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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.abo012.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" n="21" subtype="chapter"><p>He conquered, however, partly in person, and partly by his lieutenants,
						<placeName key="tgn,7002760">Cantabria</placeName>,<note anchored="true"><placeName key="tgn,7002760">Cantabria</placeName>, in the north of
							<placeName key="tgn,1000095">Spain</placeName>, now the Basque
						province.</note>
					<placeName key="tgn,7002878">Aquitania</placeName> and <placeName key="tgn,4008442">Pannonia</placeName>,<note anchored="true">The ancient
							<placeName key="tgn,4008442">Pannonia</placeName> includes <placeName key="tgn,7006278">Hungary</placeName> and part of <placeName key="tgn,1000062">Austria</placeName>, <placeName key="tgn,7003028">Styria</placeName> and <placeName key="tgn,7012988">Carniola</placeName>.</note>
					<placeName key="tgn,7015451">Dalmatia</placeName>, with all <placeName key="tgn,7016683">Illyricum</placeName> and <placeName key="tgn,7011731">Rhaetia</placeName>,<note anchored="true">The <placeName key="tgn,1109533">Rhaetian Alps</placeName> are that part of the chain bordering on the
							<placeName key="tgn,7003029">Tyrol</placeName>.</note> besides the two
					Alpine nations, the Vindelici and the Salassii.<note anchored="true">The
						Vindelici principally occupied the country which is now the kingdom of
							<placeName key="tgn,7003669">Bavaria</placeName>; and the Salassii, that
						part of <placeName key="tgn,7003120">Piedmont</placeName> which includes the
						valley of Aost.</note> He also checked the incursions of the Dacians, by
					cutting off three of their generals with vast armies, and drove the Germans
					beyond the river <placeName key="tgn,7016548">Elbe</placeName>; removing two
					other tribes who submitted, the Ubii and Sicambri, into <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, and settling them in the country
					bordering on the <placeName key="tgn,7012611">Rhine</placeName>. Other nations
					also, which broke into revolt, he reduced to submission. But he never made war
					upon any nation without just and necessary cause; and was so far from being
					ambitious either to extend the empire, or advance his own military glory, that
					he obliged the chiefs of some barbarous tribes to swear in the temple of Mars
					the Avenger,<note anchored="true">The temple of Mars Ultor was erected by
						Augustus in fulfilment of a vow made by him at the battle of <placeName key="perseus,Philippi">Philippi</placeName>. It stood in the Forum which
						he built, mentioned in chap. xxix. There are no remains of either.</note>
					that they would faithfully observe their engagements, and not violate the peace
					which they had implored. Of some he demanded a new description of hostages,
					their women, having found from experience that they cared little for their men
					when given as hostages; but he always afforded them the means of getting back
					their hostages whenever they wished it. Even those who engaged most frequently
					and with the greatest perfidy in their rebellion, he never punished more
					severely than by selling their captives, on the terms of their not serving in
					any neighbouring country, nor being released from their slavery before the
					expiration of thirty years. By the character which he thus acquired, for virtue
					and moderation, he induced even the Indians and Scythians, nations before known
					to the Romans by report only, to solicit his friendship, and that of the Roman
					people, by ambassadors. The Parthians readily allowed his claim to <placeName key="tgn,7006651">Armenia</placeName>; restoring, at his demand, the
					standards which they had taken from Marcus Crassus and Mark Antony, and offering
					him hostages besides. Afterwards, when a contest arose between several
					pretenders to the crown of that kingdom, they refused to acknowledge any one who
					was not chosen by him.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="22" subtype="chapter"><p>The temple of Janus Quirinus, which had been shut twice only, from the era of the
					building of the city to his own time, he closed thrice in a much shorter period,
					having established universal peace both by sea and land. He twice entered the
					city with the honours of an Ovation,<note anchored="true">"The Ovatio was an
						inferior kind of Triumph, granted in cases where the victory was not of
						great importance, or had been obtained without difficulty. The general
						entered the city on foot or on horseback, crowned with myrtle, not with
						laurel; and instead of bullocks, the sacrifice was performed with a sheep,
						whence this procession acquired its name."-Thomson.</note> namely, after the
					war of <placeName key="perseus,Philippi">Philippi</placeName>, and again after
					that of <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>. He had also three
					curule triumphs<note anchored="true">"The greater Triumph, in which the
						victorious general and his army advanced in solemn procession through the
						city to the Capitol, was the highest military honour which could be obtained
						in the Roman state. Foremost in the procession went musicians of various
						kinds, singing and playing triumphal songs. Next were led the oxen to be
						sacrificed, having their horns gilt, and their heads adorned with fillets
						and garlands. Then in carriages were brought the spoils taken from the
						enemy, statues, pictures, plate, armour, gold and silver, and brass; with
						golden crowns, and other gifts, sent by the allied and tributary states. The
						captive princes and generals followed in chains, with their children and
						attendants. After them came the lictors, having their fasces wreathed with
						laurel, followed by a great company of musicians and dancers dressed like
						Satyrs, and wearing crowns of gold; in the midst of whom was one in a female
						dress, whose business it was, with his looks and gestures, to insult the
						vanquished. Next followed a long train of persons carrying perfumes. Then
						came the victorious general, dressed in purple embroidered with gold, with a
						crown of laurel on his head, a branch of laurel in his right hand, and in
						his left an ivory sceptre, with an eagle on the top; having his face painted
						with vermilion, in the same manner as the statue of <placeName key="tgn,1125260">Jupiter</placeName> on festival days, and a golden
						Bulla hanging on his breast, and containing some amulet, or magical
						preservative against envy. He stood in a gilded chariot, adorned with ivory,
						and drawn by four white horses, sometimes by elephants, attended by his
						relations, and a great crowd of citizens, all in white. His children used to
						ride in the chariot with him; and that he might not be too much elated, a
						slave, carrying a golden crown sparkling with gems, stood behind him, and
						frequently whispered in his ear, 'Remember that thou art a man!' After the
						general, followed the consuls and senators on foot, at least according to
						the appointment of Augustus; for they formerly used to go before him. His
						Legati and military Tribunes commonly rode by his side. The victorious army,
						horse and foot, came last, crowned with laurel, and decorated with the gifts
						which they had received for their valour, singing their own and their
						general's praises, but sometimes throwing out railleries against him; and
						often exclaiming, 'Io Triumphe!' in which they were joined by all the
						citizens, as they passed along. The oxen having been sacrificed, the general
						gave a magnificent entertainment in the Capitol to his friends and the chief
						men of the city, after which he was conducted home by the people, with music
						and a great number of lamps and torches."-Thomson. </note> for his several
					victories in <placeName key="tgn,7015451">Dalmatia</placeName>, <placeName key="tgn,7010713">Actium</placeName>, and <placeName key="perseus,Alexandria">Alexandria</placeName>; each of which lasted three
					days.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="23" subtype="chapter"><p>In all his wars, he never received any signal or ignominious defeat, except twice
					in <placeName key="tgn,7000084">Germany</placeName>, under his lieutenants
					Lollius and Varus. The former indeed had in it more of dishonour than disaster;
					but that of Varus threatened the security of the empire itself; three legions,
					with the commander, his lieutenants, and all the auxiliaries, being cut off.
