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The Histories
by
Publius Cornelius Tacitus
Tacitus - Introduction
Book 4 - (January - November, A.D. 70)
[4.1] WHEN Vitellius was dead, the war
had indeed come to an end, but peace had yet to begin. Sword in hand, throughout
the capital, the conquerors hunted down the conquered with merciless hatred.
The streets were choked with carnage, the squares and temples reeked with
blood, for men were massacred everywhere as chance threw them in the way.
Soon, as their license increased, they began to search for and drag forth
hidden foes. Whenever they saw a man tall and young they cut him down,
making no distinction between soldiers and civilians. But the ferocity,
which in the first impulse of hatred could be gratified only by blood,
soon passed into the greed of gain. They let nothing be kept secret, nothing
be closed; Vitellianists, they pretended, might be thus concealed. Here
was the first step to breaking open private houses; here, if resistance
were made, a pretext for slaughter. The most needy of the populace and
the most worthless of the slaves did not fail to come forward and betray
their wealthy masters; others were denounced by friends. Everywhere were
lamentations, and wailings, and all the miseries of a captured city, till
the license of the Vitellianist and Othonianist soldiery, once so odious,
was remembered with regret. The leaders of the party, so energetic in kindling
civil strife, were incapable of checking the abuse of victory. In stirring
up tumult and strife the worst men can do the most, but peace and quiet
cannot be established without virtue.
[4.2] Domitian had entered into possession
of the title and residence of Caesar, but not yet applying himself to business,
was playing the part of a son of the throne with debauchery and intrigue.
The office of prefect of the Praetorian Guard was held by Arrius Varus,
but the supreme power was in the hands of Primus Antonius, who carried
off money and slaves from the establishment of the Emperor, as if they
were the spoils of Cremona. The other generals, whose moderation or insignificance
had shut them out from distinction in the war, had accordingly no share
in its prizes. The country, terror-stricken and ready to acquiesce in servitude,
urgently demanded that Lucius Vitellius with his cohorts should be intercepted
on his way from Tarracina, and that the last sparks of war should be trodden
out. The cavalry were sent on to Aricia, the main body of the legions halted
on this side of Bovillae. Without hesitation Vitellius surrendered himself
and his cohorts to the discretion of the conqueror, and the soldiers threw
down their ill-starred arms in rage quite as much as in alarm. The long
train of prisoners, closely guarded by armed men, passed through the capital.
Not one of them wore the look of a suppliant; sullen and savage, they were
unmoved by the shouts and jests of the insulting rabble. A few, who ventured
to break away, were overpowered by the force that hemmed them in; the rest
were thrown into prison. Not one of them uttered an unworthy word; even
in disaster the honour of the soldier was preserved. After this Lucius
Vitellius was executed. Equally vicious with his brother, he had yet shewn
greater vigilance during that brother's reign, and may be said, not so
much to have shared his elevation, as to have been dragged down by his
fall.
[4.3] About the same time Lucilius Bassus
was sent with some light cavalry to establish order in Campania, where
the towns were still disturbed, but by mutual animosities rather than by
any spirit of opposition to the new Emperor. The sight of the soldiery
restored quiet, and the smaller colonies escaped unpunished. At Capua,
however, the third legion was stationed to pass the winter, and the noble
families suffered severely. Tarracina, on the other hand, received no relief;
so much more inclined are we to requite an injury than an obligation. Gratitude
is a burden, while there seems to be a profit in revenge. They were consoled
by seeing the slave of Verginius Capito, whom I have mentioned as the betrayer
of Tarracina, gibbeted in the very rings of knighthood, the gift of Vitellius,
which they had seen him wear. At Rome the Senate, delighted and full of
confident hope, decreed to Vespasian all the honours customarily bestowed
on the Emperors. And indeed the civil war, which, beginning in Gaul and
Spain, and afterwards drawing into the struggle first Germany and then
Illyricum, had traversed Aegypt, Judaea, and Syria, every province, and
every army, this war, now that the whole earth was, as it were, purged
from guilt, seemed to have reached its close. Their alacrity was increased
by a letter from Vespasian, written during the continuance of the war.
Such indeed was its character at first sight; the writer, however, expressed
himself as an Emperor, speaking modestly about himself, in admirable language
about the State. There was no want of deference on the part of the Senate.
On the Emperor and his son Titus the consulship was bestowed by decree;
on Domitian the office of praetor with consular authority.
[4.4] Mucianus had also forwarded to
the Senate certain letters which furnished matter for talk. It was said,
"Why, if he is a private citizen, does he speak like a public man?
In a few days' time he might have said the very same words in his place
as a Senator. And even the invective against Vitellius comes too late,
and is ungenerous; while certainly it is arrogance to the State and an
insult to the Emperor to boast that he had the Imperial power in his hands,
and made a present of it to Vespasian." Their dislike, however, was
concealed; their adulation was open enough. In most flattering language
they voted a triumph to Mucianus, a triumph for a civil war, though the
expedition against the Sarmatae was the pretext. On Antonius Primus were
bestowed the insignia of consular rank, on Arrius Varus and Cornelius Fuscus
praetorian honours. Then they remembered the Gods. It was determined that
the Capitol should be restored. All these motions Valerius Asiaticus, consul
elect, proposed. Most of the Senators signified their assent by their looks,
or by raising the hand; but a few, who either held a distinguished rank,
or had a practised talent for flattery, declared their acquiescence in
studied speeches. When it came to the turn of Helvidius Priscus, praetor
elect, to vote, he delivered an opinion, full of respect indeed to a worthy
Emperor, and yet wholly free from insincerity; and he was strongly supported
by the sympathies of the Senate. To Priscus indeed this day was in an especial
manner the beginning of a great quarrel and a great renown.
[4.5] As I have again happened to mention
a man of whom I shall often have to speak, the subject seems to demand
that I should give a brief account of his life and pursuits, and of his
fortunes. Helvidius Priscus was a native of the town of Carecina in Italy,
and was the son of one Cluvius, who had been a centurion of the first rank.
In early youth he devoted his distinguished talents to the loftiest pursuits,
not wishing, as do many, to cloak under an imposing name a life of indolence,
but to be able to enter upon public life with a spirit fortified against
the chances of fortune. He followed those teachers of philosophy who hold
nothing to be good but what is honourable, nothing evil but what is base,
and who refuse to count either among things good or evil, power, rank,
or indeed any thing not belonging to the mind. While still holding the
quaestorship, he was selected by Paetus Thrasea to be his son-in-law, and
from the example of his father-in-law imbibed with peculiar eagerness a
love of liberty. As a citizen and as a Senator, as a husband, as a son-in-law,
as a friend, and in all the relations of life, he was ever the same, despising
wealth, steadily tenacious of right, and undaunted by danger.
[4.6] There were some who thought him
too eager for fame, and indeed the desire of glory is the last infirmity
cast off even by the wise. The fall of his father-in-law drove him into
exile, but he returned when Galba mounted the throne, and proceeded to
impeach Marcellus Eprius, who had been the informer against Thrasea. This
retribution, as great as it was just, had divided the Senate into two parties;
for, if Marcellus fell, a whole army of fellow culprits was struck down.
At first there was a fierce struggle, as is proved by the great speeches
delivered by both men. But afterwards, as the feelings of Galba were doubtful,
and many Senators interceded, Priscus dropped the charge, amidst comments
varying with the tempers of men, some praising his moderation, and others
deploring a lack of courage. On the day, however, that the Senate was voting
about the Imperial dignities of Vespasian, it had been resolved that envoys
should be sent to the new Emperor. Hence arose a sharp altercation between
Helvidius and Eprius. Priscus proposed that they should be chosen by name
by the magistrates on oath, Marcellus demanded the ballot; and this had
been the opinion expressed by the Consul elect.
[4.7] It was the dread of personal humiliation
that made Marcellus so earnest, for he feared that, if others were chosen,
he should himself appear slighted. From an angry conversation they passed
by degrees to long and bitter speeches. Helvidius asked, "Why should
Marcellus be so afraid of the judgment of the magistrates? He has wealth
and eloquence, which might make him superior to many, were he not oppressed
by the consciousness of guilt. The chances of the ballot do not discriminate
men's characters; the voting and the judgment of the Senate were devised
to reach the lives and reputations of individuals. It concerns the interests
of the Commonwealth, it concerns the honour due to Vespasian, that he should
be met by those whom the Senate counts to be peculiarly blameless, and
who may fill the Emperor's ear with honourable counsels. Vespasian was
the friend of Thrasea, Soranus, and Sextius; and the accusers of these
men, though it may not be expedient to punish them, ought not to be paraded
before him. By this selection on the part of the Senate the Emperor will,
so to speak, be advised whom he should mark with approval, and from whom
he should shrink. There can be no more effectual instrument of good government
than good friends. Let Marcellus be satisfied with having urged Nero to
destroy so many innocent victims; let him enjoy the wages of his crimes
and his impunity, but let him leave Vespasian to worthier advisers."
[4.8] Marcellus declared, "It is
not my opinion that is assailed; the Consul elect has made a motion in
accordance with old precedents, which directed the use of the ballot in
the appointment of envoys, in order that there might be no room for intrigue
or private animosities. Nothing has happened why customs of long standing
should fall into disuse, or why the honour due to the Emperor should be
turned into an insult to any man. All Senators are competent to pay their
homage. What we have rather to avoid is this, that a mind unsettled by
the novelty of power, and which will keenly watch the very looks and language
of all, should be irritated by the obstinacy of certain persons. I do not
forget the times in which I have been born, or the form of government which
our fathers and grandfathers established. I may regard with admiration
an earlier period, but I acquiesce in the present, and, while I pray for
good Emperors, I can endure whomsoever we may have. It was not through
my speech any more than it was through the judgment of the Senate that
Thrasea fell. The savage temper of Nero amused itself under these forms,
and I found the friendship of such a Prince as harassing as others found
their exile. Finally, Helvidius may rival the Catos and the Bruti of old
in constancy and courage; I am but one of the Senate which bows to the
same yoke. Besides, I would advise Priscus not to climb higher than the
throne, or to impose his counsels on Vespasian, an old man, who has won
the honours of a triumph, and has two sons grown to manhood. For as the
worst Emperors love an unlimited despotism, so the noblest like some check
on liberty." These speeches, which were delivered with much vehemence
on both sides, were heard with much diversity of feeling. That party prevailed
which preferred that the envoys should be taken by lot, as even the neutral
section in the Senate exerted themselves to retain the old practice, while
the more conspicuous members inclined to the same view, dreading jealousy,
should the choice fall on themselves.
[4.9] Another struggle ensued. The praetors
of the Treasury (the Treasury was at this time managed by praetors) complained
of the poverty of the State, and demanded a retrenchment of expenditure.
The Consul elect, considering how great was the evil and how difficult
the remedy, was for reserving the matter for the Emperor. Helvidius gave
it as his opinion that measures should be taken at the discretion of the
Senate. When the Consuls came to take the votes, Vulcatius Tertullinus,
tribune of the people, put his veto on any resolution being adopted in
so important a matter in the absence of the Emperor. Helvidius had moved
that the Capitol should be restored at the public expense, and that Vespasian
should give his aid. All the more moderate of the Senators let this opinion
pass in silence, and in time forgot it; but there were some who remembered
it.
[4.10] Musonius Rufus then made a violent
attack on Publius Celer, accusing him of having brought about the destruction
of Barea Soranus by perjury. By this impeachment all the hatreds of the
days of the informers seemed to be revived; but the accused person was
so worthless and so guilty that he could not be protected. For indeed the
memory of Soranus was held in reverence; Celer had been a professor of
philosophy, and had then given evidence against Barea, thus betraying and
profaning the friendship of which he claimed to be a teacher. The next
day was fixed for the trial. But it was not of Musonius or Publius, it
was of Priscus, of Marcellus, and his brother informers, that men were
thinking, now that their hearts were once roused to vengeance.
[4.11] While things were in this state,
while there was division in the Senate, resentment among the conquered,
no real authority in the conquerors, and in the country at large no laws
and no Emperor, Mucianus entered the capital, and at once drew all power
into his own hands. The influence of Primus Antonius and Varus Arrius was
destroyed; for the irritation of Mucianus against them, though not revealed
in his looks, was but ill-concealed, and the country, keen to discover
such dislikes, had changed its tone and transferred its homage. He alone
was canvassed and courted, and he, surrounding himself with armed men,
and bargaining for palaces and gardens, ceased not, what with his magnificence,
his proud bearing, and his guards, to grasp at the power, while he waived
the titles of Empire. The murder of Calpurnius Galerianus caused the utmost
consternation. He was a son of Caius Piso, and had done nothing, but a
noble name and his own youthful beauty made him the theme of common talk;
and while the country was still unquiet and delighted in novel topics,
there were persons who associated him with idle rumours of Imperial honours.
By order of Mucianus he was surrounded with a guard of soldiers. Lest his
execution in the capital should excite too much notice, they conducted
him to the fortieth milestone from Rome on the Appian Road, and there put
him to death by opening his veins. Julius Priscus, who had been prefect
of the Praetorian Guard under Vitellius, killed himself rather out of shame
than by compulsion. Alfenius Varus survived the disgrace of his cowardice.
Asiaticus, who was only a freedman, expiated by the death of a slave his
evil exercise of power.
[4.12] At this time the country was
hearing with anything but sorrow rumours that daily gained strength of
disasters in Germany. Men began to speak of slaughtered armies, of captured
encampments, of Gaul in revolt, as if such things were not calamities.
Beginning at an earlier period I will discuss the causes in which this
war had its origin, and the extent of the movements which it kindled among
independent and allied nations.
The Batavians, while they dwelt on the other side of the Rhine, formed
a part of the tribe of the Chatti. Driven out by a domestic revolution,
they took possession of an uninhabited district on the extremity of the
coast of Gaul, and also of a neighbouring island, surrounded by the ocean
in front, and by the river Rhine in the rear and on either side. Not weakened
by the power of Rome or by alliance with a people stronger than themselves,
they furnished to the Empire nothing but men and arms. They had had a long
training in the German wars, and they had gained further renown in Britain,
to which country their cohorts had been transferred, commanded, according
to ancient custom, by the noblest men in the nation. They had also at home
a select body of cavalry, who practised with special devotion the art of
swimming, so that they could stem the stream of the Rhine with their arms
and horses, without breaking the order of their squadrons.
[4.13] Julius Paullus and Claudius Civilis,
scions of the royal family, ranked very high above the rest of their nation.
Paullus was executed by Fonteius Capito on a false charge of rebellion.
