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The Histories
by
Publius Cornelius Tacitus
Tacitus - Introduction
Book 3 - (September - December, A.D. 69)
[3.1] UNDER happier auspices and in a
more loyal spirit the Flavianist leaders were discussing the plans of the
campaign. They had assembled at Petovio, the winter-quarters of the 13th
legion. There they debated, whether they should blockade the passes of
the Pannonian Alps till the whole strength of their party should be gathered
in their rear, or whether it would be the more vigorous policy to close
with the enemy, and to contend for the possession of Italy. Those who thought
it advisable to wait for reinforcements, and to protract the campaign,
dwelt on the strength and reputation of the German legions. "Vitellius,"
they said, "has now joined them with the flower of the British army.
Our numbers are not even equal to those of the legions whom they lately
defeated; and the conquered, let them talk as fiercely as they will, lose
something of their courage. But, if we occupy meanwhile the passes of the
Alps, Mucianus will come up with the forces of the East. Vespasian has
in addition the command of the sea, his fleets, and provinces loyal to
his cause, in which he may collect the vast materials for what may be called
another war. A salutary delay will bring us new forces, while we shall
lose nothing of what we have."
[3.2] In answer to this, Antonius Primus,
who was the most energetic promoter of the war, declared that prompt action
would be advantageous to themselves, and fatal to Vitellius. "Supineness,"
he said, "rather than confidence has grown upon the conquerors. They
are not even kept under arms or within camps. In every town of Italy, sunk
in sloth, formidable only to their entertainers, they have drunk of unaccustomed
pleasures with an eagerness equal to the rudeness of their former life.
They have been emasculated by the circus, the theatre, and the allurements
of the capital, or they are worn out with sickness. Yet even to these men,
if you give them time, their old vigour will return with the preparation
for war. Germany, whence their strength is drawn, is faraway; Britain is
separated only by a strait; the provinces of Gaul and Spain are near; on
either side they can find troops, horses, tribute; they have Italy itself,
and the resources of the capital, and, should they choose themselves to
take the offensive, they have two fleets, and the Illyrian sea open to
them. What good then will our mountain-passes do us? What will be the use
of having protracted the war into another summer? Where are we to find
in the meanwhile money and supplies? Why not rather avail ourselves of
the fact that the legions of Pannonia, which were cheated rather than vanquished,
are hastening to rise again for vengeance, and that the armies of Moesia
have brought us their unimpaired strength? If you reckon the number of
soldiers, rather than that of legions, we have greater strength, and no
vices, for our very humiliation has been most helpful to our discipline.
As for the cavalry, they were not vanquished even on that day; though the
fortune of war was against them, they penetrated the Vitellianist lines.
Two squadrons of Moesian and Pannonian cavalry then broke through the enemy;
now the united standards of sixteen squadrons will bury and overwhelm with
the crash and din and storm of their onset these horses and horsemen that
have forgotten how to fight. Unless any one hinders me, I who suggest will
execute the plan. You, whose fortune never suffered a reverse, may keep
back the legions; the light cohorts will be enough for me. Before long
you will hear that Italy has been opened, and the power of Vitellius shaken.
You will be delighted to follow, and to tread in the footsteps of victory."
[3.3] With flashing eyes, and in the
fierce tones that might be most widely heard (for the centurions and some
of the common soldiers had intruded themselves into the deliberations),
he poured out such a torrent of these and similar words, that he carried
away even the cautious and prudent, while the general voice of the multitude
extolled him as the one man, the one general in the army, and spurned the
inaction of the others. He had raised this reputation for himself at the
very first assembly, when, after Vespasian's letters had been read, he
had not, like many, used ambiguous language, on which he might put this
or that construction as might serve his purpose. It was seen that he openly
committed himself to the cause, and he had therefore greater weight with
the soldiers, as being associated with them in what was either their crime
or their glory.
[3.4] Next to Primus in influence was
Cornelius Fuscus, the procurator. He also had been accustomed to inveigh
mercilessly against Vitellius, and had thus left himself no hope in the
event of defeat. T. Ampius Flavianus, disposed to caution by natural temperament
and advanced years, excited in the soldiers a suspicion that he still remembered
his relationship to Vitellius; and as he had fled when the movement in
the legions began, and had then voluntarily returned, it was believed that
he had sought an opportunity for treachery. Flavianus indeed had left Pannonia,
and had entered Italy, and was out of the way of danger, when his desire
for revolution urged him to resume the title of Legate, and to take part
in the civil strife. Cornelius Fuscus had advised him to this course, not
that he needed the talents of Flavianus, but wishing that a consular name
might clothe with its high prestige the very first movements of the party.
[3.5] Still, that the passage into Italy
might be safe and advantageous, directions were sent to Aponius Saturninus
to hasten up with the armies of Moesia. That the provinces might not be
exposed without defence to the barbarian tribes, the princes of the Sarmatae
Iazyges, who had in their hands the government of that nation, were enrolled
in the army. These chiefs also offered the service of their people, and
its force of cavalry, their only effective troops; but the offer was declined,
lest in the midst of civil strife they should attempt some hostile enterprise,
or, influenced by higher offers from other quarters, should cast off all
sense of right and duty. Sido and Italicus, kings of the Suevi, were brought
over to the cause. Their loyalty to the Roman people was of long standing,
and their nation was more faithful than the other to any trust reposed
in them. On the flank of the army were posted some auxiliaries, for Rhaetia
was hostile, Portius Septimius, the procurator, remaining incorruptibly
faithful to Vitellius. Accordingly, Sextilius Felix with Aurius' Horse,
eight cohorts, and the native levies of Noricum, was sent to occupy the
bank of the river Aenus, which flows between Rhaetia and Noricum. Neither
hazarded an engagement, and the fate of the two parties was decided elsewhere.
[3.6] Antonius, as he hurried with the
veteran soldiers of the cohorts and part of the cavalry to invade Italy,
was accompanied by Arrius Varus, an energetic soldier. Service under Corbulo,
and successes in Armenia, had gained for him this reputation; yet it was
generally said, that in secret conversations with Nero he had calumniated
Corbulo's high qualities. The favour thus infamously acquired made him
a centurion of the first rank, yet the ill-gotten prosperity of the moment
afterwards turned to his destruction. Primus and Varus, having occupied
Aquileia, were joyfully welcomed in the neighbourhood, and in the towns
of Opitergium and Altinum. At Altinum a force was left to oppose the Ravenna
fleet, the defection of which from Vitellius was not yet known. They next
attached to their party Patavium and Ateste. There they learnt that three
cohorts, belonging to Vitellius, and the Sebonian Horse had taken up a
position at the Forum Alieni, where they had thrown a bridge across the
river. It was determined to seize the opportunity of attacking this force,
unprepared as it was; for this fact had likewise been communicated. Coming
upon them at dawn, they killed many before they could arm. Orders had been
given to slay but few, and to constrain the rest by fear to transfer their
allegiance. Some indeed at once surrendered, but the greater part broke
down the bridge, and thus cut off the advance of the pursuing enemy.
[3.7] When this success became known,
two legions, the seventh (Galba's) and the eighteenth (the Gemina), finding
the campaign opening in favour of the Flavianists, repaired with alacrity
to Patavium under the command of Vedius Aquila the legate. A few days were
there taken for rest, and Minucius Justus, prefect of the camp in the 7th
legion, who ruled with more strictness than a civil war will permit, was
withdrawn from the exasperated soldiery, and sent to Vespasian. An act
that had been long desired was taken by a flattering construction for more
than it was worth, when Antonius gave orders that the statues of Galba,
which had been thrown down during the troubles of the times, should be
restored in all the towns. It would, he supposed, reflect honour on the
cause, if it were thought that they had been friendly to Galba's rule,
and that his party was again rising into strength.
[3.8] The next question was, what place
should be selected as the seat of war. Verona seemed the most eligible,
surrounded as it was with open plains, suitable for the action of cavalry,
in which they were very strong. At the same time it was thought that in
wresting from Vitellius a colony so rich in resources there would be both
profit and glory. They secured Vicetia by simply passing through it. Though
in itself a small gain, for the town is but of moderate strength, it was
considered an important advantage when they reflected that in this town
Caecina was born, and that the general of the enemy had lost his native
place. The people of Verona were a valuable aid; they served the cause
by the example of their zeal and by their wealth, and the army thus occupied
a position between Rhaetia and the Julian Alps. It was to cut off all passage
at this point from the armies of Germany that they had barred this route.
All this was done either without the knowledge, or against the commands
of Vespasian. He gave orders that the army should halt at Aquileia and
there await Mucianus; and these orders he supported by the argument, that
as Aegypt, which commanded the corn supplies, and the revenues of the wealthiest
provinces were in his hands, the army of Vitellius would be compelled to
capitulate from the want of pay and provisions. Mucianus in frequent letters
advised the same policy; a victory that should cost neither blood nor tears,
and other objects of the kind, were his pretexts; but in truth he was greedy
of glory, and anxious to keep the whole credit of the war to himself. Owing,
however, to the vast distances, the advice came only after the matter was
decided.
[3.9] Then Antonius by a sudden movement
fell upon the outposts of the enemy, and made trial of their courage in
a slight skirmish, the combatants separating on equal terms. Soon afterwards,
Caecina strongly fortified a camp between Hostilia, a village belonging
to Verona, and the marshes of the river Tartarus, where his position was
secure, as his rear was covered by the river, and his flank by intervening
marshes. Had he only been loyal, those two legions, which had not been
joined by the army of Moesia, might have been crushed by the united strength
of the Vitellianists, or driven back and compelled to evacuate Italy in
a disgraceful retreat. Caecina, however, by various delays betrayed to
the enemy the early opportunities of the campaign, assailing by letters
those whom it was easy to drive out by force of arms, until by his envoys
he settled the conditions of his treachery. In this interval Aponius Saturninus
came up with the 7th legion (Claudius'). This legion was commanded by the
tribune Vipstanus Messalla, a man of illustrious family, himself highly
distinguished, the only man who had brought into that conflict an honest
purpose. To this army, which was far from equalling the forces of Vitellius
(it in fact consisted of three legions), Caecina despatched a letter reproaching
them with rashness in again drawing the sword in a vanquished cause. At
the same time he extolled the valour of the German army; of Vitellius he
made but some slight and common-place mention without any abuse of Vespasian.
Certainly he said nothing which could either seduce or terrify the enemy.
The leaders of the Flavianist party, omitting all apology for their former
fortune, at once took up a tone of high praise of Vespasian, of confidence
in their cause, of security as to their army, and of hostility to Vitellius,
while hopes were held out to the tribunes and centurions of retaining the
privileges which Vitellius had granted them, and Caecina was himself encouraged
in no ambiguous terms to change sides. These letters read to the assembled
army increased their confidence; for Caecina had written in a humble strain,
as if he feared to offend Vespasian, while their own generals had used
contemptuous language, meant, it would seem, to insult Vitellius.
[3.10] On the subsequent arrival of
two legions, the third commanded by Dillius Aponianus, the eighth by Numisius
Lupus, it was resolved to make a demonstration of their strength, and to
surround Verona with military lines. It so happened that Galba's legion
had had their work allotted to them on that side the lines which faced
the enemy, and that some of the allied cavalry appearing in the distance
were taken for the enemy, and excited a groundless panic. They flew to
arms, and as the rage of the soldiers at the supposed treachery fell upon
T. Ampius Flavianus, not from any proof of his guilt, but because he had
been long unpopular, they clamoured for his death in a very whirlwind of
passion, vociferating that he was the kinsman of Vitellius, that he had
betrayed Otho, that he had embezzled the donative. He could get no opportunity
of defending himself, even though he stretched out his hands in entreaty,
repeatedly prostrating himself on the ground, his garments torn, his breast
and features convulsed with sobs. This very conduct provoked afresh these
furious men, for fear so excessive seemed to argue a consciousness of guilt.
Aponius was clamoured down by the shouts of the soldiers, when he attempted
to address them; every one else was repulsed with noisy cries. To Antonius
alone the soldiers' ears were open; for he had eloquence, the art of soothing
an angry crowd, and personal influence. As the mutiny grew fiercer, and
the soldiers went on from abuse and taunts to use their hands and their
weapons, he ordered that Flavianus should be put in irons. The soldiers
saw what a mockery it was, and pushing aside those who were guarding the
tribunal, were about to commit the most outrageous violence. Antonius threw
himself in the way with his sword drawn, protesting that he would die either
by the soldiers' hands or by his own; whenever he saw any one who was known
to him, or who was distinguished by any military decoration, he summoned
him by name to his assistance. Then he turned to the standards, and prayed
to the gods of war, that they would inspire the armies of the enemy, rather
than his own, with such madness and such strife. So the mutiny began to
abate, and at the close of the day the men dispersed to their tents. The
same night Flavianus set out, and being met by letters from Vespasian,
was relieved from his perilous position.
[3.11] The legions had caught the infection
of mutiny, and next assailed Aponius Saturnius, legate of the army of Moesia,
this time the more furiously because their rage broke out, not as before,
when they were wearied with labour and military toils, but at mid-day.
