Book Two
THE YOUNG EMPEROR
I
BEFORE the rostra in the Forum of Caesar was placed a
gilded tabernacle, shaped like a small replica of the temple of Jupiter, and
within the tabernacle was a bed made of ivory, covered with a cloth of purple
and gold. Propped up at the head of the bed was the bloated face of the dead
Claudius, heavily made-up by the Imperial Undertakers for exhibition to the
crowd—for the funeral of an Emperor was as good as a show.
Standing erect upon the rostrum was Nero, delivering
the funeral oration for his adoptive father: “In his sacred person was the
wisdom that always triumphed. Moderate in his desires, master of all passions,
neglecting his personal happiness for the greatness of Rome, Claudius Caesar
deserves to be admitted among the Gods.”
Among the official mourners someone muttered that
however wise the old fellow might have been, they would not be now extolling
him to the Heavens had he not been such a glutton. A Senator, recognizing in
every sentence the pen of Seneca, was shaking his head: “The great Julius
Caesar was an admirable orator; Augustus used to speak with ease and elegance;
Tiberius was almost pedantic in his language and his love for archaic phrasing;
Claudius, when sober, was an erudite, but it is tiresome to hear a young man
reciting his harangue like an old actor.”
The enthusiasm of the populace was great. Old Claudius
had disgusted Rome. The populace will forgive anything to a sovereign except
ridicule; and Claudius had been an object of ridicule, an old man cuckolded by
a young wife, a gross buffoon, sleepy and not always clean, a doting old man
who would consult the Senate about a new mode of seasoning a sturgeon! The new
Emperor was young and smart. Well, we shall sec. In the meantime everybody
laughed over Seneca’s pamphlet, Apokolokyntos or the Metamorphosis of the Pumpkin. They said that Seneca had written
it in one night; perhaps, said the evil tongues, he wanted to apologize for
having had to compose this solemn funeral oration as well. The pamphlet was
skittish enough: “His soul went out of his body with a thunder, while in the
grumbling of his favourite organ he cried ‘Ah... Ah... I think that I have
messed myself... ’ After which he rose to Heaven. They went to announce to
Jupiter the arrival of this big man. They asked him from which land he came,
and he answered with such a thick tongue that no one could understand the
language he spoke, for it was certainly neither Greek nor Latin. Jupiter told
Hercules to go and seek out the trouble. The god who had conquered so many
monsters felt uneasy at the sight of this creature. When he heard his raucous
and bellowing voice, he thought it might be a sea monster and for a moment he
feared that he would have to add a thirteenth labour to his record. But looking
at him more closely he found that, perhaps, it was only a man...”
After the funeral and the lighting of a great pyre in
the Campus Martius, Nero said sarcastically: “You see, I can neither ignore the Apokolokyntos nor punish Seneca. In writing it
he forgot his duties as newly-appointed First Secretary of State, but in the
oration he prepared for me he said all that a perfect Minister should say.”
The accession to the Throne had been a tiresome task.
After the Praetorians had acclaimed him Emperor, Nero had to wear the red cloak
and the gilt armour and visit the troops in camp, outside the City. The visit
was delayed until seven o’clock, for the omens were so disastrous that no
earlier time was judged proper. At last, he was carried to the camp, and from
it he made a short speech and languidly distributed his gifts to the troops. He
was then carried to the Senate House, where he put on the toga and read the
Speech from the Throne.
The address, prepared by Seneca, was on noble and
traditional lines: “Receiving the duty that Rome places upon me, and of which
you, O Conscript Fathers, consider me worthy, I declare that I have not
deserved it either by my birth or by my adoption... If my duty obliges me to
make decisions, rest assured that in taking them I shall think only of the
welfare and happiness of Rome. I know my inexperience, my young age, my
ignorance. But surrounded by the wisest of counsellors, I will set myself the noblest
of examples... The Emperor will no longer act as advocate in any trial or take
sides in any law-suit. He will take care in appointing the judges and
magistrates to ensure that the laws are strictly observed. I pledge from this
moment an absolute separation between the State and my person. A citizen among
the citizens, if I am the first among them, I must also be the most loyal and
the most respectful towards Laws and Country. From this day the Senate ceases
to be the servant or the instrument of the Imperial will. I reinstate it in the
fullness of its ancient privileges.”
The Speech took the Senate by storm. The Imperial
clique was delighted; the old die-hards themselves could find nothing but
approval. The surrendering of the judicial power was a stroke of genius. If the
Emperor was as good as his word it would mean a return to the Age of Augustus.
Unanimously the Senate passed a vote of thanks giving their complete approval,
and the Lord President, speaking with great emphasis “on behalf of this ancient
and august Assembly” begged the Emperor to accept all the honours that had been
heaped upon the previous Emperors. Nero accepted them with good grace, but he
modestly refused the title of Father of the Country, on account he said, of his
youth.