Civilis was put in chains and sent to Nero, and, though acquitted by Galba,
again stood in peril of his life in the time of Vitellius, when the army
clamoured for his execution. Here were causes of deep offence; hence arose
hopes built on our disasters. Civilis, however, was naturally politic to
a degree rarely found among barbarians. He was wont to represent himself
as Sertorius or Hannibal, on the strength of a similar disfigurement of
his countenance. To avoid the opposition which he would encounter as a
public enemy, were he openly to revolt from Rome, he affected a friendship
for Vespasian and a zealous attachment to his party; and indeed a letter
had been despatched to him by Primus Antonius, in which he was directed
to divert the reinforcements which Vitellius had called up, and to keep
the legions where they were by the feint of an outbreak in Germany. The
same policy was suggested by Hordeonius in person; he had a bias towards
Vespasian, and feared for the Empire, the utter ruin of which would be
very near, were a fresh war with so many thousands of armed men to burst
upon Italy.
[4.14] Civilis, who was resolved on
rebellion, and intended, while concealing his ulterior designs, to reveal
his other plans as occasion presented itself, set about the work of revolution
in this way. By command of Vitellius all the Batavian youth was then being
summoned to the conscription, a thing naturally vexatious, and which the
officials made yet more burdensome by their rapacity and profligacy, while
they selected aged and infirm persons, whom they might discharge for a
consideration, and mere striplings, but of distinguished beauty (and many
attained even in boyhood to a noble stature), whom they dragged off for
infamous purposes. This caused indignation, and the ringleaders of the
concerted rebellion prevailed upon the people to refuse the conscription.
Civilis collected at one of the sacred groves, ostensibly for a banquet,
the chiefs of the nation and the boldest spirits of the lower class. When
he saw them warmed with the festivities of the night, he began by speaking
of the renown and glory of their race, and then counted the wrongs and
the oppressions which they endured, and all the other evils of slavery.
"There is," he said, "no alliance, as once there was; we
are treated as slaves. When does even a legate come among us, though he
come only with a burdensome retinue and in all the haughtiness of power?
We are handed over to prefects and centurions, and when they are glutted
with our spoils and our blood, then they are changed, and new receptacles
for plunder, new terms for spoliation, are discovered. Now the conscription
is at hand, tearing, we may say, for ever children from parents, and brothers
from brothers. Never has the power of Rome been more depressed. In the
winter quarters of the legions there is nothing but property to plunder
and a few old men. Only dare to look up, and cease to tremble at the empty
names of legions. For we have a vast force of horse and foot; we have the
Germans our kinsmen; we have Gaul bent on the same objects. Even to the
Roman people this war will not be displeasing; if defeated, we shall still
reckon it a service to Vespasian, and for success no account need be rendered."
[4.15] Having been listened to with
great approval, he bound the whole assembly with barbarous rites and the
national forms of oath. Envoys were sent to the Canninefates to urge a
common policy. This is a tribe which inhabits part of the island, and closely
resembles the Batavians in their origin, their language, and their courageous
character, but is inferior in numbers. After this he sent messengers to
tamper with the British auxiliaries and with the Batavian cohorts, who,
as I have before related, had been sent into Germany, and were then stationed
at Mogontiacum. Among the Canninefates there was a certain Brinno, a man
of a certain stolid bravery and of distinguished birth. His father, after
venturing on many acts of hostility, had scorned with impunity the ridiculous
expedition of Caligula. His very name, the name of a family of rebels,
made him popular. Raised aloft on a shield after the national fashion,
and balanced on the shoulders of the bearers, he was chosen general. Immediately
summoning to arms the Frisii, a tribe of the farther bank of the Rhine,
he assailed by sea the winter quarters of two cohorts, which was the nearest
point to attack. The soldiers had not anticipated the assault of the enemy;
even had they done so, they had not strength to repulse it. Thus the camp
was taken and plundered. Then the enemy fell upon the sutlers and Roman
traders, who were wandering about in every direction, as they would in
a time of peace. At the same time they were on the point of destroying
the forts, but the prefects of the cohorts, seeing that they could not
hold them, set them on fire. The standards, the colours, and what soldiers
there were, concentrated themselves in the upper part of the island under
the command of Aquilius, a centurion of the first rank, an army in name
rather than in strength. Vitellius in fact, after withdrawing the effective
troops from the cohorts, had loaded with arms a crowd of idlers from the
neighbouring villages of the Nervii and the Germans.
[4.16] Civilis, thinking that he must
proceed by craft, actually blamed the prefects for having deserted the
forts, saying that he would himself, with the cohort under his command,
quell the disturbance among the Canninefates, and that they had better
return to their respective winter quarters. It was evident, however, that
there was some treacherous design beneath this advice, that the cohorts
would be dispersed only to be more easily crushed, and that the guiding
hand in the war was not Brinno but Civilis; for indications of the truth,
which the Germans, a people who delight in war, could not long conceal,
were gradually coming to light. When stratagem proved ineffectual, he resorted
to force, arranging in distinct columns the Canninefates, the Batavians,
and the Frisii. The Roman army was drawn up to meet them not far from the
river Rhine, and the ships, which, after burning the forts, they had stranded
at that point, were arranged so as to front the enemy. Before the struggle
had lasted long, a cohort of Tungrians carried over their standards to
Civilis. The other troops, paralysed by the unexpected desertion, were
cut down alike by friends and foes. In the fleet there was the same treachery.
Some of the rowers were Batavians, and they hindered the operations of
the sailors and combatants by an apparent want of skill; then they began
to back water, and to run the sterns on to the hostile shore. At last they
killed the pilots and centurions, unless these were willing to join them.
The end was that the whole fleet of four and twenty vessels either deserted
or was taken.
[4.17] For the moment this was a brilliant
success, and it had its use for the future. They possessed themselves of
some arms and some vessels, both of which they wanted, while they became
very famous throughout Germany as the champions of liberty. The tribes
of Germany immediately sent envoys with offers of troops. The co-operation
of Gaul Civilis endeavoured to secure by politic liberality, sending back
to their respective states the captured prefects of cohorts, and giving
permission to their men to go or stay as they preferred. He offered to
those who stayed service on honourable terms, to those who departed the
spoils of the Roman army. At the same time he reminded them in confidential
conversations of the wrongs which they had endured for so many years, while
they falsely gave to a wretched slavery the name of peace. "The Batavians,"
he said, "though free of tribute, have yet taken up arms against our
common masters. In the first conflict the soldiers of Rome have been routed
and vanquished. What will be the result if Gaul throws off the yoke? What
strength is there yet left in Italy? It is by the blood of the provinces
that the provinces are conquered. Think not of how it fared with the armies
of Vindex. It was by Batavian cavalry that the Aedui and the Arverni were
trampled down, and among the auxiliaries of Verginius there were found
Belgian troops. To those who will estimate the matter aright it is evident
that Gaul fell by her own strength. But now all are on the same side, and
we have whatever remnant of military vigour still flourished in the camps
of Rome. With us too are the veteran cohorts to which the legions of Otho
lately succumbed. Let Syria, Asia Minor, and the East, habituated as it
is to despotism, submit to slavery; there are many yet alive in Gaul who
were born before the days of tribute. It was only lately indeed that Quintilius
Varus was slain, and slavery driven out of Germany. And the Emperor who
was challenged by that war was not a Vitellius, but a Caesar Augustus.
Freedom is a gift bestowed by nature even on the dumb animals. Courage
is the peculiar excellence of man, and the Gods help the braver side. Let
us then, who are free to act and vigorous, fall on a distracted and exhausted
enemy. While some are supporting Vespasian, and others Vitellius, opportunities
are opening up for acting against both."
[4.18] Civilis, bent on winning Gaul
and Germany if his purposes should prosper, was on the point of securing
supremacy over the most powerful and most wealthy of the states. His first
attempts Hordeonius Flaccus had encouraged by affecting ignorance. But
when messengers came hurrying in with intelligence that a camp had been
stormed, that cohorts had been cut to pieces, and that the Roman power
had been expelled from the island of the Batavians, the general ordered
the legate, Munius Lupercus, who was in command of the winter quarters
of two legions, to advance against the enemy. Lupercus in great haste threw
across the Rhine such legionaries as were on the spot, some Ubian troops
who were close at hand, and some cavalry of the Treveri, who were stationed
at no great distance; these were accompanied by some Batavian horse, who,
though they had been long disaffected, yet still simulated loyalty in order
that by betraying the Romans in the moment of actual conflict they might
receive a higher price for their desertion. Civilis, surrounding himself
with the standards of the captured cohorts, to keep their recent honours
before the eyes of his own men, and to terrify the enemy by the remembrance
of defeat, now directed his own mother and sisters, and the wives and children
of all his men, to stand in the rear, where they might encourage to victory,
or shame defeat. The war-song of the men, and the shrill cries of the women,
rose from the whole line, and an answering but far less vigorous cheer,
came from the legions and auxiliaries. The Batavians had exposed the left
wing by their desertion, and they immediately turned against our men. Still
the legionaries, though their position was alarming, kept their arms and
their ranks. The auxiliaries of the Ubii and the Treveri broke at once
in shameful flight, and dispersed over the whole country. On that side
the Germans threw the weight of their attack. Meanwhile the legions had
an opportunity of retreating into what was called the Old Camp. Claudius
Labeo, prefect of the Batavian horse, who had been the rival of Civilis
in some local contest, was sent away into the country of the Frisii; to
kill him might be to give offence to his countrymen, while to keep him
with the army might be to sow the seeds of discord.
[4.19] About the same time the messenger
despatched by Civilis came up with the cohorts of the Batavians and the
Canninefates, while by the orders of Vitellius they were advancing towards
Rome. At once, inflated with pride and haughtiness, they demanded, by way
of remuneration for their march, a donative, double pay, and an increase
in the number of cavalry, things indeed which Vitellius had promised, but
which they now asked, not with the thought of obtaining them, but as a
pretext for mutiny. Flaccus, by his many concessions, had produced no other
effect but to make them insist with more energy on what they knew he must
refuse. Treating him with contempt, they made their way towards Lower Germany,
to join Civilis. Hordeonius, assembling the tribunes and centurions, asked
their opinion as to whether he should use coercion with those who refused
obedience. Soon, yielding to his natural timidity and to the alarm of his
officers, who were troubled by the suspicious temper of the auxiliaries
and by the fact that the ranks of the legions had been recruited by a hurried
conscription, he resolved to confine his troops to the camp. Then, repenting
of his resolve, and finding that the very men who had advised it now disapproved
it, he seemed bent on pursuing the enemy, and wrote to Herennius Gallus,
legate of the first legion, who was then holding Bonna, that he was to
prevent the Batavians from crossing the Rhine, and that he would himself
hang on their rear with his army. They might have been crushed, if Hordeonius,
moving from one side, and Gallus from the other, had enclosed them between
their armies. But Flaccus abandoned his purpose, and, in other despatches
to Gallus, recommended him not to threaten the departing foe. Thence arose
a suspicion that the war was being kindled with the consent of the legates,
and that everything which had happened, or was apprehended, was due, not
to the cowardice of the troops, or to the strength of the enemy, but to
the treachery of the generals.
[4.20] When the Batavians were near
the camp at Bonna, they sent on before them delegates, commissioned to
deliver to Herennius Gallus a message from the cohorts. It was to this
effect: "We have no quarrel with the Romans, for whom we have so often
fought. Wearied with a protracted and fruitless service, we long for our
native land and for rest. If no one oppose us, our march will be harmless,
but if an armed force encounter us, we will make a way with the sword."
The soldiers prevailed upon the hesitating legate to risk the chances of
a battle. Three thousand legionaries, some raw Belgian cohorts, and with
them a mob of rustics and camp-followers, cowardly, but bold of speech
before the moment of danger, rushed out of all the gates, thinking to surround
the Batavians, who were inferior in number. But the enemy, being veteran
troops, formed in columns, presenting on every side a dense array, with
front, flanks, and rear secure. Thus they were able to break the thin line
of our soldiers. The Belgians giving way, the legion was driven back, retreating
in confusion on the entrenchments and the gates. It was there that the
greatest slaughter took place. The trenches were heaped up with corpses.
Nor was it only from the deadly blows of the enemy that they suffered;
many perished in the crush and by their own weapons. The victorious army,
who avoided the Colonia Agrippinensis, did not venture on any other hostile
act during the remainder of their march, and excused the conflict at Bonna,
alleging that they had asked for peace, and that when it was refused they
had but looked to their own safety.
[4.21] Civilis, who now on the arrival
of these veteran cohorts was at the head of a complete army, but who was
undecided in his plans, and still reflected on the power of Rome, made
all who were with him swear allegiance to Vespasian, and sent envoys to
the two legions which after their defeat in the previous engagement had
retreated into the Old Camp, advising them to accept the same allegiance.
Their reply was: "We do not follow the advice of traitors or enemies.
Vitellius is our Emperor; to him we will retain our fealty and devote our
swords till our last breath. Then let not a Batavian refugee affect to
decide the destinies of Rome; let him rather await the merited penalty
of his guilt." When this reply was delivered to Civilis, he was furious
with anger, and hurried the whole Batavian nation into open war. The Bructeri
and the Tencteri joined him, and messengers summoned all Germany to share
in his plunder and his glory.
[4.22] To meet the threatened dangers
of the gathering war, the legates of the legions, Munius Lupercus and Numisius
Rufus, strengthened their entrenchments and walls. The buildings, which
during a long period of peace had grown up like a town near the camp, were
destroyed, lest they might be useful to the enemy. Little care, however,
was taken about the conveyance of supplies into the camp. These the generals
allowed to be plundered; and so, what might long have sufficed for their
necessities, was wantonly wasted in a few days. Civilis, who occupied the
centre of the army with the elite of the Batavian troops, wishing to add
a new terror to his demonstration, covered both banks of the Rhine with
columns of his German allies, while his cavalry galloped about the plains.
At the same time the fleet was moved up the stream. Here were the standards
of the veteran cohorts; there the images of wild beasts, brought out of
the woods and sacred groves, under the various forms which each tribe is
used to follow into battle, and these mingled emblems of civil and of foreign
warfare utterly confounded the besieged. The extent of the entrenchment
raised the hopes of the besiegers. Constructed for two legions, it was
now held by not more than five thousand Roman soldiers. But there was with
them a great number of camp-followers, who had assembled there on the disturbance
of peace, and who could be employed in the contest.