Some letters had been published, which Saturninus was believed to have
written to Vitellius. If once they had emulated each other in valour and
obedience, so now there was a rivalry in insubordination and insolence,
till they clamoured as violently for the execution of Aponius as they had
for that of Flavianus. The legions of Moesia recalled how they had aided
the vengeance of the Pannonian army, while the soldiers of Pannonia, as
if they were absolved by the mutiny of others, took a delight in repeating
their fault. They hastened to the gardens in which Saturninus was passing
his time, and it was not the efforts of Primus Antonius, Aponianus, and
Messalla, though they exerted themselves to the uttermost, that saved him,
so much as the obscurity of the hiding-place in which he concealed himself,
for he was hidden in the furnace of some baths that happened to be out
of use. In a short time he gave up his lictors, and retired to Patavium.
After the departure of the two men of consular rank, all power and authority
over the two armies centred in Antonius alone, his colleagues giving way
to him, and the soldiers being strongly biased in his favour. There were
those who believed that both these mutinies were set on foot by the intrigues
of Antonius, in order that he might engross all the prizes of the war.
[3.12] Nor indeed was there less restlessness
among the partisans of Vitellius, who were distracted by yet more fatal
dissensions, springing, not from the suspicions of the common men, but
from the treachery of the generals. Lucilius Bassus, prefect of the Ravenna
fleet, finding that the troops wavered in purpose, from the fact that many
were natives of Dalmatia and Pannonia, provinces held for Vespasian, had
attached them to the Flavianist party. The night-time was chosen for accomplishing
the treason, because then, unknown to all the rest, the ringleaders alone
might assemble at head-quarters. Bassus, moved by shame, or perhaps by
fear, awaited the issue in his house. The captains of the triremes rushed
with a great outcry on the images of Vitellius; a few, who attempted to
resist, were cut down; the great majority, with the usual love of change,
were ready to join Vespasian. Then Bassus came forward and openly sanctioned
the movement. The fleet appointed Cornelius Fuscus to be prefect, and he
hastened to join them. Lucilius was put under honourable arrest, and conveyed
as far as Adria by the Liburnian ships; there he was thrown into prison
by Vivennius Rufinus, prefect of a squadron of cavalry, which was there
in garrison. His chains, however, were immediately struck off on the interference
of Hormus, one of the Emperor's freedmen, for he too ranked among the generals.
[3.13] On the revolt of the fleet becoming
known, Caecina called together to head-quarters, which he purposely selected
as being the most retired part of the camp, the chief centurions and some
few soldiers, while the rest were dispersed on various military duties.
Then he extolled the valour of Vespasian, and the strength of his party;
he told them that the fleet had changed sides, that they were straitened
for supplies, that Gaul and Spain were against them, that in the capital
there was nothing on which to rely, thus making the worst of everything
that concerned Vitellius. Then, the conspirators present setting the example,
and the rest being paralysed by the strangeness of the proceeding, he made
them swear allegiance to Vespasian. At the same time the images of Vitellius
were torn down, and persons were despatched to convey the intelligence
to Antonius. But when this treason became noised abroad throughout the
camp, when the soldiers, hurrying back to head-quarters, saw the name of
Vespasian written on the colours, and the images of Vitellius thrown upon
the ground, first there was a gloomy silence, then all their rage burst
out at once. "What," they cried, "has the glory of the army
of Germany fallen so low, that without a battle, even without a wound,
they should yield up hands ready bound and arms resigned to surrender?
What legions indeed are these against us? Only the conquered. The first
and the twelfth, the sole strength of the Othonianist army, are not there,
and even them we routed and crushed on these very plains, only that so
many thousands of armed men, like a herd of slaves for sale, might be given
as a present to the exile Antonius. Thus, forsooth, the adhesion of one
fleet would be worth eight legions. So it pleases Bassus and Caecina, after
robbing the Emperor of palaces, gardens, and money, to rob the soldiers
of their Emperor. But we, who have seen nothing of toil and bloodshed,
we, who must be contemptible even to the Flavianists, what shall we answer
to those who shall ask us of our victories and our defeats?"
[3.14] Joining one and all in these
cries, by which each expressed his own vexation, they proceeded, following
the lead of the fifth legion, to replace the images of Vitellius, and to
put Caecina in irons. They elected to the command Fabius Fabullus, legate
of the fifth legion, and Cassius Longus, prefect of the camp; they massacred
the soldiers from three Liburnian ships, who happened to fall in their
way, but who were perfectly ignorant and innocent of these proceedings;
they then abandoned the camp, and, after breaking down the bridge, fell
back on Hostilia, and thence on Cremona, in order to effect a junction
with the two legions, the 1st Italica and the 21st Rapax, which, with a
portion of the cavalry, Caecina had sent on to occupy Cremona.
[3.15] On this becoming known to Antonius,
he determined to attack the hostile armies, while they were still distracted
in feeling and divided in strength, before the generals could recover their
authority, and the soldiers their subordination along with that confidence
which would spring from the junction of the legions. He concluded indeed
that Fabius Valens had left the capital, and would hasten his march, on
hearing of the treason of Caecina; and Fabius was loyal to Vitellius, and
not without some military skill. At the same time he dreaded the approach
of a vast body of Germans by way of Rhaetia. Vitellius had also summoned
reinforcements from Britain, Gaul, and Spain, whose arms would have wasted
like a wide-spread pestilence, had not Antonius, fearful of this very danger,
hurried on an engagement, and thus secured his victory. He reached Bedriacum
with his whole army in two days' march from Verona. The next day, keeping
the legions to fortify the position, he sent the auxiliary infantry into
the territories of Cremona, ostensibly to collect supplies, really to imbue
the soldiery with a taste for the spoils of civil war. He himself advanced
with 4000 cavalry as far as the 8th milestone from Bedriacum, in order
that they might plunder with greater freedom. The scouts, as usual, took
a wider range.
[3.16] It was almost eleven o'clock,
when a horseman arrived at full speed with the news, that the enemy were
approaching, that a small body was moving in front, but that the stir and
noise could be heard far and wide. While Antonius was deliberating as to
what was to be done, Arrius Varus, eager to do his best, charged with the
bravest of the cavalry, and drove back the Vitellianists, inflicting upon
them some slight loss; as more came up, the fortune of the day changed,
and those who had been most eager in the pursuit found themselves last
in the flight. This rash act did not originate with Antonius; he anticipated
in fact what actually happened. He now urged his soldiers to enter on the
battle with a good heart; he then drew off the squadrons of his cavalry
to the two flanks, leaving in the midst an open space in which to receive
Varus and his troopers; the legions were ordered to arm themselves, signals
were made over the country that every man should leave plundering, and
join the battle at the nearest point. Meanwhile the terror-stricken Varus
plunged into the disordered ranks of his friends, and brought a panic with
him. The fresh troops were driven back along with the wounded fugitives,
confused by their own alarm and by the difficulties of the road.
[3.17] In the midst of this panic Antonius
omitted nothing that a self-possessed commander or a most intrepid soldier
could do. He threw himself before the terrified fugitives, he held back
those who were giving way, and wherever the struggle was hardest, wherever
there was a gleam of hope, there he was with his ready skill, his bold
hand, his encouraging voice, easily recognized by the enemy, and a conspicuous
object to his own men. At last he was carried to such a pitch of excitement,
that he transfixed with a lance a flying standard bearer, and then, seizing
the standard, turned it towards the enemy. Touched by the reproach, a few
troopers, not more than a hundred in number, made a stand. The locality
favoured them, for the road was at that point particularly narrow, while
the bridge over the stream which crossed it had been broken down, and the
stream itself, with its varying channel and its precipitous banks, checked
their flight. It was this necessity, or a happy chance, that restored the
fallen fortunes of the party. Forming themselves into strong and close
ranks, they received the attack of the Vitellianists, who were now imprudently
scattered. These were at once overthrown. Antonius pursued those that fled,
and crushed those that encountered him. Then came the rest of his troops,
who, as they were severally disposed, plundered, made prisoners, or seized
on weapons and horses. Roused by the shouts of triumph, those who had lately
been scattered in flight over the fields hastened to share in the victory.
[3.18] At the fourth milestone from
Cremona glittered the standards of two legions, the Italica and the Rapax,
which had been advanced as far as that point during the success achieved
by the first movement of their cavalry. But when fortune changed, they
would not open their ranks, nor receive the fugitives, nor advance and
themselves attack an enemy now exhausted by so protracted a pursuit and
conflict. Vanquished by accident, these men had never in their success
valued their general as much as they now in disaster felt his absence.
The victorious cavalry charged the wavering line; the tribune Vipstanus
Messalla followed with the auxiliary troops from Moesia, whom, though hurriedly
brought up, long service had made as good soldiers as the legionaries.
The horse and foot, thus mixed together, broke through the line of the
legions. The near neighbourhood of the fortifications of Cremona, while
it gave more hope of escape, diminished the vigour of their resistance.
[3.19] Antonius did not press forward,
for he thought of the fatigue and the wounds with which a battle so hard
fought, notwithstanding its successful termination, must have disabled
his cavalry and their horses. As the shadows of evening deepened the whole
strength of the Flavianist army came up. They advanced amid heaps of dead
and the traces of recent slaughter, and, as if the war was over, demanded
that they should advance to Cremona, and receive the capitulation of the
vanquished party, or take the place by storm. This was the motive alleged,
and it sounded well, but what every one said to himself was this: "The
colony, situated as it is on level ground, may be taken by assault. If
we attack under cover of darkness, we shall be at least as bold, and shall
enjoy more licence in plunder. If we wait for the light, we shall be met
with entreaties for peace, and in return for our toil and our wounds shall
receive only the empty satisfaction of clemency and praise, but the wealth
of Cremona will go into the purses of the legates and the prefects. The
soldiers have the plunder of a city that is stormed, the generals of one
which capitulates." The centurions and tribunes were spurned away;
that no man's voice might be heard, the troops clashed their weapons together,
ready to break through all discipline, unless they were led as they wished.
[3.20] Antonius then made his way into
the companies. When his presence and personal authority had restored silence,
he declared, "I would not snatch their glory or their reward from
those who have deserved them so well. Yet there is a division of duties
between the army and its generals. Eagerness for battle becomes the soldiers,
but generals serve the cause by forethought, by counsel, by delay oftener
than by temerity. As I promoted your victory to the utmost of my power
by my sword and by my personal exertions, so now I must help you by prudence
and by counsel, the qualities which belong peculiarly to a general. What
you will have to encounter is indeed perfectly plain. There will be the
darkness, the strange localities of the town, the enemy inside the walls,
and all possible facilities for ambuscades. Even if the gates were wide
open, we ought not to enter the place, except we had first reconnoitred
it, and in the day-time. Shall we set about storming the town when we have
no means seeing where the ground is level, what is the height of the walls,
whether the city is to be assailed by our artillery and javelins, or by
siege-works and covered approaches?" He then turned to individual
soldiers, asking them whether they had brought with them their axes and
spades and whatever else is used when towns are to be stormed. On their
admitting that they had not done so, "Can any hands," he answered,
"break through and undermine walls with swords and lances? And if
it should be found necessary to throw up an embankment and to shelter ourselves
under mantlets and hurdles, shall we stand baffled like a thoughtless mob,
marvelling at the height of the towers and at the enemy's defences? Shall
we not rather, by delaying one night, till our artillery and engines come
up, take with us a strength that must prevail?" At the same time he
sent the sutlers and camp-followers with the freshest of the cavalry to
Bedriacum to fetch supplies and whatever else they needed.
[3.21] The soldiers, however, were impatient,
and a mutiny had almost broken out, when some cavalry, who had advanced
to the very walls of Cremona, seized some stragglers from the town, from
whose information it was ascertained, that the six legions of Vitellius
and the entire army which had been quartered at Hostilia had on that very
day marched a distance of thirty miles, and having heard of the defeat
of their comrades, were preparing for battle, and would soon be coming
up. This alarm opened the ears that had before been deaf to their general's
advice. The 13th legion was ordered to take up its position on the raised
causeway of the Via Postumia, supported on the left by the 7th (Galba's)
which was posted in the plain, next came the 7th (Claudius'), defended
in front by a field-ditch, such being the character of the ground. On the
right was the 8th legion, drawn up in an open space, and then the 3rd,
whose ranks were divided by some thick brushwood. Such was the arrangement
of the eagles and the standards. The soldiers were mingled in the darkness
as accident had determined. The Praetorian colours were close to the 3rd
legion; the auxiliary infantry were stationed on the wings; the cavalry
covered the flanks and the rear. Sido and Italicus, the Suevian chieftains,
with a picked body of their countrymen, manoeuvred in the van.
