<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="3" subtype="chapter"><p>In the beginning of his reign, he used to spend daily an hour by himself in
					private, during which time he did nothing else but catch flies, and stick them
					through the body with a sharp pin. When some one therefore inquired, "whether
					any one was with the emperor," it was significantly answered by Vibius Crispus,
					"Not so much as a fly." Soon after his advancement, his wife Domitia, by whom he
					had a son in his second consulship, and whom the year following he complimented
					with the title of Augusta, being desperately in love with Paris, the actor, he
					put her away; but within a short time afterwards, being unable to bear the
					separation, he took her again, under pretence of complying with the people's
					importunity. During some time, there was in his administration a strange mixture
					of virtue and vice, until at last his virtues themselves degenerated into vices;
					being, as we may reasonably conjecture concerning his character, inclined to
					avarice through want, and to cruelty through fear.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="4" subtype="chapter"><p>He frequently entertained the people with most magnificent and costly shows, not
					only in the amphitheatre, but the circus; where, besides the usual races with
					chariots drawn by two or four horses a-breast, he exhibited the representation
					of an engagement between both horse and foot, and a sea-fight in the
					amphitheatre. The people were also entertained with the chase of wild beasts and
					the combat of gladiators, even in the night-time, by torch-light. Nor did men
					only fight in these spectacles, but women also. He constantly attended at the
					games given by the quaestors, which had been disused for some time, but were
					revived by him; and upon those occasions, always gave the people the liberty"of
					demanding two pair of gladiators out of his own school, who appeared last in
					court uniforms. Whenever he attended the shows of gladiators, there stood at his
					feet a little boy dressed in scarlet, with a prodigiously small head, with whom
					he used to talk very much, and sometimes seriously. We are assured, that he was
					overheard asking him, "if he knew for what reason he had in the late
					appointment, made Metius Rufus governor of Egypt?" He presented the people with
					naval fights, performed by fleets almost as numerous as those usually employed
					in real engagements; making a vast lake near the Tiber,<note anchored="true">Such excavations had been made by Julius and by Augustus [AUG. xliii.], and
						the seats for the spectators fitted up with timber in a rude way. That was
						on the other side of the Tiber. The Naumachia of Domitian occupied the site
						of the present Piazza d'Espagna, and was larger and more ornamented. </note>
					and building seats round it. And he witnessed them himself during a very heavy
					rain. He likewise celebrated the Secular games, <note anchored="true">A. U. C.
						841. See AUGUSTUS, c. xxxi. </note> reckoning not from the year in which
					they had been exhibited by Claudius, but from the time of Augustus's celebration
					of them. In these, upon the day of the Circensian sports, in order to have a
					hundred races performed, he reduced each course from seven rounds to five., He
					likewise instituted, in honour of Jupiter Capitolinus, a solemn contest in music
					to be performed every five years; besides horse-racing and gymnastic exercises,
					with more prizes than are at present allowed. There was also a public
					performance in elocution, both Greek and Latin; and besides the musicians who
					sung to the harp, there were others who played concerted pieces or solos,
					without vocal accompaniment. Young girls also ran races in the Stadium, at which
					he presided in his sandals, dressed in a purple robe. made after the Grecian
					fashion, and wearing upon his head a golden crown bearing the effigies of
					Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva; with the flamen of Jupiter, and the college of
					priests sitting by his side in the same dress; excepting only that their crowns
					had also his own image on them. He celebrated also upon the Alban mount every
					year the festival of Minerva, for whom he had appointed a college of priests,
					out of which were chosen by lot persons to preside as governors over the
					college; who were obliged to entertain the people with extraordinary chases of
					wildbeasts, and stage-plays, besides contests for prizes in oratory and poetry.
					He thrice bestowed upon the people largess of three hundred sesterces each man;
					and, at a public show of gladiators, a very plentiful feast. At the festival of
					the Seven Hills, <note anchored="true">This feast was held in December. Plutarch
						informs us that it was instituted in commemoration of the seventh hill being
						included in the city bounds. </note> he distributed large hampers of
					provisions to the senatorian and equestrian orders, and small baskets to the
					common people, and encouraged them to eat by setting them the example. The day
					after, he scattered among the people a variety of cakes and other delicacies to
					be scrambled for; and on the greater part of them falling amidst the seats of
					the crowd, he ordered five hundred tickets to be thrown into each range of
					benches belonging to the senatorian and equestrian orders.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="5" subtype="chapter"><p>He rebuilt many noble edifices which had been destroyed by fire, and amongst them
					the Capitol, which had been burnt down a second time; <note anchored="true">The
						Capitol had been burnt, for the third time, in the great fire mentioned
						TITUS, c. viii. The first fire happened in the Marian war, after which it
						was rebuilt by Pompey, the second in the reign of Vitellius. </note> but all
					the inscriptions were in his own name, without the least mention of the original
					founders. He likewise erected a new temple in the Capitol to Jupiter Custos, and
					a forum,<note anchored="true">This forum, commenced by Domitian and completed by
						Nerva, adjoined the Roman forum and that of Augustus, mentioned in c. xxix.
						of his life. From its communicating with the two others, it was called
						Transitorium. Part of the wall which bounded it still remains, of a great
						height, and 144 paces long. It is composed of square masses of freestone,
						very large, and without any cement; and it is not carried in a straight
						line, but makes three or four angles, as if some buildings had interfered
						with its direction.</note> which is now called Nerva's, as also the temple
					of the Flavian family,<note anchored="true">The residence of the Flavian family
						was converted into a temple. See c. i. of the present book.</note> a
					stadium, <note anchored="true">The Stadium was in the shape of a circus, and
						used for races both of men and hotses. </note> an odeum, <note anchored="true">The Odeum was a building intended for musical performances.
						There were four of them at Rome. </note> and a naumachia;<note anchored="true">See before, c. iv.</note> out of the stone dug from which,
					the sides of the Circus Maximus, which had been burnt down, were rebuilt.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>