READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE BEGINNING OF THE APOCALYPTICAL FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
AUGUSTUS: B.C. 31—A.D. 14 //
AUGUSTUS: B.C.
31— A.D. 14.
The genius and statesmanship of Julius Caesar secured
only a few years of absolute power, and had not time enough to shape the forms
of empire, or carry out far-reaching plans. When he fell under the daggers of
his murderers, he left no system of established rule, and no successor to
replace him. The Commonwealth had been discredited by years of impotence ;
anarchy at home, misgovernment abroad had shown the breakdown of the ancient
institutions of the state, and the frail plant of liberty needed more to bring
it back to healthy life than to be watered with the blood of Caesar. But when
the young Octavius left his books at Apollonia, and came to Rome to claim his
rights, few could have had serious fears of his ambition, or could have
foreseen in him the man who was to close the drama of the great Republic and
bring the Empire on the stage. For he had played no part as yet in public life,
was known to be of feeble health, had given no proof of genius or of
self-reliant courage. Sent on before to the advanced camp in Epirus, to be
ready for campaigns in the far East, he was startled from his round of rhetoric
and drill by the news of his great uncle’s murder. He crossed the sea without
delay; and hearing on his way that his kinsman’s will had named him heir, he
took at once the name, of Caesar Octavianus, and
hurried on to claim his heritage at Rome. His mother told him of her fears, his
stepfather urged the need of caution, and pointed to the dangers in his way;
but he persisted, though almost alone, and though he saw the need to be
resolute and wary. The daggers that had been sharpened against Julius might be
drawn upon himself, if he spoke too openly of vengeance, or appealed at once to
the soldiers and the people. The name that he had just assumed had an ominous
sound in the ears of Senate and of nobles; and M. Antonius, the old confidant
and partisan of Caesar, by right of his authority as consul, had taken the
reins of power into his hands, had gained possession of the treasures and the
papers of the fallen ruler, and was in no mood to share them with a rival
claimant. The conduct of Octavianus, though bold, was
very politic and far-sighted. Resolved at any cost to show respect for the last
wishes of his kinsman, he drew largely on the means of his family or friends to
pay the legacies bequeathed by Caesar to every citizen of Rome, and defrayed
even the expenses of the public shows that had been promised. He paid his court
with tact to the members of the Senate, and talked of amnesty and peace; put
on a show of winning deference for the leaders of the moderate party, and for
Cicero above all, and fed their hopes, that they might find in his growing
popularity a harmless counterpoise to the violent ambition of Antonius. Even
when forced at last to arm in self-defence, and to
levy troops among the veterans of Caesar, he courted the old statesman still;
he played upon his vanity, and called him father. Affecting to draw his sword
only in defence of the constitution and the Senate,
he offered to serve with his own legions under the new consuls against
Antonius, the common enemy of all loyal citizens. But he clearly read the
jealous suspicions of the nobles, and had no mind to be used awhile and then
thrown aside like a dishonoured tool. So, after the
successes won at Mutina (BC 43), which cost the lives
of both the consuls, he flung away the mask that he had worn, came to terms of
union with Antonius and with Lepidus, the governor of Gaul, and marched with
his soldiers straight to Rome to wrest the consulship from the reluctant
Senate. Then the era of Proscriptions opened, for the confederates agreed to
cement their league with blood. Each marked his victims’ names upon the fatal
list, and each consented to give up adherents of his own to the greed or hatred
of his colleagues. Meanwhile the Senatorian party,
crushed at Rome, was gathering fresh strength beyond the seas. Brutus in
Macedonia, Cassius in Syria, the foremost of the murderers of Caesar, had
turned the provinces which they governed into one vast recruiting-ground for a
last decisive struggle. When all was ready they combined their forces and
offered battle to the enemies who had crossed over to attack them. Once more
came the crash of mighty armies met again in civil war, and the battle-fields
of Philippi saw the fall of the last of the great republicans of Rome.
The world lay prostrate at the conquerors’ feet; it
remained only to divide the spoil. Antonius stayed behind to organise and rule the East. The Province of Africa was
thought enough to content the absent Lepidus, while Italy and all the West fell
to the portion of Octavianus.
But still as the young schemer mounted higher the
dangers seemed to thicken in his path, to test his hardihood and patient
statecraft. He returned to Italy to find an exhausted treasury and half-ruined
people; veterans clamouring for their pay and
settling with fierce eagerness upon the promised lands; peasants ousted from
their homes taking to brigandage from sheer despair; the city populace in no
loyal mood to a master who had little to bestow; while the wife and brother of
his rival fanned the smouldering discontent, and
vexed him sorely with intrigues, then flew to arms at last, and when beaten
stood sullenly at bay within the beleaguered fortress of Perugia. The sea
meanwhile was at the mercy of the bold Sextus Pompeius, who scoured the coasts of Italy with galleys
manned by motley crews of republicans who had fought under his father’s lead,
of pirates to whom that father’s name had been once a sound of terror, of
ruined victims of the late proscriptions, of slaves and runaways of every
class. The corn-ships dared not venture near the blockaded ports, and prices
mounted to famine height, till the starving population rose in fierce mutiny
against their ruler; while Antonius was on his way with a great fleet to call
him to account for the treatment of his brother, who had hardly escaped with
life from the horrors of the siege. But Italy was sick of civil war. The
soldiers, tired of constant bloodshed, made their leaders sheath their swords
and join in league and amity, in pledge of which Antonius took to wife Octavia,
the sister of his rival, while Sextus bargained as
the price of peace to keep his hold upon the islands and the sea, and Lepidus,
displaced already from his office of command, held only in his feeble grasp the
dignity and functions of High Pontiff.
For six more years of divided power Octavianus schemed and toiled and waited. He secured his
hold on Italy, calmed the elements of disorder in its midst, refilled the
treasury and stocked the granaries, till he felt himself strong enough to defy Sextus on the seas and crush the bold buccaneer after many
a hard-fought struggle. At last, but not till all was safe elsewhere, came the
crisis of the duel with Antonius. Eastern luxury had done its work upon his
passionate nature. Slothful self-indulgence, broken only by fitful moods of
fiery energy, clouded his reason and unnerved his manhood. The Egyptian
Cleopatra had lured him with her blandishments and wound her snares around his
heart, till Rome heard with indignation of the wrongs of the forsaken wife and
of the orgies of the wanton pair. Nay, more, they heard that not content with
parodying the names and attributes oi foreign gods, they claimed the right to
change the seat of empire and make Alexandria the new capital of the Roman
world. Was the dignity of a chaste matron, it was asked, to be the sport of the
minions of an Eastern court? Should Octavianus tamely
wait to see the national honour further outraged, and
the monstrous forms of uncouth worships instal themselves within the Seven Hills and drive the old deities from their
venerable shrines ? The personal quarrel was transformed into a war of creeds
and races. In place of the horrors of a civil struggle men thought only of the
motley aggregate of foreign peoples arrayed at Actium in the extravagance of
barbaric pomp against the discipline and valour of
the West.
In the actual conflict Antonius displayed neither a
general’s skill nor a soldier’s courage. He fought, seemingly, to cover a
retreat that had been planned before (BC 31). Cleopatra’s galleys gave the
signal for the flight, and the leader of what was now a hopeless cause hastened
after her to Egypt, where he found discontent and treachery spread around him.
After a few months spent in moody despair or riotous excesses he died by his
own hand, to be soon followed by his paramour to his dishonoured grave.
The victory of Actium had made Octavianus the undisputed master of the Roman world. One by one rivals and obstacles had
been swept away, and the patient schemer had now mounted to the topmost round
of the ladder of ambition. During the troublous years of the long struggle for
power his public life had been one course of selfish aims, unscrupulous acts,
and makeshift policy; he had yet to prove that there was anything of real and
abiding greatness in his schemes to raise him from the ranks of mere political
adventurers. But from this time we may trace a seeming change of character,
which is the more remarkable because it is so hard to parallel.
It was no change of measures only, such as often comes
with new conditions, such as that which made the founder of the dynasty reverse
much of the policy of earlier years. For, spendthrift and prodigal as Julius
had been before, he used his power to curtail extravagance, sent police agents
to the markets, and even to the houses of the wealthy, to put down luxury by
force; the leader of the popular party forbade the growth of guilds and social
clubs like those which had often carried the elections in his favour; the favourite of the
populace was anxious to check the spread of pauperism by sterner measures; the
revolutionary general whose tent had been the refuge of the men of tarnished
name and ruined fortunes baffled all their hopes of plunder, by passing
stringent measures to restore credit and to curb official greed. Octavianus also in like case resorted to like policy. One
of his first cares was to repeal the unconstitutional acts of his earlier life,
and so to close the period of revolution. He took steps without delay to
restore order and to strengthen the moral safeguards which years of anarchy and
civil war had almost ruined. To this end he passed laws like those of Julius,
and, unlike his kinsman, was enabled by his long tenure of power to carry out a
conservative reform in morals and religion which left some enduring traces.
But the change in character lay deeper far than this.
He had shown while the struggle lasted a cruelty without excuse. Though
possibly reluctant at the first to engage in the proscriptions, he is said have
acted in them more relentlessly than either of his colleagues; he had his
prisoners of war butchered in cold blood, mocked at their prayers for decent
burial, and calmly watched their dying agonies.
That he was hard and pitiless beyond the spirit of his
times is implied in many stories of the day, and among others we read that when
the captives of Philippi passed in bonds before their conquerors they saluted
Antonius with marked respect, but vented their deepest curses on Octavianus to his face.
But after Actium he showed what was for that age an
unusual clemency. He spared his open enemies, he hunted out no victims, and
professed even to bum the secret papers of his rival which might have
compromised his partisans at Rome. The same gentler spirit breathes through the
whole of his long period of rule. His jealous intolerance had led him once to
drive a consul elect to suicide for a bitter word, and to fine or banish
citizens of Nursia for honouring with a monument their deed who had fallen, as they wrote, in defence of freedom on the field of Mutina.
But he was ready now to show respect to the memory of Pompeius,
to let historians write the praises of the great republicans of Rome, to
congratulate the men of Mediolanum (Milan) for prizing the busts of Brutus, to
listen calmly to the gibes vented on himself in popular satires or in dead
men’s wills, to let even lampoons be scattered in the Senate House, and make
no effort to hunt out the authors. His suspicious fears had made him once give
orders for the instant execution of a curious bystander who had pressed in too
eagerly to hear him speak in public, and put even to the torture a praetor who
came to greet him, and whose hidden notebook was mistaken for a dagger; but in
later life he walked without an escort through the streets, went to and fro to
join the social gatherings of his friends, and showed no fear of an assassin’s
knife. The cheerful cordiality and homely courtesies of his maturer age were a marked contrast to the cold, ungenial reserve of earlier days ; and
those who find his real character hard to read may see perhaps a fitting symbol
of it in the figure of the Sphinx which he wore upon his signet-ring.
But this change of manner could not be an easy thing,
and was probably not soon effected. There are signs The change which seem to
show that constant watchfulness and self-restraint were needed to his natural
temper, and that personal influences were at work to help him. Though he was
patient and merciful in most cases that were brought before him when on the
seat of judgment, it is said that Maecenas, who was standing by, marked on one
occasion the old blood-thirsty instinct reappear, and flung to him a hasty note
with the words, ‘Rise, Hangman!’ written on it. Another time, when stung by
what was uttered in the Senate, he hurried out abruptly, and excused himself
afterwards for want of courtesy by saying that he feared his anger would slip
from his control. We are told that with others commonly, and even with Livia,
his wife, he would not always trust himself to speak on subjects of grave
moment without writing down the notes of what he had to say. In the gloom that
settled on him in old age, when family losses and dishonour,
coupled with national disasters, weighed upon his mind, the hard, unlovely
features of his character, long hidden out of sight, seemed to come to light
once more as the force of self-control was weakened by the laws of natural
decay. Yet even with such reserves his history presents a spectacle almost
unexampled of the force of will in moulding and
tempering an ungenial nature, and of the chastening influence of sovereign
rule. The signal victory just won, the honours voted
by the servile Senate, the acclamations of the people, the license of unbounded
power, might well have turned his head, as they proved fatal to the temper of
many a later emperor; but the dagger of Brutus haunted his memory and warned
him to beware of outraging Roman feeling.
But, far beyond its effect upon his personal bearing,
we may trace the influence of these warning memories on the work which lay
before him, of giving shape and system to the future government of Rome. Power
and repute had passed away from the old forms of the Republic. The whole world
lay at the feet of the master of many legions; it remained only to define the
constitutional forms in which the new forces were to work. But to do this was
no easy task. The perplexities of his position, the fears and hopes that
crossed his mind, are thrown into dramatic form by the historian Dion Cassius,
who brings a scene before our fancy in which Octavianus listens to the conflicting counsels of his two great advisers Agrippa and
Maecenas. The former is supposed to paint in sombre colours the difficulties of a monarch’s lot, to remind him
of the warnings of the past and the dangers of the future, and strongly to urge
him to copy the example set by Sulla, and after passing needful laws, and
strengthening the safeguards against anarchy and license, to resign the outward
show of power and come down from the dizzy pinnacle of greatness. Maecenas, on
the other hand, counsels absolute rule, though masked by constitutional disguises,
and describes at great length a system of centralised government, in sketching which the historian drew mainly from the experience of
his own later times, and with slight regard for strict historic truth,
attributed to the inventive genius of Maecenas a full-grown system of political
machinery which it took some centuries of imperialism to develop. But though we
must regard the narrative in question more as the writer’s own political theorising than as a sketch of matter of fact, yet there is
little doubt that schemes of resignation were at some time discussed by the Emperor
and by his circle of advisers. It is even possible, as the same writer tells
us, that he laid before the Senators at this time some proposal to leave the
helm of state and let them guide it as of old. We are told that they were
thrown into confusion by his words, and that, mistrusting his sincerity, or
fearing the return of anarchy and the scramble for power that would soon ensue,
they all implored him to withdraw his words and take back the power which he
had resigned. The scene, if ever really acted, was but an idle comedy, and the
offer could scarcely have been seriously meant, though there may have been some
passing thought of it even at this time and still more at a later period, when
he had long been sated with power and burdened with the cares of office. It is
more probable that he was content with some faint show of resistance, when the
Senate heaped their honours on his head, as
afterwards when, more than once, after a ten years’ interval, they solemnly renewed
the tenure of his power.
But we cannot doubt his sincerity in one respect—in his
wish to avoid the kingly title and all the odious associations of the name. It
had been from early times offensive to Roman ears; it had grown far more so as
they heard more of the wanton lust and cruelty and haughtiness of Eastern monarchs,
and they scorned to be degraded themselves to the level of their cringing
subjects. The charge of aspiring to be king had often been an ominous cry in
party struggles, and had proved fatal to more than one great leader; it had
been truly said perhaps of Caesar, and had largely helped to ruin him, and his
successor was too wary to be dazzled by the bauble of a name. He shrank also
from another title, truly Roman in its character, but odious since the days of
Sulla ; and though the populace of Rome, when panicstruck by pestilence and famine, clamoured to have him made
dictator, and threatened to burn the Senate as it sat in council if their will
was not obeyed, yet nothing would induce him to bear the hateful name. But the
name of Caesar he had taken long ago, after his illustrious uncle’s death, and
this became the title of the imperial office. Besides this he allowed himself
to be styled Augustus, a name which roused no jealousy and outraged no Roman
sentiment, yet vaguely implied some dignity and reverence from its long
association with the objects of religion. As such he Augustus, preferred it to
the suggested name of Romulus, and allowed one of the months to be so called
after him, as the preceding one of Julius had been named after his kinsman.
With this exception he assumed no new symbol of monarchic power, but was
satisfied with the old official titles, which, though charged with memories of
the Republic, yet singly corresponded to some side or fragment of absolute
authority. The first of these was Imperator, which served to connect him with
the army. The imperium which the name expressed, had stood in earlier days for
the higher functions, more especially for the power of the sword, which
belonged to civil as well as military authority. But, gradually curtailed in other
cases by the jealousy of the republic, it had kept its full meaning only in the
camp; the imperator was the general in command, or, in a still more special
case, he was the victorious leader whose soldiers had saluted him upon the
field of battle. Julius, whose veterans had often greeted him with this title
in many a hard-fought campaign, chose it seemingly as a fitting symbol of the
new régime, as a frank avowal of its military basis, and in this sense it was
found convenient by his successors. It implied absolute authority, such as the
general has over his soldiers, and the concentration in a single chief of the
widespread powers entrusted to subordinate commanders; it suggested little of
the old forms of constitutional election, but appealed rather to the memory of
the army’s loyal acclamations, and gave a seeming claim to their entire
obedience.
The title of the tribunician power connected the monarch with the interests of the lower orders. In the
early days of privilege, when Rome was parted into rival classes, the tribunes
had been the champions of the commons. Sacrosanct or inviolate themselves, and
armed with power to shield the weak from the license of magistrate or noble,
they gradually assumed the right to put a veto or check on all public business
in Rome. In the party struggles of the last century of the republic they had
abused their constitutional powers to destroy the influence of the Senate and
organize the popular movement against the narrow oligarchy of the ruling
classes. Such authority was too important to be overlooked or intrusted in its fulness into
other hands. The Emperor did not, indeed, assume the tribunate,
but was vested with the tribunician power which
overshadowed the annual holders of the office. It made his person sacred, not
in the city only or in discharge of official acts, as in their case, but at all
times and through the whole breadth of the empire. It gave him the formal right
to call the meetings of the Senate, and to lay before them such business as he
pleased, and thus secured the initiative in all concerns of state. Out of the
old privilege of appeal to the protection of a tribune came the right of
acquittal in judicial functions, which made the Emperor a high court of appeal
from all the lower courts, and out of which seemingly has grown the right of
pardon vested in the kings of modern Europe. The full meaning and extension of
the title seems not to have been discerned at once, but once grasped it was too
important to be dropped. By it succeeding emperors dated the tenure of their
power, as by the years of a king’s reign, and the formal act by which the title
was conferred on the kinsman or the confidant who stood nearest to the throne
seemed to point him out for succession to the imperial rank.
The familiar name of prince was one of dignity rather
than of power. The ‘princeps senatus’
in old days had been the foremost senator of his time, distinguished by weight
of character and the experience of high rank, early consulted in debate, and
carrying decisive influence by his vote. No one but the Emperor could fill this
position safely, and he assumed the name henceforth to connect him with the
Senate, as other titles seemed to bind him to the army and the people.
For the post of Supreme Pontiff, Augustus was content
to wait awhile, until it passed by death from the feeble hands of Lepidus. He
then claimed the exclusive tenure of the office, and after this time Pontifex
Maximus was always added to the long list of imperial titles. It put into his
hands, as the highest functionary of religion, the control of all the ritual of
the state; it was a convenient instrument for his policy of conservative
reform, and associated with his name some of the reverence that gathered round
the domain of spiritual life. Besides these titles to which he assumed an
exclusive right he also filled occasionally and for short periods most of the
republican offices of higher rank, both in the capital and in the country
towns. He took from time to time the consular power, with its august traditions
and imposing ceremonial. The authority of censor lay ready to his hands when a
moral reform was to be set on foot, and a return attempted to the severity of
ancient manners, or when the Senate was to be purged of unworthy members and
the order of the equites or knights to be reviewed and its dignity consulted.
Beyond the capital the proconsular power was vested in him without local
limitations, and gave him the right to issue his instructions to the
commanders of the legions, as the great generals of the republic had done
before. Finally he deigned often to accept offices of local dignity in the
smaller towns throughout the empire, appointing in each case a deputy to
discharge the duties of the post. The offices of state at Rome, meantime,
lasted on from the Republic to the Empire, unchanged in name, and with little
seeming change of functions. Consuls, Praetors, Quaestors, Tribunes, and
Aediles rose from the same classes as before, and moved for the most part in
the same round of work, though they had lost for ever their power of initiative and real control. Elected by the people formerly, but
with much sinister influence of bribery and auguries, they were now mainly the
nominees of Caesar, though the forms of popular election were still for a time
observed, and though Augustus condescended to canvass in person for his friends
and to send letters of commendation for those whom he wished to have elected.
The consulship was entirely reserved for his nominees, but passed rapidly from
hand to hand, since in order to gratify a larger number it was granted at
varying intervals for a few months only. For though it was in fact a political
nullity henceforth, and its value lay mainly in the evidence of imperial favour or its prospects of provincial office, yet the old
dignity lasted still, and for centuries the post was spoken of by Romans as
almost the highest prize of their ambition. For lower posts a distinction was
observed between the places, generally less than half, reserved entirely for
the Emperor to fill with his candidate Caesaris, as
they are called in their inscriptions, and those which were left for some show
of open voting, though influenced, it might be, by court favour.
The peculiar feature of the old Roman executive had
been its want of centralised action. Each magistrate
might thwart and check his colleague; the collision between different
officials, the power of veto, and the absence of supreme authority might bring
the political machinery to a dead lock. The imperial system swept aside these
dangers, left each magistrate to the routine of his own work, and made him feel
his responsibility to the central chief. It was part of the policy of Augustus
to disturb as little as possible the old names and forms of the Republic; to
leave their old show and dignity, that those who filled them might seem to be
not his own creatures, but the servants of the state. But besides these he set
up a number of new offices, often of more real power though of lower rank; he
filled the most important of them with his confidants, delegating to them the
functions which most needed his control, and in which he could not brook any
show of independence, and left behind him the rudiments of a centralised bureaucracy which his successors gradually
enlarged. Two terms correspond respectively to two great classes. The name prafectus, the préfêt of modern
France, stood in earlier days for the deputy of any officer of state
charged specially to execute some definite work. The praefects of Caesar were his servants, named by him and responsible to him, set to
discharge duties which the old constitution had commonly ignored. The prefect
of the city had appeared in shadowy form under the Republic to represent
the consul in his absence. Augustus felt the need, when called away from Rome,
to have someone there whom he could trust to watch the jealous nobles and
control the fickle mob. His trustiest confidants, Maecenas and Agrippa, filled
the post, and it became a standing office, with a growing sphere of competence,
overtopping the magistracies of earlier date.
The praefects of the
praetorian cohorts first appeared when the Senate formally assigned a
bodyguard to Augustus later in his reign. The troops were named after the picked
soldiers who were quartered round the tents of the generals of the Republic,
and when they were concentrated by the city walls their chief commanders soon
filled a formidable place in history, and their loyalty or treachery often
decided the fate of Rome. Next to these in power and importance came the praefects of the watch—the new police force organised by Augustus as a protection against the dangers
of the night; and of the corn supplies of Rome, which were always an object of
especial care on the part of the imperial government. And besides these, there
were many various duties entrusted by the head of the state to special
delegates, both in the capital and through the provinces. The title procurator,
which has come down to us in the form proctor, was at first mainly a term
of civil law, and was used for a financial agent or attorney. The officers so
called were regarded at the first as stewards of the Emperor’s property or
managers of his private business. They were therefore for some time of humble origin,
for the Emperor’s household was organised like that
of any Roman noble. Slaves or freedmen filled the offices of trust, wrote his
letters, kept his books, managed his affairs, and did the work of the
treasurers and secretaries of state of later days. Kept within bounds by
sterner masteri, they abused the confidence of weak
emperors, and outraged Roman pride by their wealth, arrogance, and ostentation.
The agents of the Emperor’s privy purse throughout the provinces were called by
the same title, but were commonly of higher rank and more repute.
Such in its bare outline was the executive of the
imperial government. We have next to see what was the position of the Senate.
That body had been in early times the council summoned to advise the king or
consul. By the weight and experience of its members, and their lifelong tenure
of office, it soon towered above the short-lived executive, and became the
chief moving force at Rome. But the policy of the Gracchi had dealt a fatal
blow at its supremacy. Proscriptions and civil wars had thinned its ranks. The
first Caesar had treated it with studied disrespect, and in the subsequent
times of anarchy the influence of the order and the reputation of its members
had sunk to the lowest depth of degradation. It was one of the first cares of
Augustus to restore its credit. At the risk of odium and personal danger he
more than once revised the list, and purged it of unworthy members, summoning
eminent provincials in their place. He was careful of their outward dignity,
and made the capital of a million sesterces a needful condition of the rank.
The functions also of the Senate were in theory enlarged. Its decrees on
questions brought before it had henceforth the binding force of law. As the
popular assemblies ceased to meet for legislation, case after case was
submitted to its judgment, till it gained speedily by prescription a
jurisdiction of wide range, and before long it decided the elections at its
will or registered the nominations of the Emperor.
But the substance of power and independence had passed
away from it for ever. Matters of great moment were
debated first, not in the Senate House, but in a sort of Privy Council formed
by the trusted advisers of the Emperor, while the discussions of the larger
body served chiefly to mask the forms of absolutism, to feel the pulse of
popular sentiment, and to register decisions formed elsewhere. Treated with
respect and courtesy by wary princes, the senators were the special mark of the
jealousy and greed of the worst rulers.
If we now turn our thoughts from the centre to the provinces we shall find that the imperial
system brought with it more sweeping changes and more real improvement. Almost
every country of the Roman world had long been frightfully misgoverned. Towards
the end of the Republic there rises from every land a cry in tones that grow
ever louder—a cry of misery and despair—that their governors are greedy and
corrupt, scandalously indifferent to justice, conniving at the extortion of the
Roman capitalists who farmed the tithes and taxes, and of the money-lenders,
who had settled like leeches all around them.
The governors who hastened to their provinces after a
short tenure of official rank at Rome looked to the emoluments of office to
retrieve their fortunes, exhausted frequently by public shows and bribery at
home. They abused their power in a hundred ways to amass enormous wealth, with
little check from the public opinion of their order, or from the courts of law
before which they might possibly be prosecuted by their victims or their
rivals.
But a new order of things was now begun. Augustus left
to the Senate the nominal control of the more peaceful provinces, which needed
little military force. To these ex-consuls and ex-praetors were sent out as before,
but with no power of the sword and little of the purse. High salaries were paid
to them directly by the state, but the sources of indirect gains were gradually
cut off. By their side was a proctor of the Emperor’s privy purse, to watch
their conduct and report their misdemeanours. At home
there was a vigilant ruler, ready to give ear to the complaints of the
provincials, and to see that justice was promptly done by the tribunals or the
Senate. Doubtless we still hear of much misgovernment, and scandalous abuses
sometimes are detailed, for the evils to be checked had been the growth of
ages, and the vigilance of a single ruler, however strict, must have been
oftentimes at fault.
The remaining countries, called imperial provinces,
were ruled by generals, called legate or in some few cases by proctors only.
They held office during the good pleasure of their master, and for longer
periods often than the senatorial governors. There are signs that the imperial
provinces were better ruled, and that the transference of a country to this
class from the other was looked upon as a real boon, and not as an empty honour.
Such in its chief features was the system of Augustus,
the rudiments of the bureaucratic system which was slowly organized by later
ages. This was his constructive policy, and on the value of this creative work
his claims to greatness must be based. To the provinces the gain undoubtedly
was great. His rule brought them peace and order and the essentials of good
government. It left the local forms of self-rule almost untouched, and lightened,
if it did not quite remove, the incubus of oppression which had so long tightened
its grasp upon their throats. At Rome, too, the feeling of relief was keenly
felt. Credit recovered with a rebound after the victory at Actium. Prices and
the rate of interest fell at once. The secret adherents of the fallen cause
began to breathe again more freely when they heard no mention of proscription;
the friends of order learnt with joy that the era of anarchy was closed; rigid
republicans found their jealous suspicions half-disarmed by the respect shown
for the ancient forms and names, by the courtesy with which the Senate had been
treated, and above all, perhaps, by the modest, unassuming manners of their
prince. For he shunned carefully all outward pomp, moved about the streets
almost unattended, sat patiently through the games and shows which the Romans
passionately loved, went out to dinner readily when asked, and charmed men by
his simple courtesy. He could bear plain speaking too, for a blunt soldier to
whose petition he said that he was too busy to attend, told him to his face,
that he had never said he was too busy to expose his own life for him in
battle. The expenses of his household scarcely rose to the level of those of
many a wealthy noble; he wore no clothes save those made for him by Livia and
her women, and studiously avoided all profusion or extravagance. He tried also
to spare his people’s purses, for upon a journey he often passed through a
town by night, to give the citizens no chance of proving their loyalty by
costly outlay.
But he spent his treasure lavishly for public ends The
public games and festivals provided by him were on a scale of magnificence
quite unexampled; great sums were often spent in largess to the populace of
Rome. In times of scarcity corn was sold in the capital below cost price,
besides the vast quantities distributed in free doles among the poor. Noble
senators of decayed fortunes were often pensioned, to enable them to live up to
their rank. Costly buildings set apart for public uses, temples, baths,
theatres, and aqueducts, rose rapidly on every side. His kinsmen, intimates,
all whom his influence could move, vied with him in such outlay, and helped him
to realise the boast of later days, that he found a
city of brick and left one of marble in its place? The great roads in Italy and
through the provinces were carefully repaired, and a postal system set on foot,
confined, it is true, to official uses. Armed patrols marched along the roads,
brigandage was forcibly put down, slave-gangs were inspected, and the abuses of
times of violence redressed. In the capital itself a police force was organized
for the first time, intended mainly at the first for protection against fire,
but soon extended and made permanent to secure peace and order in the streets,
which for centuries the Republic had neglected. In distant countries his
fatherly care was shown in time of need by liberal grants of money, to help
public works, or repair the ravages of earthquakes. The interests of the
legions also were consulted, but not at the expense of quiet citizens, as
before. Vast sums were spent in buying up lands in the neighbourhood of the great towns of Italy, where war or slow decay had thinned their numbers,
in order at once to recruit the urban population and supply the veterans with
farms. Colonies were planted, too, beyond the seas, for the relief of the
overgrown populace of Rome.
There was enough in such material boons to conciliate
all classes through the Empire. The stiff-necked champions of the Republic had
died upon the battlefield; a generation had grown up demoralised by years of anarchy, and few were left to mourn the loss of freedom. Few eyes
could see what was one day to be apparent, that the disguises and the
insincerities of the new régime were full of danger; that to senator and
office-bearer the paths of politics were strewn with snares; that in the face
of a timid or suspicious ruler it would be as perilous to show their fear as to
make a brave show of independence. For a while they heard the familiar sounds
of Senate, consul, and of tribune; they saw the same pageants as of old in
daily life. Nor did they realise as yet that liberty
was gone for ever, and that the ancient forms that passed
before them were as empty of real life as the ancestral masks that moved along
the streets to the noble Roman’s funeral pyre.
