) supported Haterius Agrippa, a relative
- of Germanicus. Many, on the other hand, endeavoured to make the number
- of children weigh most in favour of the candidates. Tiberius
- rejoiced to see a strife in the Senate between his sons and the law.
- Beyond question the law was beaten, but not at once, and only by a few
- votes, in the same way as laws were defeated even when they were in
- force.
-
- In this same year a war broke out in Africa, where the enemy was led
- by Tacfarinas. A Numidian by birth, he had served as an auxiliary in
- the Roman camp, then becoming a deserter, he at first gathered round
- him a roving band familiar with robbery, for plunder and for rapine.
- After a while, he marshalled them like regular soldiers, under
- standards and in troops, till at last he was regarded as the leader,
- not of an undisciplined rabble, but of the Musulamian people. This
- powerful tribe, bordering on the deserts of Africa, and even then with
- none of the civilisation of cities, took up arms and drew their
- Moorish neighbours into the war. These too had a leader, Mazippa.
- The army was so divided that Tacfarinas kept the picked men who were
- armed in Roman fashion within a camp, and familiarised them with a
- commander's authority, while Mazippa, with light troops, spread around
- him fire, slaughter, and consternation. They had forced the
- Ciniphii, a far from contemptible tribe, into their cause, when Furius
- Camillus, proconsul of Africa, united in one force a legion and all
- the regularly enlisted allies, and, with an army insignificant
- indeed compared with the multitude of the Numidians and Moors, marched
- against the enemy. There was nothing however which he strove so much
- to avoid as their eluding an engagement out of fear. It was by the
- hope of victory that they were lured on only to be defeated. The
- legion was in the army's centre; the light cohorts and two cavalry
- squadrons on its wings. Nor did Tacfarinas refuse battle. The
- Numidians were routed, and after a number of years the name of
- Furius won military renown. Since the days of the famous deliverer
- of our city and his son Camillus, fame as a general had fallen to
- the lot of other branches of the family, and the man of whom I am
- now speaking was regarded as an inexperienced soldier. All the more
- willingly did Tiberius commemorate his achievements in the Senate, and
- the Senators voted him the ornaments of triumph, an honour which
- Camillus, because of his unambitious life, enjoyed without harm.
-
- In the following year Tiberius held his third, Germanicus his
- second, consulship. Germanicus, however, entered on the office at
- Nicopolis, a city of Achaia, whither he had arrived by the coast of
- Illyricum, after having seen his brother Drusus, who was then in
- Dalmatia, and endured a stormy voyage through the Adriatic and
- afterwards the Ionian Sea. He accordingly devoted a few days to the
- repair of his fleet, and, at the same time, in remembrance of his
- ancestors, he visited the bay which the victory of Actium had made
- famous, the spoils consecrated by Augustus, and the camp of
- Antonius. For, as I have said, Augustus was his great-uncle,
- Antonius his grandfather, and vivid images of disaster and success
- rose before him on the spot. Thence he went to Athens, and there, as a
- concession to our treaty with an allied and ancient city, he was
- attended only by a single lictor. The Greeks welcomed him with the
- most elaborate honours, and brought forward all the old deeds and
- sayings of their countrymen, to give additional dignity to their
- flattery.
-
- Thence he directed his course to Euboea and crossed to Lesbos, where
- Agrippina for the last time was confined and gave birth to Julia. He
- then penetrated to the remoter parts of the province of Asia,
- visited the Thracian cities, Perinthus and Byzantium; next, the narrow
- strait of the Propontis and the entrance of the Pontus, from an
- anxious wish to become acquainted with those ancient and celebrated
- localities. He gave relief, as he went, to provinces which had been
- exhausted by internal feuds or by the oppressions of governors. In his
- return he attempted to see the sacred mysteries of the
- Samothracians, but north winds which he encountered drove him aside
- from his course. And so after visiting Ilium and surveying a scene
- venerable from the vicissitudes of fortune and as the birth-place of
- our people, he coasted back along Asia, and touched at Colophon, to
- consult the oracle of the Clarian Apollo. There, it is not a woman, as
- at Delphi, but a priest chosen from certain families, generally from
- Miletus, who ascertains simply the number and the names of the
- applicants. Then descending into a cave and drinking a draught from
- a secret spring, the man, who is commonly ignorant of letters and of
- poetry, utters a response in verse answering to the thoughts conceived
- in the mind of any inquirer. It was said that he prophesied to
- Germanicus, in dark hints, as oracles usually do, an early doom.
-
- Cneius Piso meanwhile, that he might the sooner enter on his design,
- terrified the citizens of Athens by his tumultuous approach, and
- then reviled them in a bitter speech, with indirect reflections on
- Germanicus, who, he said, had derogated from the honour of the Roman
- name in having treated with excessive courtesy, not the people of
- Athens, who indeed had been exterminated by repeated disasters, but
- a miserable medley of tribes. As for the men before him, they had been
- Mithridates's allies against Sulla, allies of Antonius against the
- Divine Augustus. He taunted them too with the past, with their
- ill-success against the Macedonians, their violence to their own
- countrymen, for he had his own special grudge against this city,
- because they would not spare at his intercession one Theophilus whom
- the Areopagus had condemned for forgery. Then, by sailing rapidly
- and by the shortest route through the Cyclades, he overtook Germanicus
- at the island of Rhodes. The prince was not ignorant of the slanders
- with which he had been assailed, but his good nature was such that
- when a storm arose and drove Piso on rocks, and his enemy's
- destruction could have been referred to chance, he sent some triremes,
- by the help of which he might be rescued from danger. But this did not
- soften Piso's heart. Scarcely allowing a day's interval, he left
- Germanicus and hastened on in advance. When he reached Syria and the
- legions, he began, by bribery and favouritism, to encourage the lowest
- of the common soldiers, removing the old centurions and the strict
- tribunes and assigning their places to creatures of his own or to
- the vilest of the men, while he allowed idleness in the camp,
- licentiousness in the towns, and the soldiers to roam through the
- country and take their pleasure. He went such lengths in
- demoralizing them, that he was spoken of in their vulgar talk as the
- father of the legions.
-
- Plancina too, instead of keeping herself within the proper limits of
- a woman, would be present at the evolutions of the cavalry and the
- manoeuvres of the cohorts, and would fling insulting remarks at
- Agrippina and Germanicus. Some even of the good soldiers were inclined
- to a corrupt compliance, as a whispered rumour gained ground that
- the emperor was not averse to these proceedings. Of all this
- Germanicus was aware, but his most pressing anxiety was to be first in
- reaching Armenia.
-
- This had been of old an unsettled country from the character of
- its people and from its geographical position, bordering, as it
- does, to a great extent on our provinces and stretching far away to
- Media. It lies between two most mighty empires, and is very often at
- strife with them, hating Rome and jealous of Parthia. It had at this
- time no king, Vonones having been expelled, but the nation's likings
- inclined towards Zeno, son of Polemon, king of Pontus, who from his
- earliest infancy had imitated Armenian manners and customs, loving the
- chase, the banquet, and all the popular pastimes of barbarians, and
- who had thus bound to himself chiefs and people alike. Germanicus
- accordingly, in the city of Artaxata, with the approval of the
- nobility, in the presence of a vast multitude, placed the royal diadem
- on his head. All paid him homage and saluted him as King Artaxias,
- which name they gave him from the city.
-
- Cappadocia meanwhile, which had been reduced to the form of a
- province, received as its governor Quintus Veranius. Some of the royal
- tributes were diminished, to inspire hope of a gentler rule under
- Rome. Quintus Servaeus was appointed to Commagene, then first put
- under a praetor's jurisdiction.
-
- Successful as was this settlement of all the interests of our
- allies, it gave Germanicus little joy because of the arrogance of
- Piso. Though he had been ordered to march part of the legions into
- Armenia under his own or his son's command, he had neglected to do
- either. At length the two met at Cyrrhus, the winterquarters of the
- tenth legion, each controlling his looks, Piso concealing his fears,
- Germanicus shunning the semblance of menace. He was indeed, as I
- have said, a kind-hearted man. But friends who knew well how to
- inflame a quarrel, exaggerated what was true and added lies,
- alleging various charges against Piso, Plancina, and their sons.
-
- At last, in the presence of a few intimate associates, Germanicus
- addressed him in language such as suppressed resentment suggests, to
- which Piso replied with haughty apologies. They parted in open enmity.
- After this Piso was seldom seen at Caesar's tribunal, and if he ever
- sat by him, it was with a sullen frown and a marked display of
- opposition. He was even heard to say at a banquet given by the king of
- the Nabataeans, when some golden crowns of great weight were presented
- to Caesar and Agrippina and light ones to Piso and the rest, that
- the entertainment was given to the son of a Roman emperor, not of a
- Parthian king. At the same time he threw his crown on the ground, with
- a long speech against luxury, which, though it angered Germanicus,
- he still bore with patience.
-
- Meantime envoys arrived from Artabanus, king of the Parthians. He
- had sent them to recall the memory of friendship and alliance, with an
- assurance that he wished for a renewal of the emblems of concord,
- and that he would in honour of Germanicus yield the point of advancing
- to the bank of the Euphrates. He begged meanwhile that Vonones might
- not be kept in Syria, where, by emissaries from an easy distance, he
- might draw the chiefs of the tribes into civil strife. Germanicus'
- answer as to the alliance between Rome and Parthia was dignified; as
- to the king's visit and the respect shown to himself, it was
- graceful and modest. Vonones was removed to Pompeiopolis, a city on
- the coast of Cilicia. This was not merely a concession to the
- request of Artabanus, but was meant as an affront to Piso, who had a
- special liking for Vonones, because of the many attentions and
- presents by which he had won Plancina's favour.
-
- In the consulship of Marcus Silanus and Lucius Norbanus,
- Germanicus set out for Egypt to study its antiquities. His
- ostensible motive however was solicitude for the province. He
- reduced the price of corn by opening the granaries, and adopted many
- practices pleasing to the multitude. He would go about without
- soldiers, with sandalled feet, and apparelled after the Greek fashion,
- in imitation of Publius Scipio, who, it is said, habitually did the
- same in Sicily, even when the war with Carthage was still raging.
- Tiberius having gently expressed disapproval of his dress and manners,
- pronounced a very sharp censure on his visit to Alexandria without the
- emperor's leave, contrary to the regulations of Augustus. That prince,
- among other secrets of imperial policy, had forbidden senators and
- Roman knights of the higher rank to enter Egypt except by
- permission, and he had specially reserved the country, from a fear
- that any one who held a province containing the key of the land and of
- the sea, with ever so small a force against the mightiest army,
- might distress Italy by famine.
-
- Germanicus, however, who had not yet learnt how much he was blamed
- for his expedition, sailed up the Nile from the city of Canopus as his
- starting-point. Spartans founded the place because Canopus, pilot of
- one of their ships, had been buried there, when Menelaus on his return
- to Greece was driven into a distant sea and to the shores of Libya.
- Thence he went to the river's nearest mouth, dedicated to a Hercules
- who, the natives say, was born in the country and was the original
- hero, others, who afterwards showed like valour, having received his
- name. Next he visited the vast ruins of ancient Thebes. There yet
- remained on the towering piles Egyptian inscriptions, with a
- complete account of the city's past grandeur. One of the aged priests,
- who was desired to interpret the language of his country, related
- how once there had dwelt in Thebes seven hundred thousand men of
- military age, and how with such an army king Rhamses conquered
- Libya, Ethiopia, Media, Persia, Bactria, and Scythia, and held under
- his sway the countries inhabited by the Syrians, Armenians, and
- their neighbours, the Cappadocians, from the Bithynian to the Lycian
- sea. There was also to be read what tributes were imposed on these
- nations, the weight of silver and gold, the tale of arms and horses,
- the gifts of ivory and of perfumes to the temples, with the amount
- of grain and supplies furnished by each people, a revenue as
- magnificent as is now exacted by the might of Parthia or the power
- of Rome.
-
- But Germanicus also bestowed attention on other wonders. Chief of
- these were the stone image of Memnon, which, when struck by the
- sun's rays, gives out the sound of a human voice; the pyramids, rising
- up like mountains amid almost impassable wastes of shifting sand,
- raised by the emulation and vast wealth of kings; the lake hollowed
- out of the earth to be a receptacle for the Nile's overflow; and
- elsewhere the river's narrow channel and profound depth which no
- line of the explorer can penetrate. He then came to Elephantine and
- Syene, formerly the limits of the Roman empire, which now extends to
- the Red Sea.
-
- While Germanicus was spending the summer in visits to several
- provinces, Drusus gained no little glory by sowing discord among the
- Germans and urging them to complete the destruction of the now
- broken power of Maroboduus. Among the Gotones was a youth of noble
- birth, Catualda by name, who had formerly been driven into exile by
- the might of Maroboduus, and who now, when the king's fortunes were
- declining, ventured on revenge. He entered the territory of the
- Marcomanni with a strong force, and, having corruptly won over the
- nobles to join him, burst into the palace and into an adjacent
- fortress. There he found the long-accumulated plunder of the Suevi and
- camp followers and traders from our provinces who had been attracted
- to an enemy's land, each from their various homes, first by the
- freedom of commerce, next by the desire of amassing wealth, finally by
- forgetfulness of their fatherland.
-
- Maroboduus, now utterly deserted, had no resource but in the mercy
- of Caesar. Having crossed the Danube where it flows by the province of
- Noricum, he wrote to Tiberius, not like a fugitive or a suppliant, but
- as one who remembered his past greatness. When as a most famous king
- in former days he received invitations from many nations, he had
- still, he said, preferred the friendship of Rome. Caesar replied
- that he should have a safe and honourable home in Italy, if he would
- remain there, or, if his interests required something different, he
- might leave it under the same protection under which he had come.
- But in the Senate he maintained that Philip had not been so formidable
- to the Athenians, or Pyrrhus or Antiochus to the Roman people, as
- was Maroboduus. The speech is extant, and in it he magnifies the man's
- power, the ferocity of the tribes under his sway, his proximity to
- Italy as a foe, finally his own measures for his overthrow. The result
- was that Maroboduus was kept at Ravenna, where his possible return was
- a menace to the Suevi, should they ever disdain obedience. But he
- never left Italy for eighteen years, living to old age and losing much
- of his renown through an excessive clinging to life.
-
- Catualda had a like downfall and no better refuge. Driven out soon
- afterwards by the overwhelming strength of the Hermundusi led by
- Vibilius, he was received and sent to Forum Julii, a colony of
- Narbonensian Gaul. The barbarians who followed the two kings, lest
- they might disturb the peace of the provinces by mingling with the
- population, were settled beyond the Danube between the rivers Marus
- and Cusus, under a king, Vannius, of the nation of the Quadi.
-
- Tidings having also arrived of Artaxias being made king of Armenia
- by Germanicus, the Senate decreed that both he and Drusus should enter
- the city with an ovation. Arches too were raised round the sides of
- the temple of Mars the Avenger, with statues of the two Caesars.