[3.22] It would have been the best policy
for the army of Vitellius to rest at Cremona, and, with strength recruited
by food and repose, to attack and crush the next day an enemy exhausted
by cold and hunger; but now, wanting a leader, and having no settled plan,
they came into collision about nine o'clock at night with the Flavianist
troops, who stood ready, and in order of battle. Respecting the disposition
of the Vitellianist army, disordered as it was by its fury and by the darkness,
I would not venture to speak positively. Some, however, have related, that
on the right wing was the 4th legion (the Macedonian); that the 5th and
15th, with the veterans of three British legions (the 9th, 2nd, and 20th),
formed the centre, while the left wing was made up of the 1st, the 16th,
and the 22nd. Men of the legions Rapax and Italica were mingled with all
the companies. The cavalry and the auxiliaries chose their position themselves.
Throughout the night the battle raged in many forms, indecisive and fierce,
destructive, first to one side, then to the other. Courage, strength, even
the eye with its keenest sight, were of no avail. Both armies fought with
the same weapons; the watch-word, continually asked, became known; the
colours were confused together, as parties of combatants snatched them
from the enemy, and hurried them in this or that direction. The 7th legion,
recently levied by Galba, was the hardest pressed. Six centurions of the
first rank were killed, and some of the standards taken; but the eagle
was saved by Atilius Verus, the centurion of the first company, who, after
making a great slaughter among the enemy, at last fell.
[3.23] The line was supported, as it
began to waver, by Antonius, who brought up the Praetorians. They took
up the conflict, repulsed the enemy, and were then themselves repulsed.
The troops of Vitellius had collected their artillery on the raised causeway,
where there was a free and open space for the discharge of the missiles,
which at first had been scattered at random, and had struck against the
trees without injury to the enemy. An engine of remarkable size, belonging
to the 15th legion, was crushing the hostile ranks with huge stones, and
would have spread destruction far and wide, had not two soldiers ventured
on a deed of surpassing bravery. Disguising themselves with shields snatched
from the midst of the carnage, they cut the ropes and springs of the engine.
They were instantly slain, and their names have consequently been lost;
but the fact is undoubted. Fortune favoured neither side, till at a late
hour of the night the moon rose and showed, but showed deceptively, both
armies. The light, however, shining from behind, favoured the Flavianists.
With them a lengthened shadow fell from men and horses, and the enemy's
missiles, incorrectly aimed at what seemed the substance, fell short, while
the Vitellianists, who had the light shining on their faces, were unconsciously
exposed to an enemy who were, so to speak, concealed while they aimed.
[3.24] As soon as Antonius could recognize
his men and be recognized by them, he sought to kindle their courage, striving
to shame some with his reproaches, stirring many with praise and encouragement,
and all with hopes and promises. "Why," he demanded of the legions
of Pannonia, "have you again taken up arms? Yonder is the field where
you may wipe out the stain of past disgrace, and redeem your honour."
Then turning to the troops of Moesia, he appealed to them as the authors
and originators of the war. "Idly," he said "have you challenged
the Vitellianists with threatening words, if you cannot abide their attack
or even their looks." So he spoke to each as he approached them. The
third legion he addressed at greater length, reminding them of old and
recent achievements, how under Marcus Antonius they had defeated the Parthians,
under Corbulo the Armenians, and had lately discomfited the Sarmatians.
Then angrily turning to the Praetorians, "Clowns," said he, "unless
you are victorious, what other general, what other camp will receive you?
There are your colours and your arms; defeat is death, for disgrace you
have exhausted." A shout was raised on all sides, and the soldiers
of the third legion saluted, as is the custom in Syria, the rising sun.
[3.25] A vague rumour thus arose, or
was intentionally suggested by the general, that Mucianus had arrived,
and that the two armies had exchanged salutations. The men then charged
as confidently as if they had been strengthened by fresh reinforcements,
while the enemy's array was now less compact; for, as there was no one
to command, it was now contracted, now extended, as the courage or fear
of individual soldiers might prompt. Antonius, seeing that they gave way,
charged them with a heavy column; the loose ranks were at once broken,
and, entangled as they were among their wagons and artillery, could not
be re-formed. The conquerors, in the eagerness of pursuit, dispersed themselves
over the entire line of road. The slaughter that followed was made particularly
memorable through the murder of a father by his son. I will record the
incident with the names, on the authority of Vipstanus Messalla. Julius
Mansuetus, a Spaniard, enlisting in the legion Rapax, had left at home
a son of tender age. The lad grew up to manhood, and was enrolled by Galba
in the 7th legion. Now chancing to meet his father, he brought him to the
ground with a wound, and, as he rifled his dying foe, recognized him, and
was himself recognized. Clasping the expiring man in his arms, in piteous
accents he implored the spirit of his father to be propitious to him, and
not to turn from him with loathing as from a parricide. "This guilt,"
he said, "is shared by all; how small a part of a civil war is a single
soldier!" With these words he raised the body, opened a grave, and
discharged the last duties for his father. This was noticed by those who
were on the spot, then by many others; astonishment and indignation ran
through the whole army, and they cursed this most horrible war. Yet as
eagerly as ever they stripped the bodies of slaughtered kinsfolk, connexions,
and brothers. They talk of an impious act having been done, and they do
it themselves.
[3.26] When they reached Cremona a fresh
work of vast difficulty presented itself. During the war with Otho the
legions of Germany had formed their camp round the walls of the city, round
this camp had drawn an entrenchment, and had again strengthened these defences.
At this sight the victorious army hesitated, while the generals doubted
what orders they should give. To attempt an assault with troops exhausted
by the toil of a day and a night would be difficult, and with no proper
reserves might be perilous. Should they return to Bedriacum, the fatigue
of so long a march would be insupportable, and their victory would result
in nothing. To entrench a camp with the enemy so close at hand would be
dangerous, as by a sudden sortie they might cause confusion among them
while dispersed and busied with the work. Above all, they were afraid of
their soldiers, who were more patient of danger than delay. Cautious measures
they disliked; their rashness inspired them with hope, and eagerness for
plunder outweighed all the horrors of carnage, wounds, and bloodshed.
[3.27] Antonius himself was this way
inclined, and he ordered the entrenched camp to be invested. At first they
fought from a distance with arrows and stones, the Flavianists suffering
most, as the enemy's missiles were aimed at them from a superior height.
Antonius then assigned to each legion the attack on some portion of the
entrenchments, and on one particular gate, seeking by this division of
labour to distinguish the cowardly from the brave, and to stimulate his
men by an honourable rivalry. The 3rd and 7th legions took up a position
close to the road from Bedriacum; more to the right of the entrenchments
were stationed the 8th and the 7th (Claudius'). The 13th were carried by
the impetuosity of their attack as far as the gate looking towards Brixia.
There ensued a little delay, while from the neighbouring fields some were
collecting spades and pickaxes, others hooks and ladders. Then raising
their shields over their heads, they advanced to the rampart in a dense
"testudo." Both used the arts of Roman warfare; the Vitellianists
rolled down ponderous stones, and drove spears and long poles into the
broken and tottering "testudo," till the dense array of shields
was loosened, and the ground was strewn with a vast number of lifeless
and mangled bodies.
[3.28] Some hesitation had shewn itself,
when the generals, seeing that the weary troops would not listen to what
seemed to them unmeaning encouragement, pointed to Cremona. Whether this
was, as Messalla relates, the device of Hormus, or whether Caius Plinius
be the better authority when he charges it upon Antonius, I cannot easily
determine. All I can say is this, that neither in Antonius nor in Hormus
would this foulest of crimes have been a degeneracy from the character
of their former lives. Wounds or bloodshed no longer kept the men back
from undermining the rampart and battering the gates. Supported on the
shoulders of comrades, and forming a second "testudo," they clambered
up and seized the weapons and even the hands of the enemy. The unhurt and
the wounded, the half-dead and the dying, were mingled together with every
incident of slaughter and death in every form.
[3.29] The fiercest struggle was maintained
by the 3rd and 7th legions, and Antonius in person with some chosen auxiliaries
concentrated his efforts on the same point. The Vitellianists, unable to
resist the combined and resolute attack, and finding that their missiles
glided off the "testudo," at last threw the engine itself on
the assailants; for a moment it broke and overwhelmed those on whom it
fell, but it drew after it in its fall the battlements and upper part of
the rampart. At the same time an adjoining tower yielded to the volleys
of stones, and, while the 7th legion in wedge-like array was endeavouring
to force an entrance, the 3rd broke down the gate with axes and swords.
All authors are agreed that Caius Volusius, a soldier of the 3rd legion,
entered first. Beating down all who opposed him, he mounted the rampart,
waved his hand, and shouted aloud that the camp was taken. The rest of
the legion burst in, while the troops of Vitellius were seized with panic,
and threw themselves from the rampart. The entire space between the camp
and the walls of Cremona was filled with slain.
[3.30] Difficulties of another kind
presented themselves in the lofty walls of the town, its stone towers,
its iron-barred gates, in the garrison who stood brandishing their weapons,
in its numerous population devoted to the interests of Vitellius, and in
the vast conflux from all parts of Italy which had assembled at the fair
regularly held at that time. The besieged found a source of strength in
these large numbers; the assailants an incentive in the prospect of booty.
Antonius gave orders that fire should instantly be set to the finest buildings
without the city, to see whether the inhabitants of Cremona might not be
induced by the loss of their property to transfer their allegiance. Some
houses near the walls, which overtopped the fortifications, he filled with
the bravest of his soldiers, who, by hurling beams, tiles, and flaming
missiles, dislodged the defenders from the ramparts.
[3.31] The legions now began to form
themselves into a "testudo," and the other troops to discharge
volleys of stones and darts, when the courage of the Vitellianists began
to flag. The higher their rank, the more readily they succumbed to fortune,
fearing that when Cremona had fallen quarter could no longer be expected,
and that all the fury of the conqueror would be turned, not on the penniless
crowd, but on the tribunes and centurions, by whose slaughter something
was to be gained. The common soldiers, careless of the future and safer
in their obscurity, still held out. Roaming through the streets or concealed
in the houses, they would not sue for peace even when they had abandoned
the contest. The principal officers of the camp removed the name and images
of Vitellius; Caecina, who was still in confinement, they released from
his chains, imploring him to plead their cause. When he haughtily rejected
their suit, they entreated him with tears; and it was indeed the last aggravation
of misery, that many valiant men should invoke the aid of a traitor. Then
they displayed from the walls the olive branches and chaplets of suppliants,
and when Antonius had ordered that the discharge of missiles should cease,
they brought out the eagles and standards. Then followed, with eyes bent
on the ground, a dismal array of unarmed men. The conquerors had gathered
round; at first they heaped reproaches on them and pointed at them their
weapons; then seeing how they offered their cheeks to insulting blows,
how, with all their high spirit departed, they submitted, as vanquished
men, to every indignity, it suddenly occurred to their recollection, that
these were the very soldiers who but shortly before had used with moderation
their victory at Bedriacum. Yet, when Caecina the consul, conspicuous in
his robes of state and with his train of lictors, came forward thrusting
aside the crowd, the victors were fired with indignation, and reproached
him with his tyranny, his cruelty, and, so hateful are such crimes, even
with his treason. Antonius checked them, gave him an escort, and sent him
to Vespasian.
[3.32] Meanwhile the population of Cremona
was roughly handled by the soldiers, who were just beginning a massacre,
when their fury was mitigated by the entreaties of the generals. Antonius
summoned them to an assembly, extolled the conquerors, spoke kindly to
the conquered, but said nothing either way of Cremona. Over and above the
innate love of plunder, there was an old feud which made the army bent
on the destruction of the inhabitants. It was generally believed that in
the war with Otho, as well as in the present, they had supported the cause
of Vitellius. Afterwards, when the 13th legion had been left to build an
amphitheatre, with the characteristic insolence of a city population, they
had wantonly provoked and insulted them. The ill-feeling had been aggravated
by the gladiatorial show exhibited there by Caecina, by the circumstance
that their city was now for the second time the seat of war, and by the
fact that they had supplied the Vitellianists with provisions in the field,
and that some of their women, taken by party-zeal into the battle, had
there been slain. The occurrence of the fair filled the colony, rich as
it always was, with an appearance of still greater wealth. The other generals
were unnoticed; Antonius from his success and high reputation was observed
of all. He had hastened to the baths to wash off the blood; and when he
found fault with the temperature of the water, an answer was heard, "that
it would soon be warm enough. Thus the words of a slave brought on him
the whole odium of having given the signal for firing the town, which was
indeed already in flames.
[3.33] Forty thousand armed men burst
into Cremona, and with them a body of sutlers and camp-followers, yet more
numerous and yet more abandoned to lust and cruelty. Neither age nor rank
were any protection from indiscriminate slaughter and violation. Aged men
and women past their prime, worthless as booty, were dragged about in wanton
insult. Did a grown up maiden or youth of marked beauty fall in their way,
they were torn in pieces by the violent hands of ravishers; and in the
end the destroyers themselves were provoked into mutual slaughter. Men,
as they carried off for themselves coin or temple-offerings of massive
gold, were cut down by others of superior strength. Some, scorning what
met the eye, searched for hidden wealth, and dug up buried treasures, applying
the scourge and the torture to the owners. In their hands were flaming
torches, which, as soon as they had carried out the spoil, they wantonly
hurled into the gutted houses and plundered temples. In an army which included
such varieties of language and character, an army comprising Roman citizens,
allies, and foreigners, there was every kind of lust, each had a law of
his own, and nothing was forbidden. For four days Cremona satisfied the
plunderers. When all things else, sacred and profane, were settling down
into the flames, the temple of Mephitis outside the walls alone remained
standing, saved by its situation or by divine interposition.