That night Rome talked of nothing else but the Speech
from the Throne; the greatest and wisest speech ever heard since the great
Augustan days. In the Palace, elated by the news brought in by Ministers and
courtiers, Nero chattered with great animation about his determination to
restore the liberal government of Augustus. He would no longer judge crimes of
lese majesty in a secret Court—indeed, there shall be no more crimes of lese
majesty. No longer will the Emperor be ruled by a freedman—and this was a blow
to Agrippina, for it was aimed at Pallas her lover. No longer shall Rome have
Ministers chosen through intrigues; but they shall be public men supported by
public opinion.
Seneca, that very day, had been officially appointed
First Secretary of State with duties of Prime Minister, and said: “Nero Caesar,
you must indeed revive Augustus’s times! ”
But Gaius Petronius, whose excellent taste in all
things was already making the deepest impression upon Nero, smiled suavely: “My
lord, the people are never grateful for law and order.”
That same night, after Senators and high officials had
departed, Nero detained Petronius in intimate conversation. He did not wish to
be alone and he sought the image of his own emotions in the mirror of his more
cultivated and more mature friend: “Don’t you think, Petronius, that was rather
a stroke of genius to refuse the title of Pater Patriae?”
Petronius looked at this new Caesar with his customary
indolence: “My lord, I know that you wish me to retain with you the frankness
of former days... It was certainly a proof of good sense to realize that a
young man of seventeen could scarcely be father to such an ancient city as our
Rome.”
II
Nero was the symbol of his times. The Roman Empire had
taken eight centuries to evolve; yet, half a century after reaching the peak it
was already declining to its fall.
Julius Caesar had seized power in the year 46 BC and
in his short career he set the outposts of the Empire. Caesar’s adoptive son,
Octavianus Augustus, in his forty-three years of reign, perfected the Empire
and gave to the world a Pax Romana. Less than forty years later, Nero inherited
an Empire that was already moving to its doom. Witness the relations of Britain
and Rome; Julius Caesar showed the flag in Southern Britain in 55 and again in
54 BC; Claudius sent his General Aulus Plautius to conquer Britain in the year
ad 43 and he himself visited the new Province in 44; Nero, in the year 60,
after crushing Queen Boadicea’s revolt, will suggest withdrawing from Britain.
In every way the Rome of Nero no longer resembled the
Rome of Augustus’s great days. In a short time a profound change had come upon
the Roman people. Even before Caesar, the many wars and conquests outside Italy
had brought about a new outlook on life. Firstly, with the acquisition of many
barbarous Provinces, Rome became industrialized. To make the new industries
prosperous, an industrial population had to be created. This, by necessity,
brought into the City craftsmen and workers from every land. The population of
Rome was therefore re-assessed and divided into urban tribes, composed of
freedmen, of foreigners and old Roman citizens enriched by the new trades and
commerce. The ancient agrarian tribes were still considered the most honourable
and the salt of the Roman people; but only in name. From that time, the
population of Rome was made up of a core of genuine Romans and an ever-mounting
influx of foreigners and emancipated slaves to whom the freedom of the City was
granted.
Pride in their conquests and the increasing splendour
of their City soon gave the people of Rome a new attitude to life: it made them
consider manual work as unworthy of conquerors and fit only for slaves and
subjected peoples. From this to a kind of superior indifference for public
affairs the step was a short one. To the debates and agitations of the Forum,
the Romans now preferred the lighter and more pleasant things of life. The
people nursed the delusion of sharing with the Caesars the Empire of the world.
Nothing—they said in their pride— nothing that the world has ever produced is
the equal of Rome. To be a Roman citizen was the peak of a man’s aspirations,
Civis Romanus sum. This new outlook was fostered by the highest and noblest men
of all the Provinces of the Empire, who only aspired to be granted the right
of citizenship; for only in Rome did Fortune dispense her favours. To Rome
flocked the intriguers and the ambitious to exploit the vices of the great and
the corruption of the sovereign people.
Rome was also crowded with slaves. New trades and
industries had created a class of big-business men; and work, in the factories
and in the home, was done by slaves. The law was very severe to these
underlings; if a slave committed a crime against his master, all the household
slaves were punished with death. Quot servi tot hostes, said the
law; all who are slaves are enemies of Rome. There was, however, for the slaves
a brighter side. Already under Augustus, Dennis of Halicarnassus wrote that it
was vice and crimes that gave freedom to a slave. Aristocratic Senators and
freshly-knighted millionaires, in the luxury of their mansions and country
villas, were in the hands of their clever slaves no less than the Emperor was
in the hands of the freedmen he had appointed Secretaries of State. The slaves
surrounded their masters with refined attentions and kept from them all minor
cares and irritations. They carried their masters about the City on elegant
litters; they fed them on a cosmopolitan cuisine; they amused them; they
provided for their pleasures. The masters were thus free to seek the Emperor’s
patronage for their businesses and industries.
