BOOK IV
A.D. 23-28
The year when Caius Asinius and Caius Antistius were
consuls was the ninth of Tiberius's reign, a period of tranquillity for the
State and prosperity for his own house, for he counted Germanicus's death a
happy incident. Suddenly fortune deranged everything; the emperor became a
cruel tyrant, as well as an abettor of cruelty in others. Of this the cause and
origin was Aelius Sejanus, commander of the praetorian cohorts, of whose
influence I have already spoken. I will now fully describe his extraction, his
character, and the daring wickedness by which he grasped at power.
Born at Vulsinii, the son of Seius Strabo, a Roman
knight, he attached himself in his early youth to Caius Caesar, grandson of the
Divine Augustus, and the story went that he had sold his person to Apicius, a
rich debauchee. Soon afterwards he won the heart of Tiberius so effectually by
various artifices that the emperor, ever dark and mysterious towards others,
was with Sejanus alone careless and freespoken. It was not through his craft,
for it was by this very weapon that he was overthrown; it was rather from heaven's
wrath against Rome, to whose welfare his elevation and his fall were alike
disastrous. He had a body which could endure hardships, and a daring spirit. He
was one who screened himself, while he was attacking others; he was as cringing
as he was imperious; before the world he affected humility; in his heart he
lusted after supremacy, for the sake of which he sometimes lavish and
luxurious, but oftener energetic and watchful, qualities quite as mischievous
when hypocritically assumed for the attainment of sovereignty.
He strengthened the hitherto moderate powers of his
office by concentrating the cohorts scattered throughout the capital into one
camp, so that they might all receive orders at the same moment, and that the
sight of their numbers and strength might give confidence to themselves, while
it would strike terror into the citizens. His pretexts were the demoralisation
incident to a dispersed soldiery, the greater effectiveness of simultaneous
action in the event of a sudden peril, and the stricter discipline which would
be insured by the establishment of an encampment at a distance from the
temptations of the city. As soon as the camp was completed, he crept gradually
into the affections of the soldiers by mixing with them and addressing them by
name, himself selecting the centurions and tribunes. With the Senate too he
sought to ingratiate himself, distinguishing his partisans with offices and
provinces, Tiberius readily yielding, and being so biassed that not only in
private conversation but before the senators and the people he spoke highly of
him as the partner of his toils, and allowed his statues to be honoured in
theatres, in forums, and at the head-quarters of our legions.
There were however obstacles to his ambition in the
imperial house with its many princes, a son in youthful manhood and grown-up
grandsons. As it would be unsafe to sweep off such a number at once by
violence, while craft would necessitate successive intervals in crime, he
chose, on the whole, the stealthier way and to begin with Drusus, against whom
he had the stimulus of a recent resentment. Drusus, who could not brook a rival
and was somewhat irascible, had, in a casual dispute, raised his fist at
Sejanus, and, when he defended himself, had struck him in the face. On
considering every plan Sejanus thought his easiest revenge was to turn his
attention to Livia, Drusus's wife. She was a sister of Germanicus, and though
she was not handsome as a girl, she became a woman of surpassing beauty. Pretending
an ardent passion for her, he seduced her, and having won his first infamous
triumph, and assured that a woman after having parted with her virtue will
hesitate at nothing, he lured her on to thoughts of marriage, of a share in
sovereignty, and of her husband's destruction. And she, the niece of Augustus,
the daughter-in-law of Tiberius, the mother of children by Drusus, for a
provincial paramour, foully disgraced herself, her ancestors, and her
descendants, giving up honour and a sure position for prospects as base as they
were uncertain. They took into their confidence Eudemus, Livia's friend and
physician, whose profession was a pretext for frequent secret interviews. Sejanus,
to avert his mistress's jealousy, divorced his wife Apicata, by whom he had had
three children. Still the magnitude of the crime caused fear and delay, and
sometimes a conflict of plans.
Meanwhile, at the beginning of this year, Drusus, one
of the children of Germanicus, assumed the dress of manhood, with a repetition
of the honours decreed by the Senate to his brother Nero. The emperor added a
speech with warm praise of his son for sharing a father's affection to his
brother's children. Drusus indeed, difficult as it is for power and mutual
harmony to exist side by side, had the character of being kindly disposed or at
least not unfriendly towards the lads. And now the old plan, so often
insincerely broached, of a progress through the provinces, was again discussed.
