THE LIVES OF THE TWELVE CAESARS
T. FLAVIUS VESPASIANUS AUGUSTUS VESPASIAN
BY
C. SUETONIUS TRANQUILLUS
I. The empire, which had been long
thrown into a disturbed and unsetted state, by the
rebellion and violent death of its three last rulers,
was at length restored to peace and security by the
Flavian family, whose descent was indeed obscure,
and which boasted no ancestral honours; but the public
had no cause to regret its elevation; though it is
acknowledged that Domitian met with the just reward
of his avarice and cruelty. Titus Flavius Petro,
a townsman of Reate , whether a centurion or
an evocatus of Pompey’s party in the
civil war, is uncertain, fled out of the battle of
Pharsalia and went home; where, having at last obtained
his pardon and discharge, he became a collector of
the money raised by public sales in the way of auction.
His son, surnamed Sabinus, was never engaged
in the military service, though some say he was a
centurion of the first order, and others, that whilst
he held that rank, he was discharged on account of
his bad state of health: this Sabinus, I
say, was a publican, and received the tax of the fortieth
penny in Asia. And there were remaining, at the
time of the advancement of the family, several statues,
which had been erected to him by the cities of that
province, with this inscription: “To the
honest Tax-farmer.” He afterwards turned
usurer amongst the Helvetii, and there died, leaving
behind him his wife, Vespasia Pella, and two sons by
her; the elder of whom, Sabinus, came to be prefect
of the city, and the younger, Vespasian, to be emperor.
Polla, descended of a good family, at Nursia
, had for her father Vespasius Pollio, thrice
appointed military tribune, and at last prefect
of the camp; and her brother was a senator of praetorian
dignity. There is to this day, about six miles
from Nursia, on the road to Spoletum, a place on the
summit of a hill, called Vespasiae, where are several
monuments of the Vespasii, a sufficient proof of the
splendour and antiquity of the family. I will
not deny that some have pretended to say, that Petro’s
father was a native of Gallia Transpadana
, whose employment was to hire workpeople who
used to emigrate every year from the country of the
Umbria into that of the Sabines, to assist them
in their husbandry ; but who settled at last
in the town of Reate, and there married. But
of this I have not been able to discover the least
proof, upon the strictest inquiry.
II. Vespasian was born in the
country of the Sabines, beyond Reate, in a little
country-seat called Phalacrine, upon the fifth of the
calends of December [27th November], in the evening,
in the consulship of Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus and
Caius Poppaeus Sabinus, five years before the
death of Augustus ; and was educated under the
care of Tertulla, his grandmother by the father’s
side, upon an estate belonging to the family, at Cosa
. After his advancement to the empire, he
used frequently to visit the place where he had spent
his infancy; and the villa was continued in the same
condition, that he might see every thing about him
just as he had been used to do. And he had so
great a regard for the memory of his grandmother,
that, upon solemn occasions and festival days, he
constantly drank out of a silver cup which she had
been accustomed to use. After assuming the manly
habit, he had a long time a distaste for the senatorian
toga, though his brother had obtained it; nor could
he be persuaded by any one but his mother to sue for
that badge of honour. She at length drove him
to it, more by taunts and reproaches, than by her
entreaties and authority, calling him now and
then, by way of reproach, his brother’s footman.
He served as military tribune in Thrace. When
made quaestor, the province of Crete and Cyrene fell
to him by lot. He was candidate for the aedileship,
and soon after for the praetorship, but met with a
repulse in the former case; though at last, with much
difficulty, he came in sixth on the poll-books.
But the office of praetor he carried upon his first
canvass, standing amongst the highest at the poll.
Being incensed against the senate, and desirous to
gain, by all possible means, the good graces of Caius
, he obtained leave to exhibit extraordinary
games for the emperor’s victory in Germany,
and advised them to increase the punishment of the
conspirators against his life, by exposing their corpses
unburied. He likewise gave him thanks in that
august assembly for the honour of being admitted to
his table.
III. Meanwhile, he married Flavia
Domitilla, who had formerly been the mistress of Statilius
Capella, a Roman knight of Sabrata in Africa, who
[Domitilla] enjoyed Latin rights; and was soon after
declared fully and freely a citizen of Rome, on a
trial before the court of Recovery, brought by her
father Flavius Liberalis, a native of Ferentum,
but no more than secretary to a quaestor. By
her he had the following children: Titus, Domitian,
and Domitilla. He outlived his wife and daughter,
and lost them both before he became emperor.
