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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div xml:lang="eng" type="translation" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi1348.abo015.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" n="21" subtype="chapter"><p>He often distributed largesses of corn and money among the people, and
					entertained them with a great variety of public magnificent spectacles, not only
					such as were usual, and in the accustomed places, but some of new invention, and
					others revived from ancient models, and exhibited in places where nothing of the
					kind had been ever before attempted. In the games which he presented at the
					dedication of Pompey's theatre, <note anchored="true">See AUGUSTUS, c. xxxi. It
						appears to have been often a prey to the flames, TIBERIUS, c. xli; CALIGULA,
						c. XX. </note> which had been burnt down, and was rebuilt by him, he
					presided upon a tribunal erected for him in the orchestra; having first paid his
					devotions, in the temple above, and then coming down through the centre of the
					circle, while all the people kept their seats in profound silence. <note anchored="true">Contrary to the usual custom of rising and saluting the
						emperor with loud acclamations. </note> He likewise exhibited the secular
					games, <note anchored="true">A. U. C. 800. </note> giving out that Augustus had
					anticipated the regular period; though he himself says in his history, "That
					they had been omitted before the age of Augustus, who had calculated the years
					with great exactness, and again brought them to their regular period."<note anchored="true">The Secular Games had been celebrated by Augustus, A. U. C.
						736. See c. xxxi. of his life, and the Epode of Horace written on the
						occasion. </note> The crier was therefore ridiculed, when he invited people
					in the usual form, "to games which no person had ever before seen, nor ever
					would again;" when many were still living who had already seen them; and some of
					the performers who had formerly acted in them, were now again brought upon the
					stage. He likewise frequently celebrated the Circensian games in the <placeName key="tgn,7001168">Vatican</placeName>, <note anchored="true">In the circus
						which he had himself built. </note> sometimes exhibiting a hunt of wild
					beasts, after every five courses. He embellished the Circus Maximus with marble
					barriers, and gilded goals, which before were of common stone <note anchored="true">Tophina; Tuffo, a porous stone of volcanic origin, which
						abounds in the neighbourhood of <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, and, with the Travartino, is employed in all common
						buildings. </note> and wood, and assigned proper places for the senators,
					who were used to sit promiscuously with the other spectators. Besides the
					chariot-races, he exhibited there the Trojan game, and wild beasts from
						<placeName key="tgn,7001242">Africa</placeName>, which were encountered by a
					troop of pretorian knights, with their tribunes, and even the prefect at the
					head of them; besides Thessalian horse, who drive fierce bulls round the circus,
					leap upon their backs when they have exhausted their fury, and drag them by the
					horns to the ground. He gave exhibitions of gladiators in several places, and of
					various kinds; one yearly on the anniversary of his accession in the pretorian
					camp, <note anchored="true">In compliment to the troops to whom he owed his
						elevation: see before, c. xi. </note> but without any hunting, or the usual
					apparatus; another in the Septa as usual; and in the same place, another out of
					the common way,. and of a few days' continuance only, which he called Sportula;
					because when he was going to present it, he informed the people by proclamation,
					" that he invited them to a late supper, got up in haste, and without ceremony."
					Nor did he lend himself to any kind of public diversion with more freedom and
					hilarity; insomuch that he would hold out his left hand, and joined by the
					common people, count upon his fingers aloud the gold pieces presented to those
					who came off conquerors. He would earnestly invite the company to be merry;
					sometimes calling them his "masters," with a mixture of insipid, far-fetched
					jests. Thus when the people called for Palumbus,<note anchored="true">Palumbus
						was a gladiator: and Claudius condescended to pun upon his name, which
						signifies a wood-pigeon.</note> he said, " He would give them one when he
					could catch it." The following was well-intended and well-timed; having, amidst
					great applause, spared a gladiator, on the intercession of his four sons, he
					sent a billet immediately round the theatre, to remind the people, " how much it
					behooved them to get children, since they had before them an example how useful
					they had been in procuring favour and security for a gladiator." He likewise
					represented in the <placeName key="tgn,7006964">Campus Martius</placeName>, the
					assault and sacking of a town, and the surrender of the British kings,<note anchored="true">See before, c. xvii. Described in c. xx. and note. </note>
					presiding in his general's cloak. Immediately before he drew off the waters from
					the Fucine lake, he exhibited upon it a naval fight. But the combatants on board
					the fleets crying out, "Health attend you, noble emperor! We, who are about to
					peril our lives, salute you;" and he replying, "Health attend you too," they all
					refused to fight, as if by that response he had meant to excuse them. Upon this,
					he hesitated for a time, whether he should not destroy them all with fire and
					sword. At last, leaping from his seat, and running along the shore of the lake