- Tiberius was the more delighted at having established peace by wise
- policy than if he had finished a war by battle. And so next he planned
- a crafty scheme against Rhescuporis, king of Thrace. That entire
- country had been in the possession of Rhoemetalces, after whose
- death Augustus assigned half to the king's brother Rhescuporis, half
- to his son Cotys. In this division the cultivated lands, the towns,
- and what bordered on Greek territories, fell to Cotys; the wild and
- barbarous portion, with enemies on its frontier, to Rhescuporis. The
- kings too themselves differed, Cotys having a gentle and kindly
- temper, the other a fierce and ambitious spirit, which could not brook
- a partner. Still at first they lived in a hollow friendship, but
- soon Rhescuporis overstepped his bounds and appropriated to himself
- what had been given to Cotys, using force when he was resisted, though
- somewhat timidly under Augustus, who having created both kingdoms
- would, he feared, avenge any contempt of his arrangement. When however
- he heard of the change of emperor, he let loose bands of freebooters
- and razed the fortresses, as a provocation to war.
-
- Nothing made Tiberius so uneasy as an apprehension of the
- disturbance of any settlement. He commissioned a centurion to tell the
- kings not to decide their dispute by arms. Cotys at once dismissed the
- forces which he had prepared. Rhescuporis, with assumed modesty, asked
- for a place of meeting where, he said, they might settle their
- differences by an interview. There was little hesitation in fixing
- on a time, a place, finally on terms, as every point was mutually
- conceded and accepted, by the one out of good nature, by the other
- with a treacherous intent. Rhescuporis, to ratify the treaty, as he
- said, further proposed a banquet; and when their mirth had been
- prolonged far into the night, and Cotys amid the feasting and the wine
- was unsuspicious of danger, he loaded him with chains, though he
- appealed, on perceiving the perfidy, to the sacred character of a
- king, to the gods of their common house, and to the hospitable
- board. Having possessed himself of all Thrace, he wrote word to
- Tiberius that a plot had been formed against him, and that he had
- forestalled the plotter. Meanwhile, under pretext of a war against the
- Bastarnian and Scythian tribes, he was strengthening himself with
- fresh forces of infantry and cavalry.
-
- He received a conciliatory answer. If there was no treachery in
- his conduct, he could rely on his innocence, but neither the emperor
- nor the Senate would decide on the right or wrong of his cause without
- hearing it. He was therefore to surrender Cotys, come in person
- transfer from himself the odium of the charge.
-
- This letter Latinius Pandus, propraetor of Moesia, sent to Thrace,
- with soldiers to whose custody Cotys was to be delivered. Rhescuporis,
- hesitating between fear and rage, preferred to be charged with an
- accomplished rather than with an attempted crime. He ordered Cotys
- to be murdered and falsely represented his death as self-inflicted.
- Still the emperor did not change the policy which he had once for
- all adopted. On the death of Pandus, whom Rhescuporis accused of being
- his personal enemy, he appointed to the government of Moesia Pomponius
- Flaccus, a veteran soldier, specially because of his close intimacy
- with the king and his consequent ability to entrap him.
-
- Flaccus on arriving in Thrace induced the king by great promises,
- though he hesitated and thought of his guilty deeds, to enter the
- Roman lines. He then surrounded him with a strong force under pretence
- of showing him honour, and the tribunes and centurions, by counsel, by
- persuasion, and by a more undisguised captivity the further he went,
- brought him, aware at last of his desperate plight, to Rome. He was
- accused before the Senate by the wife of Cotys, and was condemned to
- be kept a prisoner far away from his kingdom. Thrace was divided
- between his son Rhoemetalces, who, it was proved, had opposed his
- father's designs, and the sons of Cotys. As these were still minors,
- Trebellienus Rufus, an expraetor, was appointed to govern the
- kingdom in the meanwhile, after the precedent of our ancestors who
- sent Marcus Lepidus into Egypt as guardian to Ptolemy's children.
- Rhescuporis was removed to Alexandria, and there attempting or falsely
- charged with attempting escape, was put to death.
-
- About the same time, Vonones, who, as I have related, had been
- banished to Cilicia, endeavoured by bribing his guards to escape
- into Armenia, thence to Albania and Heniochia, and to his kinsman, the
- king of Scythia. Quitting the sea-coast on the pretence of a hunting
- expedition, he struck into trackless forests, and was soon borne by
- his swift steed to the river Pyramus, the bridges over which had
- been broken down by the natives as soon as they heard of the king's
- escape. Nor was there a ford by which it could be crossed. And so on
- the river's bank he was put in chains by Vibius Fronto, an officer
- of cavalry; and then Remmius, an enrolled pensioner, who had
- previously been entrusted with the king's custody, in pretended
- rage, pierced him with his sword. Hence there was more ground for
- believing that the man, conscious of guilty complicity and fearing
- accusation, had slain Vonones.
-
- Germanicus meanwhile, as he was returning from Egypt, found that all
- his directions to the legions and to the various cities had been
- repealed or reversed. This led to grievous insults on Piso, while he
- as savagely assailed the prince. Piso then resolved to quit Syria.
- Soon he was detained there by the failing health of Germanicus, but
- when he heard of his recovery, while people were paying the vows
- they had offered for his safety, he went attended by his lictors,
- drove away the victims placed by the altars with all the
- preparations for sacrifice, and the festal gathering of the populace
- of Antioch. Then he left for Seleucia and awaited the result of the
- illness which had again attacked Germanicus. The terrible intensity of
- the malady was increased by the belief that he had been poisoned by
- Piso. And certainly there were found hidden in the floor and in the
- walls disinterred remains of human bodies, incantations and spells,
- and the name of Germanicus inscribed on leaden tablets, half-burnt
- cinders smeared with blood, and other horrors by which in popular
- belief souls are devoted so the infernal deities. Piso too was accused
- of sending emissaries to note curiously every unfavourable symptom
- of the illness.
-
- Germanicus heard of all this with anger, no less than with fear. "If
- my doors," he said, "are to be besieged, if I must gasp out my last
- breath under my enemies' eyes, what will then be the lot of my most
- unhappy wife, of my infant children? Poisoning seems tedious; he is in
- eager haste to have the sole control of the province and the
- legions. But Germanicus is not yet fallen so low, nor will the
- murderer long retain the reward of the fatal deed."
-
- He then addressed a letter to Piso, renouncing his friendship,
- and, as many also state, ordered him to quit the province. Piso
- without further delay weighed anchor, slackening his course that he
- might not have a long way to return should Germanicus' death leave
- Syria open to him.
-
- For a brief space the prince's hopes rose; then his frame became
- exhausted, and, as his end drew near, he spoke as follows to the
- friends by his side:-
-
- "Were I succumbing to nature, I should have just ground of complaint
- even against the gods for thus tearing me away in my youth by an
- untimely death from parents, children, country. Now, cut off by the
- wickedness of Piso and Plancina, I leave to your hearts my last
- entreaties. Describe to my father and brother, torn by what
- persecutions, entangled by what plots, I have ended by the worst of
- deaths the most miserable of lives. If any were touched by my bright
- prospects, by ties of blood, or even by envy towards me while I lived,
- they will weep that the once prosperous survivor of so many wars has
- perished by a woman's treachery. You will have the opportunity of
- complaint before the Senate, of an appeal to the laws. It is not the
- chief duty of friends to follow the dead with unprofitable laments,
- but to remember his wishes, to fulfil his commands. Tears for
- Germanicus even strangers will shed; vengeance must come from you,
- if you loved the man more than his fortune. Show the people of Rome
- her who is the granddaughter of the Divine Augustus, as well as my
- consort; set before them my six children. Sympathy will be on the side
- of the accusers, and to those who screen themselves under infamous
- orders belief or pardon will be refused."
-
- His friends clasped the dying man's right hand, and swore that
- they would sooner lose life than revenge.
-
- He then turned to his wife and implored her by the memory of her
- husband and by their common offspring to lay aside her high spirit, to
- submit herself to the cruel blows of fortune, and not, when she
- returned to Rome, to enrage by political rivalry those who were
- stronger than herself. This was said openly; other words were
- whispered, pointing, it was supposed, to his fears from Tiberius. Soon
- afterwards he expired, to the intense sorrow of the province and of
- the neighbouring peoples. Foreign nations and kings grieved over
- him, so great was his courtesy to allies, his humanity to enemies.
- He inspired reverence alike by look and voice, and while he maintained
- the greatness and dignity of the highest rank, he had escaped the
- hatred that waits on arrogance.
-
- His funeral, though it lacked the family statues and procession, was
- honoured by panegyrics and a commemoration of his virtues. Some
- there were who, as they thought of his beauty, his age, and the manner
- of his death, the vicinity too of the country where he died, likened
- his end to that of Alexander the Great. Both had a graceful person and
- were of noble birth; neither had much exceeded thirty years of age,
- and both fell by the treachery of their own people in strange lands.
- But Germanicus was gracious to his friends, temperate in his
- pleasures, the husband of one wife, with only legitimate children.
- He was too no less a warrior, though rashness he had none, and, though
- after having cowed Germany by his many victories, he was hindered from
- crushing it into subjection. Had he had the sole control of affairs,
- had he possessed the power and title of a king, he would have attained
- military glory as much more easily as he had excelled Alexander in
- clemency, in self-restraint, and in all other virtues.
-
- As to the body which, before it was burnt, lay bare in the forum
- at Antioch, its destined place of burial, it is doubtful whether it
- exhibited the marks of poisoning. For men according as they pitied
- Germanicus and were prepossessed with suspicion or were biased by
- partiality towards Piso, gave conflicting accounts.
-
- Then followed a deliberation among the generals and other senators
- present about the appointment of a governor to Syria. The contest
- was slight among all but Vibius Marsus and Cneius Sentius, between
- whom there was a long dispute. Finally Marsus yielded to Sentius as an
- older and keener competitor. Sentius at once sent to Rome a woman
- infamous for poisonings in the province and a special favourite of
- Plancina, Martina by name, on the demand of Vitellius and Veranius and
- others, who were preparing the charges and the indictment as if a
- prosecution had already been commenced.
-
- Agrippina meantime, worn out though she was with sorrow and bodily
- weakness, yet still impatient of everything which might delay her
- vengeance, embarked with the ashes of Germanicus and with her
- children, pitied by all. Here indeed was a woman of the highest
- nobility, and but lately because of her splendid union wont to be seen
- amid an admiring and sympathizing throng, now bearing in her bosom the
- mournful relics of death, with an uncertain hope of revenge, with
- apprehensions for herself, repeatedly at fortune's mercy by reason
- of the ill-starred fruitfulness of her marriage. Piso was at the
- island of Coos when tidings reached him that Germanicus was dead. He
- received the news with extravagant joy, slew victims, visited the
- temples, with no moderation in his transports; while Plancina's
- insolence increased, and she then for the first time exchanged for the
- gayest attire the mourning she had worn for her lost sister.
-
- Centurions streamed in, and hinted to Piso that he had the
- sympathy of the legions at his command. "Go back," they said, "to
- the province which has not been rightfully taken from you, and is
- still vacant." While he deliberated what he was to do, his son, Marcus
- Piso, advised speedy return to Rome. "As yet," he said, "you have
- not contracted any inexpiable guilt, and you need not dread feeble
- suspicions or vague rumours. Your strife with Germanicus deserved
- hatred perhaps, but not punishment, and by your having been deprived
- of the province, your enemies have been fully satisfied. But if you
- return, should Sentius resist you, civil war is begun, and you will
- not retain on your side the centurions and soldiers, who are
- powerfully swayed by the yet recent memory of their general and by a
- deep-rooted affection for the Caesars."
-
- Against this view Domitius Celer, one of Piso's intimate friends,
- argued that he ought to profit by the opportunity. "It was Piso, not
- Sentius, who had been appointed to Syria. It was to Piso that the
- symbols of power and a praetor's jurisdiction and the legions had been
- given. In case of a hostile menace, who would more rightfully confront
- it by arms than the man who had received the authority and special
- commission of a governor? And as for rumours, it is best to leave time
- in which they may die away. Often the innocent cannot stand against
- the first burst of unpopularity. But if Piso possesses himself of
- the army, and increases his resources, much which cannot be foreseen
- will haply turn out in his favour. Are we hastening to reach Italy
- along with the ashes of Germanicus, that, unheard and undefended,
- you may be hurried to ruin by the wailings of Agrippina and the
- first gossip of an ignorant mob? You have on your side the
- complicity of Augusta and the emperor's favour, though in secret,
- and none mourn more ostentatiously over the death of Germanicus than
- those who most rejoice at it."
-
- Without much difficulty Piso, who was ever ready for violent action,
- was led into this view. He sent a letter to Tiberius accusing
- Germanicus of luxury and arrogance, and asserting that, having been
- driven away to make room for revolution, he had resumed the command of
- the army in the same loyal spirit in which he had before held it. At
- the same time he put Domitius on board a trireme, with an order to
- avoid the coast and to push on to Syria through the open sea away from
- the islands. He formed into regular companies the deserters who
- flocked to him, armed the camp-followers, crossed with his ships to
- the mainland, intercepted a detachment of new levies on their way to
- Syria, and wrote word to the petty kings of Cilicia that they were
- to help him with auxiliaries, the young Piso actively assisting in all
- the business of war, though he had advised against undertaking it.
-
- And so they coasted along Lycia and Pamphylia, and on meeting the
- fleet which conveyed Agrippina, both sides in hot anger at first armed
- for battle, and then in mutual fear confined themselves to
- revilings, Marsus Vibius telling Piso that he was to go to Rome to
- defend himself. Piso mockingly replied that he would be there as
- soon as the praetor who had to try poisoning cases had fixed a day for
- the accused and his prosecutors.
-
- Meanwhile Domitius having landed at Laodicea, a city of Syria, as he
- was on his way to the winter-quarters of the sixth legion, which
- was, he believed, particularly open to revolutionary schemes, was
- anticipated by its commander Pacuvius. Of this Sentius informed Piso
- in a letter, and warned him not to disturb the armies by agents of
- corruption or the province by war. He gathered round him all whom he
- knew to cherish the memory of Germanicus, and to be opposed to his
- enemies, dwelling repeatedly on the greatness of the general, with
- hints that the State was being threatened with an armed attack, and he
- put himself at the head of a strong force, prepared for battle.
-
- Piso, too, though his first attempts were unsuccessful, did not omit
- the safest precautions under present circumstances, but occupied a
- very strongly fortified position in Cilicia, named, Celenderis. He had
- raised to the strength of a legion the Cilician auxiliaries which
- the petty kings had sent, by mixing with them some deserters, and
- the lately intercepted recruits with his own and Plancina's slaves.