					Upon receiving intelligence of this disaster, he gave orders for keeping a
					strict watch over the city, to prevent any public disturbance, and prolonged the
					appointments of the prefects in the provinces, that the allies might be kept in
					order by experience of persons to whom they were used. He made a vow to
					celebrate the great games in honour of <placeName key="tgn,1125260">Jupiter</placeName>, Optimus, Maximus, "if he would be pleased to restore
					the state to more prosperous circumstances." This had formerly been resorted to
					in the Cimbrian and Marsian wars. In short, we are informed that he was in such
					consternation at this event, that he let the hair of his head and beard grow for
					several months, and sometimes knocked his head against the door-post, crying
					out, "0, Quintilius Varus! give me back my legions!" And ever after he observed
					the anniversary of this calamity, as a day of sorrow and mourning.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="24" subtype="chapter"><p>In military affairs he made many alterations, introducing some practices entirely
					new, and reviving others, which had become obsolete. He maintained the strictest
					discipline among the troops; and would not allow even his lieutenants the
					liberty to visit their wives, except reluctantly, and in the winter season only.
					A Roman knight having cut off the thumbs of his two young sons, to render them
					incapable of serving in the wars, he exposed both him and his estate to public
					sale. But upon observing the farmers of the revenue very greedy for the
					purchase, he assigned him to a freedman of his own, that he might send him into
					the country, and suffer him to retain his freedom. The tenth legion becoming
					mutinous, he disbanded it with ignominy; and did the same by some others which
					petulantly demanded their discharge; withholding from them the rewards usually
					bestowed on those who had served their stated time in the wars. The cohorts
					which yielded their ground in time of action, he decimated, and fed with barley.
					Centurions, as well as common sentinels, who deserted their posts when on guard,
					he punished with death. For other misdemeanors he inflicted upon them various
					kinds of disgrace; such as obliging them to stand all day before the praetorium,
					sometimes in their tunics only, and without their belts, sometimes to carry
					poles ten feet long, or sods of turf.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="25" subtype="chapter"><p>After the conclusion of the civil wars, he never, in any of his military
					harangues, or proclamations, addressed them by the title of "Fellow-soldiers,"
					but as "Soldiers" only. Nor would he suffer them to be otherwise called by his
					sons or step-sons, when they were in command; judging the former epithet to
					convey the idea of a degree of condescension inconsistent with military
					discipline, the maintenance of order, and his own majesty, and that of his
					house. Unless at <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, in case of
					incendiary fires, or under the apprehension of public disturbances during a
					scarcity of provisions, he never employed in his army slaves who had been made
					freedmen, except upon two occasions; on one, for the security of the colonies
					bordering upon <placeName key="tgn,7016683">Illyricum</placeName>, and on the
					other, to guard the banks of the river <placeName key="tgn,7012611">Rhine</placeName>. Although he obliged persons of fortune, both male and
					female, to give up their slaves, and they received their manumission at once,
					yet he kept them together under their own standard, unmixed with soldiers who
					were better born, and armed likewise after different fashion. Military rewards,
					such as trappings, collars, and other decorations of gold and silver, he
					distributed more readily than camp or mural crowns, which were reckoned more
					honourable than the former. These he bestowed sparingly, without partiality, and
					frequently even on common soldiers. He presented M. Agrippa, after the naval
					engagement in the Sicilian war, with a sea-green banner. Those who shared in the
					honours of a triumph, although they had attended him in his expeditions, and
					taken part in his victories, he judged it improper to distinguish by the usual
					rewards for service, because they had a right themselves to grant such rewards
					to whom they pleased. He thought nothing more derogatory to the character of an
					accomplished general than precipitancy and rashness; on which account he had
					frequently in his mouth those proverbs: <quote xml:lang="grc">σπεῦδε</quote>, <gloss>hasten slowly</gloss>; and <quote xml:lang="grc">ἀσφαλὴσ γὰρ ἐστ' ἀμείνων, ἡ θράσυσ στρατηλάτησ</quote>, <gloss>The
						cautious captain's better than the bold.</gloss>. And "That is done fast
					enough, which is done well enough."</p><p>He was wont to say also, that "a battle or a war ought never to be undertaken,
					unless the prospect of gain over balanced the fear of loss. For," said he, "men
					who pursue small advantages with no small hazard, resemble those who fish with a
					golden hook, the loss of which, if the line should happen to break, could never
					be compensated by all the fish they might take."</p></div><div type="textpart" n="26" subtype="chapter"><p>He was advanced to public offices before the age at which he was legally
					qualified for them; and to some, also, of a new kind, and for life. He seized
					the consulship in the twentieth year of his age, quartering his legions in a
					threatening manner near the city, and sending deputies to demand it for him in
					the name of the army. When the senate demurred, a centurion, named Cornelius,
					who was at the head of the chief deputation, throwing back his cloak, and
					showing the hilt of his sword, had the presumption to say in the senate-house,
					"This will make him consul, if ye will not." His second consulship he filled
					nine years afterwards; his third, after the interval of only one year, and held
					the same office every year successively until the eleventh. From this period,
					although the consulship was frequently offered him, he always declined it,
					until, after a long interval, not less than seventeen years, he voluntarily
					stood for the twelfth, and two years after that for a thirteenth; that he might
					successively introduce into the forum, on their entering public life, his two
					sons, Caius and Lucius, while he was invested with the highest office in the
					state. In his five consulships from the sixth to the eleventh, he continued in
					office throughout the year; but in the rest, during only nine, six, four, or
					three months, and in his second no more than a few hours. For having sat for a
					short time in the morning, upon the calends of January [1st January], in his
					curule chair. <note anchored="true">"The <foreign xml:lang="lat">Sella
							Curulis</foreign> was a chair on which the principal magistrates sat in
						the tribunal upon solemn occasions. It had no back, but stood on four
						crooked feet, fixed to the extremities of cross pieces of wood, joined by a
						common axis, somewhat in the form of the letter X; was covered with leather,
						and inlaid with ivory. From its construction, it might be occasionally
						folded together for the convenience of carriage, and set down where the
						magistrate chose to use it."—Thomson. </note> before the temple of Jupiter
					Capitolinus, he abdicated the office, and substituted another in his room. Nor
					did he enter upon them all at <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>,
					but upon the fourth in <placeName key="tgn,1000004">Asia</placeName>, the fifth
					in the Isle of <placeName key="tgn,7002673">Samos</placeName>, and the eighth
					and ninth at <placeName key="tgn,7008715">Tarragona</placeName>. <note anchored="true">Now <placeName key="tgn,7008813">Saragossa</placeName>.