					with tottering steps, the result of his foul excesses, he, partly by fair words,
					and partly by threats, persuaded them to engage. This spectacle represented an
					engagement between the fleets of <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>
					and <placeName key="tgn,7011266">Rhodes</placeName>; consisting each of twelve
					ships of war, of three banks of oars. The signal for the encounter was given by
					a silver Triton, raised by machinery from the middle of the lake.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="22" subtype="chapter"><p>With regard to religious ceremonies, the administration of affairs both civil and
					military, and the condition of all orders of the people at home and abroad, some
					practices he corrected, others which had been laid aside he revived; and some
					regulations he introduced which were entirely new. In appointing new priests for
					the several colleges, he made no appointments without being sworn. When an
					earthquake happened in the city, he never failed to summon the people together
					by the praetor, and appoint holidays for sacred rites. And upon the sight of any
					ominous bird in the City or Capitol, he issued an order for a supplication, the
					words of which, by virtue of his office of high-priest, after an exhortation
					from the rostra, he recited in the presence of the people, who repeated them
					after him; all workmen and slaves being first ordered to withdraw.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="23" subtype="chapter"><p>The courts of judicature, whose sittings had been formerly divided between the
					summer and winter months, he ordered, for the dispatch of business, to sit the
					whole year round. The jurisdiction in matters of trust, which used to be granted
					annually by special commission to certain magistrates, and in the city only, he
					made permanent, and extended to the provincial judges likewise. He altered a
					clause added by Tiberius to the Papia-Poppaean law, <note anchored="true">See
						before, AUGUSTUS, c xxxiv. </note> which inferred that men of sixty years of
					age were incapable of begetting children. He ordered that, out of the ordinary
					course of proceeding, orphans might have guardians appointed them by the
					consuls; and that those who were banished from any province by the chief
					magistrate, should be debarred from coming into the City, or any part of
						<placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>. He inflicted on certain
					persons a new sort of banishment, by forbidding them to depart further than
					three miles from <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>. When any affair
					of importance came before the senate, he used to sit between the two consuls
					upon the seats of the tribunes. He reserved to himself the power of granting
					license to travel out of <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>, which
					before had belonged to the senate.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="24" subtype="chapter"><p>He likewise granted the consular ornaments to his Ducenarian procurators. From
					those who declined the senatorian dignity, he took away the equestrian. Although
					he had in the beginning of his reign declared, that he would admit no man into
					the senate who was not the great-grandson of a Roman citizen, yet he gave the
					"broad hem" to the son of a freedman, on condition that he should be adopted by
					a Roman knight. Being afraid, however, of incurring censure by such an act, he
					informed the public, that his ancestor Appius Caecus, the censor, had elected
					the sons of freedmen into the senate; for he was ignorant, it seems, that in the
					times of Appius, and a long while afterwards, persons manumitted were not called
					freedmen, but only their sons who were free-born. Instead of the expense which
					the college of quaestors was obliged to incur in paving the high-ways, he
					ordered them to give the people an exhibition of gladiators; and relieving them
					of the provinces of <placeName key="perseus,Ostia">Ostia</placeName> and
					[Cisalpine] <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, he reinstated them in
					the charge of the treasury, which, since it was taken from them, had been
					managed by the praetors, or those who had formerly filled that office. He gave
					the triumphal ornaments to Silanus, who was betrothed to his daughter, though he
					was under age; and in other cases, he bestowed them on so many, and with so
					little reserve, that there is extant a letter unanimously addressed to him by
					all the legions, begging him "to grant his consular lieutenants the triumphal
					ornaments at the time of their appointment to commands, in order to prevent
					their seeking occasion to engage in unnecessary wars." He decreed to Aulus
					Plautius the honour of an ovation, <note anchored="true">To reward his able
						services as commander of the army in <placeName key="tgn,7008653">Britain</placeName>. See before, c. xvii. </note> going to meet him at
					his entering the city, and walking with him in the procession to the Capitol,
					and back, in which he took the left side, giving him the post of honour. He
					allowed Gabinius Secundus, upon his conquest of the Chauci, a German tribe, to
					assume the cognomen of Chaucius. <note anchored="true">German tribes between the
							<placeName key="tgn,7016548">Elbe</placeName> and the <placeName key="tgn,7004437">Weser</placeName>, whose chief seat was at <placeName key="tgn,7003672">Bremen</placeName>, and others about Ems or <placeName key="tgn,7004436">Luneburg</placeName>. </note></p></div><div type="textpart" n="25" subtype="chapter"><p>His military organization of the equestrian order was this. After having the
					command of a cohort, they were promoted to a wing of auxiliary horse, and