- And he protested that he, though Caesar's legate, was kept out of
- the province which Caesar had given him, not by the legions (for he
- had come at their invitation) but by Sentius, who was veiling
- private animosity under lying charges. "Only," he said, "stand in
- battle array, and the soldiers will not fight when they see that
- Piso whom they themselves once called 'father,' is the stronger, if
- right is to decide; if arms, is far from powerless."
-
- He then deployed his companies before the lines of the fortress on a
- high and precipitous hill, with the sea surrounding him on every other
- side. Against him were the veteran troops drawn up in ranks and with
- reserves, a formidable soldiery on one side, a formidable position
- on the other. But his men had neither heart nor hope, and only
- rustic weapons, extemporised for sudden use. When they came to
- fighting, the result was doubtful only while the Roman cohorts were
- struggling up to level ground; then, the Cilicians turned their
- backs and shut themselves up within the fortress.
-
- Meanwhile Piso vainly attempted an attack on the fleet which
- waited at a distance; he then went back, and as he stood before the
- walls, now smiting his breast, now calling on individual soldiers by
- name, and luring them on by rewards, sought to excite a mutiny. He had
- so far roused them that a standard bearer of the sixth legion went
- over to him with his standard. Thereupon Sentius ordered the horns and
- trumpets to be sounded, the rampart to be assaulted, the scaling
- ladders to be raised, all the bravest men to mount on them, while
- others were to discharge from the engines spears, stones, and
- brands. At last Piso's obstinacy was overcome, and he begged that he
- might remain in the fortress on surrendering his arms, while the
- emperor was being consulted about the appointment of a governor to
- Syria. The proposed terms were refused, and all that was granted him
- were some ships and a safe return to Rome.
-
- There meantime, when the illness of Germanicus was universally
- known, and all news, coming, as it did, from a distance, exaggerated
- the danger, there was grief and indignation. There was too an outburst
- of complaint. "Of course this was the meaning," they said, "of
- banishing him to the ends of the earth, of giving Piso the province;
- this was the drift of Augusta's secret interviews with Plancina.
- What elderly men had said of Drusus was perfectly true, that rulers
- disliked a citizen-like temper in their sons, and the young princes
- had been put out of the way because they had the idea of comprehending
- in a restored era of freedom the Roman people under equal laws."
-
- This popular talk was so stimulated by the news of Germanicus's
- death that even before the magistrate's proclamation or the Senate's
- resolution, there was a voluntary suspension of business, the public
- courts were deserted, and private houses closed. Everywhere there
- was a silence broken only by groans; nothing was arranged for mere
- effect. And though they refrained not from the emblems of the mourner,
- they sorrowed yet the more deeply in their hearts.
-
- It chanced that some merchants who left Syria while Germanicus was
- still alive, brought more cheering tidings about his health. These
- were instantly believed, instantly published. Every one passed on to
- others whom he met the intelligence, ill-authenticated as it was,
- and they again to many more, with joyous exaggeration. They ran to and
- fro through the city and broke open the doors of the temples. Night
- assisted their credulity, and amid the darkness confident assertion
- was comparatively easy. Nor did Tiberius check the false reports
- till by lapse of time they died away.
-
- And so the people grieved the more bitterly as though Germanicus was
- again lost to them. New honours were devised and decreed, as men
- were inspired by affection for him or by genius. His name was to be
- celebrated in the song of the Salii; chairs of state with oaken
- garlands over them were to be set up in the places assigned to the
- priesthood of the Augustales; his image in ivory was to head the
- procession in the games of the circus; no flamen or augur, except from
- the Julian family, was to be chosen in the room of Germanicus.
- Triumphal arches were erected at Rome, on the banks of the Rhine,
- and on mount Amanus in Syria, with an inscription recording his
- achievements, and how he had died in the public service. A cenotaph
- was raised at Antioch, where the body was burnt, a lofty mound at
- Epidaphna, where he had ended his life. The number of his statues,
- or of the places in which they were honoured, could not easily be
- computed. When a golden shield of remarkable size was voted him as a
- leader among orators, Tiberius declared that he would dedicate to
- him one of the usual kind, similar to the rest, for in eloquence, he
- said, there was no distinction of rank, and it was a sufficient
- glory for him to be classed among ancient writers. The knights
- called the seats in the theatre known as "the juniors," Germanicus's
- benches, and arranged that their squadrons were to ride in
- procession behind his effigy on the fifteenth of July. Many of these
- honours still remain; some were at once dropped, or became obsolete
- with time.
-
- While men's sorrow was yet fresh, Germanicus's sister Livia, who was
- married to Drusus, gave birth to twin sons. This, as a rare event,
- causing joy even in humble homes, so delighted the emperor that he did
- not refrain from boasting before the senators that to no Roman of
- the same rank had twin offspring ever before been born. In fact, he
- would turn to his own glory every incident, however casual. But at
- such a time, even this brought grief to the people, who thought that
- the increase of Drusus's family still further depressed the house of
- Germanicus.
-
- That same year the profligacy of women was checked by stringent
- enactments, and it was provided that no woman whose grandfather,
- father, or husband had been a Roman knight should get money by
- prostitution. Vistilia, born of a praetorian family, had actually
- published her name with this object on the aedile's list, according to
- a recognised custom of our ancestors, who considered it a sufficient
- punishment on unchaste women to have to profess their shame.
- Titidius Labeo, Vistilia's husband, was judicially called on to say
- why with a wife whose guilt was manifest he had neglected to inflict
- the legal penalty. When he pleaded that the sixty days given for
- deliberation had not yet expired, it was thought sufficient to
- decide Vistilia's case, and she was banished out of sight to the
- island of Seriphos.
-
- There was a debate too about expelling the Egyptian and Jewish
- worship, and a resolution of the Senate was passed that four
- thousand of the freedmen class who were infected with those
- superstitions and were of military age should be transported to the
- island of Sardinia, to quell the brigandage of the place, a cheap
- sacrifice should they die from the pestilential climate. The rest were
- to quit Italy, unless before a certain day they repudiated their
- impious rites.
-
- Next the emperor brought forward a motion for the election of a
- Vestal virgin in the room of Occia, who for fifty-seven years had
- presided with the most immaculate virtue over the Vestal worship. He
- formally thanked Fonteius Agrippa and Domitius Pollio for offering
- their daughters and so vying with one another in zeal for the
- commonwealth. Pollio's daughter was preferred, only because her mother
- had lived with one and the same husband, while Agrippa had impaired
- the honour of his house by a divorce. The emperor consoled his
- daughter, passed over though she was, with a dowry of a million
- sesterces.
-
- As the city populace complained of the cruel dearness of corn, he
- fixed a price for grain to be paid by the purchaser, promising himself
- to add two sesterces on every peck for the traders. But he would not
- therefore accept the title of "father of the country" which once
- before too had been offered him, and he sharply rebuked those who
- called his work "divine" and himself "lord." Consequently, speech
- was restricted and perilous under an emperor who feared freedom
- while he hated sycophancy.
-
- I find it stated by some writers and senators of the period that a
- letter from Adgandestrius, chief of the Chatti, was read in the
- Senate, promising the death of Arminius, if poison were sent for the
- perpetration of the murder, and that the reply was that it was not
- by secret treachery but openly and by arms that the people of Rome
- avenged themselves on their enemies. A noble answer, by which Tiberius
- sought to liken himself to those generals of old who had forbidden and
- even denounced the poisoning of king Pyrrhus.
-
- Arminius, meanwhile, when the Romans retired and Maroboduus was
- expelled, found himself opposed in aiming at the throne by his
- countrymen's independent spirit. He was assailed by armed force, and
- while fighting with various success, fell by the treachery of his
- kinsmen. Assuredly he was the deliverer of Germany, one too who had
- defied Rome, not in her early rise, as other kings and generals, but
- in the height of her empire's glory, had fought, indeed, indecisive
- battles, yet in war remained unconquered. He completed thirty-seven
- years of life, twelve years of power, and he is still a theme of
- song among barbarous nations, though to Greek historians, who admire
- only their own achievements, he is unknown, and to Romans not as
- famous as he should be, while we extol the past and are indifferent to
- our own times.
-
- BOOK III, A.D. 20-22
-
-
- WITHOUT pausing in her winter voyage Agrippina arrived at the island
- of Corcyra, facing the shores of Calabria. There she spent a few
- days to compose her mind, for she was wild with grief and knew not how
- to endure. Meanwhile on hearing of her arrival, all her intimate
- friends and several officers, every one indeed who had served under
- Germanicus, many strangers too from the neighbouring towns, some
- thinking it respectful to the emperor, and still more following
- their example, thronged eagerly to Brundisium, the nearest and
- safest landing place for a voyager.
-
- As soon as the fleet was seen on the horizon, not only the harbour
- and the adjacent shores, but the city walls too and the roofs and
- every place which commanded the most distant prospect were filled with
- crowds of mourners, who incessantly asked one another, whether, when
- she landed, they were to receive her in silence or with some utterance
- of emotion. They were not agreed on what befitted the occasion when
- the fleet slowly approached, its crew, not joyous as is usual, but
- wearing all a studied expression of grief. When Agrippina descended
- from the vessel with her two children, clasping the funeral urn,
- with eyes riveted to the earth, there was one universal groan. You
- could not distinguish kinsfolk from strangers, or the laments of men
- from those of women; only the attendants of Agrippina, worn out as
- they were by long sorrow, were surpassed by the mourners who now met
- them, fresh in their grief.
-
- The emperor had despatched two praetorian cohorts with
- instructions that the magistrates of Calabria, Apulia, and Campania
- were to pay the last honours to his son's memory. Accordingly tribunes
- and centurions bore Germanicus's ashes on their shoulders. They were
- preceded by the standards unadorned and the faces reversed. As they
- passed colony after colony, the populace in black, the knights in
- their state robes, burnt vestments and perfumes with other usual
- funeral adjuncts, in proportion to the wealth of the place. Even those
- whose towns were out of the route, met the mourners, offered victims
- and built altars to the dead, testifying their grief by tears and
- wailings. Drusus went as far as Tarracina with Claudius, brother of
- Germanicus, and had been at Rome. Marcus Valerius and Caius
- Aurelius, the consuls, who had already entered on office, and a
- great number of the people thronged the road in scattered groups,
- every one weeping as he felt inclined. Flattery there was none, for
- all knew that Tiberius could scarcely dissemble his joy at the death
- of Germanicus.
-
- Tiberius Augusta refrained from showing themselves, thinking it
- below their dignity to shed tears in public, or else fearing that,
- if all eyes scrutinised their faces, their hypocrisy would be
- revealed. I do not find in any historian or in the daily register that
- Antonia, Germanicus's mother, rendered any conspicuous honour to the
- deceased, though besides Agrippina, Drusus, and Claudius, all his
- other kinsfolk are mentioned by name. She may either have been
- hindered by illness, or with a spirit overpowered by grief she may not
- have had the heart to endure the sight of so great an affliction.
- But I can more easily believe that Tiberius and Augusta, who did not
- leave the palace, kept her within, that their sorrow might seem
- equal to hers, and that the grandmother and uncle might be thought
- to follow the mother's example in staying at home.
-
- The day on which the remains were consigned to the tomb of Augustus,
- was now desolate in its silence, now distracted by lamentations. The
- streets of the city were crowded; torches were blazing throughout
- the Campus Martius. There the soldiers under arms, the magistrates
- without their symbols of office, the people in the tribes, were all
- incessantly exclaiming that the commonwealth was ruined, that not a
- hope remained, too boldly and openly to let one think that they
- remembered their rulers. But nothing impressed Tiberius more deeply
- than the enthusiasm kindled in favor of Agrippina, whom men spoke of
- as the glory of the country, the sole surviving off spring of
- Augustus, the solitary example of the old times, while looking up to
- heaven and the gods they prayed for the safety of her children and
- that they might outlive their oppressors.
-
- Some there were who missed the grandeur of a state-funeral, and
- contrasted the splendid honours conferred by Augustus on Drusus, the
- father of Germanicus. "Then the emperor himself," they said, "went
- in the extreme rigour of winter as far as Ticinum, and never leaving
- the corpse entered Rome with it. Round the funeral bier were ranged
- the images of the Claudii and the Julii; there was weeping in the
- forum, and a panegyric before the rostra; every honour devised by
- our ancestors or invented by their descendants was heaped on him.
- But as for Germanicus, even the customary distinctions due to any
- noble had not fallen to his lot. Granting that his body, because of
- the distance of tie journey, was burnt in any fashion in foreign
- lands, still all the more honours ought to have been afterwards paid
- him, because at first chance had denied them. His brother had gone but
- one day's journey to meet him; his uncle, not even to the city
- gates. Where were all those usages of the past, the image at the
- head of the bier, the lays composed in commemoration of worth, the
- eulogies and laments, or at least the semblance of grief?"
-
- All this was known to Tiberius, and, to silence popular talk, he
- reminded the people in a proclamation that many eminent Romans had
- died for their country and that none had been honoured with such
- passionate regret. This regret was a glory both to himself and to all,
- provided only a due mean were observed; for what was becoming in
- humble homes and communities, did not befit princely personages and an
- imperial people. Tears and the solace found in mourning were
- suitable enough for the first burst of grief; but now they must
- brace their hearts to endurance, as in former days the Divine Julius
- after the loss of his only daughter, and the Divine Augustus when he
- was bereft of his grandchildren, had thrust away their sorrow. There
- was no need of examples from the past, showing how often the Roman
- people had patiently endured the defeats of armies, the destruction of
- generals, the total extinction of noble families. Princes were mortal;
- the State was everlasting. Let them then return to their usual
- pursuits, and, as the shows of the festival of the Great Goddess
- were at hand, even resume their amusements.
-
- The suspension of business then ceased, and men went back to their
- occupations. Drusus was sent to the armies of Illyricum, amidst an
- universal eagerness to exact vengeance on Piso, and ceaseless
- complaints that he was meantime roaming through the delightful regions
- of Asia and Achaia, and was weakening the proofs of his guilt by an
- insolent and artful procrastination. It was indeed widely rumoured
- that the notorius poisoner Martina, who, as I have related, had been
- despatched to Rome by Cneius Sentius, had died suddenly at Brundisium;
- that poison was concealed in a knot of her hair, and that no
- symptoms of suicide were discovered on her person.
-
- Piso meanwhile sent his son on to Rome with a message intended to
- pacify the emporer, and then made his way to Drusus, who would, he
- hoped, be not so much infuriated at his brother's death as kindly
- disposed towards himself in consequence of a rival's removal.
- Tiberius, to show his impartiality, received the youth courteously,
- and enriched him with the liberality he usually bestowed on the sons
- of noble families. Drusus replied to Piso that if certain insinuations
- were true, he must be foremost in his resentment, but he preferred
- to believe that they were false and groundless, and that
- Germanicus's death need be the ruin of no one. This he said openly,
- avoiding anything like secrecy. Men did not doubt that his answer
- prescribed him by Tiberius, inasmuch as one who had generally all
- the simplicity and candour of youth, now had recourse to the artifices
- of old age.