The population of Rome had grown immensely. In the
first century ad Rome had a population approaching 1,500,000. But it was also
immensely changed from former times. There was now a middle-class sandwiched
between a new and conspicuous moneyed class and a proletariat that had no other
aspiration but to be kept by a Welfare State. Athwart this new society was the
old aristocracy, or what remained of it, divided and uncertain between the
fashionable philosophy of Stoicism and a traditionalism that was totally out of
tune, and thirdly, a course of conduct that made a mockery of morals.
The lower classes were a mixture of small plebs quite
aptly called humiliores. Their lives were
precarious and for small violations of the law they were sent to the mines,
whilst for more serious crimes they were put to death on the cross. Above the
plebs stood the honestiores, or the bourgeois,
who each owned a minimum of 5,000 sesterces, and were precluded from serving
the State, but could rise to the Knightly order when their property increased
to 400,000 sesterces. They could then hope to catch the Emperor’s eye and obtain
a command of some auxiliary troops or a job in the Excise, which was an
excellent office for increasing one’s wealth and obtaining a further rise in
the world. Above all classes was the Senatorial order, whose members should own
at least one million sesterces, and could be appointed to the highest offices.
In the Senatorial order money counted far more than virtue.
Over all, higher indeed than all mortals in the whole
Empire, was the Prince. By the perpetuation of Julius Caesar’s fiction of being
descended from the Gods, the Emperor was the supreme incarnation of Law and
Religion. The distance between the Emperor and other men was immeasurable for
it was a difference not of station but of nature; the Emperor pertained of the
Divine. Because of this, when at Nero’s death the Julian Family died out, the
people of Rome discovered that sovereignty was no longer the apanage of a
family preordained by Heaven to rule—which was a rude shock, followed, as is
every rude shock in history, by a fresh recurrence of civil wars. Caesar,
Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius and Nero were Emperors in the name of a
divine right; Galba, Otho, Vitellius were merely adventurous Generals who could
but pretend to be raised to divinity upon the shields of the Legions that they
had commanded. It made all the difference.
Never, before Nero’s times, had Rome taken such a
cosmopolitan character; never before had the Roman people been so submerged and
changed by the ways and ideas and vices of the foreigners that flocked to the
City. It was indeed the case that when episodes of xenophoby occurred, it was the former foreigners themselves who affected a
self-preserving traditionalism against newcomers. The benches of the Senate
House were filled with Senators who were Roman only in name, for they came from
France, Spain, Africa and Asia; a Babel of adventurers who controlled Rome and
the Emperor with their suavity and cunning.
But the Emperor stood alone as the supreme and absolute
master. It had commenced with Caesar. When Caesar seized power, all the
magistratures that the Roman people had evolved during seven centuries for the
conduct of the Republic—the Consulate that was the quasi-Royal power of the
people; the Tribunes who protected the sovereign rights of the people; the
Censors who held a moral authority over all classes and chose the Prince of the
Senate who became head and chief of the Roman aristocracy, so important indeed
that Caesar himself was content to be called Prince of the Senate; and the
Supreme Pontiff who lived in a palace close to the Forum, the Domus Regia—all
the ancient and respected magistratures, seemed to disappear when Caesar seized
power. He had preserved them, but they were empty names.
Caesar’s genius had been above human laws. Caesar
emerged victorious out of a formidable war in the course of which all laws,
human and divine, were violated. The care that Caesar took to proclaim that any
crime is permissible to gain an Empire left him no alternative but to rest his
safety upon absolute power. The Tribunician power gave him the right of grace;
the Censorship authorized him to change at his pleasure the citizen’s condition;
the Pontificate made him master of everything that pertained to the soul. And
the people accepted it; and Senate and people swore into Caesar’s hands their
complete loyalty. Each citizen swore to defend with his sword the Divine
Julius; and all accepted the hereditary right of sovereignty of the Julian
Family. As Caesar had no children, they granted to him the right to name a
successor and pass the Imperial purple to his descendants by adoption. After
this the ancient Rome was no more. The Empire that Caesar left at his death was
a concentration of power and glory that nothing could efface or diminish,
neither revolutions nor the inadequacies of those who came after him; but the
will of the Roman people was broken for ever. To the bitter end the pretence
was carried on of describing the Orders in Council as issued in the name of the
Senate and of the people; but the ancient formula S.P.Q.R.—Senatus Populusque Romanus—became a farce and a mockery, and
Augustus, who was a wise and good man, confessed on his deathbed that his long
reign had been nothing but a marvel of deceit and hypocrisy.
