<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div xml:lang="eng" type="translation" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi1348.abo013.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" n="76" subtype="chapter"><p>He had made, about two years before, duplicates of his will, one written by his
					own hand, and the other by that of one of his freedmen; and both were witnessed
					by some persons of very mean rank. He appointed his two grandsons, Caius by
					Germanicus, and Tiberius by Drusus, joint heirs to his estate; and upon the
					death of one of them, the other was to inherit the whole. He gave likewise many
					legacies; amongst which were bequests to the Vestal Virgins, to all the
					soldiers, and each one of the people of <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>, and to the magistrates of the several quarters of the
					city. </p></div><div type="textpart" n="note" subtype="chapter"><head>Remarks on <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName></head><p>At the death of Augustus, there had elapsed so long a period from the overthrow
					of the republic by Julius Caesar, that few were now living who had been born
					under the ancient constitution of the Romans; and the mild and prosperous
					administration of Augustus, during forty-four years, had by this time reconciled
					the minds of the people to a despotic government. <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, the adopted son of the former sovereign, was of
					mature age; and though he had hitherto lived, for the most part, abstracted from
					any concern with public affairs, yet, having been brought up in the family of
					Augustus, he was acquainted with his method of government, which, there was
					reason to expect, he would render the model of his own. <placeName key="tgn,2039991">Livia</placeName>, too, his mother, and the relict of the
					late emperor, was still living, a woman venerable by years, who had long been
					familiar with the councils of Augustus, and from her high rank, as well as
					uncommon affability, possessed an extensive influence amongst all classes of the
					people.</p><p>Such were the circumstances in favour of <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>'s succession at the demise of Augustus; but there were
					others of a tendency disadvantageous to his views. His temper was haughty and
					reserved: Augustus had often apologised for the ungraciousness of his manners.
					He was disobedient to his mother; and though he had not openly discovered any
					propensity to vice, he enjoyed none of those qualities which usually conciliate
					popularity. To these considerations it is to be added, that Postumus Agrippa,
					the grandson of Augustus by <placeName key="tgn,2428630">Julia</placeName>, was
					living; and if consanguinity was to be the rule of succession, his right was
					indisputably preferable to that of an adopted son. Augustus had sent this youth
					into exile a few years before; but, towards the close of his life, had expressed
					a design of recalling him, with the view, as was supposed, of appointing him his
					successor. The father of young Agrippa had been greatly beloved by the Romans;
					and the fate of his mother, <placeName key="tgn,2428630">Julia</placeName>,
					though she was notorious for her profligacy, had ever been regarded by them with
					peculiar sympathy and tenderness. Many, therefore, attached to the son the
					partiality entertained for his parents; which was increased not only by a strong
					suspicion, but a general surmise, that his elder brothers, Caius and <placeName key="tgn,2023439">Lucius</placeName>, had been violently taken off, to make
					way for the succession of <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>.
					That an obstruction was apprehended to <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>'s succession from this quarter, is put beyond all
					doubt, when we find that the death of Augustus was industriously kept secret,
					until young Agrippa should be removed; who, it is generally agreed, was
					dispatched by an order from <placeName key="tgn,2039991">Livia</placeName> and
						<placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName> conjointly, or at least
					from the former. Though, by this act, there reilained no rival to <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, yet the consciousness of his own
					want of pretensions to the Roman throne, seems to have still rendered him
					distrustful of the succession; and that he should have quietly obtained it,
					without the voice of the people, the real inclination of the senate, or the
					support of the army, can be imputed only to the influence of his mother, and his
					own dissimulation. Ardently solicitous to attain the object, yet affecting a
					total indifference; artfully prompting the senate to give him the charge of the
					government, at the time that he intimated an invincible reluctance to accept it;
					his absolutely declining it in perpetuity, but fixing no time for an abdication;
					his deceitful insinuation of bodily infirmities, with hints likewise of
					approaching old age, that he might allay in the senate all apprehensions of any
					great duration of nis power, and repress in his adopted son, Germanicus, the
					emotions of ambition to displace him; form altogether a scene of the most
					insidious policy, inconsistency, and dissimulation.</p><p>In this period died, in the eighty-sixth year of her age, Livia Drusilla, mother
					of the emperor, and the relict of Augustus, whom she survived fifteen years. She
					was the daughter of I Drusus Calidianus and married <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName> Claudius Nero, by whom she had two sons, Tiberius and
					Drusus. The conduct of this lady seems to justify the remark of Caligula, that "
					she was an <placeName key="tgn,2446724">Ulysses</placeName> in a woman's dress."