-
- Piso, after crossing the Dalmatian sea and leaving his ships at
- Ancona, went through Picenum and along the Flaminian road, where he
- overtook a legion which was marching from Pannonia to Rome and was
- then to garrison Africa. It was a matter of common talk how he had
- repeatedly displayed himself to the soldiers on the road during the
- march. From Narnia, to avoid suspicion or because the plans of fear
- are uncertain, he sailed down the Nar, then down the Tiber, and
- increased the fury of the populace by bringing his vessel to shore
- at the tomb of the Caesars. In broad daylight, when the river-bank was
- thronged, he himself with a numerous following of dependents, and
- Plancina with a retinue of women, moved onward with joy in their
- countenances. Among other things which provoked men's anger was his
- house towering above the forum, gay with festal decorations, his
- banquets and his feasts, about which there was no secrecy, because the
- place was so public.
-
- Next day, Fulcinius Trio asked the consul's leave to prosecute Piso.
- It was contended against him by Vitellius and Veranius and the
- others who had been the companions of Germanicus, that this was not
- Trio's proper part, and that they themselves meant to report their
- instructions from Germanicus, not as accusers, but as deponents and
- witnesses to facts. Trio, abandoning the prosecution on this count,
- obtained leave to accuse Piso's previous career, and the emperor was
- requested to undertake the inquiry. This even the accused did not
- refuse, fearing, as he did, the bias of the people and of the
- Senate; while Tiberius, he knew, was resolute enough to despise
- report, and was also entangled in his mother's complicity. Truth too
- would be more easily distinguished from perverse misrepresentation
- by a single judge, where a number would be swayed by hatred and
- ill-will.
-
- Tiberius was not unaware of the formidable difficulty of the inquiry
- and of the rumours by which he was himself assailed. Having
- therefore summoned a few intimate friends, he listened to the
- threatening speeches of the prosecutors and to the pleadings of the
- accused, and finally referred the whole case to the Senate.
-
- Drusus meanwhile, on his return from Illyricum, though the Senate
- had voted him an ovation for the submission of Maroboduus and the
- successes of the previous summer, postponed the honour and entered
- Rome. Then the defendant sought the advocacy of Lucius Arruntius,
- Marcus Vinicius, Asinius Gallus, Aeserninus Marcellus and Sextus
- Pompeius, and on their declining for different reasons, Marcus
- Lepidus, Lucius Piso, and Livineius Regulus became his counsel, amid
- the excitement of the whole country, which wondered how much
- fidelity would be shown by the friends of Germanicus, on what the
- accused rested his hopes, and how far Tiberius would repress and
- hide his feelings. Never were the people more keenly interested; never
- did they indulge themselves more freely in secret whispers against the
- emperor or in the silence of suspicion.
-
- On the day the Senate met, Tiberius delivered a speech of studied
- moderation. "Piso," he said, "was my father's representative and
- friend, and was appointed by myself, on the advice of the Senate, to
- assist Germanicus in the administration of the East. Whether he
- there had provoked the young prince by wilful opposition and
- rivalry, and had rejoiced at his death or wickedly destroyed him, is
- for you to determine with minds unbiassed. Certainly if a
- subordinate oversteps the bounds of duty and of obedience to his
- commander, and has exulted in his death and in my affliction, I
- shall hate him and exclude him from my house, and I shall avenge a
- personal quarrel without resorting to my power as emperor. If
- however a crime is discovered which ought to be punished, whoever
- the murdered man may be, it is for you to give just reparation both to
- the children of Germanicus and to us, his parents.
-
- "Consider this too, whether Piso dealt with the armies in a
- revolutionary and seditious spirit; whether he sought by intrigue
- popularity with the soldiers; whether he attempted to repossess
- himself of the province by arms, or whether these are falsehoods which
- his accusers have published with exaggeration. As for them, I am
- justly angry with their intemperate zeal. For to what purpose did they
- strip the corpse and expose it to the pollution of the vulgar gaze,
- and circulate a story among foreigners that he was destroyed by
- poison, if all this is still doubtful and requires investigation?
- For my part, I sorrow for my son and shall always sorrow for him;
- still I would not hinder the accused from producing all the evidence
- which can relieve his innocence or convict Germanicus of any
- unfairness, if such there was. And I implore you not to take as proven
- charges alleged, merely because the case is intimately bound up with
- my affliction. Do you, whom ties of blood or your own true-heartedness
- have made his advocates, help him in his peril, every one of you, as
- far as each man's eloquence and diligence can do so. To like exertions
- and like persistency I would urge the prosecutors. In this, and in
- this only, will we place Germanicus above the laws, by conducting
- the inquiry into his death in this house instead of in the forum,
- and before the Senate instead of before a bench of judges. In all else
- let the case be tried as simply as others. Let no one heed the tears
- of Drusus or my own sorrow, or any stories invented to our discredit."
-
- Two days were then assigned for the bringing forward of the charges,
- and after six days' interval, the prisoner's defence was to occupy
- three days. Thereupon Fulcinius Trio began with some old and
- irrelevant accusations about intrigues and extortion during Piso's
- government of Spain. This, if proved, would not have been fatal to the
- defendant, if he cleared himself as to his late conduct, and, if
- refuted, would not have secured his acquittal, if he were convicted of
- the greater crimes. Next, Servaeus, Veranius, and Vitellius, all
- with equal earnestness, Vitellius with striking eloquence, alleged
- against Piso that out of hatred of Germanicus and a desire of
- revolution he had so corrupted the common soldiers by licence and
- oppression of the allies that he was called by the vilest of them
- "father of the legions" while on the other hand to all the best men,
- especially to the companions and friends of Germanicus, he had been
- savagely cruel. Lastly, he had, they said, destroyed Germanicus
- himself by sorceries and poison, and hence came those ceremonies and
- horrible sacrifices made by himself and Plancina; then he had
- threatened the State with war, and had been defeated in battle, before
- he could be tried as a prisoner.
-
- On all points but one the defence broke down. That he had tampered
- with the soldiers, that his province had been at the mercy of the
- vilest of them, that he had even insulted his chief, he could not
- deny. It was only the charge of poisoning from which he seemed to have
- cleared himself. This indeed the prosecutors did not adequately
- sustain by merely alleging that at a banquet given by Germanicus,
- his food had been tainted with poison by the hands of Piso who sat
- next above him. It seemed absurd to suppose that he would have dared
- such an attempt among strange servants, in the sight of so many
- bystanders, and under Germanicus's own eyes. And, besides, the
- defendant offered his slaves to the torture, and insisted on its
- application to the attendants on that occasion. But the judges for
- different reasons were merciless, the emperor, because war had been
- made on a province, the Senate because they could not be
- sufficiently convinced that there had been no treachery about the
- death of Germanicus.
-
- At the same time shouts were heard from the people in front of the
- Senate House, threatening violence if he escaped the verdict of the
- Senators. They had actually dragged Piso's statues to the Gemonian
- stairs, and were breaking them in pieces, when by the emperor's
- order they were rescued and replaced. Piso was then put in a litter
- and attended by a tribune of one of the Praetorian cohorts, who
- followed him, so it was variously rumoured, to guard his person or
- to be his executioner.
-
- Plancina was equally detested, but had stronger interest.
- Consequently it was considered a question how far the emperor would be
- allowed to go against her. While Piso's hopes were in suspense, she
- offered to share his lot, whatever it might be, and in the worst
- event, to be his companion in death. But as soon as she had secured
- her pardon through the secret intercessions of Augusta, she
- gradually withdrew from her husband and separated her defence from
- his. When the prisoner saw that this was fatal to him, he hesitated
- whether he should still persist, but at the urgent request of his sons
- braced his courage and once more entered the Senate. There he bore
- patiently the renewal of the accusation, the furious voices of the
- Senators, savage opposition indeed from every quarter, but nothing
- daunted him so much as to see Tiberius, without pity and without
- anger, resolutely closing himself against any inroad of emotion. He
- was conveyed back to his house, where, seemingly by way of preparing
- his defence for the next day, he wrote a few words, sealed the paper
- and handed it to a freedman. Then he bestowed the usual attention on
- his person; after a while, late at night, his wife having left his
- chamber, he ordered the doors to be closed, and at daybreak was
- found with his throat cut and a sword lying on the ground.
-
- I remember to have heard old men say that a document was often
- seen in Piso's hands, the substance of which he never himself
- divulged, but which his friends repeatedly declared contained a letter
- from Tiberius with instructions referring to Germanicus, and that it
- was his intention to produce it before the Senate and upbraid the
- emperor, had he not been deluded by vain promises from Sejanus. Nor
- did he perish, they said, by his own hand, but by that of one sent
- to be his executioner. Neither of these statements would I
- positively affirm; still it would not have been right for me to
- conceal what was related by those who lived up to the time of my
- youth.
-
- The emperor, assuming an air of sadness, complained in the Senate
- that the purpose of such a death was to bring odium on himself, and he
- asked with repeated questionings how Piso had spent his last day and
- night. Receiving answers which were mostly judicious, though in part
- somewhat incautious, he read out a note written by Piso, nearly to the
- following effect:-
-
- "Crushed by a conspiracy of my foes and the odium excited by a lying
- charge, since my truth and innocence find no place here, I call the
- immortal gods to witness that towards you Caesar, I have lived
- loyally, and with like dutiful respect towards your mother. And I
- implore you to think of my children, one of whom, Cneius is in way
- implicated in my career, whatever it may have been, seeing that all
- this time he has been at Rome, while the other, Marcus Piso, dissuaded
- me from returning to Syria. Would that I had yielded to my young son
- rather than he to his aged father! And therefore I pray the more
- earnestly that the innocent may not pay the penalty of my
- wickedness. By forty-five years of obedience, by my association with
- you in the consulate, as one who formerly won the esteem of the Divine
- Augustus, your father, as one who is your friend and will never
- hereafter ask a favour, I implore you to save my unhappy son." About
- Plancina he added not a word.
-
- Tiberius after this acquitted the young Piso of the charge of
- civil war on the ground that a son could not have refused a father's
- orders, compassionating at the same time the high rank of the family
- and the terrible downfall even of Piso himself, however he might
- have deserved it. For Plancina he spoke with shame and conscious
- disgrace, alleging in excuse the intercession of his mother, secret
- complaints against whom from all good men were growing more and more
- vehement. "So it was the duty of a grandmother," people said, "to look
- a grandson's murderess in the face, to converse with her and rescue
- her from the Senate. What the laws secure on behalf of every
- citizen, had to Germanicus alone been denied. The voices of a
- Vitellius and Veranius had bewailed a Caesar, while the emperor and
- Augusta had defended Plancina. She might as well now turn her
- poisonings, and her devices which had proved so successful, against
- Agrippina and her children, and thus sate this exemplary grandmother
- and uncle with the blood of a most unhappy house."
-
- Two days were frittered away over this mockery of a trial,
- Tiberius urging Piso's children to defend their mother. While the
- accusers and their witnesses pressed the prosecution with rival
- zeal, and there was no reply, pity rather than anger was on the
- increase. Aurelius Cotta, the consul, who was first called on for
- his vote (for when the emperor put the question, even those in
- office went through the duty of voting), held that Piso's name ought
- to be erased from the public register, half of his property
- confiscated, half given up to his son, Cneius Piso, who was to
- change his first name; that Marcus Piso, stript of his rank, with an
- allowance of five million sesterces, should be banished for ten years,
- Plancina's life being spared in consideration of Augusta's
- intercession.
-
- Much of the sentence was mitigated by the emperor. The name of
- Piso was not to be struck out of the public register, since that of
- Marcus Antonius who had made war on his country, and that of Julius
- Antonius who had dishonoured the house of Augustus, still remained.
- Marcus Piso too he saved from degradation, and gave him his father's
- property, for he was firm enough, as I have often related, against the
- temptation of money, and now for very shame at Plancina's acquittal,
- he was more than usually merciful. Again, when Valerius Messalinus and
- Caecina Severus proposed respectively the erection of a golden
- statue in the temple of Mars the Avenger and of an altar to Vengeance,
- he interposed, protesting that victories over the foreigner were
- commemorated with such monuments, but that domestic woes ought to be
- shrouded in silent grief.
-
- There was a further proposal of Messalinus, that Tiberius,
- Augusta, Antonia, Agrippina and Drusus ought to be publicly thanked
- for having avenged Germanicus. He omitted all mention of Claudius.
- Thereupon he was pointedly asked by Lucius Asprenas before the Senate,
- whether the omission had been intentional, and it was only then that
- the name of Claudius was added. For my part, the wider the scope of my
- reflection on the present and the past, the more am I impressed by
- their mockery of human plans in every transaction. Clearly, the very
- last man marked out for empire by public opinion, expectation and
- general respect was he whom fortune was holding in reserve as the
- emperor of the future.
-
- A few days afterwards the emperor proposed to the Senate to confer
- the priesthood on Vitellius, Veranius and Servaeus. To Fulcinius he
- promised his support in seeking promotion, but warned him not to
- ruin his eloquence by rancour. This was the end of avenging the
- death of Germanicus, a subject of conflicting rumours not only among
- the people then living but also in after times. So obscure are the
- greatest events, as some take for granted any hearsay, whatever its
- source, others turn truth into falsehood, and both errors find
- encouragement with posterity.
-
- Drusus meanwhile quitted Rome to resume his command and soon
- afterwards re-entered the city with an ovation. In the course of a few
- days his mother Vipsania died, the only one of all Agrippa's
- children whose death was without violence. As for the rest, they
- perished, some it is certain by the sword, others it was believed by
- poison or starvation.
-
- That same year Tacfarinas who had been defeated, as I have
- related, by Camillus in the previous summer, renewed hostilities in
- Africa, first by mere desultory raids, so swift as to be unpunished;
- next, by destroying villages and carrying off plunder wholesale.
- Finally, he hemmed in a Roman cohort near the river Pagyda. The
- position was commanded by Decrius, a soldier energetic in action and
- experienced in war, who regarded the siege as a disgrace. Cheering
- on his men to offer battle in the open plain, he drew up his line in
- front of his intrenchments. At the first shock, the cohort was
- driven back, upon which he threw himself fearlessly amid the
- missiles in the path of the fugitives and cried shame on the
- standard-bearers for letting Roman soldiers show their backs to a
- rabble of deserters. At the same moment he was covered with wounds,
- and though pierced through the eye, he resolutely faced the enemy
- and ceased not to fight till he fell deserted by his men.
-
- On receiving this information, Lucius Apronius, successor to
- Camillus, alarmed more by the dishonour of his own men than by the
- glory of the enemy, ventured on a deed quite exceptional at that
- time and derived from old tradition. He flogged to death every tenth
- man drawn by lot from the disgraced cohort. So beneficial was this
- rigour that a detachment of veterans, numbering not more than five
- hundred, routed those same troops of Tacfarinas on their attacking a
- fortress named Thala. In this engagement Rufus Helvius, a common
- soldier, won the honour of saving a citizen's life, and was rewarded
- by Apronius with a neck-chain and a spear. To these the emperor
- added the civic crown, complaining, but without anger, that Apronius
- had not used his right as proconsul to bestow this further
- distinction.