[4.23] Part of the camp occupied the
gentle slope of a hill; to part was a level approach. By this encampment
Augustus had thought the German tribes might be watched and checked; never
had he contemplated such a pitch of disaster, as that these tribes should
themselves advance to attack our legions. Hence no labour was bestowed
on the ground or on the defences. Our valour and our arms seemed defence
enough. The Batavians and the Transrhenane tribes took up their position,
each tribe by itself, to distinguish and so the better to display the valour
of each; first annoying us by a distant volley; then, as they found that
very many of their missiles fixed themselves harmlessly in the turrets
and battlements of the walls, and they themselves suffered from the stones
showered down on them, they fell on the entrenchment with a shout and furious
rush, many placing their scaling-ladders against the ramparts, and others
mounting on a testudo formed by their comrades. Some were in the act of
climbing over when they were thrust down by the swords of the enemy, and
fell overwhelmed by a storm of javelins and stakes. Always very daring
at first and excessively elated by success, they now in their eagerness
for plunder bore up against reverse. They also ventured to use what to
them was a novelty, engines of war; they had themselves no skill in handling
them, but the prisoners and deserters taught them to pile up timber in
the shape of a bridge, under which they put wheels, and so propelled it,
some standing on the top, and fighting as they would from an earth-work,
others concealing themselves within and undermining the walls. But the
stones thrown by the catapults prostrated the ill-constructed fabric, and
when they set themselves to prepare hurdles and mantlets, burning spears
were thrown on them by the engines, fire being thus actually used against
the assailants. At last, despairing of success by force, they changed their
plans, and resolved to wait, for they were well aware that only a few days'
provisions were in the camp, and that there was a great crowd on non-combatants;
and they counted at the same time on the treachery that might follow on
scarcity, on the wavering fidelity of the slaves, and on the chances of
war.
[4.24] Meanwhile Flaccus, who had heard
of the siege of the camp, and had sent into all parts of Gaul to collect
auxiliaries, put under command of Dillius Vocula, legate of the 18th legion,
some troops picked from the legions with orders to hasten by forced marches
along the banks of the Rhine. Flaccus himself, who was weak in health and
disliked by his troops, travelled with the fleet. The troops indeed complained
in unmistakable language that their general had despatched the Batavian
cohorts from Mogontiacum, had feigned ignorance of the plans of Civilis,
and was inviting the German tribes to join the league. "This,"
they said, "has strengthened Vespasian no less than the exertions
of Primus Antonius and Mucianus. Declared enmity and hostility may be openly
repulsed, but treachery and fraud work in darkness, and so cannot be avoided.
Civilis stands in arms against us, and arranges the order of his battle;
Hordeonius from his chamber or his litter gives such orders as may best
serve the enemy. The swords of thousands of brave men are directed by one
old man's sick caprice. How much better by slaying the traitor, to set
free our valour and our fortune from these evil auspices!" The passions
already kindled by the language which they thus held among themselves were
yet more inflamed by a despatch from Vespasian, which Flaccus, finding
that it could not be concealed, read before an assembly of the troops,
sending the persons who had brought it in chains to Vitellius.
[4.25] With feelings somewhat appeased,
they arrived at Bonna, the winter-camp of the first legion. The troops
there were even more enraged against Hordeonius, and laid on him the blame
of the late disaster. They said that it was by his orders that they had
offered battle to the Batavians, supposing that the legions from Mogontiacum
were following them; that it was through his treachery that they had been
slaughtered, no reinforcements coming up; that all these events were unknown
to the other legions, and were not told to their Emperor, though the sudden
outburst of treason might have been crushed by the prompt action of so
many provinces. Hordeonius read to the army copies of all the letters which
he had sent about Gaul, begging for reinforcements, and established as
a precedent a most disgraceful practice, namely, the handing over the despatches
to the standard-bearers of the legions, through whose means they were read
by the soldiers sooner than by the generals. He then ordered one of the
mutineers to be put in irons, more for the sake of asserting his authority
than because any one man was in fault. The army was then moved from Bonna
to the Colonia Agrippinensis, while auxiliaries from Gaul continued to
flow in; for at first that nation zealously supported the cause of Rome.
Soon indeed as the Germans increased in power, many of the states took
up arms against us, moved by the hope of freedom and, could they once shake
off the yoke, even by the lust of empire. The irritation of the legions
still increased, nor had the imprisonment of a single soldier struck them
with terror. This fellow indeed actually charged the general with complicity;
he had, he said, acted as a messenger between Civilis and Flaccus, and
because he might tell the truth he was now being crushed under a false
charge. With wonderful firmness Vocula ascended the tribunal, and ordered
the man, who had been seized by the lictors, and was loudly remonstrating,
to be led off to execution. All the best men acquiesced in the order, while
the ill-affected were struck with terror. Then, as all with common consent
demanded that Vocula should be their general, Hordeonius handed over to
him the supreme command.
[4.26] But there were many things to
exasperate the already divided feelings of the soldiery. Pay and provisions
were scanty, Gaul was rebelling against conscription and taxes, while the
Rhine, owing to a drought unexampled in that climate, would hardly admit
of navigation, and thus supplies were straitened at the same time that
outposts had to be established along the entire bank to keep the Germans
from fording the stream; the self-same cause thus bringing about a smaller
supply of grain and a greater number of consumers. Among ignorant persons
the very failure of the stream was regarded as a prodigy, as if the very
rivers, the old defences of the Empire, were deserting us. What, in peace,
would have seemed chance or nature, was now spoken of as destiny and the
anger of heaven. As the army entered Novesium the sixteenth legion joined
it; Herennius Gallus, its legate, was associated with Vocula in the responsibilities
of command. As they did not venture to advance upon the enemy, they constructed
a camp at a place called Gelduba. Here the generals sought to give steadiness
to the troops by such exercises as forming in order of battle, constructing
fortifications, making entrenchments, and whatever else might train them
for war. In the hope that they might be fired to courage by the delights
of plunder, Vocula led the army against the nearest villages of the Gugerni,
who had accepted the alliance of Civilis. Some of the troops remained permanently
with Herennius Gallus.
[4.27] One day it happened that at no
great distance from the camp the Germans were endeavouring to drag off
to their own bank a vessel laden with corn, which had run aground in the
shallows. Gallus could not endure this, and sent a cohort to help. The
numbers of the Germans also increased; as fresh troops continued to join
both sides, a regular battle ensued. The Germans, besides inflicting great
loss on our men, carried off the vessel. The vanquished troops, following
what had become a regular practice, laid the blame not on their own cowardice,
but on supposed treachery in the legate. Dragged out of his tent, his garments
torn, and his person severely beaten, he was commanded to declare for what
bribe and with what accomplices he had betrayed the army. Their old hatred
of Hordeonius reappeared. He, they declared, was the instigator of the
crime, Gallus his tool. At last, utterly terrified by their threats of
instant death, the legate himself charged Hordeonius with treachery. He
was then put in irons, and only released on the arrival of Vocula, who
the next day inflicted capital punishment on the ringleaders of the mutiny;
such wide extremes of license and of subordination were to be found in
that army. The common soldiers were undoubtedly loyal to Vitellius, but
all the most distinguished men were in favour of Vespasian. The result
was an alternation of outbreaks and executions, and a strange mixture of
obedience and frenzy, which made it impossible to restrain the men whom
it was yet possible to punish.
[4.28] Meanwhile all Germany was raising
the power of Civilis by vast additions of strength, and the alliance was
secured by hostages of the noblest rank. He directed that the territories
of the Ubii and the Treveri should be ravaged by the several tribes on
which they bordered, and that another detachment should cross the river
Mosa, to threaten the Menapii and the Morini and the frontiers of Gaul.
In both quarters plunder was collected; with peculiar hostility in the
case of the Ubii, because, this nation, being of German origin, had forsworn
its native country, and assumed the Roman name of the Agrippinenses. Their
cohorts were cut up at the village of Marcodurum, where they lay in careless
security, presuming on their distance from the river-bank. The Ubii did
not remain quiet, but made predatory excursions into Germany, escaping
at first with impunity, though they were afterwards cut off. Throughout
the whole of this war, they were more loyal than fortunate. Civilis, grown
more formidable now that the Ubii had been crushed, and elated by the success
of his operations, pressed on the siege of the legions, keeping a strict
watch to prevent any secret intelligence of advancing succours from reaching
them. He entrusted to the Batavians the care of the machines and the vast
siege-works, and when the Transrhenane tribes clamoured for battle, he
bade them go and cut through the ramparts, and, if repulsed, renew the
struggle; their numbers were superfluously large, and their loss was not
felt. Even darkness did not terminate the struggle.
[4.29] Piling up logs of wood round
the walls and lighting them, they sat feasting, and rushed to the conflict,
as each grew heated with wine, with a useless daring. Their missiles were
discharged without effect in the darkness, but to the Romans the ranks
of the barbarians were plainly discernible, and they singled out with deliberate
aim anyone whose boldness or whose decorations made him conspicuous. Civilis
saw this, and, extinguishing the fires, threw the confusion of darkness
over the attack. Then ensued a scene of discordant clamour, of accident,
and uncertainty, where no one could see how to aim or to avoid a blow.
Wherever a shout was heard, they wheeled round and strained hand and foot.
Valour was of no avail, accident disturbed every plan, and the bravest
frequently were struck down by the missiles of the coward. The Germans
fought with inconsiderate fury; our men, more alive to the danger, threw,
but not at random, stakes shod with iron and heavy stones. Where the noise
of the assailants was heard, or where the ladders placed against the walls
brought the enemy within reach of their hands, they pushed them back with
their shields, and followed them with their javelins. Many, who had struggled
on to the walls, they stabbed with their short swords. After a night thus
spent, day revealed a new method of attack.
[4.30] The Batavians had raised a tower
two stories high, which they brought up to the Praetorian gate of the camp,
where the ground was most level. But our men, pushing forward strong poles,
and battering it with beams, broke it down, causing great destruction among
the combatants on the top. The enemy were attacked in their confusion by
a sudden and successful sally. All this time many engines were constructed
by the legionaries, who were superior to the enemy in experience and skill.
Peculiar consternation was caused by a machine, which, being poised in
the air over the heads of the enemy, suddenly descended, and carried up
one or more of them past the faces of their friends, and then, by a shifting
of the weights, projected them within the limits of the camp. Civilis,
giving up all hope of a successful assault, again sat down to blockade
the camp at his leisure, and undermined the fidelity of the legions by
the promises of his emissaries.
[4.31] All these events in Germany took
place before the battle of Cremona, the result of which was announced in
a despatch from Antonius, accompanied by Caecina's proclamation. Alpinius
Montanus, prefect of a cohort in the vanquished army, was on the spot,
and acknowledged the fate of his party. Various were the emotions thus
excited; the Gallic auxiliaries, who felt neither affection nor hatred
towards either party, and who served without attachment, at once, at the
instance of their prefects, deserted Vitellius. The veteran soldiers hesitated.
Nevertheless, when Hordeonius administered the oath, under a strong pressure
from their tribunes, they pronounced the words, which their looks and their
temper belied, and while they adopted every other expression, they hesitated
at the name of Vespasian, passing it over with a slight murmur, and not
unfrequently in absolute silence.
[4.32] After this, certain letters from
Antonius to Civilis were read in full assembly, and provoked the suspicions
of the soldiery, as they seemed to be addressed to a partisan of the cause
and to be unfriendly to the army of Germany. Soon the news reached the
camp at Gelduba, and the same language and the same acts were repeated.
Montanus was sent with a message to Civilis, bidding him desist from hostilities,
and not seek to conceal the designs of an enemy by fighting under false
colours, and telling him that, if he had been attempting to assist Vespasian,
his purpose had been fully accomplished. Civilis at first replied in artful
language, but soon perceiving that Montanus was a man of singularly high
spirit and was himself disposed for change, he began with lamenting the
perils through which he had struggled for five-and-twenty years in the
camps of Rome. "It is," he said, "a noble reward that I
have received for my toils; my brother murdered, myself imprisoned, and
the savage clamour of this army, a clamour which demanded my execution,
and for which by the law of nations I demand vengeance. You, Treveri, and
other enslaved creatures, what reward do you expect for the blood which
you have shed so often? What but a hateful service, perpetual tribute,
the rod, the axe, and the passions of a ruling race? See how I, the prefect
of a single cohort, with the Batavians and the Canninefates, a mere fraction
of Gaul, have destroyed their vast but useless camps, or are pressing them
with the close blockade of famine and the sword. In a word, either freedom
will follow on our efforts, or, if we are vanquished, we shall but be what
we were before." Having thus fired the man's ambition, Civilis dismissed
him, but bade him carry back a milder answer. He returned, pretending to
have failed in his mission, but not revealing the other facts; these indeed
soon came to light.
[4.33] Civilis, retaining a part of
his forces, sent the veteran cohorts and the bravest of his German troops
against Vocula and his army, under the command of Julius Maximus and Claudius
Victor, his sister's son. On their march they plundered the winter camp
of a body of horse stationed at Ascibergium, and they fell on Vocula's
camp so unexpectedly that he could neither harangue his army, nor even
get it into line. All that he could do in the confusion was to order the
veteran troops to strengthen the centre. The auxiliaries were dispersed
in every part of the field. The cavalry charged, but, received by the orderly
array of the enemy, fled to their own lines. What ensued was a massacre
rather than a battle. The Nervian infantry, from panic or from treachery,
exposed the flank of our army. Thus the attack fell upon the legions, who
had lost their standards and were being cut down within the entrenchments,
when the fortune of the day was suddenly changed by a reinforcement of
fresh troops. Some Vascon infantry, levied by Galba, which had by this
time been sent for, heard the noise of the combatants as they approached
the camp, attacked the rear of the preoccupied enemy, and spread a panic
more than proportionate to their numbers, some believing that all the troops
from Novesium, others that all from Mogontiacum, had come up. This delusion
restored the courage of the Romans, and in relying on the strength of others
they recovered their own. All the bravest of the Batavians, of the infantry
at least, fell, but the cavalry escaped with the standards and with the
prisoners whom they had secured in the early part of the engagement. Of
the slain on that day the greater number belonged to our army, but to its
less effective part. The Germans lost the flower of their force.
[4.34] The two generals were equally
blameworthy; they deserved defeat, they did not make the most of success.
Had Civilis given battle in greater force, he could not have been outflanked
by so small a number of cohorts, and he might have destroyed the camp after
once forcing an entrance. As for Vocula, he did not reconnoitre the advancing
enemy, and consequently he was vanquished as soon as be left the camp;
and then, mistrusting his victory, he fruitlessly wasted several days before
marching against the enemy, though, had he at once resolved to drive them
back, and to follow up his success, he might, by one and the same movement,
have raised the siege of the legions. Meanwhile Civilis had tried to work
on the feelings of the besieged by representing that with the Romans all
was lost, and that victory had declared for his own troops. The standards
and colours were carried round the ramparts, and the prisoners also were
displayed. One of them, with noble daring, declared the real truth in a
loud voice, and, as he was cut down on the spot by the Germans, all the
more confidence was felt in his information. At the same time it was becoming
evident, from the devastation of the country and from the flames of burning
houses, that the victorious army was approaching. Vocula issued orders
that the standards should be planted within sight of the camp, and should
be surrounded with a ditch and rampart, where his men might deposit their
knapsacks, and so fight without encumbrance. On this, the General was assailed
by a clamorous demand for instant battle. They had now grown used to threaten.