[3.34] Such was the end of Cremona,
286 years after its foundation. It was built in the consulship of Tiberius
Sempronius and Cornelius Scipio, when Hannibal was threatening Italy, as
a protection against the Gauls from beyond the Padus, or against any other
sudden invader from the Alps. From the number of settlers, the conveniences
afforded by the rivers, the fertility of the soil, and the many connexions
and intermarriages formed with neighbouring nations, it grew and flourished,
unharmed by foreign enemies, though most unfortunate in civil wars. Ashamed
of the atrocious deed, and aware of the detestation which it was inspiring,
Antonius issued a proclamation, that no one should detain in captivity
a citizen of Cremona. The spoil indeed had been rendered valueless to the
soldiers by a general agreement throughout Italy, which rejected with loathing
the purchase of such slaves. A massacre then began; when this was known,
the prisoners were secretly ransomed by their friends and relatives. The
remaining inhabitants soon returned to Cremona; the temples and squares
were restored by the munificence of the burghers, and Vespasian gave his
exhortations.
[3.35] The soil poisoned with blood
forbade the enemy to remain long by the ruins of the buried city. They
advanced to the third milestone, and gathered the dispersed and panic-stricken
Vitellianists round their proper standards. The vanquished legions were
then scattered throughout Illyricum; for civil war was not over, and they
might play a doubtful part. Messengers carrying news of the victory were
then despatched to Britain and to Spain. Julius Calenus, a tribune, was
sent to Gaul, and Alpinius Montanus, prefect of a cohort, to Germany; as
the one was an Aeduan, the other a Trever, and both were Vitellianists,
they would be a proof of the success. At the same time the passes of the
Alps were occupied with troops, for it was suspected that Germany was arming
itself to support Vitellius.
[3.36] A few days after the departure
of Caecina, Vitellius had hurried Fabius Valens to the seat of war, and
was now seeking to hide his apprehensions from himself by indulgence. He
made no military preparation; he did not seek to invigorate the soldiers
by encouraging speeches or warlike exercises; he did not keep himself before
the eyes of the people. Buried in the shades of his gardens, like those
sluggish animals which, if you supply them with food, lie motionless and
torpid, he had dismissed with the same forgetfulness the past, the present,
and the future. While he thus lay wasting his powers in sloth among the
woods of Aricia, he was startled by the treachery of Lucilius Bassus and
the defection of the fleet at Ravenna. Then came the news about Caecina,
and he heard with a satisfaction mingled with distress, first, that he
had revolted, and then, that he had been put in irons by the army. In that
dull soul joy was more powerful than apprehension. In great exultation
he returned to Rome, and before a crowded assembly of the people heaped
praises on the dutiful obedience of the soldiers. He ordered Publius Sabinus,
prefect of the Praetorian Guard, to be thrown into prison, because of his
friendship with Caecina, and substituted in his place Alfenius Varus.
[3.37] He then addressed the Senate
in a speech of studied grandiloquence, and was extolled by the Senators
with elaborate adulation. A savage resolution against Caecina was moved
by Lucius Vitellius; the rest affected indignation at the idea that a consul
had betrayed the State, a general his Emperor, a man loaded with wealth
so vast and honours so numerous his benefactor, and seemed to deplore the
wrongs of Vitellius, while they uttered their private griefs. Not a word
from any one of them disparaged the Flavianist leaders; they censured the
delusion and recklessness of the armies, and with a prudent circumlocution
avoided the name of Vespasian. A man was found, who, while all regarded
with great contempt both giver and receiver, wormed himself by flattery
into the one day of office which remained to complete the consulate of
Caecina. On the last day of October Rosius Regulus both assumed and resigned
the office. The learned remarked that never before had a new consul been
elected without a formal act of deprivation and the passing of a law. Before
this indeed Caninius Rebilus had been consul for a single day during the
dictatorship of Caius Caesar, when the prizes of the civil war had to be
enjoyed in haste.
[3.38] At this time the murder of Junius
Blaesus obtained an infamous notoriety. Of this act I have heard the following
account. Vitellius, who was suffering from severe illness, observed from
the Servilian gardens a neighbouring turret brilliantly illuminated throughout
the night. Inquiring the cause, he was told that Caecina Tuscus was entertaining
a large party, of whom Junius Blaesus was the most distinguished. Other
particulars were given with much exaggeration about the splendour of the
banquet and the unrestrained gaiety of the guests. There were persons who
charged Tuscus and his guests, and Blaesus more vindictively than any,
with passing their days in merriment while the Emperor was sick. As soon
as it was sufficiently clear to those who keenly watch the angry moods
of princes, that Vitellius was exasperated, and that Blaesus might be destroyed,
the part of the informer was intrusted to Lucius Vitellius. An unworthy
jealousy made him the enemy of Blaesus, whose illustrious character raised
him far above one who was stained with every infamy; he burst into the
Imperial chamber, and clasping to his bosom the Emperor's son, fell at
his knees. On Vitellius enquiring the cause of his emotion: "It is
not," he replied, "from any private apprehension, or because
I am anxious for myself; it is for a brother and for a brother's children
that I have come hither with my prayers and tears. It is idle to fear Vespasian,
when there are so many legions of Germany, so many provinces with their
valour and their loyalty, and lastly, so vast an extent of sea and land
with enormous distances, to keep him from us. In the capital, in the very
bosom of the empire, there is the foe of whom we must beware, a foe who
boasts of Junii and Antonii among his ancestors, who, claiming an Imperial
descent, displays to soldiers his condescension and his magnificence. On
him all thoughts are fixed, while Vitellius, regardless alike of friends
and foes, is cherishing a rival, who from his banqueting table gazes at
the sufferings of his sovereign. For such ill-timed mirth let him be recompensed
with a night of sorrow and of death, that he may know and feel that Vitellius
still lives and reigns, and has a son, if in the course of destiny anything
should happen to himself."
[3.39] Vitellius, after wavering between
his guilty purpose and his fears, dreading lest to postpone the murder
of Blaesus might hasten his own ruin, while openly to order it might provoke
terrible odium, determined to destroy him by poison. He gave a proof of
his guilt by his marked joy when he visited Blaesus. He was even heard
to utter a most brutal speech, in which (I will relate the very words)
he boasted that he had feasted his eyes on the spectacle of his enemy's
death. Besides his noble birth and refinement of character, Blaesus was
a man of resolute loyalty. In the flourishing days of the party, when canvassed
by Caecina and the leading men, who were beginning to despise Vitellius,
he persevered in rejecting their solicitations. A righteous man and a lover
of peace, who coveted no sudden elevation, much less the throne, he could
not escape being thought to deserve it.
[3.40] Meanwhile Fabius Valens, who
was moving along with a vast and luxurious train of concubines and eunuchs
too tardily for a general about to take the field, received speedy intelligence
of the betrayal of the Ravenna fleet by Lucilius Bassus. Had he hastened
the march which he had then begun, he might have come up with Caecina while
still undecided, or have reached the legions previous to the decisive action.
Some advised him to take a few of his most devoted soldiers, and, avoiding
Ravenna, to hurry on by unfrequented paths to Hostilia or Cremona. Others
thought that he should summon the Praetorian cohorts from Rome, and then
force his way with a strong body of troops. But with a ruinous delay he
wasted in deliberation the opportunities of action. Eventually he rejected
both plans, and did what is the very worst thing in circumstances of peril,
attempted a middle course, and was neither bold enough on the one hand,
nor cautious enough on the other.
[3.41] He wrote to Vitellius asking
for aid. Three cohorts with some British cavalry arrived, a force too numerous
to elude observation, too small to force its way. Even amidst such perils
Valens could not keep himself clear of the infamous reputation of grasping
at unlawful gratifications and polluting the houses of his hosts with intrigue
and violation. He had power, he had money, and he indulged the lusts that
are the last solace of desperate fortunes. At length on the arrival of
the infantry and cavalry the folly of his plans became evident. With so
small a force, even had it been thoroughly loyal, he could not have made
his way through the enemy, and the loyalty they had brought with them was
not beyond suspicion. Yet shame and respect for the presence of their general
held them in check, no lasting restraint with men who loved danger and
were careless of disgrace. Moved by this apprehension, Valens, while he
retained a few attendants whom adversity had not changed, sent on the infantry
to Ariminum and ordered the cavalry to cover his rear. He then himself
made his way to Umbria, and thence to Etruria, where, having learnt the
issue of the battle of Cremona, he conceived a plan not wanting in vigour,
and which, had it succeeded, would have had terrible results. This was
to seize some ships, to land on some part of Gallia Narbonensis, to rouse
Gaul with its armies as well as the tribes of Germany, and so to kindle
a fresh war.
[3.42] The garrison of Ariminum were
discouraged by the departure of Valens, and Cornelius Fuscus, bringing
up his army and disposing his Liburnian ships at the nearest points of
the shore, invested the place by sea and land. His troops occupied the
plains of Umbria and that portion of the Picentine territory that is washed
by the Adriatic, and now the whole of Italy was divided by the range of
the Apennines between Vespasian and Vitellius. Valens, having started from
the bay of Pisa, was compelled, either by a calm or a contrary wind, to
put in at the port of Hercules Monoecus. Near this place was stationed
Marius Maturus, procurator of the Maritime Alps, who was loyal to Vitellius,
and who, though everything around him was hostile, had not yet thrown off
his allegiance. While courteously receiving Valens, he deterred him by
his advice from rashly invading Gallia Narbonensis. And now the fidelity
of the rest of the party was weakened by their fears. In fact the procurator
Valerius Paullinus, an enterprising officer, who had been a friend of Vespasian
before his elevation to the throne, had made the neighbouring States swear
allegiance to that Prince.
[3.43] Paullinus had collected all the
troops who, having been disbanded by Vitellius, were now spontaneously
taking up arms, and was holding with this force the colony of Forum Julii,
which commanded the sea. His influence was all the greater, because Forum
Julii was his native place, and because he was respected by the Praetorians,
in which force he had once been a tribune. The inhabitants themselves,
favouring a fellow-townsman, and anticipating his future greatness, did
their best to promote the cause. When these preparations, which were really
formidable and were exaggerated by report, became known among the now distracted
Vitellianists, Fabius Valens returned to his ships with four soldiers of
the body-guard, three personal friends, and as many centurions, while Maturus
and the rest chose to remain behind and swear allegiance to Vespasian.
For Valens indeed the open sea was safer than the coast or the towns, yet,
all uncertain about the future, and knowing rather what he must avoid than
what he could trust, he was thrown by adverse weather on the Stoechades,
islands off Massilia. There he was captured by some Liburnian ships, dispatched
by Paullinus.
[3.44] Valens once captured, everything
turned to swell the resources of the conqueror; the lead was taken in Spain
by the 1st legion (the "Adjutrix"), whose recollections of Otho
made them hate Vitellius; they drew with them the 6th and 10th. Gaul did
not hesitate to follow. A partiality long felt in Britain for Vespasian,
who had there commanded the 2nd legion by the appointment of Claudius,
and had served with distinction, attached that province to his cause, though
not without some commotion among the other legions, in which were many
centurions and soldiers promoted by Vitellius, who felt uneasy in exchanging
for another ruler one whom they knew already.
[3.45] These dissensions, and the continual
rumours of civil war, raised the courage of the Britons. They were led
by one Venutius, who, besides being naturally high spirited, and hating
the name of Rome, was fired by his private animosity against Queen Cartismandua.
Cartismandua ruled the Brigantes in virtue of her illustrious birth; and
she strengthened her throne, when, by the treacherous capture of king Caractacus,
she was regarded as having given its chief distinction to the triumph of
Claudius Caesar. Then followed wealth and the self-indulgence of prosperity.
Spurning her husband Venutius, she made Vellocatus, his armour-bearer,
the partner of her bed and throne. By this enormity the power of her house
was at once shaken to its base. On the side of the husband were the affections
of the people, on that of the adulterer, the lust and savage temper of
the Queen. Accordingly Venutius collected some auxiliaries, and, aided
at the same time by a revolt of the Brigantes, brought Cartismandua into
the utmost peril. She asked for some Roman troops, and our auxiliary infantry
and cavalry, after fighting with various success, contrived to rescue the
Queen from her peril. Venutius retained the kingdom, and we had the war
on our hands.