After the death of his wife, he renewed his union
with his former concubine Caenis, the freedwoman
of Antonia, and also her amanuensis, and treated her,
even after he was emperor, almost as if she had been
his lawful wife.
IV. In the reign of Claudius,
by the interest of Narcissus, he was sent to Germany,
in command of a legion; whence being removed into
Britain, he engaged the enemy in thirty several battles.
He reduced under subjection to the Romans two very
powerful tribes, and above twenty great towns, with
the Isle of Wight, which lies close to the coast of
Britain; partly under the command of Aulus Plautius,
the consular lieutenant, and partly under Claudius
himself . For this success he received
the triumphal ornaments, and in a short time after
two priesthoods, besides the consulship, which he
held during the two last months of the year .
The interval between that and his proconsulship he
spent in leisure and retirement, for fear of Agrippina,
who still held great sway over her son, and hated all
the friends of Narcissus, who was then dead.
Afterwards he got by lot the province of Africa,
which he governed with great reputation, excepting
that once, in an insurrection at Adrumetum, he
was pelted with turnips. It is certain that
he returned thence nothing richer; for his credit was
so low, that he was obliged to mortgage his whole
property to his brother, and was reduced to the necessity
of dealing in mules, for the support of his rank;
for which reason he was commonly called “the
Muleteer.” He is said likewise to have
been convicted of extorting from a young man of fashion
two hundred thousand sesterces for procuring him
the broad-stripe, contrary to the wishes of his father,
and was severely reprimanded for it. While in
attendance upon Nero in Achaia, he frequently withdrew
from the theatre while Nero was singing, and went
to sleep if he remained, which gave so much
offence, that he was not only excluded from his society,
but debarred the liberty of saluting him in public.
Upon this, he retired to a small out-of-the-way town,
where he lay skulking in constant fear of his life,
until a province, with an army, was offered him.
A firm persuasion had long prevailed
through all the East , that it was fated for
the empire of the world, at that time, to devolve on
some who should go forth from Judaea. This prediction
referred to a Roman emperor, as the event shewed;
but the Jews, applying it to themselves, broke out
into rebellion, and having defeated and slain their
governor , routed the lieutenant of Syria ,
a man of consular rank, who was advancing to his assistance,
and took an eagle, the standard, of one of his legions.
As the suppression of this revolt appeared to require
a stronger force and an active general, who might
be safely trusted in an affair of so much importance,
Vespasian was chosen in preference to all others,
both for his known activity, and on account of the
obscurity of his origin and name, being a person of
whom there could be not the least jealousy.
Two legions, therefore, eight squadrons of horse,
and ten cohorts, being added to the former troops
in Judaea, and, taking with him his eldest son as
lieutenant, as soon as he arrived in his province,
he turned the eyes of the neighbouring provinces upon
him, by reforming immediately the discipline of the
camp, and engaging the enemy once or twice with such
resolution, that, in the attack of a castle ,
he had his knee hurt by the stroke of a stone, and
received several arrows in his shield.
V. After the deaths of Nero and Galba,
whilst Otho and Vitellius were contending for
the sovereignty, he entertained hopes of obtaining
the empire, with the prospect of which he had long
before flattered himself, from the following omens.
Upon an estate belonging to the Flavian family, in
the neighbourhood of Rome, there was an old oak, sacred
to Mars, which, at the three several deliveries of
Vespasia, put out each time a new branch; evident
intimations of the future fortune of each child.
The first was but a slender one, which quickly withered
away; and accordingly, the girl that was born did
not live long. The second became vigorous, which
portended great good fortune; but the third grew like
a tree. His father, Sabinus, encouraged
by these omens, which were confirmed by the augurs,
told his mother, “that her grandson would be
emperor of Rome;” at which she laughed heartily,
wondering, she said, “that her son should be
in his dotage whilst she continued still in full possession
of her faculties.”
Afterwards in his aedileship, when
Caius Cæsar, being enraged at his not taking care
to have the streets kept clean, ordered the soldiers
to fill the bosom of his gown with dirt, some persons
at that time construed it into a sign that the government,
being trampled under foot and deserted in some civil
commotion, would fall under his protection, and as
it were into his lap. Once, while he was at
dinner, a strange dog, that wandered about the streets,
brought a man’s hand , and laid it under
the table. And another time, while he was at
supper, a plough-ox throwing the yoke off his neck,
broke into the room, and after he had frightened away
all the attendants, on a sudden, as if he was
tired, fell down at his feet, as he lay still upon
his couch, and hung down his neck. A cypress-tree
likewise, in a field belonging to the family, was torn
up by the roots, and laid flat upon the ground, when
there was no violent wind; but next day it rose again
fresher and stronger than before.