					</note></p></div><div type="textpart" n="27" subtype="chapter"><p>During ten years he acted as one of the triumvirate for settling the
					commonwealth, in which office he for some time opposed his colleagues in their
					design of a proscription; but after it was begun, he prosecuted it with more
					determined rigour than either of them. For whilst they were often prevailed
					upon, by the interest and intercession of friends, to show mercy, he alone
					strongly insisted that no one should be spared, and even proscribed Caius
					Toranius, <note anchored="true">A great and wise man, if he is the same person
						to whom Cicero's letters on the calamities of the times were addressed. —
						Fam. Epist. c. vi. 20, 21. </note> his guardian, who had been formerly the
					colleague of his father Octavius in the edileship. Junius Saturnius adds this
					farther account of him: that when, after the proscription was over, Marcus
					Lepidus made an apology in the senate for their past proceedings, and gave them
					hopes of a more mild administration for the future, because they had now
					sufficiently crushed their enemies; he, on the other hand, declared that the
					only limit he had fixed to the proscription was, that he should be free to act
					as he pleased. Afterwards, however, repenting of his severity, he advanced T.
					Vinius Philopoemen to the equestrian rank, for having concealed his patron at
					the time he was proscribed. In this same office he incurred great odium upon
					many accounts. For as he was one day making an harangue, observing among the
					soldiers Pinarius, a Roman knight, admit some private citizens, and engaged in
					taking notes, he ordered him to be stabbed before his eyes, as a busy-body and a
					spy upon him. He so terrified with his menaces Tedius Afer, the consul elect,
						<note anchored="true">A.U.C. 731. </note> for having reflected upon some
					action of his, that he threw himself from a great height, and died on the spot.
					And when Quintus Gallius, the praetor, came to compliment him with a double
					tablet under his cloak, suspecting that it was a sword he had concealed, and yet
					not venturing to make a search, lest it should be found to be something else, he
					caused him to be dragged from his tribunal by centurions and soldiers, and
					tortured like a slave: and although he made no confession, ordered him to be put
					to death, after he had, with his own hands, plucked out his eyes. His own
					account of the matter, however, is, that Quintus Gallius sought a private
					conference with him, for the purpose of assassinating him; that he therefore put
					him in prison, but afterwards released him, and banished him the city; when he
					perished either in a storm at sea, or by falling into the hands of robbers.</p><p>He accepted of the tribunitian power for life, but more than once chose a
					colleague in that office for two lustra <note anchored="true">The <foreign xml:lang="lat">Lustrum</foreign> was a period of five years, at the end
						of which the census of the people was taken. It was first made by the Roman
						kings, then by the consuls, but after the year 310 from the building of the
						city, by the censors, who were magistrates created for that purpose. It
						appears, however, that the census was not always held at stated periods, and
						sometimes long intervals intervened.</note> successively. He also had the
					supervision of morality and observance of the laws, for life, but without the
					title of censor; yet he thrice took a census of the people, the first and third
					time with a colleague, but the second by himself.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="28" subtype="chapter"><p>He twice entertained thoughts of restoring the republic;<note anchored="true">Augustus appears to have been in earnest on these occasions, at least, in
						his desire to retire into private life and release himself from the cares of
						government, if we may believe <placeName key="tgn,2652379">Seneca</placeName>.-De Brev. Vit. c. 5. Of his two intimate advisers,
						Agrippa gave this counsel, while Mecaenas was for continuing his career of
						ambition—Eutrop. 1. 53. </note> first, immediately after he had crushed
					Antony, remembering that he had often charged him with being the obstacle to its
					restoration. The second time was in consequence of a long illness, when he sent
					for the magistrates and the senate to his own house, and delivered them a
					particular account of the state of the empire. But reflecting at the same time
					that it would be both hazardous to himself to return to the condition of a
					private person, and might be dangerous to the public to have the government
					placed again under the control of the people, he resolved to keep it in his own
					hands, whether with the better event or intention, is hard to say. His good
					intentions he often affirmed in private discourse, and also published an edict,
					in which it was declared in the following terms: "May it be permitted me to have
					the happiness of establishing the commonwealth on a safe and sound basis, and
					thus enjoy the reward of which I am ambitious, that of being celebrated for
					moulding it into the form best adapted to present circumstances; so that, on my
					leaving the world, I may carry with me the hope that the foundations which I
					have laid for its future government, will stand firm and stable."</p></div><div type="textpart" n="29" subtype="chapter"><p>The city, which was not built in a manner suitable to the grandeur of the empire,
					and was liable to inundations of the <placeName key="tgn,1130786">Tiber</placeName>, <note anchored="true">The <placeName key="tgn,1130786">Tiber</placeName> has been always remarkable for the frequency of its
						inundations and the ravages they occasioned, as remarked by Pliny, iii. 5.
