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OCTAVIUS CAESAR AUGUSTUS :THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE FOUNDER OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
CHAPTER VII
ACTIUM
When Sextus fled from Sicily Octavius was about to
complete his 27th year. It was nearly nine years since, while little more than
a boy, he had first boldly aborted himself in opposition to men more than twice
his age, and had forced those who had been states-men
before he was born to regard him as their champion or respect him as their
master. Since that time he had had little rest from
grave anxieties or war. At Mutina, Philippi, Perusia,
and in Sicily, he had tasted danger and disaster as well as victory; and had
more than once been in imminent hazard. These fatigues had been made more
trying by frequent illness, apparently arising from a sluggish liver, to which
he had been subject from boyhood. Through all he had been supported by an
indomitable persistence and a passionate resolve to avenge his “adoptive
father, all the more formidable perhaps in a character
naturally cold and self-contained. As he went on there gradually awoke in him a nobler ambition, that of restoring and directing the
distracted state. Neither now nor afterwards do the more vulgar-attributes of
supreme power—wealthy luxury, and adulation—seem to have had charms for him. He
felt the governing power in him, he believed in his “genius,” what we might
call his “mission,” and the difficulties of a divided rule became more and more
clear to him. From this time, therefore, he used every means which wise
statesmanship or crafty policy could suggest to rid himself of the remaining partner in the Triumvirate, and to gain a free hand in
the work of restoration which, he had already begun.
In private life he had taken a step which was the
source of a life-long happiness to him. The political marriage with Scribonia in BC40, contracted with the idea of conciliating
Sextus Pompeius, bad been ended by divorce on the very day of the birth of his
only daughter Iulia. The reason alleged was her disagreeable disposition; but,
besides the change in the political situation, there was another reason of a
more personal nature. The peace of Misenum had permitted
many partisans of Brutus, Cassius, or Lucius Antonius, who had filed to Sextus
Pompeius, to return to Rome. Among others came Tiberius Nero, with his young
wife, Livia Drusilla. Unless statues and coins are more than usually false, she
was possessed of rare beauty. In BC 38 she was twenty years old,
and had one son (the future Emperor Tiberius) now in his fourth year,
and was within three months of the birth of her second son Drusus. Even to the
lax notions of divorce and re-marriage then current this seemed somewhat
scandalous. A year was held to be the necessary interval for a woman between
one marriage and another. But the object of this convention was to prevent
ambiguity as to the paternity of children; and when Octavius consulted the
pontifices, they told him that, if there was no doubt as to the paternity of
the child with which Livia was pregnant, the marriage might lawfully take place
at once. No opposition seems to have been made by Livia’s husband, who was at
least twenty years her senior. He acted as a father in giving her to her new husband, and entertained the bridal pair at a banquet. The
marriage was so prompt that a favourite page of Livia’s, seeing her take her
place on the same dinner couch as Octavius, whispered to his mistress that she
had made a mistake, for her husband was on the other couch. On the birth of
Drusus, Octavius sent the infant to its father, thus complying with the
conditions of the pontifices. That the two men should have been on good terms
is not incredible in view of the prevailing sentiment as to divorce. We find
Cicero, for instance, writing effusively to Dolabella almost directly after he
had compelled his daughter to divorce him for gross misconduct, and there are
other instances. At any rate Tiberius Nero, on his death-bed in BC 33, left the guardianship of his sons to Octavius, and in spite of such a
beginning the marriage proved permanently happy. Octavius was devoted to Livia
to the day of his death; his last conscious act was to kiss her lips.
The victory in Sicily left him supreme in the West,
and he at once devoted himself to the re-establishment of order and prosperity.
The relief to Italy and Rome was immense; for with Pompeius master of the sea
the city was always in danger of famine, and the Italian coast of devastation.
This feeling of relief found expression in the proceedings of the Senate, which
now began those votes of special honours and powers to Octavius Caesar, which in the course of the next ten or twelve years gradually
clothed him with every attribute of supremacy in the state. On his return from Sicily he was decreed an ovation, as after Philippi, as well
as statues and a triumphal arch. On the day of the victory over Pompeius (2nd
of September), there were to be feriae and supplicationes for ever; he and his wife and family were to be feasted on the Capitol, and he
was to have the perpetual right of wearing the laurel wreath of victory. He
refused the office of Pontifex Maximus, as long as Lepidus lived, but he
accepted the privileges of the tribuneship—the personal sanctity which put any one injuring or molesting him under a curse, and the
right of sitting with the tribunes in the Senate. This it seems gave him
practically the full tribunicia potestaswithin
the city. But it was a novel measure, and its full consequences were not
perhaps foreseen. He had twice before wished to be elected tribune, but his
“patriciate” stood in his way. This was meant as a kind of compromise, and if
furnishes the keynote to his later plans for absorbing the power of the
republican offices.
