A.D. 65
Origin and nature of Piso’s
conspiracy. Lucan, the Latin poet. His
quarrel with Nero. Lateranus. Celebrity
of his name. The church of St. John Lateran. Fenius
Rufus. A woman in the secret. Plans
and arrangements of the conspirators. Bold
proposals of Flavius. The palace to be
set on fire. Epicharis impatient. She
goes to the fleet. She communicates with
Proculus at Misenum. Proculus reveals the
plot to Nero. Nero perplexed. Epicharis
imprisoned. A new plan. Piso’s
objections. Reasons. Final arrangements
agreed upon. Nero to be slain in the theatre. The
several parts assigned. Scevinus. Excitement
of Scevinus. His knife. He gives
his knife to Milichus to be ground. Milichus
confers with his wife. Their suspicions. Revelations
made by Milichus. Scevinus’s defense. He
denies the allegations of his accuser. Nero
perplexed. The truth at last discovered. Scevinus
and Natalis make a full confession.
Although the people of Rome were generally
so overawed by the terror of Nero’s power, that
for a long period no one dared to make any open resistance
to his will, still his excesses and cruelties excited
in the minds of men a great many secret feelings of
resentment and detestation. At one period in the
course of his reign a very desperate conspiracy was
formed by some of the leading men of the state, to
dethrone and destroy the tyrant. This plot was
a very extensive and a very formidable one. It
was, however, accidentally discovered before it was
fully mature, and thus was unsuccessful. It is
known in history as Piso’s Conspiracy deriving
its name from that of the principal leader of it,
Caius Calpurnius Piso.
It is not supposed, however, that
Piso was absolutely the originator of the conspiracy,
nor is it known, in fact, who the originator of it
was. A great number of prominent men were involved
in the plot men who, possessing very different
characters, and occupying very different stations
in life, were probably induced by various motives
to take part in the conspiracy. A conspiracy,
however, of this kind, against so merciless a tyrant
as Nero, is an enterprise of such frightful danger,
and is attended, if unsuccessful, with such awful
consequences to all concerned in it, that men will
seldom engage in such a scheme until goaded to desperation,
and almost maddened, by the wrongs which they have
endured.
And yet the exasperation which these
conspirators felt against Nero, seems to have been
produced, in some instances at least, by what we should
now consider rather inadequate causes. For example,
one of the men most active in this secret league,
was the celebrated Latin poet Lucan. In the early
part of his life, Lucan had been one of Nero’s
principal flatterers, having written hymns and sonnets
in his praise. At length, as it was said, some
public occasion occurred in which verses were to be
recited in public, for a prize. Nero, who imagined
himself to excel in every human art or attainment,
offered some of his own verses in the competition.
The prize, however, was adjudged to Lucan. Nero’s
mind was accordingly filled with envy and hate toward
his rival, and he soon found some pretext for forbidding
Lucan ever to recite any verses in public again.
This of course exasperated Lucan in his turn, and
was the cause of his joining in the conspiracy.
Another of the conspirators was a
certain Roman nobleman, whose family name has since
become very widely known in all parts of the civilized
world, through an estate in the city with which it
was associated, which estate, and certain
buildings erected upon it, became subsequently greatly
celebrated in the ecclesiastical history of Rome.
The name of this nobleman was Plautius Lateranus.
When Lateranus was put to death at the detection of
the conspiracy, in the manner to be presently described,
his estate was confiscated. The palace and grounds
thus became the property of the Roman emperors.
In process of time, the emperor Constantine gave the
place to the pope, and from that period it continued
to be the residence of the successive pontiffs for
a thousand years. A church was built upon the
ground, called the Basilica of St. John of Lateran,
where many ancient councils were held, known in ecclesiastical
history as the councils of the Lateran. This
church is still used for some of the ceremonies connected
with the inauguration of the pope, but the palace
is now uninhabited. It presents, however, in its
ruins, a vast and imposing, though desolate aspect.
Lateranus was an unprincipled and
dissolute man, and in consequence of certain crimes
which he committed in connection with Messalina, during
the reign of Claudius, he had been condemned to death.