The strength of Rome and the secret of her greatness
had been the capacity to combine in her Constitution two elements of prosperity
that seemed to exclude one another —the debates and agitations of the Forum
which gave vent and encouragement to individual liberty and the unflinching
respect of tradition, the rigid faith in the destinies of Rome, the absolute
submission to the family laws. But after the advent of Caesar the old character
of the people changed. The glory, the splendours and the abominations of Mount
Olympus, home of the Gods, were now attributed to the Palatine Hill where
Caesar and his successors reigned and ruled as demi-Gods. The ambitions of men,
the prostitution of slaves, the appetites of the masses, all looked to the
Palace as the sole fountain of grace and favour. In less than fifty years the
most hideous scandals became the normal way of life. A great military man,
Antonius Primus, plotted with four Senators to gain possession of the vast
estate of old Balbus, and the most eminent names of Rome conspired to forge a
new Will. Octavius Sagitta, a Tribune of the people, seduced the Lady Pontia
and made her leave her husband, but after the divorce the lady sought a better
marriage and jilted her lover. He murdered her. Numantia,
repudiated by Silvanus, made him drink a philtre that turned him insane, and he
threw his second wife from a window. In the Consular family of Papirius, a
mother descended to incest; her son killed himself in shame. The lawyer Silius,
who had agreed to defend a client in Court, betrayed him to the other party for
a larger fee. Vinius, who one day was to be Minister
of State to Galba, the successor of Nero, stole a golden goblet from Claudius’s
table; the Emperor, who had the humour of a drunkard, invited him again and
made him eat and drink out of earthen vessels to avoid a second theft.
Whilst Augustus had 'been able to contain extravagance
and to throw a mantle of decency over the general decline of morals, after him
the great and the rich gave free rein to their pleasures and spent their days
at the Circus, their nights at orgies. Only money talked; the people’s plaudits
went to those who could count their slaves in decuriae like platoons of soldiers. Work was no longer a noble task, for work alone
could not bring the wealth that only speculations or the Emperor’s favour could
secure. Yet, the vast fortunes of the favourite ones were nothing compared with
the incalculable wealth of the Emperor.
The Emperor had at his disposal not only his private
estate and all the legacies that were left to him, to ensure a portion for the
legitimate heirs; the Emperor possessed immense latifunds as well, especially in Asia and in Africa, which were continuously enlarged by
the confiscation pronounced by the judges against some unfortunate citizen.
The Emperor could treat as his private exchequer the Treasury into which flowed
the apportionment of the taxes levied in all the Provinces of the Empire for
the upkeep of the Army and Navy. Furthermore, the Emperor could dispose at his
pleasure of the revenue from Egypt, which was a private endowment of the Crown,
and he could delve into the booty of war: all this without rendering account.
The Emperor’s household, that Augustus had so
anxiously preserved on the traditional style of simplicity and modesty, was now
conducted in the manner of an Oriental Satrap. To look after the Emperor’s
wardrobe there was a regiment of slaves divided into as many classes as were
the varieties of the Emperor’s dresses and uniforms ; for the tunics to be worn
within the Palace there were grooms a vests privata;
for the dresses to be worn outside, grooms a vests Forense;
for the service uniforms, grooms a vests castrense;
for the dress-uniforms, grooms a vests triumphale;
for the dresses to be worn at the theatre, grooms a vests scenica;
for the Circus, grooms a vests gladiatoria...
And the vessels for the Emperor’s table were cleaned and looked after by as
many squads of servants as there were kinds of vessels; drinking vessels, eating
vessels, silver vessels, golden vessels, vessels of rockcrystal,
jewelled vessels... His personal jewellery and ornaments were entrusted to
special freedmen called liberti ab ornament is, who were divided into keepers of the brooches, a fibulis;
keepers of the pearls, a margaritis; and his
ablution and toilet was attended to by bath attendants or balneatores;
masseurs or aliptae; hairdressers or ornatores; barbers or tonsores.
The ceremonial of his receptions and audiences was regulated by a body of
gentlemen-in-waiting, the velarii who raised
the doorcurtain into the Presence Room; the ab admissione who introduced the visitors to the Presence,
and the nomenclatores who read out the
visitors’ names. For the dining Hall, there was a phalanx of attendants, the fornicarii who looked after the kitchen ranges; the coci or chefs; the pistores or bakers, the libarii and dulciarii or pastrycooks; then there were the structores or majordomos and butlers responsible for planning
the dinners and banquets; the dining-hall footmen or triclinarii;
those who carried in the dishes or ministratores,
and those who cleared away the plates, or analectae,
and the cup-bearers who filled the cups and who varied in importance
accordingly as they held the bottle, a lagona, or
tendered the cup, a cyatho; and there were the
tasters or praegustatores, and the chorists
and singer, symphoniaci, and the musicians of
the minstrel gallery, and the dancers or saltatrices,
and the Court buffoons or moriones, and the
dwarfs, nanni, and those charged with keeping
the talk going, who were called the fatui.