						Livy mentions several such occurrences, as well as one extensive fire, which
						destroyed great part of the city. </note> as well as to fires, was so much
					improved under his administration, that he boasted, not without reason, that he
					"found it of brick, but left it of marble." <note anchored="true">The well-known
						saying of Augustus, recorded by Suetonius, that he found a city of bricks,
						but left it of marble, has another version given it by Dio, who applies it
						to his consolidation of the government, to the following effect: "That Rome,
						which I found built of mud, I shall leave you firm as a rock."-Dio. lvi. p.
						589. </note> He also rendered it secure for the time to come against such
					disasters, as far as could be effected by human foresight. A great number of
					public buildings were erected by him, the most considerable of which were a
					forum, <note anchored="true">The same motive which engaged Julius Caesar to
						build a new forum, induced Augustus to erect another. See his life c. x. It
						stood behind the present churches of St. Adrian and St. Luke, and was almost
						parallel with the public forum, but there are no traces of it remaining. The
						temple of Mars Ultor, adjoining. has been mentioned before, p. 90. </note>
					containing the temple of Mars the Avenger, the temple of Apollo on the
						<placeName key="tgn,3000935">Palatine</placeName> hill, and the temple of
					Jupiter Tonans in the capitol. The reason of his building a new forum was the
					vast increase in the population, and the number of causes to be tried in the
					courts, for which, the two already existing not affording sufficient space, it
					was thought necessary to have a third. It was therefore opened for public use
					before the temple of Mars was completely finished; and a law was passed, that
					causes should be tried, and judges chosen by lot, in that place. The temple of
					Mars was built in fulfilment of a vow made during the war of <placeName key="tgn,7010789">Philippi</placeName>, undertaken by him to avenge his
					father's murder. He ordained that the senate should always assemble there when
					they met to deliberate respecting wars and triumphs; that thence should be
					despatched all those who were sent into the provinces in the command of armies;
					and that in it those who returned victorious from the wars, should lodge the
					trophies of their triumphs. He erected the temple of Apollo<note anchored="true">The temple of the Palatine Apollo stood, according to Bianchini, a little
						beyond the triumphal arch of Titus. It appears, from the reverse of a medal
						of Augustus, to have been a rotondo, with an open portico, something like
						the temple of <placeName key="tgn,1016295">Vesta</placeName>. The statues of
						the fifty daughters of Danae surrounded the portico; and opposite to them
						were their husbands on horseback. In this temple were preserved some of the
						finest works of the Greek artists, both in sculpture and painting. Here, in
						the presence of Augustus, Horace's Carmen Seculare was sung by twenty-seven
						noble youths, and as many virgins. And here, as our author informs us,
						Augustus, towards the end of his reign, often assembled the senate. </note>
					in that part of his house on the <placeName key="tgn,2118187">Palatine</placeName> hill which had been struck with lightning, and which,
					on that account, the soothsayers declared the God to have chosen. He added
					porticos to it, with a library of Latin and Greek authors; <note anchored="true">The library adjoined the temple, and was under the protection of Apollo.
						Caius Julius Hegenus, a freedman of Augustus, and an eminent grammarian, was
						the librarian. </note> and when advanced in years, used frequently there to
					hold the senate, and examine the rolls of the judges.</p><p>He dedicated the temple to Jupiter Tonans [or. Apollo Tonans],<note anchored="true">The three fluted Corinthian columns of white marble, which
						stand on the declivity of the Capitoline hill, are commonly supposed to be
						the remains of the temple of <placeName key="tgn,2019952">Jupiter</placeName> Tonans, erected by Augustus. Part of the frieze and
						cornice are attached to them, which with the capitals of the columns are
						finely wrought. Suetonius tells us on what occasion this temple was erected.
						Of all the epithets given to Jupiter, none conveyed more terror to
						superstitious minds than that of the Thunderer- <cit><quote xml:lang="lat"><l>Caelo tonantem credidimus Jovem</l><l>Regnare.</l></quote><bibl n="Hor. Carm. 3.5">Hor. l. iii. Ode 5.</bibl></cit> We shall find this temple mentioned again in c. lxxxix. of the life
						of Au- gustus. </note> in acknowledgment of his escape from a great danger
					in his Cantabrian expedition; when, as he was travelling in the night, his
					litter was struck by lightning, which killed the slave who carried a torch
					before him. He likewise constructed some public buildings in the name of others;
					for instance, his grandsons, his wife, and sister. Thus he built the portico and
					basilica of <placeName key="tgn,2023439">Lucius</placeName> and Caius, and the
					porticos of <placeName key="tgn,2039991">Livia</placeName> and <placeName key="tgn,2555297">Octavia</placeName>.<note anchored="true">The Portico of
							<placeName key="tgn,2555297">Octavia</placeName> stood between the
						Flaminian circus and the theatre of <placeName key="tgn,7013998">Marcellus</placeName>, enclosing the temples of <placeName key="tgn,2019952">Jupiter</placeName> and Juno, said to have been built
						in the time of the republic. Several remains of them exist in the Pescheria
						or fish-market; they were of the Corinthian order, and have been traced and
						engraved by Piranesi.</note> and the theatre of <placeName key="tgn,7013998">Marcellus</placeName>.<note anchored="true">The magnificent theatre of
							<placeName key="tgn,7013998">Marcellus</placeName> was built on the site
						where Suetonius has before informed us that Julius Caesar intended to erect
						one (p. 37). It stood between the portico of <placeName key="tgn,2555297">Octavia</placeName> and the hill of the capitol. Augustus gave it the
						name of his nephew Marcelhis, though he was then dead. Its ruins are still
						to be seen in the Piazza Montanara, where the Orsini family have a palace