The sentence of death was not executed, though Lateranus
was deprived of his rank, and doomed to live in retirement
and disgrace. At the death of Claudius, and the
accession of Nero, Lateranus was fully pardoned and
restored to his former rank and position, through
Nero’s instrumentality. It might have been
supposed that gratitude for these favors would have
prevented Lateranus from joining such a conspiracy
as this against his benefactor, but gratitude has very
little place in the hearts of those who dwell in the
courts and palaces of such tyrants as Nero.
The man on whom the conspirators relied
most for efficient military aid, so far as such aid
should be needed in their enterprise, was a certain
Fenius Rufus, a captain of the imperial guards.
He was a man of very resolute and decided character,
and was very highly esteemed by the people of Rome.
He was not one of the originators of the plot, but
joined it at a later period; and when the news of his
accession to it was communicated to the rest, it gave
them great encouragement, as they attached great importance
to the adhesion of such a man to their cause.
They now immediately began to take measures for executing
their plans.
There was a woman in the secret of
this conspiracy, though how she obtained a knowledge
of it no one seemed to know. Her name was Epicharis.
While the execution of the plans of the confederates
was delayed, Epicharis came to the principal conspirators
privately, first to one and then to another, and urged
them to action. None of the members of the plot
would admit that they had given her any information
on the subject, and how she obtained her information
no one could tell. She was a woman of bad character,
and as such women often are, she was violent and implacable
in her hatred. She hated Nero, and was so impatient
at the delay of the conspirators that she made repeated
and earnest efforts to urge them on.
The conspirators in the mean time
held various secret meetings to mature their plans,
and to complete the preparation for the execution
of them. They designed to destroy Nero by some
violent means, and then to cause Piso to be proclaimed
emperor in his place. Piso was a man well suited
for their purpose in this respect. He was tall
and graceful in form, and his personal appearance was
in every respect prepossessing. His rank was
very high, and he was held in great estimation by
all the people of the city for the many generous and
noble qualities that he possessed. He was allied,
too, to the most illustrious families of Rome, and
he occupied in all respects so conspicuous a position,
and was so much an object of popular favor, that the
conspirators believed that his elevation to the empire
could easily be effected, if Nero himself could once
be put out of the way. To effect the assassination
of Nero, therefore, was the first step.
After much debate, and many consultations
in respect to the best course to be pursued, it was
decided to accept the offer of a certain Subrius Flavius,
who undertook to kill the emperor in the streets,
at night, at some time when he was roaming about in
his carousals. Flavius, in fact, was very daring
and resolute in his proposals, though wanting, as
it proved in the end, in the fulfillment of them.
He offered to stab Nero in the theater, when he was
singing on the stage, in the midst of all the thousands
of spectators convened there. This the conspirators
thought, it seems, an unnecessarily bold and desperate
mode of accomplishing the end in view, and the plan
was accordingly overruled. Flavius then proposed
to set the palace on fire some night when Nero was
out in the city, and then, in the confusion that would
ensue, and while the attention of the guards who had
accompanied Nero should be drawn toward the fire,
to assassinate the emperor in the streets. This
plan was acceded to by the conspirators, and it was
left to Flavius to select a favorable time for the
execution of it.
Time passed on, however, and nothing
was done. The favorable time which Flavius looked
for did not appear. In the meanwhile Epicharis
became more and more impatient of the delay. She
urged the conspirators to do their work, and chided
in the strongest terms their irresolution and pusillanimity.
At length finding that her invectives and reproaches
were of no avail, she determined to leave them, and
to see what she could do herself toward the attainment
of the end.
She accordingly left Rome and proceeded
southwardly along the coast till she came to Misenum,
which, as has already been said, was the great naval
station of the empire at this time. Epicharis
went to some of the officers of the fleet, many of
whom she knew, and in a very secret and
cautious manner made known to them the nature of the
plot which had been formed at Rome for the destruction
of Nero and the elevation of Piso to the empire in
his stead. Before, however, communicating intelligence
of the conspiracy to any persons whatever, Epicharis
would converse with them secretly and confidentially
to learn how they were affected toward Nero and his
government. If she found them well disposed she
said nothing. If on the other hand any one appeared
discontented with the government, or hostile to it
in any way, she would cautiously make known to him
the plans which were concocting at Rome for the overthrow
of it. She took care, however, in these conversations
to have never more than one person present with her
at a time, and she revealed none of the names of the
conspirators.