Octavius Caesar’s chief difficulties now came from the
large military forces of which he found himself possessed, either by his own
enlistment or from that of the various leaders. To disband them was neither
safe in view of possible complications with Antony, nor possible without
finding large sums of money or great tracts of unoccupied land with which to
reward the men; whereas his object now was to put an end to confiscation,
fines, and unusual imposts, and to bring back confidence and security. After
suppressing more than one incipient mutiny, he contrived to secure enough land
for those who had served their full time, partly by purchases from Capua, where
there was still a good deal of unassigned land. He repaid the colony by
granting it revenues from lands at Cnossus in Crete, which had become ager publicus on the defeat of the pirates, and on some of which a Roman colony was not long
afterwards established. Some of the men, again, who had been most clamorous and
mutinous he sent to Gaul as a supplementum to colonies already existing, or to found new
colonies. He was thus able to make remission of taxation, as well as of arrears
due from the lists of forfeiture published by the triumvirs. His enemies said
that his object was to throw the odium of their original imposition upon Antony
and Lepidus; or to make a merit of necessity, since in most cases it would have
been impossible to collect the money. These motives may have had a share in his
policy, but, he doubtless also wished to restore
confidence and cause an oblivion of the miseries of the civil wars. For the
soldiers who remained various other employments were found. The weakness of the
central government had long been shown by the existence of marauding bands in
various parts of Italy. The civil wars had aggravated the evil, till travelling
had become dangerous almost everywhere, and even the streets of Rome were
unsafe. Octavius now organised a police force of soldiers under Sabinus Cotta
to patrol the city and Italy, and within a few months the evil was much
mitigated. Besides this, Statilius Taurus was sent
with an army to restore order in the two African provinces—Proconsularis and Numidia. Another expedition was sent against the Salassi,
inhabiting the modern Val d’Aosta, who had for two years been holding out
against Antistius Vetus. He
had driven them into their mountain fastnesses; but when he left the district
they once more descended and expelled the Roman garrisons. The war was
entrusted to Valerius Messala,
who reduced them at least to temporary submission (BC 35-34). Another
similar war was that against the Iapydes, living in
what is now Croatia, who in their marauding expeditions had come as far as
Aquileia and plundered Roman colonies. To this Caesar went in person. He
destroyed their capital, Metulum, on the Colapis (mod. Kolpa), after a
desperate resistance, in the course of which he was
somewhat severely injured by the fall of a bridge. The rest of the country then
submitted. The Iapydes had no doubt provoked the
attack. But that does not seem to be the cast with the Pannonians, whom
Octavius proceeded to invade. They were a mixed Illyrian and Celtic tribe,
dwelling in forests and detached villages without great towns, and appear to
have lived peaceably. But Octavius resolved to take their one important town, Siscia, at the junction of the Kolpa and Save, partly as a convenient magazine in wars against the Daci, and partly
for the mere object of keeping his army employed and paid at the expense of a
conquered country. The siege of the town lasted thirty days, and after its fell he returned to Rome, leaving Fufius Geminus to continue the campaign. So again in the spring of BC 34 Agrippa was sent against the
Dalmatians, and when later in the season he was joined by Octavius in person,
their chief towns were taken and burnt; and this people, who since their defeat
of Gabinius in BC 44-43, had been practically independent, had again to submit
and pay tribute, with ten years’ arrears, and restore the standards taken from
Gabinius. Their submission was followed by that of other tribes, and by the
middle of BC33, the whole of Illyricum was restored to obedience.
These were the sort of successes to make a man popular
at Rome; for they were not costly in blood or treasury and they affected the interests of a large number of merchants and men of
business. Nor was this all. One of his legates, Statilius Taurus, was so successful in Africa, and another, C. Norbanus,
in Spain, that both were decreed triumphs in BC34, and in the same year
Mauretania was made a Roman province. Octavius had declined a triumph after the
Pannonian war, but accepted honours for Octavia and Livia, who were exempted
from the tutela, to which all women
were subject; and during these two years his name was becoming associated with
success and with the expansion of the Empire and of trade.
