SUETONIUS THE LIVES OF THE TWELVE CAESARS ~ THE LIFE OF VESPASIAN ~ |
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( J. C. Rolfe, Suetonius, The Lives of the Twelve Caesars, London, 1913-14 ). |
1. The
empire, which for a long time had been unsettled and, as it were,
drifting, through the usurpation and violent death of three emperors,
was at last taken in hand and given stability by the Flavian family.
This house was, it is true, obscure and without family portraits,
yet it was one of which our country had no reason whatever to be
ashamed, even though it is the general opinion that the penalty
which Domitian paid for his avarice and cruelty was fully merited. 2. Vespasian
was born in the Sabine country, in a small village beyond Reate,
called Falacrina, on the evening of the fifteenth day before the
Kalends of December, in the consulate of Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus
and Gaius Poppaeus Sabinus, five years before the death of Augustus.
He was brought up under the care of his paternal grandmother Tertulla
on her estates at Cosa. Therefore even after he became emperor he
used constantly to visit the home of his infancy, where the manor
house was kept in its original condition, since he did not wish
to miss anything which he was wont to see there; and he was so devoted
to his grandmother's memory that on religious and festival days
he always drank from a little silver cup that had belonged to her. 3. Meanwhile he took to wife Flavia Domitilla, formerly the mistress of Statilius Capella, a Roman knight of Sabrata in Africa, a woman originally only of Latin rank, but afterwards declared a freeborn citizen of Rome in a suit before arbiters, brought by her father Flavius Liberalis, a native of Ferentum and merely a quaestor's clerk. By her he had three children, Titus, Domitian, and Domitilla. He outlived his wife and daughter; in fact lost them both before he became emperor. After the death of his wife he resumed his relations with Caenis, freedwoman and amanuensis of Antonia, and formerly his mistress; and even after he became emperor he treated her almost as a lawful wife. 4. In
the reign of Claudius he was sent in command of a legion to Germany,
through the influence of Narcissus; from there he was transferred
to Britain, where he fought thirty battles with the enemy. He reduced
to subjection two powerful nations, more than twenty towns, and
the island of Vectis, near Britain, partly under the leadership
of Aulus Plautius, the consular governor, and partly under that
of Claudius himself. For this he received the triumphal regalia,
and shortly after two priesthoods, besides the consulship, which
he held for the last two months of the year. The rest of the time
up to his proconsulate he spent in rest and retirement, through
fear of Agrippina, who still had a strong influence over her son
and hated any friend of Narcissus, even after the latter's death. 5. While
Otho and Vitellius were fighting for the throne after the death
of Nero and Galba, he began to cherish the hope of imperial dignity,
which he had long since conceived because of the following portents. 6. Yet
he made no move, although his followers were quite ready and even
urgent, until he was roused to it by the accidental support of men
unknown to him and at a distance. Two thousand soldiers of the three
legions that made up the army in Moesia had been sent to help Otho.
When word came to them after they had begun their march that he
had been defeated and had taken his own life, they none the less
kept on as far as Aquileia, because they did not believe the report.
There, taking advantage of the lawless state of the times, they
indulged in every kind of pillage; then, fearing that if they went
back, they would have to give an account and suffer punishment,
they took it into their heads to select and appoint an emperor,
saying that they were just as good as the Spanish army which had
appointed Galba, or the praetorian guard which had elected Otho,
or the German army which had chosen Vitellius. Accordingly the names
of all the consular governors who were serving anywhere were taken
up, and since objection was made to the rest for one reason or another,
while some members of the third legion, which had been transferred
from Syria to Moesia just before the death of Nero, highly commended
Vespasian, they unanimously agreed on him and forthwith inscribed
his name on all their banners. At the time, however, the movement
was checked and the soldiers recalled to their allegiance for a
season. But when their action became known, Tiberius Alexander,
prefect of Egypt, was the first to compel his legions to take the
oath for Vespasian on the Kalends of July, the day which was afterwards
celebrated as that of his accession; then the army in Judaea swore
allegiance to him personally on the fifth day before the Ides of
July. 7. Therefore
beginning a civil war and sending ahead generals with troops to
Italy, he crossed meanwhile to Alexandria, to take possession of
the key to Egypt. There he dismissed all his attendants and entered
the temple of Serapis alone, to consult the auspices as to the duration
of his power. And when after many propitiatory offerings to the
god he at length turned about, it seemed to him that his freedman
Basilides offered him sacred boughs, garlands, and loaves, as is