Without even taking time to form into line, disordered and weary as they
were, they commenced the action. Civilis was on the field, trusting quite
as much to the faults of his adversaries as to the valour of his own troops.
With the Romans the fortune of the day varied, and the most violently mutinous
shewed themselves cowards. But some, remembering their recent victory,
stood their ground and struck fiercely at the foe, now encouraging each
other and their neighbours, and now, while they re-formed their lines,
imploring the besieged not to lose the opportunity. These latter, who saw
everything from the walls, sallied out from every gate. It so happened
that Civilis was thrown to the ground by the fall of his horse. A report
that he had been either wounded or slain gained belief throughout both
armies, and spread incredible panic among his own troops, and gave as great
encouragement to their opponents. But Vocula, leaving the flying foe, began
to strengthen the rampart and the towers of the camp, as if another siege
were imminent. He had misused success so often that he was rightly suspected
of a preference for war.
[4.35] Nothing distressed our troops
so much as the scarcity of supplies. The baggage of the legions was therefore
sent to Novesium with a crowd of non-combatants to fetch corn from that
place overland, for the enemy commanded the river. The march of the first
body was accomplished in security, as Civilis had not yet recovered. But
when he heard that officers of the commissariat had been again sent to
Novesium, and that the infantry detached as an escort were advancing just
as if it were a time of profound peace, with but few soldiers round the
standards, the arms stowed away in the wagons, and all wandering about
at their pleasure, he attacked them in regular form, having first sent
on troops to occupy the bridges and the defiles in the road. The battle
extended over a long line of march, lasting with varying success till night
parted the combatants. The infantry pushed on to Gelduba, while the camp
remained in the same state as before, garrisoned by such troops as had
been left in it. There could be no doubt what peril a convoy, heavily laden
and panic-stricken, would have to encounter in attempting to return. Vocula
added to his force a thousand picked men from the fifth and fifteenth legions
besieged in the Old Camp, a body of troops undisciplined and ill-affected
to their officers. But more than the number specified came forward, and
openly protested, as they marched, that they would not endure any longer
the hardships of famine and the treachery of the legates. On the other
hand, those who had stayed behind complained that they were, being left
to their fate by this withdrawal of a part of the legions. A twofold mutiny
was the result, some calling upon Vocula to come back, while the others
refused to return to the camp.
[4.36] Meanwhile Civilis blockaded the
Old Camp. Vocula retired first to Gelduba, after, wards to Novesium; Civilis
took possession of Gelduba, and not long after was victorious in a cavalry
engagement near Novesium. But reverses and successes seemed equally to
kindle in the troops the one desire of murdering their officers. The legions,
increased in number by the arrival of the men from the fifth and fifteenth,
demanded a donative, for they had discovered that some money had been sent
by Vitellius. After a short delay Hordeonius gave the donative in the name
of Vespasian. This, more than anything else, fostered the mutinous spirit.
The men, abandoning themselves to debauchery and revelry and all the license
of nightly gatherings, revived their old grudge against Hordeonius. Without
a single legate or tribune venturing to check them, for the darkness seems
to have taken from them all sense of shame, they dragged him out of his
bed and killed him. The same fate was intended for Vocula, but he assumed
the dress of a slave, and escaped unrecognized in the darkness. When their
fury had subsided and their alarm returned, they sent centurions with despatches
to the various states of Gaul, imploring help in money and troops.
[4.37] These men, headstrong, cowardly,
and spiritless, as a mob without a leader always is, on the approach of
Civilis hastily took up arms, and, as hastily abandoning them, betook themselves
to flight. Disaster produced disunion, the troops from the Upper army dissociating
their cause from that of their comrades. Nevertheless the statues of Vitellius
were again set up in the camp and in the neighbouring Belgian towns, and
this at a time when Vitellius himself had fallen. Then the men of the 1st,
the 4th, and the 18th legions, repenting of their conduct, followed Vocula,
and again taking in his presence the oath of allegiance to Vespasian, were
marched by him to the relief of Mogontiacum. The besieging army, an heterogeneous
mass of Chatti, Usipii, and Mattiaci, had raised the siege, glutted with
spoils, but not without suffering loss. Our troops attacked them on the
way, dispersed and unprepared. Moreover the Treveri had constructed a breastwork
and rampart across their territory, and they and the Germans continued
to contend with great losses on both sides up to the time when they tarnished
by rebellion their distinguished services to the Roman people.
[4.38] Meanwhile Vespasian (now consul
for the second time) and Titus entered upon their office, both being absent
from Rome. People were gloomy and anxious under the pressure of manifold
fears, for, over and above immediate perils, they had taken groundless
alarm under the impression that Africa was in rebellion through the revolutionary
movements of Lucius Piso. He was governor of that province, and was far
from being a man of turbulent disposition. The fact was that the wheat-ships
were detained by the severity of the weather, and the lower orders, who
were accustomed to buy their provisions from day to day, and to whom cheap
corn was the sole subject of public interest, feared and believed that
the ports had been closed and the supplies stopped, the Vitellianists,
who had not yet given up their party feelings, helping to spread the report,
which was not displeasing even to the conquerors. Their ambition, which
even foreign campaigns could not fill to the full, was not satisfied by
any triumphs that civil war could furnish.
[4.39] On the 1st of January, at a meeting
of the Senate, convoked for the purpose by Julius Frontinus, praetor of
the city, votes of thanks were passed to the legates, to the armies, and
to the allied kings. The office of praetor was taken away from Tettius
Julianus, as having deserted his legion when it passed over to the party
of Vespasian, with a view to its being transferred to Plotius Griphus.
Equestrian rank was conferred on Hormus. Then, on the resignation of Frontinus,
Caesar Domitian assumed the office of praetor of the city. His name was
put at the head of despatches and edicts, but the real authority was in
the hands of Mucianus, with this exception, that Domitian ventured on several
acts of power, at the instigation of his friends, or at his own caprice.
But Mucianus found his principal cause of apprehension in Primus Antonius
and Varus Arrius, who, in the freshness of their fame, while distinguished
by great achievements and by the attachment of the soldiery, were also
supported by the people, because in no case had they extended their severities
beyond the battle-field. It was also reported that Antonius had urged Scribonianus
Crassus, whom an illustrious descent added to the honours of his brother
made a conspicuous person, to assume the supreme power; and it was understood
that a number of accomplices would not have failed to support him, had
not the proposal been rejected by Scribonianus, who was a man not easily
to be tempted even by a certainty, and was proportionately apprehensive
of risk. Mucianus, seeing that Antonius could not be openly crushed, heaped
many praises upon him in the Senate, and loaded him with promises in secret,
holding out as a prize the government of Eastern Spain, then vacant in
consequence of the departure of Cluvius Rufus. At the same time he lavished
on his friends tribuneships and prefectures; and then, when he had filled
the vain heart of the man with hope and ambition, he destroyed his power
by sending into winter quarters the 7th legion, whose affection for Antonius
was particularly vehement. The 3rd legion, old troops of Varus Arrius,
were sent back to Syria. Part of the army was on its way to Germany. Thus
all elements of disturbance being removed, the usual appearance of the
capital, the laws, and the jurisdiction of the magistrates, were once more
restored.
[4.40] Domitian, on the day of his taking
his seat in the Senate, made a brief and measured speech in reference to
the absence of his father and brother, and to his own youth. He was graceful
in his bearing, and, his real character being yet unknown, the frequent
blush on his countenance passed for modesty. On his proposing the restoration
of the Imperial honours of Galba, Curtius Montanus moved that respect should
also be paid to the memory of Piso. The Senate passed both motions, but
that which referred to Piso was not carried out. Certain commissioners
were then appointed by lot, who were to see to the restitution of property
plundered during the war, to examine and restore to their place the brazen
tables of the laws, which had fallen down through age, to free the Calendar
from the additions with which the adulatory spirit of the time had disfigured
it, and to put a check on the public expenditure. The office of praetor
was restored to Tettius Julianus, as soon as it was known that he had fled
for refuge to Vespasian. Griphus still retained his rank. It was then determined
that the cause of Musonius Rufus against Publius Celer should be again
brought on. Publius was condemned, and thus expiation was made to the shade
of Soranus. The day thus marked by an example of public justice was not
barren of distinction to individuals. Musonius was thought to have fulfilled
the righteous duty of an accuser, but men spoke very differently of Demetrius,
a disciple of the Cynical school of philosophy, who pleaded the cause of
a notorious criminal by appeals to corrupt influences rather than by fair
argument. Publius himself, in his peril, had neither spirit nor power of
speech left. The signal for vengeance on the informers having been thus
given, Junius Mauricus asked Caesar to give the Senate access to the Imperial
registers, from which they might learn what impeachments the several informers
had proposed. Caesar answered, that in a matter of such importance the
Emperor must be consulted.
[4.41] The Senate, led by its principal
members, then framed a form of oath, which was eagerly taken by all the
magistrates and by the other Senators in the order in which they voted.
They called the Gods to witness, that nothing had been done by their instrumentality
to prejudice the safety of any person, and that they had gained no distinction
or advantage by the ruin of Roman citizens. Great was the alarm, and various
the devices for altering the words of the oath, among those who felt the
consciousness of guilt. The Senate appreciated the scruple, but denounced
the perjury. This public censure, as it might be called, fell with especial
severity on three men, Sariolenus Vocula, Nonnius Attianus, and Cestius
Severus, all of them infamous for having practised the trade of the informer
in the days of Nero. Sariolenus indeed laboured under an imputation of
recent date. It was said that he had attempted the same practices during
the reign of Vitellius. The Senators did not desist from threatening gestures,
till he quitted the chamber; then passing to Paccius Africanus, they assailed
him in the same way. It was he, they said, who had singled out as victims
for Nero the brothers Scribonius, renowned for their mutual affection and
for their wealth. Africanus dared not confess his guilt, and could not
deny it; but he himself turned on Vibius Crispus, who was pressing him
with questions, and complicating a charge which he could not rebut, shifted
the blame from himself by associating another with his guilt.
[4.42] Great was the reputation for
brotherly affection, as well as for eloquence, which Vipstanus Messalla
earned for himself on that day, by venturing, though not yet of Senatorial
age, to plead for his brother Aquilius Regulus. The fall of the families
of the Crassi and Orfitus had brought Regulus into the utmost odium. Of
his own free will, as it seemed, and while still a mere youth, he had undertaken
the prosecution, not to ward off any peril from himself, but in the hope
of gaining power. The wife of Crassus, Sulpicia Praetextata, and her four
children were ready, should the Senate take cognizance of the cause, to
demand vengeance. Accordingly, Messalla, without attempting to defend the
case or the person accused, had simply thrown himself in the way of the
perils that threatened his brother, and had thus wrought upon the feelings
of several Senators. On this Curtius Montanus met him with a fierce speech,
in which he went to the length of asserting, that after the death of Galba,
money had been given by Regulus to the murderer of Piso, and that he had
even fastened his teeth in the murdered man's head. "Certainly,"
he said, "Nero did not compel this act; you did not secure by this
piece of barbarity either your rank or your life. We may bear with the
defence put forward by men who thought it better to destroy others than
to come into peril themselves. As for you, the exile of your father, and
the division of his property among his creditors, had left you perfectly
safe, besides that your youth incapacitated you for office; there was nothing
in you which Nero could either covet or dread. It was from sheer lust of
slaughter and greed of gain that you, unknown as you were, you, who had
never pleaded in any man's defence, steeped your soul in noble blood, when,
though you had snatched from the very grave of your Country the spoils
of a man of consular rank, had been fed to the full with seven million
sesterces, and shone with all sacerdotal honours, you yet overwhelmed in
one common ruin innocent boys, old men of illustrious name, and noble ladies,
when you actually blamed the tardy movements of Nero in wearying himself
and his informers with the overthrow of single families, and declared that
the whole Senate might be destroyed by one word. Keep, Conscript Fathers,
preserve a man of such ready counsels, that every age may be furnished
with its teacher, and that our young men may imitate Regulus, just as our
old men imitate Marcellus and Crispus. Even unsuccessful villany finds
some to emulate it: what will happen, if it flourish and be strong? And
the man, whom we dare not offend when he holds only quaestor's rank, are
we to see him rise to the dignities of praetor and consul? Do you suppose
that Nero will be the last of the tyrants? Those who survived Tiberius,
those who survived Caligula, thought the same; and yet after each there
arose another ruler yet more detestable and more cruel. We are not afraid
of Vespasian; the age and moderation of the new Emperor reassure us. But
the influence of an example outlives the individual character. We have
lost our vigour, Conscript Fathers; we are no longer that Senate, which,
when Nero had fallen, demanded that the informers and ministers of the
tyrant should be punished according to ancient custom. The first day after
the downfall of a wicked Emperor is the best of opportunities."
[4.43] Montanus was heard with such
approval on the part of the Senate, that Helvidius conceived a hope that
Marcellus also might be overthrown. He therefore began with a panegyric
on Cluvius Rufus, who, though not less rich nor less renowned for eloquence,
had never imperilled a single life in the days of Nero. By this comparison,
as well as by direct accusations, he pressed Eprius hard, and stirred the
indignation of the Senators. When Marcellus perceived this, he made as
if he would leave the House, exclaiming, "We go, Priscus, and leave
you your Senate; act the king, though Caesar himself be present."
Crispus followed. Both were enraged, but their looks were different; Marcellus
cast furious glances about him, while Crispus smiled. They were drawn back,
however, into the Senate by the hasty interference of friends. The contest
grew fiercer, while the well-disposed majority on the one side, and a powerful
minority on the other, fought out their obstinate quarrel, and thus the
day was spent in altercation.
[4.44] At the next meeting of the Senate
Caesar began by recommending that the wrongs, the resentments, and the
terrible necessities of former times, should be forgotten, and Mucianus
spoke at great length in favour of the informers. At the same time he admonished
in gentle terms and in a tone of entreaty those who were reviving indictments,
which they had before commenced and afterwards dropped. The Senators, when
they found themselves opposed, relinquished the liberty which they had
begun to exercise. That it might not be thought that the opinion of the
Senate was disregarded, or that impunity was accorded to all acts done
in the days of Nero, Mucianus sent back to their islands two men of Senatorial
rank, Octavius Sagitta and Antistius Sosianus, who had quitted their places
of banishment. Octavius had seduced one Pontia Postumia, and, on her refusing
to marry him, in the frenzy of passion had murdered her. Sosianus by his
depravity had brought many to ruin. Both had been condemned and banished
by a solemn decision of the Senate, and, though others were permitted to
return, were kept under the same penalty. But this did not mitigate the
hatred felt against Mucianus. Sosianus and Sagitta were utterly insignificant,
even if they did return; but men dreaded the abilities of the informers,
their wealth, and the power which they exercised in many sinister ways.