The emperor's pretext was the number of veterans on the eve of discharge and
the necessity of fresh levies for the army. Volunteers were not forthcoming,
and even if they were sufficiently numerous, they had not the same bravery and
discipline, as it is chiefly the needy and the homeless who adopt by their own
choice a soldier's life. Tiberius also rapidly enumerated the legions and the
provinces which they had to garrison. I too ought, I think, to go through these
details, and thus show what forces Rome then had under arms, what kings were
our allies, and how much narrower then were the limits of our empire.
Italy on both seas was guarded by fleets, at Misenum
and at Ravenna, and the contiguous coast of Gaul by ships of war captured in
the victory of Actium, and sent by Augustus powerfully manned to the town of
Forojulium. But chief strength was on the Rhine, as a defence alike against
Germans and Gauls, and numbered eight legions. Spain, lately subjugated, was
held by three. Mauretania was king Juba's, who had received it as a gift from
the Roman people. The rest of Africa was garrisoned by two legions, and Egypt
by the same number. Next, beginning with Syria, all within the entire tract of
country stretching as far as the Euphrates, was kept in restraint by four
legions, and on this frontier were Iberian, Albanian, and other kings, to whom
our greatness was a protection against any foreign power. Thrace was held by
Rhoemetalces and the children of Cotys; the bank of the Danube by two legions
in Pannonia, two in Moesia, and two also were stationed in Dalmatia, which,
from the situation of the country, were in the rear of the other four, and,
should Italy suddenly require aid, not to distant to be summoned. But the
capital was garrisoned by its own special soldiery, three city, nine praetorian
cohorts, levied for the most part in Etruria and Umbria, or ancient Latium and
the old Roman colonies. There were besides, in commanding positions in the
provinces, allied fleets, cavalry and light infantry, of but little inferior
strength. But any detailed account of them would be misleading, since they
moved from place to place as circumstances required, and had their numbers
increased and sometimes diminished.
It is however, I think, a convenient opportunity for me
to review the hitherto prevailing methods of administration in the other
departments of the State, inasmuch as that year brought with it the beginning
of a change for the worse in Tiberius's policy. In the first place, public
business and the most important private matters were managed by the Senate: the
leading men were allowed freedom of discussion, and when they stooped to
flattery, the emperor himself checked them. He bestowed honours with regard to
noble ancestry, military renown, or brilliant accomplishments as a civilian,
letting it be clearly seen that there were no better men to choose. The consul
and the praetor retained their prestige; inferior magistrates exercised their
authority; the laws too, with the single exception of cases of treason, were
properly enforced.
As to the duties on corn, the indirect taxes and other
branches of the public revenue, they were in the hands of companies of Roman
knights. The emperor intrusted his own property to men of the most tried
integrity or to persons known only by their general reputation, and once
appointed they were retained without any limitation, so that most of them grew
old in the same employments. The city populace indeed suffered much from high
prices, but this was no fault of the emperor, who actually endeavoured to
counteract barren soils and stormy seas with every resource of wealth and
foresight. And he was also careful not to distress the provinces by new
burdens, and to see that in bearing the old they were safe from any rapacity or
oppression on the part of governors. Corporal punishments and confiscations of
property were unknown.
The emperor had only a few estates in Italy, slaves on
a moderate scale, and his household was confined to a few freedmen. If ever he
had a dispute with a private person, it was decided in the law courts. All
this, not indeed with any graciousness, but in a blunt fashion which often
alarmed, he still kept up, until the death of Drusus changed everything. While
he lived, the system continued, because Sejanus, as yet only in the beginning
of his power, wished to be known as an upright counsellor, and there was one
whose vengeance he dreaded, who did not conceal his hatred and incessantly
complained "that a stranger was invited to assist in the government while
the emperor's son was alive. How near was the step of declaring the stranger a
colleague! Ambition at first had a steep path before it; when once the way had
been entered, zealous adherents were forthcoming. Already, at the pleasure of the
commander of the guards, a camp had been established; the soldiers given into
his hands; his statues were to be seen among the monuments of Cneius Pompeius;
his grandsons would be of the same blood as the family of the Drusi. Henceforth
they must pray that he might have self-control, and so be contented." So
would Drusus talk, not unfrequently, or only in the hearing of a few persons. Even
his confidences, now that his wife had been corrupted, were betrayed.