The person of the Emperor had, perforce, to be surrounded
by a pomp that was part of the sacred function of the Divine and August
Sovereign. The Emperor was the “master of all things.” He was one of the Gods.
From him descended the happiness of the people. And
the populace of Rome, in Nero’s times, had found their happiness in two very
material things—the sportula, that was the
free distribution of meals provided by the Emperor’s generosity, and the
Circus, the free games and entertainment equally provided by the Emperor’s
munificence. The famous phrase, panem et circenses, bread and shows, was coined in Nero’s times.
Truly it synthesized the spirit and the morals of the times.
III
It is debatable what influence the men nearest to him,
guiding him in the first stages of his rule, had over Nero. Certain it was that
at the very moment when, thanks to his mother’s deeds and misdeeds, he had
mounted the Throne, Nero felt that he needed to be protected from her.
This protection he entrusted to Seneca, who in
practice assumed at once the position of Regent, and also to Burrus, who was
confirmed as Commander of the Praetorian Guards. Seneca, with cunning, begged
to be excused from many of the functions so that he could devote more time to
business. He did not dine regularly at the Imperial table nor did he trouble
the Emperor at all hours on small routine matters. He also, most tactfully,
requested the Emperor not to embrace him in public: that was an understandable sign
of respect on the part of a dutiful pupil towards his aged tutor, but his pupil
was now the Emperor while he, Seneca, was no longer his tutor but his humble
Prime Minister. The Emperor was duly impressed, and Seneca did not allow him to
realize that he was merely anxious to escape the suspicion that had blackened
Socrates concerning his pupil Alcibiades.
Afranius Burrus, a true soldier, was more direct and
to the point. The day after the Speech from the Throne, while Nero was trying
to make him agree to some suggestion of his, Burrus answered: “Caesar, when I
have expressed an opinion it is of no use to ask me for it again.”
Nevertheless, the first care of Nero as Emperor was to
show gratitude to his mother. The very same evening that he received from the
Senate the titles of Caesar and Divine, he was asked by the Officer of the
Guard the password for the night. With a romantic gesture he replied: “The best
of mothers!” The following day Nero asked Seneca whether it would not be proper
to give his mother the same honours that were given to the Empress Livia after
Augustus’s death. Immediately, at the Prime Minister’s suggestion, the Senate
invested Agrippina Priestess of Claudius, and henceforth she went about preceded
by two Lictors. Some days later the Senate voted that the sittings be held at
least twice a week at the Palace to enable Agrippina to attend: seated behind a
curtain, the Empress would be able to hear and see all unseen. A Cohort of
Praetorians was granted her as guards to her rooms, the same number as for the
Emperor’s apartments, besides the German Guards that were personally attached
to the Imperial House. Agrippina kept the Guards as an outward sign of her
personal status, and as a special honour to the memory of her father
Germanicus.
It was difficult for a young man of seventeen to free
himself, all at once, from his mother’s control and authority. Some time later
the Ambassadors from Armenia were being received by the Emperor. They were
introduced into the Presence Room, where Nero seated upon his chair of office
waited to give them an audience.
Behind the Emperor were grouped the Consuls, the most
important .Senators, the Generals of the Army and, inconspicuous among the
courtiers, the First Secretary of State, Seneca. The Praetorians, with
breastplates shining and their halberds topped with tufts of scarlet plumes,
were massed upon the steps of the Throne, their faces impressive under the tall
helmets. Before Nero, the Ambassadors arrayed in their splendid robes, with
brows encased in golden mitres and their arms covered with bracelets, made a deep
obeisance.
Suddenly, preceded by her Lictors, Agrippina appeared.
Almost hieratic within her veils, she advanced slowly, and without hesitation
commenced to mount the steps. There was a shudder of surprise among the
Senators. Was Rome going to suffer again the indignity it had endured under
Claudius? Was a woman—this woman—coming to share the Throne once more? What
would these barbarian envoys think of a woman upon the Throne of Rome?
But from the troubled group of courtiers and officials
the little figure of Seneca bent forward and whispered a few words to Nero. The
young Emperor rose from his chair, and with the utmost dignity and grace and
half a smile upon his lips, like a young Prince who feels the greatest respect
for his mother, he advanced towards Agrippina and greeted her deferentially and
kindly. Then, he took her arm, and still talking to her with a -gentle smile,
he escorted her to the door of the Presence-room. Without haste he resumed his
place upon the dais. The honour of Rome was saved. The audience continued.
Concerning this incident Agrippina did not utter a
word to her son, but she understood. From that moment she knew that it would be
necessary to fight.