[3.46] About the same time, Germany
suffered from the supineness of our generals and the mutinous conduct of
our legions; the assaults of enemies and the perfidy of allies all but
overthrew the power of Rome. Of this war, its origin and its issue, for
it lasted long, I shall hereafter speak. The Dacians also were in motion,
a people which never can be trusted, and which, now that our legions were
withdrawn from Moesia, had nothing to fear. They quietly watched the opening
of the campaign, but when they heard that Italy was in a blaze of war,
and that the whole Empire was divided against itself, they stormed the
winter quarters of the auxiliary infantry and cavalry, and occupied both
banks of the Danube. They were then preparing to destroy the camp of the
legions, but Mucianus sent the 6th legion against them, for he knew of
the victory of Cremona, and he feared this double pressure of barbarian
power with Dacians and Germans invading Italy from opposite sides. We were
helped, as often before, by the good fortune of the Roman people, which
brought to the spot Mucianus with the armies of the East, and by the decisive
settlement which in the meantime was effected at Cremona. Fonteius Agrippa
was removed from Asia (which province he had governed as proconsul for
a year) to Moesia, and had some troops given him from the army of Vitellius.
That this army should be dispersed through the provinces and closely occupied
with foreign wars, was sound policy and essential to peace.
[3.47] All other nations were equally
restless. A sudden outbreak had been excited in Pontus by a barbarian slave,
who had before commanded the royal fleet. This was Anicetus, a freedman
of Polemon, once a very powerful personage, who, when the kingdom was converted
into a Roman province, ill brooked the change. Accordingly he raised in
the name of Vitellius the tribes that border on Pontus, bribed a number
of very needy adventurers by the hope of plunder, and, at the head of a
force by no means contemptible, made a sudden attack on the old and famous
city of Trapezus, founded by the Greeks on the farthest shore of the Pontus.
There he destroyed a cohort, once a part of the royal contingent. They
had afterwards received the privileges of citizenship, and while they carried
their arms and banners in Roman fashion, they still retained the indolence
and licence of the Greek. Anicetus also set fire to the fleet, and, as
the sea was not guarded, escaped, for Mucianus had brought up to Byzantium
the best of the Liburnian ships and all the troops. The barbarians even
insolently scoured the sea in hastily constructed vessels of their own
called "camarae," built with narrow sides and broad bottoms,
and joined together without fastenings of brass or iron. Whenever the water
is rough they raise the bulwarks with additional planks according to the
increasing height of the waves, till the vessel is covered in like a house.
Thus they roll about amid the billows, and, as they have a prow at both
extremities alike and a convertible arrangement of oars, they may be paddled
in one direction or another indifferently and without risk.
[3.48] The matter attracted the attention
of Vespasian, and induced him to dispatch some veterans from the legions
under Virdius Geminus, a tried soldier. Finding the enemy in disorder and
dispersed in the eager pursuit of plunder, he attacked them, and drove
them to their ships. Hastily fitting out a fleet of Liburnian ships he
pursued Anicetus, and overtook him at the mouth of the river Cohibus, where
he was protected by the king of the Sedochezi, whose alliance he had secured
by a sum of money and other presents. This prince at first endeavoured
to protect the suppliant by a threat of hostilities; when, however, the
choice was presented to him between war and the profit to be derived from
treachery, he consented, with the characteristic perfidy of barbarians,
to the destruction of Anicetus, and delivered up the refugees. So ended
this servile war. Amidst the joy of this success, while everything was
prosperous beyond his hopes, tidings of the victory of Cremona reached
Vespasian in Aegypt. This made him hasten his advance to Alexandria, for,
now that the army of Vitellius was shattered, he sought to apply the pressure
of famine to the capital, which is always dependent on foreign supplies.
He was indeed also preparing to invade by sea and land the province of
Africa, which lies on the same line of coast, intending by thus closing
the supplies of corn to cause famine and dissension among the enemy.
[3.49] While with this world-wide convulsion
the Imperial power was changing hands, the conduct of Primus Antonius,
after the fall of Cremona, was by no means as blameless as before. Either
he believed that the necessities of the war had been satisfied, and that
all else would follow easily, or, perhaps, success, working on such a temperament,
developed his latent pride, rapacity and other vices. He swept through
Italy as if it were a conquered country and caressed the legions as if
they were his own; by all his words and acts he sought to pave for himself
the way to power. To imbue the army with a spirit of licence, he offered
to the legions the commissions of the centurions killed in the war. By
their vote the most turbulent men were elected. The soldiers in fact were
not under the control of the generals, but the generals were themselves
constrained to follow the furious impulses of the soldiers. These mutinous
proceedings, so ruinous to discipline, Antonius soon turned to his own
profit, regardless of the near approach of Mucianus, a neglect more fatal
than any contempt for Vespasian.
[3.50] As winter was approaching, and
the low country was flooded by the Padus, the army marched on without its
heavy baggage. The standards and eagles of the victorious legions, the
old and wounded soldiers, and even many effective men, were left at Verona.
The auxiliary infantry and cavalry, with some picked troops from the legions,
appeared sufficient for a war that was all but finished. They had been
joined by the 11th legion, which at first had hesitated, but now in the
hour of success felt alarm at having stood aloof. A recent levy of 6000
Dalmatians was attached to the legion. They were under the command of Pompeius
Silvanus, a man of consular rank; the real direction of affairs was in
the hands of Annius Bassus, the legate of the legion. This officer contrived,
under an appearance of submission, to govern Silvanus, a leader without
vigour, and apt to waste in words the opportunities of action. Bassus,
with his unobtrusive energy, was ready for everything that had to be done.
To these forces were added the elite of the marines of the Ravenna fleet,
who demanded permission to serve in the legions. The crews were made up
with Dalmatians. The army and generals halted at the Temple of Fortune,
undecided as to their line of action. They had heard that the Praetorian
Guard had marched out of Rome, and they supposed that the Apennines were
occupied with troops. The generals, finding themselves in a country utterly
impoverished by war, were terrified by the scarcity of provisions and the
mutinous clamours of the soldiery, who incessantly demanded the "clavarium,"
as the donative was called. They had provided neither money nor corn, and
they were embarrassed by the general impatience and rapacity; for what
they might have obtained was plundered.
[3.51] I have the very highest authority
for asserting, that there was among the conquerors such an impious disregard
of right and wrong, that a private cavalry soldier declared he had slain
his brother in the late battle, and claimed a reward from the generals.
The common law of humanity on the one hand forbade them to reward this
act of blood, the necessities of the war on the other forbade them to punish
it. They put him off, on the ground that the obligation was too great to
be immediately discharged. Nothing more is recorded. In the earlier civil
wars indeed a similar horror had occurred. In the battle with Cinna at
the Janiculum, a soldier in Pompey's army, as Sisenna tells us, slew his
own brother, and, on discovering the horrible deed he had committed, destroyed
himself. So much more earnest among our ancestors was the honour paid to
virtue, and the remorse that waited on crime. These and like instances,
drawn from the recollections of the past, I shall mention not irrelevantly,
whenever the subject and the occasion shall call for some example of goodness
or some solace in the presence of evil.
[3.52] Antonius and the other generals
of the party judged it expedient to send forward the cavalry and explore
the whole of Umbria for some point where the Apennines presented a more
gentle ascent, and also to bring up the eagles and standards and all the
troops at Verona, while they were to cover the Padus and the sea with convoys.
Some there were among the generals who were contriving delays, for Antonius
in fact was now becoming too great a man, and their hopes from Mucianus
were more definite. That commander, troubled at so speedy a success, and
imagining that unless he occupied Rome in person he should lose all share
in the glory of the war, continued to write in ambiguous terms to Varus
and Antonius, enlarging at one time on the necessity of following up their
operations, at another on the advantage of delay, and with expressions
so worded that he could, according to the event, repudiate a disastrous,
or claim a successful policy. To Plotius Griphus, who had lately been raised
by Vespasian to the senatorial rank and appointed to command a legion,
as well as to all others on whom he could fully rely, he gave plainer instructions.
All these men sent replies reflecting unfavourably on the precipitancy
of Varus and Antonius, and suiting the wishes of Mucianus. By forwarding
these letters to Vespasian he had accomplished this much, that the measures
and achievements of Antonius were not valued according to his hopes.
[3.53] Antonius was indignant, and blamed
Mucianus, whose calumnies had depreciated his own hazardous achievements.
Nor was he temperate in his expressions, for he was habitually violent
in language, and was unaccustomed to obey. He wrote a letter to Vespasian
in terms more arrogant than should be addressed to an Emperor, and not
without implied reproach against Mucianus. "It was I," he said,
"who brought into the field the legions of Pannonia; my instigations
roused the generals in Moesia; my courageous resolution forced a passage
through the Alps, seized on Italy, and cut off the succours from Germany
and Rhaetia. The discomfiture of the disunited and scattered legions of
Vitellius by a fierce charge of cavalry, and afterwards by the steady strength
of the infantry in a conflict that lasted for a day and a night, was indeed
a most glorious achievement, and it was my work. For the destruction of
Cremona the war must be answerable; the civil strifes of former days cost
the State more terrible loss and the overthrow of many cities. Not with
messages and letters, but with my arm and my sword, have I served my Emperor.
I would not seek to hinder the renown of those who in the meanwhile have
reduced Asia to tranquillity. They had at heart the peace of Moesia, I
the safety and security of Italy. By my earnest representations Gaul and
Spain, the most powerful region of the world, have been won for Vespasian.
But all my efforts have been wasted, if they alone who have not shared
the peril obtain its rewards." The meaning of all this did not escape
Mucianus, and there arose a deadly feud, cherished by Antonius with frankness,
by Mucianus with reserve, and therefore with the greater bitterness.
[3.54] Vitellius, after his power had
been shattered at Cremona, endeavoured to suppress the tidings of the disaster,
and by this foolish attempt at concealment he put off, not indeed his troubles,
but only the application of the remedy. Had he avowed and discussed his
position, he had some chance, some strength, left; whereas, on the contrary,
when he pretended that all was prosperous, he aggravated his perils by
falsehood. A strange silence was observed in his presence as to the war;
throughout the country all discussion was prohibited, and so, many who
would have told the truth had it been allowed, finding it forbidden, spread
rumours exaggerating the calamity. The generals of the enemy failed not
to magnify the report of their strength, for they sent back any spies of
Vitellius whom they captured, after conducting them round the camp in order
that they might learn the force of the victorious army. All of these persons
Vitellius questioned in secret, and then ordered that they should be put
to death. Singular bravery was displayed by a centurion, Julius Agrestis,
who, after several interviews, in which he had in vain endeavoured to rouse
Vitellius to courage, prevailed on the Emperor to send him in person to
see what was the strength of the enemy's resources, and what had happened
at Cremona. He did not seek to escape the notice of Antonius by making
his observations in secret, but avowed the emperor's instructions and his
own purpose, and asked leave to see everything. Persons were sent to shew
him the field of battle, the remains of Cremona, and the captured legions.
He then made his way back to Vitellius, and when the Emperor denied the
truth of the intelligence which he brought, and even charged him with having
been bribed, "Since," he replied, "you require some decisive
proof, and I can no longer serve you in any other way either by my life
or death I will give you a proof which you can believe." So he departed,
and confirmed his statement by a voluntary death. Some say that he was
slain by order of Vitellius, but they bear the same testimony to his loyalty
and courage.
[3.55] Vitellius, who seemed like a
man roused from slumber ordered Julius Priscus and Alfenius Varus, with
fourteen of the Praetorian cohorts and the entire force of cavalry, to
occupy the Apennines. A legion of troops drafted from the fleet followed.
So many thousand troops, comprising the picked men and horses of the army,
had they been under the direction of a different general, would have been
quite equal even to aggressive operations. The rest of the Praetorian cohorts
were entrusted to Lucius Vitellius, brother of the Emperor, for the defence
of the capital. Vitellius, while he abated nothing of his habitual indulgence,
with a precipitancy prompted by alarm, anticipated the elections, at which
he appointed consuls for several years. With a profuse liberality, he granted
treaties to allies, and the rights of Latin citizenship to foreigners;
some he relieved by the remission of tribute, others by exemptions; in
a word, utterly careless of the future, he mutilated the resources of the
Empire. But the mob was attracted by the magnificence of his bounties.
The most foolish bought these favours with money; the wise held that to
be invalid, which could neither be given nor received without ruin to the
State. Yielding at length to the importunity of the army, which had taken
up its position at Mevania, and accompanied by a numerous train of senators,
into which many were brought by ambition and more by fear, he entered the
camp, undecided in purpose and at the mercy of faithless counsels.
[3.56] While he was haranguing his troops
(marvellous to relate) such a multitude of ill-omened birds flew over him,
as to obscure with a dark cloud the light of day. There occurred another
terrible presage. A bull escaped from the altar, scattered the preparations
for sacrifice, and was finally slain far from the spot where the victims
are usually struck down. But the most portentous spectacle of all was Vitellius
himself, ignorant of military matters and without forethought in his plans,
even asking others about the order of march, about the business of reconnoitring,
and the discretion to be used in pushing on or protracting the campaign,
betraying in his countenance and gait his alarm at every fresh piece of
intelligence, and finally drinking to intoxication. At last, weary of the
camp, and having received tidings of the defection of the fleet at Misenum,
he returned to Rome, trembling at every new disaster, but reckless of the
final result. For though it was open to him to have crossed the Apennines
with an army in unimpaired vigour, and to have attacked in the field an
enemy suffering from cold and scant supplies, yet, by dividing his forces,
he abandoned to destruction or captivity troops of the keenest courage
and faithful to the last, against the judgment of the most experienced
among the centurions, who, had they been consulted, would have told him
the truth. They were all kept at a distance by the intimate friends of
Vitellius; for the Emperor's ears were so formed, that all profitable counsels
were offensive to him, and that he would hear nothing but what would please
and ruin.