This was accompanied by restorations and improvements
in the city calculated to appeal still more strongly to popular imagination. In
BC33 Agrippa as aedile reformed the water supply of Rome, constructing 700
basins, 500 fountains, and repairing the aqueducts. He also cleansed the
cloacae, adorned the circus, distributed oil and salt free, and opened the
baths gratis throughout his year of office, besides throwing among the
spectators at the theatre tessera (tickets) entitling the holders to valuable
presents. Octavius himself, who was consul for a few months at the beginning of
BC33, erected the Porticus Octaviae, named in honour
of his sister, with the spoils of the Illyrian and Pannonian wars, and began
the building of the temple of Apollo and the two libraries, on the site bought
for a house on the Palatine before BC36, when that of Hortensius had been granted to him by the Senate, and while he was still living in the
house of Calvus near the Forum.
These successes in the Western provinces, combined
with such costly improvements in the city, impressed (as it was intended that
they should) the minds of the people in Rome with the feeling that Octavius
Caesar’s name was the best guarantee for the era of peace and prosperity which
seemed at last to be succeeding the ruin and horror of civil war. In strong
contrast—carefully emphasized by Octavius and his friends—were the military
expeditions in the East, and the extravagance of Antony’s infatuation for
Cleopatra in Egypt. In BC40 he had been roused from the intoxication of love
and revelry in Alexandria to find Syria in the hands of the Parthian Pacorus, son of Orodes, and of Labienus, son of the old legate of Iulius, who had joined
the enemy after the battle of Philippi. They had defeated and killed his
legate, Decidius Saxa, and
taken possession of the province. It is true that next year, BC39, P. Ventidius
drove away Labienus, and in BC38 defeated the
Parthians and killed Pacorus. But Antony was jealous
of Ventidius, deposed him from his command, and went in person to besiege the
remains of the Parthian army in Samosata, where they had been received by
Antiochus, king of Commagene. He failed to take the
town, and though in his despatch he took all the credit of previous successes,
the truth was well known in Rome. After his failure at Samosata he made somewhat inglorious terms with Antiochus, and going off to meet
Octavius at Tarentum left C. Sosius in charge of
Syria. Sosius put down an insurrection in Judaea and
established Herod as king (BC 38-7). But in BC36 Antony suffered severe
reverses in an expedition against Phraates, who had just succeeded his father Orodes as king of Parthia. One success, however, in the course of an inglorious campaign enabled him to send
home laurelled despatches, the real value of which Caesar and his friends took
care should be known. In BC35 he began carving out a kingdom for his elder son
by Cleopatra, and making preparations for an
expedition against the king of Armenia, whom he accused of failing in his duty
of supporting him in the previous year. Having first made a treaty of
friendship with the king of Media, in BC34 he invaded Armenia, and getting
possession of the person of the king by an act of treachery which shocked Roman
sentiment—not very scrupulous in such matters—he brought him in silver chains
to Alexandria.
Thus Antony’s career as an administrator and
defender of the Empire was rightly or wrongly looked upon as comparing
unfavourably with that of Octavius. But still more shocking to Roman feeling
was his position in Cleopatra’s court. Though the moral standard at Rome was
far from high, it was rigid in regard to certain
details. Just as a valid marriage could only be contracted with a woman who was
a civis, so for a man in high position to live
openly with a foreign mistress, however high her rank, was peculiarly
scandalous. The beloved Emperor Titus, a hundred years later, had to give way
to this sentiment and dismiss his Idumaean mistress. But that a Roman imperator
should not only have, such a connection with a “barbarous” queen, but should
act as her officer and courtier; that she should have a bodyguard of Roman
soldiers; should give the watchword to them as their sovereign,
and should even employ them to deal with what in one sense or another
was Roman territory—this seemed an outrage of the worst kind. In a poem written
it seems while the campaign at Actium was still undecided, but when rumours of
Antony’s defeat were reaching Rome, Horace well expresses the disgust with
which the position conceded to Cleopatra by Antony’s fondness was regarded :
False, false the tale our grandsons will declare—
That Romans to a woman fealty sware ;
Shouldered their pikes; presented arms; and did
Whate'er her wrinkled eunuchs deigned to bid:
Or that among our Roman flags were seen
The gauzy curtains of her palanquin.’'