Among the other officers of the fleet
was a certain Proculus, who was one of the first with
whom Epicharis communicated. Proculus was one
of the men who had been employed by Nero in his attempts
to assassinate Agrippina his mother, and for his services
on that occasion had been promoted to the command
of a certain number of ships, a number containing
in all one thousand men. This promotion, however,
as Epicharis found when she came to converse with him,
Proculus did not consider as great a reward as his
services had deserved. The perpetration of so
horrible a crime as the murder of the emperor’s
mother, merited, in his opinion, as he said to Epicharis,
a much higher recompense than the command of a thousand
men. Epicharis thought so too. She talked
with Proculus about his wrongs, and the injuries which
he suffered from Nero’s ingratitude and neglect,
until she fancied that he was in a state of mind which
would prepare him to join in the plans of the conspirators,
and then she cautiously unfolded them to him.
Proculus listened with great apparent
interest to Epicharis’s communication, and pretended
to enter very cordially into the plan of the conspiracy;
but as soon as the interview was ended he immediately
left Misenum, and proceeded immediately to Rome, where
he divulged the whole design to Nero.
Nero was exceedingly alarmed, and
sent officers off at once to seize Epicharis and bring
her before him. Epicharis, when questioned and
confronted with Proculus, resolutely denied that she
had ever held any such conversation with Proculus
as he alledged, and feigned the utmost astonishment
at what she termed the impudence of his accusation.
She called for witnesses and proofs. Proculus
of course could produce none, for Epicharis had taken
care that there should be no third person present
at their interviews. Proculus could not even
give the names of any of the conspirators at Rome.
He could only persist in his declaration that Epicharis
had really disclosed to him the existence of the conspiracy,
and had proposed to him to join in it; while she on
the contrary as strenuously and positively denied
it. Nero was perplexed. He found it impossible
to determine what to believe. He finally dismissed
Proculus, and sent Epicharis to prison, intending
that she should remain there until he could make a
more full examination into the case, and determine
what to do.
In the mean time the conspirators
became considerably alarmed when they heard of the
arrest of Epicharis, and though they knew that thus
far she had revealed nothing, they could not tell how
soon her fidelity and firmness might yield under the
tortures to which she was every day liable to be subjected;
and as there appeared to be now no prospect that Flavius
would ever undertake to execute his plan, they began
to devise some other means of attaining the end.
It seems that Piso possessed at this
time a villa and country-seat at Baiae, on the
coast south of Rome, and near to Misenum, and that
Nero was accustomed sometimes to visit Piso here.
It was now proposed by some of the conspirators that
Piso should invite Nero to visit him at this villa,
as if to witness some spectacles or shows which should
be arranged for his entertainment there, and that then
persons employed for the purpose should suddenly assassinate
him, when off his guard, in the midst of some scene
of convivial pleasure. Piso, however, objected
to this plan. He conceived, he said, that it
would be dishonorable in him to commit an act of violence
upon a guest whom he had invited under his roof, as
his friend. He was willing to take his full share
of the responsibility of destroying the tyrant in
any fair and manly way, but he would not violate the
sacred rites of hospitality to accomplish the end.
So this plan was abandoned. It
was supposed, however, that Piso had another and a
deeper reason for his unwillingness that Nero should
be assassinated at Baiae than his regard for his
honor as a host. He thought, it was said, that
it would not be safe for him to be away from Rome
when the death of Nero should be proclaimed in the
capitol, lest some other Roman nobleman or great officer
of state should suddenly arise in the emergency and
assume the empire. There were, in fact, one or
two men in Rome of great power and influence, of whom
Piso was specially jealous and he was naturally very
much disposed to be on his guard against opening any
door of opportunity for them to rise to power.
To commit a great crime in order to secure his own
aggrandizement, and yet to manage the commission of
it in such a way as not only to shut himself off from
the expected benefit, but to secure that benefit to
a hated rival, would have been a very fatal misstep.