From the imperial machinery we may next turn to the
great men who helped possibly to create and certainly to work it. It was the
singular good fortune of Augustus to secure the services of two ministers like
Agrippa and Maecenas, of different genius but equal loyalty of character.
Marcus Vipsanius, surnamed
Agrippa, had been in early days the schoolfellow and intimate of Octavius. They
were at Apollonia together, studying the philosophy and art of Greece, when the
tidings came that Caesar had been murdered. They were together when the bold
scheme was formed and the two youths set forth together to claim the heritage
of Caesar and to strive for the empire of the world. To whom the initiative was
due we know not; but we do know that Agrippa’s courage never wavered, though Octavianus seemed at times ready to falter and draw back.
To the many-sided activity of Agrippa and to his unfailing resolution the
success of that enterprise seems mainly due. He was the great general of the
cause that triumphed, the hero of every forlorn hope, and the knight-errant for
every hazardous adventure in distant regions. His energy helped to win Perugia
after stubborn siege; his quick eye saw in the Lucrine lake the shelter for the fleets that were to be manned and trained before they
could hope to face Sextus Pompeius,
the bold corsair chief, who swept the seas and menaced Rome with famine. Thanks
to him again the victory of Actium was won, for the genius if not the courage
of Octavianus failed him on the scene of battle.
Whenever danger showed itself henceforth—in Gaul, in
Spain, where the native tribes rose once more in arms; in Pontus, where one of
the line of Mithridates unfurled the banner of
revolt; on the shores of the Danube, where the Pannonians were stirring—no hand
but Agrippa’s could be trusted to dispel the gathering storms. We find in him
not heroism alone but the spirit of self-sacrifice. Three times, we read, he
refused the honours of a triumph. At a word he
stooped to the lowest round of official rank, the aedileship,
burdened as it was with the ruinous responsibilities of shows and festivals,
and kept the Romans in good humour at a critical
moment of the civil struggle. To win further popularity by the sweets of
material well-being, the soldier forsook the camp and courted the arts of
peace, busied himself with sanitary reforms, repaired the magnificent cloaca of
old Rome, constructed the splendid therma for the hot
baths introduced from Eastern lands, built new aqueducts towering aloft upon
the arches of the old, and distributed the pure water so conveyed to fountains
in every quarter of the city, which were decorated with statues and columns of
precious marbles to be counted by the hundred. Another sacrifice was called
for—to divorce the daughter of Atticus, Cicero’s famous friend, and draw nearer
the throne by marrying the Emperor’s niece, Marcella; and he obeyed from
dutiful submission to his master, or from the ambitious hope to share the power
which his sword had won. Soon it seemed as if his loyalty was to meet with its
reward. Augustus was brought to death’s door by sudden illness, and, in what
seemed like his last hour, seized Agrippa’s hand and slipped a ring upon the
finger, as if to mark him out for his successor. But health returned again, and
with it visible coolness towards Agrippa and increased affection for Marcellus,
his young nephew.
Agrippa resigned himself without a murmur, and lived
in retirement a while at Lesbos, till the death of Marcellus and the warnings
of Maecenas pointed him out again as the only successor worthy of the Empire.
Signs of discontent among the populace of Rome quickened the Emperor’s desire
to have his trusty friend beside him, and to draw him yet more closely to him
he bade him put away Marcella, and gave him his own daughter Julia. Once more
he obeyed in silence, and now might fairly hope to be rewarded for his patience
and one day to mount into the weakly Emperor’s place. But his lot was to be
always second, never first. His strong frame, slowly weakened by hard campaigns
and ceaseless journeys at full speed in every quarter of the world, gave (BC
12) way at last, and his career was closed while he seemed yet in his prime.
In him Augustus lost a gallant soldier and unselfish friend, who is said,
indeed, to have advised him after Actium to resign his power, but who certainly
had done more than any other to set him up and to keep him on the pinnacle of
greatness. It throws a curious light upon his story to read the comment on it
in the pages of the naturalist Pliny. He is speaking of the superstitious fancy
that misery clouded the lives of all who were called Agrippa. In spite, he
says, of his brilliant exploits he was no exception to the rule. He was unlucky
in his wife Julia, who dishonoured his good name; in
his children, who died by poison or in exile; and unhappy also in bearing all
his life what he calls the hard bondage of Augustus. The friend for whom he
toiled so long and faithfully showed little tenderness of heart; the master
whom he served had tasked his energies in every sphere, and called for many an
act of self-devotion, but he had already looked coldly on his loyal minister,
and he might at any moment weary of a debt he could not pay, and add another
page to the long chronicle of the ingratitude of princes.
Maecenas, better known by his mother’s name than that
of Cilnius, his father, came from an Etruscan stock
that had given a line of masters to Arretium. He
was better fitted for the council chamber than the field of battle, for the
delicate manoeuvres of diplomacy than for the rough
work of stormy times. During the years of civic struggle, and while the air was
charged with thunder-clouds, we find him always, as the trusty agent of Octavianus, engaged on every important mission that needed
adroitness and address. His subtle tact and courtesies were tried with the same
success upon Sextus Pompeius and on Antonius, when the confidence of each was to
be won, or angry feelings charmed away, or the dangers of a coalition met. His honied words were found of not less avail with the populace
of Rome, when scarcity and danger threatened and the masters of the legions
were away. It seemed, indeed, after the Empire was once established that his
political career was closed, for he professed no high ambition, refused to wear
the gilded chains of office, or to rise above the modest rank of knighthood. He
seemed content with his great wealth (how gained we need not ask), with the
social charms of literary circles and the refinements of luxurious ease, of
which the Etruscans were proverbially fond. But his influence, though secret,
was as potent as before. He was still the Emperor’s chief adviser, counselling
tact and moderation, ready to soothe his ruffled nerves when sick and
weary with the cares of state. He was still serving on a secret mission, and
one that lasted all his life. Keenly relishing the sweets of peace and all the
refined and social pleasures which a great capital alone can furnish, haunted
by no high principles to vex his Sybaritic ease, and gifted with a rare
facility of winning words, he was peculiarly fitted to influence the tone of
Roman circles and diffuse a grateful pride in the material blessings of
imperial rule. He could sympathise with the weariness
of men who had passed through long years of civic strife and seen every cause betrayed by turns, and who craved only peace and
quiet, with leisure to enjoy and to forget. Instinct or policy soon led him to
caress the rising poets of the day, for their social influence might be great.
Their epigrams soon passed from mouth to mouth; a well-turned phrase or a bold
satire lingered in the memory long after the sound of the verses died away; and
the practice of public recitations gave them at times something of the power to
catch the public ear which journalism has had in later days. So from taste and
policy alike Maecenas played the part of patron of the arts and letters. He
used the fine point and wit of Horace to sing the praises of the enlightened
ruler who gave peace and plenty to the world, to scoff meantime at high
ambitions, and play with the memory of fallen causes. The social philosophy of
moderation soothed the self-respect of men who were sated with the fierce game
of politics and war, and gladly saw their indolent and sceptical refinement reflected in the poet’s graceful words. He used the nobler muse of
Vergil to lead the fancy of the Romans back to the good old days, ere country
life was deserted for the camp and city, suggesting the subject of the Georgies to revive the old taste for husbandry and lead men
to break up the waste land with the plough. He helped also to degrade that muse
by leading it astray from worthier themes to waste its melody and pathos in the
uncongenial attempt to throw a halo of heroic legend round the cradle of the
Julian line. Other poets, too, Propertius, Tibullus, Ovid, paid dearly for the
patronage which cramped their genius and befouled their taste, and in place of
truer inspiration prompted chiefly amorous insipidities and servile adulation.
For himself his chief aim in later life seemed careless ease, but that boon
fled away from him the more he wooed it. The Emperor eyed Terentia,
his wife, too fondly, and the injured husband consoled himself with the best
philosophy he could. But she was a scold as well as a coquette, and now drove
him to despair with bitter words, now lured him to her side again, till their
quarrels passed at length beyond the house and became the common talk of all
the gossips of the town. As he was borne along the streets, lolling in his
litter, in a dress loose with studied negligence, his fingers all bedecked with
rings, with eunuchs and parasites and jesters in his train, men asked each
other with a smile what was the last news of the fickle couple—were they
married or divorced again? At las his nerves gave way and sleep forsook him. In
vain he had recourse to the pleasures of the table which his Tuscan nature
loved, to the rare wines that might lull his cares to rest, to distant
orchestras of soothing music. In earlier days he had set to tuneful verse what
Seneca calls the shameful prayer, that his life might still be spared when
health and strength and comeliness forsook him. He lived long enough to feel
the vanity of all his wishes. Nothing could cure his lingering agony of
sleeplessness or drive the spectre of death from his
bedside. But the end came at last. He passed away, and, loyal even in his
death, he left the Emperor his heir.
We have watched Augustus in his public life, and
marked his measures and his ministers; it is time now to turn to his domestic
circle and see what influences were about him here. The chief figure to be
studied is Livia, his wife, who had been the object of his violent love while
still married to Tiberius Nero, and had been forced to quit her reluctant
husband for the home of the triumvir. She soon gained over him an influence
that never wavered. Her gentle courtesies of manner, her wifely virtues never
tainted by the breath of scandal, the homeliness with which she copied the
grave matrons of old days who stayed at home and spun the wool to clothe their
men, the discreet reserve with which she shut her eyes to her husband’s
infidelities, are the reasons given by herself, as we are told, when she was
asked for the secret of her power. Quite insufficient in themselves, they may
have helped to secure the ascendency which her beauty and her strength of
character had won. The gradual change that may be traced in the outward bearing
of Augustus may be due partly to her counsels. Certainly she seemed to press
patience and forbearance on him, and Dion Cassius at a later time puts into her
mouth a pretty sermon on the grace of mercy when her husband’s temper had been
soured by traitorous plots. She was open-handed too in works of charity,
brought up poor children at her own expense, and gave many a maid a marriage
dower. Caligula, who knew her well, and had insight in his own mad way, called
her ‘Ulysses in petticoats’; and the men of her own day, it seems, thought her
such a subtle schemer, that they credited her with acts of guile of which no
evidence was produced. Dark rumours floated through
the streets of Rome, and men spoke of her in meaning whispers, as death knocked
again and again at the old man’s doors and the favourites of the people passed away. It was her misfortune or her guilt that all who were
nearest to the Emperor, all who stood between her son and the succession, died
by premature and seemingly mysterious deaths. The young Marcellus, to whose
memory Vergil raised the monument of his pathetic lines; the brave Agrippa, cut
off when all his hopes seemed nearest to fulfilment; two of Julia’s children
by Agrippa, within eighteen months of each other; all died in turn before their
time, and all were followed to the grave by regrets and by suspicions that grew
louder in each case. For Livia had had no children by Augustus. Of the fruit of
her first marriage Drusus died in Germany, and Tiberius alone was left. The
popular fancy, goaded by repeated losses, found it easy to believe that a
ruthless tragedy was going on before their eyes, and that the chief actor was a
mother scheming for her son, calmly sweeping from his path every rival that she
feared. One grandson still was left, the youngest of Julia’s children, Agrippa Postumus, who was born after his father’s death. On him
Augustus lavished his love awhile as the last hope of his race, adopted him
even as his own; but soon he found, or was led to fancy, that the boy was
clownish and intractable, removed him to Surrentum,
and when confinement made him worse, to the island of Planasia.
But one day pity or regret stole over the old man’s heart: he slipped away
quietly with a single confidant to see the boy, seemed to feel the old love
revive again, and spoke as if he would restore him to his place at home. The
one bystander told his wife the story, and she whispered it to Livia’s ear.
That witness died suddenly soon after, and his wife was heard to moan that her
indiscretion caused his death. Then Livia dared no longer to wait, lest a
dotard’s fondness should be fatal to her hopes. Quietly she took her potent
drugs to a favourite fig-tree in a garden close at
hand, then as they walked together later on offered him the poisoned figs and
ate herself of the harmless ones that grew beside. Such were the stories that
were current too lightly credited perhaps from fear noteworthy as reflecting
the credulous the people, and the fatality that seemed at the time, or hate,
but suspicions of to haunt the household of the Caesars. Of that family the two Julias yet remained alive, the wife and daughter of
Agrippa : but they were pining in their lonely prisons, and their memory had
almost passed away.
The elder Julia was the child of Augustus by Scribonia. Betrothed while still in the nursery to a young
son of Antonius, she was promised in jest to Cotison,
a chieftain of the Getae, and then to the nephew of
the Emperor, Marcellus. At his death she passed, at the age of seventeen, and
with her the hopes of the succession, to Agrippa’s house, where an earlier wife
was displaced to make room for her. Eleven years she lived with him, and when
he died Tiberius must in his turn divorce the Agrippina whom he loved and take
the widowed princess to his house. She had been brought up strictly, almost
sternly by her father. Profligate as he had been himself in early life, his
standard of womanly decorum was a high one, and he wished to see in Julia the
austere dignity of the Roman matrons of old days. But she was readier to follow
the examples of his youth than the disguises and hypocrisies of his later life.
She scorned the modest homeliness of Livia and the republican simplicity of
Augustus, aired ostentatiously her pride of race, and loved profusion and
display. Once freed by marriage from the restraints of her father’s home, she
began a career of license unparalleled even for that age. She flung to the
winds all womanly reserves, paraded often in her speech a cynical disdain for
conventional restraints, and gathered round her the most reckless of the youth
of Rome, till her excesses became a scandal and a byword through the town. The
Emperor was the last to know of his dishonoured name.
He had marked, indeed, with grave displeasure her love of finery and sumptuous
living, had even destroyed a house which she built upon too grand a scale; but
for years no one dared to tell him more, till at last some
one, perhaps Livia, raised the veil, and the whole story of her life was
known. He heard of her long career of guilty license, and how but lately she
had roved at night through the city with her tram of revellers and made the Forum the scene of her worst orgies, dishonouring with bold words and shameless deeds the very tribune where her father stood but
yesterday to speak in favour of his stricter marriage
laws. He was told, though with little show of truth, that she was plotting a
still darker deed and urging her paramour to take his life. The blow fell very
hardly on the father, and clouded all the peace of his last years. At first his
rage passed quite from his control. Her desks were ransacked, her slaves were
tortured, and all the infamous details poured out before the Senate. When he
was told that Phoebe, the freed woman and confidant of Julia, had hung herself
in her despair he answered grimly, ‘Would that I were Phoebe’s father’. Nothing
but her death seemed likely to content him. Then came a change; he shut himself
away from sight, and would speak of her no more. She was exiled to a cheerless
island; and though the fickle people, and Tiberius even, pleaded for her
pardon, she was at most allowed at Rhegium a less
gloomy prison. There, in her despairing loneliness, she must have felt a
lingering agony of retribution. She heard how the hand of vengeance fell upon
her friends and paramours, and, harder still to bear, how child after child
mysteriously died, and only two were left—Agrippa, thrust away from sight and
pity on his petty island, and Julia, who had followed in her mother’s steps,
and was an exile and a prisoner like herself.
Such family losses and dishonours might well embitter the Emperor’s last years; but other causes helped to
deepen the gloom which fell upon him. Since Agrippa’s death there was no
general whom he could trust to lead his armies, no strong hand to curb the
restless tribes of the half-conquered North, or roll back from the frontiers
the tide of war. He sent his grandsons to the distant armies; but they were
young and inexperienced, and firmer hands than theirs were needed to save the
eagles from disgrace.
One great disaster at this time revealed the danger
and sent a thrill of horror through the Empire. German tribes upon the Gallic
border had kept unbroken peace of late, and many of them seemed quite to have
submitted to the Roman rule. A few years before, indeed, some hordes had dashed
across the Rhine upon a plundering foray, and in the course of it had laid an
ambush for the Roman cavalry, and driven them and Lollius,
their leader, backward in confusion and disgrace. But that storm had rolled
away again, and the tribes sent hostages and begged for peace. Roman influence
seemed spreading through the North, as year by year the legions and the traders
carried the arts of settled life into the heart of Germany. But in an evil hour Quintilius Varus was sent thither in command. The
rule seemed too lax and the change too slow for his impatience, and he set
himself to consolidate and civilize in hot haste. Discontent and disaffection
spread apace, but Varus saw no danger and had no suspicions. The German
chieftains, when their plots were laid, plied him with fair assurances of
peace, lured him to leave the Rhine and march towards the Visurgis (Weser) through tribes that were all ready for revolt. Wiser heads warned him
of the coming danger, but in vain. He took no heed, he would not even keep his
troops together and in hand. At last the schemers, Arminius (Hermann) at their
head, thought the time had come. They began the rising at a distance, and made
him think it only a local outbreak in a friendly country; so they led him on
through forest lands, then rose upon him on all sides in a dangerous defile.
The legions, taken by surprise as they were marching carelessly, hampered with
baggage and camp-followers, could make little head against their foes. They
tried to struggle on through swamps and woods, where falling trees crushed them
as they passed along, and barricades were piled by unseen hands, while wind and
rain seemed leagued together for their min. Three days they stood at bay and
strove to beat off their assailants, who returned with fresh fury to the
charge. Then their strength or courage failed them. The more resolute spirits
slew themselves with their own hands, and the rest sank down to die. Of three
full legions few survived, and for many a year the name of that field of
death—the Saltus Teutoburgiensis—sounded ominously in Roman ears.
In the capital there was a panic for awhile. A short time before they had heard the tidings that
Pannonia was in revolt, and now came the news that Germany was all in
arms, and, forcing the Roman lines, stripped as they were of their army of defence, might pour even into Italy, which seemed a
possible nay easy prey. The danger, indeed, was not so imminent. Tiberius, and
after him Germanicus, maintained the frontier and
avenged their soldiers; but the loss of prestige was very great, and the
emperor felt it till his death. For months of mourning he would not trim his
beard or cut his hair, and ‘Varus, give me back my legions!’ was the moan men
often heard him utter. He felt it the more keenly because soldiers were so hard
to find. At the centre no one would enlist. In vain
he appealed to their sense of honour, in vain he had
recourse to stringent penalties; he was forced at last to enrol freedmen and make up his legions from the rabble of the streets. He had seen
long since hardly with alarm that the population was decreasing, soldiers, had
re-stocked the dwindling country towns with colonists, had tried to promote
marriage among all classes, had forced through a reluctant Senate the Lex Papia Poppaea by which celibacy
was saddled with penal disabilities. But men noticed with a sneer that the two
consuls after whom the law was named were both unmarried, and it was a
hopeless effort to arrest such social tendencies by legislation. The central
countries of the Empire could not now find men to fill the ranks. The veterans
might be induced to forsake the little glebes of which they soon grew weary,
but others would not answer to the call. Whole regions were almost deserted,
and the scanty populations had little mind for war. So the distant provinces
became the legions’ recruiting-ground, and the last comers in the Empire must
defend it.
Under the pressure of such public and domestic cares
we need not wonder that the Emperor became moody and morose, and that the
unlovely qualities of earlier days began to re-appear. He shunned the gentle
courtesies of social life, would be present at no festive gathering, disliked
even to be noticed or saluted. Increasing weakness gave him an excuse for
failing to be present in the Senate— a few picked men could represent the body,
and the Emperor’s bedchamber became a privy council. He heard with petulance
that the exiles in the islands were trying to relax the rigour of their lot, and living in comfort and in luxury. Stringent restrictions were
imposed upon their freedom. He heard of writings that were passing through
men’s hands in which his name was spoken of with caustic wit and scant respect.
The books must be hunted out at once and burnt, and the authors punished if
they could be found. The bitter partisanship with which Titus Labienus had expressed his republican sympathies, and the
meaning look with which he turned over pages of his history, which could be
read only after he was dead, have made his name almost typical of the struggle
between despotism and literary independence. Cassius Severus said he must be
burnt himself, if the memory of Labienus’ work must
be quite stamped out; and his was, accordingly, the first of the long list of
cases in which the old laws of treason—the Leges Majestatis—were strained to reach not acts alone but words.
A much more familiar name, the poet Ovid, is brought before us at this time.
The spoiled child of the fashionable society of Rome, he had early lent his
facile wit to amuse the careless worldlings round
him, had made a jest of the remonstrances of serious
friends, who tried to win his thoughts to politics and busy life, and had
squandered all his high gifts of poetry on frivolous or wanton themes. His
conversational powers or his literary fame attracted the notice of the younger
Julia, and he was drawn into the gay circle that surrounded her. There in an
evil hour, it seems, he was made the confidant of dangerous secrets, and was
one of the earliest to suffer when the Emperor’s eyes at last were opened. To
the would-be censor and reformer of the public morals, who had turned his back
upon the follies of his youth, the poet’s writings must have been long
distasteful, as thinly veiled allurements to licentiousness. The indignant
grandfather eyed them still more sternly, saw in them the source or the apology
of wanton deeds, and drove their author from the Rome he loved so well to
a half-civilised home at Tomi, on the
Scythian frontier, from which all his unmanly flatteries and lamentations
failed to free him.
It was time Augustus should be called away; he had
lived too long for happiness and fame, his subjects were growing weary of their
master, and some were ready to conspire against him. Still doubtless in the
provinces men blessed his name, as they thought of the prosperity and peace
which he had long secured to them. One ship’s crew of Alexandria, we read, when
he put into Puteoli, where they were, came with
garlands, frankincense, and glad words of praise to do him honour.
‘To him they owed,’ so ran their homage, ‘their lives, their liberties, and the
wellbeing of their trade? But those who knew him best were colder in their
praises now, and scarcely wished that he should tarry long among them. For
seventy-five years his strength held out, sickly and enfeebled as his body
seemed. The summons came as he was coasting by Campania, and left him only time
to crawl to Naples and thence to Nola, where he died. To those who stood beside
his bed his last words, if reported truly, breathe the spirit of his life :
“What think ye of the comedy, my friends? Have I fairly played my part in it?
If so, applaud?” The applause, if any, must be given to the actor rather than
to the man, for the least lovely features of his character seem most truly his.
In his last years he was busy with the task of giving
an account of his long stewardship. Long ago he had set on foot a survey of the
Empire, and maps had been prepared by the geographical studies of Agrippa.
Valuations of landed property had been made, as one step, though a very partial
one, towards a uniform system of taxation. He had now gathered up for the
benefit of his successors and the Senate all the varied information statistics,
that lay ready to his hand. He had written out with his own hand, we are told,
the statistics of chief moment, an account of the population in its various
grades of privilege, one muster-rolls of all the armies and the fleets, and the
balance-sheet of the revenue and expenditure of state. Taught by the experience
of later years, or from the depression caused by decaying strength, he added
for future rulers the advice to be content with organizing what was won
already, and not to push the frontiers of the army further. Before he died he
took a last survey of his own life, wrote out a summary of all the public acts
which he cared to recall to memory, and left directions that the chronicle
should be engraved on brazen tablets in the mausoleum built to do him honour. That chronicle may still be read, though not at
Rome. In a distant province, at the town of Ancyra, in Galatia, a temple had
been built for the worship of Augustus, and the guardian priests had a copy of
his own biography carved out at length in stone on one of the side-walls. The
temple has passed since then to other uses and witnessed the rites of a
different religion; houses have sprung up round it, and partly hidden, though
probably preserved, the old inscription. Until of late only a part of it could
be deciphered, but a few years ago the patient energy of the explorers sent out
by the French Government succeeded in uncovering the whole wall and making a
complete copy of nearly all that had been written on it. From the place where
it was found its literary name is the ‘Monumentum Ancyranum’. It is not without a certain grandeur, which
even those may feel who dispute the author’s claim to greatness. With stately
confidence and monumental brevity of detail it unfolds the long roll of his
successes. Disdaining seemingly to stoop to the pettiness of bitter words, it
speaks calmly of his fallen rivals; veiling, indeed, in constitutional terms
the illegalities of his career, but misleading or unfair only by its silence.
Not a word is there to revive the hateful memory of the proscriptions, little
to indicate the dire suspense of the war with Sextus Pompeius, or the straits and anxieties of the long struggle
with Antonius; but those questionable times of his career once passed, the
narrative flows calmly on. It recounts with proud self-confidence the long list
of battles fought and victories won; the nations finally subdued under his
rule; the Eastern potentates who sought his friendship; the vassal princes who
courted his protection. It tells of the many colonies which he had founded, and
of the towns recruited by his veterans; speaks of the vast sums that he had
spent on shows and largess for the people; and describes the aqueducts and
various buildings that had sprung up at his bidding to add to the material
magnificence of Rome. For all these benefits the grateful citizens had hailed
him as the father of his country. To the provincials who read these lines it
might seem perhaps that there were few signs in them of any feeling that the
Empire owed any duties to themselves. A few words of reference to the sums
spent in time of need upon their towns, and that was all. To the administrator
it might seem a strange omission to say nothing of the great change in the
ruling mechanism. Yet in what was there omitted lay his claim to greatness. The
plea which justified the Empire was found in the newly-organized machinery of
government and in the peace and justice long secured to the whole civilised world.
High as he had risen in life, he was to be raised to a
yet higher rank after his death, and the deified Augustus became, like many a
succeeding emperor, the object of a national worship. A phenomenon so startling
to our modem thought calls for some words of comment. First, we may note that
polytheism naturally tends to efface the boundary-lines between the human and
the divine. It peoples earth and air and water with its phantom beings, of
bounded powers and clashing wills, and weaves with wanton hand the fanciful
tissue of its legends, in which it plays with the story of their loves and
hates and fitful moods of passion, till its deities can scarcely be distinguished
from the mortal men and women in whose likeness they are pictured.
Eastern thought, moreover, seldom scrupled to honour its great men with the names and qualities of
god-head. Often in servile flattery, sometimes perhaps in the spirit of a mystic
creed, it saw in the rulers whom it feared a sort of avatar or incarnation of a
power divine, which it made the object of its worship. The Pharaohs of Egypt
and the monarchs of Assyria were deified even in their lifetime by the language
of inscriptions, and in later times temples were raised in Asia Minor in honour of the governors of the day, so that Antonius and
Cleopatra gave little shock to Eastern sentiment when in their royal pageant
they assumed the titles and the symbols of Isis and Osiris. It was, therefore,
on this side of the Roman world that the fashion of worshipping the Emperor
began. Even in the lifetime of Augustus deputations came from towns of Asia
which were anxious to set up altars and build temples in his honour. For a while, indeed, he treated them with coldness
and sometimes with mockery, he yet could not quite repress the enthusiasm of
their servile worship, which grew apace in the more distant provinces.
Less credulous minds looked upon the tendency as only
a fanciful way of symbolizing a tendency, or great fact. Much of the
simple faith in the old legendary creeds had passed away before the critical
spirit of Greek culture and many thought that the heroes and gods of the old
fables were but the great men of past times seen through the mist of popular
fancy, till a divine halo gathered round their superhuman stature. If the
sentiment of bygone days had made gods out of the men who sowed the seeds of
art and learning and tamed the savagery of early life, the wondering awe of
ignorant folk might be allowed to crystallize still in the same forms, and to
find a national deity in the great ruler who secured for the whole world the
boon of civilised order. So reasoned probably the
critical and unimpassioned, content to humour the
credulous fancy of the masses, and to deal tenderly with an admiration which
they did not share, but which it might be dangerous to thwart.
Above all, in Italy the tendency in question found
support and strength in a widespread feeling which had lingered on from early
times, that the souls of men did not pass away at death, but still haunted
their old homes, and watched as guardian Lares over
the weal and woe of the generations that came after. Offering and prayer seemed
but a fitting token of respect, and might be useful to quicken their sympathies
or appease their envy. Thus every natural unity, the family, the clan, the
canton, and the nation, had their tutelary powers and special ritual of genuine homegrowth, while in nearly all besides the foreign
influences had overlaid the old religious forms. It had been part of the
conservative policy of Augustus to foster these old forms of worship, to repair
the little chapels in the city wards, and to give priestly functions to the
masters of the streets officially connected with them. Even while he lived he
allowed the figure of his Genius to be placed in the chapels beside the Lares. At his death divine honours were assigned to it as to the rest, or rather it rose of above them all, as the
imperial unity had towered above the petty districts which they were thought to
guard. Temples rose to the deified Augustus, altars smoked in every land, and
guilds of Augustales were organized to do him priestly
service—for the provinces were eager to follow the example of the imperial
city, and their loyal zeal had even outstripped the reverence of Rome. The
ruling powers were well pleased to see a halo of awfulness gather round their
race, while subject peoples saw in the apotheosis of the monarch only a fitting
climax to the majesty of his life and a symbol of the greatness of the Empire.
And so succeeding monarchs in their turn were deified by pagan Rome, as saints
were canonized by favour of the Pope. The Senate’s
vote gave divine honours with the title of ‘Divus’, and it was passed commonly as a matter of course,
or withheld only as a token of abhorrence or contempt.
TIBERIUS.—A.D.
14-37.
Tiberius Claudius Nero was the son of Tiberius Nero
and Livia, and was carried by them while still an infant in their hurried
flight after the surrender of Perugia. On their return to Rome after the
general peace his parents were separated by the imperious will of Octavianus, who made Livia his wife. Losing his father at
the age of nine, and taken from the nursery to pronounce the funeral speech, he
was placed again under his mother’s care and became the object of her ambitious
hopes. He married the daughter of Agrippa, and loved her well, but was forced
to leave her afterwards for Julia, who brought as her dowry the prospects of
the imperial succession. He was soon sent to learn the business of a soldier,
serving in the campaign in Pannonia and Germany, and dispatched on missions of
importance, such as to crown Tigranes in Armenia as a
subject prince, and to carry home the eagles which had been lost in Parthia by
Crassus. At home all the old offices of state were pressed upon him, till at
last he was honoured even with the significant honour of the tribunician power.
Yet Augustus seems to have had little liking for him, and to have noted keenly
all his faults, the taciturn sullenness which contrasted painfully with the
Emperor’s gayer moods, his awkward gestures and slow articulation when he
spoke, the haughtiness of manner which came naturally to all the Claudian line, and the habit of hard drinking, on which the
rude soldiers spent their wit when they termed him punningly ‘Biberius Mero’. The Emperor even went so far as to speak to
the Senate on the subject, and to say that they were faults of manner rather
than of character. For the rest we hear that he was comely in face and
well-proportioned, and handsome enough to attract Julia’s fancy; nor could he
be without strong natural affection, for he loved his first wife fondly, and
lived happily with Julia for a while, and showed the sincerest sorrow when his
brother Drusus died. This is all we hear of him till the age of thirty-five.
