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 SUETONIUS THE LIVES OF THE TWELVE CAESARS ~ THE LIFE OF OTHO ~  | 
      
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           ( J. C. Rolfe, Suetonius, The Lives of the Twelve Caesars, London, 1913-14 ).  | 
      
|   1.       The 
              ancestors of Otho came from an old and illustrious family in the 
              town of Ferentium and were descended from the princes of Etruria. 
              His grandfather Marcus Salvius Otho, whose father was a Roman knight 
              but whose mother was of lowly origin and perhaps not even free-born, 
              became a senator through the influence of Livia Augusta, in whose 
              house he was reared; but did not advance beyond the grade of praetor. 2.       The 
              emperor Otho was born on the fourth day before the Kalends of May 
              in the consulate of Camillus Arruntius and Domitius Ahenobarbus. 
              From earliest youth he was so extravagant and wild that his father 
              often flogged him; and they say that he used to rove about at night 
              and lay hands on any one whom he met who was feeble or drunk and 
              toss him in a blanket. 3. He was privy to all the emperor's plans and secrets, and on the day which Nero had chosen for the murder of his mother he gave both of them a most elaborate banquet, in order to avert suspicion. Also when Poppaea Sabina, who up to that time had been Nero's mistress, was separated from her husband and turned over for the time being to Otho, he pretended marriage with her; but not content with seducing her he became so devoted that he could not endure the thought of having Nero even as a rival. At all events it is believed that he not only would not admit those whom Nero sent to fetch her, but that on one occasion he even shut out the emperor himself, who stood before his door, vainly mingling threats and entreaties and demanding the return of his trust. Therefore Nero annulled the marriage and under colour of an appointment as governor banished Otho to Lusitania, contenting himself with this through fear that by inflicting a severer punishment he would make the whole farce public; but even as it was, it was published abroad in this couplet:                              "Why, 
              do you ask, in feigned honour does Otho in banishment languish? 
               With the rank of quaestor Otho governed the province for ten years with remarkable moderation and integrity. 4.       When 
              at last an opportunity for revenge was given him, Otho was the first 
              to espouse Galba's cause, at the same time conceiving on his own 
              account high hopes of imperial power, because of the state of the 
              times, but still more because of a declaration of the astrologer 
              Seleucus. For he had not only promised Otho some time before that 
              he would survive Nero, but had at this time unexpectedly appeared 
              unsought and made the further promise, that he would soon become 
              emperor as well. 5.       Now 
              he had hoped to be adopted by Galba, and looked forward to it from 
              day to day. But when Piso was preferred and he at last lost that 
              hope, he resorted to force, spurred on not merely by feelings of 
              resentment, but also by the greatness of his debts. For he flatly 
              declared that he could not keep on his feet unless he became emperor, 
              and that it made no difference whether he fell at the hands of the 
              enemy in battle or at those of his creditors in the Forum. 6.       He 
              had been inclined to seize the Camp immediately after the adoption, 
              and set upon Galba as he was dining in the Palace, but had been 
              prevented by consideration for the cohort which was on guard at 
              the time, and a reluctance to increase its ill repute; for it was 
              while that same cohort was at its post that both Galba had been 
              slain and Nero had been forsaken. The intervening time was lost 
              owing to bad omens and the warnings of Seleucus. 7.       Next, 
              as the day was drawing to its close, he entered the senate and after 
              giving a brief account of himself, alleging that he had been carried 
              off in the streets and forced to undertake the rule, which he would 
              exercise in accordance with the general will, he went to the Palace. 
              When in the midst of the other adulations of those who congratulated 
              and flattered him, he was hailed by the common herd as Nero, he 
              made no sign of dissent; on the contrary, according to some writers, 
              he even made use of that surname in his commissions and his first 
              letters to some of the governors of the provinces. Certain it is 
              that he suffered Nero's busts and statues to be set up again, and 
              reinstated his procurators and freedmen in their former posts, while 
              the first grant that he signed as emperor was one of fifty million 
              sesterces for finishing the Golden House. "With long pipes what concern have I?" 8.       Now 
              at about this same time the armies in Germany swore allegiance to 
              Vitellius. When Otho learned of this, he persuaded the senate to 