So the plan of destroying Nero at Baiae was overruled.
At length one more, and as it proved
a final scheme, was formed for accomplishing the purpose
of the conspiracy. It was determined to execute
Nero in Rome, at a great public celebration which was
then about to take place. It seems that it was
sometimes customary in ancient times for persons who
had any request or petition to make to an emperor
or king, to avail themselves of the occasion of such
celebrations to present them. Accordingly it was
determined that Lateranus should approach Nero at
a certain time during the celebration of the games,
as if to offer a petition, the other conspirators
being close at hand, and ready to act at a moment’s
warning. Lateranus, as soon as he was near enough,
was to kneel down and suddenly draw the emperor’s
robes about his feet, and then clasp the feet thus
enveloped, in his arms, so as to render Nero helpless.
The other conspirators were then to rush forward and
kill their victim with their daggers. In the
mean time while Lateranus and his associates were
perpetrating this deed in the circus where the games
were to be exhibited, Piso was to station himself in
a certain temple not far distant, to await the result;
while Fenius, the officer of the guard, who has already
been mentioned as the chief military reliance of the
conspirators, was to be posted in another part of
the city, with a military cavalcade in array, ready
to proceed through the streets and bring Piso forth
to be proclaimed emperor as soon as he should receive
the tidings that Nero had been slain. It is said
that in order to give additional eclat and popularity
to the proceeding, it was arranged that Octavia, a
daughter of Claudius, the former emperor, was to be
brought forward with Piso in the cavalcade, as if
to combine the influence of her hereditary claims,
whatever they might be, with the personal popularity
of Piso in favor of the new government about to be
established.
Thus every thing was arranged.
To each conspirator, his own particular duty was assigned,
and, as the day approached for the execution of the
scheme, every thing seemed to promise success.
It is obvious, however, that, as the affair had been
arranged, all would depend upon the resolution and
fidelity of those who had been designated to stab
the emperor with their daggers, when Lateranus should
have grasped his feet. The slightest faltering
or fear at this point, would be fatal to the whole
scheme. The man on whom the conspirators chiefly
relied for this part of their work, was a certain
desperate profligate, named Scevinus, who had been
one of the earliest originators of the conspiracy,
and one of the most dauntless and determined of the
promoters of it, so far as words and professions could
go. He particularly desired that the privilege
of plunging the first dagger into Nero’s heart
should be granted to him. He had a knife, he
said, which he had found in a certain temple a long
time before, and which he had preserved and carried
about his person constantly ever since, for some such
deed. So it was arranged that Scevinus should
strike the fatal blow.
As the time drew nigh, Scevinus seemed
to grow more and more excited with the thoughts of
what was before him. He attracted the attention
of the domestics at his house, by his strange and mysterious
demeanor. He held a long and secret consultation
with Natalis, another conspirator, on the day
before the one appointed for the execution of the
plot, under such circumstances as to increase still
more the wonder and curiosity of his servants.
He formally executed his will, as if he were approaching
some dangerous crisis. He made presents to his
servants, and actually emancipated one or two of his
favorite slaves. He talked with all he met, in
a rapid and incoherent manner, on various subjects,
and with an air of gayety and cheerfulness which it
was obvious to those who observed him was all assumed;
for, in the intervals of these conversations, and at
every pause, he relapsed into a thoughtful and absent
mood, as if he were meditating some deep and dangerous
design.
That night, too, he took out his knife
from its sheath, and gave it to one of his servants,
named Milichus, to be ground. He directed Milichus
to be particularly attentive to the sharpening of the
point. Before Milichus brought back the knife,
Scevinus directed him to prepare bandages such as
would be suitable for binding up wounds to stop the
effusion of blood. Milichus observed all these
directions, and, having made all the preparations required,
according to the orders which Scevinus had given him keeping
the knife, however, still in his possession he
went to report the whole case to his wife, in order
to consult with her in respect to the meaning of all
these mysterious indications.
The wife of Milichus soon came to
the conclusion, that these strange proceedings could
denote nothing less than a plot against the life of
the emperor; and she urged her husband to go early
the next morning, and make known his discovery.