the custom there; and yet he knew well that no one had let him in,
and that for some time he had been hardly able to walk by reason
of rheumatism, and was besides far away. And immediately letters
came with the news that Vitellius had been routed at Cremona and
the emperor himself slain at Rome. 8. Returning
to Rome under such auspices and attended by so great renown, after
celebrating a triumph over the Jews, he added eight consulships
to his former one; he also assumed the censorship and during the
whole period of his rule he considered nothing more essential than
first to strengthen the State, which was tottering and almost overthrown,
and then to embellish it as well. 9. He
also undertook new works, the temple of Peace hard by the Forum
and one to the Deified Claudius on the Caelian mount, which was
begun by Agrippina, but almost utterly destroyed by Nero; also an
amphitheatre in the heart of the city, a plan which he learned that
Augustus had cherished. 10. Lawsuit upon lawsuit had accumulated in all the courts to an excessive degree, since those of long standing were left unsettled through the interruption of court business and new ones had arisen through the disorder of the times. He therefore chose commissioners by lot to restore what had been seized in time of war, and to make special decisions in the court of the Hundred, reducing the cases to the smallest number, since it was clear that the lifetime of the litigants would not suffice for the regular proceedings. 11. Licentiousness and extravagance had flourished without restraint; hence he induced the senate to vote that any woman who formed a connection with the slave of another person should herself be treated as a bond-woman; also that those who lend money to minors should never have a legal right to enforce payment, that is to say, not even after the death of the fathers. 12. In other matters he was unassuming and lenient from the very beginning of his reign until its end, never trying to conceal his former lowly condition, but often even parading it. Indeed, when certain men tried to trace the origin of the Flavian family to the founders of Reate and a companion of Hercules whose tomb still stands on the Via Salaria, he laughed at them for their pains. So far was he from a desire for pomp and show, that on the day of his triumph, he did not hesitate to say: "It serves me right for being such a fool as to want a triumph in mythology old age, as if it were due to my ancestors or had ever been among my own ambitions." He did not even assume the tribunician power at once nor the title of Father of his Country until late. As for the custom of searching those who came to pay their morning calls, he gave that up before the civil war was over. 13. He bore the frank language of his friends, the quips of pleaders, and the impudence of the philosophers with the greatest patience. Though Licinius Mucianus, a man of notorious unchastity, presumed upon his services to treat Vespasian with scant respect, he never had the heart to criticize him except privately and then only to the extent of adding to a complaint made to a common friend, the significant words: "I at least am a man." When Salvius Liberalis ventured to say while defending a rich client, "What is it to Caesar if Hipparchus had a hundred millions," he personally commended him. When the Cynic Demetrius met him abroad after being condemned to banishment, and without deigning to rise in his presence or to salute him, even snarled out some insult, he merely called him "cur." 14. He was not inclined to remember or to avenge affronts or enmities, but made a brilliant match for the daughter of his enemy Vitellius, and even provided her with a dowry and a house-keeping outfit. When he was in terror at being forbidden Nero's court, and asked what on earth he was to do or where he was to go, one of the ushers put him out and told him to "go to Morbovia"; but when the man later begged for forgiveness, Vespasian confined his resentment to words, and those of about the same number and purport. Indeed, so far was he from being led by any suspicion or fear to cause anyone's death, that when his friends warned him that he must keep an eye on Mettius Pompusianus, since it was commonly believed that he had an imperial horoscope, he even made him consul, guaranteeing that he would one day be mindful of the favour. 15. It cannot readily be shown that any innocent person was punished save in Vespasian's absence and without his knowledge, or at any rate against his will and by misleading him. Although Helvidius Priscus was the only one who greeted him on his return from Syria by his private name of "Vespasian," and moreover in his praetorship left the emperor unhonoured and unmentioned in all his edicts. He did not show anger until by the extravagance of his railing Helvidius had all but degraded him. But even in his case, though he did banish him and later order his death, he was most anxious for any means of saving him, and sent messengers to recall those who were to slay him; and he would have saved him, but for a false report that Helvidius had already been done to death. Certainly he never took pleasure in the death of anyone, but even wept and sighed over those who suffered merited punishment. 16. The
only thing for which he can fairly be censured was his love of money.