[4.45] A trial, conducted in the Senate
according to ancient precedents, brought into harmony for a time the feelings
of its members. Manlius Patruitus, a Senator, laid a complaint, that he
had been beaten by a mob in the colony of Sena, and that by order of the
magistrates; that the wrong had not stopped here, but that lamentations
and wailings, in fact a representation of funeral obsequies, had been enacted
in his presence, accompanied with contemptuous and insulting expressions
levelled against the whole Senate. The persons accused were summoned to
appear, and after the case had been investigated, punishment was inflicted
on those who were found guilty. A resolution of the Senate was also passed,
recommending more orderly behaviour to the people of Sena. About the same
time Antonius Flamma was condemned under the law against extortion, at
the suit of the people of Cyrene, and was banished for cruel practices.
[4.46] Amidst all this a mutiny in the
army all but broke out. The troops who, having been disbanded by Vitellius,
had flocked to support Vespasian, asked leave to serve again in the Praetorian
Guard, and the soldiers who had been selected from the legions with the
same prospect now clamoured for their promised pay. Even the Vitellianists
could not be got rid of without much bloodshed. But the money required
for retaining in the service so vast a body of men was immensely large.
Mucianus entered the camp to examine more accurately the individual claims.
The victorious army, wearing their proper decorations and arms, he drew
up with moderate intervals of space between the divisions; then the Vitellianists,
whose capitulation at Bovillae I have already related, and the other troops
of the party, who had been collected from the capital and its neighbourhood,
were brought forth almost naked. Mucianus ordered these men to be drawn
up apart, making the British, the German, and any other troops that there
were belonging to other armies, take up separate positions. The very first
view of their situation paralyzed them. They saw opposed to them what seemed
a hostile array, threatening them with javelin and sword. They saw themselves
hemmed in, without arms, filthy and squalid. And when they began to be
separated, some to be marched to one spot, and some to another, a thrill
of terror ran through them all. Among the troops from Germany the panic
was particularly great; for they believed that this separation marked them
out for slaughter. They embraced their fellow soldiers, clung to their
necks, begged for parting kisses, and entreated that they might not be
deserted, or doomed in a common cause to suffer a different lot. They invoked
now Mucianus, now the absent Emperor, and, as a last resource, heaven and
the Gods, till Mucianus came forward, and calling them "soldiers bound
by the same oath and servants of the same Emperor," stopped the groundless
panic. And indeed the victorious army seconded the tears of the vanquished
with their approving shouts. This terminated the proceedings for that day.
But when Domitian harangued them a few days afterwards, they received him
with increased confidence. The land that was offered them they contemptuously
rejected, and begged for regular service and pay. Theirs were prayers indeed,
but such as it was impossible to reject. They were therefore received into
the Praetorian camp. Then such as had reached the prescribed age, or had
served the proper number of campaigns, received an honourable discharge;
others were dismissed for misconduct; but this was done by degrees and
in detail, always the safest mode of reducing the united strength of a
multitude.
[4.47] It is a fact that, whether suggested
by real poverty or by a wish to give the appearance of it, a proposition
passed the Senate to the effect that a loan of sixty million sesterces
from private persons should be accepted. Pompeius Silvanus was appointed
to manage the affair. Before long, either the necessity ceased or the pretence
was dropped. After this, on the motion of Domitian, the consulships conferred
by Vitellius were cancelled, and the honours of a censor's funeral were
paid to Sabinus; great lessons both of the mutability of fortune, ever
bringing together the highest honours and the lowest humiliations.
[4.48] About the same time the proconsul
Lucius Piso was murdered. I shall make the account of this murder as exact
as possible by first reviewing a few earlier circumstances, which have
a bearing on the origin and motives of such deeds. The legion and the auxiliaries
stationed in Africa to guard the frontiers of the Empire were under the
proconsul's authority during the reigns of the divine Augustus and Tiberius.
But in course of time Caligula, prompted by his restless temper and by
his fear of Marcus Silanus, who then held Africa, took away the legion
from the proconsul, and handed it over to a legate whom he sent for that
purpose. The patronage was equally divided between the two officers. A
source of disagreement was thus studiously sought in the continual clashing
of their authority, and it was further developed by an unprincipled rivalry.
The power of the legates grew through their lengthened tenure of office,
and, perhaps, because an inferior feels greater interest in such a competition.
All the more distinguished of the proconsuls cared more for security than
for power.
[4.49] At this time the legion in Africa
was commanded by Valerius Festus, a young man of extravagant habits and
immoderate ambition, who was now made uneasy by his relationship to Vitellius.
Whether this man in their frequent interviews tempted Piso to revolt, or
whether he resisted such overtures, is not known for certain, for no one
was present at their confidential meetings, and, after Piso's death, many
were disposed to ingratiate themselves with the murderer. There is no doubt
that the province and the troops entertained feelings of hostility to Vespasian,
and some of the Vitellianists, who had escaped from the capital, incessantly
represented to Piso that Gaul was hesitating and Germany ready to revolt,
that his own position was perilous, and that for one who in peace must
be suspected, war was the safer course. While this was going on, Claudius
Sagitta, prefect of Petra's Horse, making a very quick passage, reached
Africa before Papirius, the centurion despatched by Mucianus. He declared
that an order to put Piso to death had been given to the centurion, and
that Galerianus, his cousin and son-in-law, had perished; that his only
hope of safety was in bold action; that in such action two paths were open;
he might defend himself on the spot, or he might sail for Gaul and offer
his services as general to the Vitellianist armies. Piso was wholly unmoved
by this statement. The centurion despatched by Mucianus, on landing in
the port of Carthage, raised his voice, and invoked in succession all blessings
on the head of Piso, as if he were Emperor, and bade the bystanders, who
were astonished by this sudden and strange proceeding, take up the same
cry. The credulous mob rushed into the market-place, and demanded that
Piso should shew himself. They threw everything into an uproar with their
clamorous shouts of joy, careless of the truth, and only eager to flatter.
Piso, acting on the information of Sagitta, or, perhaps, from natural modesty,
would not make his appearance in public, or trust himself to the zeal of
the populace. On questioning the centurion, and finding that he had sought
a pretext for accusing and murdering him, he ordered the man to be executed,
moved, not so much by any hope of saving his life, as by indignation against
the assassin; for this fellow had been one of the murderers of Macer, and
was now come to slay the proconsul with hands already stained with the
blood of the legate. He then severely blamed the people of Carthage in
an edict which betrayed his anxiety, and ceased to discharge even the usual
duties of his office, shutting himself up in his palace, to guard against
any casual occurrence that might lead to a new outbreak.
[4.50] But when the agitation of the
people, the execution of the centurion, and other news, true or false,
exaggerated as usual by report, came to the ears of Festus, he sent some
cavalry to put Piso to death. They rode over at full speed, and broke into
the dwelling of the proconsul in the dim light of early dawn, with their
swords drawn in their hands. Many of them were unacquainted with the person
of Piso, for the legate had selected some Moorish and Carthaginian auxiliaries
to perpetrate the deed. Near the proconsul's chamber they chanced to meet
a slave, and asked him who he was, and where Piso was to be found? The
slave with a noble untruth replied, "I am he," and was immediately
cut down. Soon after Piso was killed, for there was on the spot one who
recognized him, Baebius Massa, one of the procurators of Africa, a name
even then fatal to the good, and destined often to reappear among the causes
of the sufferings which he had ere long to endure. From Adrumetum, where
he had stayed to watch the result, Festus went to the legion, and gave
orders that Cetronius Pisanus, prefect of the camp, should be put in irons.
He did this out of private pique, but he called the man an accomplice of
Piso. Some few centurions and soldiers he punished, others he rewarded,
neither the one nor the other deservedly, but he wished men to believe
that he had extinguished a war. He then put an end to a quarrel between
the Censes and the Leptitani, which, originating in robberies of corn and
cattle by two rustic populations, had grown from this insignificant beginning
till it was carried on in pitched battles. The people of Ceea, who were
inferior in numbers, had summoned to their aid the Garamantes, a wild race
incessantly occupied in robbing their neighbours. This had brought the
Leptitani to extremities; their territories had been ravaged far and wide,
and they were trembling within their walls, when the Garamantes were put
to flight by the arrival of the auxiliary infantry and cavalry, and the
whole of the booty was recaptured, with the exception of some which the
plunderers, in their wanderings through inaccessible hamlets, had sold
to more distant tribes.
[4.51] Vespasian had heard of the victory
of Cremona, and had received favourable tidings from all quarters, and
he was now informed of the fall of Vitellius by many persons of every rank,
who, with a good fortune equal to their courage, risked the perils of the
wintry sea. Envoys had come from king Vologesus to offer him 40,000 Parthian
cavalry. It was a matter of pride and joy to him to be courted with such
splendid offers of help from the allies, and not to want them. He thanked
Vologesus, and recommended him to send ambassadors to the Senate, and to
learn for himself that peace had been restored. While his thoughts were
fixed on Italy and on the state of the Capital, he heard an unfavourable
account of Domitian, which represented him as overstepping the limits of
his age and the privileges of a son. He therefore entrusted Titus with
the main strength of the army to complete what had yet to be done in the
Jewish war.
[4.52] It was said that Titus before
his departure had a long interview with his father, in which he implored
him not to let himself be easily excited by the reports of slanderers,
but to shew an impartial and forgiving temper towards his son. "Legions
and fleets," he reminded him, "are not such sure bulwarks of
Imperial power as a numerous family. As for friends, time, altered fortunes,
perhaps their passions or their errors, may weaken, may change, may even
destroy, their affection. A man's own race can never be dissociated from
him, least of all with Princes, whose prosperity is shared by others, while
their reverses touch but their nearest kin. Even between brothers there
can be no lasting affection, except the father sets the example."
Vespasian, delighted with the brotherly affection of Titus rather than
reconciled to Domitian, bade his son be of good cheer, and aggrandise the
State by war and deeds of arms. He would himself provide for the interests
of peace, and for the welfare of his family. He then had some of the swiftest
vessels laden with corn, and committed them to the perils of the still
stormy sea. Rome indeed was in the very critical position of not having
more than ten days' consumption in the granaries, when the supplies from
Vespasian arrived.
[4.53] The work of rebuilding the Capitol
was assigned by him to Lucius Vestinius, a man of the Equestrian order,
who, however, for high character and reputation ranked among the nobles.
The soothsayers whom he assembled directed that the remains of the old
shrine should be removed to the marshes, and the new temple raised on the
original site. The Gods, they said, forbade the old form to be changed.
On the 21st of June, beneath a cloudless sky, the entire space devoted
to the sacred enclosure was encompassed with chaplets and garlands. Soldiers,
who bore auspicious names, entered the precincts with sacred boughs. Then
the vestal virgins, with a troop of boys and girls, whose fathers and mothers
were still living, sprinkled the whole space with water drawn from the
fountains and rivers. After this, Helvidius Priscus, the praetor, first
purified the spot with the usual sacrifice of a sow, a sheep, and a bull,
and duly placed the entrails on turf; then, in terms dictated by Publius
Aelianus, the high-priest, besought Jupiter, Juno, Minerva, and the tutelary
deities of the place, to prosper the undertaking, and to lend their divine
help to raise the abodes which the piety of men had founded for them. He
then touched the wreaths, which were wound round the foundation stone and
entwined with the ropes, while at the same moment all the other magistrates
of the State, the Priests, the Senators, the Knights, and a number of the
citizens, with zeal and joy uniting their efforts, dragged the huge stone
along. Contributions of gold and silver and virgin ores, never smelted
in the furnace, but still in their natural state, were showered on the
foundations. The soothsayers had previously directed that no stone or gold
which had been intended for any other purpose should profane the work.
Additional height was given to the structure; this was the only variation
which religion would permit, and the one feature which had been thought
wanting in the splendour of the old temple.
[4.54] Meanwhile the tidings of the
death of Vitellius, spreading through Gaul and Germany, had caused a second
war. Civilis had thrown aside all disguise, and was now openly assailing
the Roman power, while the legions of Vitellius preferred even a foreign
yoke to the rule of Vespasian. Gaul had gathered fresh courage from the
belief that the fortunes of our armies had been everywhere disastrous;
for a report was rife that our winter camps in Moesia and Pannonia were
hemmed in by the Sarmatians and Dacians. Rumours equally false were circulated
respecting Britain. Above all, the conflagration of the Capitol had made
them believe that the end of the Roman Empire was at hand. The Gauls, they
remembered, had captured the city in former days, but, as the abode of
Jupiter was uninjured, the Empire had survived; whereas now the Druids
declared, with the prophetic utterances of an idle superstition, that this
fatal conflagration was a sign of the anger of heaven, and portended universal
empire for the Transalpine nations. A rumour had also gone forth that the
chiefs of Gaul, whom Otho had sent against Vitellius, had, before their
departure, bound themselves by a compact not to fall the cause of freedom,
should the power of Rome be broken by a continuous succession of civil
wars and internal calamities.
[4.55] Before the murder of Flaccus
Hordeonius nothing had come out by which any conspiracy could be discovered.
After his death, messengers passed to and fro between Civilis and Classicus,
commander of the cavalry of the Treveri. Classicus was first among his
countrymen in rank and wealth; he was of a royal house, of a race distinguished
both in peace and war, and he himself claimed to be by family tradition
the foe rather than the ally of the Romans. Julius Tutor and Julius Sabinus
joined him in his schemes. One was a Trever, the other a Lingon. Tutor
had been made by Vitellius guardian of the banks of the Rhine. Sabinus,
over and above his natural vanity, was inflamed with the pride of an imaginary
descent, for he asserted that his great-grandmother had, by her personal
charms, attracted the admiration of the divine Julius, when he was campaigning
in Gaul. These two men held secret conferences to sound the views of the
rest of their countrymen, and when they had secured as accomplices such
as they thought suitable for their purpose, they met together in a private
house in the Colonia Agrippinensis; for the State in its public policy
was strongly opposed to all such attempts. Some, however, of the Ubii and
Tungri were present but the Treveri and Lingones had the greatest weight
in the matter. Nor could they endure the delay of deliberation; they rivalled
each other in vehement assertions that the Romans were in a frenzy of discord,
that their legions had been cut to pieces, that Italy was laid waste, that
Rome itself was at that very moment undergoing capture, while all her armies
were occupied by wars of their own. If they were but to secure the passes
of the Alps with bodies of troops, Gaul, with her own freedom firmly established,
might look about her, and fix the limits of her dominion.
[4.56] These views were no sooner stated
than approved. As to the survivors of the Vitellianist army, they doubted
what to do; many voted for putting to death men so turbulent and faithless,
stained too with the blood of their generals. Still the policy of mercy
prevailed. To cut off all hope of quarter might provoke an obstinate resistance.
It would be better to draw them into friendly union. If only the legates
of the legions were put to death, the remaining multitude, moved by the
consciousness of guilt and the hope of escape, would readily join their
cause.