Then comes a great break in his career. Suddenly, without a word of
explanation, he wishes to leave Rome and retire from public life (BC 6).
Livia’s entreaties, the Emperor’s protests, and the remonstrances of friends have no effect; and having wrung from Augustus his consent, he
betakes himself to Rhodes. What were his motives cannot now be known. It may
have been in part his disgust at the guilty life of Julia, who outraged his honour and allowed her paramours to make merry with his
character; in part perhaps weariness at being always kept in leadingstrings at Rome; but most probably it was jealousy
at the rising star of the young grandsons of the Emperor, and fear of the
dangers that might flow from too visible a rivalry. In the pleasant isle of
Rhodes he lived awhile, quietly enough, though he could not always drop his
rank. One day he was heard to say that he would go and see the sick. He found
that he was saved the trouble of going far in search, as the magistrates had
them all brought out and laid in order under the arcades, with more regard to
his convenience than theirs. Another time, when a war of words was going on
among the wranglers in the schools, he stepped into the fray, and was so much
hurt at being roughly handled that, hurrying home, he sent a guard to seize the
poor professor who had ventured to ignore his dignity. At length, growing weary
of his stay at Rhodes, he said that the young princes were now secure of the
succession, and that he may safely take a lower place at Rome. But Augustus
coldly bade him stay and take no further trouble about those whom he was so
determined to forsake.
Then came a time of terrible suspense. He knew that he
was closely watched, and that the simplest words were easily misjudged. The
Emperor reproached him with tampering with the loyalty of the officers who put
in at Rhodes to see him. He shunned the coast and lived in solitude, to avoid
all official visits, and yet he heard to his alarm that he was still regarded
with suspicion, that threatening words had passed about him in the intimate
circle of the young Caesars, that his prospects looked so black that the
citizens of Nemausus (Nimes) had even flung his
statue down to curry favour with his enemies, that
his innocence would help him little, and that at any moment he might fall. Only Thrasyllus, his astrologer, might see him, to excite
him with ambiguous words. But Livia’s influence was strong enough at last to
bring him back to Rome after more than seven years of absence, to live,
however, in complete retirement in the gardens of Maecenas, to take like a
schoolboy to mythology, and pose the grammarians who formed his little court
with nice questions about the verses which the Seirens used to sing, or the false name which the young Achilles bore. Not until the
death of the young Caesars was he taken back to favour and adopted by the Emperor as his son.
But the weariness of those long years of forced
inaction, the lingering agony of that suspense had done their work, and he
resigned himself henceforth without a murmur to the Emperor’s will. Not a
moment of impatience at the caprices of the sick old man, not an outspoken word
nor hasty gesture now betrayed his feelings; but, as an apt pupil in the school
of hypocrisy about him, he learned to dissemble and to wait. The only favour that he asked was to take his post in every field of
danger, and to prove his loyalty and courage. With all his powers of
self-restraint he must have breathed more freely in the camp than in the
stifling air of Rome, and the revolt in Pannonia gave him the opportunity he
needed. That war, said to be the most dangerous since the wars with Carthage,
tasked for three years all his resources as a general at the head of fifteen
legions. Scarcely was it closed when the defeat of Varus summoned him to the
German frontier to avenge the terrible disaster. In the campaigns that followed
he spared no vigilance or personal effort, shared the hardships of the
soldiers, and enforced the rigorous discipline of ancient generals. Not only
does Velleius Paterculus, who served among his troops, speak of his commander
in terms of unbounded praise, but later writers, who paint generally a darker
picture, describe his merits at this time without reserve.
From such duties he was called away to the deathbed
of Augustus, whom he found at Nola, either dead already or almost at the last
gasp. But Livia had been long since on the watch, had strictly guarded all
approach to his bed-side, and let no one know that the end was near till her
son was ready and their measures taken. He had been long since marked out for
the succession by the formal act of adoption, which made him the natural heir,
as also by the partnership in the tribunician dignity, which raised him above all the other subjects. But the title to the
sovereign rank was vague and ill-defined, and no constitutional theory of
succession yet existed. As the Empire by name and origin rested on a military
basis the consent of the soldiery was all-important. If the traditions of many
years were to have weight, the Senate must be consulted and respected. The
legions were far away upon the frontiers, in greatest force upon the side of
Germany and Pannonia; and the first news came from the North was that the
two armies were in mutiny, clamouring for higher pay
and laxer discipline. The hasty levies raised after the defeat of Varus had
lowered the general morale, and carried to the camp the turbulent license of
the capital On the Rhine there was the further danger that Germanicus,
his nephew, who was then in supreme command, should rely on his influence with
his troops and lead them on, or be led by them, to fight for empire. This son
of Drusus, who had been the popular idol of his day, and who was said to have
hankered after the old liberties of the Republic, had won himself the soldiers’
hearts by his courtesy, gallantry, and grace, and the familiar name of Germanicus which they gave him is the only one by which
history has known him since. They were ready to assert their right to be
consulted. The power which they defended was in their hands to give at a word
from him, and if that word had been spoken they would certainly have marched in
arms to Rome. But he was not fired by such ambitious hopes, nor had he had he
been seemingly any sentimental dreams of ancient willing, freedom. He took
without delay the oath of obedience to Tiberius, restored discipline after a
few anxious days of mutiny, and then tried to distract the thoughts of his
soldiers from dangerous memories by a series of campaigns into the heart of
Germany.
Tiberius meanwhile at home was feeling his way with
very cautious steps. While he was still uncertain of the attitude of Germanicus and the temper of the legions, he used nothing
but ambiguous language, affected to decline the reins of the state, kept even
the Senate in suspense, and at last with feigned reluctance accepted office
only for a while, till they should see fit to give him rest. It was in keeping
with such policy that he shrank from the excessive honours which the Senate tried to lavish of him, and declined even the titles which
Augustus had accepted. Either from fear or from disgust he showed dislike to
the flattery which was at first rife about him, checked it when it was
outspoken, and resented even as a personal offence the phrases ‘lord’ and
‘master’ as applied to him. Meantime the Senate was encouraged to think that the
powers of administration rested in their hands. Nothing was too paltry, nothing
was to be submitted for their discussion ; even military matters were at first
referred to them, and generals in command were censured for neglecting to
report their doings to the Council. The populace of Rome, however, was treated
with less courtesy. The ancient forms of the elections were quite swept away,
and in legislation also the Senate took the place of the popular assembly.
Little attempt was made to keep the people in good humour by shows of gladiators or gorgeous pageants, and Tiberius would not try to put
on the studied affability with which Augustus sat for hours through the
spectacles, or the frank courtesy with which he stayed to salute the
passers-by. But, on the other hand, he showed himself at first sincerely
desirous of just rule, warned provincial governors who pressed him to raise
higher taxes that ‘a good shepherd shears but does not flay his sheep’ and kept
a careful watch on the tribunals to see that the laws were properly enforced.
Vigorous measures were adopted to put down brigandage, the police of Italy was
better regulated, popular disturbances in the capital or in the provinces were
promptly and even sternly checked, and many of the abuses were remedied which
had grown out of the old rights of sanctuary.
His reign must have been largely due to Livia’s
influence. For many years Tiberius had been much away from Rome, and it was
natural that he should at first rely upon his mother’s well-tried statecraft, her
knowledge of men and familiar experience of the social forces of the times. He
owed all to her patient scheming, even if she had not, as men thought, swept
away by poison the obstacles to his advancement. Her position was for many
reasons a commanding one. The will of Augustus had named her as co-heiress,
given her the official title of Augusta, and raised her by adoption to the
level of her son. She shared with him, therefore, in some measure the imperial
dignity; their names were coupled in official language; the letters even of
Tiberius ran for some time in her name as well as his. There were numerous
coins of local currency, at Rome and in the provinces, on which her name was
stamped, sometimes joined with her son’s but oftener alone. At her bidding, or
by her influence, priesthoods were formed and temples rose in all parts of the
empire to extend the worship of the deified Augustus; and inscriptions still
preserved upon them testify to her pride of self-assertion, as well as to the
policy with which she strove to surround the imperial family with the solemn
associations of religious awe. To that end she also enlisted the fine arts in
her service, and found employment for the first sculptors, engravers, and
painters of the day in multiplying copies of the features of the ruling race,
and endearing them to the imagination of the masses.
The Senate was not slow to encourage the ambition of
Augusta. Vote after vote was passed as the members tried to outdo each other in
their flattery, till they raised her even to the foremost place, and proposed
to call the Emperor Livius to do her honour. Tiberius, indeed, demurred to this : and before
long there were signs clear enough to curious eyes that he was ashamed to feel
he owed her all, impatient of her tutelage, and jealous of her high
pretensions. Men spoke in meaning whispers to each other, and wits made
epigrams on the growing coldness between mother and son. They said he vainly
strove to keep her in the shade. Old as she was, she clung to power and state, and
relied on her talents and influence to hold her own. The Senate and the camp
she could not visit, but in all else she claimed to rule. As he seemed to shun
the eyes of men she came forward more in public, won popular favour by her courtesies and generous gifts, gathered her
crowd of courtiers round her, conferred at her will the offices of state, and
tried to overawe the courts of justice when the interests of her favourites were at stake. In the circle of her intimates we
hear of irreverent wits whose caustic speeches did not spare the Emperor
himself; and once, we read, when words ran high between Augusta and her son,
she took from her bosom old letters of Augustus and read sarcastic passages
that bore on his faults of manner or of temper. This coolness did not lead to
open rupture, for his old habits of obedience were confirmed enough to bear the
strain, and he submitted to her claims, though she used her grudgingly and
ungraciously enough.
On the whole she used her influence wisely, and while
she ruled, the policy of state was cool and wary. She could be stern and
resolute enough when force seemed needful. She had given orders for the death
of Agrippa Postumus as soon as his grandfather had
ceased to breathe. She did not plead for pity with her son when he let Julia
die a wretched death of slow starvation in her prison, and took at last his
vengeance on her paramour for the mockery and outrage of the past. It is likely
even that her quick eye saw the use that might be made of the old laws of
treason, which had come down from the Commonwealth. They had been meant to
strike at men who had by open act brought dishonour or disaster on the state. Sulla was the first to make them cover libellous words, and Augustus had, though sparingly,
enforced them in like cases. The Caesar had already stepped into the people’s
place and screened his majesty against so-called treason; but when the Caesar
had been deified, any crime against his person was heightened by the sin of
sacrilege. In the language of the law obedience to the living Emperor soon
became confounded with the religious worship of the dead, and loyalty became in
theory a sort of adoration. Any disrespect might carry danger with it. Jesting
words against the late Emperor might be construed into blasphemy when the
Emperor had become a god. His likeness must be held in honour,
and it might be fatal even to beat a slave who clung for safety to his statue,
or to treat carelessly his effigy upon a coin. A few such cases were enough to
increase enormously the imperial prestige, and extend to the living members of
the family some of the reverence that was gathering round the dead. But though
Augusta had few scruples she had no taste for needless bloodshed, and while she
lived she certainly exercised a restraining influence upon her son.
Another of the Emperor’s family exerted a force of
like restraint though in a very different way. Germanicus was the darling of the legions, and might at any moment be a pretender to the
throne. He had calmed his mutinous soldiery, led them
more than once into the heart of Germany, visited the battlefield where Varus
fell, and brought back with him in triumph the captive wife and child of
Arminius, the national hero of the Germans. It might seem dangerous to leave
him longer at the head of an army so devoted to their general—dangerous perhaps
to bring him back to win the hearts of men at Rome. But his presence might be
useful in the East, for the kingdoms of Parthia and Armenia had been torn by
civil war and thrown into collision by the claims of rival candidates for
power, and by wars of succession due in part at least to the intrigues of Rome.
A general of high repute was needed to protect the frontier and appease the neighbouring powers, and the death of some of the vassal
kings of Asia Minor had left thrones vacant, and wide lands to be annexed or
organized. It was resolved to recall Germanicus from
his post and to dispatch him to the Syrian frontier on this important mission.
On the north there was a mission to little to be gained by border warfare,
which provoked but could not crush the resistance of the German tribes, and
there was wisdom in following the counsel of Augustus not to aim at further
conquests. Germanicus might be unwilling to retire;
but the duties to which he was transferred were of high dignity and trust. Yet
men noted with alarm that Silanus, who was linked to
him by tics of marriage, was recalled from Syria at the time, and the haughty,
self-willed Cnaeus Piso made governor in his stead. Dark rumours spread abroad
that he had been chosen for the task of watching and of thwarting the young
prince, and that his wife, Plancina, had been
schooled in all the petty jealousies and spite of which Agrippina was the mark.
So far at least all was mere suspicion, but there was no doubt that when they
went to Syria the attitude of Piso was haughty and
offensive. He made a bold parade of independence, disputed the authority and cavilled at the words and actions of Germanicus,
tampered even with the loyalty of the soldiers and drove him at last to open
feud. When Germanicus fell ill soon afterwards Piso showed indecent glee, and though he was on the eve of
quitting Syria he lingered till further news arrived. He put down by violence
the open rejoicing of the crowd at Antioch when cheerful tidings came. Still he
waited, and the murmur spread that the sickness was his work, and that poison
and witchcraft had been used to gratify his spite and perhaps to do the
Emperor’s bidding. Germanicus himself was ready to
believe the story and to fear the worst. The suspicions gained force as he grew
weaker, and his last charge on his deathbed to his poisoned friends was to
expose his murderer and avenge his death (AD 19). The sad story was received at
Rome with passionate sorrow and resentment. His father’s memory, his noble
qualities and gentle bearing, had endeared him to all classes, and men recalled
the ominous words that ‘those whom the people love die early’. One after
another their favourites had passed away, cut off in
the springtime of their youth; and now the last of them, the best beloved
perhaps of all, had been sent away from them, they murmured, to the far East
to die from the noxious air of Syria, or it might be from the virulence of Piso’s hate. Still more outspoken was the grief when the
chief mourners reached the shores of Italy, and passed in sad procession
through the towns. At the sight of the widowed Agrippina, and the children
gathered round the funeral urn that held his ashes, all classes of society vied
with each other in the tokens of their sympathy. There was no flattery in such
signs of mourning, for few believed that Tiberius was sorry, and many thought
that he was glad at the loss that they regretted. Was it grief that kept him in
the palace, or fear lest men should read his heart? Was it due respect to his
brave nephew to give such scant show of funeral honours,
and to frown at the spontaneous outburst of his people’s sorrow ? Was it love
of justice or a sense of guilt that made him so slow to punish Piso’s crime, so quick to discourage the zeal of his
accusers ? They could only murmur and suspect, for nothing certain could be
known. At Piso’s trial there was evidence enough of
angry words and bitter feelings, of acts of insubordination, almost of civil
strife, but no proof that Germanicus was murdered,
still less that Tiberius was privy to the deed. It was, indeed, whispered abroad
that the accused had evidence enough to prove that he only did what he was
bidden; but if so, he feared to use it, and before the trial was over he died
by his own hand.
The popular suspicion against Tiberius was no mere
after-thought of later days, when Rome had learnt to know the darker features
of his character. From the first they had never loved him, and the more they
saw the less they liked him. He seemed of dark and gloomy temper, with no
geniality of manner, shunning the pleasures of the people, and seldom generous
or openhanded. He had even an ungracious way of doing what was right, and
spoiled a favour by his way of granting it. There was
such reserve and constraint in what he said that men thought him a profound
dissembler and imputed to him crimes he had no thought of. They seemed to have
divined the cruelty that was still latent, and to have detested him before his
acts deserved their hate. Even in the early years the satires current in the
city and the epigrams passed from mouth to mouth show us how intense was the
dislike; and soon we see enough to justify it.
One of the most alarming features of the times in
traced his influence was the rapid spread of professional accusers, of the delatores, of
whom we read, indeed, before, but who now became a power in the state. The
Roman law of early times looked to private citizens to expose wrong-doing, and
to impeach civil or political offenders. Sometimes it was moral indignation,
oftener it was the bitterness of party feeling, and oftener still the passion
of ambition, that brought them forward as accusers. The great men of the
Republic were constantly engaged in legal strife. Cato, for example, was put on
his defence some four-and-forty times, and appeared
still oftener as accuser. It was commonly the first step in a young man’s
career to single out a prominent member of the rival party, to charge him with
some political offence, and to prove in the attack his courage or knowledge of
the laws. This practice naturally intensified the of party struggles, and often
led to family feuds. It took to some extent the place of the duelling of modern times, and led more than once to a sort
of hereditary ‘vendetta’. It oftener served the passions of a party than the
real interests of justice; and, prized as it was as a safeguard and privilege
of freedom, fostered license more than liberty. Yet, as if this tendency were
not strong enough already, measures were taken to confirm it. More sordid
motives were appealed to, and hopes of money bribes were held out to spur on
the accuser’s zeal. These, it may be, seemed more needful, as moral sympathies
were growing stronger and the party passions of the Commonwealth were cooling
down. Certainly the meaner motives must have been most potent in the days of
the early Empire, when men came forward to enforce the sumptuary and marriage
laws which were almost universally disliked.
We hear little of the delatores as a class under
Augustus ; with a ruler like Tiberius they became quite a new wheel in the
political machinery. It suited his reserve to keep himself in the background
while the objects of his fear or his suspicions were attacked, to learn the
early stages of the trial from men who had no official connexion with himself, while the Senate or the law courts were responsible for the
result, and he could step in at last to temper, if he pleased, the rigour of the sentence. He did not own them for his
instruments, refused even to speak to them directly on the subject; but with
instinctive shrewdness they interpreted his looks, divined his wishes, and
acted with eagerness upon a word that fell from any confidant whom he and
increase seemed to trust. No wonder that their numbers grew apace, for it
seemed an easy road to wealth and honour. Settling
even by threes and fours upon their victims, they disputed the precedence of
the attack, for if they were successful the goods of the condemned might be
distributed among them; and when an enemy of Caesar fell, quite a shower of
official titles was rained upon them. They came from all classes alike. Some
there were of ancient lineage and good old names; some were adventurers from
the provinces who had come to push their fortunes in the capital, some even of
the meanest rank who crowded into a profession where a ready tongue and
impudence seemed the only needful stock in trade. For all were trained in early
youth to plead and hold their own in the keen fence of words. In the days of
the Republic all must learn to speak who would make their way in public life,
and the training of the schools remained the same when all besides was changed
around them. The orator’s harangues had been silenced in the Forum. No Cicero
might hope to sway the crowd or guide the Senate, but they disputed still and
declaimed and laboured at the art of rhetoric as if
oratory were the one end and aim of life. When life opened on them in real
earnest they soon discovered how slowly honest and unaided talent could hope to
make its way to fame. The conditions of the times were changed, and one only
way was left to copy the great orators of earlier days. They could yet win
wealth and honour, and make the boldest spirits
quail, and be a power in to the infertile state, and gain perhaps the Emperor’s favour, by singling out some man of mark, high in
office or in rank, and furbishing afresh against him the weapons drawn from the armoury of the laws of treason. If they were not
weighted with nice scruples, if they could work upon the ruler’s fears or give
substance to his vague suspicions; if they were dexterous enough to rake up
useful scraps of evidence and put their lies into a telling form, then they
might hope to amass great fortunes speedily and to rise to high official rank.
Did any wish to pay off an old debt of vengeance, or to force a recognition
from the classes that despised them, or to retrieve a shattered fortune and to
find a royal road to fame, it needed only to swell the ranks of the informers,
to choose a victim and invent a crime. If no plausible story could be found to
ruin him, it was always possible to put into his mouth some threats against the
Emperor’s life, some bold lampoon upon his vices, which they found all ready to
their hand. The annals of the times are full of tales which show how terrible
was the power they wielded. Through every social class and circle the poison of
suspicion spread, for every friend might prove a traitor and be an informer in
disguise. It might be perilous to speak about affairs of state, for the
frankest words of confidence might be reported, and be dangerously mistrust
construed. It might be dangerous to be too silent, for fear of being taken for
a malcontent. A man’s worst enemies might be in his home, for every house was
full of slaves, who learned or guessed the master’s secrets, and whose eyes
were always on the watch to divine the inmost feelings of his heart. In a few
minutes, by a few easy words, they could wreak their vengeance for the slights
of years, gain their freedom even by their master’s death, and with it such a
slice of what was his as would make them rich beyond their wildest dreams. No
innocence could be quite secure against such foes, for it was as easy to invent
as to report a crime. No council-chamber was so safe but that some traitorous
ear could lurk unseen, for in one trial it appeared that three senators were
hidden between the ceiling and the roof to hear the conversation of the man
whom they accused. There was no kind life without its dangers. To eschew politics
was not enough. The poet’s vanity might lure him to his ruin if he ventured to
compose an elegy upon the prince’s son, when the noble subject of his verse was
sick, not dead. The historian’s life might pay the penalty for a few bold words
of freedom, as Cremutius Cordus had to die for calling the murderers of Caesar the last of the old Romans.
Philosophy itself might be suspected, for a lecture on the whole duty of man
might recognise another standard than the Emperor’s
will and pleasure and handle his special faults too freely. There was no escape
from dangers such as these. In earlier days men might leave Rome before the
trial was quite over, and shun the worst rigour of
the law by self-chosen banishment from home. But the strong arm of the imperial
ruler could reach as far as the farthest limits of the empire, and flight
seemed scarcely possible beyond. One only road of flight lay open, and to that
many had recourse. When the fatal charges had been laid, men often did not stay
to brook the ignominy of the trial, or face the informer’s torrent of
invectives, but had their veins opened in the bath, or by poison or the sword
ended the life which they despaired to save. They hoped to rescue by their
speedy death some little of their fortune for their children, and to secure at
least the poor advantage of a decent funeral for their bodies.
It was the Emperor’s suspicious temper that increased
so largely the influence of the delatores; but there was one man who gained his trust, and
gained it only to abuse it. Lucius Aelius Sejanus had
long since won favour by artful insight into
character and affected zeal and self-devotion. His flattery was too subtle to
offend, his duplicity so skilful as to mask
completely his own pride and ambition, while he fed the watchful jealousy of
his master by whispered doubts of others. His father, a knight of Tuscan
stock, had been prefect of the imperial guards, ten battalions of which were
quartered in different places round the city. When the son was raised to the
same rank, his first act of note was to induce the Emperor to concentrate the
guards in one camp near the gates, as the permanent garrison of Rome. That
done, he spared no pains to win the goodwill of the soldiers, to secure the
devotion of the officers, and raise his tools to posts of trust. To the real
power thus secured, the rapidly increasing favour of
Tiberius lent visible authority. In official language he was sometimes named as
the partner of the ruler’s labours; senators and
nobles of old family courted his patronage with humble words; official titles
were bestowed at his discretion, and spies and informers speedily were proud to
take rank in his secret service. While ambitious hopes were growing within him
with the self-confidence of a proud and resolute nature, the passion of revenge
came in to define and to mature them. Drusus, the young son of Tiberius, whom
we read of as coarse, choleric, and cruel, happened in a brawling mood to
strike Sejanus on the face. The blow was one day to be washed out in blood, but
for the moment it was borne in silence. He made no sign to rouse suspicion, but
turned to Livilla, the prince’s wife, and plied her
with his wily words, seconded by winning grace and personal beauty. The weak
woman yielded to the tempter. Flinging away her womanly honour,
and with it tenderness and scruple, she sacrificed her husband to her lover.
With her help he had, Drusus poisoned, and so removed the heir-presumptive to
the throne.
Next came the turn of Agrippina and her children.
Between the widowed mother and Tiberius a certain coolness had grown up already,
which it was easy to increase. Her frank, impetuous, high-souled nature could
not breathe freely in the palace. Proud of her husband’s memory and the promise
of her children, and too reliant on the people’s love, she could not stoop to
weigh her words, to curb her feelings, and school herself to be wary and
submissive. His dark looks and freezing manner stung her often to impatience,
and she allowed herself to show too clearly the want of sympathy between them.
The ill-timed warmth of Agrippina’s friends, the dark insinuations of Sejanus,
widened the breach already made, and each was made to fear the other and hint
at poison or at treason. The thunder-clouds had gathered fast, and the storm would
soon have burst between them, had not Augusta stayed his hand and stepped in
with milder counsels. Jealous as he may have been, the son still submitted to
the mother’s sway. He feared an open rupture, while he chafed at her
interference and restraint. Then the schemer thought of parting them. Away from
Rome and from his mother, Tiberius would breathe more freely, and lean more on
his trusted servant, and he himself also could mature his plans more safely if
he were not always watched by that suspicious eye. For twelve years the Emperor
had scarcely left the city; but he was weary at last of moving in the same
round of public labours, of meeting always the same
curious eyes, full as it seemed of fear or of mistrust.
The counsels of Sejanus took root and bore their fruit
in season. At first Rome only heard that its ruler was travelling southward,
then that he was at Capreae (AD 26), the
picturesque island in the bay of Naples which had tempted Augustus with its
charms and passed by purchase into his estates. Soon, they thought, he would be
back again, but time went on and still he came not; and though he talked at
times of his return, and came twice almost within sight, he never set foot
within their walls again.
After three years he heard at Caprete of his mother’s death, but he was not present at her funeral long neglected
even to give the needful orders, and set at nought the last wishes of her will. Her death removed the only shield of Agrippina and
her children. One after another their chief adherents had been swept away. The
old generals that loved them had been struck down by the informers; the
relentless jealousy of the Emperor and Sejanus had for years set spies upon
them to report and exaggerate unguarded words. All the charges which had been gathered
up meantime were at once laid before the Senate in a message full of savage
harshness; the mother and her two eldest children were hurried off to separate
prisons, with litters closed, lest the memory of Germanicus should stir the people. They languished there awhile, then perished miserably
by sword and famine.
There was another whom the Emperor had long looked at
with unfriendly eyes. Asinius Gallus, a marked figure
in the higher circles, had taken to his house Asinius the wife whom Tiberius had been forced indeed to put away, yet loved too well
to feel kindly to the man who took his place. He had been named by the last
Emperor among the few who might aspire to the throne, and was possibly the
child the promise of whose manhood had been heralded by the fourth Eclogue of
Vergil. He was certainly forward and outspoken, with something of presumption
even in his flattery; he had often given offence by hasty words, and above all
in the early scene of mutual mistrust and fear in the Senate House he had tried
to force Tiberius to use plain language and drop his hypocritic trifling. He was made to pay a hard penalty for his boldness. The Emperor
stayed his hand for years, allowed him to pay his court and join in the debates
among the rest, and even summoned him to Capreae to
his table. But even while he sat there the news came that the Senate had
condemned him at the bidding of their master, and he left the palace for a
prison. For years he pined in utter loneliness, while
the death which he would have welcomed as a boon was still denied him.
Meantime Sejanus ruled at Rome with almost absolute
power. His master’s seemingly unbounded trust made soldiers, senators,
informers vie with each other in submissive service : his favour was the passport to preferment; his enmity was followed by a charge of treason
or a threatening missive from Capreae to the Senate.
All classes streamed to his ante-chambers with their greetings, and the world
of Rome flattered, feared, or hated him. The Emperor heard all intelligence
through him, coloured and garbled as he pleased,
approved his counsels, re-echoed his suspicions, and daily resigned more of the
burden of rule into his hands. There had been no sign of mistrust even when he
had asked for the hand of Livilla, the widow of the
murdered Drusus, though consent had been delayed and reproof of his ambition
hinted. Yet, wary as Sejanus was, he could not hide from envious eyes the pride
and ambition of his heart. He grew haughtier with the confidence of power, and
men whispered that in moments of self-indulgence he spoke of himself as the
real autocrat of Rome, and sneered at his master as the Monarch of the Isle.
But that master’s eyes at length were opened. His brother’s widow, Antonia,
long retired from public life, had kept a watchful eye on all that passed, and
sent a trusty messenger at length to warn him. He saw his danger instantly,
felt it with a vividness that seemed to paralyse his
will and stay his hand. For many months we have the curious picture of the
monarch of the Roman world brooding, scheming, and conspiring against his
servant. For months his letters were so worded as to keep Sejanus balanced
between fear and hope. Sometimes he writes as if his health was failing, and
the throne would soon be vacant, sometimes promotes his friend and loads him
with caresses, and then again his strength is suddenly restored and he writes
fretfully and sternly. The Senate is kept also in suspense, but notes that he
no more calls the favourite his colleague, and that
he raises a personal enemy to be consul. The bolt falls at last. Suddenly there
arrives in Rome a certain Macro with letters from Caprese for the Senate. He carries the commission in his pocket which makes him the new praefect of the guard, and has been told to concert
measures with Laco, the praefect of the watch. He meets Sejanus by the way, alarmed to find that there is no
message for himself, and reassures him with the tale that the letter brings
him the high dignity of tribunician power. While
Sejanus hurries in triumph to the Senate House, Macro shows his commission to
the praetorians and sends them to their quarters far away, while Laco guards the Senate House with his watch. The reading of
the Emperor’s letter then begins. It is long and curiously involved in style,
deals with many subjects, with here and there a slighting word against Sejanus,
to which, however, he pays scant attention, as his thoughts are occupied
with the signs of favour soon to follow. Suddenly
comes the unlooked-for close. Two of his nearest intimates are denounced for
punishment, and he is to be lodged at once in prison. Those who sat near had
slipped away from him meantime; Laco with his guards
is by his side, while the Senate rises on all sides and vents in angry cries
the accumulated hate of years. He is dragged off to his dungeon. The people on
the way greet him with savage jeers, throw down the statues raised long since
in his honour, and the praetorians in their distant
quarter make no sign. The Senate takes courage to give the order for his death,
and soon all that is left of him is a name in history to point the moral of an
unworthy favourite’s rise and fall. His death rid
Tiberius of his fears, but was fatal to the party who had looked to Sejanus as
their chief, and possibly had joined him in treasonable plots against his
master. Post after post brought the death-warrants of fresh victims. His
kinsmen were the first to suffer, then came the turn of friends and tools. All
who owed to him their advancement, all who had shown him special honour, paid the hard penalty of their imprudence. The
thirst for blood grew fiercer daily, for the wife of Sejanus on her deathbed
told the story of the poison of which Drusus died, and the truth was known at
last. Tiberius had hidden his grief when his son died, and treated with mocking
irony the citizens of Ilium who came somewhat late with words of condolence,
telling them that he was sorry that they too had lost a great man named Hector;
but the grief he had then not shown turned now to thirst for vengeance. On any
plea that anger or suspicion could dictate fresh names were added to the list
of the accused, till the crowded prisons could hold no more. The praetorians
whose loyalty had been mistrusted were allowed to show how little they had
cared for their commander by taking wild vengeance on his partisans; the
populace also roamed the streets in riotous mobs to prove their tardy hatred
for his memory. In a passage of the Emperor’s memoirs that has come down to us
we read the charge that the fallen minister had plotted against Agrippina and
her children. We may compare with this the fact that the order for the death of
the second son was given after the traitor’s fall. He was starved to death in
the dungeon of the palace, after trying in his agony to gnaw the bed on which
he lay, and the note-book of his gaoler gave a
detailed account of his last words and dying struggles.