-
- Tacfarinas, however, finding that the Numidians were cowed and had a
- horror of siege-operations, pursued a desultory warfare, retreating
- when he was pressed, and then again hanging on his enemy's rear. While
- the barbarian continued these tactics, he could safely insult the
- baffled and exhausted Romans. But when he marched away towards the
- coast and, hampered with booty, fixed himself in a regular camp,
- Caesianus was despatched by his father Apronius with some cavalry
- and auxiliary infantry, reinforced by the most active of the
- legionaries, and, after a successful battle with the Numidians,
- drove them into the desert.
-
- At Rome meanwhile Lepida, who beside the glory of being one of the
- Aemilii was the great-granddaughter of Lucius Sulla and Cneius
- Pompeius, was accused of pretending to be a mother by Publius
- Quirinus, a rich and childless man. Then, too, there were charges of
- adulteries, of poisonings, and of inquiries made through astrologers
- concerning the imperial house. The accused was defended by her brother
- Manius Lepidus. Quirinus by his relentless enmity even after his
- divorce, had procured for her some sympathy, infamous and guilty as
- she was. One could not easily perceive the emperor's feelings at her
- trial; so effectually did he interchange and blend the outward signs
- of resentment and compassion. He first begged the Senate not to deal
- with the charges of treason, and subsequently induced Marcus
- Servilius, an ex-consul, to divulge what he had seemingly wished to
- suppress. He also handed over to the consuls Lepida's slaves, who were
- in military custody, but would not allow them to be examined by
- torture on matters referring to his own family. Drusus too, the
- consul-elect, he released from the necessity of having to speak
- first to the question. Some thought this a gracious act, done to
- save the rest of the Senators from a compulsory assent, while others
- ascribed it to malignity, on the ground that he would have yielded
- only where there was a necessity of condemning.
-
- On the days of the games which interrupted the trial, Lepida went
- into the theatre with some ladies of rank, and as she appealed with
- piteous wailings to her ancestors and to that very Pompey, the
- public buildings and statues of whom stood there before their eyes,
- she roused such sympathy that people burst into tears and shouted,
- without ceasing, savage curses on Quirinus, "to whose childless
- old-age and miserably obscure family, one once destined to be the wife
- of Lucius Caesar and the daughter-in-law of the Divine Augustus was
- being sacrificed." Then, by the torture of the slaves, her infamies
- were brought to light, and a motion of Rubellius Blandus was carried
- which outlawed her. Drusus supported him, though others had proposed a
- milder sentence. Subsequently, Scaurus, who had had daughter by her,
- obtained as a concession that her property should not be
- confiscated. Then at last Tiberius declared that he had himself too
- ascertained from the slaves of Publius Quirinus that Lepida had
- attempted their master's life by poison.
-
- It was some compensation for the misfortunes of great houses (for
- within a short interval the Calpurnii had lost Piso and the Aemilii
- Lepida) that Decimus Silanus was now restored to the Junian family.
- I will briefly relate his downfall.
-
- Though the Divine Augustus in his public life enjoyed unshaken
- prosperity, he was unfortunate at home from the profligacy of his
- daughter and granddaughter, both of whom he banished from Rome, and
- punished their paramours with death or exile. Calling, as he did, a
- vice so habitual among men and women by the awful name of sacrilege
- and treason, he went far beyond the indulgent spirit of our ancestors,
- beyond indeed his own legislation. But I will relate the deaths of
- others with the remaining events of that time, if after finishing
- the work I have now proposed to myself, I prolong my life for
- further labours.
-
- Decimus Silanus, the paramour of the granddaughter of Augustus,
- though the only severity he experienced was exclusion from the
- emperor's friendship, saw clearly that it meant exile; and it was
- not till Tiberius's reign that he ventured to appeal to the Senate and
- to the prince, in reliance on the influence of his brother Marcus
- Silanus, who was conspicuous both for his distinguished rank and
- eloquence. But Tiberius, when Silanus thanked him, replied in the
- Senate's presence, "that he too rejoiced at the brother's return
- from his long foreign tour, and that this was justly allowable,
- inasmuch as he had been banished not by a decree of the Senate or
- under any law. Still, personally," he said, "he felt towards him his
- father's resentment in all its force, and the return of Silanus had
- not cancelled the intentions of Augustus." Silanus after this lived at
- Rome without attaining office.
-
- It was next proposed to relax the Papia Poppaea law, which
- Augustus in his old age had passed subsequently to the Julian
- statutes, for yet further enforcing the penalties on celibacy and
- for enriching the exchequer. And yet, marriages and the rearing of
- children did not become more frequent, so powerful were the
- attractions of a childless state. Meanwhile there was an increase in
- the number of persons imperilled, for every household was undermined
- by the insinuations of informers; and now the country suffered from
- its laws, as it had hitherto suffered from its vices. This suggests to
- me a fuller discussion of the origin of law and of the methods by
- which we have arrived at the present endless multiplicity and
- variety of our statutes.
-
- Mankind in the earliest age lived for a time without a single
- vicious impulse, without shame or guilt, and, consequently, without
- punishment and restraints. Rewards were not needed when everything
- right was pursued on its own merits; and as men desired nothing
- against morality, they were debarred from nothing by fear. When
- however they began to throw off equality, and ambition and violence
- usurped the place of self-control and modesty, despotisms grew up
- and became perpetual among many nations. Some from the beginning, or
- when tired of kings, preferred codes of laws. These were at first
- simple, while men's minds were unsophisticated. The most famous of
- them were those of the Cretans, framed by Minos; those of the
- Spartans, by Lycurgus, and, subsequently, those which Solan drew up
- for the Athenians on a more elaborate and extensive scale. Romulus
- governed us as he pleased; then Numa united our people by religious
- ties and a constitution of divine origin, to which some additions were
- made by Tullus and Ancus. But Servius Tullius was our chief
- legislator, to whose laws even kings were to be subject.
-
- After Tarquin's expulsion, the people, to check cabals among the
- Senators, devised many safeguards for freedom and for the
- establishment of unity. Decemvirs were appointed; everything specially
- admirable elsewhere was adopted, and the Twelve Tables drawn up, the
- last specimen of equitable legislation. For subsequent enactments,
- though occasionally directed against evildoers for some crime, were
- oftener carried by violence amid class dissensions, with a view to
- obtain honours not as yet conceded, or to banish distinguished
- citizens, or for other base ends. Hence the Gracchi and Saturnini,
- those popular agitators, and Drusus too, as flagrant a corrupter in
- the Senate's name; hence, the bribing of our allies by alluring
- promises and the cheating them by tribunes vetoes. Even the Italian
- and then the Civil war did not pass without the enactment of many
- conflicting laws, till Lucius Sulla, the Dictator, by the repeal or
- alteration of past legislation and by many additions, gave us a
- brief lull in this process, to be instantly followed by the
- seditious proposals of Lepidus, and soon afterwards by the tribunes
- recovering their license to excite the people just as they chose.
- And now bills were passed, not only for national objects but for
- individual cases, and laws were most numerous when the commonwealth
- was most corrupt.
-
- Cneius Pompeius was then for the third time elected consul to reform
- public morals, but in applying remedies more terrible than the evils
- and repealing the legislation of which he had himself been the author,
- he lost by arms what by arms he had been maintaining. Then followed
- twenty years of continuous strife; custom or law there was none; the
- vilest deeds went unpunished, while many noble acts brought ruin. At
- last, in his sixth consulship, Caesar Augustus, feeling his power
- secure, annulled the decrees of his triumvirate, and gave us a
- constitution which might serve us in peace under a monarchy.
- Henceforth our chains became more galling, and spies were set over us,
- stimulated by rewards under the Papia Poppaea law, so that if men
- shrank from the privileges of fatherhood, the State, as universal
- parent, might possess their ownerless properties. But this espionage
- became too searching, and Rome and Italy and Roman citizens everywhere
- fell into its clutches. Many men's fortunes were ruined, and over
- all there hung a terror till Tiberius, to provide a remedy, selected
- by lot five ex-consuls, five ex-praetors, and five senators, by whom
- most of the legal knots were disentangled and some light temporary
- relief afforded.
-
- About this same time he commended to the Senate's favour, Nero,
- Germanicus's son, who was just entering on manhood, and asked them,
- not without smiles of ridicule from his audience, to exempt him from
- serving as one of the Twenty Commissioners, and let him be a candidate
- for quaestorship five years earlier than the law allowed. His excuse
- was that a similar decree had been made for himself and his brother at
- the request of Augustus. But I cannot doubt that even then there
- were some who secretly laughed at such a petition, though the
- Caesars were but in the beginning of their grandeur, and ancient usage
- was more constantly before men's eyes, while also the tie between
- stepfather and stepson was weaker than that between grandfather and
- grandchild. The pontificate was likewise conferred on Nero, and on the
- day on which he first entered the forum, a gratuity was given to the
- city-populace, who greatly rejoiced at seeing a son of Germanicus
- now grown to manhood. Their joy was further increased by Nero's
- marriage to Julia, Drusus's daughter. This news was met with
- favourable comments, but it was heard with disgust that Sejanus was to
- be the father-in-law of the son of Claudius. The emperor was thought
- to have polluted the nobility of his house and to have yet further
- elevated Sejanus, whom they already suspected of overweening ambition.
-
- Two remarkable men died at the end of the year, Lucius Volusius
- and Sallustius Crispus. Volusius was of an old family, which had
- however never risen beyond the praetorship. He brought into it the
- consulship; he also held the office of censor for arranging the
- classes of the knights, and was the first to pile up the wealth
- which that house enjoyed to a boundless extent.
-
- Crispus was of equestrian descent and grandson of a sister of
- Caius Sallustius, that most admirable Roman historian, by whom he
- was adopted and whose name he took. Though his road to preferment
- was easy, he chose to emulate Maecenas, and without rising to a
- senator's rank, he surpassed in power many who had won triumphs and
- consulships. He was a contrast to the manners of antiquity in his
- elegance and refinement, and in the sumptuousness of his wealth he was
- almost a voluptuary. But beneath all this was a vigorous mind, equal
- to the greatest labours, the more active in proportion as he made a
- show of sloth and apathy. And so while Maecenas lived, he stood next
- in favour to him, and was afterwards the chief depository of
- imperial secrets, and accessory to the murder of Postumus Agrippa,
- till in advanced age he retained the shadow rather than the
- substance of the emperor's friendship. The same too had happened to
- Maecenas, so rarely is it the destiny of power to be lasting, or
- perhaps a sense of weariness steals over princes when they have
- bestowed everything, or over favourites, when there is nothing left
- them to desire.
-
- Next followed Tiberius's fourth, Drusus's second consulship,
- memorable from the fact that father and son were colleagues. Two years
- previously the association of Germanicus and Tiberius in the same
- honour had not been agreeable to the uncle, nor had it the link of
- so close a natural tie.
-
- At the beginning of this year Tiberius, avowedly to recruit his
- health, retired to Campania, either as a gradual preparation for
- long and uninterrupted seclusion, or in order that Drusus alone in his
- father's absence might discharge the duties of the consulship. It
- happened that a mere trifle which grew into a sharp contest gave the
- young prince the means of acquiring popularity. Domitius Corbulo, an
- ex-praetor, complained to the Senate that Lucius Sulla, a young noble,
- had not given place to him at a gladiatorial show. Corbulo had age,
- national usage and the feelings of the older senators in his favour.
- Against him Mamercus Scaurus, Lucius Arruntius and other kinsmen of
- Sulla strenuously exerted themselves. There was a keen debate, and
- appeal was made to the precedents of our ancestors, as having censured
- in severe decrees disrespect on the part of the young, till Drusus
- argued in a strain calculated to calm their feelings. Corbulo too
- received an apology from Mamercus, who was Sulla's uncle and
- stepfather, and the most fluent speaker of that day.
-
- It was this same Corbulo, who, after raising a cry that most of
- the roads in Italy were obstructed or impassable through the
- dishonesty of contractors and the negligence of officials, himself
- willingly undertook the complete management of the business. This
- proved not so beneficial to the State as ruinous to many persons,
- whose property and credit he mercilessly attacked by convictions and
- confiscations.
-
- Soon afterwards Tiberius informed the Senate by letter that Africa
- was again disturbed by an incursion of Tacfarinas, and that they
- must use their judgment in choosing as proconsul an experienced
- soldier of vigorous constitution, who would be equal to the war.
- Sextus Pompeius caught at this opportunity of venting his hatred
- against Lepidus, whom he condemned as a poor-spirited and needy man,
- who was a disgrace to his ancestors, and therefore deserved to lose
- even his chance of the province of Asia. But the Senate were against
- him, for they thought Lepidus gentle rather than cowardly, and that
- his inherited poverty, with the high rank in which he had lived
- without a blot, ought to be considered a credit to instead of a
- reproach. And so he was sent to Asia, and with respect to Africa it
- was decided that the emperor should choose to whom it was to be
- assigned.
-
- During this debate Severus Caecina proposed that no magistrate who
- had obtained a province should be accompanied by his wife. He began by
- recounting at length how harmoniously he had lived with his wife,
- who had borne him six children, and how in his own home he had
- observed what he was proposing for the public, by having kept her in
- Italy, though he had himself served forty campaigns in various
- provinces. "With good reason," he said, "had it been formerly
- decided that women were not to be taken among our allies or into
- foreign countries. A train of women involves delays through luxury
- in peace and through panic in war, and converts a Roman army on the
- march into the likeness of a barbarian progress. Not only is the sex
- feeble and unequal to hardship, but, when it has liberty, it is
- spiteful, intriguing and greedy of power. They show themselves off
- among the soldiers and have the centurions at their beck. Lately a
- woman had presided at the drill of the cohorts and the evolutions of
- the legions. You should yourselves bear in mind that, whenever men are
- accused of extortion, most of the charges are directed against the
- wives. It is to these that the vilest of the provincials instantly
- attach themselves; it is they who undertake and settle business; two
- persons receive homage when they appear; there are two centres of
- government, and the women's orders are the more despotic and
- intemperate. Formerly they were restrained by the Oppian and other
- laws; now, loosed from every bond, they rule our houses, our
- tribunals, even our armies."