He dreamt in Achaia that the good
fortune of himself and his family would begin when
Nero had a tooth drawn; and it happened that the day
after, a surgeon coming into the hall, showed him
a tooth which he had just extracted from Nero.
In Judaea, upon his consulting the oracle of the
divinity at Carmel , the answer was so encouraging
as to assure him of success in anything he projected,
however great or important it might be. And
when Josephus , one of the noble prisoners, was
put in chains, he confidently affirmed that he should
be released in a very short time by the same Vespasian,
but he would be emperor first . Some omens
were likewise mentioned in the news from Rome, and
among others, that Nero, towards the close of his
days, was commanded in a dream to carry Jupiter’s
sacred chariot out of the sanctuary where it stood,
to Vespasian’s house, and conduct it thence into
the circus. Also not long afterwards, as Galba
was going to the election, in which he was created
consul for the second time, a statue of the Divine
Julius turned towards the east. And in
the field of Bedriacum , before the battle began,
two eagles engaged in the sight of the army; and one
of them being beaten, a third came from the east,
and drove away the conqueror.
VI. He made, however,
no attempt upon the sovereignty, though his friends
were very ready to support him, and even pressed him
to the enterprise, until he was encouraged to it by
the fortuitous aid of persons unknown to him and at
a distance. Two thousand men, drawn out of three
legions in the Moesian army, had been sent to the assistance
of Otho. While they were upon their march, news
came that he had been defeated, and had put an end
to his life; notwithstanding which they continued
their march as far as Aquileia, pretending that they
gave no credit to the report. There, tempted
by the opportunity which the disorder of the times
afforded them, they ravaged and plundered the country
at discretion; until at length, fearing to be called
to an account on their return, and punished for it,
they resolved upon choosing and creating an emperor.
“For they were no ways inferior,” they
said, “to the army which made Galba emperor,
nor to the pretorian troops which had set up Otho,
nor the army in Germany, to whom Vitellius owed
his elevation.” The names of all the consular
lieutenants, therefore, being taken into consideration,
and one objecting to one, and another to another,
for various reasons; at last some of the third legion,
which a little before Nero’s death had been
removed out of Syria into Moesia, extolled Vespasian
in high terms; and all the rest assenting, his name
was immediately inscribed on their standards.
The design was nevertheless quashed for a time, the
troops being brought to submit to Vitellius a
little longer.
However, the fact becoming known,
Tiberius Alexander, governor of Egypt, first obliged
the legions under his command to swear obedience to
Vespasian as their emperor, on the calends [the 1st]
of July, which was observed ever after as the day
of his accession to the empire; and upon the fifth
of the ides of the same month [the 28th July], the
army in Judaea, where he then was, also swore allegiance
to him. What contributed greatly to forward
the affair, was a copy of a letter, whether real or
counterfeit, which was circulated, and said to have
been written by Otho before his decease to Vespasian,
recommending to him in the most urgent terms to avenge
his death, and entreating him to come to the aid of
the commonwealth; as well as a report which was circulated,
that Vitellius, after his success against Otho,
proposed to change the winter quarters of the legions,
and remove those in Germany to a less hazardous
station and a warmer climate. Moreover, amongst
the governors of provinces, Licinius Mucianus dropping
the grudge arising from a jealousy of which he had
hitherto made no secret, promised to join him with
the Syrian army, and, among the allied kings, Volugesus,
king of the Parthians, offered him a reinforcement
of forty thousand archers.
VII. Having, therefore, entered
on a civil war, and sent forward his generals and
forces into Italy, he himself, in the meantime, passed
over to Alexandria, to obtain possession of the key
of Egypt . Here having entered alone, without
attendants, the temple of Serapis, to take the auspices
respecting the establishment of his power, and having
done his utmost to propitiate the deity, upon turning
round, [his freedman] Basilides appeared before
him, and seemed to offer him the sacred leaves, chaplets,
and cakes, according to the usage of the place, although
no one had admitted him, and he had long laboured under
a muscular debility, which would hardly have allowed
him to walk into the temple; besides which, it was
certain that at the very time he was far away.