					Octavius first saw her as she fled from the danger which threatened her husband,
					who had espoused the cause of Antony; and though she was then pregnant, he
					resolved to marry her; whether with her own inclination or not, is left by
					Tacitus undetermined. To pave the way for this union, he divorced his wife
					Scribonia, and with the approbation of the Augurs, which he could have no
					difficulty in obtaining, celebrated his nuptials with <placeName key="tgn,2039991">Livia</placeName>. There ensued from this marriage no
					issue, though much desired by both parties; but <placeName key="tgn,2039991">Livia</placeName> retained, without interruption, an unbounded ascendancy
					over the emperor, whose confidence she abused, while the uxorious husband little
					suspected that he was cherishing in his bosom a viper who was to prove the
					destruction of his house. She appears to have entertained a predominant ambition
					of giving an heir to the Roman empire; and since it could not be done by any
					fruit of her marriage with Augustus, she resolved on accomplishing that end in
					the person of <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, the eldest son
					by her former husband. The plan which she devised for this purpose, was to
					exterminate all the male offspring of Augustus by his daughter Julia, who was
					married to Agrippa; a stratagem which, when executed,.would procure for
						<placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, through the means of
					adoption, the eventual succession to the empire. The cool yet sanguinary policy,
					and the patient perseverance of resolution, with which she prosecuted her
					design, have seldom been equalled. While the sons of <placeName key="tgn,2428630">Julia</placeName> were yet young, and while there was
					still a possibility that she herself might have issue by Augustus, she suspended
					her project, in the hope, perhaps, that accident or disease might operate in its
					favour; but when the natural term of her constitution had put a period to her
					hopes of progeny, and when the grandsons of the emperor were risen to the years
					of manhood, and had been adopted by him, she began to carry into execution what
					she long had meditated. The first object devoted to destruction was C. Caesar
					Agrippa, the eldest of Augustus's grandsons. This promising youth was sent to
						<placeName key="tgn,1023711">Armenia</placeName>, upon an expedition against
					the Persians; and Lollius, who had been his governor, either accompanied him
					thither from <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>, or met him in the
					East, where he had obtained some appointment. From the hand of this traitor,
					perhaps under the pretext of exercising the authority of a preceptor, but in
					reality instigated by <placeName key="tgn,2039991">Livia</placeName>, the young
					prince received a fatal blow, of which he died some time after.</p><p>The manner of Caius's death seems to have been carefully kept from the knowledge
					of Augustus, who promoted Lollius to the consulship, and made him governor of a
					province; but, by his rapacity in this station, he afterwards incurred the
					emperor's displeasure. The true character of this person had escaped the keen
					discernment of <placeName key="tgn,2399199">Horace</placeName>, as well as the
					sagacity of the emperor; for in two epistles addressed to Lollius, he mentions
					him as great and accomplished in the superlative degree; <foreign xml:lang="lat">maxime Lolli, liberrime Lolli</foreign>; so imposing had been the manners
					and address of this deceitfnl courtier.</p><p><placeName key="tgn,2023439">Lucius</placeName>, the second son of <placeName key="tgn,2024572">Julia</placeName>, was banished into <placeName key="tgn,7003005">Campania</placeName>, for using, as it is said, seditious
					language against his grandfather. In the seventh year of his exile, Augustus
					proposed to recall him; but <placeName key="tgn,2039991">Livia</placeName> and
						<placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, dreading the consequences
					of his being restored to the emperor's favour, put in practice the expedient of
					having him immediately assassinated. Postumus Agrippa, the third son, incurred
					the displeasure of his grandfather in the same way as <placeName key="tgn,2023439">Lucius</placeName>, and was confined at <placeName key="tgn,7004648">Surrentum</placeName>, where he remained a prisoner until
					he was put to death by the order either of <placeName key="tgn,2039991">Livia</placeName> alone, or in conjunction with <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, as was before observed.</p><p>Such was the catastrophe, through the means of <placeName key="tgn,2039991">Livia</placeName>, of all the grandsons of Augustus; and reason justifies
					the inference, that she who scrupled not to lay violent hands upon those young
					men, had formerly practised every artifice that could operate towards rendering
					them obnoxious to the emperor. We may even ascribe to her dark intrigues the
					dissolute conduct of <placeName key="tgn,2024572">Julia</placeName>: for the