Antony himself made no concealment as to the queen’s
connection with the army. After his disastrous expedition of BC 36-5, Cleopatra
supplied him with money, and he told his men when paying them that they were
receiving it from her. The connection also involved a breach with Octavius.
Their friendship—always doubtful—had been patched up from time to time by
formal reconciliations; in BC43 after Mutina; in BC40 at Brindisi, and in BC37
at Tarentum. For a time Antony had found great
pleasure in the society of Octavia, with whom he lived for a time at Athens.
But after the meeting at Tarentum he left Octavia with
her brother on his return to the East, and soon fell again under Cleopatra’s
spell, who, though not beautiful, fascinated him by her art and infinite
variety. When in BC35 Octavia, trying to effect another reconciliation, went to
Athens, taking money and soldiers for him from her brother, Antony accepted the
gifts, but sent her word that she was to return to Rome. Caesar would have had
her repudiate him at once, but she seems to have been sincerely attached to
him, and to have shrunk from the idea of an insult to herself being made an
occasion of civil war. She persisted in living in his town house, and in
bringing up with liberality, not only her own children by him, but also
Antony’s children by Fulvia.
But after his return from the Armenian expedition (BC34)
Antony became still more infatuated with Cleopatra. He publicly gave her the
title of “Queen of Queens”, and her eldest son the name of Caesarion and “King
of Kings”; while to his two sons and daughter by Cleopatra he assigned kingdoms
in Syria, Armenia, Libya, and Cyrene. He had the assurance to write to the
Senate asking for the confirmation of these acta. When his two friends, C. Sosius and Cn. Domitius Ahenobarbus entered on their consulship (1st of
January, BC32), they resolved to suppress this despatch, in
spite of Octavius’s wishes; but they communicated to the Senate his
message that the second period of the Triumvirate having expired (on the last
day of BC33) he had no desire for its renewal. He did not, however, lay down
his imperium, and the object of this declaration was to embroil Octavius with
the Senate, should he wish to retain his extraordinary powers. Ahenobarbus,
indeed, had had enough of civil war and wished to take no step likely to bring
it about. But Sosius made an elaborate speech in
praise of Antony, and attacking, or at least depreciating, Octavius; and was
only prevented from bringing in a motion in Antony’s favour by the intervention
of a tribune. A few days after this Octavius (who had not been present on the
1st of January) summoned the Senate, and delivered a speech from the consular
bench, which though studiously moderate as regards himself, was very outspoken
as regards Sosius and Antony. No one ventured to
reply, and the Senate was dismissed with the assurance that Octavius would
produce proofs of what he had said about Antony. The two consuls, without
taking any farther step, left Rome privately and joined Antony in Alexandria.
They were followed by a considerable number of Senators, Octavius giving out
that they went with his full consent, and declaring
that others might go if they chose.
This was a division of the governing body similar to that of BC 49-8, and it was evident that a civil
war was imminent. Sentiment was by no means all on one side at Rome, as is
proved by the numbers of the Senate who crossed to Antony. Party feeling, in
fact, was so keen that the very boys in the streets divided themselves into Caesarians and Antonians; and both leaders showed great
eagerness by arguments and declarations to put themselves in the right.
Antony’s grievances against Octavius were: (1) that he deprived Lepidus of
Africa without consulting him; (2) that he had not shared with him the
countries formerly controlled by Sextus Pompeius; (3) that he enrolled soldiers
in Italy without sending him the contingents due by their agreement. Octavius
Caesar’s against Antony were that he was occupying Egypt (not a Roman province)
without authority; had executed Sextus Pompeius, whom he (Octavius) had wished
to spare; had disgraced the Roman name by his conduct to the king of Armenia,
by his connection with Cleopatra, and by bestowing kingdoms on his children by
her; and, lastly, had wronged him by acknowledging Caesarion as a son of Iulius
Caesar. Letters and messages were interchanged for some months on these and
other points, both trying to justify themselves. Antony, in one letter at
least, preserved by Suetonius, ridicules in the coarsest terms what he regards
as Octavius Caesar’s hypocritical or prudish objection to his connection with
the queen. But at length Octavius found means to discredit Antony in the eyes
of the Senators, and to convince them that they must prevent an invasion of
Italy by a proclamation of war against Cleopatra, which would be understood to
be against Antony. He did this by using two of Antony’s officers who had
quarrelled with him and returned to Rome—M. Titius and L. Munatius Plancus. The latter, Cicero’s
correspondent, the governor of Celtic Gaul in BC44, and consul in BC42, had
joined Antony in Alexandria as his legatus, and had
been much in his confidence. He is held up to scorn by contemporary writers as
a monster of fickleness and an ingrained traitor, and his thus turning upon
Antony was regarded with much contempt even by the Caesarians.