Immediately after this, arrived letters with intelligence
that Vitellius’s troops had been defeated at
Cremona, and he himself slain at Rome. Vespasian,
the new emperor, having been raised unexpectedly from
a low estate, wanted something which might clothe
him with divine majesty and authority. This,
likewise, was now added. A poor man who was blind,
and another who was lame, came both together before
him, when he was seated on the tribunal, imploring
him to heal them , and saying that they were
admonished in a dream by the god Serapis to seek
his aid, who assured them that he would restore sight
to the one by anointing his eyes with his spittle,
and give strength to the leg of the other, if he vouchsafed
but to touch it with his heel. At first he could
scarcely believe that the thing would any how succeed,
and therefore hesitated to venture on making the experiment.
At length, however, by the advice of his friends,
he made the attempt publicly, in the presence of the
assembled multitudes, and it was crowned with success
in both cases . About the same time, at
Tegea in Arcadia, by the direction of some soothsayers,
several vessels of ancient workmanship were dug out
of a consecrated place, on which there was an effigy
resembling Vespasian.
VIII. Returning now to Rome,
under these auspices, and with a great reputation,
after enjoying a triumph for victories over the Jews,
he added eight consulships to his former one.
He likewise assumed the censorship, and made it his
principal concern, during the whole of his government,
first to restore order in the state, which had been
almost ruined, and was in a tottering condition, and
then to improve it. The soldiers, one part of
them emboldened by victory, and the other smarting
with the disgrace of their defeat, had abandoned themselves
to every species of licentiousness and insolence.
Nay, the provinces, too, and free cities, and some
kingdoms in alliance with Rome, were all in a disturbed
state. He, therefore, disbanded many of Vitellius’s
soldiers, and punished others; and so far was he from
granting any extraordinary favours to the sharers
of his success, that it was late before he paid the
gratuities due to them by law. That he might
let slip no opportunity of reforming the discipline
of the army, upon a young man’s coming much
perfumed to return him thanks for having appointed
him to command a squadron of horse, he turned away
his head in disgust, and, giving him this sharp reprimand,
“I had rather you had smelt of garlic,”
revoked his commission. When the men belonging
to the fleet, who travelled by turns from Ostia and
Puteoli to Rome, petitioned for an addition to their
pay, under the name of shoe-money, thinking that it
would answer little purpose to send them away without
a reply, he ordered them for the future to run barefooted;
and so they have done ever since. He deprived
of their liberties, Achaia, Lycia, Rhodes, Byzantium,
and Samos; and reduced them into the form of provinces;
Thrace, also, and Cilicia, as well as Comagene, which
until that time had been under the government of kings.
He stationed some legions in Cappadocia on account
of the frequent inroads of the barbarians, and, instead
of a Roman knight, appointed as governor of it a man
of consular rank. The ruins of houses which had
been burnt down long before, being a great desight
to the city, he gave leave to any one who would, to
take possession of the void ground and build upon
it, if the proprietors should hesitate to perform the
work themselves. He resolved upon rebuilding
the Capitol, and was the foremost to put his hand
to clearing the ground of the rubbish, and removed
some of it upon his own shoulder. And he undertook,
likewise, to restore the three thousand tables of
brass which had been destroyed in the fire which consumed
the Capitol; searching in all quarters for copies
of those curious and ancient records, in which were
contained the decrees of the senate, almost from the
building of the city, as well as the acts of the people,
relative to alliances, treaties, and privileges granted
to any person.
IX. He likewise erected several
new public buildings, namely, the temple of Peace
near the Forum, that of Claudius on the
Coelian mount, which had been begun by Agrippina,
but almost entirely demolished by Nero ; and
an amphitheatre in the middle of the city, upon
finding that Augustus had projected such a work.
He purified the senatorian and equestrian orders,
which had been much reduced by the havoc made amongst
them at several times, and was fallen into disrepute
by neglect. Having expelled the most unworthy,
he chose in their room the most honourable persons
in Italy and the provinces. And to let it be
known that those two orders differed not so much in
privileges as in dignity, he declared publicly, when
some altercation passed between a senator and a Roman
knight, “that senators ought not to be treated
with scurrilous language, unless they were the aggressors,
and then it was fair and lawful to return it.”