Sejanus accordingly thought that he must be prompt, and
chose a poison the gradual working of which might be mistaken for a natural
disorder. It was given to Drusus by Lygdus, a eunuch, as was ascertained eight
years later. As for Tiberius, he went to the Senate house during the whole time
of the prince's illness, either because he was not afraid, or to show his
strength of mind, and even in the interval between his death and funeral. Seeing
the consuls, in token of their grief, sitting on the ordinary benches, he
reminded them of their high office and of their proper place; and when the
Senate burst into tears, suppressing a groan, he revived their spirits with a
fluent speech. "He knew indeed that he might be reproached for thus
encountering the gaze of the Senate after so recent an affliction. Most
mourners could hardly bear even the soothing words of kinsfolk or to look on
the light of day. And such were not to be condemned as weak. But he had sought
a more manly consolation in the bosom of the commonwealth."
Then deploring the extreme age of Augusta, the
childhood of his grandsons, and his own declining years, he begged the Senate
to summon Germanicus's children, the only comfort under their present misery. The
consuls went out, and having encouraged the young princes with kind words,
brought them in and presented them to the emperor. Taking them by the hand he
said: "Senators, when these boys lost their father, I committed them to
their uncle, and begged him, though he had children of his own, to cherish and
rear them as his own offspring, and train them for himself and for posterity. Drusus
is now lost to us, and I turn my prayers to you, and before heaven and your
country I adjure you to receive into your care and guidance the great-grandsons
of Augustus, descendants of a most noble ancestry. So fulfil your duty and
mine. To you, Nero and Drusus, these senators are as fathers. Such is your
birth that your prosperity and adversity must alike affect the State."
There was great weeping at these words, and then many a
benediction. Had the emperor set bounds to his speech, he must have filled the
hearts of his hearers with sympathy and admiration. But he now fell back on
those idle and often ridiculed professions about restoring the republic, and
the wish that the consuls or some one else might undertake the government, and
thus destroyed belief even in what was genuine and noble.
The same honours were decreed to the memory of Drusus
as to that of Germanicus, and many more were added. Such is the way with
flattery, when repeated. The funeral with its procession of statues was
singularly grand. Aeneas, the father of the Julian house, all the Alban kings,
Romulus, Rome's founder, then the Sabine nobility, Attus Clausus, and the busts
of all the other Claudii were displayed in a long train.
In relating the death of Drusus I have followed the
narrative of most of the best historians. But I would not pass over a rumour of
the time, the strength of which is not even yet exhausted. Sejanus, it is said,
having seduced Livia into crime, next secured, by the foulest means, the
consent of Lygdus, the eunuch, as from his youth and beauty he was his master's
favourite, and one of his principal attendants. When those who were in the
secret had decided on the time and place of the poisoning, Sejanus, with the
most consummate daring, reversed his plan, and, whispering an accusation
against Drusus of intending to poison his father, warned Tiberius to avoid the
first draught offered him as he was dining at his son's house. Thus deceived,
the old emperor, on sitting down to the banquet, took the cup and handed it to
Drusus. His suspicions were increased when Drusus, in perfect unconsciousness,
drank it off with youthful eagerness, apparently, out of fear and shame,
bringing on himself the death which he had plotted against his father.
These popular rumours, over and above the fact that
they are not vouched for by any good writer, may be instantly refuted. For who,
with moderate prudence, far less Tiberius with his great experience, would have
thrust destruction on a son, without even hearing him, with his own hand too,
and with an impossibility of returning to better thoughts. Surely he would
rather have had the slave who handed the poison, tortured, have sought to
discover the traitor, in short, would have been as hesitating and tardy in the
case of an only son hitherto unconvicted of any crime, as he was naturally even
with strangers. But as Sejanus had the credit of contriving every sort of
wickedness, the fact that he was the emperor's special favourite, and that both
were hated by the rest of the world, procured belief for any monstrous fiction,
and rumour too always has a dreadful side in regard to the deaths of men in
power. Besides, the whole process of the crime was betrayed by Apicata,
Sejanus's wife, and fully divulged, under torture, by Eudemus and Lygdus. No
writer has been found sufficiently malignant to fix the guilt on Tiberius,
though every circumstance was scrutinized and exaggerated. My object in
mentioning and refuting this story is, by a conspicuous example, to put down
hearsay, and to request all into whose hands my work shall come, not to catch
eagerly at wild and improbable rumours in preference to genuine history which
has not been perverted into romance.