The story he and his companion had to tell, however, served Octavius’s turn.
They brought word that, on hearing of his speech in the Senate, Antony had
publicly divorced Octavia in the presence of the Senators,
and had announced that he intended to undertake a war against him. They
also told how Antony styled Cleopatra his queen and sovereign, gave her a
bodyguard of Roman soldiers, with her name on their shields; how he escorted
her to the forum and sat by her side on the seat of justice; how, when she rode
in her chair he walked on foot by her side among the eunuchs; how he called the
general’s quarters or praetorium “the Palace,” wore an Egyptian scimitar and a
robe embroidered with gold, and sat on a gilded chair; and how some religious
mummeries had been played, in which he took the part of Osiris, she of the Moon
and Isis. The Roman world believed that Antony was bewitched by Cleopatra; and
the serious consequences likely to ensue were made more manifest by his will,
of which Augustus got either a copy or an account of its contents from Plancus, and read it publicly from the Rostra. In it Antony affirmed the legitimacy of Caesarion, gave
enormous legacies to his children by Cleopatra, and ordered his body to be
buried with that of the queen’s in the royal mausoleum. Altogether people began
to believe the report that he meant to hand over the Empire, even Rome itself,
to Cleopatra, and to transfer the seat of government to Alexandria. There was
one of those outbursts of feeling which carries all before it. Even those who
had been neutral, or inclined to be suspicious of Octavius, turned violently
against Antony. He was deposed from the consulship for BC31, to which he had
been elected, and declared to be divested of imperium. It seems probable that
he was not at first declared a hostis, but war
was voted against Cleopatra. It was enough for his enemies that he should be
found fighting with the Egyptians against Rome; and the vote was well
understood to include him. Caesar was appointed to proclaim the war with all the Fetial ceremonies, and the Senate
assumed the sagum.
Both sides were now making
preparations in earnest. Octavius could draw forces from Italy, Gaul,
Spain, Illyricum, Sardinia, Sicily, and other islands. Antony relied on Asia,
the parts about Thrace, Greece and Macedonia, Egypt, Cyrene, and the islands of
the Aegean, besides a large number of client kings who
had owed their position to him. He silenced their scruples, when gathered at
Samos, by pointing out that they would not be formally at war with Rome, and promising that within two months of the victory he
would lay down his imperium and remit all power to the Senate and people. Nor
did he confine his exertions to the East. Agents were sent to cities in Italy
carrying money, though Octavius —who kept himself well informed—frustrated this
attempt for the most part.
From Samos Antony removed his headquarters to Athens,
whence in the winter of BC32 he started to invade Italy. But at Corcyra he got
intelligence of an advanced approaches squadron of Octavius Caesar’s fleet near
the Acroceraunian promontory, and thinking that
Octavius was there in full force, he decided to put off hostilities till the
spring, by which time he expected to be joined by the forces of the client
kings. He himself wintered at Patrae, distributing
his forces so as to guard various points in Greece. He
scornfully rejected Octavius Caesar’s proposal for an interview, on the ground
that there was no one to decide between them, if either broke the terms upon
which they might agree. The proposal was probably not seriously meant. It was
only another means of putting Antony in the wrong.