X. The business of the courts had
prodigiously accumulated, partly from old law-suits
which, on account of the interruption that had been
given to the course of justice, still remained undecided,
and partly from the accession of new suits arising
out of the disorder of the times. He, therefore,
chose commissioners by lot to provide for the restitution
of what had been seized by violence during the war,
and others with extraordinary jurisdiction to decide
causes belonging to the centumviri, and reduce
them to as small a number as possible, for the dispatch
of which, otherwise, the lives of the litigants could
scarcely allow sufficient time.
XI. Lust and luxury, from the
licence which had long prevailed, had also grown to
an enormous height. He, therefore, obtained a
decree of the senate, that a woman who formed an union
with the slave of another person, should be considered
a bondwoman herself; and that usurers should
not be allowed to take proceedings at law for the recovery
of money lent to young men whilst they lived in their
father’s family, not even after their fathers
were dead.
XII. In other affairs, from
the beginning to the end of his government, he conducted
himself with great moderation and clemency. He
was so far from dissembling the obscurity of his extraction,
that he frequently made mention of it himself.
When some affected to trace his pedigree to the founders
of Reate, and a companion of Hercules , whose
monument is still to be seen on the Salarian road,
he laughed at them for it. And he was so little
fond of external and adventitious ornaments, that,
on the day of his triumph , being quite tired
of the length and tediousness of the procession, he
could not forbear saying, “he was rightly served,
for having in his old age been so silly as to desire
a triumph; as if it was either due to his ancestors,
or had ever been expected by himself.”
Nor would he for a long time accept of the tribunitian
authority, or the title of Father of his Country.
And in regard to the custom of searching those who
came to salute him, he dropped it even in the time
of the civil war.
XIII. He bore with great mildness
the freedom used by his friends, the satirical allusions
of advocates, and the petulance of philosophers.
Licinius Mucianus, who had been guilty of notorious
acts of lewdness, but, presuming upon his great services,
treated him very rudely, he reproved only in private;
and when complaining of his conduct to a common friend
of theirs, he concluded with these words, “However,
I am a man.” Salvius Liberalis, in
pleading the cause of a rich man under prosecution,
presuming to say, “What is it to Cæsar, if Hipparchus
possesses a hundred millions of sesterces?”
he commended him for it. Demetrius, the Cynic
philosopher , who had been sentenced to
banishment, meeting him on the road, and refusing
to rise up or salute him, nay, snarling at him in
scurrilous language, he only called him a cur.
XIV. He was little disposed
to keep up the memory of affronts or quarrels, nor
did he harbour any resentment on account of them.
He made a very splendid marriage for the daughter
of his enemy Vitellius, and gave her, besides,
a suitable fortune and equipage. Being in a great
consternation after he was forbidden the court in the
time of Nero, and asking those about him, what he
should do? or, whither he should go? one of those
whose office it was to introduce people to the emperor,
thrusting him out, bid him go to Morbonia .
But when this same person came afterwards to beg
his pardon, he only vented his resentment in nearly
the same words. He was so far from being influenced
by suspicion or fear to seek the destruction of any
one, that, when his friends advised him to beware
of Metius Pomposianus, because it was commonly believed,
on his nativity being cast, that he was destined by
fate to the empire, he made him consul, promising for
him, that he would not forget the benefit conferred.
XV. It will scarcely be found,
that so much as one innocent person suffered in his
reign, unless in his absence, and without his knowledge,
or, at least, contrary to his inclination, and when
he was imposed upon. Although Helvidius Priscus
was the only man who presumed to salute him
on his return from Syria by his private name of Vespasian,
and, when he came to be praetor, omitted any mark
of honour to him, or even any mention of him in his
edicts, yet he was not angry, until Helvidius proceeded
to inveigh against him with the most scurrilous language.
Though he did indeed banish him, and afterwards
ordered him to be put to death, yet he would gladly
have saved him notwithstanding, and accordingly dispatched
messengers to fetch back the executioners; and he
would have saved him, had he not been deceived by a
false account brought, that he had already perished.
He never rejoiced at the death of any man; nay he
would shed tears, and sigh, at the just punishment
of the guilty.
XVI. The only thing deservedly
blameable in his character was his love of money.
For not satisfied with reviving the imposts which
had been repealed in the time of Galba, he imposed
new and onerous taxes, augmented the tribute of the
provinces, and doubled that of some of them.