						erected on the site. </note> He also often exhorted other persons of rank to
					embellish the city by new buildings, or repairing and improving the old,
					according to their means. In consequence of this recommendation, many were
					raised; such as the temple of <placeName key="tgn,2086286">Hercules</placeName>
					and the Muses, by Marcius Philippus; a temple of <placeName key="tgn,2118015">Diana</placeName> by Lucius Cornificius; the Court of Freedom by Asinius
					Pollio; a temple of <placeName key="tgn,2644983">Saturn</placeName> by Munatius
					Plancus; a theatre by Cornelius Balbus<note anchored="true">The theatre of
						Balbus was the third of the three permanent theatres of <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>. Those of Pompey and <placeName key="tgn,7013998">Marcellus</placeName> have been already
						mentioned.</note>; an amphitheatre by Statilius Taurus, and several other
					noble edifices by Marcus Agrippa.<note anchored="true">Among these were, at
						least, the noble portico, if not the whole, of the Pantheon, still the pride
						of <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>, under the name of the
						Rotondo, on the frieze of which may be seen the inscription, <quote xml:lang="lat"><abbr>M.<expan><ex>Marcus</ex></expan></abbr> AGRIPPA. <abbr>L.<expan><ex>Lucii</ex></expan></abbr>
							<abbr>F.<expan><ex>filius</ex></expan></abbr>
							<abbr>COS.<expan><ex>consul</ex></expan></abbr> TERTIUM. FECIT.</quote> Agrippa also
						built the temple of <placeName key="tgn,2065560">Neptune</placeName>, and
						the portico of the Argonauts. </note></p></div><div type="textpart" n="30" subtype="chapter"><p>He divided the city into regions and districts, ordaining that the annual
					magistrates should take by lot the charge of the former; and that the latter
					should be superintended by wardens chosen out of the people of each
					neighbourhood. He appointed a nightly watch to be on their guard against
					accidents from fire; and, to prevent the frequent inundations, he widened and
					cleansed the bed of the <placeName key="tgn,1130786">Tiber</placeName>, which
					had in the course of years been almost dammed up with rubbish, and the channel
					narrowed by the ruins of houses.<note anchored="true">To whatever extent
						Augustus may have cleared out the bed of the <placeName key="tgn,1130786">Tiber</placeName>, the process of its being encumbered with an alluvium
						of ruins and mud has been constantly going on. Not many years ago, a scheme
						was set on foot for clearing it by private enterprise, principally for the
						sake of the valuable remains of art which it is supposed to contain.</note>
					To render the approaches to the city more commodious, he took upon himself the
					charge of repairing the Flaminian way as far as <placeName key="perseus,Ariminum">Ariminum</placeName>, <note anchored="true">The
							<placeName key="tgn,6006327">Via Flaminia</placeName> was probably
						undertaken by the censor Caius Flaminius, and finished by his son of the
						same name, who was consul A.U.C. 566, and employed his soldiers in forming
						it after subduing the Ligurians. It led from the Flumentan gate, now the
						Porta del Popolo, through Etruria and <placeName key="tgn,7003125">Umbria</placeName> into the Cisalpine Gaul, ending at <placeName key="perseus,Ariminum">Ariminum</placeName>, the frontier town of the
						territories of the republic, now <placeName key="tgn,7004929">Rimini</placeName>, on the Adriatic; and is travelled by every tourist
						who takes the route, north of the Appenines, through the States of the
						Church, to <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>. Every one knows
						that the great highways, not only in <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName> but in the provinces, were among the most magnificent
						and enduring works of the Roman people. </note> and distributed the repairs
					of the other roads amongst several persons who had obtained the honour of a
					triumph; to be defrayed out of the money arising from the spoils of war. Temples
					decayed by time, or destroyed by fire, he either repaired or rebuilt; and
					enriched them, as well as many others, with splendid offerings. On a single
					occasion, he deposited in the cell of the temple of Jupiter Capitolinus, sixteen
					thousand pounds of gold, with jewels and pearls to the amount of fifty millions
					of sesterces.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="31" subtype="chapter"><p>The office of Pontifex Maximus, of which he could not decently deprive Lepidus as
					long as he lived,<note anchored="true">It had formed a sort of honourable
						retirement in which Lepidus was shelved, to use a familiar expression, when
						Augustus got rid of him quietly from the Triumvirate. Augustus assumed it
						A.U.C. 740, thus. centring the last of all the great offices of the state in
						his own person; that of Pontifex Maximus, being of high importance, from the
						sanctity attached to it, and the influence it gave him over the whole system
						of religion.</note> he assumed as soon as he was dead. He then caused all
					prophetical books, both in Latin and Greek, the authors of which were either
					unknown, or of no great authority, to be brought in; and the whole collection,
					amounting to upwards of two thousand volumes, he committed to the flames,
					preserving only the Sibylline oracles; but not even those without a strict
					examination, to ascertain which were genuine. This being done, he deposited them
					in two gilt coffers, under the pedestal of the statue of the Palatine Apollo. He
					restored the calendar, which had been corrected by Julius Caesar, but through
					negligence was again fallen into confusion, <note anchored="true">In the
						thirty-six years since the calendar was corrected by Julius Casar, the
						priests had erroneously intercalated eleven days instead of nine. See
						JULIUS, c. xl.</note> to its former regularity; and upon that occasion,
					called the month Sextilis, <note anchored="true">Sextilis, the sixth month,
						reckoning from March, in which the year of Romulus commenced. </note> by his
					own name, August, rather than September, in which he was born; because in it he
					had obtained his first consulship, and all his most considerable victories.