For not content with reviving the imposts which had been repealed
under Galba, he added new and heavy burdens, increasing the amount
of tribute paid by the provinces, in some cases actually doubling
it, and quite openly carrying on traffic which would be shameful
even for a man in private life; for he would buy up certain commodities
merely in order to distribute them at a profit. He made no bones
of selling offices to candidates and acquittals to men under prosecution,
whether innocent or guilty. He is even believed to have had the
habit of designedly advancing the most rapacious of his procurators
to higher posts, that they might be the richer when he later condemned
them; in fact, it was common talk that he used these men as sponges,
because he, so to speak, soaked them when they were dry and squeezed
them when they were wet. 17. He was most generous to all classes, making up the requisite estate for senators, giving needy ex-consuls an annual stipend of five hundred thousand sesterces, restoring to a better condition many cities throughout the empire which had suffered from earthquakes or fires, and in particular encouraging men of talent and the arts. 18. He was the first to establish a regular salary of a hundred thousand sesterces for Latin and Greek teachers of rhetoric, paid from the privy purse. He also presented eminent poets with princely largess and great rewards, and artists, too, such as the restorer of the Venus of Cos and of the Colossus. To a mechanical engineer, who promised to transport some heavy columns to the Capitol at small expense, he gave no mean reward for his invention, but refused to make use of it, saying: "You must let me feed my poor commons." 19. At
the plays with which he dedicated the new stage of the theatre of
Marcellus he revived the old musical entertainments. To Apelles,
the tragic actor, he gave four hundred thousand sesterces; to Terpnus
and Diodorus, the lyre-players, two hundred thousand each; of several
a hundred thousand; while those who received least were paid forty
thousand, and numerous golden crowns were awarded besides. He gave
constant dinner-parties, too, usually formally and sumptuously,
to help the marketmen. He gave gifts to women on the Kalends of
March, as he did to the men on the Saturnalia. 20. He was well built, with strong, sturdy limbs, and the expression of one who was straining. Apropos of which a witty fellow, when Vespasian asked him to make a joke on him also, replied rather cleverly: "I will, when you have finished relieving yourself." He enjoyed excellent health, though he did nothing to keep it up except to rub his throat and the other parts of his body a certain number of times in the tennis court, and to fast one day in every month. 21. This was in general his manner of life. While emperor, he always rose very early, in fact before daylight; then after reading his letters and the reports of all the officials, he admitted his friends, and while he was receiving their greetings, he put on his own shoes and dressed himself. After despatching any business that came up, he took time for a drive and then for a nap, lying with one of his concubines, of whom he had taken several after the death of Caenis. After his siesta he went to the bath and the dining-room; and it is said that at no time was he more good-natured or indulgent, so that the members of his household eagerly watched for these opportunities of making requests. 22. Not only at dinner but on all other occasions he was most affable, and he turned off many matters with a jest; for he was very ready with sharp sayings, albeit of a low and buffoonish kind, so that he did not even refrain from obscene expressions. Yet many of his remarks are still remembered which are full of fine wit, and among them the following. When an ex-consul called Mestrius Florus called his attention to the fact that the proper pronunciation was plaustra rather than plostra, he greeted him next day as "Flaurus." When he was importuned by a woman, who said that she was dying for love for him, he took her to his bed and gave her four hundred thousand sesterces for her favours. Being asked by his steward how he would have the sum entered in his accounts, he replied: "To a passion for Vespasian." 23. He also quoted Greek verses with great timeliness, saying of a man of tall stature and monstrous parts: "Striding along and waving a lance that casts a long shadow," and of the freedman Cerylus, who was very rich, and to cheat the privy purse of its dues at his death had begun to give himself out as freeborn, changing his name to Laches: "O
Laches, Laches,
When
you are dead, you'll change your name at once But he particularly resorted to witticisms about his unseemly means of gain, seeking to diminish their odium by some jocose saying and to turn them into a jest. Having put off one of his favourite attendants, who asked for a stewardship for a pretended brother, he summoned the candidate himself, and after compelling him to pay him as much money as he had agreed to give his advocate, appointed him to the position without delay. On his attendant's taking up the matter again, he said: "Find yourself another brother; the man that you thought was yours is mine." On a journey, suspecting that his muleteer had got down to shoe the mules merely to make delay and give time for a man with a lawsuit to approach the emperor, he asked how much he was paid for shoeing the mules and insisted on a share of the money. When Titus found fault with him for contriving a tax upon public conveniences, he held a piece of money from the first payment to his son's nose, asking whether its odour was offensive to him. When Titus said "No," he replied, "Yet it comes from urine." On the report of a deputation that a colossal statue of great cost had been voted him at public expense, he demanded to have it set up at once, and holding out his open hand, said that the base was ready. He did not cease his jokes even when in apprehension of death and in extreme danger; for when among other portents the Mausoleum opened on a sudden and a comet appeared in the heavens, he declared that the former applied to Junia Calvina of the family of Augustus, and the latter to the king of the Parthians, who wore his hair long; and as death drew near, he said: "Woe's me. Methinks I'm turning into a god." 24. In his ninth consulship he had a slight illness in Campania, and returning at once to the city, he left for Cutiliae and the country about Reate, where he spent the summer every year. There, in addition to an increase in his illness, having contracted a bowel complaint by too free use of the cold waters, he nevertheless continued to perform his duties as emperor, even receiving embassies as he lay in bed. Taken on a sudden with such an attack of diarrhoea that he all but swooned, he said: "An emperor ought to die standing," and while he was struggling to get on his feet, he died in the arms of those who tried to help him, on the ninth day before the Kalends of July, at the age of sixty-nine years, seven months and seven days. 25. All agree that he had so much faith in his own horoscope and those of his family, that even after constant conspiracies were made against him he had the assurance to say to the senate that either his sons would succeed him or he would have no successor. It is also said that he once dreamed that he saw a balance with its beam on a level placed in the middle of the vestibule of the Palace, in one pan of which stood Claudius and Nero and in the other himself and his sons. And the dream came true, since both houses reigned for the same space of time and the same term of years. |
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