He likewise openly engaged in a traffic, which is discreditable
even to a private individual, buying great quantities
of goods, for the purpose of retailing them again
to advantage. Nay, he made no scruple of selling
the great offices of the state to candidates, and pardons
to persons under prosecution, whether they were innocent
or guilty. It is believed, that he advanced
all the most rapacious amongst the procurators to
higher offices, with the view of squeezing them after
they had acquired great wealth. He was commonly
said, “to have used them as sponges,”
because it was his practice, as we may say, to wet
them when dry, and squeeze them when wet. It
is said that he was naturally extremely covetous,
and was upbraided with it by an old herdsman of his,
who, upon the emperor’s refusing to enfranchise
him gratis, which on his advancement he humbly petitioned
for, cried out, “That the fox changed his hair,
but not his nature.” On the other hand,
some are of opinion, that he was urged to his rapacious
proceedings by necessity, and the extreme poverty
of the treasury and exchequer, of which he took public
notice in the beginning of his reign; declaring that
“no less than four hundred thousand millions
of sesterces were wanting to carry on the government.”
This is the more likely to be true, because he applied
to the best purposes what he procured by bad means.
XVII. His liberality, however,
to all ranks of people, was excessive. He made
up to several senators the estate required by
law to qualify them for that dignity; relieving likewise
such men of consular rank as were poor, with a yearly
allowance of five hundred thousand sesterces
; and rebuilt, in a better manner than before,
several cities in different parts of the empire, which
had been damaged by earthquakes or fires.
XVIII. He was a great encourager
of learning and the liberal arts. He first granted
to the Latin and Greek professors of rhetoric the yearly
stipend of a hundred thousand sesterces
each out of the exchequer. He also bought the
freedom of superior poets and artists , and gave
a noble gratuity to the restorer of the Coan of Venus
, and to another artist who repaired the Colossus
. Some one offering to convey some immense
columns into the Capitol at a small expense by a mechanical
contrivance, he rewarded him very handsomely for his
invention, but would not accept his service, saying,
“Suffer me to find maintenance for the poor
people.”
XIX. In the games celebrated
when the stage-scenery of the theatre of Marcellus
was repaired, he restored the old musical entertainments.
He gave Apollinaris, the tragedian, four hundred
thousand sesterces, and to Terpinus and Diodorus,
the harpers, two hundred thousand; to some a hundred
thousand; and the least he gave to any of the performers
was forty thousand, besides many golden crowns.
He entertained company constantly at his table, and
often in great state and very sumptuously, in order
to promote trade. As in the Saturnalia he made
presents to the men which they were to carry away with
them, so did he to the women upon the calends of March
; notwithstanding which, he could not wipe off
the disrepute of his former stinginess. The
Alexandrians called him constantly Cybiosactes; a name
which had been given to one of their kings who was
sordidly avaricious. Nay, at his funeral, Favo,
the principal mimic, personating him, and imitating,
as actors do, both his manner of speaking and his
gestures, asked aloud of the procurators, “how
much his funeral and the procession would cost?”
And being answered “ten millions of sesterces,”
he cried out, “give him but a hundred thousand
sesterces, and they might throw his body into
the Tiber, if they would.”
XX. He was broad-set, strong-limbed,
and his features gave the idea of a man in the act
of straining himself. In consequence, one of
the city wits, upon the emperor’s desiring him
“to say something droll respecting himself,”
facetiously answered, “I will, when you have
done relieving your bowels.” He enjoyed
a good state of health, though he used no other means
to preserve it, than repeated friction, as much
as he could bear, on his neck and other parts of his
body, in the tennis-court attached to the baths, besides
fasting one day in every month.
XXI. His method of life was
commonly this. After he became emperor, he used
to rise very early, often before daybreak. Having
read over his letters, and the briefs of all the departments
of the government offices; he admitted his friends;
and while they were paying him their compliments,
he would put on his own shoes, and dress himself with
his own hands. Then, after the dispatch of such
business as was brought before him, he rode out, and
afterwards retired to repose, lying on his couch with
one of his mistresses, of whom he kept several after
the death of Caenis . Coming out of his
private apartments, he passed to the bath, and then
entered the supper-room. They say that he was
never more good-humoured and indulgent than at that
time: and therefore his attendants always seized
that opportunity, when they had any favour to ask.
XXII. At supper, and, indeed,
at other times, he was extremely free and jocose.
For he had humour, but of a low kind, and he would
sometimes use indecent language, such as is addressed
to young girls about to be married. Yet there
are some things related of him not void of ingenious
pleasantry; amongst which are the following.