She told him that it was impossible that such a conspiracy
should succeed, for it must be known to a great many
persons, some one of whom would be sure to divulge
it in hope of a reward. “If you divulge
it,” she added, “you will secure the reward
for yourself; and if you do not, you will be supposed
to be privy to it, when it is made known by others,
and so will be sacrificed with the rest to Nero’s
anger.”
Milichus was convinced by his wife’s
reasonings, and on the following morning, as soon
as the day dawned, he rose and repaired to the palace.
At first he was refused admittance, but on sending
word to the officer of the household, that he had intelligence
of the most urgent importance to communicate to Nero,
they allowed him to come in. When brought into
Nero’s presence, he told his story, describing
particularly all the circumstances that he had observed,
which had led him to suppose that a conspiracy was
formed. He spoke of the long and mysterious consultation
which Scevinus and Natalis had held together
on the preceding day; he described the singular conduct
and demeanor which Scevinus had subsequently manifested,
the execution of his will, his wild and incoherent
conversation, his directions in respect to the sharpening
of the knife and the preparation of the bandages;
and, to crown his proofs, he produced the knife itself,
which he had kept for this purpose, and which thus
furnished, in some sense, an ocular demonstration of
the truth of what he had declared.
Officers were immediately sent to
seize Scevinus, and to bring him into the presence
of the emperor. Scevinus knew, of course, that
the only possible hope for him was in a bold and resolute
denial of the charge made against him. He accordingly
denied, in the most solemn manner, that there was
any plot or conspiracy whatever, and he attempted
to explain all the circumstances which had awakened
his servant’s suspicions. The knife or
dagger which Milichus had produced, was an ancient
family relic, he said, one which he had
kept for a long time in his chamber, and which his
servant had obtained surreptitiously, for the purpose
of sustaining his false and malicious charge against
his master. As to his will, he often made and
signed a will anew, he said, as many other persons
were accustomed to do, and no just inference against
him could be drawn from the circumstance that he had
done this on the preceding day; and in respect to
the bandages and other preparation for the dressing
of wounds which Milichus alledged that he had ordered,
he denied the statement altogether. He had not
given any such orders. The whole story was the
fabrication of a vile slave, attempting, by these
infamous means, to compass his master’s destruction.
Scevinus said all this with so bold and intrepid a
tone of voice, and with such an air of injured innocence,
that Nero and his friends were half disposed to believe
that he was unjustly accused, and to dismiss him from
custody. This might very probably have been the
result, and Milichus himself might have been punished
for making a false and malicious accusation, had not
the sagacity of his wife, who was all the time watching
these proceedings with the most anxious interest,
furnished a clew which, in the end, brought the whole
truth to light.
She called attention to the long conference
which Scevinus had held with Natalis on the preceding
day. Scevinus was accordingly questioned concerning
it. He declared that his interview was nothing
but an innocent consultation about his own private
affairs. He was questioned then about the particulars
of the conversation. Of course he was compelled
to fabricate a statement in reply. Natalis
himself was then sent for, and examined, apart from
Scevinus, in regard to the conversation they had held
together. Natalis, of course, fabricated
a story too, but, as usual with such fabrications,
the two accounts having been invented independently,
were inconsistent with each other. Nero was immediately
convinced that the men were guilty, and that some
sort of plot or conspiracy had been formed. He
ordered that they should both be put to the torture
in order to compel them to confess their crime, and
disclose the names of their accomplices. In the
mean time they were sent to prison, and loaded with
irons, to be kept in that condition until the instruments
of torture could be prepared.
When at length they were brought to
the rack, the sight of the horrid machinery unmanned
them. They begged to be spared, and promised
to reveal the whole. They acknowledged that a
conspiracy had been formed, and gave the names of
all who had participated in it. They explained
fully, too, the plans which had been devised, and
as in this case, though they were examined separately,
their statements agreed, Nero and his friends were
convinced of the truth of their declarations, and
thus at last the plot was fully brought to light.
Nero himself was struck with consternation and terror
at discovering the formidable danger to which he had
been exposed.