					subsequently received the commission of tribune of a legion. He raised a body of
					militia, who were called Supernumeraries, who, though they were a sort of
					soldiers, and kept in reserve, yet received pay. He procured an act of the
					senate to prohibit all soldiers from attending senators at their houses, in the
					way of respect and compliment. He confiscated the estates of all freedmen who
					presumed to take upon themselves the equestrian rank. Such of them as were
					ungrateful to their patrons, and were complained of by them, he reduced to their
					former condition of slavery; and declared to their advocates, that he would
					always give judgment against the freedmen, in any suit at law which the masters
					might happen to have with them. Some persons having exposed their sick slaves,
					in a languishing condition, on the island of Aesculapius, <note anchored="true">This island in the <placeName key="tgn,1130786">Tiber</placeName>, opposite
						the Campus Martins, is said to have been formed by the corn sown by Tarquin
						the Proud on that consecrated field, and cut down and thrown by order of the
						consuls into the river. The water being low, it lodged in the bed of the
						stream, and gradual deposits of mud raising it above the level of the water,
						it was in course of time covered with buildings. Among these was the temple
						of AEsculapius, erected A. U. C. 462, to receive the serpent, the emblem of
						that deity which was brought to <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName> in the time of a plague. There is a coin of Antoninus
						Pius recording this event, and Lumisdus has preserved copies of some curious
						votive inscriptions in acknowledgment of cures which were found in its
						ruins, Antiquities of <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, p.
						379. It was common for the patient after having been exposed some nights in
						the temple, without being cured, to depart and put an end to his life.
						Suetonius here informs us that slaves so exposed, at last obtained their
						freedom. </note> because of the tediousness of their cure; he declared all
					who were so exposed perfectly free, never more to return, if they should
					recover, to their former servitude; and that if any one chose to kill at once,
					rather than expose, a slave, he should be liable for murder. He published a
					proclamation, forbidding all travellers to pass through the towns of <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName> any otherwise than on foot, or in a
					litter or chair.<note anchored="true">Which were carried on the shoulders of
						slaves. This prohibition had for its object either to save the wear and tear
						in the narrow streets, or to pay respect to the liberties of the
						town.</note> He quartered a cohort of soldiers at <placeName key="perseus,Puteoli">Puteoli</placeName>, and another at <placeName key="perseus,Ostia">Ostia</placeName>, to be in readiness against any
					accidents from fire. He prohibited foreigners from adopting Roman names,
					especially those which belonged to families.<note anchored="true">See the note
						in c. i. of this life of CLAUDIUS.</note> Those who falsely pretended to the
					freedom of <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, he heheaded on the
						<placeName key="tgn,4012794">Esquiline</placeName>. He gave up to the senate
					the provinces of <placeName key="tgn,7002733">Achaia</placeName> and <placeName key="tgn,7006667">Macedonia</placeName>, which Tiberius had transferred to
					his own administration. He deprived the Lycians of their liberties, as a
					punishment for their fatal dissensions; but restored to the Rhodians their
					freedom, upon their repenting of their former misdemeanors. He exonerated for
					ever the people of <placeName key="tgn,7002329">Ilium</placeName> from the
					payment of taxes, as being the founders of the Roman race; reciting upon the
					occasion a letter in Greek, from the senate and people of <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName> to king Seleucus, <note anchored="true">Seleucus Philopater, son of Antiochus the Great, who being conquered by the
						Romans, the succeeding kings of <placeName key="tgn,1000140">Syria</placeName> acknowledged the supremacy of <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>. </note> on which they promised him
					their friendship and alliance, provided that he would grant their kinsmen the
					Iliensians immunity from all burdens.</p><p>He banished from <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName> all the Jews, who
					were continually making disturbances at the instigation of one Chrestus. <note anchored="true">Suetonius has already, in TIBERIUS, C. xxxvi., mentioned the
						expulsion of the Jews from <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>,
						and this passage confirms the conjecture, offered in the note, that the
						Christians were obscurely alluded to in the former notice. The antagonism
						between Christianity and Judaism appears to have given rise to the tumults
						which first led the authorities to interfere. Thus much we seem to learn
						from both passages: but the most enlightened men of that age were singularly
						ill-informed on the stupendous events which had recently occurred in
							<placeName key="tgn,7001407">Judea</placeName>, and we find Suetonius,
						although he lived at the commencement of the first century of the Christian
						aera, when the memory of these occurrences was still fresh, and it might be
						supposed, by that time, widely diffused, transplanting Christ from
							<placeName key="tgn,7001371">Jerusalem</placeName> to <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>, and placing him in the time of
						Claudius, although the crucifixion took place during the reign of Tiberius.