Being once reminded by Mestrius Florus, that plaustra
was a more proper expression than plostra, he the
next day saluted him by the name of Flaurus .
A certain lady pretending to be desperately enamoured
of him, he was prevailed upon to admit her to his
bed; and after he had gratified her desires, he gave
her four hundred thousand sesterces.
When his steward desired to know how he would have
the sum entered in his accounts, he replied, “For
Vespasian’s being seduced.”
XXIII. He used Greek verses
very wittily; speaking of a tall man, who had enormous
parts:
Makxi bibas, kradon dolichoskion
enchos;
Still shaking, as he strode,
his vast long spear.
And of Cerylus, a freedman, who being
very rich, had begun to pass himself off as free-born,
to elude the exchequer at his decease, and assumed
the name of Laches, he said:
O Lachaes, Lachaes,
Epan apothanaes, authis ex
archaes esae Kaerylos.
Ah, Laches, Laches! when thou
art no more,
Thou’lt Cerylus be called,
just as before.
He chiefly affected wit upon his own
shameful means of raising money, in order to wipe
off the odium by some joke, and turn it into ridicule.
One of his ministers, who was much in his favour,
requesting of him a stewardship for some person, under
pretence of his being his brother, he deferred granting
him his petition, and in the meantime sent for the
candidate, and having squeezed out of him as much money
as he had agreed to give to his friend at court, he
appointed him immediately to the office. The
minister soon after renewing his application, “You
must,” said he, “find another brother;
for the one you adopted is in truth mine.”
Suspecting once, during a journey,
that his mule-driver had alighted to shoe his mules,
only in order to have an opportunity for allowing a
person they met, who was engaged in a law-suit, to
speak to him, he asked him, “how much he got
for shoeing his mules?” and insisted on having
a share of the profit. When his son Titus blamed
him for even laying a tax upon urine, he applied to
his nose a piece of the money he received in the first
instalment, and asked him, “if it stunk?”
And he replying no, “And yet,” said he,
“it is derived from urine.”
Some deputies having come to acquaint
him that a large statue, which would cost a vast sum,
was ordered to be erected for him at the public expense,
he told them to pay it down immediately, holding
out the hollow of his hand, and saying, “there
was a base ready for the statue.” Not even
when he was under the immediate apprehension and peril
of death, could he forbear jesting. For when,
among other prodigies, the mausoleum of the Caesars
suddenly flew open, and a blazing star appeared in
the heavens; one of the prodigies, he said, concerned
Julia Calvina, who was of the family of Augustus ;
and the other, the king of the Parthians, who wore
his hair long. And when his distemper first seized
him, “I suppose,” said he, “I shall
soon be a god.”
XXIV. In his ninth consulship,
being seized, while in Campania, with a slight indisposition,
and immediately returning to the city, he soon afterwards
went thence to Cutiliae , and his estates in the
country about Reate, where he used constantly to spend
the summer. Here, though his disorder much increased,
and he injured his bowels by too free use of the cold
waters, he nevertheless attended to the dispatch of
business, and even gave audience to ambassadors in
bed. At last, being taken ill of a diarrhoea,
to such a degree that he was ready to faint, he cried
out, “An emperor ought to die standing upright.”
In endeavouring to rise, he died in the hands of
those who were helping him up, upon the eighth of
the calends of July [24th June] , being sixty-nine
years, one month, and seven days old.
XXV. All are agreed that he
had such confidence in the calculations on his own
nativity and that of his sons, that, after several
conspiracies against him, he told the senate, that
either his sons would succeed him, or nobody.
It is said likewise, that he once saw in a dream a
balance in the middle of the porch of the Palatine
house exactly poised; in one scale of which
stood Claudius and Nero, in the other, himself and
his sons. The event corresponded to the symbol;
for the reigns of the two parties were precisely of
the same duration.
Neither consanguinity nor adoption,
as formerly, but great influence in the army having
now become the road to the imperial throne, no person
could claim a better title to that elevation than Titus
Flavius Vespasian. He had not only served with
great reputation in the wars both in Britain and Judaea,
but seemed as yet untainted with any vice which could
pervert his conduct in the civil administration of
the empire. It appears, however, that he was
prompted more by the persuasion of friends, than by
his own ambition, to prosecute the attainment of the
imperial dignity. To render this enterprise
more successful, recourse was had to a new and peculiar
artifice, which, while well accommodated to the superstitious
credulity of the Romans, impressed them with an idea,
that Vespasian’s destiny to the throne was confirmed
by supernatural indications. But, after his
elevation, we hear no more of his miraculous achievements.