Tiberius pronounced a panegyric on his son before the
Rostra, during which the Senate and people, in appearance rather than in heart,
put on the expression and accents of sorrow, while they inwardly rejoiced at
the brightening future of the family of Germanicus. This beginning of
popularity and the ill-concealed ambition of their mother Agrippina, hastened
its downfall. Sejanus when he saw that the death of Drusus was not avenged on
the murderers and was no grief to the people, grew bold in wickedness, and, now
that his first attempt had succeeded, speculated on the possibility of
destroying the children of Germanicus, whose succession to the throne was a
certainty. There were three, and poison could not be distributed among them,
because of the singular fidelity of their guardians and the unassailable virtue
of Agrippina. So Sejanus inveighed against Agrippina's arrogance, and worked powerfully
on Augusta's old hatred of her and on Livia's consciousness of recent guilt,
and urged both these women to represent to the emperor that her pride as a
mother and her reliance on popular enthusiasm were leading her to dream of
empire. Livia availed herself of the cunning of accusers, among whom she had
selected Julius Postumus, a man well suited to her purpose, as he had an
intrigue with Mutilia Prisca, and was consequently in the confidence of
Augusta, over whose mind Prisca had great influence. She thus made her aged
grandmother, whose nature it was to tremble for her power, irreconcilably
hostile to her grandson's widow. Agrippina's friends too were induced to be
always inciting her proud spirit by mischievous talk.
Tiberius meanwhile, who did not relax his attention to
business, and found solace in his work, occupied himself with the causes of
citizens at Rome and with petitions from allies. Decrees of the Senate were
passed at his proposal for relieving the cities of Cibyra and Aegium in Asia
and Achaia, which had suffered from earthquakes, by a remission of three years'
tribute. Vibius Serenus too, proconsul of Further Spain, was condemned for
violence in his official capacity, and was banished to the island of Amorgus
for his savage temper. Carsidius Sacerdos, accused of having helped our enemy
Tacfarinas with supplies of grain, was acquitted, as was also Caius Gracchus on
the same charge. Gracchus's father, Sempronius, had taken him when a mere child
to the island of Cercina to be his companion in exile. There he grew up among
outcasts who knew nothing of a liberal education, and after a while supported
himself in Africa and Sicily by petty trade. But he did not escape the dangers
of high rank. Had not his innocence been protected by Aelius Lamia and Lucius
Apronius, successive governors of Africa, the splendid fame of that ill-starred
family and the downfall of his father would have dragged him to ruin.
This year too brought embassies from the Greek communities.
The people of Samos and Cos petitioned for the confirmation of the ancient
right of sanctuary for the respective temples of Juno and Aesculapius. The
Samians relied on a decree of the Amphictyonic Council, which had the supreme
decision of all questions when the Greeks, through the cities they had founded
in Asia, had possession of the sea-coast. Cos could boast equal antiquity, and
it had an additional claim connected with the place. Roman citizens had been
admitted to the temple of Aesculapius, when king Mithridates ordered a general
massacre of them throughout all the islands and cities of Asia.
Next, after various and usually fruitless complaints
from the praetors, the emperor finally brought forward a motion about the
licentious behaviour of the players. "They had often," he said,
"sought to disturb the public peace, and to bring disgrace on private
families, and the old Oscan farce, once a wretched amusement for the vulgar,
had become at once so indecent and so popular, that it must be checked by the
Senate's authority. The players, upon this, were banished from Italy.
