<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.abo022.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" n="15" subtype="chapter"><p>His last victim was Flavius Clemens,<note anchored="true">See note to c.
						xvii.</note> his cousin-german, a man below contempt for his want of energy,
					whose sons, then of very tender age, he had avowedly destined for his
					successors, and, discarding their former names, had ordered one to be called
					Vespasian, and the other Domitian. Nevertheless, he suddenly put him to death
					upon some very slight suspicion, <note anchored="true">The guilt imputed to them
						was atheism and Jewish (Christian ?) manners. Dion lxvii. 1112. </note>
					almost before he was well out of his consulship. By this violent act he very
					much hastened his own destruction. During eight months together there was so
					much lightning at Rome, and such accounts of the phenomenon were brought from
					other parts, that at last he cried out, "Let him now strike whom he will." The
					Capitol was struck by lightning, as well as the temple of the Flavian family,
					with the Palatine-house, and his own bed-chamber. The tablet also, inscribed
					upon the base of his triumphal statue was carried away by the violence of the
					storm, and fell upon a neighbouring monument. The tree which just before the
					advancement of Vespasian had been prostrated, and rose again,<note anchored="true">See VESPASIAN c. v.</note> suddenly fell to the ground. The
					goddess Fortune of Praeneste, to whom it was his custom on new year's day to
					commend the empire for the ensuing year, and who had always given him a
					favourable reply, at last returned him a melancholy answer, not without mention
					of blood. He dreamt that Minerva, whom he worshipped even to a superstitious
					excess, was withdrawing from her sanctuary, declaring she could protect him no
					longer, because she was disarmed by Jupiter. Nothing, however, so much affected
					him as an answer given by Ascletario, the astrologer, and his subsequent fate.
					This person had been informed against, and did not deny his having predicted
					some future events, of which, from the principles of his art, he confessed he
					had a foreknowledge. Domitian asked him, what end he thought he should come to
					himself? To which replying, "I shall in a short time be torn to pieces by dogs,"
					he ordered him immediately to be slain, and, in order to demonstrate the vanity
					of his art, to be carefully buried. But during the preparations for executing
					this order, it happened that the funeral-pile was blown down by a sudden storm,
					and the body, halfburnt, was torn to pieces by dogs; which being observed by
					Latinus, the comic actor, as he chanced to pass that way, he told it, amongst
					the other news of the day, to the emperor at supper.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>