[3.57] The fleet at Misenum, so much
can be done in times of civil discord by the daring of even a single man,
was drawn into revolt by Claudius Faventinus, a centurion cashiered by
Galba, who forged letters in the name of Vespasian offering a reward for
treachery. The fleet was under the command of Claudius Apollinaris, a man
neither firm in his loyalty, nor energetic in his treason. Apinius Tiro,
who had filled the office of praetor, and who then happened to be at Minturnae,
offered to head the revolt. By these men the colonies and municipal towns
were drawn into the movement, and as Puteoli was particularly zealous for
Vespasian, while Capua on the other hand remained loyal to Vitellius, they
introduced their municipal jealousy into the civil war. Claudius Julianus,
who had lately exercised an indulgent rule over the fleet at Misenum, was
selected by Vitellius to soothe the irritation of the soldiery. He was
supported by a city cohort and a troop of gladiators whose chief officer
he was. As soon as the two camps were pitched, Julianus, without much hesitation,
went over to the side of Vespasian, and they then occupied Tarracina, which
was protected by its fortifications and position rather than by any ability
of theirs.
[3.58] Vitellius, when informed of these
events, left a portion of his army at Narnia under the command of the prefect
of the Praetorian Guard, and deputed his brother Lucius with six cohorts
of infantry and 500 cavalry to encounter the danger that now threatened
him on the side of Campania. Sick at heart, he found relief in the zeal
of the soldiers and in the shouts with which the people clamoured for arms,
while he gave the delusive name of an army and of Roman legions to a cowardly
mob, that would not venture on any thing beyond words. At the instance
of his freedmen (for his friends were the less faithful the more distinguished
their rank) he ordered the tribes to be convoked, and to those who gave
in their names administered the oath of service. As the numbers were excessive,
he divided the business of enrolment between the consuls. He required the
Senators to furnish a prescribed number of slaves and a certain weight
of silver. The Roman Knights offered their services and money, and even
the freedmen voluntarily sought the privilege of doing the same. This pretence
of loyalty, dictated at first by fear, passed into enthusiasm, and many
expressed compassion, not so much for Vitellius, as for the fallen condition
of the Imperial power. Vitellius himself failed not to draw out their sympathies
by his pitiable looks, his voice, and his tears; he was liberal in his
promises and even extravagant, as men in their alarm naturally are. He
even expressed a wish to be saluted as Caesar, a title which he had formerly
rejected. But now he had a superstitious feeling about the name; and it
is a fact that in the moment of terror the counsels of the wise and the
voice of the rabble are listened to with equal respect. But as all movements
that originate in thoughtless impulse, however vigorous in their beginnings,
become feeble after a time, the throng of Senators and Knights gradually
melted away, dispersing at first tardily and during the absence of the
Emperor, but before long with a contemptuous indifference to his presence,
till, ashamed of the failure of his efforts, Vitellius waived his claims
to services which were not offered.
[3.59] As the occupation of Mevania,
and the apparent revival of the war with new vigour, had struck terror
into Italy, so now did the timorous retreat of Vitellius give an unequivocal
bias in favour of the Flavianists. The Samnites, the Peligni, and the Marsi,
roused themselves, jealous at having been anticipated by Campania, and,
as men who serve a new master, were energetic in all the duties of war.
The army, however, was much distressed by bad weather in its passage over
the Apennines, and since they could hardly struggle through the snow, though
their march was unmolested, they perceived what danger they would have
had to encounter, had not Vitellius been made to turn back by that good
fortune, which, not less often than the wisdom of their counsels, helped
the Flavianist generals. Here they fell in with Petilius Cerialis, who
had escaped the sentries of Vitellius by a rustic disguise and by his knowledge
of the country. There was a near relationship between Cerialis and Vespasian,
and he was not without reputation as a soldier. He was therefore admitted
to rank among the generals. It has been said by many that the means of
escape were likewise open to Flavius Sabinus and to Domitian, and indeed
messengers, dispatched by Antonius, contrived under various disguises to
make their way to them, offering them a place of refuge and a protecting
force. Sabinus pleaded his ill health, unsuited to toil and adventure.
Domitian did not want the courage, but he feared that the guards whom Vitellius
had set over him, though they offered to accompany him in his flight, had
treacherous designs. And Vitellius himself, out of a regard for his own
connexions, did not meditate any cruelty against Domitian.
[3.60] The Flavianist generals on their
arrival at Carsulae took a few days for repose, while the eagles and standards
of the legions were coming up. Carsulae appeared a good position for an
encampment, for it commanded an extensive prospect, provisions could be
safely brought up, and there were in its rear several very wealthy towns.
They also calculated on interviews with the Vitellianists, who were only
ten miles distant, and on the chances of defection. The soldiers were dissatisfied
with this prospect, and wished for victory rather than for peace. They
would not even await the arrival of their own legions, whom they looked
upon as sharers in the spoil rather than in the dangers of the campaign.
Antonius summoned them to an assembly, and explained to them that Vitellius
had still forces, which would waver in their loyalty if they had time to
reflect, but would be fierce foes if driven to despair. "The opening
of a civil war must," he said, "be left to chance; the final
triumph is perfected by wise counsels and skill. The fleet of Misenum and
the fairest portion of Campania have already revolted, and out of the whole
world Vitellius has nothing left but the country between Tarracina and
Narnia. From our victory at Cremona sufficient glory has accrued to us,
and from the destruction of that city only too much disgrace. Let us not
be eager to capture rather than to preserve the capital. Greater will be
our reward, far higher our reputation, if we secure without bloodshed the
safety of the Senate and of the people of Rome." By this and similar
language their impatience was allayed.
[3.61] Soon after, the legions arrived.
Alarmed by the report of this increase to the army, the Vitellianist cohorts
began to waver; no one urged them to fight, many urged them to change sides,
each more eager than the other to hand over his company or troop, a present
to the conqueror, and a source of future advantage to himself. From these
men it was ascertained that Interamna, situated in the adjoining plain,
was occupied by a garrison of 400 cavalry. Varus was at once dispatched
with a lightly equipped force, and cut to pieces a few who attempted to
resist; the greater number threw down their arms, and begged for quarter.
Some fled back into the camp, and spread panic everywhere by exaggerated
reports of the courage and strength of the enemy, seeking thus to mitigate
the disgrace of having lost the position. Among the Vitellianists treason
went unpunished; all loyalty was subverted by the rewards of desertion,
and nothing was left but emulation in perfidy. There were numerous desertions
among the tribunes and centurions; the common soldiers remained obstinately
faithful to Vitellius, till Priscus and Alfenius, deserting the camp and
returning to Vitellius, relieved all from any shame they might feel at
being traitors.
[3.62] About the same time Fabius Valens
was put to death while in confinement at Urbinum. His head was displayed
to the Vitellianist cohort, that they might not cherish any further hope,
for they generally believed that Valens had made his way into Germany,
and was there bringing into the field veteran as well as newly levied armies.
The bloody spectacle reduced them to despair, and it was amazing how the
army of Vespasian welcomed in their hearts the destruction of Valens as
the termination of the war. Valens was a native of Anagnia, and belonged
to an Equestrian family; he was a man of loose character, but of no small
ability, who sought to gain by profligacy a reputation for elegance. In
the theatricals performed by young men during the reign of Nero, at first
apparently from compulsion, afterwards of his own free choice, he repeatedly
acted in the farces, with more cleverness than propriety. While legate
of a legion, he first supported, then slandered, Verginius. Fonteius Capito
he murdered, either after he had corrupted him, or because he had failed
to do so. Though a traitor to Galba he was loyal to Vitellius, and gained
a lustre from the perfidy of others.
[3.63] Finding all their hopes cut off,
the troops of Vitellius, intending to pass over to the side of the conqueror,
but to do so with honour, marched down with their standards and colours
into the plains beneath Narnia. The army of Vespasian, prepared and equipped
as if for action, was drawn up in dense array on both sides of the road.
The Vitellianists were received between the two columns; when they were
thus surrounded, Antonius addressed them kindly. One division was ordered
to remain at Narnia, another at Interamna; with them were left some of
the victorious legions, which would not be formidable to them if they remained
quiet, but were strong enough to crush all turbulence. At the same time
Primus and Varus did not neglect to forward continual messages to Vitellius,
offering him personal safety, the enjoyment of wealth, and a quiet retreat
in Campania, provided he would lay down his arms and surrender himself
and his children to Vespasian. Mucianus also wrote to him to the same effect,
and Vitellius was often disposed to trust these overtures, and even discussed
the number of his household and the choice of a residence on the coast.
Such a lethargy had come over his spirit, that, had not others remembered
he had been an Emperor, he would have himself forgotten it.
[3.64] The leading men in the State
had secret conferences with Flavius Sabinus, prefect of the city, urging
him to secure a share in the credit of the victory. "You have,"
they said, "a force of your own in the city cohorts; the cohorts of
the watch will not fail you, and there are also our own slaves, there is
the prestige of the party, there is the fact that to the victorious everything
is easy. You should not yield the glory of the war to Antonius and Varus.
Vitellius has but a few cohorts, and they are alarmed by gloomy tidings
from every quarter. The feelings of the people are easily swayed, and,
if you put yourself at their head, there will soon be the same flatteries
ready for Vespasian. Vitellius even in prosperity was unequal to his position,
and he is proportionately unnerved by disaster. The merit of having finished
the war will belong to him who may have possessed himself of the capital.
It would well become Sabinus to keep the Empire for his brother, and Vespasian
equally well, to count his other adherents inferior to Sabinus."
[3.65] Old and infirm as he was, it
was with anything but eagerness that he listened to these suggestions.
Some indeed assailed him with dark insinuations, implying that from motives
of envy and rivalry he was seeking to retard the elevation of his brother.
It was true, that while both were in a private station, Flavius Sabinus,
who was the elder, was the superior of Vespasian in influence and in wealth.
He was believed indeed to have sustained the failing credit of his brother,
while taking a mortgage of his house and lands; and hence, though the outward
appearance of harmony was preserved, some secret grudge was feared. It
is more charitable to suppose that the mild temper of the man shrank from
bloodshed and slaughter, and that for this reason he had held frequent
conferences with Vitellius to discuss the question of peace and the cessation
of hostilities upon certain conditions. After many private interviews,
they finally, so report said, ratified an agreement in the temple of Apollo.
The words of their conversation had two witnesses in Cluvius Rufus and
Silius Italicus. Their looks were noted by the more distant spectators;
the expression of Vitellius was abject and mean, that of Sabinus not triumphant,
but rather akin to pity.
[3.66] Could Vitellius have swayed the
feelings of his partisans as easily as he had himself yielded, the army
of Vespasian might have entered the capital without bloodshed. But the
more loyal his adherents, the more did they protest against peace and negotiation.
They pointed out the danger and disgrace of a submission in which the caprice
of the conqueror would be their sole guarantee. "And Vespasian,"
they said, "is not so arrogant as to tolerate such a subject as Vitellius.
Even the vanquished would not endure it. Their pity would be dangerous
to him. You certainly are an old man, and have had enough both of prosperity
and of adversity, but think what a name, what a position, you will leave
to your son Germanicus. Now indeed they promise you wealth, and a large
establishment, and a luxurious retreat in Campania; but when Vespasian
has once seized the throne, neither he, nor his friends, nor even his armies,
will feel themselves secure till all rivalry has been extinguished. Fabius
Valens, captive as he was, and reserved against the chance of disaster,
was yet too formidable to them; and certainly Primus, Fuscus, and Mucianus,
who exhibits the temper of his party, will not be allowed power over Vitellius
except to put him to death. Caesar did not leave Pompey, Augustus did not
leave Antony in safety, though, perhaps, Vespasian may show a more lofty
spirit, Vespasian, who was a dependant of Vitellius, when Vitellius was
the colleague of Claudius. If you would act as becomes the censorship,
the thrice-repeated consulate of your father, and all the honours of your
illustrious house, let despair at any rate arm you to courageous action.
The troops are still firm, and among the people there is abundant zeal.
Lastly, nothing can happen to us more terrible than that upon which we
are voluntarily rushing. If we are conquered, we must die; we must die,
if we capitulate. All that concerns us is this; shall we draw our last
breath amidst scorn and insult, or in a valiant struggle?"