						St. <placeName key="tgn,2047783">Luke</placeName>, Acts xviii. 2, mentions
						the expulsion of the Jews from <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>
						by the emperor Claudius: Dio, however, says that he did not expel them, but
						only forbad their religious assemblies. It was very natural for Suetonius to
						write Chrestus instead of Christus, as the former was a name in use among
						the Greeks and Romans. Among others, Cicero mentions a person of that name
						in his Fam. Ep. ii. 8. </note> He allowed the ambassadors of the <placeName key="tgn,2088713">Germans</placeName> to sit at the public spectacles in the
					seats assigned to the senators, being induced to grant them favours by their
					frank and honourable conduct. For, having been seated in the rows of benches
					which were common to the people, on observing the Parthian and Armenian
					ambassadors sitting among the senators, they took upon themselves to cross over
					into the same seats, as being, they said, no way inferior to the others, in
					point either of merit or rank. The religious rites of the Druids, solemnized
					with such horrid cruelties, which had only been forbidden the citizens of
						<placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName> during the reign of Augustus,
					he utterly abolished among the Gauls.<note anchored="true"><placeName key="tgn,2119609">Pliny</placeName> tells us that Druidism had its
						origin in <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, and was trnsplanted
						into <placeName key="tgn,7008653">Britain</placeName>, xxi. 1. Julius Caesar
						asserts just the contrary, <bibl n="Caes. Gal. 6.13">Bell. Gall.
							vi.13.11</bibl>. The edict of Claudius was not carried into effect; at
						least, we find vestiges of Druidism in <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, during the reigns of Nero and Alexander
						Severus.</note> On the other hand, he attempted to transfer the Eleusinian
					mysteries from <placeName key="tgn,7002681">Attica</placeName> to <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>.<note anchored="true">The Eleusinian
						mysteries were never transferred from <placeName key="perseus,Athens">Athens</placeName> to <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>,
						notwithstanding this attempt of Claudius, and although Aurelius Victor says
						that Adrian effected it.</note> He likewise ordered the temple of Venus
					Erycina in <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>, which was old and in
					a ruinous condition, to be repaired at the expense of the Roman people. He
					concluded treaties with foreign princes in the forum, with the sacrifice of a
					sow and the form of words used by the heralds in former times. But in these and
					other things, and indeed the greater part of his administration, he was directed
					not so much by his own judgment, as by the influence of his wives and freedmen;
					for the most part acting in conformity to what their interests or fancies
					dictated.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="26" subtype="chapter"><p>He was trice married at a very early age, first to Aemilia Lepida, the
					grand-daughter of Autustus, and afterwards to Livia Medullina, who had the
					cognomen of Camilla, and was descended from the old dictator Camillus. The
					former he divorced while still a virgin, because her parents had incurred the
					displeasure of Augustus; and he lost the latter by sickness on the day fixed for
					their nuptials. He next married Plautia Urgulanilla, whose father had enjoyed
					the honour of a triumph; and soon afterwards, Aelia Paetina, the daughter of a
					man of consular rank. But he divorced them both; Paetina, upon some trifling
					cause of disgust; and Urgulanilla, for scandalous lewdness, and the suspicion of
					murder. After them he took in marriage Valeria Messalina,the daughter of
					Barbatus Messala, his cousin. But finding that, besides her other shameful
					debaucheries, she had even gone so far as to marry in his own absence Caius
					Silius, the settlement of her dowry being formally signed, in the presence of
					the augurs, he put her to death. When summoning his pretorians to his presence,
					he made to them this declaration: "As I have been so unhappy in my unions, I am
					resolved to continue in future unmarried; and if I should not, I give you leave
					to stab me."</p><p>He was, however, unable to persist in this resolution; for he began immediately
					to think of another wife; and even of taking back Paetina, whom he had formerly
					divorced: he thought also of Lollia Paulina, who had been married to Caius
					Caesar. But being ensnared by the arts of Agrippina, the daughter of his brother
					Germanicus, who took advantage of the kisses and endearments which their near
					relationship admitted, to inflame his desires, he got some one to propose at the
					next meeting of the senate, that they should oblige the emperor to marry
					Agrippina, as a measure highly conducive to the public interest; and that in
					future liberty should be given for such marriages, which until that time had
					been considered incestuous. In less than twenty-four hours after this, he
					married her.<note anchored="true">A.U.C. 801</note> No person was found,
					however, to follow the example, excepting one freedman, and a centurion of the
					first rank, at the solemnization of whose nuptials both he and Agrippina
					attended.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="27" subtype="chapter"><p>He had children by three of his wives; by Urgulanilla, Drusus and Claudia; by
					Petina, Antonia; and by Messalina, Octavia, and also a son, whom at first he
					called Germanicus, but afterwards Britannicus. He lost Drusus at <placeName key="perseus,Pompeii">Pompeii</placeName>, when he was very young; he being
					choked with a pear, which in his play he tossed into the air, and caught in his
					mouth. Only a few days before, he had betrothed him to one of Sejanus's
						daughters;<note anchored="true">A.U.C. 773</note> and I am therefore
					surprised that some authors should say he lost his life by the treachery of
					Sejanus. Claudia, who was, in truth, the daughter of Bbter his freedman, though
					she was born five months before his divorce, he ordered to be thrown naked at
					her mother's door. He married Antonia to Cneius Pompey the Great,<note anchored="true">It would seem from this passage, that the cognomen of " the
						Great," had now been restored to the descendants of Cneius Pompey, on whom
						it was first conferred.</note> and afterwards to Faustus Sylla,<note anchored="true">A. U. C. 806.</note> both youths of very noble parentage;
					Octavia to his step-son Nero,<note anchored="true">A. U. C. 803.</note> after
					she had been contracted to <placeName key="tgn,1046911">Silanus</placeName>.
