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                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:stoa0023.stoa001.perseus-eng2:28.1.9-28.1.17</urn>
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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text><body><div xml:lang="lat" type="translation" n="urn:cts:latinLit:stoa0023.stoa001.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" subtype="book" n="28"><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="1"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="9"><p>But as the affair languished because of a severe illness with which Olybrius was long affected, those who had brought the charge, impatient of delay, presented a petition, asking that the examination of the dispute should be turned over to the prefect of the grain supply; and from a desire for a speedy decision this was granted.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="10"><p>Thus Maximinus gained the power of doing harm and poured out the natural cruelty implanted in his hard heart, as often happens with wild beasts in the amphitheatre, when they break in pieces the back-gates and are at last set free. And while the business was being looked into in many ways, as if in a kind of preliminary practice, and some persons, whose sides had been torn into furrows, had named certain nobles as having, through their <pb n="v3.p.95"/> clients and other common people who were notorious as malefactors and informers, made use of men skilled in harmful practices, the hellish judge,<q>going beyond his last</q><note type="footnote" resp="editor">On <foreign xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">supra plantain</foreign> see Val. Max. viii. 12, ext. 3, <foreign xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">artifex (Apelles) qui in opere suo moneri se a sutore de crepida et ansulis passus, de crure etiam disputare incipientem, supra plantam ascendere vetuit.</foreign> In the form <foreign xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">supra crepidam</foreign>, it became proverbial (Pliny, <title rend="italic">N.H.</title> xxxv. 85). Here it means <q>beyond the powers which had been given him.</q></note> (as the saying is), in a malicious report to the emperor informed him that the offences which many men had committed at Rome could not be investigated or punished except by severer measures.<note type="footnote" resp="editor"><foreign xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">Suppliciis</foreign> refers both to tortures in order to exact information and executions accompanied by torture.</note></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="11"><p>On hearing this, the emperor, in anger, being rather a cruel than a strict foe of vices, gave one general judicial sentence to cover cases of the kind, which he arbitrarily fused with the design of treason, and ruled that all those whom the justice of the ancient code and the edicts of deified emperors had made exempt from inquisitions by torture should, if circumstances demanded, be examined with torments.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="12"><p>And that with doubled power and higher rank Maximinus might patch together a greater heap of calamities, the emperor gave him a temporary appointment as acting prefect at Rome;<note type="footnote" resp="editor">During the illness of Olybrius.</note><note type="footnote" resp="editor"><date>371–72 A.D.</date></note> and he associated with him in the investigation of these charges which were being devised for the peril of many the secretary Leo, afterward chief-marshal of the court,<note type="footnote" resp="editor">Cf. xxx. 2, 10.</note> a Pannonian and a grave-robber,<note type="footnote" resp="editor">Cf. <foreign xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">tartareus,</foreign> xv. 6, 1; <foreign xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">funereus,</foreign> xxix. 5, 46; <foreign xml:lang="lat" rend="italic">bustuarius</foreign>is also used of a gladiator who fought at funeral games, Cic. In <title rend="italic">Pisonem</title>,9, 19.</note> snorting forth cruelty from the grinning jaws of a wild beast, and no less insatiable in his thirst for human blood than Maximinus.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="13"><p>The persistent natural bent of Maximinus to cruel conduct was increased by the coming of a colleague of the same character and by the charm of a commission conferring lofty rank. Therefore, full of joy, he turned his steps this way and that, seeming to dance rather than walk, and <pb n="v3.p.97"/> seeking to imitate the Brahmins, who march (as some say) above the earth among their altars.<note type="footnote" resp="editor">Philostratus, <title rend="italic">Vita Apollonii</title>, iii. 15, says that the Brahmins sometimes levitated themselves two cubits high from the ground . . . walking with the sun.</note></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="14"><p>And now, as the trumpets sounded the signal for the murder of citizens and all were stupified by the horrible situation, besides many harsh and merciless acts, which because of their variety and number cannot be enumerated, the execution of Marinus, a public advocate, was conspicuous. This man was accused of having dared by forbidden arts to try to gain a certain Hispanilla as his wife, and when the truthfulness of the evidence had been perfunctorily examined, Maximinus condemned him to death.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="15"><p>And since I think that perchance some of my readers by careful examination may note and bring it against me as a reproach that this, and not that, happened first, or that those things which they themselves saw are passed over, I must satisfy them to this extent: that not everything which has taken place among persons of the lowest class is worth narrating; and if this were necessary to be done, even the arrays of facts to be gained from the public records themselves would not suffice, when there was such a general fever of evils, and a new and unbridled madness was mingling the highest with the lowest; for it was clearly evident that it was not a judicial trial which was to be feared, but a suspension of legal proceedings.<note type="footnote" resp="editor">One of Ammianus’ few word-plays; but see Blomgren, pp. 128 ff.</note></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="16"><p>Then Cethegus, a senator, was accused of adultery and beheaded, Alypius, a young man of noble birth, was banished for a trifling fault, and others of lower rank were publicly put to death; and every one, seeing in their unhappy fate the <pb n="v3.p.99"/> picture (as it were) of his own danger, dreamt of the torturer and of fetters and lodgings of darkness.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="17"><p>At the same time, the case of Hymetius also, a man of distinguished character, was tried, of which we know this to have been the course of events. When he was governing Africa as proconsul he took from the storehouses grain intended for the Roman people<note type="footnote" resp="editor">Egypt and Africa supplied the Romans with grain until the division of the empire, after which Africa supplied Rome, and Egypt Constantinople.</note> and sold it to the Carthaginians, who were by that time worn out from lack of food, and a little later, when the crops were again abundant, without any delay completely restored what he had taken.</p></div></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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