					woman who could secretly act as procuress to her own husband, would feel little
					restraint upon her mind against corrupting his daughter, when such an effect
					might contribute to answer the purpose which she had in view. But in the
					ingratitude of <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, however
					undutiful and reprehensible in a son towards a parent, she at last experienced a
					just retribution for the crimes in which she had trained him to procure the
					succession to the empire. To the disgrace of her sex, she introduced amongst the
					Romans the horrible practice of domestic murder, little known before the times
					when the thirst or intoxication of unlimited power had vitiated the social
					affections; and she transmitted to succeeding ages a pernicious example, by
					which immoderate ambition might be gratified, at the expense of every moral
					obligation, as well as of humanity.</p><p>One of the first victims in the sanguinary reign of the present emperor, was
					Germanicus, the son of Drusus, <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>'s own brother, and who had been adopted by his uncle
					himself. Under any sovereign, of a temper different from that of <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, this amiable and meritorious prince
					would have been held in the highest esteem. At the death of his grandfather
					Augustus, he was employed in a war in <placeName key="tgn,7000084">Germany</placeName>, where he greatly distinguished himself by his military
					achievements; and as soon as intelligence of that event arrived, the soldiers,
					by whom he was extremely beloved, unanimously saluted him emperor. Refusing,
					however, to accept this mark of their partiality, he persevered in allegiance to
					the government of his uncle, and prosecuted the war with success. Upon the
					conclusion of this expedition, he was sent, with the title of emperor in the
					East, to repress the seditions of the Armenians, in which he was equally
					successful. But the fame which he acquired, served only to render him an object
					of jealousy to <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, by whose order
					he was secretly poisoned at <placeName key="tgn,2275537">Daphne</placeName>,
					near <placeName key="tgn,2073463">Antioch</placeName>, in the thirtyfourth year
					of his age. The news of Germanicus's death was received at <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName> with universal lamentation; and all ranks
					of the people entertained an opinion, that, had he survived <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, he would have restored the freedom
					of the republic. The love and grditude of the Romans decreed many honours to his
					memory. It was ordered, that his name should be sung in a solemn procession of
					the Salii; that crowns of oak, in allusion to his victories, should be placed
					upon curule chairs in the hall pertaining to the priests of Augustus; and that
					an effigy of him in ivory should be drawn upon a chariot, preceding the
					ceremonies of the Circensian games. Triumphal arches were erected, one at
						<placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>, another on the banks of the
						<placeName key="tgn,7012611">Rhine</placeName>, and a third upon Mount
					Amanus in <placeName key="tgn,1000140">Syria</placeName>, with inscriptions of
					his achievements, and that he died for his services to the republic.<note anchored="true">Tacit. Annal. lib. ii.</note></p><p>His obsequies were celebrated, not with the display of images and funeral pomp,
					but with the recital of his praises and the virtues which rendered him
					illustrious. From a resemblance in his personal accomplishments, his age, the
					manner of his death, and the vicinity of <placeName key="tgn,7010768">Daphne</placeName> to <placeName key="tgn,7002626">Babylon</placeName>,
					many compared his fate to that of Alexander the Great. He was celebrated for
					humanity and benevolence, as well as military talents, and amidst the toils of
					war, found leisure to cultivate the arts of literary genius. He composed two
					comedies in Greek, some epigrams, and a translation of Aratus into Latin verse.
					He married Agrippina, the daughter of M. Agrippa, by whom he had nine children.
					This lady, who had accompanied her husband into the east, carried his ashes to
						<placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>, and accused his murderer,
					Piso; who, unable to bear up against the public odium incurred by that
					transaction, laid violent hands upon himself. Agrippina was now nearly in the
					same predicament with regard to Tiberius, that Ovid had formerly been in respect
					of Augustus. He was sensible, that when she accused Piso, she was not ignorant
					of the person by whom the perpetrator of the murder had been instigated; and her
					presence, therefore, seeming continually to reproach him with his guilt, he
					resolved to rid himself of a person become so obnoxious to his sight, and
					banished her to the island of Pandataria, where she died some time afterwards
					with famine.</p><p>But it was not sufficient to gratify this sanguinary tyrant, that he had, without