Such was the outline of their original plan. Emissaries were likewise
despatched throughout Gaul to stir up war, while they themselves feigned
submission, that they might be the better able to crush the unsuspecting
Vocula. Persons, however, were found to convey information to him, but
he had not sufficient strength to suppress the movement, as the legions
were incomplete in numbers and disloyal. So, what with soldiers of doubtful
fidelity and secret enemies, he thought it best, under the circumstances,
to make his way by meeting deceit with deceit, and by using the same arts
with which he was himself assailed. He therefore went down to the Colonia
Agrippinenses. Thither Claudius Labeo, who, as I have related, had been
taken prisoner and sent out of the province into the country of the Frisii,
made his escape by bribing his gaolers. This man undertook, if a force
were given him, to enter the Batavian territory and bring back to the Roman
alliance the more influential part of that State; but, though he obtained
a small force of infantry and cavalry, he did not venture to attempt anything
among the Batavi, but only induced some of the Nervii and Betasii to take
up arms, and made continual attacks on the Canninefates and the Marsaci
more in the way of robbery than of war.
[4.57] Lured on by the treacherous representations
of the Gauls, Vocula marched against the enemy. He was near the Old Camp,
when Classicus and Tutor, who had gone on in advance under the pretence
of reconnoitring, concluded an agreement with the German chiefs. They then
for the first time separated themselves from the legions, and formed a
camp of their own, with a separate line of entrenchment, while Vocula protested
that the power of Rome was not so utterly shaken by civil war as to have
become contemptible even to Treveri and Lingones. "There are still,"
he said, "faithful provinces, victorious armies, the fortune of the
Empire, and avenging Gods. Thus it was that Sacrovir and the Aedui in former
days, Vindex and the Gauls in more recent times, were crushed in a single
battle. The breakers of treaties may look for the vengeance of the same
Deities, and the same doom. Julius and Augustus understood far better the
character of the people. Galba's policy and the diminution of their tribute
have inspired them with hostile feelings. They are now enemies, because
their yoke is easy; when they have been plundered and stripped, they will
be friends." After uttering this defiance, finding that Classicus
and Tutor persisted in their treachery, he changed his line of march, and
retired to Novesium. The Gauls encamped at a distance of two miles, and
plied with bribes the centurions and soldiers who visited them there, striving
to make a Roman army commit the unheard of baseness of swearing allegiance
to foreigners, and pledge itself to the perpetration of this atrocious
crime by murdering or imprisoning its officers. Vocula, though many persons
advised him to escape, thought it best to be bold, and, summoning an assembly,
spoke as follows:
[4.58] "Never, when I have addressed
you, have I felt more anxious for your welfare, never more indifferent
about my own. Of the destruction that threatens me I can hear with cheerfulness;
and amid so many evils I look forward to death as the end of my sufferings.
For you I feel shame and compassion. Against you indeed no hostile ranks
are gathering. That would be but the lawful course of war, and the right
which an enemy may claim. But Classicus hopes to wage with your strength
his war against Rome, and proudly offers to your allegiance an empire of
Gaul. Though our fortune and courage have for the moment failed us, have
we so utterly forgotten the old memories of those many times when the legions
of Rome resolved to perish but not to be driven from their post? Often
have our allies endured to see their cities destroyed, and with their wives
and children to die in the flames, with only this reward in their death,
the glory of untarnished loyalty. At this very moment our legions at the
Old Camp are suffering the horrors of famine and of siege, and cannot be
shaken by threats or by promises. We, besides our arms, our numbers, and
the singular strength of our fortifications, have corn and supplies sufficient
for a campaign however protracted. We had lately money enough even to furnish
a donative; and, whether you choose to refer the bounty to Vitellius or
Vespasian, it was at any rate from a Roman Emperor that you received it.
If you, who have been victorious in so many campaigns, who have so often
routed the enemy at Gelduba and at the Old Camp, yet shrink from battle,
this indeed is an unworthy fear. Still you have an entrenched camp; you
have fortifications and the means of prolonging the war, till succouring
armies pour in from the neighbouring provinces. It may be that I do not
satisfy you; you may fall back on other legates or tribunes, on some centurion,
even on some common soldier. Let not this monstrous news go forth to the
whole world, that with you in their train Civilis and Classicus are about
to invade Italy. Should the Germans and the Gauls lead you to the walls
of the capital, will you lift up arms against your Country? My soul shudders
at the imagination of so horrible a crime. Will you mount guard for Tutor,
the Trever? Shall a Batavian give the signal for battle? Will you serve
as recruits in the German battalions? What will be the issue of your wickedness
when the Roman legions are marshalled against you? Will you be a second
time deserters, a second time traitors, and brave the anger of heaven while
you waver between your old and your new allegiance? I implore and entreat
thee, O Jupiter, supremely good and great, to whom through eight hundred
and twenty years we have paid the honours of so many triumphs, and thou,
Quirinus, father of Rome, that, if it be not your pleasure that this camp
should be preserved pure and inviolate under my command, you will at least
not suffer it to be polluted and defiled by a Tutor and a Classicus. Grant
that the soldiers of Rome may either be innocent of crime, or at least
experience a repentance speedy and without remorse."
[4.59] They received his speech with
feelings that varied between hope, fear, and shame. Vocula then left them,
and was preparing to put an end to his life, when his freedmen and slaves
prevented him from anticipating by his own act a most miserable death.
Classicus despatched one Aemilius Longinus, a deserter from the first legion,
and speedily accomplished the murder. With respect to the two legates,
Herennius and Numisius, it was thought enough to put them in chains. Classicus
then assumed the insignia of Roman Imperial power, and entered the camp.
Hardened though he was to every sort of crime, he could only find words
enough to go through the form of oath. All who were present swore allegiance
to the empire of Gaul. He distinguished the murderer of Vocula by high
promotion, and the others by rewards proportioned to their services in
crime.
Tutor and Classicus then divided the management of the war between them.
Tutor, investing the Colonia Agrippinensis with a strong force, compelled
the inhabitants and all the troops on the Upper Rhine to take the same
oath. He did this after having first put to death the tribunes at Mogontiacum,
and driven away the prefect of the camp, because they refused obedience.
Classicus picked out all the most unprincipled men from the troops who
had capitulated, and bade them go to the besieged, and offer them quarter,
if they would accept the actual state of affairs; otherwise there was no
hope for them; they would have to endure famine, the sword, and the direst
extremities. The messengers whom he sent supported their representations
by their own example.
[4.60] The ties of loyalty on the one
hand, and the necessities of famine on the other, kept the besieged wavering
between the alternatives of glory and infamy. While they thus hesitated,
all usual and even unusual kinds of food failed them, for they had consumed
their horses and beasts of burden and all the other animals, which, though
unclean and disgusting, necessity compelled them to use. At last they tore
up shrubs and roots and the grass that grew between the stones, and thus
shewed an example of patience under privations, till at last they shamefully
tarnished the lustre of their fame by sending envoys to Civilis to beg
for their lives. Their prayers were not heard, till they swore allegiance
to the empire of Gaul. Civilis then stipulated for the plunder of the camp,
and appointed guards who were to secure the treasure, the camp-followers,
and the baggage, and accompany them as they departed, stripped of everything.
About five miles from the spot the Germans rose upon them, and attacked
them as they marched without thought of danger. The bravest were cut down
where they stood; the greater part, as they were scattered in flight. The
rest made their escape to the camp, while Civilis certainly complained
of the proceeding, and upbraided the Germans with breaking faith by this
atrocious act. Whether this was mere hypocrisy, or whether he was unable
to restrain their fury, is not positively stated. They plundered and then
fired the camp, and all who survived the battle the flames destroyed.
[4.61] Then Civilis fulfilled a vow
often made by barbarians; his hair, which he had let grow long and coloured
with a red dye from the day of taking up arms against Rome, he now cut
short, when the destruction of the legions had been accomplished. It was
also said that he set up some of the prisoners as marks for his little
son to shoot at with a child's arrows and javelins. He neither took the
oath of allegiance to Gaul himself, nor obliged any Batavian to do so,
for he relied on the resources of Germany, and felt that, should it be
necessary to fight for empire with the Gauls, he should have on his side
a great name and superior strength. Munius Lupercus, legate of one of the
legions, was sent along with other gifts to Veleda, a maiden of the tribe
of the Bructeri, who possessed extensive dominion; for by ancient usage
the Germans attributed to many of their women prophetic powers and, as
the superstition grew in strength, even actual divinity. The authority
of Veleda was then at its height, because she had foretold the success
of the Germans and the destruction of the legions. Lupercus, however, was
murdered on the road. A few of the centurions and tribunes, who were natives
of Gaul, were reserved as hostages for the maintenance of the alliance.
The winter encampments of the auxiliary infantry and cavalry and of the
legions, with the sole exception of those at Mogontiacum and Vindonissa,
were pulled down and burnt.
[4.62] The 16th legion, with the auxiliary
troops that capitulated at the same time, received orders to march from
Novesium to the Colony of the Treveri, a day having been fixed by which
they were to quit the camp. The whole of this interval they spent in many
anxious thoughts. The cowards trembled to think of those who had been massacred
at the Old Camp; the better men blushed with shame at the infamy of their
position. "What a march is this before us!" they cried, "Who
will lead us on our way? Our all is at the disposal of those whom we have
made our masters for life or death." Others, without the least sense
of their disgrace, stowed away about their persons their money and what
else they prized most highly, while some got their arms in readiness, and
girded on their weapons as if for battle. While they were thus occupied,
the time for their departure arrived, and proved even more dismal than
their anticipation. For in their intrenchments their woeful appearance
had not been so noticeable; the open plain and the light of day revealed
their disgrace. The images of the Emperors were torn down; the standards
were borne along without their usual honours, while the banners of the
Gauls glittered on every side. The train moved on in silence like a long
funeral procession. Their leader was Claudius Sanctus; one of his eyes
had been destroyed; he was repulsive in countenance and even more feeble
in intellect. The guilt of the troops seemed to be doubled, when the other
legion, deserting the camp at Bonna, joined their ranks. When the report
of the capture of the legions became generally known, all who but a short
time before trembled at the name of Rome rushed forth from the fields and
houses, and spread themselves everywhere to enjoy with extravagant delight
the strange spectacle. The Picentine Horse could not endure the triumph
of the insulting rabble, and, disregarding the promises and threats of
Sanctus, rode off to Mogontiacum. Chancing to fall in with Longinus, the
murderer of Vocula, they overwhelmed him with a shower of darts, and thus
made a beginning towards a future expiation of their guilt. The legions
did not change the direction of their march, and encamped under the walls
of the colony of the Treveri.
[4.63] Elated with their success, Civilis
and Classicus doubted whether they should not give up the Colonia Agrippinensis
to be plundered by their troops. Their natural ferocity and lust for spoil
prompted them to destroy the city; but the necessities of war, and the
advantage of a character for clemency to men founding a new empire, forbade
them to do so. Civilis was also influenced by recollections of kindness
received; for his son, who at the beginning of the war had been arrested
in the Colony, had been kept in honourable custody. But the tribes beyond
the Rhine disliked the place for its wealth and increasing power, and held
that the only possible way of putting an end to war would be, either to
make it an open city for all Germans, or to destroy it and so disperse
the Ubii.
[4.64] Upon this the Tencteri, a tribe
separated by the Rhine from the Colony, sent envoys with orders to make
known their instructions to the Senate of the Agrippinenses. These orders
the boldest spirit among the ambassadors thus expounded: "For your
return into the unity of the German nation and name we give thanks to the
Gods whom we worship in common and to Mars, the chief of our divinities,
and we congratulate you that at length you will live as free men among
the free. Up to this day have the Romans closed river and land and, in
a way, the very air, that they may bar our converse and prevent our meetings,
or, what is a still worse insult to men born to arms, may force us to assemble
unarmed and all but stripped, watched by sentinels, and taxed for the privilege.
But that our friendship and union may be established for ever, we require
of you to strip your city of its walls, which are the bulwarks of slavery.
Even savage animals, if you keep them in confinement, forget their natural
courage. We require of you to massacre all Romans within your territory;
liberty and a dominant race cannot well exist together. Let the property
of the slain come into a common stock, so that no one may be able to secrete
anything, or to detach his own interest from ours. Let it be lawful for
us and for you to inhabit both banks of the Rhine, as it was of old for
our ancestors. As nature has given light and air to all men, so has she
thrown open every land to the brave. Resume the manners and customs of
your country, renouncing the pleasures, through which, rather than through
their arms, the Romans secure their power against subject nations. A pure
and untainted race, forgetting your past bondage, you will be the equals
of all, or will even rule over others."
[4.65] The inhabitants of the Colony
took time for deliberation, and, as dread of the future would not allow
them to accept the offered terms, while their actual condition forbade
an open and contemptuous rejection, they replied to the following effect:
"The very first chance of freedom that presented itself we seized
with more eagerness than caution, that we might unite ourselves with you
and the other Germans, our kinsmen by blood. With respect to our fortifications,
as at this very moment the Roman armies are assembling, it is safer for
us to strengthen than to destroy them. All strangers from Italy or the
provinces, that may have been in our territory, have either perished in
the war, or have fled to their own homes. As for those who in former days
settled here, and have been united to us by marriage, and as for their
offspring, this is their native land. We cannot think you so unjust as
to wish that we should slay our parents, our brothers, and our children.
All duties and restrictions on trade we repeal. Let there be a free passage
across the river, but let it be during the day-time and for persons unarmed,
till the new and recent privileges assume by usage the stability of time.
As arbiters between us we will have Civilis and Veleda; under their sanction
the treaty shall be ratified." The Tencteri were thus appeased, and
ambassadors were sent with presents to Civilis and Veleda, who settled
everything to the satisfaction of the inhabitants of the Colony. They were
not, however, allowed to approach or address Veleda herself. In order to
inspire them with more respect they were prevented from seeing her. She
dwelt in a lofty tower, and one of her relatives, chosen for the purpose,
conveyed, like the messenger of a divinity, the questions and answers.
[4.66] Thus strengthened by his alliance
with the Colonia Agrippinensis, Civilis resolved to attach to himself the
neighbouring States, or to make war on them if they offered any opposition.
He occupied the territory of the Sunici, and formed the youth of the country
into regular cohorts. To hinder his further advance, Claudius Labeo encountered
him with a hastily assembled force of Betasii, Tungri, and Nervii, relying
on the strength of his position, as he had occupied a bridge over the river
Mosa. They fought in a narrow defile without any decided result, till the
Germans swam across and attacked Labeo's rear. At the same moment, Civilis,
acting either on some bold impulse or by a preconcerted plan, rushed into
the Tungrian column, exclaiming in a loud voice, "We have not taken
up arms in order that the Batavi and Treveri may rule over the nations.
Far from us be such arrogance! Accept our alliance. I am ready to join
your ranks, whether you would prefer me to be your general or your comrade."