-
- A few heard this speech with approval, but the majority
- clamorously objected that there was no proper motion on the subject,
- and that Caecina was no fit censor on so grave an issue. Presently
- Valerius Messalinus, Messala's son, in whom the father's eloquence was
- reproduced, replied that much of the sternness of antiquity had been
- changed into a better and more genial system. "Rome," he said, "is not
- now, as formerly, beset with wars, nor are the provinces hostile. A
- few concessions are made to the wants of women, but such as are not
- even a burden to their husbands homes, much less to the allies. In all
- other respects man and wife share alike, and this arrangement involves
- no trouble in peace. War of course requires that men should be
- unincumbered, but when they return what worthier solace can they
- have after their hardships than a wife's society? But some wives
- have abandoned themselves to scheming and rapacity. Well; even among
- our magistrates, are not many subject to various passions? Still, that
- is not a reason for sending no one into a province. Husbands have
- often been corrupted by the vices of their wives. Are then all
- unmarried men blameless? The Oppian laws were formerly adopted to meet
- the political necessities of the time, and subsequently there was some
- remission and mitigation of them on grounds of expediency. It is
- idle to shelter our own weakness under other names; for it is the
- husband's fault if the wife transgresses propriety. Besides, it is
- wrong that because of the imbecility of one or two men, all husbands
- should be cut off from their partners in prosperity and adversity. And
- further, a sex naturally weak will be thus left to itself and be at
- the mercy of its own voluptuousness and the passions of others. Even
- with the husband's personal vigilance the marriage tie is scarcely
- preserved inviolate. What would happen were it for a number of years
- to be forgotten, just as in a divorce? You must not check vices abroad
- without remembering the scandals of the capital."
-
- Drusus added a few words on his own experience as a husband.
- "Princes," he said, "must often visit the extremities of their empire.
- How often had the Divine Augustus travelled to West and to the East
- accompanied by Livia? He had himself gone to Illyricum and, should
- it be expedient, he would go to other countries, not always however
- with a contented mind, if he had to tear himself from a much loved
- wife, the mother of his many children."
-
- Caecina's motion was thus defeated. At the Senate's next meeting
- came a letter from Tiberius, which indirectly censured them for
- throwing on the emperor every political care, and named Marcus Lepidus
- and Junius Blaesus, one of whom was to be chosen pro-consul of Africa.
- Both spoke on the subject, and Lepidus begged earnestly to be excused.
- He alleged ill-health, his children's tender age, his having a
- daughter to marry, and something more of which he said nothing, was
- well understood, the fact that Blaesus was uncle of Sejanus and so had
- very powerful interest. Blaesus replied with an affectation of
- refusal, but not with the same persistency, nor was he backed up by
- the acquiescence of flatterers.
-
- Next was exposed an abuse, hitherto the subject of many a
- whispered complaint. The vilest wretches used a growing freedom in
- exciting insult and obloquy against respectable citizens, and
- escaped punishment by clasping some statue of the emperor. The very
- freedman or slave was often an actual terror to his patron or master
- whom he would menace by word and gesture. Accordingly Caius Cestius, a
- senator, argued that "though princes were like deities, yet even the
- gods listened only to righteous prayers from their suppliants, and
- that no one fled to the Capitol or any other temple in Rome to use
- it as an auxiliary in crime. There was an end and utter subversion
- of all law when, in the forum and on the threshold of the Senate
- House, Annia Rufilla, whom he had convicted of fraud before a judge,
- assailed him with insults and threats, while he did not himself dare
- to try legal proceedings, because he was confronted by her with the
- emperor's image." There rose other clamorous voices, with even more
- flagrant complaints, and all implored Drusus to inflict exemplary
- vengeance, till he ordered Rufilla to be summoned, and on her
- conviction to be confined in the common prison.
-
- Considius Aequus too and Coelius Cursor, Roman knights, were
- punished on the emperor's proposal, by a decree of the Senate, for
- having attacked the praetor, Magius Caecilianus, with false charges of
- treason. Both these results were represented as an honour to Drusus.
- By moving in society at Rome, amid popular talk, his father's dark
- policy, it was thought, was mitigated. Even voluptuousness in one so
- young gave little offence. Better that he should incline that way,
- spend his days in architecture, his nights in banquets, than that he
- should live in solitude, cut off from every pleasure, and absorbed
- in a gloomy vigilance and mischievous schemes.
-
- Tiberius indeed and the informers were never weary. Ancharius
- Priscus had prosecuted Caesius Cordus, proconsul of Crete, for
- extortion, adding a charge of treason, which then crowned all
- indictments. Antistius Vetus, one of the chief men of Macedonia, who
- had been acquitted of adultery, was recalled by the emperor himself,
- with a censure on the judges, to be tried for treason, as a
- seditious man who had been implicated in the designs of Rhescuporis,
- when that king after the murder of his brother Cotys had meditated war
- against us. The accused was accordingly outlawed, with the further
- sentence that he was to be confined in an island from which neither
- Macedonia nor Thrace were conveniently accessible.
-
- As for Thrace, since the division of the kingdom between
- Rhoemetalces and the children of Cotys, who because of their tender
- age were under the guardianship of Trebellienus Rufus, it was
- divided against itself, from not being used to our rule, and blamed
- Rhoemetalces no less than Trebellienus for allowing the wrongs of
- his countrymen to go unpunished. The Coelaletae, Odrusae and Dii,
- powerful tribes, took up arms, under different leaders, all on a level
- from their obscurity. This hindered them from combining in a
- formidable war. Some roused their immediate neighbourhood; others
- crossed Mount Haemus, to stir up remote tribes; most of them, and
- the best disciplined, besieged the king in the city of
- Philippopolis, founded by the Macedonian Philip.
-
- When this was known to Publius Vellaeus who commanded the nearest
- army, he sent some allied cavalry and light infantry to attack those
- who were roaming in quest of plunder or of reinforcements, while he
- marched in person with the main strength of the foot to raise the
- siege. Every operation was at the same moment successful; the
- pillagers were cut to pieces; dissensions broke out among the
- besiegers, and the king made a well-timed sally just as the legion
- arrived. A battle or even a skirmish it did not deserve to be
- called, in which merely half-armed stragglers were slaughtered without
- bloodshed on our side.
-
- That same year, some states of Gaul, under the pressure of heavy
- debts, attempted a revolt. Its most active instigators were Julius
- Florus among the Treveri and Julius Sacrovir among the Aedui. Both
- could show noble birth and signal services rendered by ancestors,
- for which Roman citizenship had formerly been granted them, when the
- gift was rare and a recompense only of merit. In secret conferences to
- which the fiercest spirits were admitted, or any to whom poverty or
- the fear of guilt was an irresistible stimulus to crime, they arranged
- that Florus was to rouse the Belgae, Sacrovir the Gauls nearer home.
- These men accordingly talked sedition before small gatherings and
- popular assemblies about the perpetual tributes, the oppressive usury,
- the cruelty and arrogance of their governors, hinting too that there
- was disaffection among our soldiers, since they had heard of the
- murder of Germanicus. "It was," they said, "a grand opportunity for
- the recovery of freedom, if only they would contrast their own
- vigour with the exhaustion of Italy, the unwarlike character of the
- city populace, and the utter weakness of Rome's armies in all but
- their foreign element."
-
- Scarcely a single community was untouched by the germs of this
- commotion. First however in actual revolt were the Andecavi and
- Turoni. Of these the former were put down by an officer, Acilius
- Aviola, who had summoned a cohort which was on garrison duty at
- Lugdunum. The Turoni were quelled by some legionary troops sent by
- Visellius Varro who commanded in Lower Germany, and led by the same
- Aviola and some Gallic chieftains who brought aid, in order that
- they might disguise their disaffection and exhibit it at a better
- opportunity. Sacrovir too was conspicuous, with head uncovered,
- cheering on his men to fight for Rome, to display, as he said, his
- valour. But the prisoners asserted that he sought recognition that
- he might not be a mark for missiles. Tiberius when consulted on the
- matter disdained the information, and fostered the war by his
- irresolution.
-
- Florus meanwhile followed up his designs and tried to induce a
- squadron of cavalry levied among the Treveri, trained in our service
- and discipline, to begin hostilities by a massacre of the Roman
- traders. He corrupted a few of the men, but the majority were
- steadfast in their allegiance. A host however of debtors and
- dependents took up arms, and they were on their way to the forest
- passes known as the Arduenna, when they were stopped by legions
- which Visellius and Silius had sent from their respective armies, by
- opposite routes, to meet them. Julius Indus from the same state, who
- was at feud with Florus and therefore particularly eager to render
- us a service, was sent on in advance with a picked force, and
- dispersed the undisciplined rabble. Florus after eluding the
- conquerors by hiding himself in one place after another, at last
- when he saw some soldiers who had barred every possible escape, fell
- by his own hand. Such was the end of the rebellion of the Treveri.
-
- A more formidable movement broke out among the Aedui, proportioned
- to the greater wealth of the state and the distance of the force which
- should repress it. Sacrovir with some armed cohorts had made himself
- master of Augustodunum, the capital of the tribe, with the noblest
- youth of Gaul, there devoting themselves to a liberal education, and
- with such hostages he proposed to unite in his cause their parents and
- kinsfolk. He also distributed among the youth arms which he had had
- secretly manufactured. There were forty thousand, one fifth armed like
- our legionaries; the rest had spears and knives and other weapons used
- in the chase. In addition were some slaves who were being trained
- for gladiators, clad after the national fashion in a complete covering
- of steel. They were called crupellarii, and though they were
- ill-adapted for inflicting wounds, they were impenetrable to them.
- This army was continually increased, not yet by any open combination
- of the neighbouring states, but by zealous individual enthusiasm, as
- well as by strife between the Roman generals, each of whom claimed the
- war for himself. Varro after a while, as he was infirm and aged,
- yielded to Silius who was in his prime.
-
- At Rome meanwhile people said that it was not only the Treveri and
- Aedui who had revolted, but sixty-four states of Gaul with the Germans
- in alliance, while Spain too was disaffected; anything in fact was
- believed, with rumour's usual exaggeration. All good men were saddened
- by anxiety for the country, but many in their loathing of the
- present system and eagerness for change, rejoiced at their very perils
- and exclaimed against Tiberius for giving attention amid such
- political convulsions to the calumnies of informers. "Was Sacrovir
- too," they asked, "to be charged with treason before the Senate? We
- have at last found men to check those murderous missives by the sword.
- Even war is a good exchange for a miserable peace." Tiberius all the
- more studiously assumed an air of unconcern. He changed neither his
- residence nor his look, but kept up his usual demeanour during the
- whole time, either from the profoundness of his reserve; or was it
- that he had convinced himself that the events were unimportant and
- much more insignificant than the rumours represented?
-
- Silius meantime was advancing with two legions, and having sent
- forward some auxiliary troops was ravaging those villages of the
- Sequani, which, situated on the border, adjoin the Aedui, and were
- associated with them in arms. He then pushed on by forced marches to
- Augustodunum, his standard-bearers vying in zeal, and even the
- privates loudly protesting against any halt for their usual rest or
- during the hours of night. "Only," they said, "let us have the foe
- face to face; that will be enough for victory." Twelve miles from
- Augustodunum they saw before them Sacrovir and his army in an open
- plain. His men in armour he had posted in the van, his light
- infantry on the wings, and the half-armed in the rear. He himself rode
- amid the foremost ranks on a splendid charger, reminding them of the
- ancient glories of the Gauls, of the disasters they had inflicted on
- the Romans, how grand would be the freedom of the victorious, how more
- intolerable than ever the slavery of a second conquest.
-
- His words were brief and heard without exultation. For now the
- legions in battle array were advancing, and the rabble of townsfolk
- who knew nothing of war had their faculties of sight and hearing quite
- paralysed. Silius, on the one hand, though confident hope took away
- any need for encouragement, exclaimed again and again that it was a
- shame to the conquerors of Germany to have to be led against Gauls, as
- against an enemy. "Only the other day the rebel Turoni had been
- discomfited by a single cohort, the Treveri by one cavalry squadron,
- the Sequani by a few companies of this very army. Prove to these Aedui
- once for all that the more they abound in wealth and luxury, the
- more unwarlike are they, but spare them when they flee."
-
- Then there was a deafening cheer; the cavalry threw itself on the
- flanks, and the infantry charged the van. On the wings there was but a
- brief resistance. The men in mail were somewhat of an obstacle, as the
- iron plates did not yield to javelins or swords; but our men,
- snatching up hatchets and pickaxes, hacked at their bodies and their
- armour as if they were battering a wall. Some beat down the unwieldy
- mass with pikes and forked poles, and they were left lying on the
- ground, without an effort to rise, like dead men. Sacrovir with his
- most trustworthy followers hurried first to Augustodunum and then,
- from fear of being surrendered, to an adjacent country house. There by
- his own hand he fell, and his comrades by mutually inflicted wounds.
- The house was fired over their heads, and with it they were all
- consumed.
-
- Then at last Tiberius informed the Senate by letter of the beginning
- and completion of the war, without either taking away from or adding
- to the truth, but ascribing the success to the loyalty and courage
- of his generals, and to his own policy. He also gave the reasons why
- neither he himself nor Drusus had gone to the war; he magnified the
- greatness of the empire, and said it would be undignified for
- emperors, whenever there was a commotion in one or two states, to quit
- the capital, the centre of all government. Now, as he was not
- influenced by fear, he would go to examine and settle matters.
-
- The Senate decreed vows for his safe return, with thanksgivings
- and other appropriate ceremonies. Cornelius Dolabella alone, in
- endeavouring to outdo the other Senators, went the length of a
- preposterous flattery by proposing that he should enter Rome from
- Campania with an ovation. Thereupon came a letter from the emperor,
- declaring that he was not so destitute of renown as after having
- subdued the most savage nations and received or refused so many
- triumphs in his youth, to covet now that he was old an unmeaning
- honour for a tour in the neighbourhood of Rome.
-
- About the same time he requested the Senate to let the death of
- Sulpicius Quirinus be celebrated with a public funeral. With the old
- patrician family of the Sulpicii this Quirinus, who was born in the
- town of Lanuvium, was quite unconnected. An indefatigable soldier,
- he had by his zealous services won the consulship under the Divine
- Augustus, and subsequently the honours of a triumph for having stormed
- some fortresses of the Homonadenses in Cilicia. He was also
- appointed adviser to Caius Caesar in the government of Armenia, and
- had likewise paid court to Tiberius, who was then at Rhodes. The
- emperor now made all this known to the Senate, and extolled the good
- offices of Quirinus to himself, while he censured Marcus Lollius, whom
- he charged with encouraging Caius Caesar in his perverse and
- quarrelsome behaviour. But people generally had no pleasure in the
- memory of Quirinus, because of the perils he had brought, as I have
- related, on Lepida, and the meanness and dangerous power of his last
- years.
-
- At the close of the year, Caius Lutorius Priscus, a Roman knight,
- who, after writing a popular poem bewailing the death of Germanicus,
- had received a reward in money from the emperor, was fastened on by an
- informer, and charged with having composed another during the
- illness of Drusus, which, in the event of the prince's death, might be
- published with even greater profit to himself. He had in his vanity
- read it in the house of Publius Petronius before Vitellia, Petronius's
- mother-in-law, and several ladies of rank. As soon as the accuser
- appeared, all but Vitellia were frightened into giving evidence. She
- alone swore that she had heard not a word. But those who criminated
- him fatally were rather believed, and on the motion of Haterius
- Agrippa, the consul-elect, the last penalty was invoked on the
- accused.