At Caprese also there was no
lack of horrors. There too the victims came to be tried under his eye, it is
said to be even tortured, and to glut his thirst for bloodshed. He watched
their agonies upon the rack, and was so busy with that work that when an old
friend came from Rhodes at his own wish, he mistook the name of his invited
guest and ordered him too to be tortured like the rest. Some asked to be put
out of their misery by speedy death, but he refused, saying that he had not yet
forgiven them. Even in trifling matters the like severity broke out. A poor
fisherman climbed the steep rocks at Capreae to offer
him a fine lobster; but the Emperor, startled in his walk by his unbidden
visitor, had his face gashed with its sharp claws to teach him more respect for
rank. Nor is it only and foul cruelty that stains his name. Sensuality without
disguise or limit, unnatural lusts too foul to be described, debauchery that
shrank from no excess, these are the charges of the ancient writers that brand
him with eternal infamy. Over these it may be well to drop the veil and hasten
onward to the close.
At length it was seen that his strength was breaking
up, and the eyes of the little court at Caprese turned to Caius, the youngest son of Agrippina and Germanicus,
whom, though with few signs of love, he had pointed out as his successor. The
physician whispered that his life was ebbing, and he sank into a swoon that
seemed the sleep of death. All turned to the living from the dead and saluted
him as the new Emperor, when they were startled with the news hastened that
eyes were opened and Tiberius was still alive. But then—so ran the tale
all Rome believed—the prefect Macro bade the young prince be bold and prompt:
together they flung a pillow on the old man’s head and smothered him like a mad
dog as he lay (AD 37).
The startling story of his later years is given with
like features in the pages of three authors, Tacitus, Suetonius, and Dion
Cassius, and none besides of ancient times describe his life or paint his
character with any fulness of detail. But modern
critics have come forward to contest the verdict of past history, and to demand
a new hearing of the case. We must stay, therefore, to see what is the nature
of their plea.
They remind us that, at the worst, it was only the
society of Rome that felt the weight of his heavy hand. Elsewhere, they say,
through all the provinces of the vast empire his rule was wise and wary. His
firm hand curbed the license of his agents; he kept his legions posted on the
frontiers, but had no wish for further conquests, and in dealing with neighbouring powers relied on policy rather than on force.
The shelter that he offered to the fugitive chiefs of Germany and the
pretenders to the Eastern thrones gave him always an excuse for diplomacy and
intrigues, which distracted the forces that were dangerous. Provincial writers
like Strabo the geographer, Philo the philosopher, and Josephus the historian,
speak of his rule with thankfulness and fervour; and
the praises seem well-founded till we come to the last years of his life. Then,
says Suetonius, he sunk into a sloth which neglected every public duty. He
would not sign commissions, nor change the governors once appointed, nor fill up
the vacancies that death had caused, nor give orders to chastise the neighbouring tribes that disturbed the border countries
with their forays. It is true the Empire was so little centralized as yet, and
so much free life remained in the old institutions of the provinces, that
distant peoples scarcely suffered from the torpor of the central power, and,
once relieved from the abuses of the old Republic, were well content if they
were only left alone. Still the degradation of Rome, if real, must have reacted
on them, have for she attracted to the centre the
notabilities of every land. She sent forth in turn her thought, her culture,
and her social influence, and the pulsations of her moral life were felt in
countries far away. The heroism of her greatest men raised the tone of the
world’s thought, and examples of craven fear and meanness surely tended to
dispirit and degrade it.
If we return now to the details of his rule at home
what evidence can his defenders find to stay our judgment? They can point to
the contemporary praises of Valerius Maximus, a
literary courtier of the meanest type, and to the enthusiastic words in which
Velleius Paterculus speaks of his old general’s virtues. But the terms of the
latter do not sound like a frank soldier’s language; the style is forced and
subtle, and the value of his praises of Tiberius may well be questioned when in
the same pages we find a fulsome flattery of Augustus and Sejanus that passes
all bounds of belief. We may note also that his history ends before the latter
period of this reign begins. In default of testimony of a stronger kind,
attention has been drawn to the marks of bias and exaggeration in the story
commonly received, to the wild rumours wantonly
spread against a monarch who had never won his people’s love, and lightly
credited by writers who reflected the prejudices of noble coteries offended by
the unyielding firmness of his rule. On such evidence it has been thought
enough to assume that the memoirs of Agrippina, Nero’s mother, blackened the
name of Tiberius and had a sinister influence on later history; to imagine a
duel of life and death between the imperial government and the partisans of the
widow and children of Germanicus; to believe, but
without proof, that the chief victims of the times were all conspirators, who
paid the just forfeit of their lives; to point to the malignant power of
Sejanus and to fancy that the real clemency of Tiberius took at last a sombre hue in the presence of universal treachery. Whence
this strange mania of disloyalty can have come is not made clear, nor how it
was that of the twenty trusted senators chosen for the privy council only two
or three were left alive, nor why Drusus, the son of Germanicus,
was murdered when the fall of Sejanus had removed the tempter.
Nor can the stories of the debauchery at Caprae be lightly set aside without disproof. They left a
track too lurid on the popular imagination, they stamped their impress even in
vile words on the language of the times, and gave a fatal impulse to the
tendencies of the corrupted art that left the records of its shame among the
ruins of Pompeii.
It may seem strange, indeed, as has been urged, that a
character unstained for many years by gross defects should reveal so late in
life such darker features. But we have no evidence which will enable us to
rewrite the story of these later years, though on some points we have reason to
mistrust the fairness of the historians whose accounts alone have reached us.
They do seem to have judged too harshly acts and words which admit a fair and honourable colour. Their conclusions
do not always tally with the facts which they bring forward, and seem sometimes
inconsistent with each other; the number and details of the criminal trials
which they describe often fail to justify their charges of excessive cruelty in
the emperor, and many of their statements as to his secret feelings and designs
must have been incapable of proof. It was probably from prudence and not from
mere irresolution that the prince continued his provincial governors so long in
office; it may have been from true policy rather than from jealousy that he
recalled Germanicus from useless forays on the border
lands, from good sense rather than from want of spirit that he discouraged all
excessive honours to himself. In these and many like
cases Tacitus and other writers may have given a false reading of his motives,
as they have certainly reported without weighing the scandalous gossip that
blackened the memory of a ruler who discredited his best qualities by
ungracious manners, and often made his virtues seem as odious as his vices.
But of the natural character of his younger years we
know little. We see him trained in a school of rigid repression and hypocrisy,
cowering under the gibes and censures of Augustus, wavering between the
extremes of hope and fear, tortured by anxiety at Rhodes, drilled afterwards
into an impassive self-restraint, till natural gaiety and frankness
disappeared. When power came at last it found him soured by rancour and resentment, haunted by suspicion and mistrust, afraid of the Senate and Germanicus, and yet ashamed to own his fears; too
keen-eyed to relish flattery, yet dreading any show of independence; curbed by
his mother, and spurred on by Sejanus into ferocity inspired by fear; with an
intellectual preference for good government, but still with no tenderness or
sympathy for those whom he ruled. Possibly the partisans of Agrippina troubled
his peace with their bold words and seditious acts, or even conspired to set
her children in his place, and drove him to stern measures in his own defence. At length, when the only man whom he had fondly
trusted played him false, his old mistrust settled into a general contempt for
other men and for the restraints of their opinion. These safeguards gone, he
may perhaps have plunged into the depths of cruelty and lust and self-contempt
which made Pliny speak of him as the gloomiest of men—‘tristissimus hominum,’— and led him to confess in his letters to
the Senate that he was suffering from a long agony of despairing wretchedness.
Even from the distant East, we read, came the scornful letters in which the
King of Parthia poured reproaches on the cruelty and debaucheries of his
brother Emperor of the West.
CALIGULA.—A.D.
37-41.
The tidings of the gloomy emperor’s death were heard
at Rome with universal joy. The senators and men of mark began to breathe more
freely after the reign of terror ; the people who had suffered less, but for
whom little had been done in the way of shows and largess, began to cry about
the streets, ‘Tiberius to the Tiber!’ and to talk of flinging his dishonoured body like carrion to the crows.
All eyes turned with joy to the young Caius. The fond
regrets with which they thought of Germanicus, his
father, the memory of Agrippina’s cruel fate, and the piteous stories of her
murdered children, caused an outburst of general sympathy for the last
surviving son. In early childhood he had been the soldiers’ darling. Carried as
a baby to the camp upon the Rhine, he had been dressed in mimic uniform and
called by the familiar name of Caligula, from the tiny boots he wore like the
legionaries around him. The mutinous troops who were deaf to the general’s
appeal were shamed into submission when they saw their little nursling carried
for safety from their camp. For some years little had been known of him. After
Agrippina’s fall he had been brought up in seclusion by his grandmother
Antonia, and thence summoned to Caprese by the old
Emperor while still a youth. He showed at that time a who had marked power of
self-restraint, betrayed no resentments or regrets, and baffled the spies who
were set to report his words. Yet Tiberius, who watched him narrowly, is said
to have discerned the latent passions that were to break out one day in the
license of absolute power; but still he advanced him to the rank of the
pontificate, allowed him to be thought his probable successor, and named him in
his will as co-heir with the young Tiberius, his grandchild. Besides this the praefect Macro was secretly won over to secure the support
of the praetorian troops, and together they waited for and perhaps hastened the
death of the old man. No such support, indeed, seemed needed, for at Rome there
was a popular movement in his favour. The people
rushed into the Senate House with acclamations when he came, they showered
endearing names upon him, the claims of his young cousin were ignored, and at
the age of twenty-four Caligula became the sole monarch of the Roman world. The
young sovereign was welcomed with a general outburst of excitement. Not only
in the city which for long years had not seen its ruler, but even in the provinces,
there were signs everywhere of widespread joy. In three months more than one
hundred and sixty thousand victims fell in thanksgiving upon the altars. The
young sovereign could scarcely be unmoved amid the general gladness. Senate,
soldiers, people, all were lavish in their honours;
the treasury was full of the hoards that had been gathering there for years ;
there was nothing yet to cross his will or cloud his joy. His first acts were
in unison with the glad tone of public feeling, and did much to increase it.
The exiles were brought back from the lonely islands where they pined; the
works of the bold writers, Labienus and the like,
were allowed once more to pass from hand to hand; the ardour of the informers cooled, and a deaf ear was turned to warning letters; the
independence of the magistrates was re-asserted, and the accounts of the
imperial budget fully published. Some show was even made awhile of restoring
the elections to the popular vote, while a round of civic spectacles was
arranged upon a scale of long-disused magnificence.
The bright hopes thus raised were all short-lived. The
extravagant popularity which had greeted him at first, the dizzy sense of
undisputed power, were enough to turn a stronger head. His nervous system had
always been weak. Epileptic from his boyhood, he suffered also from constant
sleeplessness, and even when he slept his rest was broken with wild dreams. His
health gave way soon after his accession ; and the anxiety on all sides was so
intense, the prayers offered for his recovery so excessive, that they seemed to
have finally disturbed the balance of his reason. Henceforth his life is one
strange medley of grandiose aims and incoherent fancies, relieved at times by
lucid intervals of acute and mocking insight, but rendered horrible by a fiend’s cruelty and a satyr’s lust. In a short time Rome
was startled by the news that its young Emperor claimed to be a god already. It
was not enough for him to wait to be canonized like others after death. He
towered already above the kings of the earth; the one thing wanting was to
enjoy divine honours while he lived. To this end
temples must rise at once to do him honour;
priesthoods be established for his service; countless statues of the gods be
brought from Greece and take in exchange the likeness of his head for their
own. The palace was extended to the Forum, and the valley spanned with stately
arches, that the shrine of Castor and Pollux might serve as a sort of vestibule
to his own house, and that he might take his seat as by right between the
heavenly brothers and be the object of admiring worship.
From a god something more is looked for than the works
of man, and so he was always dreaming of great schemes. He threw a bridge
across from Baiae to Puteoli,
upwards of three miles in length, and marched along it in state to furnish a
two days’ wonder to the world. He thought of a building a city upon the highest
Alps; with greater wisdom he wished to cut a channel through the Corinthian isthmus,
and sent even to take the measurements needed for the work.
The heathen poets have often sung of the envy and
jealousy of heaven; and the Emperor for a like cause could brook no rival. His
young cousin Tiberius must die to expiate the crime of being once put upon a
level with him; his father-in-law, Silanus, and his
grandmother, Antonia, paid the forfeit of their lives for having formed too low
an estimate of his majesty. Indeed, any eminence might be dangerous near him.
Bald himself, he could not pass a fine head of hair without the wish and
sometimes too the order that it should be shaved quite bare. He prided himself
upon his eloquence, and two men nearly suffered for the reputation of their
style. The first was Seneca, then much in vogue, who was saved only by a
friend’s suggestion that he was too far gone in a decline to live. The other, Domitius Afer, was a brilliant
orator and notable informer. In vain had he foreseen his danger and tried to
disarm jealousy by flattering words. He set up a statue to the Emperor to note
the fact that he was consul a second time at the age of twenty-seven; but this
was taken ill, as a reflexion on the monarch’s youth
and unconstitutional procedure. Caius, who prided himself on his fine style,
came one day to the Senate with a long speech ready-prepared against him. Afer was too wary to reply, but falling to the ground as if
thunderstruck at eloquence so marvellous, only
culled from memory the choicest passages of what he heard with comments on
their beauties, saying that he feared the orator more than the master of the
legions. The Emperor, delighted at praises from so good a judge, looked on him
henceforth with favour. His spleen was moved not only
by living worth but even by the glory of the dead. He threw down the statues of
the famous men that graced the Campus Martius. He
thought of sweeping from the public libraries the works of Vergil and Livy,
but contented himself with harshly criticising them.
The titles even that called up the memory of illustrious deeds provoked his
umbrage; the old families must put aside the surnames of the Republic, and the
Pompeian race drop the dangerous epithet of ‘Great.’
The gods, it seemed, were above moral laws, for the
old fables told of their amours without disguise or shame. Caius would be like
Jupiter in this: indulge at once each roving fancy and change his wives from
day to day. Invited at one time to a noble Roman’s marriage feast, he stopped
the rite and himself claimed the bride, boasting that he acted like Augustus and
the Romulus of old time. His lewdness spared no rank nor ties of blood, but of
all he loved Caesonia best, who was famous only for
her wantonness. He dressed her like an Amazon and made her ride to the reviews;
and when she bore a child he recognised it for his
own by the ferocity with which the infant seemed to scratch and claw everything
she saw.
The oracles of old, from which men tried to learn the
will of heaven, were couched often in dark mysterious terms, and in this spirit
he delighted to perplex and to alarm. He summoned the oracles, senators from
their beds at the dead of night, frightened them with strange sounds about them
in the palace, then sung to them awhile and let them go. When the people clamoured for a legal tariff of the new tolls and dues, he
had one written out, but in characters so small and so high-posted that no eyes
could read it. His caprices often took a darker colour.
He heard that when he was once sick rash men had vowed in to give their lives
or face the gladiators if he grew better, and with grim humour he obliged them to prove their loyalty, even to the death.
We may see by the description of an eye-witness how
great was the terror caused by these fitful moods of ferocity and folly. At
Alexandria the Emperor’s claims to deity had been regarded as impious by the
Jews, but readily acquiesced in by the Greeks, who caught eagerly at any plea
to persecute their hated rivals, and wreak the grudge of a long-standing feud.
The synagogues were profaned with statues, the Jewish homes were pillaged
without mercy, and complaints of disloyalty forwarded to Rome. The sufferers on
their side sent an embassy to plead their cause, and at its head the learned
Philo, who has left us an account to tell us how they fared. They were not
received in state, in the presence of grave counsellors, but after long delay
the two deputations of the Alexandrians and Jews were allowed to wait upon the
Emperor while he was looking at some country houses near the bay of Naples. The
Jews came bowing to the ground before him, but despaired when they saw the look
of sarcasm on his face, and were accosted with the words, “So you are the
impious wretches who will not have me for a god, but worship one whose name you
dare not mention”, and to their horror he pronounced the awful name. Their
enemies, overjoyed at this rebuff, showed their glee with words and looks of
insult, and their spokesman charged the Jews with wanton indifference to the
Emperor’s health and safety. “Not so, Lord Caius”, they protested loudly, “for
thrice we have sacrificed whole hecatombs in thy behalf”. “Maybe” was the
reply, “but ye sacrificed for me, and not to me”. This second speech completed
their dismay, and left them all aghast with fear. But almost as he spoke, he
scampered off, and went hurrying through the house, prying all about the rooms
upstairs and down, cavilling at what he saw, and
giving orders on his way, while the poor Jews had to follow in his train from
place to place, amid the mockery and ribald jests of those about them. At
length, after some direction given, he turned and said in the same breath to
them, “Why do you not eat pork?” They tried to answer calmly that national
customs often varied: some people, for example, would not touch the flesh of
lambs. “Quite right, too” he said, “for it is poor tasteless stuff”. Then the
insults and the gibes went on again. Presently he asked a question about their
claims to civil status, but cut them short in the long answer which they gave
him, and set off at a run into the central hall, to have some blinds of transparent
stone drawn up against the sun. He came back in a quieter mood, and asked what
they had to say, but without waiting for the answer hurried off again to look
at some paintings in a room close by. “At last” says Philo, “God in his mercy
to us softened his hard heart, and he let us go alive, saying as he sent us off
. After all, they are to be pitied more than blamed, poor fools, who cannot
believe I am a god”.
His devices to refill the treasury, which his
extravagance had emptied, showed no lack of original re source, though his
plans were not quite after the rules of financial science. He put up to auction
all the heirlooms of the past that had been stored in the imperial household,
took an active part even in the sale, pointed out the rare old pieces with all
the relish of a connoisseur, and gave the family pedigree of each. He made his
courtiers push the prices up ; and when one of them was sleepy he took each motion
of the nodding head for a higher bid, and had a few gladiators knocked down to
him at the cost of millions. When the news came of his daughter’s birth he
publicly bemoaned the costly burdens of paternity, and asked his loyal subjects
for their doles to help him rear and portion the princess. He stood even at the
entrance of his house on New Year’s Day to receive with his own hands the presents
showered on him by the crowd as they came to court. Oftentimes he did not stay
to devise such far-fetched Resorted to measures, but simply marked down wealthy
confiscation. men for confiscation, betook himself as far as Gaul in quest of
plunder, and filled his coffers at the expense of the provincials. Even without
such poor excuse he showed meantime a cruelty that seemed like the mere
wantonness of a distempered fancy, as when he invited men to see him open a new
bridge in state, and had the machinery contrived to fling crowds into the
water; or when he laughed as he sat between the consuls and told them that a
single word from him would make their heads roll off their necks; or when, to
give his guests more zest for what they ate, he had the executioner ushered in
to do his work before their eyes.
One fiercer taste he seemed to lack—the love of war.
But, suddenly reminded that recruits were wanted to make up the ranks of his
Batavian body-guard, he took a fancy to a campaign in Germany, perhaps in
memory of his father’s name. Preparations were made on a grand scale, and he
started for the seat of war, hurrying sometimes in such hot haste that his
guards could scarcely keep beside him, and then again, lolling in lordly ease,
called out the people from the country towns to sweep and water all the roads.
As soon as he had reached the camp he made a great parade of the discipline of
earlier days, degraded general officers who were late in coming with their
troops, and dismissed centurions from the service on trifling grounds or none
at all. Little came of all this show. A princely refugee from Britain asked for
shelter. The Rhine was crossed, a parody of a night attack was acted out, and
imposing letters were written to the Senate to describe the submission of the
Britons and the terror of the Germans. Then he hurried with his legions to the
ocean, with all the pomp and circumstance of war, while none could guess the
meaning of the march. At last when they could go no further he bade his
soldiers pick up the shells that lay upon the shore and carry home their
trophies as if to show in strange burlesque the vanity of schemes of conquest.
Before he left the camp, however, the wild fancy seized him to avenge the
insult offered to his majesty in childhood, and he resolved to decimate the
legions that had mutinied long years before. He had them even drawn up in close
order and unarmed before him, but they suspected danger and confronted him so
boldly that he feared to give the word and slunk away to Rome. On his return he
seemed ashamed to celebrate the triumph for which he had made costly preparations,
forbade the Senate to vote him any honours, but
complained of them bitterly when they obeyed.
Still his morbid fancy could not rest, and wild
projects flitted through his brain. He would degrade Rome from her place among
the cities and make Alexandria, or even his birthplace, Antium,
the capital of the world. But first he meditated a crowning exploit to usher in
the change with fitting pomp. It was nothing less than the massacre of all the
citizens of mark. He kept two note-books, which he called his ‘sword’ and
‘dagger’ and in them were the names of all the senators and knights whom he
doomed to death. But the cup was full already, and his time was come, though he
had only had three years of power to abuse. He had often outraged with mocking
and foul words the patience of Cassius Choerea, a
tribune of the guard. At last Choerea could bear no
more, and after sounding other officers of rank, who had been suspected of
conspiracy already, and who knew their lives to be in danger, he resolved to
strike at once. They took the Emperor unawares in a narrow passage at the
theatre, thrust him through and through with hasty blows, and left him pierced
with thirty wounds upon the floor.
CLAUDIUS.—A.D.
41-54.
Few credited at first the tidings of the death of
Caius; many thought the story was only spread by him in some mad freak to test
their feelings, and so they feared to show either joy or grief. When at last
they found that it was true, and that Caesonia and
his child were also murdered, they noted in their gossip that all the Caesars
who bore the name of Caius had died a violent death, and then they waited
quietly to see what the Senate and the soldiers thought of doing. The Senate
met at once in the Capitol, where the consuls summoned to their guard the
cohorts of the watch. There, with the memorials of the past, the tokens of
ancient freedom, round them, they could take counsel with becoming calmness and
dignity. The Emperor was dead, and there seemed no claimant with a title to the
throne. Should they venture to elect a sovereign, regardless of the warnings of
the past, or should they set up a commonwealth once more, and breathe fresh
life into the shadowy forms about them? The discussion lasted all that day, and
the night passed without a final vote. But it was nightfall, all idle talk, for
the praetorians meanwhile had made their choice. The tidings of the Emperor’s
death soon reached the camp, and drew the soldiers to the city. Too late to
defend or even to avenge their sovereign, they dispersed in quest of booty, and
roamed through the palace at their will. One of the plunderers passing by the
alcove of a room espied the feet of someone hidden behind the half-closed
curtains. Curious to see who it might be, he dragged him out, and recognised the face of Gaudius the late Emperor’s uncle. He showed him to his comrades who were near, and,
possibly in jest, they saluted him as their new prince, raised him at once upon
their shoulders, and carried him in triumph to the camp. The citizens who saw
him carried by marked his piteous look of terror, and thought the poor wretch
was carried to his doom. The Senate heard that he was in the camp, but only
sent to bid him take his place among them, and heard seemingly without concern
that he was there detained by force. But the next day found them in different
mood. The populace had been clamouring to have a
monarch, the praetorians had sworn obedience to their new-found emperor, the
city guards had slipped away, and the Senate, divided and disheartened,
had no course left them but submission.
Tiberius Claudius Nero Germanicus,
the son of Drusus, grandson of Livia Augusta, suffered in early years from
lingering diseases which left him weak both in body and in mind. The Romans commonly
had little tenderness for sickly children. Antonia and his mother even spoke of
him as a monster, as a thing which nature had roughhewn but never finished;
while his grandmother would not deign to speak to him except by messenger or
letter. Though brought up in the palace he was little cared for, was left to
the tender mercies of a muleteer, of whose rough usage he spoke bitterly in
afterlife, and even when he came to manhood was not allowed to show himself in
public life or hope for any of the offices of state. We may still read the
letters written by Augustus to his wife, in which he speaks of him as too
imbecile for any public functions, too awkward and ungainly to take a prominent
place even in the circus at the show. The only honour which he gave him was a place in the priesthood of the augurs, and at his death
he left him a very paltry legacy. Nor did Tiberius think more highly of him.
He gave him only the poor grace of consular ornaments; and when he asked to
have the consulship itself his uncle took no further notice than to send him a
few gold pieces to buy good cheer with in the
holidays. His nephew Caius made him consul, but encouraged the rough jests with
which his courtiers bantered him. If he came late among the guests at dinner
they shifted their seats and shouldered him away till he was tired of looking
for an empty place; if he fell asleep, as was his wont, they plastered up his
mouth with olives, or put shoes upon his hands, that he might rub his eyes with
them when he woke. He was sent by the Senate into Germany to congratulate the
Emperor on his supposed successes; but Caius took it ill, and thought the
choice of him was such a slight that he had the deputation flung into the
river. Ever after he was the very last to be asked in the Senate for his vote,
and when he was allowed to be one of the new priests the office was saddled
with such heavy fees that his household goods had to be put up to auction to
defray them. After such treatment from his kinsmen it was no wonder that he sunk
into coarse and vulgar ways, indulged his natural liking for low company, ate
largely and drank hardly, and turned to dice for his amusement. Yet he had also
tastes of a much higher order, kept Greeks of literary culture round him,
studied hard and with real interest, and at the advice of the historian Livy
took to writing history himself. His first choice of subject was ambitious, for
he tried to deal with the troubled times that followed Julius Caesar’s death;
but he was soon warned to leave so dangerous a theme. He wrote also largely on
the history of Etruria and Carthage, and later authors often used the materials
collected by or for him. Of the latter of the two works we read that a courtly
club was formed at Alexandria to read it regularly through aloud from year to
year.
Such was the man who in his fiftieth year was raised
to the Empire by a soldier’s freak, to rule in name but to be in fact the
puppet of his wives and free men. These were the real governors of the world,
and their intrigues and rivalries and lust and greed have left their hateful
stamp upon his reign.
The freedmen had for a long time played an important
part in the domestic life of Rome; for the household slaves that were so
numerous at this time in every family of ample means could look commonly for
freedom after some years of faithful service, though their old master still had
legal claims upon them, and custom and old associations bound them to their
patron and his children. They haunted the houses of the wealthy, filled all the
offices of trust, and ministered to their business and pleasures. Among them
there were many men of refinement and high culture, natives of Greece and Asia,
at least as well educated as their masters, and useful to them in a hundred
ways as stewards, secretaries, physicians, poets, confidants and friends. The
Emperor’s household was organised like that of any
noble. Here, too, there were slaves for menial work, and freedmen for the posts
of trust. The imperial position was too new and ill-defined, the temper of the
people too republican as yet for men of high social rank and dignity to be in
personal attendance in the palace; offices like those of high steward,
chamberlain, great seal, and treasurer to the monarch had the stigma of slavery
still branded on them, and were not such as noblemen could covet. But these
were already posts of high importance, and much of the business of state was
already in the freedmen’s hands. For by the side of the Senate and the old curule officers of the Republic, the Empire had set up,
both in the city and the provinces, a new system of administrative machinery,
of which the Emperor was the centre and mainspring. To
issue instructions, check accounts, receive reports, and keep the needful
registers became a daily increasing labour, and many skilful servants soon were needed to be in constant attendance
in the palace. The funeral inscriptions of the time show that the official
titles in the imperial household were becoming rapidly more numerous as the
functions were more and more subdivided. When the ruler was strong and
self-contained, his servants took their proper places as valets-de-chambre, ushers, and clerks,
while a privileged few were confidential agents and advisers. When he was
inexperienced or weak, they took the reins out of his hands, and shamefully
abused their power. Much too low in rank to have a political career before
them, they were not weighted with the responsibilities of power, and could not
act like the cabinet ministers of modern Europe. The theory of the constitution
quite ignored them, and they were only creatures of the Emperor, who was not
the fountain of honour, like later kings, and could not
make them noble if he would.
As high ambitions were denied them, and they could not
openly assert their talents, they fell back commonly on lower aims and meaner
arts. They lied and intrigued and flattered to push their way ambition and to
higher place; they used their power to gratify a greedy avarice or sensual
lust. Wealth was their first and chief desire, and, their master’s confidence
once gained, riches flowed in upon them from all sides. To get easy access to
the sovereign’s ear was a privilege which all were glad to buy. The suitors who
came to ask a favour, a post of profit or of honour; the litigants who feared for the goodness of their
cause and wished to have a friend at court; vassal princes eager to stand well
in the Emperor’s graces; town councillors longing for
some special boon or d for relief from costly burdens ; provincials of every
class and country ready to buy at any cost the substantial gift of Roman
franchise. Hundreds such as these all sought the favourite in the antechamber, and schemed and trafficked for his help. There was no time
to be lost, indeed, for a monarch’s favour is an
unstable thing, and shrewd adventurers like themselves were ever plotting to
displace them. At any moment they might be disgraced, so they grasped every
chance that brought them gain and speedily amassed colossal fortunes. Men told
a story at the time with glee that when Claudius complained of scanty means a
bystander remarked that he would soon be rich enough if two of his favourite freedmen would admit him into partnership.
Now for the first time the personal attendants take a
prominent place in public thought, and history is forced to note their names
and chronicle their doings, and the story of their influence passes from the
scandalous gossip of the palace to the pages of the gravest writers. In the
days of his obscurity they had shared the meaner fortunes of their master,
enlivened his dulness by their wit, and catered for
his literary tastes. They had provided theories of style and learning and
research, though they could not give him sense to use them, and now they were
doubtless eager to help their patron to make history, not to write it Greedily
they followed him to the palace, and swooped upon the Empire as their prey.