The multitude was moved by the appeal, and were beginning to sheathe their
swords, when Campanus and Juvenalis, two of the Tungrian chieftains, surrendered
the whole tribe to Civilis. Labeo made his escape before he could be intercepted.
The Betasii and Nervii, also capitulating, were incorporated by Civilis
into his army. He now commanded vast resources, as the States were either
completely cowed, or else were naturally inclined in his favour.
[4.67] Meanwhile Julius Sabinus, after
having thrown down the pillars that recorded the treaty with Rome, bade
his followers salute him as Emperor, and hastened at the head of a large
and undisciplined crowd of his countrymen to attack the Sequani, a neighbouring
people, still faithful to Rome. The Sequani did not decline the contest.
Fortune favoured the better cause, and the Lingones were defeated. Sabinus
fled from the battle with a cowardice equal to the rashness with which
he had precipitated it, and, in order to spread a report of his death,
he set fire to a country-house where he had taken refuge. It was believed
that he there perished by a death of his own seeking. The various shifts
by which he contrived to conceal himself and to prolong his life for nine
years, the firm fidelity of his friends, and the noble example of his wife
Epponina, I shall relate in their proper place. By this victory of the
Sequani the tide of war was stayed. The States began by degrees to recover
their senses, and to reflect on the claims of justice and of treaties.
The Remi were foremost in this movement, announcing throughout Gaul that
deputies were to be sent to consult in common assembly whether they should
make freedom or peace their object.
[4.68] At Rome report exaggerated all
these disasters, and disturbed Mucianus with the fear that the generals,
though distinguished men (for he had already appointed Gallus Annius and
Petilius Cerialis to the command), would be unequal to the weight of so
vast a war. Yet the capital could not be left without a ruler, and men
feared the ungoverned passions of Domitian, while Primus Antonius and Varus
Arrius were also, as I have said, objects of suspicion. Varus, who had
been made commander of the Praetorian Guard, had still at his disposal
much military strength. Mucianus ejected him from his office, and, not
to leave him without consolation, made him superintendent of the sale of
corn. To pacify the feelings of Domitian, which were not unfavourable to
Varus, he appointed Arretinus Clemens, who was closely connected with the
house of Vespasian, and who was also a great favourite with Domitian, to
the command of the Praetorian Guard, alleging that his father, in the reign
of Caligula, had admirably discharged the duties of that office. The old
name he said, would please the soldiers, and Clemens himself, though on
the roll of Senators, would be equal to both duties. He selected the most
eminent men in the State to accompany him, while others were appointed
through interest. At the same time Domitian and Mucianus prepared to set
out, but in a very different mood; Domitian in all the hope and impatience
of youth, Mucianus ever contriving delays to check his ardent companion,
who, he feared, were he to intrude himself upon the army, might be led
by the recklessness of youth or by bad advisers to compromise at once the
prospects of war and of peace. Two of the victorious legions, the 6th and
8th, the 21st, which belonged to the Vitellianist army, the 2nd, which
consisted of new levies, were marched into Gaul, some over the Penine and
Cottian, some over the Graian Alps. The 14th legion was summoned from Britain,
and the 6th and 10th from Spain. Thus rumours of an advancing army, as
well as their own temper, inclined the States of Gaul which assembled in
the country of the Remi to more peaceful counsels. Envoys from the Treveri
were awaiting them there, and among them Tullius Valentinus, the most vehement
promoter of the war, who in a set speech poured forth all the charges usually
made against great empires, and levelled against the Roman people many
insulting and exasperating expressions. The man was a turbulent fomenter
of sedition, and pleased many by his frantic eloquence.
[4.69] On the other hand Julius Auspex,
one of the leading chieftains among the Remi, dwelt on the power of Rome
and the advantages of peace. Pointing out that war might be commenced indeed
by cowards, but must be carried on at the peril of the braver spirits,
and that the Roman legions were close at hand, he restrained the most prudent
by considerations of respect and loyalty, and held back the younger by
representations of danger and appeals to fear. The result was, that, while
they extolled the spirit of Valentinus, they followed the counsels of Auspex.
It is certain that the Treveri and Lingones were injured in the eyes of
the Gallic nations by their having sided with Verginius in the movement
of Vindex. Many were deterred by the mutual jealousy of the provinces.
"Where," they asked, "could a head be found for the war?
Where could they look for civil authority, and the sanction of religion?
If all went well with them, what city could they select as the seat of
empire?" The victory was yet to be gained; dissension had already
begun. One State angrily boasted of its alliances, another of its wealth
and military strength, or of the antiquity of its origin. Disgusted with
the prospect of the future, they acquiesced in their present condition.
Letters were written to the Treveri in the name of the States of Gaul,
requiring them to abstain from hostilities, and reminding them that pardon
might yet be obtained, and that friends were ready to intercede for them,
should they repent. Valentinus still opposed, and succeeded in closing
the ears of his countrymen to this advice, though he was not so diligent
in preparing for war as he was assiduous in haranguing.
[4.70] Accordingly neither the Treveri,
the Lingones, nor the other revolted States, took measures at all proportioned
to the magnitude of the peril they had incurred. Even their generals did
not act in concert. Civilis was traversing the pathless wilds of the Belgae
in attempting to capture Claudius Labeo, or to drive him out of the country.
Classicus for the most part wasted his time in indolent repose, as if he
had only to enjoy an empire already won. Even Tutor made no haste to occupy
with troops the upper bank of the Rhine and the passes of the Alps. Meanwhile
the 21st legion, by way of Vindonissa, and Sextilius Felix with the auxiliary
infantry, by way of Rhaetia, penetrated into the province. They were joined
by the Singularian Horse, which had been raised some time before by Vitellius,
and had afterwards gone over to the side of Vespasian. Their commanding
officer was Julius Briganticus. He was sister's son to Civilis, and he
was hated by his uncle and hated him in return with all the extreme bitterness
of a family feud. Tutor, having augmented the army of the Treveri with
fresh levies from the Vangiones, the Caeracates, and the Triboci, strengthened
it with a force of veteran infantry and cavalry, men from the legions whom
he had either corrupted by promises or overborne by intimidation. Their
first act was to cut to pieces a cohort, which had been sent on in advance
by Sextilius Felix; soon afterwards, however, on the approach of the Roman
generals at the head of their army, they returned to their duty by an act
of honourable desertion, and the Triboci, Vangiones, and Caeracates, followed
their example. Avoiding Mogontiacum, Tutor retired with the Treveri to
Bingium, trusting to the strength of the position, as he had broken down
the bridge over the river Nava. A sudden attack, however, was made by the
infantry under the command of Sextilius; a ford was discovered, and he
found himself betrayed and routed. The Treveri were panicstricken by this
disaster, and the common people threw down their arms, and dispersed themselves
through the country. Some of the chiefs, anxious to seem the first to cease
from hostilities, fled to those States which had not renounced the Roman
alliance. The legions, which had been removed, as I have before related,
from Novesium and Bonna to the territory of the Treveri, voluntarily swore
allegiance to Vespasian. These proceedings took place in the absence of
Valentinus. When he returned, full of fury and bent on again throwing everything
into confusion and ruin, the legions withdrew to the Mediomatrici, a people
in alliance with Rome. Valentinus and Tutor again involved the Treveri
in war, and murdered the two legates, Herennius and Numisius, that by diminishing
the hope of pardon they might strengthen the bond of crime.
[4.71] Such was the state of the war,
when Petilius Cerialis reached Mogontiacum. Great expectations were raised
by his arrival. Eager for battle, and more ready to despise than to be
on his guard against the enemy, he fired the spirit of the troops by his
bold language; for he would, he said, fight without a moment's delay, as
soon as it was possible to meet the foe. The levies which had been raised
in Gaul he ordered back to their respective States, with instructions to
proclaim that the legions sufficed to defend the Empire, and that the allies
might return to the duties of peace, secure in the thought that a war which
Roman arms had undertaken was finished. This proceeding strengthened the
loyalty of the Gauls. Now that their youth were restored to them they could
more easily bear the burden of the tribute; and, finding themselves despised,
they were more ready to obey. Civilis and Classicus, having heard of the
defeat of Tutor and of the rout of the Treveri, and indeed of the complete
success of the enemy, hastened in their alarm to concentrate their own
scattered forces, and meanwhile sent repeated messages to Valentinus, warning
him not to risk a decisive battle. This made Cerialis move with more rapidity.
He sent to the Mediomatrici persons commissioned to conduct the legions
which were there by the shortest route against the enemy; and, collecting
such troops as there were at Mogontiacum and such as he had brought with
himself, he arrived in three days' march at Rigodulum. Valentinus, at the
head of a large body of Treveri, had occupied this position, which was
protected by hills, and by the river Mosella. He had also strengthened
it with ditches and breastworks of stones. These defences, however, did
not deter the Roman general from ordering his infantry to the assault,
and making his cavalry advance up the hill; he scorned the enemy, whose
forces, hastily levied, could not, he knew, derive any advantage from their
position, but what would be more than counterbalanced by the courage of
his own men. There was some little delay in the ascent, while the troops
were passing through the range of the enemy's missiles. As soon as they
came to close fighting, the barbarians were dislodged and hurled like a
falling house from their position. A detachment of the cavalry rode round
where the hills were less steep, and captured the principal Belgic chiefs,
and among them Valentinus, their general.
[4.72] On the following day Cerialis
entered the Colony of the Treveri. The soldiers were eager to destroy the
city. "This," they said, "is the birthplace of Classicus
and Tutor; it was by the treason of these men that our legions were besieged
and massacred. What had Cremona done like this, Cremona which was torn
from the very bosom of Italy, because it had occasioned to the conquerors
the delay of a single night? Here on the borders of Germany stands unharmed
a city which exults in the spoils of our armies and the blood of our generals.
Let the plunder be brought into the Imperial treasury; we shall be satisfied
with the fire that will destroy a rebellious colony and compensate for
the overthrow of so many camps." Cerialis, fearing the disgrace of
being thought to have imbued his soldiers with a spirit of licence and
cruelty, checked their fury. They submitted, for, now that civil war was
at an end, they were tractable enough in dealing with an enemy. Their thoughts
were then diverted by the pitiable aspect of the legions which had been
summoned from the Mediomatrici. They stood oppressed by the consciousness
of guilt, their eyes fixed on the earth. No friendly salutations passed
between the armies as they met, they made no answer to those who would
console or encourage them, but hid themselves in their tents, and shrank
from the very light of day. Nor was it so much their peril or their alarm
that confounded them, as their shame and humiliation. Even the conquerors
were struck dumb, and dared not utter a word of entreaty, but pleaded for
pardon by their silent tears, till Cerialis at last soothed their minds
by declaring that destiny had brought about all that had happened through
the discords of soldiers and generals or through the treachery of the foe.
They must consider that day as the first of their military service and
of their allegiance. Their past crimes would be remembered neither by the
Emperor nor by himself. They were thus admitted into the same camp with
the rest, and an order was read in every company, that no soldier was in
any contention or altercation to reproach a comrade with mutiny or defeat.
[4.73] Cerialis then convoked an assembly
of the Treveri and Lingones, and thus addressed them: "I have never
cultivated eloquence; it is by my sword that I have asserted the excellence
of the Roman people. Since, however, words have very great weight with
you, since you estimate good and evil, not according to their real value,
but according to the representations of seditious men, I have resolved
to say a few words, which, as the war is at an end, it may be useful for
you to have heard rather than for me to have spoken. Roman generals and
Emperors entered your territory, as they did the rest of Gaul, with no
ambitious purposes, but at the solicitation of your ancestors, who were
wearied to the last extremity by intestine strife, while the Germans, whom
they had summoned to their help, had imposed their yoke alike on friend
and foe. How many battles we have fought against the Cimbri and Teutones,
at the cost of what hardships to our armies, and with what result we have
waged our German wars, is perfectly well known. It was not to defend Italy
that we occupied the borders of the Rhine, but to insure that no second
Ariovistus should seize the empire of Gaul. Do you fancy yourselves to
be dearer in the eyes of Civilis and the Batavi and the Transrhenane tribes,
than your fathers and grandfathers were to their ancestors? There have
ever been the same causes at work to make the Germans cross over into Gaul,
lust, avarice, and the longing for a new home, prompting them to leave
their own marshes and deserts, and to possess themselves of this most fertile
soil and of you its inhabitants. Liberty, indeed, and the like specious
names are their pretexts; but never did any man seek to enslave his fellows
and secure dominion for himself, without using the very same words.
[4.74] "Gaul always had its petty
kingdoms and intestine wars, till you submitted to our authority. We, though
so often provoked, have used the right of conquest to burden you only with
the cost of maintaining peace. For the tranquillity of nations cannot be
preserved without armies; armies cannot exist without pay; pay cannot be
furnished without tribute; all else is common between us. You often command
our legions. You rule these and other provinces. There is no privilege,
no exclusion. From worthy Emperors you derive equal advantage, though you
dwell so far away, while cruel rulers are most formidable to their neighbours.
Endure the passions and rapacity of your masters, just as you bear barren
seasons and excessive rains and other natural evils. There will be vices
as long as there are men. But they are not perpetual, and they are compensated
by the occurrence of better things. Perhaps, however, you expect a milder
rule under Tutor and Classicus, and fancy that armies to repel the Germans
and the Britons will be furnished by less tribute than you now pay. Should
the Romans be driven out (which God forbid) what can result but wars between
all these nations? By the prosperity and order of eight hundred years has
this fabric of empire been consolidated, nor can it be overthrown without
destroying those who overthrow it. Yours will be the worst peril, for you
have gold and wealth, and these are the chief incentives to war. Give therefore
your love and respect to the cause of peace, and to that capital in which
we, conquerors and conquered, claim an equal right. Let the lessons of
fortune in both its forms teach you not to prefer rebellion and ruin to
submission and safety." With words to this effect he quieted and encouraged
his audience, who feared harsher treatment.
[4.75] The territory of the Treveri
was occupied by the victorious army, when Civilis and Classicus sent letters
to Cerialis, the purport of which was as follows: "Vespasian, though
the news is suppressed, is dead. Rome and Italy are thoroughly wasted by
intestine war. Mucianus and Domitian are mere empty and powerless names.
If Cerialis wishes for the empire of Gaul, we can be content with the boundaries
of our own States. If he prefers to fight, we do not refuse that alternative."
Cerialis sent no answer to Civilis and Classicus, but despatched the bearer
and the letter itself to Domitian. The enemy advanced from every quarter
in several bodies. Cerialis was generally censured for allowing them to
unite, when he might have destroyed them in detail. The Roman army surrounded
their camp with a fosse and rampart, for up to that time they had been
rash enough to occupy it without any defence. Among the Germans there was
a conflict of opinions.