IV
On the whole, at this stage, the Throne merely meant
to Nero independence and the freedom to enjoy life. Seneca, combining the dual
duties of Prime Minister and private Mentor, still wrote the Emperor’s speeches
and trained him in deportment for the Senate.
“Nero Caesar is young,” it was often said in the
reading-room of the Senate-house, “but his youth will help to give us a better
government and more stability than we have had under that dotard Claudius.
Besides, he has two excellent Ministers. Seneca will follow our policy and
Burrus will control the army.”
Events were proving this forecast right. All was quiet
and well ordered at home and throughout the Provinces. The Empire was at its
zenith. It covered all the known world, from the Straits of Gibraltar to the
western parts of Asia—Spain, France, Switzerland, Southern Germany up to the
Rhine, Austria and Hungary, Greece and Macedonia, the Balkan countries, Asia
Minor and all the Near East as far as the Euphrates, the whole of North Africa,
Carthage, Numidia, Mauritania, Lybia and Egypt, and
it had, under Claudius, occupied the south of Britain and Wales. The Roman
world was at peace and the administration of the Dominions was controlled with
much care. Any excess of power on the part of the Proconsuls and Governors was
promptly checked.
The new Emperor was talking of nothing but peace. He
even expressed the intention of withdrawing the troops from the most peaceful
Provinces, such as far away Britain, so as to give greater confidence to people
at home and abroad, a statement that set the Colonial Office in an uproar. It
was all very well, they said to the Prime Minister, to speak of the most
peaceful Provinces; but they were peaceful only because the Legions were there!
To withdraw the troops would only be to court trouble; perhaps an invasion by
unknown peoples. It was absolutely necessary to find an argument that would
convince the Emperor.
Seneca hit indeed upon an idea. He submitted to Nero
that to withdraw the troops from Britain would detract from the glory of his
step-father Claudius who had received the submission of the British tribes.
That country was far from conquered yet; such a move might give incentive to
the native kings to revolt and the effect upon Northern Gaul, always on the
look-out for political trouble, might prove disastrous. Seneca did not disclose
that he had vast investments in Britain which were much safer under the protection
of the Roman Legions. Nero gave way, and thus both the Colonial Office and the
Imperial General Staff were pleased.
In Rome, however, the Emperor was freer to proceed
with liberal reforms. To prevent forgeries, a method was invented of having
documents bored and run through three times with thread and then sealed. For
Wills an innovation was introduced by which the two first pages, with nothing
else but the testator’s name upon them, were to be presented blank to those who
were to sign them as witnesses, and no one who wrote a Will for another should
insert a legacy for himself. It was ordered that litigants should pay a
reasonable fee to their lawyers but nothing to the Courts, the charges of which
would be borne by the Treasury. The Senate’s dignity was increased by making
the Senate a Court of Appeal as high as the appeals to the Emperor. New
gymnasia were built for the young people of Rome and the day they were opened
the Emperor in person graciously distributed to the sons of Senators and to the
younger Knights the oil with which they rubbed their bodies before taking part
in the sports. A certain Veiento, charged with having
published a libel against some Senators and the College of Priests, was
promptly tried and sentenced. And the first time a sentence of death was
submitted to the Emperor for endorsement, he cried: “Ah, I wish I did not know
how to write!”
In those days of general delight over the new and
young Emperor, people in Rome were inclined to magnify everything. The Senate
seemed to delight in issuing extraordinary Orders: “Let the people of Rome
address tributes of praise to Nero Caesar for eight days! The Emperor shall
wear the Triumphal dress for eight continuous days! Let Nero make a glorious
entry into the City and ride to the Capitol to receive an ovation! The people
of Rome will raise to Nero two statues of solid gold and silver in the temple
of Mars, as high as those of the God!”
To cap these honours a further Senatorial Decree
ordered that the year shall henceforth be reckoned from December, Nero’s
birth-month. He accepted all other honours, but declined the last one. With
youthful frankness he told Seneca: “I think that a little show of modesty will
please the people even more. Besides, the idea of beginning the year from the
last month seems rather absurd.” Seneca approved, and felt that his pupil and
Emperor had more shrewdness than he imagined. And never one to let an occasion
pass, he recited one of his aphorisms: “There is nothing the people love better
than a show of modesty and leniency. Let the reins go loose occasionally, and
the people will call you a true democrat.”
But with his friend Petronius, Nero regretted that
Seneca had made him neglect the studies of the ancient philosophers: “My mother
considered philosophy unworthy of a Prince and according to Seneca a Prince
should be an opportunist, not a philosopher.”
V
At twenty it is pardonable to be fickle with life and
more so with love. Octavia, barely thirteen years old, was a poor companion for
a young Emperor a little intoxicated with the heady wine of success and
hankering after aestheticism and art. When his mother Agrippina had decided
upon the marriage, Nero had gone through the ceremony almost with repugnance.