That same year also brought fresh sorrow to the emperor
by being fatal to one of the twin sons of Drusus, equally too by the death of
an intimate friend. This was Lucilius Longus, the partner of all his griefs and
joys, the only senator who had been the companion of his retirement in Rhodes. And
so, though he was a man of humble origin, the Senate decreed him a censor's
funeral and a statue in the forum of Augustus at the public expense. Everything
indeed was as yet in the hands of the Senate, and consequently Lucilius Capito,
procurator of Asia, who was impeached by his province, was tried by them, the
emperor vehemently asserting "that he had merely given the man authority
over the slaves and property of the imperial establishments; that if he had
taken upon himself the powers of a praetor and used military force, he had
disregarded his instructions; therefore they must hear the provincials." So
the case was heard and the accused condemned. The cities of Asia, gratified by
this retribution and the punishment inflicted in the previous year on Caius
Silanus, voted a temple to Tiberius, his mother, and the Senate, and were
permitted to build it. Nero thanked the Senators and his grandfather on their
behalf and carried with him the joyful sympathies of his audience, who, with
the memory of Germanicus fresh in their minds, imagined that it was his face
they saw, his voice they heard. The youth too had a modesty and a grace of
person worthy of a prince, the more charming because of his peril from the
notorious enmity of Sejanus.
About the same time the emperor spoke on the subject of
electing a priest of Jupiter in the room of Servius Maluginensis, deceased, and
of the enactment of a new law. "It was," he said, "the old
custom to nominate together three patricians, sons of parents wedded according
to the primitive ceremony, and of these one was to be chosen. Now however there
was not the same choice as formerly, the primitive form of marriage having been
given up or being observed only by a few persons." For this he assigned
several reasons, the chief being men's and women's indifference; then, again,
the ceremony itself had its difficulties, which were purposely avoided; and
there was the objection that the man who obtained this priesthood was
emancipated from the father's authority, as also was his wife, as passing into
the husband's control. So the Senate, Tiberius argued, ought to apply some
remedy by a decree of a law, as Augustus had accommodated certain relics of a
rude antiquity to the modern spirit.
It was then decided, after a discussion of religious
questions, that the institution of the priests of Jupiter should remain
unchanged. A law however was passed that the priestess, in regard to her sacred
functions, was to be under the husband's control, but in other respects to
retain the ordinary legal position of women. Maluginensis, the son, was chosen
successor to his father. To raise the dignity of the priesthood and to inspire
the priests with more zeal in attending to the ceremonial, a gift of two
million sesterces was decreed to the Vestal Cornelia, chosen in the room of
Scantia; and, whenever Augusta entered the theatre, she was to have a place in
the seats of the Vestals.
In the consulship of Cornelius Cethegus and Visellius
Varro, the pontiffs, whose example was followed by the other priests in
offering prayers for the emperor's health, commended also Nero and Drusus to
the same deities, not so much out of love for the young princes as out of
sycophancy, the absence and excess of which in a corrupt age are alike
dangerous. Tiberius indeed, who was never friendly to the house of Germanicus,
was then vexed beyond endurance at their youth being honoured equally with his
declining years. He summoned the pontiffs, and asked them whether it was to the
entreaties or the threats of Agrippina that they had made this concession. And
though they gave a flat denial, he rebuked them but gently, for many of them
were her own relatives or were leading men in the State. However he addressed a
warning to the Senate against encouraging pride in their young and excitable
minds by premature honours. For Sejanus spoke vehemently, and charged them with
rending the State almost by civil war. "There were those," he said,
"who called themselves the party of Agrippina, and, unless they were
checked, there would be more; the only remedy for the increasing discord was
the overthrow of one or two of the most enterprising leaders."
Accordingly he attacked Caius Silius and Titius
Sabinus. The friendship of Germanicus was fatal to both. As for Silius, his
having commanded a great army for seven years, and won in Germany the
distinctions of a triumph for his success in the war with Sacrovir, would make
his downfall all the more tremendous and so spread greater terror among others.
Many thought that he had provoked further displeasure by his own presumption
and his extravagant boasts that his troops had been steadfastly loyal, while
other armies were falling into mutiny, and that Tiberius's throne could not
have lasted had his legions too been bent on revolution. All this the emperor
regarded as undermining his own power, which seemed to be unequal to the burden
of such an obligation. For benefits received are a delight to us as long as we
think we can requite them; when that possibility is far exceeded, they are
repaid with hatred instead of gratitude.