Two of his old companions towered above all the rest,
Pallas and Narcissus. The former had been with Claudius from childhood, and
filled the place of keeper of the privy purse, or steward of the imperial
accounts. In such a post, with such a master it, was easy for him to enrich
himself, and he did not neglect his opportunities. But his pride was even more
notable than his wealth. He would not deign to speak even to his slaves, but
gave them his commands by gestures, or if that was not enough by written
orders. His arrogance did not even spare the nobles and the Senate, but they
well deserved such treatment by their servile meanness. The younger Pliny tells
us some years afterwards how it moved his spleen to find in the official
documents that the Senate had passed a vote of thanks to Pallas and a large
money grant, and that he had declined the gift and said he would be content
with modest poverty, if only he could be still of dutiful service to his lord.
A modest poverty of many millions!
Narcissus was the Emperor’s secretary, and as such
familiar alike with state secrets and with his master’s personal concerns. He
was always at his side, to jog his memory and guide his judgment; in the
Senate, at the law courts, in cabinet council, at the festive board, nothing
could be done without his knowledge; in most events of moment his influence may
be traced. Men chafed, no doubt, at the presumption of the upstart, and told
with malicious glee of the retort made by the freedman of the conspirator
Camillus, who, when examined in the council-chamber by Narcissus and asked
what he would have done himself if his master had risen to the throne,
answered, “I should have known my place, and held my tongue behind his chair”.
They heard with pleasure too that when he went on a mission to the mutinous soldiery in Britain, and tried to harangue them from their
general’s tribune, they would not even listen to him but drowned his voice with
the songs of the Saturnalia, the festive time at Rome, when the slaves kept
holiday and took their masters’ places. But at Rome none dared to be so bold,
though his influence at court stirred the jealousy of many, who whispered to
each other that it was no wonder he grew rich so fast when he made so much by
peculation out of the great works which he prompted Claudius to undertake, and
one of which at least, the outlet for the Lucrine Lake, caused almost a public scandal by its failure.
After them came Polybius, whose literary skill had
often served his patron in good stead and gave him constant access to his ear.
No sinister motives can be traced to him ; at worst we hear that he was vain,
and thought himself on a level with the best, and liked to take the air with a
consul at each side. He had cool impudence enough, we read; for in the theatre,
when the people pointed at him as they heard a line about a ‘beggar on
horseback’ who was hard to brook, he quoted at once another line from the same
poet of the ‘ kings that had risen from a low estate.’
Callistus lent to the new comers in the palace his long
experience of the habits of a court He had served under the last ruler, could
suit his ways to please a new master so unlike the old, and soon took a high
place among the ruling clique by his tact and knowledge of the world of Rome.
Felix, too, whom we read of in the story of St. Paul, gained, possibly through
his brother Pallas the post of governor of Judea, but must have had rare qualities
to marry, as Suetonius tells us, three queens in succession. Posides was the soldier of the party. His military powers,
shown in the sixteen days campaign of Claudius in Britain, raised him above
other generals in his master’s eyes, like his stately buildings which Juvenal
mentions as out-topping the Capitol. There is no need to carry on the list.
These are only the most favoured of the party, the
best endowed with natural gifts, the most trusted confidants of Caesar.
The first care of the new government was to reassure
the public mind. Choerea and his accomplices must
die, indeed; for the murder of an Emperor was a fatal thing to overlook, and
they were said to have threatened the life of Claudius himself. For all besides
there was a general amnesty. Marked deference was shown by the new ruler to the
Senate, and the bold words latterly spoken by its members were unnoticed. Few honours were accepted in his own name, while the statues of
Caius were withdrawn from public places, his acts expunged from all official
registers, and his claims to divine honours ignored,
as those of Tiberius had been before. The people were kept in good humour by the public shows and merrymakings, as the
soldiers had been by the promise of fifteen hundred sesterces a man; and so
the new reign began amid signs of general contentment.
The next care of the little clique was to keep their
master in good humour, to flatter his vanities and
gratify his tastes, while they played upon his weakness and governed in his
name. This they did for years with rare success, thanks to their intimate
knowledge of his character and to the harmony that prevailed among themselves.
He had all the coarse Roman’s love for public games, was never weary of seeing
gladiators fight; so they helped him to indulge his tastes and make
spectacles merry with the populace of Rome. As the common round of spectacles
was not enough, new shows must be lavishly provided. From the early morning
till the entertainment closed he was always in his seat, eager to see the cages
of the wild beasts opened and to lose nothing of the bloody sport. The
spectators could always see him, with his wagging head and the broad grin upon
his slobbering mouth, could hear him often crack his poor jokes on what went
on, sometimes noted with amusement how he hurried with his staggering legs
across the arena to coax or force the reluctant gladiators to resume their
deadly work. They noted also that he had the statue of Augustus first veiled
and then removed from the scene of bloodshed, as if the cruel sport that amused
the living must offend the saintly dead.
He was fond also of good cheer, so fond of it that he
sometimes lost sight of his dignity. One day as he sat upon the judgment seat
he smelt the savour of a burnt offering in a temple
close at hand, and breaking up the court in haste, he hurried to take his seat
at dinner with the priests. At another time, in the Senate, when the discussion
turned on licensing the public-houses, he gravely spoke about the merits of the
different wine-shops where he had been treated in old days. So feasting was the
order of the day; great banquets followed one upon the other, and hundreds of
guests were bidden to his table, at which few ate or drank so freely or so
coarsely as himself.
But he had more royal tastes than these, for he
aspired to be a sort of Solomon upon the seat of justice. As magistrate or as
assessor by the curule chair or in the Senate, when
grave cases were debated, he would sit for hours listening to the pleaders or
examining the witnesses, sometimes showing equity and insight, sometimes so
frivolous and childish in his comments, that litigants and lawyers lost their
patience altogether.
As the father of the people, it seemed one of his
first cares to find his children bread, and no little time and thought were
spent by him or by his agents in seeing that the granaries were filled and the
provisioning markets well supplied. Yet the poor were not always grateful, for
once when prices rose they crowded in upon him in the Forum and pelted him with
hard words and crusts of bread, till he was glad to slink out by a back door to
his palace. For this was certainly the familiarity that breeds contempt; his
presence, speech, and character were too ungainly and undignified to impose
respect; and even in his proclamations his advisers let him air his folly to the
world. Sometimes he spoke in them about his personal foibles; confessed that he
had a hasty temper, but that it soon passed away; and said that in years gone
by he had acted like a simpleton to disarm the jealousy of Caius. Then again he
put out public edicts as full of household cures and recipes as the talk of any
village gossip.
He had little taste for military exploits ; yet once
it was thought prudent to excite his martial ardour,
that he might have the pleasure of a real triumph, like the commanders of old
days. At the crisis of a campaign in Britain, when the preparations had been
made for victory, the general sent to summon Claudius to the seat of war. All
had been done to make the journey pleasant, the carriage even had been
specially arranged to make it easy for him to while away the time by the games
of dice which he loved so well; and though the waves and winds were not so
complaisant or so regardful of his comforts, he reached at last the distant
island, in time to receive the submission of the native princes and to be
hailed as Emperor on the battlefield.
Meanwhile the freedmen reaped their golden harvest;
having early agreed upon a common course of action, they divided the spoil
without dispute. They trafficked in the offices of state, bestowed commissions
in the army, sold the verdicts of the law courts, and put up the Emperor’s favour to the highest bidder. One privilege, which millions
craved, the citizenship of Rome, was above all a source of income to the favoured freedmen, who could get their master’s signature
to any deed. He has, indeed, in history the credit of a liberal policy of
incorporation, and speeches are put into his mouth in which he argues from the
best precedents of earlier days in favour of opening
the doors to alien races. It may be that his study of the past had taught him
something; but it is likely that the interest of his ministers did more to
further a course which in their hands was so lucrative a form of jobbery. It
was a common jest to say that the market was so overstocked at last that the franchise
went for a mere song.
But these, after all, were petty gains, and they
needed a more royal road to wealth. They found it in a new kind of
proscription. They marked out for and confiscation those who had houses or gardens
which they coveted, made out rich men to be malcontents, and the city to be
full of traitors. It was easy to work upon the Emperor’s fears, for he had
always been an abject craven, and was always fancying hidden daggers. A telling
story, a mysterious warning, or a dream invented for the purpose, almost
anything could throw him off his balance and make him give the fatal order. Nor
did they always wait for that One day a centurion came to give in his report.
He had, in pursuance of his orders, killed a man of consular rank. Claudius had
never known of it before, but approved the act when he heard the soldiers
praised for being so ready to avenge their lord. When the list was made out in
later times, it was believed that thirty-five members of the Senate and some
three hundred knights fell as victims to the caprice or greed of the clique
that governed in the name of Claudius, many of them without any forms of
justice, or at best with the hurried mockery of a trial in the palace. So fatal
to a people may be the weakness of its rulers. It was noticed as a scandalous
proof of his recklessness in bloodshed that he soon forgot even what had
passed, and bade the very men to supper whose death-warrant he had signed, and
wondered why they were so late in coming.
The guilt of these atrocities must be shared also by
his wives. Of these Claudius married several in succession, but two especially
stand out in history for the horror of all times.
Messalina’s name has passed into a byword for unbounded
wantonness without disguise or shame. Her fatal influence ruined or degraded
all she touched. The pictures painted of her in old writers give no redeeming
features in her character, no single unselfish aim or mental grace, nothing but
sensual appetites in a form of clay. Her beauty gained her an easy command over
her husband’s heart, but not content with that her wanton fancy ranged through
every social order and shrank from no impure advances. Some whom she tempted
had repelled her in their virtue or disgust, but her slighted love soon turned
to hatred, and on one false plea or other she took the forfeit of their lives.
For she had no scruples or compunction, no shrinking from the sight of blood;
and pity, if she ever felt it, was with her only a mere passing thrill, a counter-irritant
to other feelings of the flesh. The Roman Jezebel coveted, we read, splendid
gardens of Lucullus, and to get them had a lying charge of treason brought
against Valerius Asiaticus,
their owner. His defence was so pathetic as to move
all those who heard him in the Emperor's chamber, and to make even Messalina
weep. But as she hurried out to dry her tears she whispered to her agent, who
stood beside, that for all this the accused must not escape.
For a long time she was wise enough to court or humour the confederates of the palace, and so far her
course of crime was easy. At last she threw off such restraints of prudence,
and turned upon Polybius, who had taken her favours in too serious a mood, and rid herself for ever of
his ill-timed jealousy. The other freedmen took his fate as a warning of
defiance to them all, looked for a struggle of life and death, and watched
their opportunity to strike. The chance soon came, for Messalina cast her
lustful eyes on a young noble, and did not scruple to parade her insolent
contempt for Claudius by forcing Silius to a public
marriage. It was the talk of the whole town, but the Emperor was the last to
know it. Then Narcissus saw the time was come, and, though the rest wavered, he
was firm. In concert with his confidants he opened the husband’s eyes, and
worked skilfully upon his fears with dark warnings
about plots and revolution; prevented any intercourse between them, lest her
wiles and beauty might prove fatal to his scheme, and at last boldly
ordered and her death, while Claudius gave no sign and asked no question. She
died in the gardens of Lucullus, purchased so lately by the murder of their
owner.
The Emperor soon after made a speech to his guards
upon the subject, bemoaned his sorry luck in marriage, and told them they might
use their swords upon him if he ever took another wife. But his freedmen knew
him better, and were already in debate the upon the choice of a new wife. Callistus, Pallas, and Narcissus each had his separate
scheme in view, and the rival claims broke up the old harmony between them. The
choice of Pallas fell on Agrippina, the daughter of Germanicus and niece of Claudius. Married at the age of twelve to Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus, a man of singular ferocity of temper,
she had brought him a son who was to be one day famous. She had been foully
treated by Caligula, her brother, and banished to an island till his death.
Recalled by Claudius, she learnt prudence from the fate of the two Juliae, sister and cousin, who fell victims to the jealousy
of Messalina. She shunned all dangerous rivalry at court, and was content to
exchange her widowhood for the quiet country life of a new husband, one of the
richest men in Rome, who, dying shortly after, left Domitius his heir, and gave her back her freedom when the time was come for her to use
it. Her first care was to gain a powerful ally at court. She found one soon in
Pallas, who was as proud and ambitious as herself, and she stooped to be the
mistress of a minion while aspiring to be an Emperor’s wife. When Pallas
pleaded for her in the council-chamber, where the merits of the different
claimants were long and anxiously discussed, she did not spare to use her
feminine wiles upon the weak old man. By right of kinship she had a ready
access to the palace, and could lavish her caresses and her blandishments upon
him. The fort besieged so hotly fell at once, and she was soon his wife in all
but name. For awhile he seemed to waver at the
thought of shocking public sentiment by a marriage with his niece; but those
scruples were soon swept aside by the courtly entreaties of the Senate and the clamour of a hired mob.
Agrippina showed at once that she meant to be regent
as well as wife. She grasped with a firm hand the reins of power, still relied
upon the veteran statecraft and experience of Pallas, and maintaining with him
the old intrigue, broke up the league of the confederates. The feminine rivals
whose influence she feared were swept aside by banishment or death. Lollia above all had crossed her path, and seemed likely to
carry off the prize. She did not rest till the order was given for her death
and a centurion despatched to bring her head. Then—so
runs the horrid story—to make sure that the ghastly face was really that of the
beautiful woman she had feared and hated, she pushed up the pallid lips to feel
the teeth, whose form she knew. Then she felt that she was safe, and received
the title of Augusta from the Senate. She had the doings of her court reported
in the official journals of the day, and gave the law to all the social world
of Rome. Two children of Claudius, by Messalina, Britannicus and Octavia, stood in the path of her ambition. Of these the latter was at once
betrothed to her young son, who was pushed forward rapidly in the career of honours, ennobled even with proconsular authority, and
styled ‘Prince of the Youth’ even in his seventeenth year. Meantime the
star of the young Britannicus was paling, and men
noted with suspicion that all the trusted guards and servants of the boy were
one by one removed and their places filled with strangers. Of the freedmen of
the palace Narcissus not bowed before her; with gloomy look and only had
ill-concealed suspense he still watched over his patron and his children. His
strength of character and long experience gave him a hold over his master that
was still unshaken, and Agrippina did not dare to attack him face to face. But
his enmity was not to be despised. He had sealed the doom of one wife—he might
yet destroy another. There was something to alarm her also in the mood of
Claudius, weak dotard as he was, for strange words fell from him in his drunken
fits, coupled with maudlin tenderness for his own children and suspicious
looks at Nero. There seemed no time, therefore, to be lost, and she decided to
act promptly. She seized the opportunity when Narcissus was sent away awhile to
take the waters for the gout; and while his watchful eye was off her, she
called to her aid the skill of the poisoner Locusta,
and gave Claudius the fatal dose in the savoury dish
he loved.
Scarcely was he dead when Seneca wrote for the
amusement of the Roman circles a withering satire on the solemn act by which he
was raised to the rank of the immortals. In a medley of homely prose and lofty
verse he pictures the scene above at the moment of the Emperor’s death. Mercury
had taken pity on his lingering agony, and begged Clotho, one of the three
Kates, to cut short his span of life. She tells him that she was only waiting
till he had made an end of giving the full franchise to the world. Already by
his grace Greeks and Gauls, Spaniards and Britons
wore the toga, and only a few remnants were still left uncared for. But at
length she lets loose the struggling soul. Then the scene shifts to heaven.
Jupiter is told that a stranger had just come hobbling in, a bald old man, who
wagged his head so much and spoke so thick that no one could make out his
meaning, for it did not sound like Greek or Roman or any sort of civilized
speech. Hercules, as being used to monsters, is deputed to ask him whence he comes,
and he does this as a Greek in words of Homer. Claudius, glad to find scholars
up in heaven who may perhaps think well of his own works of history, caps the
quotation with another about a journey made from Troy, and might have imposed
on the simple-minded god, if the goddess Fever had not come up at the moment
from the Roman shrine where she was worshipped, and said that he was only born
at Lugdunum, in the country of the old Gauls, who, like himself, had taken the capital by storm.
Claudius, in his anger, made the usual gesture by which he ordered men’s heads
off their shoulders, but no one minded him any more than if they had been his
own proud freedmen; so, remembering that he could not strut and crow any more
on his own dunghill, he begs Hercules to befriend him and to plead his cause in the council-chamber of the gods. This he does with
some effect, and when the debate opens most of the speakers seem inclined tro let Claudius come in. But at length Augustus rises, and
with energy denounces his successor, who had shed so much noble blood like
water, and murdered so many of the family of the Caesars without a trial
or a hearing. His speech and vote decide the question, and Claudius is
dragged away to Hades with a noose about his throat like the victims of his
cruelty. As he passes on his way through funeral dirge is being sung, and he
hears the snatches of it which mentioned in his praise that no one ever was so
speedy on the seat of judgment, or could decide so easily after hearing one
side only, or sometimes neither; and that pleaders and gamblers would keenly
feel the loss of a monarch who had loved so much the law court and the
dice-box. The spirits in Hades raise a shout of triumph when they hear that he
is near, and all whom he had sent before him throng about him as h enters.
There they stand, the intimates, the kinsmen he had doomed to death, the
senators, the knights, and less honoured names as
countless as the sand on the seashore, and silently confront the fallen
tyrant. But Claudius, seeing all the well-known faces, forgetting, as he often
did in life, or even ignorant of the causes of their death, said, “Why, here
are all friends! How ever came you hither?” Then they
curse him to his face and drag him to the chair of Aeacus,
the judge, who condemns him unheard, to the surprise of all, save the criminal
himself. After some thought a fitting penalty was found. Claudius was doomed to
play for all eternity with a dice-box that had no bottom.
NERO.—A.D. 54-68
We read that when Domitius was told that he had a son, he said that any child of his by Agrippina must
prove an odious and baneful creature. The mother asked her brother Caius, the
Emperor, to give the child a name, but he pointed to Claudius, his
laughingstock, and said that the little one should bear his name, though the
mother angrily protested at the omen. Soon afterwards he lost his parents’ care
by death and banishment, and was brought up at the house of his aunt, Lepida, entrusted to the charge of a dancing-master and a
barber, till brighter times came back with the return of his mother from her
place of exile. He rose with Agrippina’s rise to power, and became the central
object of her ambitious hopes; for, the sister of one emperor and wife of
another, she was determined to be the mother of a third. At the age of ten she
had him made the adopted son of Claudius, when he took the name of Nero. The
choice of Seneca to be his tutor met with the approval of men of worth and
culture; the appointment of Burrhus to be the sole
prefect of the praetorian guard secured the support of the armed force of
Rome. His betrothal to Octavia strengthened his claims still further, and
stirred the jealousy of the young Britannicus and the
grave fears of the old servants like Narcissus. The issue showed how
well-founded were those fears. As soon as the death of Claudius was made known,
Nero, hurrying to the camp of his advisers, spoke the soldiers fairly, and
making ample promises of largess, was saluted Emperor by acclamation. The
claims of Britannicus were set aside, and no voice
was raised even in the Senate in his favour.
At first the strong will of Agrippina seemed to give
the tone to the new government. Votes were passed in her honour by the Senate; the watchword given to the soldiers was, ‘The best of mothers’.
To satisfy her resentment or to calm her fears Narcissus had to die. That she
might take her part in all concerns of state the Senate was called to the
palace to debate, where behind a curtain she could hear and not be seen. But
the two chief advisers of the prince, though they owed their places to her favour, had no mind to be the tools of a bold bad woman,
behind whom they could still see the form of the haughty minion Pallas.
The prefect of the pretorians, Afranius Burrhus, who
wielded the armed force of the new government, was a man of grave and almost
austere character, whose name had long stood high at Rome for soldierly
discipline and honour. His merits had given him a
claim to his high rank, and he would not stoop to courtierlike compliance. He used his weighty influence for good, though he had at times to
stand by and witness evil which he was powerless to check.
L. Annaeus Seneca
represented the moral force of the privy council, though he had the more
yielding and compliant temper of the two. Sprung from a rich family of Corduba, in Spain, his wealth and good connexions and brilliant powers of rhetoric had made him popular in early life with the
highest circles of the capital, till he gained to his cost the favour of the Emperor’s sister. Banished by the influence
of Messalina, he had turned to philosophy for comfort, and won high repute
among the serious world of Rome by the earnestness and fervour of his letters. Few stood higher among the moral writers of the day, no one
seemed fitter by experience and natural tastes to be director of the conscience
of the young nobility.
With rare harmony, though different methods, the two
advisers used their influence to sway the young Emperor’s mind and to check the
overweening pride of Agrippina. They took the reins of power from her hand and
reassured the public mind, which had been unnerved by the despotic venal
government of late years, with its tyrant menials and closet trials. They
restored to the Senate some portion of its old authority and chose the public
servants wisely. For five years the world was ruled with dignity and order, for
the young Emperor reigned in name, but did not govern, and the acts that passed
for his were grave and prudent, while the very words even were put into his
mouth for state occasions. When the Senate sent a vote of thanks he bade them
keep their gratitude till he deserved it; and when he had to sign a
death-warrant, he said that he wished he was not scholar enough to write his
name. The pretty phrases were repeated; men did not stay to ask if they were
Seneca’s or Nero’s, but hoped that they might prove the keynote of the new
reign. But the two ministers meantime had cause for grave misgivings, for they
had long studied their young charge with watchful eyes, and had seen with
regret how little they could do to mould his
character as they could wish. Burrhus had failed to
teach him in the camp any of the virtues of a soldier ; all the lessons of
temperance, hardihood, and patience left no traces in his mind. Seneca had been
warned, we read, by Agrippina that the quibbles of philosophy would be too mean
for his young pupil. He had little taste himself for the orators of the
Republic, and did not care to point to them for lessons of manly dignity and
freedom. But he did his best to teach him wisdom, spoke to him earnestly of
duty, wrote for him moral treatises , full of thought and epigram, on themes
like clemency and anger, but could not drop the language of the court, and
hinted in his very warnings that the prince was raised above the law—was almost
a god to make and to destroy.
Nero even from his youth had turned of choice to other
teachers. He had little taste for the old Roman drill in arms and law and
oratory, and was, it was noted, the first of the emperors who had his speeches
written for him, from lack of readiness in public business. But he had a real
passion for the arts of Greece, for music, poetry, and acting; had the first
masters of the age to train him, studied with them far into the night, and soon
began to pride himself upon the inspiration of the Muses. To gain time for such
pursuits he was well content to leave the business of state
to graver heads, and to take his part only in the pageant. He
had other pleasures of a meaner stamp. Soon it was the talk of
Rome that the young Emperor stole out in disguise at
night, went to low haunts or roved about the streets with noisy roysterers like himself, broke into taverns and assaulted
quiet citizens, and showed even in his mirth the signs of latent wantonness and
cruelty.
His boon companions were not slow to foster the pride
and insolence of rank, to bid him use the power he had, and free himself
without delay from petticoat rule and the leading-strings of greybeards. Their
counsels fell on willing ears. He had long been weary of his mother. She had
ruled him as a boy by fear rather than by love, and now she could not stoop
willingly to a lower place. She wanted to be regent still, and hoped perhaps to
see her son content to sing and act and court the Muses, while she governed in
his name. But he had listened gladly to ministers who schooled him to curb her
ambition and assert himself. He looked on calmly while they checked her control
over the Senate, put aside her chief adviser, Pallas, annulled the despotic
acts of the last reign, and took the affairs of state out of her hands. She was
not the woman to submit without a struggle. There were stormy scenes sometimes
between them, and then again she tried with a woman’s blandishments to recover
the ground that she had lost. She talked of the wrongs of the young Britannicus, and spoke of stirring the legions in his favour. As Nero’s love for Octavia cooled she took to her
home the injured wife and made public parade of sympathy and pity. When it was
too late, she changed her course of action, condoned and offered even to
disguise the amorous license on which she had frowned before so sternly, and
tried in vain to win his love with a studied tenderness that would refuse him
nothing.
Nero’s chief ministers had put him on his guard
against her and roused his jealousy and fear. They had now to stand by and see
the struggle take its course, and watch the outcome with a growing horror. Britannicus, of whose name such imprudent use was made, was
stricken at dinner with a sudden fit and taken out to die, as all men thought,
by poison. His poor sister hid her grief in silence, but she was soon to be
divorced. Agrippina was first stripped of all her guard of honour and forced to leave her house upon the Palatine; false informers were let loose
upon her and wanton insolence encouraged. It was murmured that the dread Locusta was at work brewing her poisonous drugs, and that
three times they tried in vain to poison her. One day it was found that the
canopy above her bed was so arranged that the ropes must soon give way, and the
whole crush her as she lay in sleep. At length Nero could wait no longer, and
he found a willing tool in Anicetus, the admiral of
his fleet, and between them a dark plot was hatched. It was holiday-time, and
Nero was taking the baths at Bairn. Suddenly he wrote
a letter to his mother full of sorrow at the past estrangement and of hopes
that they might live on better terms if she would only come and see him as of
old. She came at once, and found a hearty welcome ; was pressed to stay on one
plea or another till at last night was come. Nero conducted her to a barge of
state and left her with tender words and fond embraces. She was not far upon
her homeward way across the bay when, at a signal given, the deck fell crashing
in and the barge rolled over on its side; and the crew, far from coming to the
rescue, struck with their oars at Agrippina and her women as they struggled in
the water. But she was quiet and kept afloat a while, till a boat picked her up
and carried her to her home, to brood over the infamous design. At last
she sent a messenger to tell her son that she was safe though wounded. Nero,
baffled in his murderous hopes and haunted by fears of vengeance, was for a
while irresolute. He even called into counsel Seneca and Burrhus,
and told them of his plot and of its failure. They would have no hand in her
death, though they had no hope, perhaps no wish to save her. While they talk Anicetus acts. He hastens with an officer or two to
Agrippina’s house, makes his way through the startled crowd about the shore,
and finds her in her bedroom all alone. There, while she eyes them fiercely and
bids them strike the womb that bore the monster, they shower their blows upon
her and leave her lifeless body gashed with wounds (AD 59).
The ministers of Nero must share the infamy of this
unnatural deed. They had already tarnished their good name by mean compliance.
To save the power that was slipping from their grasp they had closed their eyes
to Nero’s vices: they had tried even to cloak his youthful passion for a
freedwoman by a paltry subterfuge; they had held their peace when Britannicus was poisoned, and stooped even to share the
bounties that were showered at the time upon the courtiers; and now they sunk
so low in good men’s eyes as to defend the deed from the thought of which even
Nero at first shrunk aghast. Burrhus, we read, sent
officers of the praetorian guard to announce the soldiers’ joy that their
sovereign was safe for ever from his mother’s plots. Seneca’s hand drew up the
dispatches to the Senate in which the murdered woman was charged with
treasonable designs against the Emperor’s life, and all the worst horrors of
the days of Claudius were raked up to cover her memory with shame. The Senate,
too, was worthy of its prince, and voted solemn thanksgivings for his safety,
while Thrasea alone protested by his silence, and
walked out of the house at last when he could brook their flattery no longer.
Even distant cities found an excuse for mean servility. One deputation came to
beg Nero in the name of the provincials to bear his heavy grief with patience.
The Emperor came back to Rome to find the city decked
out in festive guise to greet him like a conquering hero. So, rid at length of
all fear of rivalry or moral restraints from his advisers, he gave free vent to
his desires. Music and song, the circus and the theatre had been the passion of
his childhood; they were now to be the chief object of his life. He shared the
tastes of the populace of Rome, and catered for them with imperial grandeur. No
cost or care was spared to make the spectacles imposing and worthy of the
master of the world. The old national prejudice had looked on the actor’s trade
as almost infamous for freeborn Romans; but on the stage, Nero drove upon the
stage citizens of rank, knights and senators of ancient lineage, and made them
play and act and dance before the people. The historian Dion Cassius rises
from his sober prose almost to eloquence when he describes the descendants of
the conquered races pointing the finger at the sons of the great families from
which their victors sprung; the Greeks asking with surprise and scorn if that
was indeed Mummius, the Spaniards marvelling to see a Scipio, the Macedonians an Aemilius before them.
At last, as if it were to cover their disgrace—or, as many thought, to share
it—Nero appeared himself in public, and sang and played and acted for the
prize, and sought the plaudits of the crowd. He did not take it up as the mere
pastime of an idle day, but practised and studied in
real earnest, showed feverish jealousy of rival actors, and humbly bowed before
the judges, as if the contest were a real one. No one might leave the theatre
while he played; Vespasian was seen to nod, and sunk at once in his good
graces. Five thousand sturdy youths were trained to sit in companies among the
audience and give the signal for applause. Not content with such display at
Rome, he starred it even in the provinces. The Greeks were the great
connoisseurs of all the fine arts ; in their towns were glorious prizes to be
won, and Greece alone was worthy of his voice and talents. Greece was worthy
also of her ruler; nowhere was adulation more refined, nowhere did men flatter
with more subtle tact the pride and vanity of the artist-prince.
We cannot doubt that Nero had a genuine love of art.
It may seem as if he lived to justify the modern fancy that art has a sphere
and canons of its own, and may be quite divorced from moral laws. But indeed
the art of Nero and his times was bad, and that because it was not moral. It
set at naught the eternal laws of truth and simplicity, of temperance and
order. In poetry and music it was full of conceits and affectations, straining
after the fantastic. In plastic art size was thought of more than beauty of
proportion, and men aimed at the vast and grandiose in enormous theatres and
colossal statues. In place of the delicate refinement of Greek taste its drama
sought for coarse material effects; it did not try by flight of fancy to stir
the nobler feelings of the heart, but relied on sensuous pageantry and carnal
horrors to goad and sate the morbid taste for what was coarse, ferocious, and
obscene.
Nero’s life as Emperor was one long series of stage
effects, of which the leading feature was a feverish extravagance. His return
from the art-tour in Greece outdid all the triumphal processions of the past.
Thousands of carriages were needed for his baggage; his sumpter mules were shod with silver; and all the towns he passed upon his way received
him through a breach made in their walls, for such he heard was the ‘sign of honour’ with which their citizens were wont to welcome the
Olympian victors of old days. The public works which he designed were more to
feed his pride than serve the public. He wanted, like another Xerxes, to cut a
canal through the Corinthian isthmus; thought of making vast lakes to be
supplied from the hot springs of Baiae, and schemed
great works by which the sea might be brought almost to the walls of Rome. But
it was only by his buildings that he left enduring traces, and to this the
great disaster of his times gave an unlooked-for impulse. Some little shops in
the low grounds near the Circus took fire by chance. The flames spread
fast through the narrow streets and crowded alleys of the quarter,
and soon began to climb up the higher ground to the statelier houses of
the wealthy. Almost a week the fire was burning, and of the fourteen wards of
the city only four escaped unharmed. Nero was at Antium when the startling news arrived, and he reached Rome too late to save his
palace. He threw his gardens open to the homeless poor, lowered at once the
price of corn, and had booths raised in haste to shelter them. He did not lack
sympathy for the masses of the city, whose tastes he shared and catered for.