					any cause, cut off both Germanicus and his wife Agrippina: the distinguished
					merits and popularity of that prince were yet to be revenged upon his children;
					and accordingly he set himself to invent a pretext for their destruction. After
					endeavouring in vain, by various artifices, to provoke the resentment of
						<placeName key="tgn,2538429">Nero</placeName> and Drusus against him, he had
					recourse to false accusation, and not only charged them with seditious designs,
					to which their tender years were ill adapted, but with vices of a nature the
					most scandalous. By a sentence of the senate, which manifested the extreme
					servility of that assembly, he procured them both to be declared open enemies to
					their country. <placeName key="tgn,2538429">Nero</placeName> he banished to the
					island'of Pontia, where, like his unfortunate mother, he miserably perished by
					famine; and Drusus was doomed to the same fate, in the lower part of the
					Palatium, after suffering for nine days the violence of hunger, and having, as
					is related, devoured part of his bed. The remaining son, Caius, on account of
					his vicious disposition, he resolved to appoint his successor on the throne,
					that, after his own death, a comparison might be made in favour of his own
					memory, when the Romans should be governed by a sovereign yet more vicious and
					more tyrannical, if possible, than himself.</p><p>Sejanus, the minister in the present reign, imitated with success, for some time,
					the hypocrisy of his master; and, had his ambitious temper, impatient of
					attaining its object, allowed him to wear the mask for a longer period, he might
					have gained the imperial diadem; in the pursuit of which he was overtaken by
					that fate which he merited still more by his cruelties than his perfidy to
					Tiberms. This man was a native of Volsinium in <placeName key="tgn,7009760">Tuscany</placeName>, and the son of a Roman knight. He had first insinuated
					himself into the favour of Caius Caesar, the grandson of Augustus, after whose
					death he courted the friendship of Tiberius, and obtained m a short time his
					entire confidence, which he improved to the best advantage. The object which he
					next pursued, was to gain the attachment of the senate, and the officers of the
					army; besides whom, with a new kind of policy, he endeavoured to secure in his
					interest every lady of distinguished connections, by giving secretly to each of
					them a promise of marriage, as soon as he should arrive at the sovereignty. The
					chief obstacles in his way were the sons and grandsons of Tiberius; and these he
					soon sacrificed to his ambition, under various pretences. Drusus, the eldest of
					this progeny, having in a fit of passion struck the favourite, was destined by
					him to destruction. For this purpose, he had the presumption to seduce Livia,
					the wife of Drusus, to whom she had borne several children; and she consented to
					marry her adulterer upon the death of her husband, who was soon after poisoned,
					through the means of an eunuch named Lygdus, by order of her and Sejanus. Drusus
					was the son of Tiberius by Vipsania, one of Agrippa's daughters. He displayed
					great intrepidity during the war m the provinces of <placeName key="tgn,7016683">Illyricum</placeName> and <placeName key="tgn,4008442">Pannonia</placeName>, but appears to have been dissolute in his morals.
						<placeName key="tgn,2399199">Horace</placeName> is said to have written the
					Ode in praise of Drusus at the desire of Augustus; and while the poet celebrates
					the military courage of the prince, he insinuates indirectly a salutary
					admonition to the cultivation of the civil virtues: <cit><quote xml:lang="lat"><l>Doctrina sed vim promovet insitam,</l><l>Rectique cultus pectora roborant:</l><l>Utcumque defecere mores,</l><l>Dedecorant bene nata culpae.</l></quote><bibl n="Hor. Carm. 4.4">Ode iv. 4.</bibl></cit>
					<cit><quote xml:lang="eng"><l>Yet sage instructions to refine the soul</l><l>And raise the genius, wondrous aid impart,</l><l>Conveying inward, as they purely roll,</l><l>Strength to the mind and vigour to the heart:</l><l>When mortals fail, the stains of vice disgrace</l><l>The fairest honours of the noblest race.</l></quote><bibl>Francis.</bibl></cit></p><p>Upon the death of Drusus, Sejanus openly avowed a desire of marrying the widowed
					princess; but Tiberius opposing this measure, and at the same time recommending
					Germanicus to the senate as his successor in the empire, the mind of Sejanus was
					more than ever inflamed by the united, and now furious, passions of love and
					ambition. He therefore urged his demand with increased importunity; but the
					emperor still refusing his consent, and things being not yet ripe for an
					immediate revolt, Sejanus thought nothing so favourable for the prosecution of
					his designs as the absence of Tiberius from the capital. With this view, under
					the pretence of relieving his master from the cares of government, he persuaded
					him to retire to a distance from <placeName key="tgn,7013962">Rome</placeName>.