Silius had a wife, Sosia Galla, whose love of Agrippina
made her hateful to the emperor. The two, it was decided, were to be attacked,
but Sabinus was to be put off for a time. Varro, the consul, was let loose on
them, who, under colour of a hereditary feud, humoured the malignity of Sejanus
to his own disgrace. The accused begged a brief respite, until the prosecutor's
consulship expired, but the emperor opposed the request. "It was
usual," he argued, "for magistrates to bring a private citizen to trial,
and a consul's authority ought not to be impaired, seeing that it rested with
his vigilance to guard the commonwealth from loss." It was characteristic
of Tiberius to veil new devices in wickedness under ancient names. And so, with
a solemn appeal, he summoned the Senate, as if there were any laws by which
Silius was being tried, as if Varro were a real consul, or Rome a commonwealth.
The accused either said nothing, or, if he attempted to defend himself, hinted,
not obscurely, at the person whose resentment was crushing him. A long
concealed complicity in Sacrovir's rebellion, a rapacity which sullied his
victory, and his wife Sosia's conduct, were alleged against him. Unquestionably,
they could not extricate themselves from the charge of extortion. The whole
affair however was conducted as a trial for treason, and Silius forestalled
impending doom by a self-inflicted death.
Yet there was a merciless confiscation of his property,
though not to refund their money to the provincials, none of whom pressed any
demand. But Augustus's bounty was wrested from him, and the claims of the
imperial exchequer were computed in detail. This was the first instance on
Tiberius's part of sharp dealing with the wealth of others. Sosia was banished
on the motion of Asinius Gallus, who had proposed that half her estate should
be confiscated, half left to the children. Marcus Lepidus, on the contrary, was
for giving a fourth to the prosecutors, as the law required, and the remainder
to the children.
This Lepidus, I am satisfied, was for that age a wise
and high-principled man. Many a cruel suggestion made by the flattery of others
he changed for the better, and yet he did not want tact, seeing that he always
enjoyed an uniform prestige, and also the favour of Tiberius. This compels me
to doubt whether the liking of princes for some men and their antipathy to
others depend, like other contingencies, on a fate and destiny to which we are
born, or, to some degree, on our own plans; so that it is possible to pursue a
course between a defiant independence and a debasing servility, free from
ambition and its perils. Messalinus Cotta, of equally illustrious ancestry as
Lepidus, but wholly different in disposition, proposed that the Senate should
pass a decree providing that even innocent governors who knew nothing of the
delinquencies of others should be punished for their wives' offences in the
provinces as much as for their own.
Proceedings were then taken against Calpurnius Piso, a
high-spirited nobleman. He it was, as I have related, who had exclaimed more
than once in the Senate that he would quit Rome because of the combinations of
the informers, and had dared in defiance of Augusta's power, to sue Urgulania
and summon her from the emperor's palace. Tiberius submitted to this at the
time not ungraciously, but the remembrance of it was vividly impressed on a
mind which brooded over its resentments, even though the first impulse of his
displeasure had subsided.
Quintus Granius accused Piso of secret treasonable
conversation, and added that he kept poison in his house and wore a dagger
whenever he came into the Senate. This was passed over as too atrocious to be
true. He was to be tried on the other charges, a multitude of which were heaped
on him, but his timely death cut short the trial.
Next was taken the case of Cassius Severus' an exile. A
man of mean origin and a life of crime, but a powerful pleader, he had brought
on himself, by his persistent quarrelsomeness, a decision of the Senate, under
oath, which banished him to Crete. There by the same practices he drew on
himself, fresh odium and revived the old; stripped of his property and
outlawed, he wore out his old age on the rock of Seriphos.
About the same time Plautius Silvanus, the praetor, for
unknown reasons, threw his wife Apronia out of a window. When summoned before
the emperor by Lucius Apronius, his father-in-law, he replied incoherently,
representing that he was in a sound sleep and consequently knew nothing, and
that his wife had chosen to destroy herself. Without a moment's delay Tiberius
went to the house and inspected the chamber, where were seen the marks of her
struggling and of her forcible ejection. He reported this to the Senate, and as
soon as judges had been appointed, Urgulania, the grandmother of Silvanus, sent
her grandson a dagger. This was thought equivalent to a hint from the emperor,
because of the known intimacy between Augusta and Urgulania. The accused tried
the steel in vain, and then allowed his veins to be opened. Shortly afterwards
Numantina, his former wife, was charged with having caused her husband's
insanity by magical incantations and potions, but she was acquitted.