And yet the story spread that the horrors of the blazing city caught his
excited fancy, that he saw in it a scene worthy of an Emperor to act in, and
sung the story of the fall of Troy among the crashing ruins and the fury of the
flames. Even wilder fancies spread among the people: men whispered that his
servants had been seen with lighted torches in their hands as suspicions, they
were hurrying to and fro to spread the fire. For Nero had been heard to wish
that the old Rome of crooked streets and crowded lanes might be now swept clean
away, that he might rebuild it on a scale of royal grandeur. Certainly he
claimed for himself the lion’s share of the space that the flames had cleared.
The palace to which the Palatine hill had given a name
now took a wider range and spread to the Esquiline, including in its vast
circuit long lines of porticoes, lakes, woods, and parks; while the buildings were
so lavishly adorned with every art as to deserve the name of the Golden
House’ which the people’s fancy gave to them. In its vestibule stood the
colossal figure of the Emperor, one hundred and twenty feet in height, which
afterwards gave its name to the Colosseum. From it stretched porticoes a mile
in length, supported on triple ranges of marble pillars, leading to the lake,
round which was built a mimic town, opening out into parks stocked with wild
animals of every sort. The halls were lined with gold and precious stones; the
banquetingrooms were fitted with revolving roofs of ivory, perforated to
scatter flowers and perfumes on the guests while shifting tables seemed to
vanish of themselves and reappear charged with richest viands. There were baths
too to suit all tastes, some supplied from the waters of the sea, and some
filled with sulphurous streams that had their sources
miles away.
Thousands of the choicest works of art of Greece and
Asia had been destroyed, but their place was taken by the paintings and
the statues brought from every quarter of the empire. Nero sent special
agents to ransack the cities for art-treasures, and many a town among
the isles of Greece mourned in after days the visit that had despoiled it of
some priceless treasure.
When all was done and the Emperor surveyed the work,
even he was satisfied, and he cried, “Now at least I feel that I am lodged as a
man should be”. It was in halls like these that the privileged few gathered
round their lord when he returned from the grave business of the circus and the
stage to indulge in the pleasures of the table. Otho,
the profligate dandy, who had been complaisant enough to lend his wife to Nero; Tigellinus, praefect of the
guards, ready to pander to his master’s worst caprices; Vatinius,
the hunchback, who had left his cobbler’s bench and pushed his fortunes in the
palace by his scurrilous jests and reckless attacks on honest men; Sporus, the poor eunuch, and Pythagoras, the freedman, both
degraded by the mockery of marriage with the wanton prince—these and many
another whose names have not been gibbeted in history left their memories of infamy
in that ‘House of Gold’.
The mood of the citizens meanwhile was dark and
lowering as they brooded over their disasters, and Nero looked to find some
victims to fill their thoughts or turn their suspicion from himself. The
Christians were the scapegoats chosen. Confused in the popular fancy with the
Jews, whose bigotry and turbulence had made them hated, upon askance by Roman
rulers as members of secret clubs and possible conspirators, disliked probably
by those who knew them best for their unsocial habits or their tirades against
the fashions of the times, the Christians were sacrificed alike to policy and
hatred. They deserved their fate, says Tacitus, not, indeed, because they were
guilty of the fire, but from their hatred of mankind. There was a refinement of
cruelty in their doom. Some were covered with the skins of beasts, and fierce
dogs were let loose to worry them. Others were tied to stakes and smeared with
tar, and then at nightfall, one after another, they were set on fire, that
their burning bodies might light up Nero’s gardens, while the crowds made merry
with good cheer, and the Emperor looked curiously on as at the play. No wonder
that in the pages even of the heathen writers we hear something like a cry of
horror, and that in the Christian literature we may trace the lurid colours of such scenes in the figures of Antichrist and in
the visions of the coming judgment.
But Nero did not often waste his thought and
ingenuity on such poor prey as the artizans and
freedmen of the Christian Churches. His victims were commonly of higher rank,
and the nearer to him the nearer they seemed to death. His aunt followed his
mother to the grave, and her tender words to him as she lay upon her deathbed
were rewarded by a message to her doctor to be prompt and close her pains.
Octavia was soon divorced and killed, on a charge of faithlessness, which was
so carelessly contrived as to shock men by its very wantonness of power. Poppaea, her successor, was dearly loved, and yet be killed
her in a fit of passion with a hasty kick. He soon wearied of the grave face of Burrhus, who read in his coolness the omen of a
speedy death. Before long he grew sick and felt that he was poisoned. He
pointed to the blood that he spat up as the signs of princely gratitude, would
not see Nero when he called to ask him how he felt, but said only, “Well” and
turned his face away and died. Seneca was longer spared, but he too felt that
his time must come. He held himself aloof from court, tried to give up all his
wealth and honours, to live austerely, and by the
lessons of philosophy to make himself strong and self-contained, or to be
director of the consciences of those who needed help and comfort.
But with a prince like Nero even students were not
safe, and philosophy itself was dangerous ground. The noblest minds at Rome
were at this time mainly Stoics, and among the long line of Nero’s victims
there were many who were in some sense martyrs to the Stoic creed. They
were not republicans, though they have sometimes passed for such in later
history. They were not disloyal, though they were looked at with disfavour. They were ready to serve the ruling powers
either in the Senate or the camp; there was a largeness even in their social
views as citizens of the world that would seem to fit them markedly for
carrying out the levelling spirit of the imperial policy. Nevertheless they
were regarded with jealousy and mistrust; nor is the reason far to seek.
Stoicism in passing from the schools of Greece had ceased to be an abstract
theory, with interest only for the curious mind that loved the subtleties of
paradox. It was a standard of duty for the Romans, and a creed to live and die
for. The resolute spirit and the hard outlines of its doctrines had a
fascination for the higher type of Roman mind. To live up to the ideal of a
noble life, in which reason should rule and virtue be its own reward ; to care
very much for a good conscience, for personal dignity and freedom, and to think
slightingly of short-lived goods over which the will has no control—here was a
rule that was not without a certain grandeur, however wanting it might be at
times in tenderness and sympathy. But such high teaching was distasteful to the
sensualist and tyrant; its tone rebuked his follies and his vices. It set up a
higher standard than the will of Caesar, and was too marked a contrast to the
servile flattery of the times. It was not the spiritual Quixotism of a few,
which might be safely disregarded, but men flocked to it on every side for
lessons of comfort and of hardihood in evil days. Weak women turned to it to
give them strength, as Arria, in the days of
Claudius, had shown her husband how to die, when she but spread handed him the
dagger that had pierced her through with the words, “See, Paetus,
it does not hurt”. Some spread the doctrines with a sort of apostolic fervour, and may well have said at times uncourtly things
of the vices in high places, like the Puritan preachers of our own land. Some,
again, mistook bluntness of speech for love of truth, like Cornutus,
who, when someone pressed Nero to write a work in some four hundred books,
remarked that ‘no one then would read them; it was true Chrysippus wrote as many, but they were of some use to mankind’. Others, influencing the
world of fashion in quiet intercourse and friendly letters, showed the young
how to live in times of danger; or when the fatal message came stood by and
calmed the pains of death, like the father-confessors of the Church.
Of the great Stoics of that time there was no more
commanding figure than that of Thrasea Paetus. He had none of the hard austerity of a Cato nor the
one-sided vehemence of a social reformer; he was fond even of the play, and
mixed gaily in the social circles of the city; would not blame even vice
severely, for fear of losing sight of charity to men. In the Senate he was
discreet and calm, even when he disliked what was done; tempered his blame with
words of praise, spoke of Nero as an eminent prince, and voted commonly with
his colleagues, though he did not stoop to mean compliance. Sometimes, indeed,
he protested by his silence, as when he rose and left the Senate-house rather
than hear the apology of Nero for the murder of his mother, and when he
declined to come and join the vote for the apotheosis of Poppaea.
At last, when the evils seemed too strong for cure, he would take no part in
public actions. For the last three years of his life he would not sit in his
place among the senators, nor take the yearly vow of loyalty, nor offer prayer
or sacrifice for Caesar. The rebuke of his silence was a marked one, for the
world, watching his bearing, turned even to the official journals to see what Thrasea had not done, and to put their construction on his
absence. The calm dignity of his demeanour seems to
have awed even Nero for a while, but at last the Emperor wearied of his quiet
protest. The fatal order found him in his garden, surrounded by a circle of his
kinsmen and choice spirits, with whom he tranquilly conversed upon high themes.
Like another Socrates he heard his doom with cheerfulness, and passed away
without a bitter word.
Seneca, too, found consolation but not safety in the
Stoic doctrines. He had long retired from the active of world, and shunned the
Emperor’s jealous eye. He had sought in philosophy the lessons of a lofty
self-denial, and was spending the last years of his life in studying how to
die. The rash conspiracy of a few of his acquaintance, in which he took no
part himself, was the excuse, though not the motive, for his murder. The
sentence found him with his young wife and intimates, prepared for but not
courting death. Denied the pleasure of leaving them by will the last tokens of
affection, he told his friends that he could bequeath them only the pattern of
an honest life, and gently reproved the weakness of their grief. His veins were
opened; but he talked on still while life was slowly ebbing, and was calm
through all the agony of lingering death. (AD 65)
Corbulo, the greatest soldier of his day, whose character
was cast in an antique mould, and was true to the
traditions of the camp, had also to experience the ingratitude of princes. He
had led his troops to victory in the North, had baffled the Parthian force and
guile, and saved a Roman army from disaster; he had been so loyal to his
Emperor in the face of strong temptation as to cause the Armenian Tiridates to say in irony to Nero that he was lucky in
having such a docile slave. Suddenly he was recalled with flattering words. The
death-warrant met him on his way, and he fell upon his sword, saying only, “I
deserved it”. So unlooked for was the deed that men could only say that Nero
was ashamed to meet his eye while busied in pursuits so unworthy of a monarch.
A crowd of other victims pass before us on the scene.
The least distinguished were driven forth from Rome to people lonely islands,
while the chiefs proved to the world that they had learned from the Stoic creed
the secret how to live nobly and die grandly. Women too were not wanting in
heroic courage. Paulina, the young wife of Seneca, among the tried to go with
him to the grave. Others were glad to save their self-respect by death. Of
these some fell as victims to the jealousy of Caesar; their eminence, their
virtues, and historic names made them dangerous rivals. Some found their wealth
a fatal burden when the Emperor’s wild extravagance had drained his coffers and
fresh funds were needed for his lavish outlay. More frequently they died to
expiate a moral protest, which was often silent, but not the less expressive.
The absolute ruler was provoked by men who would not crouch or bend. He felt
instinctively that they abhorred him, and fancied that he saw even in the look
of Thrasea something of the sour pedagogue’s frown.
Their fate marked the crisis of the struggle between high thought and an
ignoble acting.
Lucan too at this time, by a less honourable death, closed a short life of poetic fame. He had risen to early eminence in
the social circles of the capital, stood high in favour at the court, where the passion for the fine arts was in vogue, and, as the
nephew of Seneca, he shared the studies and for a time the confidence of Nero.
But the sunshine of princely favour was soon clouded;
he was coldly welcomed in the palace, and then forbidden to recite in public.
What was the reason of the change disgrace at we cannot say with certainty.
Perhaps he was too bold in the choice of his great subject. The civil wars of
the Republic had seemingly a fascination for the literary genius of this time,
and many a pen was set to work and many a fancy fired by the story of the men
who fought and died in the name of liberty or for the right to misgovern half
the world. There was, of course, a danger in such themes. Julius Caesar had
written an Anti-Cato, to attack a popular ideal, and later rulers might be
tempted to meet his eulogists with the sword rather than the pen. Historians
had already suffered for their ill-timed praises of the great republicans; and
Claudius had been warned not to meddle with so perilous a theme. Lucan,
therefore, may well have given offence to the instinctive jealousy of a despot,
though he was not sparing of his flattering words, as when he bids him take a
central place among the heavenly constellations, for fear of disturbing the
equilibrium of the world ; and in the opening books, at least, which alone had
seen the light, he was wary and cautious in his tone. Or it may be he offended
Nero’s canons of poetic style, for he cast aside the old tradition and boldly
dispensed with the dreamland of fable and all the machinery of the marvellous and superhuman. He aspired to set history to
heroic verse, but claimed no knowledge of the world unseen. Or, as it is more
likely still, his fame gave umbrage to his master, who was himself a would-be
poet, and could not bear to have a rival. Whatever may have been the cause of
his disgrace, Lucan could not patiently submit to be thus silenced. His vanity
needed the plaudits of the crowd; his genius perhaps seemed cramped and chilled
for the want of kindly sympathy. For the habit of public readings, then so
common, took to some extent the place of the journals and reviews of modern
times, and brought an author into immediate relation with the cultivated world
for whom he wrote. When this pleasure was denied him Lucan first distilled into
his poem some of the bitterness of his wounded pride, and then joined a band of
resolute men who were conspiring to strike down the monarch of whom they were
long weary and to set up a noble Piso in his place.
The plot came to an untimely end, and most of those who joined it lost their
lives. Lucan lost not his life only, but his honour,
for when his fears were worked upon he gave evidence against his friends, and
even denounced his mother as an accomplice in the plot. We can have
little pity when we read that he could not save his life even by such
means, nor can we feel interest in the affected calmness with
which, in his last moments, he recited from his poem an account of death-agonies
somewhat like his own.
There died at the same time the chief professor of a
very different creed from that of the great Stoics. Petronius had given a
lifetime to the study of the refinements of luxurious ease: his wit and
taste and ingenuity had made him the oracle of Roman fashion, or the ‘arbiter,’
as he was called, of elegance. Nothing new could pass current in the gay world
of the city till it had the stamp of his approval. He was the probable author
of a satire which reflects the tone of social thought around him, its
self-contempt, its mocking insight, and its shameless immorality. The work is a
strange medley. It contains among other things a specimen of a heroic poem on
the same theme as that of Lucan’s, full of the mythological machinery which the
bolder poet had eschewed, and intended, therefore, possibly as a protest
against Lucan’s revolutionary canons. It gives us also, in the supper of Trimalchio, a curious picture of the tasteless extravagance
and vulgar ostentation of the wealthy upstarts of the times, such as might
please the fastidious pride of the nobles in Roman circles. It might amuse them
also, sated as they were with fashionable gossip, to hear the common people
talk, and to be led in fancy into the disreputable haunts through which the
hero of the piece is made to wander in the course of strange adventures, like
a “Gil Blas” of old romance. The writer, if he really was Petronius,
roused at last a jealousy which caused his ruin; for the vile favourite, Tigellinus, who had
gained the ear of Nero, and aspired to be the master of ceremonies at the
palace, could not bear a rival near him. He trumped up a false charge against
him, worked upon his master’s fears which had been excited lately by the widespread
conspiracy of Piso, and had an order sent to him to
keep away from court. Petronius took the message for his death-warrant, and
calmly prepared to meet his end. He set his house in order, gave instructions
to reward some and punish others of his slaves, wrote out his will, and composed
a stinging satire upon the Emperor’s foul excesses which he sealed and sent to
him before he died. It was noted that at the last no philosopher stood at his
bedside to whisper words of comfort or dwell on hopes of immortality, but that
true, even in death, to his ignoble, godless creed, he amused himself as the
streams of life were ebbing with frivolous epigrams and wanton verses.
Besides the portents of cruelty and lust, confined
mainly to the walls of Rome, other disasters were not wanting to leave their
gloomy traces on the annals of the times. A hasty rising of the British tribes
under Queen Boadicea was followed by the Sack of two great Roman colonies, Camulodunum and Londinium, and
the loss of seventy thousand men. In Armenia a general’s incapacity had brought dishonour on the legions and nearly caused the loss
of Syria. Italy had been visited with hurricane and other and plague ; and the
volcanic forces that had been long pent up beneath Vesuvius gave some time, token
of their power by rocking the ground on which Pompeii stood and laying almost
all its buildings low.
It was the monarch’s turn at length to suffer some of
the agony now felt around him; and after fourteen years he fell because the
world seemed weary of him, The signal of revolt was given first in Gaul, Gaul,
where Vindex, a chieftain of a powerful clan of
Aquitania, roused the slumbering discontent into a flame by describing, as an
eye-witness, the infamy of Nero’s rule and the ends to which the heavy taxes
were applied. He told them of Sporus carried as a
bride in Nero’s litter and submitting publicly to his caresses; of Tigellinus lording it at Rome, and making havoc among noble
lives, while his master was fiddling in all the theatres of Greece ; of Poppaea Sabina, first his mistress then his wife, who had
her mules shod with shoes of gold, and five hundred asses daily milked to fill
her bath; of the countless millions wrung from toiling subjects and squandered
on a vile favourite or a passing fancy. Waiving all
hopes of personal ambition, he urged Galba, the governor of Spain, to lead the
movement, and came to terms with Verginius Rufus, who
was marching from taken up by Germany against him. He killed
himself, indeed, soon after with his own hand in despair, when the
soldiers of Verginius fell upon his followers without
orders from their general; but Galba was moving with his legions, and courier
after courier arrived in Rome to say that the West of the Empire was in arms.
Nero heard the tidings first at Naples, but took
little heed of anything except the taunts of Vindex at his sorry acting; and even when he came at length to Rome he wavered between
childish levity and ferocious threats. Sometimes he could think only of silly
jests and scientific toys, sometimes he dreamed of fearful vengeance on the
traitors and their partisans in Rome and then again he would drop into maudlin
lamentations, talk of moving his legions to sympathy by pathetic scenes, or of
giving up the throne to live for art in humble peace. He tried to levy troops,
but none answered to the call; the praetorian guards refused to march, the
sentries even slunk away and left their posts, while the murmurs grew hourly
more threatening, and ominous cries were heard even in the city. Afraid to stay
within the palace, he went at night to ask his friends for shelter; but the
doors of all were barred. He came back again to find his chambers plundered,
and the box of poisons which he had hoarded gone. At length a freedman, Phaon, offered him a hiding-place outside the walls; and
barefooted as he was, with covered face, Nero rode away to seek it. As he went
by the quarters of the soldiers he heard them curse him and wish Galba joy. At
last he and his guide leave the horses and creep through the brushwood and the
rushes to the back of Phaon’s house, where on hands
and feet he crawls through a narrow hole which was broken through the wall.
Stretched on a paltry mattress, in a dingy cell, hungry, but turning in disgust
from the black bread, with the water from the marsh to slake his thirst, he
listens with reluctance to the friends who urge him to put an end to such
ignoble scenes. He has a grave dug hastily to the measure of his body, and
fragments of marble gathered for his monument, and he feels the dagger’s edge,
but has not nerve enough to use it. He asks some of the bystanders to show him
by their example how to die, and then he feels ashamed of his own weakness and
mutters, “Fie, Nero! now is the time to play the man”. At last comes Phaon’s courier with the news that the Senate had put a
price upon his head ; the tramp of the horses tells him that his pursuers are
on his track, and fear gives him the nerve to put the dagger to his throat,
while, true to the passion of his life, he mutters, “What a loss my death will
be to art!’” Stoicism had taught his victims how to die with grand composure ; but
all his high art and dramatic studies could not save him from the meanest exit
from the stage. His last wish was granted, and they burnt the body where it
lay, to save it from the outrage that might follow. Two poor women, who had
nursed him as a baby, and Acte, the object of his
boyish love, gathered up his ashes and laid them beside the rest of his own
race.
It might be thought that few but his own pampered favourites could retain any affectionate remembrance of
such a monster of sensuality and cruel caprice, who at his best was moody and
volatile, undignified and vain; yet it seems that a fond memory of him
lingered in the hearts of many of the people, who brought their flowers to
grave or posted up proclamations which an nounced that he was living still and would come to take vengeance on his enemies.
Pretenders started up from time to time and gathered adherents round them in
his name, and even after twenty years one such adventurer, of humble birth,
received from the Parthians a welcome and support, and was reluctantly
abandoned by them at the last.
GALBA.—A.D.
68-69.
The accession of Sulpicius Galba was due to a stir of independence in the provinces. Gaul would not brook
the rule of Nero longer, and the chief who came forward in the name of Vindex to maintain their liberty of choice, and whose fiery
proclamations hurled Nero from his throne, called upon Galba to succeed him. He
came of ancient lineage, though unconnected with the family which through
natural ties or by adoption had given six emperors to Rome. Early omens are
said to have drawn upon him as a boy the notice of Augustus and Tiberius; he
was hotly courted by the widowed Agrippina, and took a high place among the
legatees of Livia Augusta in the will that was not carried out. Many years of
his life were spent in high command in Africa, Germany, and Spain, where he
became eminent for energy and strict discipline, bordering at times on
harshness, till he put on a show of easy sloth to disarm the jealousy of Nero.
The force at his command was small. A single legion and two troops of horse
formed but a scanty army to carry an Emperor to Rome. His soldiers showed no
great enthusiasm for him, and some of his cavalry were minded even to desert
him. When he heard the news of the death of Vindex he
despaired not of success only but of life, and thought of ending his career by his
own hand.
So far he had appealed only to the province that he
ruled, had begun to levy troops and strengthen his tiny army, and to form a
council of provincial notabilities to advise him like a senate. He called
himself the servant only of the Roman State. But when the tidings came that the
capital had accepted him for their new ruler he took at once the name of
Caesar, and put forth without disguise imperial claims. Rival pretenders
started up at once around him. In Africa, in Germany, in the quarters of the
Praetorian guards, generals came forward to dispute the prize, for every camp
might have its claimant when the power of the sword would give a title to the
throne; but one after another fell, while their soldiers wavered or deserted
them. So Galba made his way to Rome without a struggle. But before him came the rumours of his harshness and his parsimony. He had
sternly fined and punished the cities that were slow to recognize him, and put
men to death unheard as partisans of the fallen causes. Ugly stories reappeared
of the severities of earlier days—of the money-changer whose hands he had
nailed to the bench where he had given false weight, of the criminal for whom
he had provided in mockery a higher cross than usual, as he protested that he
was a citizen of Rome. There was little to attract the people in the sight of
their new prince, who entered Rome upon a litter, with hands and feet crippled
by the gout, and face somewhat cold and hard, marked already with the
feebleness of old age.
The soldiers were the first to murmur. The marines
whom Nero had called out mutinied when they were sent back to join their ships,
but they were sternly checked and decimated. The imperial bodyguard of Germans
was disbanded and sent back home empty-handed. The ashamed already
of the death of Nero and their prefect, heard with rage that the new
sovereign would not court their favour or stoop to
buy the loyalty of his soldiers. The legions on the frontier were ill-pleased
to think that their voices counted for so little, that they were not
thought worthy of a word or promise. The German army chafed because their
general Verginius had been removed on flattering pretexts,
but really because his influence over them was feared; and they construed his
forced absence from the camp as an insult to their loyalty, and the exceptional favours shown to some towns of Gaul as a marked
affront populace offered to themselves. Nor was the city populace in a cheerful
mood. For years they had been feasted and caressed ; races and games,
gladiators and wild beasts had made life seem a holiday and kept them ever in
good humour. Now they heard that there was to be an
end to all such cheer, for their ruler was a morose, penurious old man, who
thought a few silver pieces awarded to the finest actor of the day a present
worthy of a prince.
Nero’s favourites and
servants heard with rage that they must disgorge at once the plunder of the
past régime. A commission was appointed to call them to account and to wrest
from them what their master’s prodigality had given, and as a special grace to
leave them each a beggarly tithe of all the presents, in which he had expended
during the few years of his reign no less than two thousand one hundred million
sesterces. The Senate and the men of worth of rank were full of hope at first,
for Galba seemed upright and spoke them fair. But soon they found, to their
dismay, that all influence had passed out of their hands, and that the Emperor
himself was not the ruling power in the state. Three favourites—one
a freedman, Icelus; two of higher rank, T. Vinius, his legate, and Cornelius Laco,
an assessor in his court of justice—had followed him from Spain, and gained, as
it seemed, an absolute control over his acts. They never left him, and the wits
of Rome called them the Emperor’s pedagogues; indeed, they seemed to guide the
old man as by the leading-strings of childhood, and to recall the memory of the
worst days of the dotard Claudius. Public offices of trust, boons, immunities,
and honours were put up shamelessly to auction, and
the life and honour of free men were sacrificed to
the caprice and greed of haughty and venal minions, while the most infamous of
Nero’s creatures, Tigellinus, was saved by their influence
from the fate he merited.
In a short time the discontent was universal. Already
the legions of the Rhine had refused the oath of loyalty, and called on the
Senate and the people to choose another Emperor, while in the city the temper
of all classes boded ill. But Galba took one more step, and that was fatal.
Feeling that at the age of seventy-three he had not strength to rule alone, he
decided to adopt a colleague and successor. His choice fell on Piso Frugi Licinianus,
who was young, noble, and of eminent worth. But the act came too late to regain
the confidence that had been lost, and only provoked a speedier explosion of
fear, jealousy, and disaffection ; the more so because the speech in which he
told the soldiers of his choice was of almost disdainful brevity, and
irritated minds that were still wavering and might have been won over by a
little timely liberality.
The blow came from the praetorian camp, in which two
common soldiers undertook to give away the throne, and kept their word. A
freedman had tampered with them in the interest of his master Otho, who had hoped to take the place that Piso filled, and who would now try foul means, as fair had
failed. The soldiers felt the temper of their comrades, and Otho’s intimates and servants were lavish with their presents to the guard on all
occasions. While Galba stood one morning beside the altar on which the victim
lay, and the priest read presages of disaster in the entrails, Otho was beckoned suddenly away on the plea of buying an
old property with the advice of his architects and builders. In the Forum he
found twenty-three praetorians, who hurried him in a litter to their camp, and
then presented him to the homage of their comrades. All were soon won over with
fair words and liberal promises of bounty. The marines had not forgiven the
Emperor his harsh treatment of their comrades, and therefore joined the
movement eagerly, while the armed forces quartered in the city made common
cause with the insurgents, thrusting aside the officers who tried to hold them
in.
Rumours passed rapidly through Rome meanwhile. At first men
heard that the guards were up in arms against their prince and had carried off
a senator, some said Otho, to their camp. Messengers
were dispatched at once by the startled rulers to secure if possible the
obedience of the other forces, while Piso appealed to
the company on guard around the palace to be staunch and true even though
others wavered, and then set out to face the insurgents in the camp. Shortly
after came the news that the praetorians had slain Otho to assert their loyalty, and that they were coming to salute their sovereign.
The false news spread, designedly or not, and all classes who had hesitated
before streamed into the palace to make a show of joy, and to conduct Galba to
the camp, while one soldier in the crowd waved in the air his sword, dripping,
as he said, with Otho’s blood. But the Emperor,
mindful of discipline to the last, after much said, “Comrade, who bade you do
the deed?”. At length he started, after much debate and; doubt, but could make
little way among the densely-crowded streets, and hardly reached the Forum,
when the insurgent troops appeared in sight. They were joined at once by his
single company of guards; together they charged and dispersed the crowd that
followed him, while the slaves that bore the litter flung it down upon the
ground and left their master stunned and helpless and undefended, to be hacked
to death by the fierce but while on soldiery that closed about him. So died,
says Tacitus, one whom all would have thought fit for empire, had he not been
Emperor in deed. There were many claimants for the honour of dispatching him, and Vitellius received more than
one hundred and twenty letters of petition from men who looked for high reward
for such a signal merit. To save the trouble of deciding and to discourage so
dangerous a precedent, he ordered all the suitors to be put to death.
Piso had fled for sanctuary meantime to Vesta’s temple,
where a poor slave took pity on him and gave him the shelter of his hut. But
the emissaries of Otho were soon upon the spot to
drag him from his hiding-place and slay him on the temple steps and take his
head to feast his, master’s eyes. The friends of the fallen rulers were allowed
by special favour to buy their bodies from the
soldiers, and show them the last tokens of respect.
OTHO.—A.D. 69.
M. Salvius Otho began in early youth a wild and dissolute career. To
gain a footing in the palace he paid his court to an old waiting-maid of
influence, and before long became one of the most prominent of the set of young roysterers who, surrounded Nero. He rose to be the
chief friend and confidant of the young prince, encouraged him in his worst
excesses, was privy even to his mother’s murder, and gave the luxurious supper
which lulled her fears to rest. He relied too much, however, on his influence,
and presumed to be the Emperor’s rival for the heart of Poppaea Sabina, after giving her his hand and home to cloak Nero’s wanton love. To
cover his disgrace and check the scandalous gossip of the city he was appointed
to official duties in Lusitania, where for ten years his equity and
self-restraint were a marked contrast to the infamy of his earlier and later
life. In Galba’s rise to power he saw his opportunity of return, and he
exhausted all his arts of flattery and address in the attempt to win the old man’s favour, with the further hope that he might take the
place which the Emperor’s death would soon vacate. That hope once baffled, he
calmly laid his plans, and swept away without compunction the obstacles that
barred his road to power. On the evening of the day when Galba fell he made his
way across the blood-stained Forum to the palace, while the Senate in a hurried
meeting passed all the usual votes of honour for
their new prince. The populace were ready with their cheers, and pressed him to
take the name of Nero, in memory of the revels of his youth. But the real power
was in the soldiers’ hands, and they watched with jealous care the puppet they
had set upon the throne. He had nothing of the soldier’s bearing, was
effeminate in look and carriage, with beardless face and an ungainly walk.
Yet, strange to say, they loved him well, and were loyal to him to the
last. They love, kept watch and ward with anxious care that no evil might
befall him. They once flew to arms in groundless panic when he was seated with
his friends at supper, forced their way even to his presence, to make sure that
their favourite was safe; and when he died some slew
themselves in their despair, as the dog dies upon his master’s grave. Otho could refuse them nothing. He let them choose their
own commanders, listened readily to all their grievances, gave them freely all
they asked for, and had recourse to subterfuges to rescue from their clutches
some whom he wished to spare. He had soon need of all their loyalty, for even
before Galba’s death the armies of the Rhine had hailed as Emperor their
general Vitellius, and their legions were already on
the march for Rome. For they were weary of the monotony of constant drill and
border camps, and flushed with triumph at the ease with which they had crushed
the hopes of Vindex. They cast greedy eyes on the
wealth of Gaul, and were jealous of the privileged praetorians; they felt their
power and longed to use it, now that the fatal secret had been learnt, that
emperors were not made at Rome alone.