						<note anchored="true">So Cicero called the day on which he returned from
						exile, the day of his "nativity" and his "new birth," <foreign xml:lang="grc">παλιγεννεσίαν</foreign>, a word which had afterwards a
						theological sense, from its use in the New Testament. </note> He increased
					the number, dignity, and revenues of the priests, and especially those of the
					Vestal Virgins. And when, upon the death of one of them, a new one was to be
					taken, <note anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Capi</foreign>. There is a peculiar force in the word
						here adopted by Suetonius; the form used by the Pontifex Maximus, when he
						took the novice from the hand of her father, being <foreign xml:lang="lat">Te
							capio amata</foreign>, "I have you, my dear," implying the forcible
						breach of former ties, as in the case of a captive taken in war. </note> and
					many persons made interest that their daughters names might be omitted in the
					lists for election, he replied with an oath, "If either of my own
					grand-daughters were old enough, I would have proposed her."</p><p>He likewise revived some old religious customs, which had become obsolete; as the
					augury of public health, <note anchored="true">At times when the temple of Janus
						was shut, and then only, certain divinations were made, preparatory to
						solemn supplication for the public health, "as if," says Dio, " even that
						could not be implored from the gods, unless the signs were propitious." It
						would be an inquiry of some interest, now that the care of the public health
						is becoming a department of the state, with what sanatory measures these
						becoming solemnities were attended.</note> the office of high priest of
					Jupiter, the religious solemnity of the Lupercalia, with the Secular, and
					Compitalian games. He prohibited young boys from running in the Lupercalia; and
					in respect of the Secular games, issued an order, that no young persons of
					either sex should appear at any public diversions in the night-time, unless in
					the company of some elderly relation. He ordered the household gods to be decked
					twice a year with spring and summer flowers, <note anchored="true">Theophrastus
						mentions the spring and summer flowers most suited for these chaplets. Among
						the former, were hyacinths, roses, and white violets; among the latter,
						lychinis, amaryllis, iris, and some species of lilies. </note> in the
					Compitalian festival.</p><p>Next to the immortal gods, he paid the highest honours to the memory of those
					generals who had raised the Roman state from its low origin to the highest pitch
					of grandeur. He accordingly repaired or rebuilt the public edifices erected by
					them; preserving the former inscriptions, and placing statues of them all, with
					triumphal emblems, in both the porticos of his forum, issuing an edict on the
					occasion, in which he made the following declaration: "My design in so doing is,
					that the Roman people may require from me, and all succeeding princes, a
					conformity to those illustrious examples." He likewise removed the statue of
					Pompey from the senate-house, in which Caius Caesar had been killed, and placed
					it under a marble arch, fronting the palace attached to Pompey's theatre.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="32" subtype="chapter"><p>He corrected many ill practices, which, to the detriment of the public, had
					either survived the licentious habits of the late civil wars, or else originated
					in the long peace. Bands of robbers shewed themselves openly, completely armed,
					under colour of self-defence; and in different parts of the country, travellers,
					freemen and slaves without distinction, were forcibly carried off, and kept to
					work in the houses of correction.<note anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Ergastulis</foreign>. These were subterranean strong rooms, with narrow
						windows, like dungeons, in the country houses, where incorrigible slaves
						were confined in fetters, in the intervals of the severe tasks in grinding
						at the hand-mills, quarrying stones, drawing water, and other hard
						agricultural labour in which they were employed. </note> Several
					associations were formed under the specious name of a new college, which banded
					together for the perpetration of all kinds of villany. The banditti he quelled
					by establishing posts of soldiers in suitable stations for the purpose; the
					houses of correction were subjected to a strict superintendence; all
					associations, those only excepted which were of ancient standing, and recognised
					by the laws, were dissolved. He burnt all the notes of those who had been a long
					time in arrear with the treasury, as being the principal source of vexatious
					suits and prosecutions. Places in the city claimed by the public, where the
					right was doubtful, he adjudged to the actual possessors. He struck out of the
					list of criminals the names of those over whom prosecutions had been long
					impending, where nothing further was intended by the informers than to gratify
					their own malice, by seeing their enemies humiliated; laying it down as a rule,
					that if any one chose to renew a prosecution, he should incur the risk of the
					punishment which he sought to inflict. And that crimes might not escape
					punishment, nor business be neglected by delay, he ordered the courts to sit
					during the thirty days which were spent in celebrating honorary games. To the
					three classes of judges then existing, he added a.fourth, consisting of persons
					of inferior order, who were called Ducenarii, and decided all litigations about
					trifling sums. He chose judges from the age of thirty years and upwards; that is
					five years younger than had been usual before. And a great many declining the
					office, he was with much difficulty prevailed upon to allow each class of judges
					a twelve-month's vacation in turn: and the courts to be shut during the months
					of November and December.<note anchored="true">These months were not only "the
						Long Vacation" of the lawyers, but during them there was a general cessation
						of business at <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>; the calendar
						exhibiting a constant succession of festivals. The month of December, in
						particular, was devoted to pleasure and relaxation.</note></p></div><div type="textpart" n="33" subtype="chapter"><p>He was himself assiduous in his functions as a judge, and would sometimes prolong
					his sittings even into the night:<note anchored="true">Causes are mentioned, the
						hearing of which was so protracted that lights were required in the court;
						and sometimes they lasted, we are told, as long as eleven or twelve days.
					</note> if he were indisposed, his litter was placed before the tribunal, or he
					administered justice reclining on his couch at home; displaying always not only
					the greatest attention, but extreme lenity. To save a culprit, who evidently
					appeared guilty of parricide, from the extreme penalty of being sewn up in a
					sack, because none were punished in that manner but such as confessed the fact,
					he is said to have interrogated him thus: "Surely you did not kill your father,
					did you?" And when, in a trial of a cause about a forged will, all those who had
					signed it were liable to the penalty of the <placeName key="tgn,2257061">Cornelian</placeName> law, he ordered that his colleagues on the tribunal
					should not only be furnished with the two tablets by which they decided, "guilty
					or not guilty," but with a third likewise, ignoring the offence of those who
					should appear to have given their signatures through any deception or mistake.