This year at last released Rome from her long contest
with the Numidian Tacfarinas. Former generals, when they thought that their
successes were enough to insure them triumphal distinctions, left the enemy to
himself. There were now in Rome three laurelled statues, and yet Tacfarinas was
still ravaging Africa, strengthened by reinforcements from the Moors, who,
under the boyish and careless rule of Ptolemaeus, Juba's son, had chosen war in
preference to the despotism of freedmen and slaves. He had the king of the
Garamantes to receive his plunder and to be the partner of his raids, not
indeed with a regular army, but with detachments of light troops whose
strength, as they came from a distance, rumour exaggerated. From the province
itself every needy and restless adventurer hurried to join him, for the
emperor, as if not an enemy remained in Africa after the achievements of
Blaesus, had ordered the ninth legion home, and Publius Dolabella, proconsul
that year, had not dared to retain it, because he feared the sovereign's orders
more than the risks of war.
Tacfarinas accordingly spread rumours; that elsewhere
also nations were rending the empire of Rome and that therefore her soldiers
were gradually retiring from Africa, and that the rest might be cut off by a
strong effort on the part of all who loved freedom more than slavery. He thus
augmented his force, and having formed a camp, he besieged the town of
Thubuscum. Dolabella meanwhile collecting all the troops on the spot, raised
the siege at his first approach, by the terror of the Roman name and because
the Numidians cannot stand against the charge of infantry. He then fortified
suitable positions, and at the same time beheaded some chiefs of the Musulamii,
who were on the verge of rebellion. Next, as several expeditions against
Tacfarinas had proved the uselessness of following up the enemy's desultory
movements with the attack of heavy troops from a single point, he summoned to
his aid king Ptolemaeus and his people, and equipped four columns, under the
command of his lieutenants and tribunes. Marauding parties were also led by
picked Moors, Dolabella in person directing every operation.
Soon afterwards news came that the Numidians had fixed
their tents and encamped near a half-demolished fortress, by name Auzea, to
which they had themselves formerly set fire, and on the position of which they
relied, as it was inclosed by vast forests. Immediately the light infantry and
cavalry, without knowing whither they were being led, were hurried along at
quick march. Day dawned, and with the sound of trumpets and fierce shouts, they
were on the half-asleep barbarians, whose horses were tethered or roaming over
distant pastures. On the Roman side, the infantry was in close array, the
cavalry in its squadrons, everything prepared for an engagement, while the
enemy, utterly surprised, without arms, order, or plan, were seized,
slaughtered, or captured like cattle. The infuriated soldiers, remembering
their hardships and how often the longed-for conflict had been eluded, sated
themselves to a man with vengeance and bloodshed. The word went through the
companies that all were to aim at securing Tacfarinas, whom, after so many
battles, they knew well, as there would be no rest from war except by the
destruction of the enemy's leader. Tacfarinas, his guards slain round him, his
son a prisoner, and the Romans bursting on him from every side, rushed on the
darts, and by a death which was not unavenged, escaped captivity.
This ended the war. Dolabella asked for triumphal
distinctions, but was refused by Tiberius, out of compliment to Sejanus, the
glory of whose uncle Blaesus he did not wish to be forgotten. But this did not
make Blaesus more famous, while the refusal of the honour heightened
Dolabella's renown. He had, in fact, with a smaller army, brought back with him
illustrious prisoners and the fame of having slain the enemy's leader and
terminated the war. In his train were envoys from the Garamantes, a rare spectacle
in Rome. The nation, in its terror at the destruction of Tacfarinas, and
innocent of any guilty intention, had sent them to crave pardon of the Roman
people. And now that this war had proved the zealous loyalty of Ptolemaeus, a
custom of antiquity was revived, and one of the Senators was sent to present
him with an ivory sceptre and an embroidered robe, gifts anciently bestowed by
the Senate, and to confer on him the titles of king, ally, and friend.