					Britannicus was born upon the twentieth day of his reign, and in his second
					consulship. He often earnestly commended him to the soldiers, holding him in his
					arms before their ranks; and would likewise show him to the people in the
					theatre, setting him upon his lap, or holding him out whilst he was still very
					young; and was sure to receive their acclamations, and good wishes on his
					behalf. Of his sons-in-law, he adopted Nero. He not only dismissed from his
					favour both Pompey and <placeName key="tgn,1046911">Silanus</placeName>, but put
					them to death.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="28" subtype="chapter"><p>Amongst his freedmen, the greatest favourite was the eunuch Posides, whom, in his
					British triumph, he presented with the pointless spear, classing him among the
					military men. Next to him, if not equal, in favour was <placeName key="tgn,2324437">Felix</placeName>,<note anchored="true">This is the
							<placeName key="tgn,2324437">Felix</placeName> mentioned in the Acts,
						cc. xxiii., and xxiv., before whom <placeName key="tgn,1129393">St.
							Paul</placeName> pleaded. He is mentioned by Josephus; and Tacitus, who
						calls him Felix Antonius, gives his character: Annal. v. 9. 6. </note> whom
					he not only preferred to commands both of cohorts and troops, but to the
					government of the province of <placeName key="tgn,7001407">Judea</placeName>;
					and he became, in consequence of his elevation, the husband of three queens.
						<note anchored="true">It appears that two of these wives of <placeName key="tgn,2324437">Felix</placeName> were named Drusilla. One, mentioned
						Acts xxiv. 24, and there called a Jewess, was the sister of king Agrippa,
						and had married before, Azizus, king of the Emessenes. The other Drusilla,
						though not a queen, was of royal birth, being the grand-daughter of
						Cleopatra by Mark Antony. Who the third wife of <placeName key="tgn,2101139">Felix</placeName> was, is unknown. </note> Another favourite was
					Harpocras, to whom he granted the privilege of being carried in a litter within
					the city, and of holding public spectacles for the entertainment of the people.
					In this class was likewise Polybius, who assisted him in his studies, and had
					often the honour of walking between the two consuls. But above all others,
					Narcissus, his secretary, and <placeName key="tgn,2565867">Pallas</placeName>,
						<note anchored="true">Tacitus and Josephus mention that <placeName key="tgn,2565867">Pallas</placeName> was the brother of <placeName key="tgn,2101139">Felix</placeName>, and the younger <placeName key="tgn,2119609">Pliny</placeName> ridicules the pompous inscription on
						his tomb. </note> the comptroller of his accounts, were in high favour with
					him. He not only allowed them to receive, by decree of the senate, immense
					presents, but also to be decorated with the questorian and praetorian ensigns of
					honour. So much did he indulge them in amassing wealth, and plundering the
					public, that, upon his complaining, once, of the lowness of his exchequer, some
					one said, with great reason, that "It would be full enough, if those two
					freedmen of his would but take him into partnership with them."</p></div><div type="textpart" n="29" subtype="chapter"><p>Being entirely governed by these freedmen, and, as I have already said, by his
					wives, he was a tool to others, rather than a prince. He distributed offices, or
					the command of armies, pardoned or punished, according as it suited their
					interests, their passions, or their caprice; and for the most part, without
					knowing, or being sensible of what he did. Not to enter into minute details
					relative to the revocation of grants, the reversal of judicial decisions,
					obtaining his signature to fictitious appointments, or the bare-faced alteration
					of them after signing; he put to death Appius Silanus, the father of his
					son-in-law, and the two Julias, the daughters of Drusus and Germanicus, without
					any positive proof of the crimes with which they were charged, or so much as
					permitting them to make any defence. He also cut of Cneius Pompey, the husband
					of his eldest daughter; and Lucius Silanus, who was betrothed to the younger
					Pompey, was stabbed in the act of unnatural lewdness with a favourite paramour.