Nothing, however, was done before the end of the year,
a storm having frustrated an attempt of Octavius Caesar’s to surprise some of the
enemy’s ships at Corcyra. In the early spring the first move was made by
Agrippa, who swooped down upon Methone in Messenia,
killed Bogovas, late king of Mauretania, and harassed
the shores of Greece by other descents, in order to divert Antony’s attention; who was now with his main fleet in the Ambracian gulf, having secured the narrow entrance to it by
towers on either side, and with ships stationed between. His camp was close to
the temple of Apollo, on the south side of the strait. The successes of Agrippa
encouraged Octavius to move. He landed troops in Ceraunia,
making his own headquarters at the “Sweet Haven”, at the mouth of the Cocytus,
and sent a detachment by land round the Ambracian sea
to threaten Antony’s camp. Having failed to entice the fleet from the Ambracian gulf, or to tempt the men to abandon Antony, he
seized the high ground overlooking the strait, and opposite Actium, where he
entrenched himself, on the ground on which he afterwards built Nicopolis. The summer months, however, were wearing away
without any decisive blow being struck by either side, and the delay was
irksome to both. Rome was in a state of simmering revolt owing to distress and
heavy taxes, a discontent which found expression in the conspiracy of Lepidus,
son of the ex-triumvir. It was promptly suppressed, indeed, and Lepidus was
sent over to Octavius to receive his condemnation; but, nevertheless, Maecenas,
who was in charge of Rome, found that he had no
sinecure. To Antony, again, delay meant discontent among his Eastern followers,
tottering loyalty, and probable abandonment. Above all, Cleopatra was in a
highly nervous state, and was urging a return to Egypt. At last on the 31st of August, a cavalry engagement going against Antony, she became
clamorous; and after long deliberation, Antony determined to follow her advice.
He ordered his ships to be prepared for battle, but with the secret intention
of avoiding a fight and sailing away to Alexandria.
Octavius was kept informed of this,
and resolved to prevent it. His idea was to allow the Antonian fleet to
issue out and begin their course, and then to fall upon their rear. But Agrippa
thought that the superior sailing powers of the Antonian fleet would render
this impossible, and urged an attack as soon as the
ships cleared the straits. There had been rough weather for four days, but on
the 3rd of September there was a calm, or only some surf from the preceding
storms; and when the trumpet rang out for the start Antony’s huge vessels,
furnished with towers and filled with armed men, began streaming out of the
straits. They did not at first show any signs of standing out to sea. The ships
took up a close order and waited to be attacked. There was a brief pause on
Octavius Caesar’s side. He or Agrippa hesitated to attack these great galleons
with their smaller craft. But before long an order was issued to the vessels on
the extremities of Octavius’s fleet to exert their utmost powers in rowing in
order to get round Antony’s two wings. To avoid this danger Antony was forced
against his will to order an attack.
The battle raged all the afternoon without decisive result; though the smallness of Octavius’s vessels proved in
many points a decided advantage. They could be rowed close up to bigger ships and be rowed away again when a shower of javelins had been
poured in upon the enemy. Antony’s men returned the volleys and used grappling
irons of great weight. If these irons caught one of the smaller ships they were doubtless very effective; but if the cast
missed they either seriously damaged their own ship, or caused so much
confusion and delay that an opportunity was given to the enemy to pour in fresh
volleys of darts. At length Cleopatra, whose ships were on the southern fringe
of the fleet, could bear the suspense no longer. She gave the signal for
retreat, and a favourable breeze springing up, the Egyptian ships were soon
fading out of sight. Antony thinking that this was the result of a panic, and
that the day was lost, hastened after the retiring squadron. The example of
their leader was followed by many of the crews, who lightening their ships by
throwing overboard the wooden towers and war tackle, fled with sails full
spread. But others still maintained the struggle, and it was not until Caesar’s
men began throwing lighted brands upon the enemy’s ships that the rout became
general. Even then the work was not over, for Octavius spent the whole night on
board endeavouring to rescue men from the burning ships.
Antony got clear off from pursuit, but his camp on
land was easily taken, and his army was intercepted while trying to retreat
into Macedonia. For the most part the men took service in Octavius Caesar’s
legions, the veterans being disbanded without pensions. Antony, however, was
followed to Egypt by many of his adherents of rank, and still thought himself
strong enough to make terms with Octavius. But he could no longer hope for aid
from the client kings. They all hastened to make their peace with Octavius, or were captured and punished. Even Cleopatra was
secretly prepared to betray him.