              send a deputation, to say that an emperor had already been chosen 
              and to counsel peace and harmony; but in spite of this he offered 
              Vitellius by messengers and letters a share in the imperial dignity 
              and proposed to become his son-in-law. But when it became clear 
              that war was inevitable, and the generals and troops which Vitellius 
              had sent in advance were already drawing near, he was given a proof 
              of the affection and loyalty of the praetorians towards himself 
              which almost resulted in the destruction of the senate. It had been 
              resolved that some arms should be removed and carried back on shipboard 
              by the marines; but as these were being taken out in the Camp towards 
              nightfall, some suspected treachery and started a riot; then on 
              a sudden all the soldiers hastened to the Palace without any particular 
              leader, demanding the death of the senators. After putting to flight 
              some of the tribunes who attempted to stop them, and killing others, 
              just as they were, all blood-stained, they burst right into the 
              dining-room, demanding to know where the emperor was; and they could 
              not be quieted until they had seen him. 9.       With 
              like rashness, although no one doubted that the proper course was 
              to protract the war, since the enemy were hard pressed by hunger 
              and by the narrowness of their quarters, he decided to fight a decisive 
              battle as soon as possible, either because he could not endure the 
              continued worry and hoped that the war could be ended before the 
              arrival of Vitellius, or from inability to resist the impetuosity 
              of his soldiers, who clamoured for the fight. He himself did not 
              take part in any of the battles, but remained behind at Brixellum. 10.       My 
              father Suetonius Laetus took part in that war, as a tribune of the 
              equestrian order in the Thirteenth legion. He used often to declare 
              afterwards that Otho, even when he was a private citizen, so loathed 
              civil strife, that at the mere mention of the fate of Brutus and 
              Cassius at a banquet he shuddered; that he would not have engaged 
              with Galba, if he had not felt confident that the affair could be 
              settled peacefully; further, that he was led to hold his life cheap 
              at that time by the example of a common soldier. This man on bringing 
              news of the defeat of the army was believed by no one, but was charged 
              by the soldiers now with falsehood and now with cowardice, and accused 
              of running away; whereupon he fell on his sword at the emperor's 
              feet. My father used to say that at this sight Otho cried out that 
              he would no longer endanger the lives of such brave men, who had 
              deserved so well. 11. When he had thus made his preparations and was now resolved upon death, learning from a disturbance which meantime arose that those who were beginning to depart and leave the camp were being seized and detained as deserters, he said "Let us add this one more night to our life" (these were his very words), and he forbade the offering of violence to anyone. Leaving the door of his bedroom open until a late hour, he gave the privilege of speaking with him to all who wished to come in. After that, quenching his thirst with a draught of cold water, he caught up two daggers, and having tried the point of both of them, put one under his pillow. Then closing the doors, he slept very soundly. When he at last woke up at about daylight, he stabbed himself with a single stroke under the left breast; and now concealing the wound, and now showing it to those who rushed in at his first groan, he breathed his last and was hastily buried (for such were his orders) in the thirty-eighth year of his age and on the ninety-fifth day of his reign. 12. Neither Otho's person nor his bearing suggested such great courage. He is said to have been of moderate height, splay-footed and bandy-legged, but almost feminine in his care of his person. He had the hair of his body plucked out, and because of the thinness of his locks wore a wig so carefully fashioned and fitted to his head, that no one suspected it. Moreover, they say that he used to shave every day and smear his face with moist bread, beginning the practice with the appearance of the first down, so as never to have a beard; also that he used to celebrate the rites of Isis publicly in the linen garment prescribed by the cult. I am inclined to think that it was because of these habits that a death so little in harmony with his life excited the greater marvel. Many of the soldiers who were present kissed his hands and feet as he lay dead, weeping bitterly and calling him the bravest of men and an incomparable emperor, and then at once slew themselves beside his bier. Many of those who were absent too, on receiving the news attacked and killed one another from sheer grief. In short the greater part of those who had hated him most bitterly while he lived lauded him to the skies when he was dead; and it was even commonly declared that he had put an end to Galba, not so much for the sake of ruling, as of restoring the republic and liberty.  | 
      
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