					Silanus was obliged to quit the office of praetor upon the fourth of the calends
					of January [29th Dec.], and to kill himself on new year's day<note anchored="true">A.U.C. 802</note> following, the very same on which Claudius
					and Agrippina were married. He condemned to death five and thirty senators, and
					above three hundred Roman knights, with so little attention to what he did, that
					when a centuon brought him word of the execution ofa man of consular rank, who
					was one of the number, and told him that he had executed his order, he declared,
					"he had ordered no such thing, but that he approved of it;" because his
					freedmen, it seems, had said, that the soldiers did nothing more than their
					duty, in dispatching the emperor's enemies without waiting for a warrant. But it
					is beyond all belief, that he himself, at the marriage of Messalina with the
					adulterous Silius, should actually sign the writings relative to her dowry;
					induced, as it is pretended, by the design of diverting from himself and
					transferring upon another the danger which some omens seemed to threaten
					him.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="30" subtype="chapter"><p>Either standing or sitting, but especially when he lay asleep, he had a majestic
					and graceful apearance; for he was tall, but not slender. His grey locks became
					him well, and he had a full neck. But his knees were feeble, and failed him in
					walking, so that his gait was ungainly, both when he assumed state, and when he
					was taking diversion. He was outrageous in his laughter, and still more so in
					his wrath, for then he foamed at the mouth, and discharged from his nostrils. He
					also stammered in his speech, and had a tremulous motion of the head at all
					times, but particularly when he was engaged in any business, however
					trifling.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="31" subtype="chapter"><p>Though his health was very infirm during the former part of his life, yet, after
					he became emperor, he enjoyed a good state of health, except only that he was
					subject to a pain of the stomach. In a fit of this complaint, he said he had
					thoughts of killing himself.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="32" subtype="chapter"><p>He gave entertainments as frequent as they were splendid, and generally when
					there was such ample room, that very often six hundred guests sat down together.
					At a feast he gave on the banks of the canal for draining the Fucine Lake, he
					narrowly escaped being drowned, the water at its discharge rushing out with such
					violence, that it overflowed the conduit. At supper he had always his own
					children, with those of several of the nobility, who, according to an ancient
					custom, sat at the feet of the couches. One of his guests having been suspected
					of purloining a golden cup, he invited him again the next day, but served him.
					with a porcelain jug. It is said, too, that he intended to publish an edict,
					"allowing to all people the liberty of giving vent at table to any distension
					occasioned by flatulence," upon hearing of a person whose modesty, when under
					restraint, had nearly cost him his life.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="33" subtype="chapter"><p>He was always ready to eat and drink at any time or in any place. One day, as he
					was hearing causes in the forum of Augustus, he smelt the dinner which was
					preparing for the Salii, <note anchored="true">The Salii, the priests of
							<placeName key="tgn,2090583">Mars</placeName>, twelve in number, were
						instituted by <placeName key="tgn,2033144">Numa</placeName>. Their dress was
						an embroidered tunic, bound with a girdle ornamented with brass. They wore
						on their head a conical cap, of a considerable height; carried a sword by
						their side; in their right hand a spear or rod, and in their left, one of
						the Ancilia, or shields of <placeName key="tgn,2090583">Mars</placeName>. On
						solemn occasions, they used to go to the Capitol, through the forum and
						other public parts of the city, dancing and singing sacred songs, said to
						have been composed by <placeName key="tgn,2033144">Numa</placeName>; which,
						in the time of <placeName key="tgn,2399200">Horace</placeName>, could hardly
						be understood by any one, even the priests themselves. The most solemn
						procession of the Salii was on the first of March, in commemoration of the
						time when the sacred shield was believed to have fallen from heaven, in the
						reign of <placeName key="tgn,2033144">Numa</placeName>. After their
						procession, they had a splendid entertainment, the luxury of which was
						proverbial. </note> in the temple of <placeName key="tgn,2090583">Mars</placeName> adjoining, whereupon he quitted the tribunal, and went to
					partake of the feast with the priests. He scarcely ever left the table until he
					had thoroughly crammed himself and drank to intoxication; and then he would
					immediately fall asleep, lying upon his back with his'mouth open. While in this
					condition, a feather was put down his throat, to make him throw up the contents
					of his stomach. Upon composing himself to rest, his sleep was short, and he
					usually awoke before midnight; but he would sometimes sleep in the daytime, and
					that, even, when he was upon the tribunal; so that the advocates often found it
					difficult to wake him, though they raised their voices for that purpose. He set