The same summer, the germs of a slave war in Italy were
crushed by a fortunate accident. The originator of the movement was Titus
Curtisius, once a soldier of the praetorian guard. First, by secret meetings at
Brundisium and the neighbouring towns, then by placards publicly exhibited, he
incited the rural and savage slave-population of the remote forests to assert
their freedom. By divine providence, three vessels came to land for the use of
those who traversed that sea. In the same part of the country too was Curtius
Lupus, the quaestor, who, according to ancient precedent, had had the charge of
the "woodland pastures" assigned to him. Putting in motion a force of
marines, he broke up the seditious combination in its very first beginnings. The
emperor at once sent Staius, a tribune, with a strong detachment, by whom the
ringleader himself, with his most daring followers, were brought prisoners to
Rome where men already trembled at the vast scale of the slave-establishments,
in which there was an immense growth, while the freeborn populace daily
decreased.
That same consulship witnessed a horrible instance of
misery and brutality. A father as defendant, a son as prosecutor, (Vibius
Serenus was the name of both) were brought before the Senate; the father,
dragged from exile in filth and squalor now stood in irons, while the son
pleaded for his guilt. With studious elegance of dress and cheerful looks, the
youth, at once accuser and witness, alleged a plot against the emperor and that
men had been sent to Gaul to excite rebellion, further adding that Caecilius
Cornutus, an ex-praetor, had furnished money. Cornutus, weary of anxiety and
feeling that peril was equivalent to ruin, hastened to destroy himself. But the
accused with fearless spirit, looked his son in the face, shook his chains, and
appealed to the vengeance of the gods, with a prayer that they would restore
him to his exile, where he might live far away from such practices, and that,
as for his son, punishment might sooner or later overtake him. He protested too
that Cornutus was innocent and that his terror was groundless, as would easily
be perceived, if other names were given up; for he never would have plotted the
emperor's murder and a revolution with only one confederate.
Upon this the prosecutor named Cneius Lentulus and
Seius Tubero, to the great confusion of the emperor, at finding a hostile
rebellion and disturbance of the public peace charged on two leading men in the
state, his own intimate friends, the first of whom was in extreme old age and
the second in very feeble health. They were, however, at once acquitted. As for
the father, his slaves were examined by torture, and the result was
unfavourable to the accuser. The man, maddened by remorse, and terror-stricken
by the popular voice, which menaced him with the dungeon, the rock, or a
parricide's doom, fled from Rome. He was dragged back from Ravenna, and forced
to go through the prosecution, during which Tiberius did not disguise the old
grudge he bore the exile Serenus. For after Libo's conviction, Serenus had sent
the emperor a letter, upbraiding him for not having rewarded his special zeal
in that trial, with further hints more insolent than could be safely trusted to
the easily offended ears of a despot. All this Tiberius revived eight years
later, charging on him various misconduct during that interval, even though the
examination by torture, owing to the obstinacy of the slaves, had contradicted
his guilt.
The Senate then gave their votes that Serenus should be
punished according to ancient precedent, when the emperor, to soften the odium
of the affair, interposed with his veto. Next, Gallus Asinius proposed that he
should be confined in Gyaros or Donusa, but this he rejected, on the ground
that both these islands were deficient in water, and that he whose life was
spared, ought to be allowed the necessaries of life. And so Serenus was
conveyed back to Amorgus.
In consequence of the suicide of Cornutus, it was
proposed to deprive informers of their rewards whenever a person accused of
treason put an end to his life by his own act before the completion of the
trial. The motion was on the point of being carried when the emperor, with a
harshness contrary to his manner, spoke openly for the informers, complaining
that the laws would be ineffective, and the State brought to the verge of ruin.
"Better," he said, "to subvert the constitution than to remove
its guardians." Thus the informers, a class invented to destroy the
commonwealth, and never enough controlled even by legal penalties, were
stimulated by rewards.
Some little joy broke this long succession of horrors. Caius
Cominius, a Roman knight, was spared by the emperor, against whom he was
convicted of having written libellous verses, at the intercession of his
brother, who was a Senator. Hence it seemed the more amazing that one who knew
better things and the glory which waits on mercy, should prefer harsher
courses. He did not indeed err from dulness, and it is easy to see when the
acts of a sovereign meet with genuine, and when with fictitious popularity. And
even he himself, though usually artificial in manner, and though his words
escaped him with a seeming struggle, spoke out freely and fluently whenever he
came to a man's rescue. |