[3.67] The ears of Vitellius were deaf
to manly counsels. His whole soul was overwhelmed by a tender anxiety,
lest by an obstinate resistance he might leave the conqueror less mercifully
disposed to his wife and children. He had also a mother old and feeble,
but she, expiring a few days before, escaped by her opportune death the
ruin of her house, having gained from the Imperial dignity of her son nothing
but sorrow and a good name. On the 18th of December, after hearing of the
defection of the legion and the auxiliary infantry which had surrendered
at Narnia, he left the palace, clad in mourning robes, and surrounded by
his weeping household. With him went his little son, carried in a litter,
as though in a funeral procession. The greetings of the people were flattering,
but ill-suited to the time; the soldiers preserved an ominous silence.
[3.68] There could hardly be a man so
careless of human interests as not to be affected by this spectacle. There
was the Roman Emperor, lord but a few days before of the whole human race,
leaving the seat of his power, and passing through the midst of his people
and his capital, to abdicate his throne. Men had never before seen or heard
of such an event. Caesar, the Dictator, had fallen by sudden violence,
Caligula by secret treason. The shades of night and the obscurity of a
rural hiding-place had veiled the flight of Nero. Piso and Galba had, it
might be said, fallen in battle. In an assembly of his own people, and
in the midst of his own soldiers, with the very women of his family looking
on, Vitellius stood and spoke a few words suitable to the sad conjuncture.
"He gave way," he said, "for the sake of peace, for the
sake of his country; let them only remember him, and think with compassion
of his brother, of his wife, of his young and innocent children."
At the same time he held out his son, commending him first to individual
bystanders, then to the whole assembly. At last, unable to speak for weeping,
he unfastened the dagger from his side, and offered it to the Consul, Caecilius
Simplex, who was standing by him, as if to indicate that he surrendered
the power of life and death over the citizens. The Consul rejecting it,
and those who were standing by in the assembly shouting remontrance, he
departed, as if with the intention of laying aside the emblems of Imperial
power in the Temple of Concord, and of betaking himself to his brother's
house. Louder shouts here met him from the crowd, which hindered him from
entering a private house, and invited him to return to the palace. Every
other route was closed, and the only one open was one which led into the
Via Sacra. Then in utter perplexity he returned to the palace. The rumour
that he had renounced the Imperial dignity had preceded him thither, and
Flavius Sabinus had sent written orders to the tribunes of the cohorts
to keep their soldiers under restraint.
[3.69] Then, as if the whole State had
passed into the hands of Vespasian, the leading men of the Senate, many
of the Equestrian order, with all the city soldiery and the watch, thronged
the dwelling of Sabinus. Intelligence was there brought to him of the enthusiasm
of the populace and of the threatening attitude of the German cohorts.
He had now gone too far to be able to retreat, and every one, fearing for
himself, should the Vitellianists come upon them while they were scattered
and comparatively weak, urged him, in spite of his reluctance, to hostilities.
As usually happens, however, in such cases, all gave the advice, but few
shared the risk. The armed retinue which was escorting Sabinus was met,
as it was coming down by the Lake Fundanus, by some of the most determined
of the Vitellianists. From this unforeseen collision resulted an encounter
slight indeed, but terminating favourably for the Vitellianists. In the
hurry of the moment Sabinus adopted the safest course open to him, and
occupied the Capitol with a miscellaneous body of soldiery, and some Senators
and Knights. It is not easy to give the names of these persons, since after
the triumph of Vespasian many pretended to have rendered this service to
his party. There were even women who braved the dangers of the siege; the
most conspicuous among them being Verulana Gratilla, who was taken thither,
not by the love of children or kindred, but by the fascination of war.
The Vitellianists kept but a careless watch over the besieged, and thus
at the dead of night Sabinus was able to bring into the Capitol his own
children and Domitian his brother's son, and to send by an unguarded route
a messenger to the generals of the Flavianist party, with information that
they were besieged, and that, unless succour arrived, they must be reduced
to distress. The night passed so quietly that he might have quitted the
place without loss; for, brave as were the soldiers of Vitellius in encountering
danger, they were far from attentive to the laborious duties of watching.
Besides this, the sudden fall of a winter storm baffled both sight and
hearing.
[3.70] At dawn of day, before either
side commenced hostilities, Sabinus sent Cornelius Martialis, a centurion
of the first rank, to Vitellius, with instructions to complain of the infraction
of the stipulated terms. "There has evidently," he said, "been
a mere show and pretence of abdicating the Empire, with the view of deceiving
a number of distinguished men. If not, why, when leaving the Rostra, had
he gone to the house of his brother, looking as it did over the Forum,
and certain to provoke the gaze of the multitude, rather than to the Aventine,
and the family house of his wife? This would have befitted a private individual
anxious to shun all appearance of Imperial power. But on the contrary,
Vitellius retraced his steps to the palace, the very stronghold of Empire;
thence issued a band of armed men. One of the most frequented parts of
the city was strewed with the corpses of innocent persons. The Capitol
itself had not been spared. "I," said Sabinus, "was only
a civilian and a member of the Senate, while the rivalry of Vitellius and
Vespasian was being settled by conflicts between legions, by the capture
of cities, by the capitulation of cohorts; with Spain, Germany, and Britain
in revolt, the brother of Vespasian still remained firm to his allegiance,
till actually invited to discuss terms of agreement. Peace and harmony
bring advantage to the conquered, but only credit to the conqueror. If
you repent of your compact, it is not against me, whom you treacherously
deceived, that you must draw the sword, nor is it against the son of Vespasian,
who is yet of tender age. What would be gained by the slaughter of one
old man and one stripling? You should go and meet the legions, and fight
there for Empire; everything else will follow the issue of that struggle."
To these representations the embarrassed Vitellius answered a few words
in his own exculpation, throwing all the blame upon the soldiers, with
whose excessive zeal his moderation was, he said, unable to cope. He advised
Martialis to depart unobserved through a concealed part of the palace,
lest he should be killed by the soldiers, as the negotiator of this abhorred
convention. Vitellius had not now the power either to command or to forbid.
He was no longer Emperor, he was merely the cause of war.
[3.71] Martialis had hardly returned
to the Capitol, when the infuriated soldiery arrived, without any leader,
every man acting on his own impulse. They hurried at quick march past the
Forum and the temples which hang over it, and advanced their line up the
opposite hill as far as the outer gates of the Capitol. There were formerly
certain colonnades on the right side of the slope as one went up; the defenders,
issuing forth on the roof of these buildings, showered tiles and stones
on the Vitellianists. The assailants were not armed with anything but swords,
and it seemed too tedious to send for machines and missiles. They threw
lighted brands on a projecting colonnade, and following the track of the
fire would have burst through the half-burnt gates of the Capitol, had
not Sabinus, tearing down on all sides the statues, the glories of former
generations, formed them into a barricade across the opening. They then
assailed the opposite approaches to the Capitol, near the grove of the
Asylum, and where the Tarpeian rock is mounted by a hundred steps. Both
these attacks were unexpected; the closer and fiercer of the two threatened
the Asylum. The assailants could not be checked as they mounted the continuous
line of buildings, which, as was natural in a time of profound peace, had
grown up to such a height as to be on a level with the soil of the Capitol.
A doubt arises at this point, whether it was the assailants who threw lighted
brands on to the roofs, or whether, as the more general account has it,
the besieged thus sought to repel the assailants, who were now making vigorous
progress. From them the fire passed to the colonnades adjoining the temples;
the eagles supporting the pediment, which were of old timber, caught the
flames. And so the Capitol, with its gates shut, neither defended by friends,
nor spoiled by a foe, was burnt to the ground.
[3.72] This was the most deplorable
and disgraceful event that had happened to the Commonwealth of Rome since
the foundation of the city; for now, assailed by no foreign enemy, with
Heaven ready to be propitious, had our vices only allowed, the seat of
Jupiter Supremely Good and Great, founded by our ancestors with solemn
auspices to be the pledge of Empire, the seat, which neither Porsenna,
when the city was surrendered, nor the Gauls, when it was captured, had
been able to violate, was destroyed by the madness of our Emperors. Once
before indeed during civil war the Capitol had been consumed by fire, but
then only through the crime of individuals; now it was openly besieged,
and openly set on fire. And what were the motives of this conflict? what
the compensation for so great a disaster? was it for our country we were
fighting? King Tarquinius Priscus had vowed its erection in his war with
the Sabines, and had laid the foundations on a scale which suited the hopes
of future greatness rather than what the yet moderate resources of Rome
could achieve. After him, Servius Tullius, heartily assisted by the allies,
and Tarquinius Superbus, employing the spoils of war from the conquered
Suessa Pometia, raised the superstructure. But the glory of its completion
was reserved for the days of liberty. After the expulsion of the Kings,
Horatius Pulvillus, in his second consulate, dedicated it, a building so
magnificent, that the vast wealth afterwards acquired by the people of
Rome served to embellish rather than increase it. It was rebuilt on the
same site, when, after an interval of 415 years, it was burnt to the ground
in the consulate of Lucius Scipio and Caius Norbanus. Sulla, after his
final triumph, undertook the charge of restoring it, but did not live to
dedicate it, the one thing denied to his uniform good fortune. The name
of Lutatius Catulus, the dedicator, remained among all the vast erections
of the Emperors, down to the days of Vitellius. This was the building that
was now on fire.
[3.73] The catastrophe, however, caused
more panic among the besieged than among the besiegers. In fact, the troops
of Vitellius lacked neither skill nor courage in the midst of peril. Opposed
to them were soldiers without self-possession, and a spiritless and, so
to speak, infatuated commander, who had not the use of his tongue or his
ears, who would not be guided by other men's counsels, and could not carry
out his own, who, hurried to and fro by the shouts of the enemy, forbade
what he had just ordered, and ordered what he had just forbidden. Then,
as usually happens when everything is lost, all gave orders, and no one
obeyed. At last, they threw away their arms, and began to look about for
ways of escape and means of concealment. The Vitellianists burst in, carrying
everywhere with indiscriminate ferocity the firebrand and the sword. A
few of the military men, among whom the most conspicuous were Cornelius
Martialis, Aemilius Pacensis, Casperius Niger, and Didius Sceva, ventured
to resist, and were cut down. Flavius Sabinus, who was unarmed, and who
did not attempt to fly, was surrounded, and with him the consul Quinctius
Atticus, marked out by his clinging to the shadow of office, and by his
folly in having scattered among the people edicts highly eulogistic of
Vespasian and insulting to Vitellius. The rest escaped by various chances,
some disguised as slaves, others concealed by the fidelity of dependants,
and hiding among the baggage. Some caught the watchword by which the Vitellianists
recognised each other, and, themselves challenging others and giving it
when challenged, found in their audacity an effectual disguise.
[3.74] When the enemy first burst in,
Domitian concealed himself in the house of a servant of the temple. At
the ingenious suggestion of a freedman, he assumed a linen vestment, and
passing unnoticed among a crowd of acolytes, found a refuge with Cornelius
Primus, one of his father's dependants, in a house near the Velabrum. When
his father mounted the throne, he pulled down the chamber of the temple-servant,
and built a small chapel, dedicated to Jupiter the Preserver, with an altar
on which his own adventures were represented in marble. Afterwards, on
his own accession to the Imperial power, he consecrated a vast temple to
Jupiter the Guardian, with an effigy of himself in the arms of the god.
Sabinus and Atticus were loaded with chains, and conducted to Vitellius,
who received them with anything but anger in his words and looks, amidst
the murmurs of those who demanded the privilege of slaying them and their
pay for the work they had done. Those who were standing near began the
clamour, and the degraded rabble cried out for the execution of Sabinus,
and mingled threats with their flatteries. Vitellius, who was standing
before the steps of the palace, and was preparing to intercede, was induced
to desist. The body of Sabinus, pierced and mutilated and with the head
severed from it, was dragged to the Gemoniae.
[3.75] Such was the end of a man in
no wise contemptible. In five and thirty campaigns he had served the State,
and had gained distinction both at home and abroad. His blamelessness and
integrity no one could question. He was somewhat boastful; this was the
only fault of which rumour accused him in the seven years during which
he had governed Moesia, and the twelve during which he was prefect of the
city. In the closing scene of his life some have seen pusillanimity, many
a moderate temper, sparing of the blood of his countrymen. One thing is
allowed by all, that, before the accession of Vespasian, the distinction
of the family was centred in Sabinus. I have heard that his death gratified
Mucianus, and many indeed asserted that the interests of peace were promoted
by the removal of the rivalry between these two men, one of whom felt himself
to be the brother of the Emperor, while the other thought himself his colleague.
Vitellius resisted the demands of the people for the execution of the Consul;
he was now pacified, and wished, it would seem, to recompense Atticus,
who, when asked who had set fire to the Capitol, had confessed his own
guilt, and by this confession, which may indeed have been an opportune
falsehood, was thought to have taken upon himself the odium of the crime,
and to have acquitted the Vitellianist party.
[3.76] Meanwhile Lucius Vitellius, who
was encamped near Feronia, was threatening Tarracina with destruction.