Octavia was not pretty. She was only very virtuous, and her father Claudius had
not brought her up to be particularly brilliant or witty. No one wondered that
Nero neglected her. When his friends enquired after the Empress Octavia, he
answered that his young wife was like those Generals who having failed to win a
full battle received only the insignia of triumph, not a real triumph.
Seneca understood the situation. The cunning Stoic,
who had so often written about the sanctity of marital life, realized that
Octavia was not the girl to give Nero that sentimental and physical
satisfaction to hold an impetuous young man. She was merely an undeveloped
child. On the other hand, Seneca could not allow the Emperor to commit the
crime of adultery. All Rome would laugh at Seneca’s expense: “The pupil of such
a perfect man!”
Seneca decided therefore that there would be no harm
if the Emperor, in the secrecy of the Palace, amused himself with the sweet
and delightful Acte. In fact, Acte was Nero’s first love. A freedwoman from Asia, she was of extraordinary beauty
and possessed the finest attractions a woman can have for a young lover. She
was also modest and chaste, a very rare jewel in Rome.
Fearing the suspicion of Agrippina and anticipating
her fury at the thought that another woman might gain a hold upon the Emperor,
Seneca, with the full approval of Burrus, induced the wise and grave Annaeus Serenus to declare publicly that Acte was his own mistress. Only a wise and grave man can
have no sense of ridicule. In devotion to the Imperial tutor and in loyalty to
his Sovereign, Serenus agreed to play this delicate part. To the world it was
Serenus who provided Acte with an elegant house and a
retinue of attendants.
Agrippina, who guessed the purport of this manoeuvre,
said, “It will pass.” But soon Nero spoke of retiring to Rhodes and to a
bucolic life with the woman of his heart. Seneca explained to his pupil that
there are exalted stations from which one cannot escape. In his abdication Nero
would find no safety. The Empire was an inescapable destiny.
When it was reported to Agrippina that Nero thought of
repudiating Octavia and marrying Acte—and some
obliging friends, at the prompting of the enamoured Emperor, had already
prepared for the charming Acte a genealogical tree
showing her to descend from the ancient Kings of Pergamus so that Nero, easily
influenced by anything theatrical, was saying that it would be marvellous to
ally the Julian family with the family that from Troy had given origin to Rome
herself, she tackled her son before the whole Court. “See you all,” she said,
“the spectacle that my son offers to Rome! The Emperor, trailing like a doting
old man at the feet of a former slave, a creature good to give a man an hour of
pleasure! But no, she is the official mistress of Caesar. And for all this I
took such pains to make my child Domitius the legitimate heir of Claudius, and
for all this I gave him as a tutor the wisest of men! Now the wise man is
choosing for him a concubine and the Emperor is reduced to making love to a
freedwoman! Octavia, his proper wife, is neglected and repulsed. And I,
Germanicus’s daughter, am insulted, turned out, deprived of my proper status
and honours. I am reduced to serve as a screen to the former slave Acte!”
The scene was too long; it was also dangerous.
Agrippina believed she would intimidate her son. She only detached him from her
for ever.
Some days later Agrippina came to her son and asked
for forgiveness. “My son, my words expressed but badly what was in my mind.
Yes, I confess, it is very painful to me to see another woman have all the
tenderness of my son. A mother finds it difficult to realize that her son is a
grown-up man, and that she can no longer fill his days and his mind. But I have
thought it over, I have understood. I excuse everything, I only wish to retain
your affection. Don’t fear anything from me, my son. Your greatness is the sole
aim of my life.”
Nero embraced his mother. Agrippina was waiting for
this moment. She knew, she had known it a long time, that her caresses, her
perfume, her very presence could be disturbing to her son. She pressed him
ardently to her bosom, against her breasts that heaved under her veils.
Nero felt her trembling. She sighed, and as though
unable to contain herself, she pressed her mouth to his lips.
Nero felt like the hero in the Greek tragedy; he
uttered: “My gratitude, O mother, is more than I can express.” He disengaged
himself from the embrace. Agrippina went away, her heart heavy not with shame
but with rage and hate.
No sooner had his mother left the room than Nero was
seized by fear and regret. Perhaps he had misunderstood his mother? Perhaps she
would now take upon him one of her terrible revenges. Full of forebodings he
yielded to an impulse of generosity. Locked away in the strongrooms of the
Palace were the jewels and ornaments that the wives of the Caesars had worn. He
chose from amongst the treasures a splendid pectoral and a headdress and sent
them to his mother.
Agrippina returned the jewels with an explosive
message: “Remember that everything you possess actually belongs to me. You are
sending me as a gift merely what is mine.”