So leaving Vitellius himself
to follow slowly with the levies newly raised, two armies made their way to
Italy, with Valens and Caecina at their head, and
crossing the Alps by different passes, after spreading terror among the peoples
of Gaul and of Helvetia, met at last upon the plains of Lombardy. Letters
meantime had passed between Vitellius and Otho, in which each urged the other to abate his claims,
and to take anything short of the imperial power. From promises they passed to
threats, and thence to plots. Each sent assassins to destroy the other, and
each failed to gain his end. But the legions of the North came daily nearer,
and Otho lost no time in mustering his forces, and
showed an energy of which few had thought him capable. He could count upon the
army in the East, where Vespasian was acting in his name. The nearer legions in
Pannonia and Dalmatia were true to him, and would soon be ready Otho marched to to join the
forces that he led from Rome. So with such household troops as he could gather
and the questionable contingent of two thousand gladiators, he set out to meet
the enemy and to appeal to the decision of the sword. With him there went
perforce many of the chief officers of state, the senators of consular rank,
nobles and knights of high position : some proud of their gay arms and
trappings, but raw and timid soldiers for the most part, thinking often more of
the pleasures of the table than of the real business of war. But their presence
in the camp gave moral support to Otho’s cause, and
lessened the danger of disaffection in the rear. His most skilful generals urged delay till his distant forces could come up from Illyria or the
East; but his soldiers were rash and headstrong and, flushed by slight
successes at first over Caecina, accused their chiefs
of treachery. His confidants were inexperienced and sanguine, and Otho would not wait. He had not the nerve to bear suspense
nor yet to brave the crash of battle. So weakening his army by the withdrawal
of his guard, he retired to Brixellum (Brescia), to
wait impatiently for the result, and to send messages in quick succession to
urge his generals to fight without delay. The armies met in the shock of battle
on the plains near Bedriacum, where Otho’s best generals, was forced to fight against their
will, were the first to leave the field, and his ill-led and mutinous soldiers
broke and fled. But the poor gladiators stood their ground and died almost to
a man. The fugitives from the field of battle soon brought the tidings to Brixellum, and Otho saw that all
was over. His guards, indeed, boasted of their loyal love, and urged him to
live and to renew the struggle, and told him of his distant armies on the
march. But he had staked his all upon a single battle, and he knew that he must
pay his losses. He was sick perhaps of civil bloodshed, though the fine words
which Tacitus ascribes to him sound strangely in the mouth of one who plotted
against Galba and gloated over Piso’s death. He
waited one more day to let the senators retire who had reluctantly followed him
to war, and to save Verginius from the blind fury of
the soldiers, or perhaps with some faint lingering hope of rescue; he spent
one more night, we know not in what thoughts, upon his bed, and at the dawn
took up his dagger and died by his own hand. It was certainly no hero’s death.
The meanest of that day, the poor gladiator of the stage, could face death
calmly when his hour was come; and reigns of terror and the Stoics’ creed had
long made suicide a thing of course to every weary or despairing soul. Yet so
rare were the lessons of unselfishness in high places, that men thought it
noble in him to risk no more his soldiers’ lives, painted with a loving hand
the picture of his death, and whispered that his bold stroke for empire was perhaps
the act, not of an unscrupulous adventurer, but of a republican who wished to
restore his country’s freedom.
VITELLIUS.—A.D. 69.
VITELLIUS had only a short term of power, but It was
long enough to mark perhaps the lowest depth to which elective monarchy has
ever fallen. His father Lucius had done good service as a soldier, but he came
back to Rome to disgrace his name by mean and abject flattery of the ruling
powers. To pay his homage to the divine Caligula he veiled and bowed to the
ground in silent adoration. To push his father in his fortunes in the court of
Claudius, where wives and freedmen ruled, he kept the effigies of Pallas and
Narcissus among those of his household gods, and carried one of Messalina’s
slippers in his bosom, to have the pleasure of kissing it in public. He rose to
be thrice consul, and the admiring Senate had graven on his statue in the Forum
the words which told of his unswerving loyalty towards his prince. The son
followed in his father’s steps and pandered to the vices of three Emperors in
turn. As a youth he shared the sensual orgies of Tiberius at Capreae, he pleased Claudius by his skill at dice, and Nero
by using a show of force when he was too shy to sing in public. In the province
of Africa he bore a better character as proconsul, but as commissioner of
public works at Rome he was said to have filched the gold out of the temples
and replaced it with ornaments of baser metal. Yet on the recall of Verginius he was sent by Galba to command the camp in lower
Germany. Men thought the appointment strange enough. Some said he owed it to a favourite’s caprice; some fancied that he was chosen from
contempt, as too mean and slothful to be dangerous in command. He was the
greatest glutton of his times, had eaten all his means away, and had to leave
his family in hired lodgings and to pledge his mother’s jewels to pay the
expenses of his journey. But he started in the gayest mood, made messmates and
friends of all he met, and did not stay to pick and choose. His low pleasantries
and jovial humour charmed all the muleteers and
soldiers on the road, and in the camp he was hearty and affable to all alike,
was always ready to relax the rules of discipline, and seldom took the trouble
to refuse a prayer. The army saw in him a general who was too liberal and
open-handed to wish to stint them to their beggarly pittance and keep them to
task-work on the frontier. He would not try to curb their licence or deny them plunder if they were once upon to Rome. Two leading generals, Fabius Valens and Alienus Caecina, saw in him also a convenient tool, whose very
vices caught the fancy of the soldiers, and whose name would sound well in a
proclamation, but who was too weak and indolent to wish to rule, and would be
obliged to fall back on men of action like themselves. Both wished for civil
war on personal grounds. Valens resented bitterly the neglect of the good
service rendered by him to Galba’s cause; Caecina had
just been detected in fraudulent use of public money and would soon be called
to an account.
Within a month a crowd of soldiers gather at nightfall
round their general’s tent, force their way into his presence, and carry him
upon their shoulders through the camp, while their comrades salute their new
Emperor with acclamations. The legions of the upper province were already in
revolt, and soon broke the idle oath of allegiance to the Senate and joined
their comrades of the lower Rhine. The two armies under Valens and Caecina pushed forward by separate routes to cross the
Alps. Their track was marked by license and by rapine. The frightened villagers
fled away; the townsfolk trembled lest their riches should tempt the soldiers’
greed, or jealous neighbours vent their spite in
treacherous charges, and were glad at any cost to purchase safety from the
leaders. Caecina was the first to front the foe, but
was beaten off from the strong walls of Placentia after a vain attempt to
storm it, which caused the ruin of the amphitheatre,
the finest of the kind in Italy and the pride of all the townsmen. Valens,
however, was not far behind, and the two armies once united crushed the
badly-handled troops of Otho in the victory of Bedriacum, near the confluence of the Addua and the Padus.
Vitellius was in no mood to hurry. He was very well content to
move in pomp and triumph on the road, or float at ease along the rivers, while
his guards did the fighting. The provincials vied with each other in their
eagerness to do him honour, and they found that the
one passport to his favour was to provide abundance of
good cheer. He was glutton and epicure in one. The countries through which he
passed were drained of all their choicest, costliest while viands, and every
halt upon the way was the signal for a round of sumptuous banquets, which never
came too fast for his voracious appetite; while his train of followers gave
loose to insolent license, plundering as they went and quarrelling with their
hosts, and Vitellius only laughed in uproarious mirth
to see their brawls. The rude soldiers of the North settled like a cloud of
locusts on the fair lands of Italy; cornfields and vineyards were stripped for
many a league upon their way, and towns were ruined to supply and rioting took
the place of the stem discipline of frontier armies, and camp-followers
ravaged what the soldiers spared. Even in the streets of Rome the quiet
citizens stood aghast as the wild-looking troops came pouring in, the untanned
skins of beasts upon their shoulders, their clumsy sandals slipping on the
stones. But the soldiers were in no mood to brook a curious stare or mocking
jibe, for a blow soon followed on a word, and bloody brawls destroyed the peace
of the streets where they were quartered. Caecina,
with his cloak of plaid and Gallic trousers, had little of the Roman general’s
look, nor did men eye his wife with pleasure as she rode by on her fine horse
with purple trappings. With them in military guise came the new master of the
world, the soldiers’ choice, with the drunkard’s fiery face and weak legs that
could scarcely carry his unwieldy frame. He now returned in state to the city
from which he stole away but lately to avoid importunate creditors. His first
care was to pay honour to the memory of Nero and to
call at a concert for the song that he had loved, as if he saw in him the ideal
of a ruler. But the substance of power passed at once out of his feeble hands ;
the generals who had led his troops governed in his name, while Asiaticus, his freedman, copied the insolence of the favourites of Claudius. Their master meantime gave all his
thoughts to the pleasures of the table, inventing new dishes to contain
portentous pasties to which every land must yield its quota, and spending in a
few short months nine hundred million sesterces in sumptuous fare.
But he had no long time to eat and drink undisturbed.
Within eight months the armies of the East took the oath of allegiance to
Vespasian, and the legions in Moesia and Pannonia, which had not been able to
strike a blow for Otho, were ready to avenge him by
turning their arms against Vitelli us. The main army of the enemy, indeed, was
slow to move; but Primus Antonius, a bold and resolute officer, pushed on with
the scanty forces that lay nearest on the road to Italy, and reached Verona
before a blow was struck. He might have paid dearly for his rashness if the
generals of Vitellius had been prompt and loyal; but
their mutual jealousies caused treachery and wavering counsels in their midst,
and all seemed to conspire to help Vespasian. The air and luxury of Rome had
done their work upon the vigour of the German
legions, and their morale had suffered even more. The auxiliary forces had been
disbanded and sent home; recruiting had been stopped for want of funds;
furloughs were freely granted; and the old praetorians had been broken up and
were streaming now to join Antonius. The Etesian winds, which were blowing at
this time, wafted the ships towards the East, but delayed all the
homeward-bound, so that little was known of the plans and movements of the
enemy, while it was no secret that the forces of Vitellius were daily growing weaker, and that Csecina was
chafing visibly at the rising popularity of Valens. The fleet at Ravenna was
the first to declare against Vitellius, for their
admiral, Lucilius Bassus,
had failed to gain the post of praetorian praefect,
and was eager to, avenge the slight. Caecina, who was
taking the command in the north of Italy, tried first to let the war drag
slowly on, and then to spread disaffection in the ranks, and to raise the
standard for Vespasian. But the soldiers had more sense of honour than their leaders. Hearing of the plot, they rose at once, threw Caecina and some others into chains, and fought on doggedly
without a general. The crash of war came a second time upon the plains of Bedriacum, where, after hard fighting, the legions of
Germany were routed, and flying in confusion to their entrenchments at Cremona,
brought upon the unoffending town all the horrors of havoc and destruction.
Even amid the scenes of that year of strife and
carnage the fate of Cremona sent a thrill of horror throughout Italy. So
suddenly came the ruin on the city that the great fair held there at that time
was crowded with strangers from all parts, who shared the fate of the poor
citizens. At a hasty word from their general Antonius, who said that the water
in the bath was lukewarm and should be hotter soon, the soldiers broke all the
bands of discipline, and for four days pillaged and burnt and tortured at their
pleasure, till there was left only a heap of smoking ruins, and crowds of
miserable captives kept for sale, whom for very shame no one would buy.
Vitellius meanwhile had hardly realized his danger, till the
news came of the treachery of Caecina and the
disasters at Bedriacum and Cremona. Even then at
first he tried to hide them from the world and to silence the gloomy murmurs
that were floating through the city. The enemy returned to him the scouts whom
he had sent, but after hearing what they had to tell in secret he had their
mouths stopped for ever. A centurion, Julius Agrestis, tried in vain to rouse him to be stirring, and
volunteered to ascertain the truth with his own eyes. He went, returned, and
when the Emperor affected still to disbelieve, he gave the best proof he could
of his sincerity by falling on his sword upon the spot. Then, at last, Vitellius summoned resolution to raise recruits from the
populace of Rome, and to call out the newly-levied cohorts of the guards. He
set out at their head to guard the passes of the Apennines, but he soon wearied
of the hardships of the field, and came back again to Rome to hear fresh
tidings of treachery and losses, and to be told that Valens had been captured
in the effort to raise Gaul in his defence, and to
feel that his days of power were numbered. In despair at last he thought of
abdication, and came to terms with Vespasian’s brother, Flavius Sabinus, who had long been prefect of the city. In a
abdicate, few hopeless words he told the soldiers and vented by the people that
he resigned all claims upon them, and laid aside the insignia of empire in the
shrine of Concord. But the troops from Germany, who had felt their power a few
months since, could not believe that it had passed out of their hands, and they
rose in blind fury at the thought of tame submission. They forced Vitellius to resume his titles, and hurried to attack Sabinus, who, with some of the leading men of Rome and a
scanty band of followers, was driven for refuge to the Capitol. There they
found shelter for a single night, but on the morrow the citadel was attacked
and stormed by overpowering numbers. A few resolute men died in its defence ; some slipped away in various disguises, and among
them Domitian, the future Emperor ; but the rest were hunted down and slain in
flight. In the confusion of the strife the famous temple of Jupiter caught
fire. All were too busy to give time or thought fray the to stay the flames,
and in a few hours only ruins were left of the greatest of the national
monuments of Rome, which, full of the associations of the past, had served for
ages as a sort of record office in which were treasured the memorials of
ancient history, the laws, the treaties, and the proclamations of old times.
The loss was one that could not be replaced, but it was soon to be avenged.
Antonius was not far away with the vanguard of Vespasian’s army. Messengers
came fast to tell him first that the Capitol was besieged, and then that it was
stormed. They were followed soon by envoys from the Senate to plead for peace,
but they were roughly handled by the soldiers; and Musonius
Rufus, of the Stoic creed, who had come unbidden with
his calming lessons of philosophy found scant hearing for his balanced periods
about concord, for the rude soldiers jeered and hooted till the sage dropped
his ill-timed lecture for fear of still worse usage. Vestal Virgins came with
letters from Vitellius asking for a single day of
truce, but in vain, for the murder of Sabinus had put
an end to the courtesies of war. Soon the army was at the gates of Rome, and
scenes of fearful carnage followed in the gardens and the streets even of the
city, for the Vitellians still sullenly resisted,
though without leaders or settled methods of defence,
till at length they were borne down by numbers, while the population turned
with savage jeers against them and helped to hunt them from their hiding-places
and to strip the bodies of the fallen. When the enemy was at the city gates, Vitellius slunk quietly away in a litter, with his butler
and his cook to bear him company, in the hope of flying to the South. Losing
heart or nerve, he had himself carried back again, and wandered restlessly
through the deserted chambers of the palace. His servants even slipped away,
and he was left alone. Before long the plunderers made their way into the
palace, and after searching high and low found him at length hidden behind a
mattress in the porter’s lodge, or, as another version of the story runs,
crouching in a kennel with the dogs. They dragged him out with insults and
blows, paraded him in mockery through the streets, and buffeted him to death at
last in the place where the bodies of the meanest criminals were flung to feed
the birds of prey.
VESPASIAN.—A.D.
69-79.
The Flavian family, to which the next three Emperors
belonged, was of no high descent. It was said, indeed— though Suetonius could
find no evidence the story—that Vespasian’s great-grandfather origin and was a
day-labourer of Umbria, who came each year to work in
the hire of a Sabine farmer, till at last he settled at Reate.
His father had been a tax-gatherer in Asia, and had taken afterwards to the
money-lender’s trade, and dying left a widow with two sons, Sabinus and Vespasianus. The younger showed in early life no high ambition, did not
care even to be senator, and was only brought to sue for honours by the taunts and entreaties of his mother. Fortune did not seem to smile on
him at first. Caligula was angry because the streets were foul when he was mdile, and had his bosom plastered up with mud. He proved
his valour as a soldier in many a battlefield in
Germany and Britain, but fell into disgrace again because his patron was
Narcissus, on whose friends Agrippina looked askance. Then he rose to be
governor of Africa, and was too fair not to give offence; but his worst danger
was from Nero’s vanity, which he sorely wounded, by going to sleep while he was
singing, or by leaving the party altogether. Shunning the court, he lived in
quiet till the rising in Judaea made Nero think of him again as a general of
tried capacity, yet too modest and unambitious to be feared. By his energy and valour he soon restored discipline and won the soldiers’
trust, and was going on vigorously with the work of conquest when the news
came of Nero’s fall. His son Titus set out to pay his compliments to Galba, and
possibly to push his fortunes at the court; but hearing at Corinth that
Galba too had fallen, and that Otho was in his place,
he sailed back at once to join his father.
Vespasian’s friends now thought that the time was come
for him to strike a blow for empire. The two rivals who were quarrelling for
the prize were men of infamous character and no talents for command, while the
legions of the East trusted their generals and were jealous of the Western
armies. The rumour was spread among them that they
were to be shifted from their quarters to the rigour of the German frontier, to let others reap the fruits of war; and they began to clamour for an emperor of their own. Mucianus, the governor of Syria, might have been a
formidable rival, for he was brilliant and dexterous in action, of winning ways
and ready speech, had moved among the highest circles, and won the affections
of his soldiers. He was no friend to Vespasian, for he had coveted his post in
Palestine; yet now, from a rare prudence or self-sacrifice, or gained over, it may
be, by the graceful tact of Titus, he was willing to waive all claims of
personal ambition and to share all the dangers of the movement. But Vespasian
himself was slow to move. He had made his army take the oath to each Emperor in
turn, and he thought mainly now of the war that lay ready to his hand. The
urgent pleadings of his son, the well-turned periods of Mucianus,
such as Tacitus puts into his mouth, the sanguine hopes of friends, might have
failed to make him risk the hazard; but the soldiers’ talk had compromised his
name, the troops at Aquileia had declared for him already, and he felt that it
might be dangerous to draw back. The praefect of
Egypt, with whom Titus had intrigued already, took the first decisive step, and
put at Vespasian’s command his important province and the corn-supplies of
Rome. The armies of Palestine and Syria rose soon after and joined the movement
with enthusiasm. Berenice, Agrippa’s sister, who had long since gained the ear
of Titus, helped him with her statecraft and brought offers of alliance from
Eastern princes and even from the Parthian empire. But Vespasian was still slow
and wary. While Primus Antonius pushed on with the vanguard of his army from
Illyria, not staying in his adventurous haste to hear the warning to be
cautious, Mucianus followed with the main body to
find the struggle almost over before he made his way to Rome, and was in
Vespasian himself crossed over into Egypt to take measures to starve his
enemies into submission, or to hold the country as a stronghold in case of
failure. There he heard of the bold march of the vanguard into Italy, of the
bloody struggle near Cremona, and of the undisputed march to Rome. Then came
the tidings from the Northwest that the withdrawal of the legions had been
followed by a rising of the neighbouring races, and
that even Roman troops had stooped so low as to swear fealty to the Gaul. The
Britons and Dacians too were stirring, and brigands
were pillaging the undefended Pontus. Soon he learnt that the Capitol had been
stormed and his brother killed in the blind fury of the soldiers’ riot, but
that vengeance had been taken in the blood of Vitellius and his troops. Each ship brought couriers with eventful news, or senators
coming to do homage, till the great town of Alexandria was thronged to
overflowing. Still he stayed in Egypt, till at length he could not in prudence
tarry longer, for Mucianus having set Antonius aside
was in absolute command at Rome, and his own son Domitian, a youth of
seventeen, who had been left in the city but escaped his uncle’s fate, seemed
to have lost his head at the sudden change of fortune, and was indulging in
arrogant caprices. Titus was with his father in Egypt till the last, and
pleaded with him to deal tenderly with his brother’s wilful ways, then left to close the war in Palestine, while Vespasian hastened with
the com-ships on to Rome, where the granaries had only food for ten days left,
and Mucianus had been ruling with a sovereign’s airs.
Meantime the rising on the Rhine was quelled. It had
its source in the revengeful ambition of Civilis, a
chieftain of the ruling class of the Batavi, Germany—who narrowly escaped with life from the charge of disloyalty to Rome. His
people had long sent their contingents to serve beside the legions. Bold,
brave, and proud of their military exploits, they were easily encouraged to
believe that they could take the lead in a national movement of the Germans.
The frontier had been almost stripped in the excitement of the civil war, and
the scanty remnants of the legions knew not which side to join, and had no
confidence in their leaders. To supply the waste of war fresh levies were
demanded, and the Batavi, stung to fury by the
recruiting officers, listened readily to Civilis.
They rose to arms, at first in Vespasian’s name, and then, throwing off the
mask, frankly unfurled the national banner, to which the neighbouring races streamed.
The Treveri and Lingones tried to play the same part among the Gauls and to lead them too against the imperial troops, who,
half-hearted and mutinying against their leaders, laid down their arms or were
overpowered by numbers. Some even took the military oath in the name of the
sovereignty of Gaul. It was but an idle title after all. The mutual jealousy
between the several clans and towns barred the way to real union among them,
nor would the Germans calmly yield to the pretensions of their less warlike neighbours. Soon, too, the tramp of the advancing legions
was heard along the great highways, for, the struggle once over at the centre, no time was lost in sending Cerealis to restore order on the Rhine.
The wavering loyalty of the Gauls was soon secured, and it scarcely needed the general’s proclamation to remind
them that the Roman Empire brought peace and safety to their homes, and that
even failure, it they could rend that union to pieces they would be the first
to suffer from its ruin. To reduce the Batavi to
submission force was needed more than words; but the strife grew more hopeless
as their allies fell off, and such as still remained in arms were routed after
an obstinate battle, in which a river’s bed was choked with the bodies of the
slain. The submission of Civilis closed an
insurrection, formidable in itself, but most noteworthy as an ominous sign of
the possible disruption of the Empire.
It was left for Vespasian on his return to heal the
gaping wounds of civil war, to restore good order to the provinces, and to calm
the excitement of the capital after scenes of fire and carnage, and the
vicissitude of the last eventful year, which had seen three Emperors rise and
fall. The city was beautified again, and rose with fresh grandeur from the
havoc and the ruin. The temple on the Capitol was magnificently restored, and
all the dignitaries of Rome assembled in great pomp to share in laying the
foundation-stone. The temple finished, they were careful to replace some at
least of what had been destroyed within it. Careful search was made for copies
of the treaties, laws, and ancient records which had perished in the flames,
and three thousand were replaced, as in a national museum.
But while pious hands were dealing reverently with the
greatest of Rome’s ancient temples the forces of destruction were let loose
elsewhere, and prophecies of woe upon the Holy City of Jerusalem were nearing
their fulfilment. To understand the causes of the rising in Judaea it may be
well to glance at Rome’s earlier relations with that country. The first of her
generals to conquer it was the great Pompeius, and it
was on his forcible entry into the Temple that attention was directed to the
religion of a people who had a shrine seemingly without a god. Falling with the
provinces of the East to the portion of Antonius, Judaea was conferred by him
as a kingdom upon Herod, and Augustus afterwards confirmed that prince’s tenure
and added fresh districts to his rule. For it was a settled maxim of his policy
to draw a girdle of dependent kingdoms round the distant provinces, and
gradually to accustom hardy races to the yoke of Rome. In the case of the Jews
there seemed to be good reasons for this course. They were soon known to be a
stubborn people, tenacious of their national customs, and ready to fly to arms
in their defence. They were spread widely through the
Empire, in the great cities and the marts of industry; but men liked them less
the more they saw them. They thought them turbulent and stiff-necked, and
mutual prejudice prevented any real insight into national temper or any
sympathy for the noble qualities of the race. It is curious to read in Tacitus
the strange medley of gross errors about their history and creed—monstrous
fancies gathered from malicious gossip or reported by credulous and ignorant
writers. It is the more strange when we think that he must have seen hundreds
of the men whose habits and beliefs he unwittingly misjudged, and one of whom
at least wrote in his own days to enlighten the world of letters on the
subject. At Rome the Jewish immigrants were looked upon with marked disfavor.
Under Tiberius we read that thousands of them were forcibly removed as settlers
to Sardinia, where if they sickened of malaria, as was likely, it would be but
a trifling loss. In Judaea the caprices of the Emperors affected them but
little, though they flew to arms rather than allow the statue of Caligula to be
set up in their Temple. But hard times began when, under Claudius, the country
passed from the dynasty of the Herods to the rule of
Roman knights or freedmen. It was their misfortune to be exposed to the greed
or lust of men as bad as the provincial governors of the Republic, while
zealots, who mistook the times, were fanning the flame of national discontent.
They bore with the vile Felix; but at length the insolence of Gessius Florus provoked a hasty
rising, which spread rapidly from place to place, till the whole country was in
arms.
The general in command of Syria could make no head
against the insurrection, which carried all before it till the strong hand of
Vespasian turned upon the rebels with resistless force the strong engine of
Roman discipline. But the war which had begun in a hasty not was persisted in
with stubborn resolution. Towns and strongholds had to be stormed or starved
into surrender, till the last hopes and fanaticism of the people stood at bay
within the walls of Jerusalem and the lines of the besieging legions. Two
summers passed away while thus much was being done, and the third year was
spent in further-reaching schemes of conquest, and the beleaguered city was
left almost unassailed. It was at this point that
Titus was left in sole command, eager to push Jerusalem forward the siege and
to enjoy the sweets of victory at Rome. But he had no easy task before him. The
city, strong by natural position, was fortified by walls of unusual breadth and
height, and amply supplied with water. Within were resolute men who had flocked
thither from all sides to defend the shrine of their most sacred memories and
the stronghold of freedom, and whose fiery zeal swept every thought aside
before their duty to their country and their God. There were also others more
timid or more prudent, who better knew the force of Rome and feared the
zealots’ narrow bigotry. Thus mutual distrust and mutual slaughter weakened the
forces of defence. After long months of obstinate
fighting discipline and skill prevailed over the dogged valour of the Jews—the Holy City was taken by storm, and the great Temple, the one centre of the nation’s worship, was utterly destroyed (AD
71). It was said that Titus was grieved to see the ruin of so glorious a
monument of art. He had no such tender feeling for his prisoners of war. The
outbreak which Roman misgovernment had provoked had been already fearfully
avenged. Jerusalem was left a heap of ruins, and its defenders were dragged in
their conqueror’s train, to die of misery and hardship on the way or to feed
the wild beasts with their bodies at the amphitheatres of the great cities on the road to Rome.
When the successful general returned to Italy it
remained only to celebrate the triumph of the war, and the Jewish historian
Josephus describes, as an eyewitness, the splendid pageant, which was one
magnificent beyond all parallel. The procession of the day began at the
Triumphal Gate, through which for ages so many conquering armies had passed
along in pomp. The rich spoil, gathered from many a ransacked town, was
followed by the long line of captives, the poor remains of the multitudes which
had been carried off to furnish cruel sport for the citizens of Syrian towns.
Then came the pictured shows that filled the kindling fancy with the memories
of glory, strife, and carnage; the battle scenes, the besieging lines, the
dread confusion of the storming armies, the sky all glow with the blazing
Temple, and streams of blood flowing through the burning cities. With each scene
passed a captive leader, to give reality to what men saw. Then came the sight
most piteous to Jewish eyes—the plunder of the Holy Place, the sacred vessels
which profane hands had feared to touch before, the golden table of the shewbread, the candlestick, which may be still seen
portrayed, with its seven branching lamps, by those who pass beneath the Arch
of Titus. After these came the images of victory, and then the ruling powers of
Rome, the father with the two sons who were in their turn to succeed him. Hour
after hour passed away as the procession moved in stately splendour through the streets. At last it wound along the Sacred Way which led up to the
Capitol, and halted when the Emperor stood at the door of the great temple of
Jupiter. While he waited there, the chief prisoner, Simon, the son of Gioras, was dragged off, with a noose about his deck, to
the dark prison not many steps away. There was a silence of suspense while he
was there buffeted and slain; then the shout was raised that Rome’s enemy was
no more ; the last sacrifices of the day were offered in the temple by
Vespasian, and all was over.
The war thus closed was a legacy of Nero’s rule, for
the present government was one of peace. Happily the new Emperor was a man of
different stamp from any of the Caesars who had gone before. There had been
fearful waste of treasure, and the Empire needed a good manager who would
tastes of husband its resources, and a quiet ruler who would soothe men’s
ruffled nerves. Vespasian was not a man of high ambition or heroic measures.
Soldier as he was, he was glad to sheathe the sword; but otherwise he carried
to the palace the habits of earlier life. He was simple and homely in his
tastes, affected no dignity, kept little state, and had no expensive pleasures.
Much of the cruelty of previous monarchs grew out of
their wanton waste. The imperial revenue was small, and their extravagance soon
drained their coffers; to replenish them they had recourse to rapine or
judicial murder. Vespasian saw the need of strict economy. To maintain his
legions and the civil service, to feed and amuse a population of proud paupers,
and to make good the ravages of fire and sword, he needed a full treasury, and
there could be little left to spend upon himself. But for himself he needed
little. He loved his little house among the Sabine hills better than the palace
of the Caesars; drank his wine with keener relish from his old grandmother’s
cup than from gold or silver goblets; disliked parade or etiquette, and could
scarcely sit through the stately weariness of the triumphal show. He mocked at
the flatterers who thought to please his vanity by making Hercules the founder
of his race; and unwillingly, at Alexandria, submitted to test the virtue of
his imperial hands on the blind who were brought to him to cure, as in later
days monarchs used to touch for the king’s evil.
Stories soon passed from mouth to mouth to show how he
disliked luxurious habits. A perfumed fop, we read, came to thank him for the
promise of promotion, but saw the great man turn away saying, “I would rather
that you smelt of garlic”, and found his appointment cancelled after all. But
as ruler he never seemed content. He said from the first that he must have a
vast sum to carry on the government, and he showed no lack of energy in raising
it. Even at Alexandria, the first city to salute him Emperor, the people who
looked for gratitude heard only of higher taxes in the place of bounty, and
vented their disgust in angry nicknames. Fresh tolls and taxes were imposed on
every side by a financier who was indifferent to public talk or ridicule, and
shrank from no source of income, however mean or unsavoury the name might seem, if only it filled his coffers. Men remembered that his
father had been taxgatherer and usurer by turns, and
they said the son took after him, when they saw their ruler stooping to
unworthy traffic, selling his favours and immunities,
bestowing honours on the highest bidder, and
prostituting, as they fancied, the justice of his courts of law. It was said
that he employed his mistress, Caenis, as a
go-between in such degrading business, and that he allowed his fiscal agents to
enrich themselves by greed and fraud, stepping in at last to take the spoil,
and draining sponges dry. The wits of Rome of course amused themselves at his
expense, and told their stories of his want of dignity. A servant one day asked
him for a favour for one whom he called his brother.