					no bounds to his libidinous intercourse with women, but never betrayed any
					unnatural desires for the other sex. He was fond of gaming, and published a book
					upon the subject. He even used to play as he rode in his chariot, having the
					tables so fitted, that the game was not disturbed by the motion of the
					carriage.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="34" subtype="chapter"><p>His cruel and sanguinary disposition was exhibited upon great as well as trifling
					occasions. When any person was to be put to the torture, or criminal punished
					for parricide, he was impatient for the execution, and would have it performed
					in his own presence. When he was at Tibur, being desirous of seeing an example
					of the old way of putting malefactors to death, some were immediately bound to a
					stake for the purpose; but there being no executioner to be had at the place, he
					sent for one from <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>, and waited for
					his coming until night. In any exhibition of gladiators, presented either by
					himself or others, if any of the combatants chanced to fall, he ordered them to
					be butchered, especially the Retiaii, that he might see their faces in the
					agonies of death. Two gladiators happening to kill each other, he immediately
					ordered some little knives to be made of their swords for his own use. He took
					great pleasure in seeing men engage with wild beasts, and the combatants who
					appeared on the stage at noon. He woul I therefore come to the theatre by break
					of day, and at noon, dismissing the people to dinner, continued sitting himself;
					and besides those who were devoted to that sanguinary fate, he would match
					others with the beasts, upon slight or sudden occasions; as, for instance, the
					carpenters and their assistants, and people of that sort, if a machine, or any
					piece of work in which they had been employed about the theatre did not answer
					the purpose for which it had been intended. To this desperate kind of encounter
					he forced one of his nomenclators, even encumbered as he was by wearing the
					toga.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="35" subtype="chapter"><p>But the characteristics most predominant in him were fear and distrust. In the
					beginning of his reign, though he much affected a modest and humble appearance,
					as has been already observed, yet he durst not venture himself at an
					entertainment without being attended by a guard of spearmen, and made soldiers
					wait upon him at table instead of servants. He never visited a sick person,
					until the chamber had been first searched, and the bed and bedding thoroughly
					examined. At other times, all persons who came to pay their court to him were
					strictly searched by officers appointed for that purpose; nor was it until after
					a long time, and with much difficulty, that he was prevailed upon to excuse
					women, boys, and girls from such rude handling, or suffer their attendants or
					writing-masters to retain their cases for pens and styles. When <placeName key="tgn,2068320">Camillus</placeName> formed his plot against him, not
					doubting but his timidity might be worked upon without a war, he wrote to him a
					scurrilous, petulant, and threatening letter, desiring him to resign the
					government, and betake himself to a life of privacy. Upon receiving this
					requisition, he had some thoughts of complying with it, and summoned together
					the principal men of, the city, to consult with them on the subject.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="36" subtype="chapter"><p>Having heard some loose reports of conspiracies formed against him, he was so
					much alarmed, that he thought of immediately abdicating the government. And
					when, as I have before related, a man armed with a dagger was discovered near
					him while he was sacrificing, he instantly ordered the heralds to convoke the
					senate, and with tears and dismal exclamations, lamented that such was his
					condition, that he was safe no where; and for a long time afterwards he
					abstained from appearing in public. He smothered his ardent love for Messalina,
					not so much on account of her infamous conduct, as from apprehension of danger;
					believing that she aspired to share with Silius, her partner in adultery, the
					imperial dignity. Upon this occasion he ran in a great fright, and a very
					shameful manner, to the camp, asking all the way he went, "if the empire were
					indeed safely his."</p></div><div type="textpart" n="37" subtype="chapter"><p>No suspicion was too trifling, no person on whom it rested too contemptible, to
					throw him into a panic, and inuce him to take precautions for his safety, and
					meditate reveng, A man engaged in a litigation before his tribunal, having
					saluted him, drew him aside, and told him he had dreamt that he saw him
					murdered; and shortly afterwards, when his adversary came to deliver his plea to
					the emperor, the plaintiff, pretending to have discovered the murderer, pointed
					to him as the man he had seen in his dream; whereupon, as if he had been taken
					in the act, he was hurried away to execution. We are informed, that Appius
					Silanus was got rid of in the same manner, by a contrivance betwixt Messalina
					and Narcissus, in which they had their several parts assigned them. Narcissus
					therefore burst into his lord's chamber before daylight, apparently in great
					fright, and told him that he had dreamt that Appius Silanus had murdered him.