					All appeals in causes between inhabitants of <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>, he assigned every year to the praetor of the city; and
					where provincials were concerned, to men of consular rank, to one of whom the
					business of each province was referred.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="34" subtype="chapter"><p>Some laws he abrogated, and he made some new ones; such as the sumptuary law,
					that relating to adultery and the violation of chastity, the law against bribery
					in elections, and likewise that for the encouragement of marriage. Having been
					more severe in his reform of this law than the rest, he found the people utterly
					averse to submit to it, unless the penalties were abolished or mitigated,
					besides allowing an interval of three years after a wife's death, and increasing
					the premiums on marriage. The equestrian order clamoured loudly, at a spectacle
					in the theatre, for its total repeal; whereupon he sent for the children of
					Germanicus, and shewed them partly sitting upon his own lap, and partly on their
					father's; intimating by his looks and gestures, that they ought not to think it
					a grievance to follow the example of that young man. But finding that the force
					of the law was eluded, by marrying girls under the age of puberty, and by
					frequent change of wives, he limited the time for consummation after espousals,
					and imposed restrictions on divorce.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="35" subtype="chapter"><p>By two separate scrutinies he reduced to their former number and splendour the
					senate, which had been swamped by a disorderly crowd; for they were now more
					than a thousand, and some of them very mean persons, who, after Caesar's death,
					had been chosen by dint of interest and bribery, so that they had the nickname
					of Orcini among the people. <note anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Orcini</foreign>. They were also called Charonites, the point of the
						sarcasm being, that they owed their elevation to a dead man, one who was
						gone to Orcus, namely Julius Caesar, after whose death Mark Antony
						introduced into the senate many persons of low rank who were designated for
						that honour in a document left by the deceased emperor. </note> The first of
					these scrutinies was left to themselves, each senator naming another; but the
					last was conducted by himself and Agrippa. On this occasion he is believed to
					have taken his seat as he presided, with a coat of mail under his tunic, and a
					sword by his side, and with ten of the stoutest men of senatorial rank, who were
					his friends, standing round his chair. Cordus Cremutius<note anchored="true">Cordus Cremutius wrote a History of the Civil Wars, and the Times of
						Augustus, as we are informed by Dio, 6, 52.</note> relates that no senator
					was suffered to approach him, except singly, and after having his bosom searched
					[for secreted daggers]. Some he obliged to have the grace of declining the
					office; these he allowed to retain the privileges of wearing the distinguishing
					dress, occupying the seats at the solemn spectacles, and of feasting publicly,
					reserved to the senatorial order.<note anchored="true">In front of the
						orchestra.</note> That those who were chosen and approved of, might perform
					their functions under more solemn obligations, and with less inconvenience, he
					ordered that every senator, before he took his seat in the house, should pay his
					devotions, with an offering of frankincense and wine, at the altar of that God
					in whose temple the senate then assembled,<note anchored="true">The senate
						usually assembled in one of the temples, and there was an altar consecrated
						to some god in the curia, where they otherwise met, as that to Victory in
						the Julian Curia.</note> and that their stated meetings should be only twice
					in the month, namely, on the calends and ides; and that in the months of
					September and October,<note anchored="true">To allow of their absence during the
						vintage, always an important season in rural affairs in wine-growing
						countries. In the middle and south of <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>, it begins in September, and, in the worst aspects,
						the grapes are generally cleared before the end of October. In elevated
						districts they hung on the trees, as we have witnessed, till the month of
						November.</note> a certain number only, chosen by lot, such as the law
					required to give validity to a decree, should be required to attend. For
					himself, he resolved to choose every six months a new council, with whom he
					might consult previously upon such affairs as he judged proper at any time to
					lay before the full senate. He also took the votes of the senators upon any
					subject of importance, not according to custom, nor in regular order, but as he
					pleased; that every one might hold himself ready to give his opinion, rather
					than a mere vote of assent.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="36" subtype="chapter"><p>He also made several other alterations in the management of public affairs, among
					which were these following: that the acts of the senate should not be
						published;<note anchored="true">Julius Caesar had introduced the contrary
						practice. See <placeName key="tgn,2008628">JULIUS</placeName>, c. XX.</note>
					that the magistrates should not be sent into the provinces immediately after the
					expiration of their office; that the proconsuls should have a certain sum
					assigned them out of the treasury for mules and tents, which used before to be
					contracted for by the government with private persons; that the management of
					the treasury should be transferred from the city-quaestors to the praetors, or
					those who had already served in the latter office; and that the decemviri should
					call together the court of One hundred, which had been formerly summoned by
					those who had filled the office of quaestor.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="37" subtype="chapter"><p>To augment the number of persons employed in the administration of the state, he
					devised several new offices: such as surveyors of the public buildings, of the
					roads, the aqueducts, and the bed of the <placeName key="tgn,1130786">Tiber</placeName>; for the distribution of corn to the people; the
					prefecture of the city; a triumvirate for the election of the senators; and
					another for inspecting the several troops of the equestrian order, as often as
					it was necessary. He revived the office of censor,<note anchored="true">A. U. C.
						312, two magistrates were created, under the name of Censors, whose office,
						at first, was to take an account of the number of the people, and the value
						of their estates. Power was afterwards granted them to inspect the morals of
						the people; and from this period the office became of great importance.
						After Sylla, the election of censors was intermitted for seventeen years.
						Under the emperors, the office of censor was abolished; but the chief
						functions of it were exercised by the emperors themselves, and frequently
						both with caprice and severity.</note> which had been long disused, and
					increased the number of praetors. He likewise required that whenever the
					consulship was conferred on him he should have two colleagues instead of one;
					but his proposal was rejected, all the senators declaring by acclamation that he
					abated his high majesty quite enough in not filling the office alone, and
					consenting to share it with another.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="38" subtype="chapter"><p>He was unsparing in the reward of military merit, having granted to above thirty
					generals the honour of the greater triumph; besides which, he took care to have
					triumphal decorations voted by the senate for more than that number. That the
					sons of senators might become early acquainted with the administration of
					affairs, he permitted them, at the age when they took the garb of manhood, <note anchored="true">Young men until they were seventeen years of age, and young
						women until they were married, wore a white robe bordered with purple,
						called <placeName key="tgn,2114627">Toga</placeName> Pratexta. The former,
						when they had completed this period, laid aside the dress of minority, and
						assumed the Toga Virilis, or manly habit. The ceremony of changing the Toga
						was performed with great solemnity before the images of the <placeName key="tgn,1018972">Lares</placeName>, to whom the Bulla was consecrated.