The Emperor sent at once to call the suitor to him, made him pay him down the
sum which he had promised to his friend at court, and then when the servant
came again to ask the favour said in answer, “Look
out for another brother, for he whom you call yours is now mine”. Another time
a deputation came to tell him that a town had voted a costly statue in his honour. “Set it up at once?” he said, and, holding out the
hollow of his hand, “here is the base all ready to receive it”. There was,
indeed, nothing royal in his talk or manners. He freely indulged in vulgar
banter, and was never, it is said, in a gayer mood than when he had hit upon
some sordid trick for raising money. Of such tales many, perhaps, were mere
idle talk the spleen of men who thought it hard to be called upon to pay their
quota to the expenser of the state.
The money was certainly well used, however it was
gotten. Government was carried on with a strong though thrifty hand, and peace
and order were everywhere secured. Liberal grants were made to cities in which
fire and earthquake made havoc; senators were provided with means to support
their rank, and old families saved from ruin by timely generosity. The fine
arts and liberal studies were encouraged; public professorships were founded
and endowed out of the Emperor’s privy purse. Nor were the amusements of the
people overlooked, though his outlay on this score seemed mean and parsimonious
as compared with the extravagance of Nero. It was the great merit of Vespasian
that absolute power had no disturbing influence on his judgment suspicion, or
his temper. He had no suspicious fears, but let his doors stand open to all
comers through the day, and dropped the earlier habit of the court of searching
those who entered. He showed no jealousy of great men round him, and treated Mucianus with forbearance, though his patience was sorely
tried by his haughty airs. He was in no haste to assert his dignity, and when
Demetrius the Cynic kept his seat and vented some rude speech as he came near
him, he only called him ‘a snarling cur’ and passed on his way.
In one case, indeed, he was persuaded to take harsher
measures. Helvidius Priscus,
the son-in-law of Thrasea Paetus,
had from the first asserted in the most offensive forms his claims to
republican equality. He spoke of his prince by name without a title of rank or honour; as praetor he ignored him in all official acts, and
treated him when they met with almost cynical contempt. He was not content
seemingly to be let alone, but aspired to be a martyr to his Stoic dogmas.
Vespasian was provoked at last to give the order for his death, recalling it,
indeed, soon after, but only to be told that it was too late to save him, for
Titus and his chief advisers felt the danger from the philosophic malcontents,
saw how much their policy of abstention had weakened the government oi Nero,
and were resolved that Helvidius should die, though
at the cost of Vespasian’s regret and self-reproach.
There was also another scene, and one too of unusual
pathos, in which he acted sternly. Julius Sabinus was
a chieftain of the Lingones who called his clan to
arms for Gallic independence. The movement failed—the Sequani against whom he marched having defeated him. He heard that the Roman eagles
were at hand, and in despair the would-be Caesar burnt his house over his head
and hid himself in a dark cave, in hope that men might think him dead. His wife Epponina believed he was no more, and gave way to
such an agony of grief that he sent a trusty messenger to tell her all and bid
her join him. For years she lived, in the town by day among her unsuspecting
friends, and in the hours of darkness with her husband. She began to hope that
she might free them both from the weariness of this concealment if she could
but go to Rome and win his pardon. She dared not leave him in his hiding-place
alone, so she took him with her in disguise. But the long journey was a
fruitless one the boon was never granted. Sadly and wearily they made their way
back to their hiding place, to carry on the old life of disguise and of
suspense. Then, to make her trial harder, she bore two children to her husband.
She hid her state from every eye, hid her little ones even from her friends,
suckled and reared them for some time in that dark cave with their father. At
length the secret was discovered, and the whole family was carried off to hear
their sentence from Vespasian’s lips. In vain she asked for mercy, in vain she
pleaded that the rash presumption of a moment had been atoned for by long years
of lingering suspense ; in vain she brought her little ones to lisp with their
infant lips the cry for pity, till the Emperor’s heart was touched and he was
ready to relent. But Titus stood by and was seemingly unmoved. He urged that it
would be a dangerous example to let any hope for mercy who had showed such high
ambition, and that state policy required that they should die. Unable to save
her husband, the noble-hearted woman bore him company in death, and left the
Emperor’s presence with defiance on her lips.
Vespasian was soon to follow her. He had passed ten
years of sovereignty and sixty-nine of life. His career as a ruler had been one
of unremitting toil, and even when his powers began to fail he would not give
himself more rest. Physicians warned him that he must slacken work and change
the order of his daily life, but “an emperor” he said “should die upon his
feet”; and he was busy with the cares of office almost to the last. His jesting humour did not leave him even on his deathbed, and as
the streams of life were ebbing he thought of the divine honours given to the earlier Caesars and said, “I feel that I am just going to be a
god”.
Nor did the populace forget to jest in their sorrow at
his death. When the funeral rites were going on, an actor was seen to personate
the dead man by his dress and bearing and to ask the undertaker how much the
funeral cost. When a large sum was named, “Give me the hundredth part of it”
Vespasian was made to say, “and fling my body into the Tiber”
TITUS.—A.D. 79-81.
Titus was born in the tiny cell of a poor house at
Rome, when his father was struggling on with straitened means. But when
Vespasian caught the eye of the favourite Narcissus
and was sent to serve in high command in Britain, his young son was life of
Titus, taken to court, to be brought up with Britannicus and share his pursuits as schoolfellow and playmate. His powers of mind and
body ripened rapidly, and he gave promise of a brilliant future, till his early
career at court was cut short by the murder of Britannicus.
He was said even to have touched with his lips the poisoned cup and to have
long suffered from the potion. Little is told us of the years that followed
save that he served with credit in campaigns in Germany and Britain, and gave
some time to legal studies, till his father took the command of the army in the
Jewish war and the prospects of civil strife opened a wider horizon to his
ambitious hopes. The memories of his early years spent in the palace may well
have fired his fancy, and his adventurous spirit probably outstripped the slow
caution of Vespasian. It was Titus who intrigued with Mucianus,
who went to and fro between Egypt, Palestine, and Syria, who plotted and
schemed with Berenice in the intervals of gayer moods, who compromised his
father’s name and drove him to come forward as a candidate for empire.
When all was won and Vespasian’s strong hand was
needed in the capital, Titus was left to close the war in Palestine and to
pacify the East. The struggle dragged slowly on in spite of his impatience to
return. His personal gallantry and skill in the conduct of the siege won the
trust and affection of hi soldiers; but his merciless cruelty to the conquered
left a lasting stain upon his name. The winter months were spent by him with
royal pomp in the great towns of Syria, where the Eastern princes flocked to do
him honour, and alarming rumours spread at Rome of the sovereign airs which he put on, of the ominous influence
of Berenice, of his unbounded popularity with the army of the East. Men began
to fear that he would not be content to wait and share the Empire, but would
rend it asunder in a parricidal war. Such fears were soon put to rest when in
early spring he left his train to follow as it could and hurried with all speed
to greet Vespasian with the simple words, “See, father, here I am”.
From that time he shared in full the titles and
reality of empire, assuming in his thirtieth year the Tribunician dignity which his father had till this time modestly declined, and dazzling
Roman eyes with the pomp and magnificence of the triumphal shows. For Titus
felt perhaps that Vespasian’s homely vulgarity was out of place in the founder
of a new dynasty, and that to balance the traditions of the Caesars and the
profusion of a Nero it would be prudent for the new rulers to do something to
make themselves admired or feared. He had himself a princely bearing and a
ready flow of graceful words; he excelled in manly exercises, and was a lover
of the fine arts. He keenly felt the ridicule that clung to some of his
father’s ways of raising money, and urged him to think more of appearances;
but in this Vespasian was not to be moved. He even bantered Titus on his
delicate nerves, asking if he disliked the smell of the coins that were paid as
the impost on unsavoury matter. But in other things
he was more yielding. He was willing to follow the imperial traditions and to
spend largely on the great works which Titus raised to dignify the Flavian name
or to eclipse the memory of Nero. The parks and woods included in the circuit
of the Golden House were given back to their earlier uses. The palace itself
was in part pulled down, and the Baths of Titus swallowed up the rest, while
the Temple of Peace was built to hold the works of art which had been stored
within it. The bronze colossus of the Emperor, founded for Nero by Zenodorus, was changed into a statue of the Sun, and gave
probably its name to the Flavian Amphitheatre which still survives in ruins. In
after years a triumphal arch was planned and finished, on which we can still
see the solemn pageant and note the great candlestick and other national
trophies of which the Temple at Jerusalem had been despoiled.
Besides such tokens of imperial grandeur Titus
relied, it seems, on sterner action; but in this he took his measures without
concert with his father. He had managed to win his consent to the death of Helvidius Priscus, but Vespasian
would be no party to a reign of terror. His son took the unusual step of
becoming praefect of the praetorian guards, an office
filled commonly by knights. The soldiers were convenient agents, who asked no
questions but acted at a word; and if anyone at Rome was too outspoken in his
criticism or likely to be dangerous, he was easily removed in a hasty riot or a
soldiers’ brawl, or a cry could be got up in the theatre or in the camp and the
traitor’s head be called for. In one case, it is true, treasonable letters were
found to prove the guilt of a noble who was seized as he left the palace where
he had been dining ; but then it was remembered that Titus had a strange
facility for copying handwriting, and boasted that he could have been a
first-rate forger if he would.
If it was his wish to inspire terror he succeeded, for
men already began to whisper to each other about his cruelty, and to fear that
they would see another Nero on the throne. Still more unpopular were his
relations with Berenice, which might end, it was thought, in marriage. Had she
not already, like another Cleopatra, bound his fancy to her by her Eastern
spells, and would he not probably go on to seat the hated Jewish paramour upon
his throne? The populace of Rome, which had borne with Caligula’s mad antics
and Nero’s monstrous orgies, were stirred with inexplicable loathing at the
thought. Titus tried to silence the outcry with harsh measures, and had one
bold caviller beaten with rods for a rude jest. But
the storm grew louder; he saw at last that he must yield, and reluctantly
consented to dismiss her. This was not all that men had to say against him.
There were ugly stories of rapacious greed, of debauches carried far into the
night, of sensual excesses better left unnamed.
Such was his character at Rome when Vespasian’s death
left him sole occupant of the imperial office, and from that moment a change
passed over the spirit of his life. Like Octavius he had been feared—he would
now like Augustus win his eople’s love. The boon
companions who had shared his midnight parties, the unworthy favourites whose hands were tingling for the money-bags
which Vespasian had filled, the informers who had tasted blood and thought the
chief hindrance in their way had been removed by death—all these vanished at
once like birds of night when dawn is come, and were driven even from the city.
He was full of tenderness and courtesy for every class, sanctioned by one
stroke of the pen all the concessions made by earlier monarchs; said he was not
a princely thing to let any suitor leave him in sadness with his boon ungranted, and complained that he had lost a day in which
he blest no man with a favour. So scrupulous was he
of any show of greed that he would hardly receive the customary presents; so
fearful of staining the sanctity of his reputation that he aimed at universal
clemency, and pardoned two young conspirators with a graceful tenderness for
their mother’s anxious feelings, which made the mercy doubly precious. His
father’s strict economy had left the treasury full, and Titus could enjoy
awhile in safety the pleasure of giving freely and the luxury of being loved,
for the people who had feared a tyrant thought that the golden age was come at
last, and soon began to idolize a ruler who refused them nothing, who spoke with
such a royal grace and spent so freely on their pleasures. They did not ask if
it could last, or if the revenue could bear the constant strain; they did not
think that their ruler’s character might change again when he had to face the
trial of an empty treasury and a disappointed people. Happily, perhaps, for the
memory of Titus, his career upon the throne was short. He had little more than
two short years of absolute power, when Rome heard with a genuine outburst of
universal grief that its beloved ruler had caught a fever on his way to his
villa on the Sabine hills, and died, complaining that it was hard to be robbed
of life so soon, when he had only a single crime upon his conscience. What that
crime was no one knew. Posterity perhaps might think that his one crime as
sovereign was the leaving the legacy of empire to Domitian, his brother, whose
vices he had clearly read and weakly pardoned.
Some great disasters mark in sombre colours the annals of his rule; in all he had shown
for the sufferers unstinted sympathy and bounty. A great fire raged three days
and nights through Rome ; a terrible plague spread its ravages through Italy;
and lastly the world was startled by the horrors of a story so unparalleled in
history as to tempt us to dwell longer on details.
The volcanic energies had been slumbering for ages
beneath Vesuvius, or had found a vent perhaps here and there in spots higher up
along the coast that were full of horrors to the ancient, but seem harmless now
to modern eyes. A few years earlier they had given tokens of their power by
shaking to the ground the buildings of Pompeii, a city peopled by industrious
traders. The Roman Senate, warned by the disaster, thought of removing the city
to a safer spot; but the Pompeians clung to their old neighbourhood and repaired in haste their ruined
dwellings. The old town was swept away, with its distinctive Oscan forms, that
told of times before Greeks or Romans set the local fashions, and a copy of the
capital upon a humble scale, with forum, theatres, and temples, took its place.
Some of the well-to-do migrated probably to distant homes and left their
houses, to be hastily annexed to those of neighbours,
who soon adapted them, though on different levels, to their use. But scarcely
was the work of restoration over when the great catastrophe came upon them. The
little cloud that rests always on the mountain-top expanded suddenly to
unwonted size, The credulous fancy of Dion Cassius pictures to us phantom
shapes of an unearthly grandeur, like the giants that the poets sing of, riding
in the air before the startled eyes of men ; but the younger Pliny, who was a
distant eye-witness, describes the scene in simpler terms. He was with his
uncle, the great naturalist, who was in command of the fleet then stationed at Misenum. Suddenly they were called upon to note the unusual
appearance of Vesuvius, where the cloud took to their eyes the form of an
enormous pine-tree. The elder Pliny, who never lost a chance of learning,
resolved to start at once to study the new marvel, and asked his nephew to go
with him. But the young student, who even in later life cared more for books
than nature, had a task to finish and declined to go. As the admiral was
starting he received pressing messages from friends at Stabiae,
close beneath the mountain, to help them to take refuge on shipboard, as the
way round by land was long to take under the fiery hail that was fast falling.
The fleet neared the shore, where the frightened families had piled their
baggage ready to embark; but the hot ashes fell upon the decks, thicker and
hotter every moment, and, stranger still, the waters seemed to retire from the
beach and to grow too shallow to allow them to reach the poor fugitives, who
strained their eyes only to see the ships move off, and with them seemingly all
hope of succour. The volcanic force was doubtless
raising the whole beach and making the sea recede before it. But Pliny was not
to be discouraged, and landed finally at another point, where a friend had a
villa, on the coast. Here he bathed tranquilly and supped and slept till the
hot showers threatened to block up the doors, and the rocking earth loosened
the walls within which they rested. So they made their way out on to the open
beach, with cushions bound upon their heads for shelter from the ashes, and
waited vainly for a fair wind to take them thence. Pliny lay down to rest
beside the water, while the sky was red with fire and the air loaded with sulphureous gases; and when his slaves tried at last
to lift him up he rose only to fall and die. By a curious irony of fortune the
student, whose great work is a sort of encyclopaedia of the knowledge which men had gathered about nature, chose the unhealthiest
spot and the worst posture for his resting-place, while his ignorant servants
managed to escape. For the waves were charged with sulphur that escaped from the fissures of the rocks, and the heavy gas, moving along
the surface of the earth, was most fatal to those who stooped the lowest.
Meantime at Pompeii the citizens first learned their
danger as they were seated at the theatre and keeping holiday. The lurid sky
and falling showers drove them to their homes. Some hurried thither to seize
their valuables and hasten to be gone out of reach of further risk ; some felt
the ground rock beneath them as they went and were crushed beneath the falling
pillars; others sought a refuge in their cellars, and found the scoriae piled
around their dwellings. Hot dust was wafted through every crevice; noxious
gases were spread around them; and thus their hidingplace became their tomb.
Hour after hour the fiery and various showers fell and piled their heaps higher
and higher over the doomed city, while a pall of darkness was spread over the
earth. Then the hot rain came pouring down, as the sea-waters, finding their
way through fissured rocks into the boiling mass, were belched forth again in vapour, which condensing fell in rain. The rain, mingling
with the scoriae, formed streams of mud, which grew almost into torrents on the
steep hillsides, and poured through the streets of Herculaneum, choked up the
houses as they passed, then rose over the walls, till an indistinguishable mass
was left at last to hide the place where once a fair city stood.
Weeks after, when the volcano had spent its force,
some of the citizens of Pompeii who had escaped came back to see the scene of
desolation, guessed as they best could the site of their old homes, dug their
way here and there through any partially hole which they could make into the
rooms, houses of to carry off all the articles they prized, and then they left
the place for ever. Time after time since then the struggling forces have burst
forth from the mountain, and the volcanic showers have trace again fallen and
covered the old city with a thicker crust, till all trace of it was lost to
sight and memory. After many centuries it was discovered by accident, and the
work of clearance has been slowly going forward, constantly enriching the great
Museum at Naples with stores to illustrate the industrial arts of ancient
times, and restoring to our eyes a perfectly unique example of the country town
of classical antiquity in all its characteristic features. At Herculaneum there
has been less done, and there is more perhaps to be looked for. It was a resort
of fashion rather than a market-town, was more under Greek influence, and,
therefore, had a higher taste for the fine arts than Pompeii; and above all it
does not seem to have been rifled by its old inhabitants, from whose eyes it
was hidden probably by thick coats of hardened mud.
DOMITIAN.—A.D.
81-96.
DURING Domitian’s early years his father Vespasian was
hiding in disgrace. He lived in a little house at Rome so meanly furnished that
it had not a single piece of silver plate, and his straitened means may
possibly have tempted him to vice, as the scandalous stories of later days
asserted. He first attracted public notice when his father headed the
movement in the East, but Vitellius still left him
unmolested. There was danger, however, from the fury of the soldiers, and he
took refuge with his uncle Sabinus on the Capitol, to
see the fortress stormed and the defenders slain. He escaped from the massacre
in disguise, and lurked for awhile in the house of a
poor friend in a mean quarter of the town. But succour was near at hand, and the vanguard of his father’s army not only brought him
safety but raised him suddenly to unlooked-for greatness.
The change was fatal to his modesty and self-control.
He aired at once all the insolence of absolute power, gave the rein to his
sensual desires, and turned his bestowed all the offices of state at his
caprice, head. Vespasian even wrote in irony to thank him for not appointing a
successor to himself. The arrival of Mucianus, the
vicegerent of the Emperor, put some check upon his license; but it needed all
the statesman’s authority and tact to temper the arrogance of the headstrong
youth. The crisis on the Rhine was pressing, and they set out together for the
seat of war, but all was over before they reached Lugdunum;
and Domitian, detained from going further, is said to have sent fruitless
messages to tamper with the fidelity of Cerealis. If
he had ever seriously hoped to raise himself to the level of his brother he had
quite failed, and he had gone too far to meet his father’s eye without
misgiving. To disarm the anger that he dreaded he feigned even folly and took
to hunting flies, for the often-quoted jest of Vibius Crispus, that there was no one, “not even a fly, with
Caesar” belongs more probably to this than to a later time. Thanks his father’s
tenderness or the entreaties of his brother, he suffered nothing worse than
warning words; but Vespasian watched him narrowly henceforth, kept him always
by his side, trusted him with no public functions, and flatly refused to let
him lead the forces which the Parthian king had sent to beg for in return for
his own proffers of support. But by this time Domitian had learnt to bide his
time and to be patient. He hid his chagrin at being kept thus in the
leading-strings of childhood, and took to poetry, coquetting with the Muses in
default of graver duties.
At Vespasian’s death, however, the old temper broke
out afresh. At first he thought of outbidding Titus by offering the soldiers a
bounty twice as large, but wanted nerve to appeal to force; then he complained
that he was kept out of his rights, as his father’s will had named him partner
in the imperial power, and to the last he tried the long-suffering tenderness
of Titus by moody sullenness and discontent, and possibly even by plots against
his life.
His brother’s death soon removed the only obstacle to
his ambition and the only restraint upon his will. But, strange to say, wanton
and headstrong as he had been before, he now exerted a rare faculty of
self-restraint, as if he were weighted with the responsibility of power and
wished to win and to deserve the popularity of Titus. He spent some time in
quiet every morning to think over his course of action and to school himself
for the duties. He saw that justice was the first requisite of social
well-being, and he spared no effort to secure it. In the law courts he was
often listening to the pleadings and the sentence given. The judges knew that
his eye was on them, and that it was dangerous to take a bribe or show caprice.
Even in distant provinces the governors felt that they were closely watched,
and. never, it is said, did they show more equity and self-restraint than in
this opening period of Domitian’s rule.
His treatment of another class showed a like spirit. The
rise and fall of the informers had been a sort of weather-gauge of the moral
formers, atmosphere around. Since Nero’s death the bolder spirits in the Senate
had tried under each Emperor in turn to bring the false accusers to the bar of
justice. The leading Stoics had come forward smarting with the memory of the
friends whom they had lost, full of indignant eloquence against the
bloodhounds who had hunted them to death. The infamous names of Marcellus, Crispus, Regulus called out an
explosion of revengeful sentiment. The Senate even went so far as to ask that
the old notebooks of the Emperors might be produced to furnish evidence against
the men they hated. But little had been really done, and men thought they
traced the malign influence of Mucianus in screening
the criminals from attack. Titus had driven them away in disgrace; but now
perhaps they were creeping, like unclean things, out of their hidingplaces to study the new sovereign’s temper. They
could not be encouraged by the words that dropped from him:
“The prince who fails to chastise informers whets
their zeal”; nor by the penalty of exile fixed for the accuser who brought a
charge of defrauding the treasury or privy purse, and failed to make it good.
He tried next to meet a growing evil of the times that
was significant of misrule. He announced that he would receive no legacies save
from the to himself, childless, and quashed the wills made out of vanity or
ostentation to the prejudice of the natural heirs.
Not content with such reforms, he tried to give a
higher moral tone to the social life of the great city, to check the license of
the theatres, to discourage indecent pasquinades, society, and raise the respect
for chastity and moral ties.
Had he only ruled as short a time as Titus he would
have borne as fair a character in history, and he would seemingly have deserved
it better, for he grasped the reins with a firmer hand and wished to merit
rather than to win his subjects’ love. How was it that so fair an opening was
so sadly clouded, or whence the change that came over the spirit of his change
of rule? In the meagre account of ancient writers we find no attempt made to
solve the problem. But we may see perhaps some explanation in the events that happened
at the time. One thing was wanting still, the laurel crown of victory, to raise
Domitian to the level of his brother. In an evil hour he coveted military
glory, and set out for Germany, where a pretext for war was never wanting. But,
high as was the order of his talents, he had neither the general’s eye nor the
soldier’s courage, and his heart failed him when he drew nearer to the enemy.
The German expedition ended as it began in plundering a few poor villages, and
in pompous proclamations to the army and the Senate. But far away towards the
Danube there was the sound of the real crash of war. Decebalus,
at the head of his Dacian hordes, was an enemy worthy of the most skilful generals of Rome. Bold, fertile in resource, and
skilled in all the fence of war, he had drilled and organized a formidable
power, which for years tried the mettle of the Roman armies. Hither also came
Domitian to gain his laurels, and here too his courage failed him. He stayed in
the rear away from all the fighting, while his legions, badly led, were driven
backward in disgrace. Unwilling to return without striking a blow to retrieve
his tarnished fame, he hurried to Pannonia to chastise the Marcomanni for
neglecting to send him succour in the war. But
thither also he was followed by his evil star. Instead of the submission that
he looked for he found a vigorous defence; he was
ensnared and routed by an enemy whom he had thought to find an easy prey. Sick
of war and of its dangers, he came to terms with Decebalus without delay; and rare as it was for a Roman leader to conclude a war after
defeat, he was glad to purchase peace at any cost, and to give not money only
but tools and workmen to teach the Dacian tribes the arts of civilized life.
He could not face his people with the confession of
his failure, so lying bulletins went homeward to the Senate to tell of
victories never won and to disguise the history of the campaigns. Honours and thanksgivings were voted in profusion. The
imperial city and the provincial towns accepted the official story, and raised
with dutiful joy triumphal statues to their piince.
But the truth leaked out, of course, and Domitian returned to Rome an altered
man. He read mockery in the eyes of all he met, detested their praises as gross
flattery, yet resented silence as a censure. He gave costly entertainments to
the people, but with a gaiety so forced and a mien so changed that men spoke of
them currently as funeral feasts, till at last he took them at their word,
inviting the senators to a strange parody of a supper in the tombs, and played
with grim humour on their fears.
While he was in this capricious mood another event
served yet further to embitter him. Antonius, a governor upon the Rhine, began
once more the fatal game of civil war. Though he was soon crushed and slain,
and his notebooks burnt, to compromise no partisans, yet the suspicious fears
of Domitian were not to be lulled so easily, and he fancied universal treachery
around him. The plot was the motive or excuse for an outburst of vindictive
feeling, which would not stay to wait for proofs, but grew ever more relentless
the faster his victims fell. Like some half-tamed animals we read of, he needed
to taste blood to reveal to himself and others the ferocity of his feline
nature.
One further cause perhaps there was—a frequent one
with vicious rulers—to tempt him to yet further evil. This was simply want of
money. The fruitless expenses of the wars, the heavy price he money, paid for
peace, the lavish outlay to keep up the farce and put the populace in good humour—these had drained the coffers which Vespasian had
filled, and which the easy prodigality of Titus had already emptied. At first
he was minded to economize by reducing the strength or number of the legions;
but he feared to weaken the thin line of border armies, and in his present mood
he saw a readier way to fill his treasury—the old, old story of these evil
times. Fines, confiscations, and judicial murders, became once more the order
of the day, coloured at times by various pleas, but
often too by none at all. He talked of conspiracies and treasons till his
morbid fancy saw traitors everywhere around him; his suspicious fears settled
at last into general mistrust as the hatred of the world grew more intense.
The Philosophers were among the first to suffer. Rusticus and Senecio died for
their outspoken reverence for the great martyrs of their Stoic creed, and many
another suffered with them, till by one sweeping edict all were banished from
the city and from Italy. Philosophy did not, indeed, make conspirators, but he
feared its habits of bold speech and criticism, as modern despots are
intolerant of a free press ; and he looked with an evil eye at men who would
not stoop to Caesar-worship, as persecuting Churches would trample out Dissent.
Among those who were brought before him at this time
and banished with the rest one name is mentioned that may stand apart, that of
Apollonius of Tyana. He was, it seems, a wandering
sage, so renowned for sanctity and wisdom that a band of admiring scholars
grouped themselves around him, and were glad to follow him from land to land.
Strange legends of his unearthly power gathered in time about his name, and
words of more than human insight were reported to feed the credulous fancy of
the world. In the last phase of the struggle between Pagan and Christian
thought the figure of Apollonius was chosen as a rival to the Jesus of the
Gospels, and his life was written by Philostratus to
prove that the religious philosophy of heathenism could show its sermons,
miracles, and inspiration.
These were hard times for earnest thinkers ; they were
not encouraging for men of action. Military prowess and success were too marked
a contrast to the humbling disasters on the Danube to meet with much favour from the Emperor; but there were few generals of
renown to try his temper. Julius Agricola is prominent among them, because the skilful pen of Tacitus, his son-in-law, has written for us
the story of his life. His just, firm rule as governor of Britain, the
promptitude with which he swept away the abuses of the past, the courage with
which he pushed his arms into the far North and brought Caledonia within the
limits of his province, form a bright page in the annals of this period. But
they gave little pleasure to his jealous sovereign, who eyed him coldly on his
return to Rome, and gave him no further chance of service or of glory. He lived
a few years more in modest dignity, without a word of flattery, yet not
desirous to court a useless death by offensive speech. When he died men
whispered their suspicions of foul play, but the Emperor, who was named among
his heirs, accepted gladly the token of his respect, forgetting his own earlier
principles, or that, as the historian tells us, ‘only a bad prince is left a legacy
in a good father’s will?
But though he feared serious thought and action, the
lighter charms of literature might perhaps have soothed the moody prince. In
earlier days he had turned to poetry for solace, the sad Muses, whom he had
courted in retirement, had, as Juvenal tells us, no patron else to look to than
the Domitian who had just risen to the throne. But the Emperor read little else
himself besides the memoirs of Tiberius, and the writers of his day had but
scant cause to bless his princely bounties. Martial, with all his ready flow
of sparkling verse, his pungent epigram, and witty sallies, had a hard life of
it enough at Rome, and was reduced to cringe and flatter for the gift of a new
toga or a paltry dole. Statius, well read and highly gifted as he was with
fluency and fancy, found it easy to win loud applause when he read his Thebaid in public, but gained little by his ingenious
compliments and conceits as poet laureate of the court, and had not means
enough at last to find a marriage-portion for his daughter. Juvenal’s appeal in favour of the starving Muses met seemingly
with no reponse, and disappointment may have added to
his high-toned vehemence and studied scorn. It was no time certainly for to
write without partiality or fear, and the condensed vigour of his style, its vivid portraiture and power of moral indignation might have
been lost wholly to the world had not another Emperor come at last to combine
monarchy with freedom.
Meantime Rome had grown weary of the bloodthirsty mania
of its ruler, who loved to pounce with stealthy suddenness upon his victims and
to talk of mercy when he meant to slay. It was the rich, the noble, the
large-hearted who suffered most in this reign of terror, and it was left to his
wife and freedmen to cut it short. Finding, it is said, a notebook in his bed,
and in it their own names marked down for death, they formed their plans
without delay. It was in vain that Domitian was haunted by his warning fears,
that he had his porticoes inlaid with polished stone to reflect the assassin’s
dagger ; in vain he sent for astrologers and soothsayers to read the future; he
could not be always armed against the enemies of his own household. The
conspirators surprised him alone in an unguarded moment and dispatched him with
many wounds, though he struggled fiercely to the last praetorians
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