-
- Marcus Lepidus spoke against the sentence as follows:- "Senators, if
- we look to the single fact of the infamous utterance with which
- Lutorius has polluted his own mind and the ears of the public, neither
- dungeon nor halter nor tortures fit for a slave would be punishment
- enough for him. But though vice and wicked deeds have no limit,
- penalties and correctives are moderated by the clemency of the
- sovereign and by the precedents of your ancestors and yourselves.
- Folly differs from wickedness; evil words from evil deeds, and thus
- there is room for a sentence by which this offence may not go
- unpunished, while we shall have no cause to regret either leniency
- or severity. Often have I heard our emperor complain when any one
- has anticipated his mercy by a self-inflicted death. Lutorius's life
- is still safe; if spared, he will be no danger to the State; if put to
- death, he will be no warning to others. His productions are as empty
- and ephemeral as they are replete with folly. Nothing serious or
- alarming is to be apprehended from the man who is the betrayer of
- his own shame and works on the imaginations not of men but of silly
- women. However, let him leave Rome, lose his property, and be
- outlawed. That is my proposal, just as though he were convicted
- under the law of treason."
-
- Only one of the ex-consuls, Rubellius Blandus, supported Lepidus.
- The rest voted with Agrippa. Priscus was dragged off to prison and
- instantly put to death. Of this Tiberius complained to the Senate with
- his usual ambiguity, extolling their loyalty in so sharply avenging
- the very slightest insults to the sovereign, though he deprecated such
- hasty punishment of mere words, praising Lepidus and not censuring
- Agrippa. So the Senate passed a resolution that their decrees should
- not be registered in the treasury till nine days had expired, and so
- much respite was to be given to condemned persons. Still the Senate
- had not liberty to alter their purpose, and lapse of time never
- softened Tiberius.
-
- Caius Sulpicius and Didius Haterius were the next consuls. It was
- a year free from commotions abroad, while at home stringent
- legislation was apprehended against the luxury which had reached
- boundless excess in everything on which wealth is lavished. Some
- expenses, though very serious, were generally kept secret by a
- concealment of the real prices; but the costly preparations for
- gluttony and dissipation were the theme of incessant talk, and had
- suggested a fear that a prince who clung to oldfashioned frugality
- would be too stern in his reforms. In fact, when the aedile Caius
- Bibulus broached the topic, all his colleagues had pointed out that
- the sumptuary laws were disregarded, that prohibited prices for
- household articles were every day on the increase, and that moderate
- measures could not stop the evil.
-
- The Senate on being consulted had, without handling the matter,
- referred it to the emperor. Tiberius, after long considering whether
- such reckless tastes could be repressed, whether the repression of
- them would not be still more hurtful to the State, also, how
- undignified it would be to meddle with what he could not succeed in,
- or what, if effected, would necessitate the disgrace and infamy of men
- of distinction, at last addressed a letter to the Senate to the
- following purport:-
-
- Perhaps in any other matter, Senators, it would be more convenient
- that I should be consulted in your presence, and then state what I
- think to be for the public good. In this debate it was better that
- my eyes should not be on you, for while you were noting the anxious
- faces of individual senators charged with shameful luxury, I too
- myself might observe them and, as it were, detect them. Had those
- energetic men, our aediles, first taken counsel with me, I do not know
- whether I should not have advised them to let alone vices so strong
- and so matured, rather than merely attain the result of publishing
- what are the corruptions with which we cannot cope. They however
- have certainly done their duty, as I would wish all other officials
- likewise to fulfil their parts. For myself, it is neither seemly to
- keep silence nor is it easy to speak my mind, as I do not hold the
- office of aedile, praetor, or consul. Something greater and loftier is
- expected of a prince, and while everybody takes to himself the
- credit of right policy, one alone has to bear the odium of every
- person's failures. For what am I first to begin with restraining and
- cutting down to the old standard? The vast dimensions of country
- houses? The number of slaves of every nationality? The masses of
- silver and gold? The marvels in bronze and painting? The apparel
- worn indiscriminately by both sexes, or that peculiar luxury of
- women which, for the sake of jewels, diverts our wealth to strange
- or hostile nations?
-
- I am not unaware that people at entertainments and social gatherings
- condemn all this and demand some restriction. But if a law were to
- be passed and a penalty imposed, those very same persons will cry
- out that the State is revolutionised, that ruin is plotted against all
- our most brilliant fashion, that not a citizen is safe from
- incrimination. Yet as even bodily disorders of long standing and
- growth can be checked only by sharp and painful treatment, so the
- fever of a diseased mind, itself polluted and a pollution to others,
- can be quenched only by remedies as strong as the passions which
- inflame it. Of the many laws devised by our ancestors, of the many
- passed by the Divine Augustus, the first have been forgotten, while
- his (all the more to our disgrace) have become obsolete through
- contempt, and this has made luxury bolder than ever. The truth is,
- that when one craves something not yet forbidden, there is a fear that
- it may be forbidden; but when people once transgress prohibitions with
- impunity, there is no longer any fear or any shame.
-
- Why then in old times was economy in the ascendant? Because every
- one practised self-control; because we were all members of one city.
- Nor even afterwards had we the same temptations, while our dominion
- was confined to Italy. Victories over the foreigner taught us how to
- waste the substance of others; victories over ourselves, how to
- squander our own. What a paltry matter is this of which the aediles
- are reminding us! What a mere trifle if you look at everything else!
- No one represents to the Senate that Italy requires supplies from
- abroad, and that the very existence of the people of Rome is daily
- at the mercy of uncertain waves and storms. And unless masters,
- slaves, and estates have the resources of the provinces as their
- mainstay, our shrubberies, forsooth, and our country houses will
- have to support us.
-
- Such, Senators, are the anxieties which the prince has to sustain,
- and the neglect of them will be utter ruin to the State. The cure
- for other evils must be sought in our own hearts. Let us be led to
- amendment, the poor by constraint, the rich by satiety. Or if any of
- our officials give promise of such energy and strictness as can stem
- the corruption, I praise the man, and I confess that I am relieved
- of a portion of my burdens. But if they wish to denounce vice, and
- when they have gained credit for so doing they arouse resentments
- and leave them to me, be assured, Senators, that I too am by no
- means eager to incur enmities, and though for the public good I
- encounter formidable and often unjust enmities, yet I have a right
- to decline such as are unmeaning and purposeless and will be of use
- neither to myself nor to you.
-
- When they had heard the emperor's letter, the aediles were excused
- from so anxious a task, and that luxury of the table which from the
- close of the war ended at Actium to the armed revolution in which
- Servius Galba rose to empire, had been practised with profuse
- expenditure, gradually went out of fashion. It is as well that I
- should trace the causes of this change.
-
- Formerly rich or highly distinguished noble families often sank into
- ruin from a passion for splendour. Even then men were still at liberty
- to court and be courted by the city populace, by our allies and by
- foreign princes, and every one who from his wealth, his mansion and
- his establishment was conspicuously grand, gained too proportionate
- lustre by his name and his numerous clientele. After the savage
- massacres in which greatness of renown was fatal, the survivors turned
- to wiser ways. The new men who were often admitted into the Senate
- from the towns, colonies and even the provinces, introduced their
- household thrift, and though many of them by good luck or energy
- attained an old age of wealth, still their former tastes remained. But
- the chief encourager of strict manners was Vespasian, himself
- old-fashioned both in his dress and diet. Henceforth a respectful
- feeling towards the prince and a love of emulation proved more
- efficacious than legal penalties or terrors. Or possibly there is in
- all things a kind of cycle, and there may be moral revolutions just as
- there are changes of seasons. Nor was everything better in the past,
- but our own age too has produced many specimens of excellence and
- culture for posterity to imitate. May we still keep up with our
- ancestors a rivalry in all that is honourable!
-
- Tiberius having gained credit for forbearance by the check he had
- given to the growing terror of the informers, wrote a letter to the
- Senate requesting the tribunitian power for Drusus. This was a
- phrase which Augustus devised as a designation of supremacy, so that
- without assuming the name of king or dictator he might have some title
- to mark his elevation above all other authority. He then chose
- Marcus Agrippa to be his associate in this power, and on Agrippa's
- death, Tiberius Nero, that there might be no uncertainty as to the
- succession. In this manner he thought to check the perverse ambition
- of others, while he had confidence in Nero's moderation and in his own
- greatness.
-
- Following this precedent, Tiberius now placed Drusus next to the
- throne, though while Germanicus was alive he had maintained an
- impartial attitude towards the two princes. However in the beginning
- of his letter he implored heaven to prosper his plans on behalf of the
- State, and then added a few remarks, without falsehood or
- exaggeration, on the character of the young prince. He had, he
- reminded them, a wife and three children, and his age was the same
- as that at which he had himself been formerly summoned by the Divine
- Augustus to undertake this duty. Nor was it a precipitate step; it was
- only after an experience of eight years, after having quelled mutinies
- and settled wars, after a triumph and two consulships, that he was
- adopted as a partner in trials already familiar to him.
-
- The senators had anticipated this message and hence their flattery
- was the more elaborate. But they could devise nothing but voting
- statues of the two princes, shrines to certain deities, temples,
- arches and the usual routine, except that Marcus Silanus sought to
- honour the princes by a slur on the consulate, and proposed that on
- all monuments, public or private, should be inscribed, to mark the
- date, the names, not of the consuls, but of those who were holding the
- tribunitian power. Quintus Haterius, when he brought forward a
- motion that the decrees passed that day should be set up in the Senate
- House in letters of gold, was laughed at as an old dotard, who would
- get nothing but infamy out of such utterly loathsome sycophancy.
-
- Meantime Junius Blaesus received an extension of his government of
- Africa, and Servius Maluginensis, the priest of Jupiter, demanded to
- have Asia allotted to him. "It was," he asserted, "a popular error
- that it was not lawful for the priests of Jupiter to leave Italy; in
- fact, his own legal position differed not from that of the priests
- of Mars and of Quirinus. If these latter had provinces allotted to
- them, why was it forbidden to the priests of Jupiter? There were no
- resolutions of the people or anything to be found in the books of
- ceremonies on the subject. Pontiffs had often performed the rites to
- Jupiter when his priest was hindered by illness or by public duty. For
- seventy-five years after the suicide of Cornelius Merula no
- successor to his office had been appointed; yet religious rites had
- not ceased. If during so many years it was possible for there to be no
- appointment without any prejudice to religion, with what comparative
- ease might he be absent for one year's proconsulate? That these
- priests in former days were prohibited by the pontiff from going
- into the provinces, was the result of private feuds. Now, thank
- heaven, the supreme pontiff was also the supreme man, and was
- influenced by no rivalry, hatred or personal feeling."
-
- As the augur Lentulus and others argued on various grounds against
- this view, the result was that they awaited the decision of the
- supreme pontiff. Tiberius deferred any investigation into the priest's
- legal position, but he modified the ceremonies which had been
- decreed in honour of Drusus's tribunitian power with special censure
- on the extravagance of the proposed inscription in gold, so contrary
- to national usage. Letters also from Drusus were read, which, though
- studiously modest in expression, were taken to be extremely
- supercilious. "We have fallen so low," people said, "that even a
- mere youth who has received so high an honour does not go as a
- worshipper to the city's gods, does not enter the Senate, does not
- so much as take the auspices on his country's soil. There is a war,
- forsooth, or he is kept from us in some remote part of the world. Why,
- at this very moment, he is on a tour amid the shores and lakes of
- Campania. Such is the training of the future ruler of mankind; such
- the lesson he first learns from his father's counsels. An aged emperor
- may indeed shrink from the citizen's gaze, and plead the weariness
- of declining years and the toils of the past. But, as for Drusus, what
- can be his hindrance but pride?"
-
- Tiberius meantime, while securing to himself the substance of
- imperial power, allowed the Senate some shadow of its old constitution
- by referring to its investigation certain demands of the provinces. In
- the Greek cities license and impunity in establishing sanctuaries were
- on the increase. Temples were thronged with the vilest of the
- slaves; the same refuge screened the debtor against his creditor, as
- well as men suspected of capital offences. No authority was strong
- enough to check the turbulence of a people which protected the
- crimes of men as much as the worship of the gods.
-
- It was accordingly decided that the different states were to send
- their charters and envoys to Rome. Some voluntarily relinquished
- privileges which they had groundlessly usurped; many trusted to old
- superstitions, or to their services to the Roman people. It was a
- grand spectacle on that day, when the Senate examined grants made by
- our ancestors, treaties with allies, even decrees of kings who had
- flourished before Rome's ascendancy, and the forms of worship of the
- very deities, with full liberty as in former days, to ratify or to
- alter.
-
- First of all came the people of Ephesus. They declared that Diana
- and Apollo were not born at Delos, as was the vulgar belief. They
- had in their own country a river Cenchrius, a grove Ortygia, where
- Latona, as she leaned in the pangs of labour on an olive still
- standing, gave birth to those two deities, whereupon the grove at
- the divine intimation was consecrated. There Apollo himself, after the
- slaughter of the Cyclops, shunned the wrath of Jupiter; there too
- father Bacchus, when victorious in war, pardoned the suppliant Amazons
- who had gathered round the shrine. Subsequently by the permission of
- Hercules, when he was subduing Lydia, the grandeur of the temple's
- ceremonial was augmented, and during the Persian rule its privileges
- were not curtailed. They had afterwards been maintained by the
- Macedonians, then by ourselves.
-
- Next the people of Magnesia relied on arrangements made by Lucius
- Scipio and Lucius Sulla. These generals, after respectively
- defeating Antiochus and Mithridates, honoured the fidelity and courage
- of the Magnesians by allowing the temple of Diana of the White Brow to
- be an inviolable sanctuary. Then the people of Aphrodisia produced a
- decree of the dictator Caesar for their old services to his party, and
- those of Stratonicea, one lately passed by the Divine Augustus, in
- which they were commended for having endured the Parthian invasion
- without wavering in their loyalty to the Roman people. Aphrodisia
- maintained the worship of Venus; Stratonicea, that of Jupiter and of
- Diana of the Cross Ways.
-
- Hierocaesarea went back to a higher antiquity, and spoke of having a
- Persian Diana, whose fane was consecrated in the reign of Cyrus.
- They quoted too the names of Perperna, Isauricus, and many other
- generals who had conceded the same sacred character not only to the
- temple but to its precincts for two miles. Then came the Cyprians on
- behalf of three shrines, the oldest of which had been set up by
- their founder Aerias to the Paphian Venus, the second by his son
- Amathus to Venus of Amathus, and the last to Jupiter of Salamis, by
- Teucer when he fled from the wrath of his father Telamon.