						On this occasion, they went either to the Capitol, or to some temple, to pay
						their devotions to the Gods.</note> to assume also the distinction of the
					senatorian robe, with its broad border, and to be present at the debates in the
					senate-house. When they entered the military service, he not only gave them the
					rank of military tribunes in the legions, but likewise the command of the
					auxiliary horse. And that all might have an opportunity of acquiring military
					experience, he commonly joined two sons of senators in command of each troop of
					horse. He frequently reviewed the troops of the equestrian order, reviving the
					ancient custom of a cavalcade,<note anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Transvectio</foreign>: a procession of the equestrian order, which they
						made with great splendour through the city, every year, on the fifteenth of
						July. They rode on horseback from the temple of Honour, or of <placeName key="tgn,2090583">Mars</placeName>, without the city, to the Capitol,
						with wreaths of olive on their heads, dressed in robes of scarlet, and
						bearing in their hands the military ornaments which they had received from
						their general, as a reward of their valour. The knights rode up to the
						censor, seated on his curule chair in front of the Capitol, and dismounting,
						led their horses in review before him. If any of the knights was corrupt in
						his morals, had diminished his fortune below the legal standard, or even had
						not taken proper care of his horse, the censor ordered him to sell his
						horse, by which he was considered as degraded from the equestrian
						order.</note> which had been long laid aside. But he did not suffer any one
					to be obliged by an accuser to dismount while he passed in review, as had
					formerly been the practice. As for such as were infirm with age, or any way
					deformed, he allowed them to send their horses before them, coming on foot to
					answer to their names, when the muster roll was called over soon afterwards. He
					permitted those who had attained the age of thirty-five years, and desired not
					to keep their horse any longer, to have the privilege of giving it up.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="39" subtype="chapter"><p>With the assistance of ten senators, he obliged each of the Roman knights to give
					an account of his life: in regard to those who fell under his displeasure, some
					were punished; others had a mark of infamy set against their names. The most
					part he only reprimanded, but not in the same terms. The mildest mode of reproof
					was by delivering them tablets,<note anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Pugillaria</foreign> were a kind of pocket-book, so called, because
						memorandums were written or impinged by the <foreign xml:lang="lat">styli</foreign>, on their waxed surface. They appear to have been of
						very ancient origin, for we read of them in Homer under the name of <foreign xml:lang="grc">πίνακεσ</foreign>—<cit><bibl n="Hom. Il. 6.169">Il. 6.169</bibl><quote xml:lang="grc"><l>γράψασ ἐν πίνακι πτυκτῷ θυμοφθόρα</l></quote></cit>
						<quote xml:lang="eng"><l>Writing dire things upon his tablet's
							roll.</l></quote>
					</note> the contents of which, confined to themselves, they were to read on the
					spot. Some he disgraced for borrowing money at low interest, and letting it out
					again upon usurious profit.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="40" subtype="chapter"><p>In the election of tribunes of the people, if there was not a sufficient number
					of senatorian candidates, he nominated others from the equestrian order;
					granting them the liberty, after the expiration of their office, to continue in
					whichsoever of the two orders they pleased. As most of the knights had been much
					reduced in their estates by the civil wars, and therefore durst not sit to see
					the public games in the theatre in the seats allotted to their order, for fear
					of the penalty provided by the law in that case, he enacted, that none were
					liable to it, who had themselves, or whose parents had ever, possessed a
					knight's estate. He took the census of the Roman people street by street: and
					that the people might not be too often taken from their business to receive the
					distribution of corn, it was his intention to deliver tickets three times a year
					for four months respectively; but at their request, he continued the former
					regulation, that they should receive their share monthly. He revived the former
					law of elections, endeavouring, by various penalties, to suppress the practice
					of bribery. Upon the day of election, he distributed to the freedmen of the
					Fabian and Scaptian tribes, in which he himself was enrolled, a thousand
					sesterces each, that they might, look for nothing from any of the candidates.
					Considering it of extreme importance to preserve the Roman people pure, and
					untainted with a mixture of foreign or servile blood, he not only bestowed the
					freedom of the city with a sparing hand, but laid some restriction upon the
					practice of manumitting slaves. When Tiberius interceded with him for the
					freedom of <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName> in behalf of a Greek
					client of his, he wrote to him for answer, "I shall not grant it, unless he
					comes himself, and satisfies me that he has just grounds for the application."
					And when <placeName key="tgn,2039991">Livia</placeName> begged the freedom of
					the city for a tributary <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, he
					refused it, but offered to release him from payment of taxes, saying, " I shall
					sooner suffer some loss in my exchequer, than that the citizenship of <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName> be rendered too common." Not content with
					interposing many obstacles to either the partial or complete emancipation of
					slaves, by quibbles respecting the number, condition and difference of those who
					were to be manumitted; he likewise enacted that none who had been put in chains
					or tortured, should ever obtain the freedom of the city in any degree. He
					endeavoured also to restore the old habit and dress of the Romans; and upon
					seeing once, in an assembly of the people, a crowd in grey cloaks,<note anchored="true"><foreign xml:lang="lat">Pullatorum</foreign>; dusky, either
						from their dark colour, or their being soiled. The toga was white, and was
						the distinguishing costume of the sovereign people of <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>, without which, they were not to
						appear in public; as members of a university are forbidden to do so, without
						the academical dress, or officers in garrisons out of their regimentals.
					</note> he exclaimed with indignation, "See there, <quote xml:lang="lat"><l>Romanos rerum dominos, gentemque togatem.<note anchored="true"><bibl n="Verg. A. 1.186">Aen. 1.186</bibl></note></l></quote>
					<quote xml:lang="eng"><l><placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>'s
							conquering sons, lords of the wide-spread globe,</l><l>Stalk proudly in the toga's graceful robe.</l></quote> And he gave orders
					to the ediles not to permit, in future, any Romans to be present in the forum or
					circus unless they took off their short coats, and wore the toga.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>