					The empress, upon this, affecting great surprise, declared she had the like
					dream for several nights successively. Presently afterwards, word was brought,
					as it had been agreed on, that Appius was come, he having, indeed, received
					orders the preceding day to be there at that time; and, as if the truth of the
					dream was sufficiently confirmed by his appearance at that juncture, he was
					immediately ordered to be prosecuted and put to death. The day following,
					Claudius related the whole affair to the senate, and acknowledged his great
					obligation to his freedmen for watching over him even in his sleep.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="38" subtype="chapter"><p>Sensible of his being subject to passion and resentment, he excused himself in
					both instances by a proclamation, assuring the public that " the former should
					be short and harmless, and the latter never without good cause." After severely
					reprimanding the people of <placeName key="tgn,7007018">Ostia</placeName> for
					not sending some boats to meet him upon his entering the mouth of the <placeName key="tgn,1130786">Tiber</placeName>, in terms which might expose them to the
					public resentment, he wrote to <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>
					that he had been treated as a private person; yet immediately afterwards he
					pardoned them, and that in a way which had the appearance of making them
					satisfaction, or begging pardon for some injury he had done them. Some people
					who addressed him unseasonably in public, he pushed away with his own hand. He
					likewise banished a person who had been secretary to a quaestor, and even a
					senator who had filled the office of praetor. without a hearing, and although
					they were innocent; the former only because he had treated him with rudeness
					while he was in a private station, and the other, because in his aedileship he
					had fined some tenants of his, for selling some cooked victuals contrary to law,
					and ordered his steward, who interfered, to be whipped. On this account,
					likewise, he took from the ediles the jurisdiction they had over cooks'-shops.
					He did not scruple to speak of his own absurdities, and declared in some short
					speeches which he published, that he had only feigned imbecility in the reign of
					Caius, because otherwise it would have been impossible for him to have escaped
					and arrived at the station he had then attained. He could not, however, gain
					credit for this assertion; for a short time afterwards, a book was published
					under the title of <title xml:lang="grc">*mwrw=n a)nasta/sis</title>, "The
					Resurrection of Fools," the design of which was to show "that nobody ever
					counterfeited folly."</p></div><div type="textpart" n="39" subtype="chapter"><p>Amongst other things, people admired in him his indifference and unconcern; or,
					to express it in Greek, his <foreign xml:lang="grc">μετεωξία</foreign> and
						<foreign xml:lang="grc">ἀβλεφία</foreign>. Placing himself at table a
					little after Messalina's death, he enquired, "Why the empress did not come?"
					Many of those whom he had condemned to death, he ordered the day after to be
					invited to his table, and to game with him, and sent to reprimand them as
					sluggish fellows for not making greater haste. When he was meditating his
					incestuous marriage with Agrippina, he was perpetually calling her, "My
					daughter, my nursling, born and brought up upon my lap." And when he was going
					to adopt Nero, as if there was little cause for censure in his adopting a
					son-in-law, when he had a son of his own arrived at years of maturity; he
					continually gave out in public, "that no one had ever been admitted by adoption
					into the Claudian family."</p></div><div type="textpart" n="40" subtype="chapter"><p>He frequently appeared so careless in what he said, and so inattentive to
					circumstances, that it was believed he never reflected who he himself was, or
					amongst whom, or at what time or in what place, he spoke. In the debate in the
					senate relative to the butchers and vintners, he cried out, "I ask you, who can
					live without a bit of meat ?" And mentioned the great plenty of old taverns,
					from which he himself used formerly to have his wine. Among other reasons for
					his supporting a certain person who was candidate for the quaestorship, he gave
					this: "His father," said he, " once gave me, very seasonably, a draught of cold
					water when I was sick." Upon his bringing a woman as a witness in some cause
					before the senate, he said, "This woman was my mother's freedwoman and dresser,
					but she always considered me as her nraster; and this I say, because there are
					some still in my family that do not look upon tie as such." The people of
						<placeName key="perseus,Ostia">Ostia</placeName> addressing him in open
					court with a petition, he flew into a rage at them, and said, "There is no
					reason why I should oblige you: if any one else is free to act as he pleases,
					surely I am." The following expressions he had in his mouth every day, and at
					all hours and seasons: "What! do you take me for a Theogonius?"<note anchored="true">Scaliger and Casaubon give Teleggenius as the reading of the
						best manuscripts. Whoever he was, his name seems to have been a byeword for
						a notorious fool. </note> And in Greek <foreign xml:lang="grc">λάλει καὶ</foreign>, "Speak, but do not touch me;" besides many other
					familiar sentences, below the dignity of a private person, much more of an
					emperor, who was not deficient either in eloquence or learning, as having
					applied himself very closely to the liberal sciences.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>