The prosecution of the war in Britain,
which had been suspended for some years, was resumed
by Vespasian; and he sent thither Petilius Cerealis,
who by his bravery extended the limits of the Roman
province. Under Julius Frontinus, successor
to that general, the invaders continued to make farther
progress in the reduction of the island: but the
commander who finally established the dominion of
the Romans in Britain, was Julius Agricola, not less
distinguished for his military achievements, than for
his prudent regard to the civil administration of the
country. He began his operations with the conquest
of North Wales, whence passing over into the island
of Anglesey, which had revolted since the time of Suetonius
Paulinus, he again reduced it to subjection.
Then proceeding northwards with his victorious army,
he defeated the Britons in every engagement, took
possession of all the territories in the southern parts
of the island, and driving before him all who refused
to submit to the Roman arms, penetrated even into
the forests and mountains of Caledonia. He defeated
the natives under Galgacus, their leader, in a decisive
battle; and fixing a line of garrisons between the
friths of Clyde and Forth, he secured the Roman province
from the incursions of the people who occupied the
parts of the island beyond that boundary.
Wherever he established the Roman power, he introduced
laws and civilization amongst the inhabitants, and
employed every means of conciliating their affection,
as well as of securing their obedience.
The war in Judaea, which had been
commenced under the former reign, was continued in
that of Vespasian; but he left the siege of Jerusalem
to be conducted by his son Titus, who displayed great
valour and military talents in the prosecution of
the enterprise. After an obstinate defence by
the Jews, that city, so much celebrated in the sacred
writings, was finally demolished, and the glorious
temple itself, the admiration of the world, reduced
to ashes; contrary, however, to the will of Titus,
who exerted his utmost efforts to extinguish the flames.
The manners of the Romans had now
attained to an enormous pitch of depravity, through
the unbounded licentiousness of the tines; and, to
the honour of Vespasian, he discovered great zeal
in his endeavours to effect a national reformation.
Vigilant, active, and persevering, he was indefatigable
in the management of public affairs, and rose in the
winter before day-break, to give audience to his officers
of state. But if we give credit to the whimsical
imposition of a tax upon urine, we cannot entertain
any high opinion, either of his talents as a financier,
or of the resources of the Roman empire. By
his encouragement of science, he displayed a liberality,
of which there occurs no example under all the preceding
emperors, since the time of Augustus. Pliny the
elder was now in the height of reputation, as well
as in great favour with Vespasian; and it was probably
owing not a little to the advice of that minister,
that the emperor showed himself so much the patron
of literary men. A writer mentioned frequently
by Pliny, and who lived in this reign, was Licinius
Mucianus, a Roman knight: he treated of the history
and geography of the eastern countries. Juvenal,
who had begun his Satires several years before, continued
to inveigh against the flagrant vices of the times;
but the only author whose writings we have to notice
in the present reign, is a poet of a different class.
C. Valerius Flaccus wrote
a poem in eight books, on the Expedition of the Argonauts;
a subject which, next to the wars of Thebes and Troy,
was in ancient times the most celebrated. Of
the life of this author, biographers have transmitted
no particulars; but we may place his birth in the
reign of Tiberius, before all the writers who flourished
in the Augustan age were extinct. He enjoyed
the rays of the setting sun which had illumined that
glorious period, and he discovers the efforts of an
ambition to recall its meridian splendour. As
the poem was left incomplete by the death of
the author, we can only judge imperfectly of the conduct
and general consistency of the fable: but the
most difficult part having been executed, without
any room for the censure of candid criticism, we may
presume that the sequel would have been finished with
an equal claim to indulgence, if not to applause.
The traditional anecdotes relative to the Argonautic
expedition are introduced with propriety, and embellished
with the graces of poetical fiction. In describing
scenes of tenderness, this author is happily pathetic,
and in the heat of combat, proportionably animated.
His similes present the imagination with beautiful
imagery, and not only illustrate, but give additional
force to the subject. We find in Flaccus
a few expressions not countenanced by the authority
of the most celebrated Latin writers. His language,
however, in general, is pure; but his words are perhaps
not always the best that might have been chosen.
The versification is elevated, though not uniformly
harmonious; and there pervades the whole poem an epic
dignity, which renders it superior to the production
ascribed to Orpheus, or to that of Apollonius,
on the same subject.