With the exception of one visit to Brindisi of seven
days, to suppress the mutiny of some discontented veterans, Octavius spent the
winter at Samos and Athens, collecting an army and navy destined to deprive
Egypt permanently of its independence! Cleopatra had indeed tried to brave it
out. She returned to Alexandria with her prows decked with flowers and her
pipers playing a triumphant tune. The people are not likely to have been
deceived, but there was no sign of revolt. She was able to seize the property
of those whose fidelity she suspected, and even put to death the captive king
of Armenia to gratify her ally the king of Media. Messages were sent to the
kings who had been allied with Antony, and for some gladiators whom he had in
training at Trapezus. The gladiators started but were
intercepted, and no help came from the client kings. A still worse
disappointment awaited him in Cyrene, over which he had placed L. Pinarius Scarpus with four
legions. When, leaving Cleopatra at Parattonium, he
went to take over these legions, Pinarius refused to
receive hint and even put his messengers to death, and shortly afterwards
handed over his province and army to Octavius Caesar’s legate, Cornelius
Gallus. This was an unmistakable sign that Antony’s day of influence was over.
Cleopatra returned to Alexandria and made secret preparations for retiring into
Asia, as far as Iberia (Georgia) if
necessary, though still keeping up appearances and
sending in every direction for aid. Cleopatra’s son Cassarion and Antony’s son by Fulvia (Antyllus)
were declared of man’s estate and capable of governing, and messages were
despatched to Octavius proposing that Antony should retire to Athens as a privatus, and that Cleopatra should abdicate in
favour of Caesarion. The queen also, without Antony’s knowledge, sent Octavius
a gold sceptre and crown. He made no reply to Antony, but answered in
threatening terms to Cleopatra, while sending his freedman Thyrsus to give her privately a reassuring
message. Antony suspected the purport of Thyrsus’s mission, and with a last
ebullition of his old swaggering humour had him flogged, and sent back with the
message, that if Octavius felt aggrieved, he might put his freedman Hipparchus
(who had joined Octavius) to the torture in revenge. But things went from bad
to worse with him. News came that the gladiators had been impounded, that his
own legatus in Syria (Q. Didius)
had bidden the Arabs burn the ships while he had prepared for his flight in the
Red Sea, and that the only two client kings who had seemed inclined to stand by
him—those of Cilicia and Galatia—had fallen off. He therefore tried once more
to open communications with Octavius. He sent him as a prisoner one of the
assassins of Iulius, whom he had protected and employed, P. Turullius,
and a considerable sum of money by the hands of his son Antyllus.
Octavius put Turullius to death and took the money,
but returned no answer to Antony, though he again sent a private message to
Cleopatra. Presently Antony was informed that Gallus had arrived at Paraetonium with the four legions taken over from Pinarius; and believing that even now his personal
influence was sufficient to win back the men, he hurried thither, accompanied
by the remains of his fleet coasting along to guard him. But this only led to
farther disaster. The soldiers refused to listen to him; and when his ships
entered the harbour the chains were made fast across the mouth and they were trapped. On land he now found himself between two hostile forces;
for Octavius with Cleopatra’s connivance had landed at Pelusium and was marching on Alexandria, and Gallus was attacking him from Paraetonium. He once more executed one of those rapid
movements for which he was famous. Hastening back to Alexandria he flung his
cavalry upon Octavius Caesar’s vanguard when tired with its march. But the
success of this movement encourage him to make a
general attack, in which he was decisively beaten. His last resource, the ships still remaining in the harbour of Alexandria, failed
him. Acting under Cleopatra’s orders the captains refused to receive him. The
queen, it is said, had shut herself up in the Tomb-house or Ptolemaeum,
hoping to drive Antony to despair and suicide, as the only solution of the
difficulty. If that was indeed her motive, she was both successful and
repentant. Antony stabbed himself, and begged to be
carried to the Tomb-house, where he died in her arms.
Octavius was now eager to secure Cleopatra’s person.
He sent Gallus to her with soothing messages, which he delivered to her at the
porch. But while he was speaking with her C. Proculeius entered by a window, seized the queen and conveyed her to the Palace, was allowed her usual attendants and all the usually
paraphernalia of royalty. Of the two accounts of Octavius’s interview with her
the more picturesque one is given by the usually prosaic Dio.