[4.76] Civilis said: "We must await
the arrival of the Transrhenane tribes, the terror of whose name will break
down the shattered strength of Rome. As for the Gauls, what are they but
the prey of the conqueror? And yet the chief strength of the nation, the
Belgae, are with us, either openly, or in heart." Tutor maintained
that the power of Rome would only increase with delay, as her armies were
assembling from all quarters. "One legion," he said, "has
already been brought over from Britain; others have been summoned from
Spain, or are advancing from Italy. Nor are these troops newly raised levies,
but they are veteran soldiers, experienced in war. But the Germans, whom
we are expecting, do not obey orders, and cannot be controlled, but always
act according to their own caprice. The money too and other presents by
which alone they can be bribed are more plentiful among the Romans, and
no one can be so bent on fighting as not to prefer repose to peril, when
the profit is the same. But if we at once meet the foe, Cerialis has no
legions but those that survive from the wreck of the German army, and these
are bound by treaties to the States of Gaul. And the very fact of their
having, contrary to their expectations, lately routed the undisciplined
force of Valentinus will confirm in their rashness both them and their
general. They will venture again, and will find themselves in the hands,
not of an ignorant stripling, whose thoughts were of speeches and harangues
rather than of battle and the sword, but in those of Civilis and Classicus,
whom when they once behold they will be reminded of panic, of flight, of
famine, and of the many times when as captives they had to beg for life.
Nor are the Treveri and Lingones bound by any ties of affection; once let
their fear cease, and they will resume their arms." Classicus put
an end to these differences of opinion by giving his approval to the suggestions
of Tutor, which were at once acted on.
[4.77] The centre was the post assigned
to the Ubii and Lingones. On the right were the Batavian cohorts; on the
left the Bructeri and the Tencteri. One division marching over the hills,
another passing between the highroad and the river Mosella, made the attack
with such suddenness, that Cerialis, who had not slept in the camp, was
in his chamber and even in his bed, when he heard at the same moment that
the battle had begun, and that his men were being worsted. He rebuked the
alarm of the messengers, till the whole extent of the disaster became visible,
and he saw that the camp of the legions had been forced, that the cavalry
were routed, that the bridge over the Mosella, which connected the farther
bank of the river with the Colony, was held by the Germans. Undismayed
by the confusion, Cerialis held back the fugitives with his own hand, and
readily exposing himself, with his person entirely unprotected, to the
missiles of the enemy, he succeeded by a daring and successful effort,
with the prompt aid of his bravest soldiers, in recovering the bridge and
holding it with a picked force. Then returning to the camp, he saw the
broken companies of the legions, which had been captured at Bonna and Novesium,
with but few soldiers round the standards, and the eagles all but surrounded
by the foe. Fired with indignation, he exclaimed, "It is not Flaccus
or Vocula, whom you are thus abandoning. There is no treachery here; I
have nothing to excuse but that I rashly believed that you, forgetting
your alliance with Gaul, had again recollected your allegiance to Rome.
I shall be added to the number of the Numisii and Herennii, so that all
your commanders will have fallen by the hands of their soldiers or of the
enemy. Go, tell Vespasian, or, since they are nearer, Civilis and Classicus,
that you have deserted your general on the battlefield. Legions will come
who will not leave me unavenged or you unpunished."
[4.78] All this was true, and the tribunes
and prefects heaped on their men the same reproaches. The troops formed
themselves in cohorts and companies, for they could not deploy into line;
as the enemy were scattered everywhere, while from the fact that the battle
was raging within the entrenchments, they were themselves hampered with
their tents and baggage. Tutor, Classicus, and Civilis, each at his post,
animated the combatants; the Gauls they urged to fight for freedom, the
Batavi for glory, the Germans for plunder. Everything seemed in favour
of the enemy, till the 21st legion, having more room than the others, formed
itself into a compact body, withstood, and soon drove back the assailants.
Nor was it without an interposition of heaven, that by a sudden change
of temper the conquerors turned their backs and fled. Their own account
was, that they were alarmed by the sight of the cohorts, which, after being
broken at the first onset, rallied on the top of the hills, and presented
the appearance of reinforcements. What checked them in their course of
victory was a mischievous struggle among themselves to secure plunder while
they forgot the enemy. Cerialis, having thus all but ruined everything
by his carelessness, restored the day by his resolution; following up his
success, he took and destroyed the enemy's camp on the same day.
[4.79] No long time was allowed to the
soldiers for repose. The Agrippinenses were begging for help, and were
offering to give up the wife and sister of Civilis and the daughter of
Classicus, who had been left with them as pledges for the maintenance of
the alliance. In the meanwhile they had massacred all the Germans who were
scattered throughout their dwellings. Hence their alarm and reasonable
importunity in begging for help, before the enemy, recovering their strength,
could raise their spirits for a new effort or for thoughts of revenge.
And indeed Civilis had marched in their direction, nor was he by any means
weak, as he had still, in unbroken force, the most warlike of his cohorts,
which consisted of Chauci and Frisii, and which was posted at Tolbiacum,
on the frontiers of the Agrippinenses. He was, however, diverted from his
purpose by the deplorable news that this cohort had been entirely destroyed
by a stratagem of the Agrippinenses, who, having stupefied the Germans
by a profuse entertainment and abundance of wine, fastened the doors, set
fire to the houses, and burned them. At the same time Cerialis advanced
by forced marches, and relieved the city. Civilis too was beset by other
fears. He was afraid that the 14th legion, supported by the fleet from
Britain, might do mischief to the Batavi along their line of coast. The
legion was, however, marched overland under the command of Fabius Priscus
into the territory of the Nervii and Tungri, and these two states were
allowed to capitulate. The Canninefates, taking the offensive, attacked
our fleet, and the larger part of the ships was either sunk or captured.
The same tribe also routed a crowd of Nervii, who by a spontaneous movement
had taken up arms on the Roman side. Classicus also gained a victory over
some cavalry, who had been sent on to Novesium by Cerialis. These reverses,
which, though trifling, came in rapid succession, destroyed by degrees
the prestige of the recent victory.
[4.80] About the same time Mucianus
ordered the son of Vitellius to be put to death, alleging that dissension
would never cease, if he did not destroy all seeds of civil war. Nor would
he suffer Antonius Primus to be taken into the number of Domitian's attendants,
for he felt uneasy at his popularity with the troops, and feared the proud
spirit of the man, who could not endure an equal, much less a superior.
Antonius then went to Vespasian, who received him, not indeed as he expected,
but in a not unfriendly spirit. Two opposite influences acted on the Emperor;
on the one hand were the merits of Antonius, under whose conduct the war
had beyond all doubt been terminated; on the other, were the letters of
Mucianus. And everyone else inveighed against him, as an ill-affected and
conceited man, nor did they forget the scandals of his early life. Antonius
himself failed not to provoke offence by his arrogance and his excessive
propensity to dwell on his own services. He reproached other men with being
cowards; Caecina he stigmatized as a captive and a prisoner of war. Thus
by degrees he came to be thought of less weight and worth, though his friendship
with the Emperor to all appearance remained the same.
[4.81] In the months during which Vespasian
was waiting at Alexandria for the periodical return of the summer gales
and settled weather at sea, many wonders occurred which seemed to point
him out as the object of the favour of heaven and of the partiality of
the Gods. One of the common people of Alexandria, well known for his blindness,
threw himself at the Emperor's knees, and implored him with groans to heal
his infirmity. This he did by the advice of the God Serapis, whom this
nation, devoted as it is to many superstitions, worships more than any
other divinity. He begged Vespasian that he would deign to moisten his
cheeks and eye-balls with his spittle. Another with a diseased hand, at
the counsel of the same God, prayed that the limb might feet the print
of a Caesar's foot. At first Vespasian ridiculed and repulsed them. They
persisted; and he, though on the one hand he feared the scandal of a fruitless
attempt, yet, on the other, was induced by the entreaties of the men and
by the language of his flatterers to hope for success. At last he ordered
that the opinion of physicians should be taken, as to whether such blindness
and infirmity were within the reach of human skill. They discussed the
matter from different points of view. "In the one case," they
said, "the faculty of sight was not wholly destroyed, and might return,
if the obstacies were removed; in the other case, the limb, which had fallen
into a diseased condition, might be restored, if a healing influence were
applied; such, perhaps, might be the pleasure of the Gods, and the Emperor
might be chosen to be the minister of the divine will; at any rate, all
the glory of a successful remedy would be Caesar's, while the ridicule
of failure would fall on the sufferers." And so Vespasian, supposing
that all things were possible to his good fortune, and that nothing was
any longer past belief, with a joyful countenance, amid the intense expectation
of the multitude of bystanders, accomplished what was required. The hand
was instantly restored to its use, and the light of day again shone upon
the blind. Persons actually present attest both facts, even now when nothing
is to be gained by falsehood.
[4.82] Vespasian thus came to conceive
a deeper desire to visit the sanctuary of Serapis, that he might consult
the God about the interests of his throne. He gave orders that all persons
should be excluded from the temple. He had entered, and was absorbed in
worship, when he saw behind him one of the chief men of Egypt, named Basilides,
whom he knew at the time to be detained by sickness at a considerable distance,
as much as several days journey from Alexandria. He enquired of the priests,
whether Basilides had on this day entered the temple. He enquired of others
whom he met, whether he had been seen in the city. At length, sending some
horsemen, he ascertained that at that very instant the man had been eighty
miles distant. He then concluded that it was a divine apparition, and discovered
an oracular force in the name of Basilides.
[4.83] The origin of this God Serapis
has not hitherto been made generally known by our writers. The Egyptian
priests give this account. While Ptolemy, the first Macedonian king who
consolidated the power of Egypt, was setting up in the newly-built city
of Alexandria fortifications, temples, and rites of worship, there appeared
to him in his sleep a youth of singular beauty and more than human stature,
who counselled the monarch to send his most trusty friends to Pontus, and
fetch his effigy from that country. This, he said, would bring prosperity
to the realm, and great and illustrious would be the city which gave it
a reception. At the same moment he saw the youth ascend to heaven in a
blaze of fire. Roused by so significant and strange an appearance, Ptolemy
disclosed the vision of the night to the Egyptian priests, whose business
it is to understand such matters. As they knew but little of Pontus or
of foreign countries, he enquired of Timotheus, an Athenian, one of the
family of the Eumolpids, whom he had invited from Eleusis to preside over
the sacred rites, what this worship was, and who was the deity. Timotheus,
questioning persons who had found their way to Pontus, learnt that there
was there a city Sinope, and near it a temple, which, according to an old
tradition of the neighbourhood, was sacred to the infernal Jupiter, for
there also stood close at hand a female figure, to which many gave the
name of Proserpine. Ptolemy, however, with the true disposition of a despot,
though prone to alarm, was, when the feeling of security returned, more
intent on pleasures than on religious matters; and he began by degrees
to neglect the affair, and to turn his thoughts to other concerns, till
at length the same apparition, but now more terrible and peremptory, denounced
ruin against the king and his realm, unless his bidding were performed.
Ptolemy then gave directions that an embassy should be despatched with
presents to king Scydrothemis, who at that time ruled the people of Sinope,
and instructed them, when they were on the point of sailing, to consult
the Pythian Apollo. Their voyage was prosperous, and the response of the
oracle was clear. The God bade them go and carry back with them the image
of his father, but leave that of his sister behind.
[4.84] On their arrival at Sinope, they
delivered to Scydrothemis the presents from their king, with his request
and message. He wavered in purpose, dreading at one moment the anger of
the God, terrified at another by the threats and opposition of the people.
Often he was wrought upon by the gifts and promises of the ambassadors.
And so three years passed away, while Ptolemy did not cease to urge his
zealous solicitations. He continued to increase the dignity of his embassies,
the number of his ships, and the weight of his gold. A terrible vision
then appeared to Scydrothemis, warning him to thwart no longer the purposes
of the God. As he yet hesitated, various disasters, pestilence, and the
unmistakable anger of heaven, which grew heavier from day to day, continued
to harass him. He summoned an assembly, and explained to them the bidding
of the God, the visions of Ptolemy and himself, and the miseries that were
gathering about them. The people turned away angrily from their king, were
jealous of Egypt, and, fearing for themselves, thronged around the temple.
The story becomes at this point more marvellous, and relates that the God
of his own will conveyed himself on board the fleet, which had been brought
close to shore, and, wonderful to say, vast as was the extent of sea that
they traversed, they arrived at Alexandria on the third day. A temple,
proportioned to the grandeur of the city, was erected in a place called
Rhacotis, where there had stood a chapel consecrated in old times to Serapis
and Isis. Such is the most popular account of the origin and introduction
of the God Serapis. I am aware indeed that there are some who say that
he was brought from Seleucia, a city of Syria, in the reign of Ptolemy
III., while others assert that it was the act of the same king, but that
the place from which he was brought was Memphis, once a famous city and
the strength of ancient Egypt. The God himself, because he heals the sick,
many identified with Aesculapius; others with Osiris, the deity of the
highest antiquity among these nations; not a few with Jupiter, as being
supreme ruler of all things; but most people with Pluto, arguing from the
emblems which may be seen on his statues, or from conjectures of their
own.
[4.85] Domitian and Mucianus received,
before they reached the Alps, favourable news of the operations among the
Treveri. The best proof of the victory was seen in the enemy's general
Valentinus, who with undaunted courage shewed in his look his habitual
high spirit. He was heard, but only that they might judge of his character;
and he was condemned. During his execution he replied to one who taunted
him with the subjection of his country, "That I take as my consolation
in death." Mucianus now brought forward as a new thought a plan he
had long concealed. "Since," he said, "by the blessing of
the Gods the strength of the enemy has been broken, it would little become
Domitian, now that the war is all but finished, to interfere with the glory
of others. If the stability of the Empire or the safety of Gaul were in
danger, it would have been right for Caesar to take his place in the field;
but the Canninefates and Batavi should be handed over to inferior generals.
Let the Emperor display from the near neighbourhood of Lugdunum the might
and prestige of imperial power, not meddling with trifling risks, though
he would not be wanting on greater occasions."
[4.86] His artifices were understood,
but it was a part of their respect not to expose them. Thus they arrived
at Lugdunum. It is believed that from this place Domitian despatched secret
emissaries to Cerialis, and tempted his loyalty with the question whether,
on his shewing himself, he would hand over to him the command of the army.
Whether in this scheme Domitian was thinking of war with his father, or
of collecting money, and men to be used against his brother, was uncertain;
for Cerialis, by a judicious temporising, eluded the request as prompted
by an idle and childish ambition. Domitian, seeing that his youth was despised
by the older officers, gave up even the less important functions of government
which he had before exercised. Under a semblance of simple and modest tastes,
he wrapped himself in a profound reserve, and affected a devotion to literature
and a love of poetry, thus seeking to throw a veil over his character,
and to withdraw himself from the jealousy of his brother, of whose milder
temper, so unlike his own, he judged most falsely.
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