-
- Audience was also given to embassies from other states. The senators
- wearied by their multiplicity and seeing the party spirit that was
- being roused, intrusted the inquiry to the consuls, who were to sift
- each title and see if it involved any abuse, and then refer back the
- entire matter to the Senate. Besides the states already mentioned, the
- consuls reported that they had ascertained that at Pergamus there
- was a sanctuary of Aesculapius, but that the rest relied on an
- origin lost in the obscurity of antiquity. For example, the people
- of Smyrna quoted an oracle of Apollo, which had commanded them to
- dedicate a temple to Venus Stratonicis; and the islanders of Tenos, an
- utterance from the same deity, bidding them consecrate a statue and
- a fane to Neptune. Sardis preferred a more modern claim, a grant
- from the victorious Alexander. So again Miletus relied on king Darius.
- But in each case their religious worship was that of Diana or
- Apollo. The Cretans too demanded a like privilege for a statue of
- the Divine Augustus. Decrees of the Senate were passed, which though
- very respectful, still prescribed certain limits, and the
- petitioners were directed to set up bronze tablets in each temple,
- to be a sacred memorial and to restrain them from sinking into selfish
- aims under the mask of religion.
-
- About this time Julia Augusta had an alarming illness, which
- compelled the emperor to hasten his return to Rome, for hitherto there
- had been a genuine harmony between the mother and son, or a hatred
- well concealed. Not long before, for instance, Julia in dedicating a
- statue to the Divine Augustus near the theatre of Marcellus had
- inscribed the name of Tiberius below her own, and it was surmised that
- the emperor, regarding this as a slight on a sovereign's dignity,
- had brooded over it with deep and disguised resentment. However the
- Senate now decreed supplications to the gods and the celebration of
- the Great Games, which were to be exhibited by the pontiffs, augurs,
- the colleges of the Fifteen and of the Seven, with the Augustal
- Brotherhood. Lucius Apronius moved that the heralds too should preside
- over these Games. This the emperor opposed, distinguishing the
- peculiar privileges of the sacred guilds, and quoting precedents.
- Never, he argued, had the heralds this dignity. "The Augustal
- priests were included expressly because their sacred office was
- specially attached to the family for which vows were being performed."
-
- My purpose is not to relate at length every motion, but only such as
- were conspicuous for excellence or notorious for infamy. This I regard
- as history's highest function, to let no worthy action be
- uncommemorated, and to hold out the reprobation of posterity as a
- terror to evil words and deeds. So corrupted indeed and debased was
- that age by sycophancy that not only the foremost citizens who were
- forced to save their grandeur by servility, but every exconsul, most
- of the ex-praetors and a host of inferior senators would rise in eager
- rivalry to propose shameful and preposterous motions. Tradition says
- that Tiberius as often as he left the Senate-House used to exclaim
- in Greek, "How ready these men are to be slaves." Clearly, even he,
- with his dislike of public freedom, was disgusted at the abject
- abasement of his creatures.
-
- From unseemly flatteries they passed by degrees to savage acts.
- Caius Silanus, pro-consul of Asia, was accused by our allies of
- extortion; whereupon Mamercus Scaurus, an ex-consul, Junius Otho, a
- praetor, Brutidius Niger, an aedile, simultaneously fastened on him
- and charged him with sacrilege to the divinity of Augustus, and
- contempt of the majesty of Tiberius, while Mamercus Scaurus quoted old
- precedents, the prosecutions of Lucius Cotta by Scipio Africanus, of
- Servius Galba by Cato the Censor and of Publius Rutilius by Scaurus.
- As if indeed Scipio's and Cato's vengeance fell on such offences, or
- that of the famous Scaurus, whom his great grandson, a blot on his
- ancestry, this Mamercus was now disgracing by his infamous occupation.
- Junius Otho's old employment had been the keeping of a preparatory
- school. Subsequently, becoming a senator by the influence of
- Sejanus, he shamed his origin, low as it was, by his unblushing
- effronteries. Brutidius who was rich in excellent accomplishments, and
- was sure, had he pursued a path of virtue, to reach the most brilliant
- distinction, was goaded on by an eager impatience, while he strove
- to outstrip his equals, then his superiors, and at last even his own
- aspirations. Many have thus perished, even good men, despising slow
- and safe success and hurrying on even at the cost of ruin to premature
- greatness.
-
- Gellius Publicola and Marcus Paconius, respectively quaestor and
- lieutenant of Silanus, swelled the number of the accusers. No doubt
- was felt as to the defendant's conviction for oppression and
- extortion, but there was a combination against him, that must have
- been perilous even to an innocent man. Besides a host of adverse
- Senators there were the most accomplished orators of all Asia, who, as
- such, had been retained for the prosecution, and to these he had to
- reply alone, without any experience in pleading, and under that
- personal apprehension which is enough to paralyse even the most
- practised eloquence. For Tiberius did not refrain from pressing him
- with angry voice and look, himself putting incessant questions,
- without allowing him to rebut or evade them, and he had often even
- to make admissions, that the questions might not have been asked in
- vain. His slaves too were sold by auction to the state-agent, to be
- examined by torture. And that not a friend might help him in his
- danger, charges of treason were added, a binding guarantee for
- sealed lips. Accordingly he begged a few days' respite, and at last
- abandoned his defence, after venturing on a memorial to the emperor,
- in which he mingled reproach and entreaty.
-
- Tiberius, that his proceedings against Silanus might find some
- justification in precedent, ordered the Divine Augustus's indictment
- of Volesus Messala, also a proconsul of Asia, and the Senate's
- sentence on him to be read. He then asked Lucius Piso his opinion.
- After a long preliminary eulogy on the prince's clemency, Piso
- pronounced that Silanus ought to be outlawed and banished to the
- island of Gyarus. The rest concurred, with the exception of Cneius
- Lentulus, who, with the assent of Tiberius, proposed that the property
- of Silanus's mother, as she was very different from him, should be
- exempted from confiscation, and given to the son.
-
- Cornelius Dolabella however, by way of carrying flattery yet
- further, sharply censured the morals of Silanus, and then moved that
- no one of disgraceful life and notorious infamy should be eligible for
- a province, and that of this the emperor should be judge. "Laws,
- indeed," he said, "punish crimes committed; but how much more merciful
- would it be to individuals, how much better for our allies, to provide
- against their commission."
-
- The emperor opposed the motion. "Although," he said, "I am not
- ignorant of the reports about Silanus, still we must decide nothing by
- hearsay. Many a man has behaved in a province quite otherwise than was
- hoped or feared of him. Some are roused to higher things by great
- responsibility; others are paralysed by it. It is not possible for a
- prince's knowledge to embrace everything, and it is not expedient that
- he should be exposed to the ambitious schemings of others. Laws are
- ordained to meet facts, inasmuch as the future is uncertain. It was
- the rule of our ancestors that, whenever there was first an offence,
- some penalty should follow. Let us not revolutionise a wisely
- devised and ever approved system. Princes have enough burdens, and
- also enough power. Rights are invariably abridged, as despotism
- increases; nor ought we to fall back on imperial authority, when we
- can have recourse to the laws."
-
- Such constitutional sentiments were so rare with Tiberius, that they
- were welcomed with all the heartier joy. Knowing, as he did, how to be
- forbearing, when he was not under the stimulus of personal resentment,
- he further said that Gyarus was a dreary and uninhabited island, and
- that, as a concession to the Junian family and to a man of the same
- order as themselves, they might let him retire by preference to
- Cythnus. This, he added, was also the request of Torquata, Silanus's
- sister, a vestal of primitive purity. The motion was carried after a
- division.
-
- Audience was next given to the people of Cyrene, and on the
- prosecution of Ancharius Priscus, Caesius Cordus was convicted of
- extortion. Lucius Ennius, a Roman knight, was accused of treason,
- for having converted a statue of the emperor to the common use of
- silver plate; but the emperor forbade his being put upon his trial,
- though Ateius Capito openly remonstrated, with a show of independence.
- "The Senate," he said, "ought not to have wrested from it the power of
- deciding a question, and such a crime must not go unpunished.
- Granted that the emperor might be indifferent to a personal grievance,
- still he should not be generous in the case of wrongs to the
- commonwealth." Tiberius interpreted the remark according to its
- drift rather than its mere expression, and persisted in his veto.
- Capito's disgrace was the more conspicuous, for, versed as he was in
- the science of law, human and divine, he had now dishonoured a
- brilliant public career as well as a virtuous private life.
-
- Next came a religious question, as to the temple in which ought to
- be deposited the offering which the Roman knights had vowed to Fortune
- of the Knights for the recovery of Augusta. Although that Goddess
- had several shrines in Rome, there was none with this special
- designation. It was ascertained that there was a temple so called at
- Antium, and that all sacred rites in the towns of Italy as well as
- temples and images of deities were under the jurisdiction and
- authority of Rome. Accordingly the offering was placed at Antium.
-
- As religious questions were under discussion, the emperor now
- produced his answer to Servius Maluginensis, Jupiter's priest, which
- he had recently deferred, and read the pontifical decree,
- prescribing that whenever illness attacked a priest of Jupiter, he
- might, with the supreme pontiff's permission, be absent more than
- two nights, provided it was not during the days of public sacrifice or
- more than twice in the same year. This regulation of the emperor
- Augustus sufficiently proved that a year's absence and a provincial
- government were not permitted to the priests of Jupiter. There was
- also cited the precedent of Lucius Metellus, supreme pontiff, who
- had detained at Rome the priest Aulus Postumius. And so Asia was
- allotted to the exconsul next in seniority to Maluginensis.
-
- About the same time Lepidus asked the Senate's leave to restore
- and embellish, at his own expense, the basilica of Paulus, that
- monument of the Aemilian family. Public-spirited munificence was still
- in fashion, and Augustus had not hindered Taurus, Philippus, or Balbus
- from applying the spoils of war or their superfluous wealth to adorn
- the capital and to win the admiration of posterity. Following these
- examples, Lepidus, though possessed of a moderate fortune, now revived
- the glory of his ancestors.
-
- Pompeius's theatre, which had been destroyed by an accidental
- fire, the emperor promised to rebuild, simply because no member of the
- family was equal to restoring it, but Pompeius's name was to be
- retained. At the same time he highly extolled Sejanus on the ground
- that it was through his exertions and vigilance that such fury of
- the flames had been confined to the destruction of a single
- building. The Senate voted Sejanus a statue, which was to be placed in
- Pompeius's theatre. And soon afterwards the emperor in honouring
- Junius Blaesus proconsul of Africa, with triumphal distinctions,
- said that he granted them as a compliment to Sejanus, whose uncle
- Blaesus was.
-
- Still the career of Blaesus merited such a reward. For Tacfarinas,
- though often driven back, had recruited his resources in the
- interior of Africa, and had become so insolent as to send envoys to
- Tiberius, actually demanding a settlement for himself and his army, or
- else threatening us with an interminable war. Never, it is said, was
- the emperor so exasperated by an insult to himself and the Roman
- people as by a deserter and brigand assuming the character of a
- belligerent. "Even Spartacus when he had destroyed so many consular
- armies and was burning Italy with impunity, though the State was
- staggering under the tremendous wars of Sertorius and Mithridates, had
- not the offer of an honourable surrender on stipulated conditions; far
- less, in Rome's most glorious height of power, should a robber like
- Tacfarinas be bought off by peace and concessions of territory." He
- intrusted the affair to Blaesus, who was to hold out to the other
- rebels the prospect of laying down their arms without hurt to
- themselves, while he was by any means to secure the person of the
- chief. Many surrendered themselves on the strength of this amnesty.
- Before long the tactics of Tacfarinas were encountered in a similar
- fashion.
-
- Unequal to us in solid military strength, but better in a war of
- surprises, he would attack, would elude pursuit, and still arrange
- ambuscades with a multitude of detachments. And so we prepared three
- expeditions and as many columns. One of the three under the command of
- Cornelius Scipio, Blaesus's lieutenant, was to stop the enemy's forays
- on the Leptitani and his retreat to the Garamantes. In another
- quarter, Blaesus's son led a separate force of his own, to save the
- villages of Cirta from being ravaged with impunity. Between the two
- was the general himself with some picked troops. By establishing
- redoubts and fortified lines in commanding positions, he had
- rendered the whole country embarrassing and perilous to the foe,
- for, whichever way he turned, a body of Roman soldiers was in his
- face, or on his flank, or frequently in the rear. Many were thus slain
- or surprised.
-
- Blaesus then further divided his triple army into several
- detachments under the command of centurions of tried valour. At the
- end of the summer he did not, as was usual, withdraw his troops and
- let them rest in winter-quarters in the old province; but, forming a
- chain of forts, as though he were on the threshold of a campaign, he
- drove Tacfarinas by flying columns well acquainted with the desert,
- from one set of huts to another, till he captured the chief's brother,
- and then returned, too soon however for the welfare of our allies,
- as there yet remained those who might renew hostilities.
-
- Tiberius however considered the war as finished, and awarded Blaesus
- the further distinction of being hailed "Imperator" by the legions, an
- ancient honour conferred on generals who for good service to the State
- were saluted with cheers of joyful enthusiasm by a victorious army.
- Several men bore the title at the same time, without pre-eminence
- above their fellows. Augustus too granted the name to certain persons;
- and now, for the last time, Tiberius gave it to Blaesus.
-
- Two illustrious men died that year. One was Asinius Saloninus,
- distinguished as the grandson of Marcus Agrippa, and Asinius Pollio,
- as the brother of Drusus and the intended husband of the emperor's
- granddaughter. The other was Capito Ateius, already mentioned, who had
- won a foremost position in the State by his legal attainments,
- though his grandfather was but a centurion in Sulla's army, his father
- having been a praetor. He was prematurely advanced to the consulship
- by Augustus, so that he might be raised by the honour of this
- promotion above Labeo Antistius, a conspicuous member of the same
- profession. That age indeed produced at one time two brilliant
- ornaments of peace. But while Labeo was a man of sturdy independence
- and consequently of wider fame, Capito's obsequiousness was more
- acceptable to those in power. Labeo, because his promotion was
- confined to the praetorship, gained in public favour through the
- wrong; Capito, in obtaining the consulship, incurred the hatred
- which grows out of envy.
-
- Junia too, the niece of Cato, wife of Caius Cassius and sister of
- Marcus Brutus, died this year, the sixty-fourth after the battle of
- Philippi. Her will was the theme of much popular criticism, for,
- with her vast wealth, after having honourably mentioned almost every
- nobleman by name, she passed over the emperor. Tiberius took the
- omission graciously and did not forbid a panegyric before the Rostra
- with the other customary funeral honours. The busts of twenty most
- illustrious families were borne in the procession, with the names of
- Manlius, Quinctius, and others of equal rank. But Cassius and Brutus
- outshone them all, from the very fact that their likenesses were not
- to be seen.
-