He found her looking charming in her mourning, surrounded by likenesses of
various kinds of the great Iulius, and in the bosom of her dress a packet of
letters received from him. On his entrance she rose with a blush and greeted
him as her lord and master. She pleaded that Iulius had always honoured her and
acknowledged her as queen. She read affectionate passages from his letters,
which she kissed passionately with tears streaming from her eyes, being at the
same time careful to put respectful admiration and affection for Octavius
himself into her looks and the tone of her voice. Octavius quite appreciated
the drama thus played for his behoof, but feigned unconsciousness, keeping his
eyes fixed on the ground and saying nothing but: “Courage, madam! Do hot be
alarmed, for no harm will happen to you”. He said no word, however, as to her
retention of royal power, nor did his voice betray the least tenderness. In an
agony of disappointment she flung herself at his feet
and besought him by the memory of his father to allow her to die and share
Antony’s tomb. Octavius made no reply except once more to bid her not be
alarmed; but he gave orders that though allowed her usual attendants she was to
be closely watched. Cleopatra understood only too well that the intention was
to take her to Rome that she might adorn the victor’s triumph. But in order to
secure greater freedom she feigned submission and to be busied in collecting
presents to take to Livia. Having thus diminished the vigilance of Epaphroditus
and her other guards, she some days afterwards made a parade of writing a
letter to Octavius, which she induced Epaphroditus to convey. When he returned,
however, he found the queen, decked in royal robes, lying dead with two of her
waiting women dead or dying by her side. “No one knows for certain,” says Dio, “how she died. Some say that a venomous snake was
conveyed to her in a water-vessel or in some flowers. Others that the long pin
with which she fastened her hair had a poisoned point, with which she pricked
her arm.” Plutarch, with a like expression of doubt, says that the snake was
conveyed in a basket of figs; and that on receiving the letter brought by
Epaphroditus Octavius understood her purpose and hurried to the Palace to
prevent it, and even summoned some of the mysterious Psylli—snake
charmers and curers—to suck out the poison. But in spite of his disappointment, he admired her spirit and gave her a royal funeral. Perhaps
after all he felt relieved of a difficulty. According to Plutarch she had shown
him that she was not to be easily managed. At the end of her conversation with
Caesar, he says, she handed him a schedule of the royal treasures. But when one
of her stewards or treasurers remarked that she was keeping back certain sums,
the enraged queen sprang up, clutched his hair, and beat his face with her
fists. When Octavius smiled and tried to pacify her, she exclaimed: “A pretty
thing, Octavius, that you should visit and address me with honour in my fallen
state, and that one of my own slaves should malign me! If I have set apart
certain women’s ornaments, it was not for myself, but for Octavia and Livia,
that they might soften your heart to me.”
It would be pleasanter if the death of Cleopatra and
the confiscation of her treasury were the end of the story. But the executions
of the two poor boys, Caesarion and Antyllus, were
acts of cold-blooded cruelty. The former, who could not have been more than
sixteen, had been sent by his mother with a large supply of money to Ethiopia,
but was betrayed by his padagogus, overtaken by Octavius’s soldiers, and
put to death. The young Antonius (or Antyllus) begged
hard for his life, and fled for safety to the heroum of the
divine Iulius, constructed by Cleopatra, but was dragged away and killed. He
could at most have been no more than fourteen, and had
in childhood been betrothed to Caesar’s infant daughter, Iulia. Perhaps the
pretensions of Caesarion to the paternity of Caesar, and his acknowledgment as
heir to the throne of Egypt, made his death inevitable, but the extreme youth
of Antyllus and his helplessness, might have pleaded
for him. The rest of Antony’s children were protected by Octavia,
and brought up as became their rank.
It is impossible not to feel some sympathy for Antony,
who had thus flung away fame and life for a woman’s love. But it was doubtless
happy thing for the world that the direction of affairs fell to the cautious
Augustus rather than to him. He had some attractive qualities, but no virtues.
Boundless self-indulgence in a ruler more than outweighs good-nature or
liberality. It brings more suffering to subjects than the occasional
gratification caused by the latter qualities can compensate. His scheme for
erecting a series of semi-independent kingdoms in the East would almost
certainly have been the cause of endless troubles. He was not more than
fifty-three at his death, but there were signs of a great decay of energy and
activity. The people thought of him—
“As of a Prince whose manhood was all gone,
And molten down in mere uxoriousness.’’
And undoubtedly, if instead of spending a winter in
Samos in luxury and riot and part of another at Athens in much the same way, he
had begun his attack on Octavius a year earlier, the result might have been
different. But he let the occasion slip and found, as others have done, that
the head of Time is bald at the back.
CHAPTER VIIITHE NEW CONSTITUTION, B.C. 30-23
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