					The emperor, indolent and luxurious, approved of the proposal, and retired into
						<placeName key="tgn,7003005">Campania</placeName>, leaving to his ambitious
					minister the whole direction of the empire. Had Sejanus now been governed by
					common prudence and moderation, he might have attained to the accomplishment of
					all his wishes; but a natural impetuosity of temper, and the intoxication of
					power, precipitated him into measures which soon effected his destruction. As if
					entirely emancipated from the control of a master, he publicly declared himself
					sovereign of the Roman empire, and that Tiberius, who had by this time retired
					to <placeName key="tgn,7006855">Capri</placeName>, was only the dependent prince
					of that tributary island. He even went so far in degrading the emperor, as to
					have him introduced in a ridiculous light upon the stage. Advice of Sejanus's
					proceedings was soon carried to the emperor at <placeName key="tgn,7006855">Capri</placeName>; his indignation was immediately excited; and with a
					confidence founded upon an authority exercised for several years, he sent orders
					for accusing Sejanus before the senate. This mandate no sooner arrived, than the
					audacious minister was deserted by his adherents; he was in a short time after
					seized without resistance, and strangled in prison the same day.</p><p>Human nature recoils with horror at the cruelties of this execrable tyrant, who,
					having first imbrued his hands in the blood of his own relations, proceeded to
					exercise them upon the public with indiscriminate fury. Neither age nor sex
					afforded any exemption from his insatiable thirst for blood. Innocent children
					were condemned to death, and butchered in the presence of their parents;
					virgins, without any imputed guilt, were sacrificed to a similar destiny; but
					there being an ancient custom of not strangling females in that situation, they
					were first deflowered by the executioner, and afterwards strangled, as if an
					atrocious addition to cruelty could sanction the exercise of it. Fathers were
					constrained by violence to witness the death of their own children; and even the
					tears of a mother, at the execution of her child, were punished as a capital
					offence. Some extraordinary calamities, occasioned by accident, added to the
					horrors of the reign. A great number of houses on Mount Ccelius were destroyed
					by fire; and by the fall of a temporary building at Fidenae, erected for the
					purpose of exhibiting public shows, about twenty thousand persons were either
					greatly hurt, or crushed to death in the ruins.</p><p>By another fire which afterwards broke out, a part of the Circus was destroyed,
					with the numerous buildings on Mgunt Aventine. The only act of munificence
					displayed by Tiberius during his reign, was upon the occasion of those fires,
					when, to qualify the severity of his government, he indemnified the most
					considerable sufferers for the loss they had sustained.</p><p>Through the whole of his life, Tiberius seems to have conducted himself with a
					uniform repugnance to nature. Affable on a few occasions, but in general averse
					to society, he indulged, from his earliest years, a moroseness of disposition,
					which counterfeited the appearance of austere virtue; and in the decline of
					life, wRien it is common to reform from juvenile indiscretions, he launched
					forth into excesses, of a kind the most.unnatural and most detestable.
					Considering the vicious passions which had ever brooded in his heart, it may
					seem surprising that he restrained himself within the bounds of decency during
					so many years after his accession; but though utterly destitute of reverence or
					affection for his mother, he still felt, during her life, a filial awe upon his
					mind: and after her death, ie was actuated by a slavish fear of Sejanus, until
					at last political necessity absolved him likewise from this restraint. These
					checks being both removed, he rioted without any control, either from sentiment
					or authority.</p><p><placeName key="tgn,2119609">Pliny</placeName> relates, that the art of making
					glass malleable was actually discovered under the reign of <placeName key="tgn,2720789">Tiberius</placeName>, and that the shop and tools of the
					artist were destroyed, lest, by the establishment of this invention, gold and
					silver should lose their value. Dion adds, that the author of the discovery was
					put to death.</p><p>The gloom which darkened the Roman capital during this melancholy period, shed a
					baleful influence on the progress of science throughout the empire, and
					literature languished during the present reign, in the same proportion as it:had
					flourished in the preceding. It is doubtful' whether such a change might not
					have happened in some degree, even had the government of Tiberius been equally
					mild with that of his predecessor. The prodigious fame of the writers of the
					Augustan age, by repressing emulation, tended to a general diminution of the
					efforts of genius for some time; while the banishment of <placeName key="tgn,2016081">Ovid</placeName>, it is probable, and the capital
					punishment of a subsequent poet, for censuring the character of Agamemnon,
					operated towards the farther discouragement of poetical exertions. There now
					existed no circumstance to counterbalance these disadvantages. Genius no longer
					found a patron either in the emperor or his minister; and the gates of the
					palace were shut against all who cultivated the elegant pursuits of the Muses.
					Panders, catamites, assassins, wretches stained with every crime, were the
					constant attendants, as the only fit companions, of the tyrant who now occupied
					the throne. We are informed, however, that even this emperor had a taste for the
					liberal arts, and that he composed a lyric poem upon the death of Lucius Caesar,
					with some Greek poems in imitation of Euphorion, Rhianus, and Parthenius. But
					none of these has been transmitted to posterity: and if we should form an
					opinion of them upon the principle of Catullus, that to be a good poet one ought
					to be a good man, there is little reason to regret that they have perished. </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>