There were shut up in the place a few gladiators and seamen, who dared
not leave the walls and risk an engagement in the plain. I have mentioned
before that Julianus was in command of the gladiators, Apollinaris of the
seamen, two men whose profligacy and indolence made them resemble gladiators
rather than generals. They kept no watch; they did not strengthen the weak
points of the fortifications; but, making each pleasant spot ring with
the noise of their daily and nightly dissipation, they dispersed their
soldiers on errands which were to minister to their luxury, and never spoke
of war, except at their banquets. Apinius Tiro had quitted the place a
few days before, and was now, by the harsh exaction of presents and contributions
from the towns, adding to the unpopularity rather than to the resources
of his party.
[3.77] Meanwhile a slave belonging to
Verginius Capito deserted to L. Vitellius, and having engaged, on being
furnished with a force, to put him in possession of the unoccupied citadel,
proceeded at a late hour of the night to place some light-armed cohorts
on the summit of a range of hills which commanded the enemy's position.
From this place the troops descended to what was more a massacre than a
conflict. Many whom they slew were unarmed or in the act of arming themselves,
some were just awaking from sleep, amid the confusion of darkness and panic,
the braying of trumpets, and the shouts of the foe. A few of the gladiators
resisted, and fell not altogether unavenged. The rest made a rush for the
ships, where everything was involved in a general panic, the troops being
mingled with country people, whom the Vitellianists slaughtered indiscriminately.
Six Liburnian ships with Apollinaris, prefect of the fleet, escaped in
the first confusion. The rest were either seized upon the beach, or were
swamped by the weight of the crowds that rushed on board. Julianus was
brought before L. Vitellius, and, after being ignominiously scourged, was
put to death in his presence. Some persons accused Triaria, the wife of
L. Vitellius, of having armed herself with a soldier's sword, and of having
behaved with arrogance and cruelty amid the horrors and massacres of the
storm of Tarracina. Lucius himself sent to his brother a laurelled dispatch
with an account of his success, and asked whether he wished him at once
to return to Rome, or to complete the subjugation of Campania. This circumstance
was advantageous to the State as well as to the cause of Vespasian. Had
the army fresh from victory, and with all the pride of success added to
its natural obstinacy, marched upon Rome, a conflict of no slight magnitude,
and involving the destruction of the capital, must have ensued. Lucius
Vitellius, infamous as he was, had yet some energy, but it was not through
his virtues, as is the case with the good, but through his vices, that
he, like the worst of villains, was formidable.
[3.78] While these successes were being
achieved on the side of Vitellius, the army of Vespasian had left Narnia,
and was passing the holiday of the Saturnalia in idleness at Ocriculum.
The reason alleged for so injurious a delay was that they might wait for
Mucianus. Some persons indeed there were who assailed Antonius with insinuations,
that he lingered with treacherous intent, after receiving private letters
from Vitellius, which conveyed to him the offer of the consulship and of
the Emperor's daughter in marriage with a vast dowry, as the price of treason.
Others asserted that this was all a fiction, invented to please Mucianus.
Some again alleged that the policy agreed upon by all the generals was
to threaten rather than actually to attack the capital, as Vitellius' strongest
cohorts had revolted from him, and it seemed likely that, deprived of all
support, he would abdicate the throne, but that the whole plan was ruined
by the impatience and subsequent cowardice of Sabinus, who, after rashly
taking up arms, had not been able to defend against three cohorts the great
stronghold of the Capitol, which might have defied even the mightiest armies.
One cannot, however, easily fix upon one man the blame which belongs to
all. Mucianus did in fact delay the conquerors by ambiguously-worded dispatches;
Antonius, by a perverse acquiescence, or by an attempt to throw the odium
upon another, laid himself open to blame; the other generals, by imagining
that the war was over, contrived a distinction for its closing scene. Even
Petilius Cerialis, though he had been sent on with a thousand cavalry by
crossroads through the Sabine district so as to enter Rome by the Via Salaria,
had not been sufficiently prompt in his movements, when the report of the
siege of the Capitol put all alike on the alert.
[3.79] Antonius marched by the Via Flaminia,
and arrived at Saxa Rubra, when the night was far spent, too late to give
any help. There he received nothing but gloomy intelligence, that Sabinus
was dead, that the Capitol had been burnt to the ground, that Rome was
in consternation, and also that the populace and the slaves were arming
themselves for Vitellius. And Petilius Cerialis had been defeated in a
cavalry skirmish. While he was hurrying on without caution, as against
a vanquished enemy, the Vitellianists, who had disposed some infantry among
their cavalry, met him. The conflict took place not far from the city among
buildings, gardens, and winding lanes, which were well known to the Vitellianists,
but disconcerting to their opponents, to whom they were strange. Nor indeed
were all the cavalry one in heart, for there were with them some who had
lately capitulated at Narnia, and who were anxiously watching the fortunes
of the rival parties. Tullius Flavianus, commanding a squadron, was taken
prisoner; the rest fled in disgraceful confusion, but the victors did not
continue the pursuit beyond Fidenae.
[3.80] By this success the zeal of the
people was increased. The mob of the city armed itself. Some few had military
shields, the greater part seized such arms as came to hand, and loudly
demanded the signal of battle. Vitellius expressed his thanks to them,
and bade them sally forth to defend the capital. Then the Senate was called
together, and envoys were selected to meet the armies and urge them in
the name of the Commonwealth to union and peace. The reception of these
envoys was not everywhere the same. Those who fell in with Petilius Cerialis
were exposed to extreme peril, for the troops disdained all offers of peace.
The praetor Arulenus Rusticus was wounded. This deed seemed all the more
atrocious, when, over and above the insult offered to the dignity of the
envoy and praetor, men considered the private worth of the man. His companions
were dispersed, and the lictor that stood next to him, venturing to push
aside the crowd, was killed. Had they not been protected by an escort provided
by the general, the dignity of the ambassador, respected even by foreign
nations, would have been profaned with fatal violence by the madness of
Roman citizens before the very walls of their Country. The envoys who met
Antonious were more favourably received, not because the troops were of
quieter temper, but because the general had more authority.
[3.81] One Musonius Rufus, a man of
equestrian rank, strongly attached to the pursuit of philosophy and to
the tenets of the Stoics, had joined the envoys. He mingled with the troops,
and, enlarging on the blessings of peace and the perils of war, began to
admonish the armed crowd. Many thought it ridiculous; more thought it tiresome;
some were ready to throw him down and trample him under foot, had he not
yielded to the warnings of the more orderly and the threats of others,
and ceased to display his ill-timed wisdom. The Vestal virgins also presented
themselves with a letter from Vitellius to Antonius. He asked for one day
of truce before the final struggle, and said, that if they would permit
some delay to intervene, everything might be more easily arranged. The
sacred virgins were sent back with honour, but the answer returned to Vitellius
was, that all ordinary intercourse of war had been broken off by the murder
of Sabinus and the conflagration of the Capitol.
[3.82] Antonius, however, summoned the
legions to an assembly, and endeavoured to calm them, proposing that they
should encamp near the Mulvian bridge, and enter the capital on the following
day. His reason for delay was the fear that the soldiers, once exasperated
by conflict, would respect neither the people nor the Senate, nor even
the shrines and temples of the Gods. They, however, looked with dislike
on all procrastination as inimical to victory. At the same time the colours
that glittered among the hills, though followed by an unwarlike population,
presented the appearance of a hostile array. They advanced in three divisions,
one column straight from where they had halted along the Via Flaminia,
another along the bank of the Tiber, a third moved on the Colline Gate
by the Via Salaria. The mob was routed by a charge of the cavalry. Then
the Vitellianist troops, themselves also drawn up in three columns of defence,
met the foe. Numerous engagements with various issue took place before
the walls, but they generally ended in favour of the Flavianists, who had
the advantage of more skilful generalship. Only that division suffered
which had wound its way along narrow and slippery roads to the left quarter
of the city as far as the gardens of Sallust. The Vitellianists, taking
their stand on the garden-walls, kept off the assailants with stones and
javelins till late in the day, when they were taken in the rear by the
cavalry, which had then forced an entrance by the Colline Gate. In the
Campus Martius also the hostile armies met, the Flavianists with all the
prestige of fortune and repeated victory, the Vitellianists rushing on
in sheer despair. Though defeated, they rallied again in the city.
[3.83] The populace stood by and watched
the combatants; and, as though it had been a mimic conflict, encouraged
first one party and then the other by their shouts and plaudits. Whenever
either side gave way, they cried out that those who concealed themselves
in the shops, or took refuge in any private house, should be dragged out
and butchered, and they secured the larger share of the booty; for, while
the soldiers were busy with bloodshed and massacre, the spoils fell to
the crowd. It was a terrible and hideous sight that presented itself throughout
the city. Here raged battle and death; there the bath and the tavern were
crowded. In one spot were pools of blood and heaps of corpses, and close
by prostitutes and men of character as infamous; there were all the debaucheries
of luxurious peace, all the horrors of a city most cruelly sacked, till
one was ready to believe the Country to be mad at once with rage and lust.
It was not indeed the first time that armed troops had fought within the
city; they had done so twice when Sulla, once when Cinna triumphed. The
bloodshed then had not been less, but now there was an unnatural recklessness,
and men's pleasures were not interrupted even for a moment. As if it were
a new delight added to their holidays, they exulted in and enjoyed the
scene, indifferent to parties, and rejoicing over the sufferings of the
Commonwealth.
[3.84] The most arduous struggle was
the storming of the camp, which the bravest of the enemy still held as
a last hope. It was, therefore, with peculiar energy that the conquerors,
among whom the veteran cohorts were especially forward, brought to bear
upon it at once all the appliances which have been discovered in reducing
the strongest cities, the testudo, the catapult, the earth-work, and the
firebrand. They repeatedly shouted "that all the toil and danger they
had endured in so many conflicts would be crowned by this achievement.
The capital has been restored to the Senate and people of Rome, and their
temples to the Gods; but the soldier's peculiar distinction is in the camp;
this is his country, and this his home; unless this be recovered forthwith,
the night must be passed under arms." On the other hand the Vitellianists,
though unequal in numbers and doomed to defeat, could yet disturb the victory,
delay the conclusion of peace, and pollute both hearth and altar with blood;
and they clung to these last consolations of the vanquished. Many, desperately
wounded, breathed their last on the towers and ramparts. When the gates
were torn down, the survivors threw themselves in a body on the conquerors,
and fell to a man, with their wounds in front and their faces turned towards
the foe, so anxious were they even in their last hours to die with honour.
When the city had been taken, Vitellius caused himself to be carried in
a litter through the back of the palace to the Aventine, to his wife's
dwelling, intending, if by any concealment he could escape for that day,
to make his way to his brother's cohorts at Tarracina. Then, with characteristic
weakness, and following the instincts of fear, which, dreading everything,
shrinks most from what is immediately before it, he retraced his steps
to the desolate and forsaken palace, whence even the meanest slaves had
fled, or where they avoided his presence. The solitude and silence of the
place scared him; he tried the closed doors, he shuddered in the empty
chambers, till, wearied out with his miserable wanderings, he concealed
himself in an unseemly hiding-place, from which he was dragged out by the
tribune Julius Placidus. His hands were bound behind his back, and he was
led along with tattered robes, a revolting spectacle, amidst the invectives
of many, the tears of none. The degradation of his end had extinguished
all pity. One of the German soldiers met the party, and aimed a deadly
blow at Vitellius, perhaps in anger, perhaps wishing to release him the
sooner from insult. Possibly the blow was meant for the tribune. He struck
off that officer's ear, and was immediately dispatched.
[3.85] Vitellius, compelled by threatening
swords, first to raise his face and offer it to insulting blows, then to
behold his own statues falling round him, and more than once to look at
the Rostra and the spot where Galba was slain, was then driven along till
they reached the Gemoniae, the place where the corpse of Flavius Sabinus
had lain. One speech was heard from him shewing a spirit not utterly degraded,
when to the insults of a tribune he answered, "Yet I was your Emperor."
Then he fell under a shower of blows, and the mob reviled the dead man
with the same heartlessness with which they had flattered him when he was
alive.
[3.86] Luceria was his native place.
He had nearly completed his 57th year. His consulate, his priesthood, his
high reputation, his place among the first men of the State, he owed, not
to any energy of his own, but to the renown of his father. The throne was
offered him by men who did not know him. Seldom have the affections of
the army attached themselves to any man who sought to gain them by his
virtues as firmly as they did to him from the indolence of his character.
Yet he had a certain frankness and generosity, qualities indeed which turn
to a man's ruin, unless tempered with discretion. Believing that friendship
may be retained by munificent gifts rather than by consistency of character,
he deserved more of it than he secured. Doubtless it was good for the State
that Vitellius should be overthrown, but they who betrayed Vitellius to
Vespasian cannot make a merit of their treachery, since they had themselves
revolted from Galba. The day was now fast drawing to a close, and the Senate
could not be convened, owing to the panic of the magistrates and Senators,
who had stolen out of the city, or were concealing themselves in the houses
of dependants. When nothing more was to be feared from the enemy, Domitian
came forward to meet the leaders of the party; he was universally saluted
by the title of Caesar, and the troops, in great numbers, armed as they
were, conducted him to his father's house.
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