From this moment Nero accepted the challenge. Suspecting
Pallas of inciting Agrippina against Acte, the
following day he ordered Pallas to resign from the position of Imperial
Treasurer which he still held and to leave the Palace. Pallas had the
impertinence to put two conditions—the favour of Agrippina gave him the courage
to lift his voice. The conditions were that his financial tenure should go
without enquiry and that he should not be considered in debt towards the State.
Nero felt that this insolence was beyond bounds and
yet he was only too glad to be rid of the rascal. But he could not resist the
amusement of seeing the man make his exit. The deposed Minister quitted the
Palace as though he were going on a triumphal expedition. An escort of German
Guards walked before him—the personal Guard of Agrippina, then followed Pallas,
lying upon a litter which eight Abyssinians carried shoulder high. Behind him
was the cortege of his clients and friends, of all those who thought it wise to
back Agrippina. Many Greeks and Orientals mingled in the queue, recognizable by
their garish dresses, their gilt ornaments and jewels. One would have said that
an Asiatic king was descending from the Palace into Rome. “Well,” said Nero
with good humour, “our friend Pallas has abdicated...”
A few days later Agrippina created another scene. The
dismissal of Pallas had hurt her, in her interests and in her personal pride.
Nero was dining privately with a small party of friends, which included the
young Prince Britannicus. Suddenly Aggripina entered
the dining-hall. At the sight of the Empress-mother all felt uneasy and
alarmed. She advanced, with her right arm outstretched in accusation against
the Emperor: “My son, you seem to forget Britannicus. Britannicus is no longer
a child! He is Claudius’s own son, the real heir to the Throne, which Domitius
stole with the help of his mother whom he now so ungratefully insults. Rome
shall learn of all this. Let Burrus and Seneca escort me out if they like! The
Army shall choose between them and Germanicus’s daughter!”
The scene was so absurd and the purpose so transparent
that no one said a word. The servants were astonished and frightened—they knew
only too well what fate awaited a slave who heard too much. Agrippina looked
round, then she retired like an actress from the stage.
VI
The Emperor was perplexed. Time had come for a
decision; and he realized that he must decide alone. Of his two councillors,
one was an excellent soldier, honest and loyal but unenterprising; the other, a
subtle thinker but far from being a man of action. Yet, time was pressing, for
Agrippina was capable of desperate deeds and Nero felt that even now Agrippina
was plotting. That sense of the dramatic upon which his life was hinged, the
insistent urge to see himself as a hero in a Greek drama, the identification of
the born actor with the character in the play, took hold of him.
Agrippina was his mother, and conflict between mother
and son would be the peak of a yet unthinkable tragedy. Much simpler to put
aside the instrument of Agrippina’s wrath. The populace hated Agrippina, for
she was a notorious character; yet she was the Emperor’s mother. But the
palsied Britannicus was almost of no significance.
Young Prince Britannicus was a lean young man, of
striking appearance, with a dreamy air and affable manners, and the enchanting
grace lent by silence. But he was cursed with epilepsy, the disease of the
Caesars.
Britannicus led a retired life. He had no part in
public affairs and desired no part in politics. He never attended the Senate,
though he belonged to it by right. Whatever he had suffered for the slight that
had robbed him of the Throne, he never gave vent to his feelings. His only joy
seemed to rest in composing poetry. His intimate friends spoke of Britannicus’s
poems as exquisite and original; Lucan called him the poet of the future. Often
Britannicus entertained his friends by reciting his verses, in a gentle voice,
plucking the strings of a harp with his thin fingers.
Nero had heard him play and chant his poems but once,
and that day a bitter jealousy entered his heart. His own poems lacked that
captivating novelty of form, nor could he play the harp or the cetra. Yet, many a time he had seen Britannicus overcome by
a seizure, his face turn blue, his neck swelling convulsively, frothing at the
mouth. Once it happened at a public celebration, and the gathering was
immediately dispersed, for such a fit was considered a bad omen. The Romans
called epilepsy the sickness of Hercules, and who suffered from it was reputed
to be both accursed and prophetic, blessed and damned.
One day, resting with the Emperor in the library where
they still had some occasional hours of tuition, Seneca brought up the subject
of the reasons of State as justifying extreme deeds by the Sovereign. “Fastigium tuum affixum est” said
Seneca. “Your destiny is written in the Heavens. A refulgent light surrounds
you as Emperor; all eyes are turned upon you. The more you think you can pass
out of your own light and the more you rise upon the horizon ... Political
necessities may well impose upon a ruler acts which may revolt his conscience.
There is such a thing as historical fatality; the catharsis that brings about
the tragedies of real life which will provide sublime themes for poets...
Caesar alone can say to himself: Only I can kill a man or save his life without
violating the Law.”
Late at night, working at his latest book in his
library, the philosopher felt with some satisfaction that he had at last found
an apt title for his new treatise. Turning over the pages, he wrote it in a
bold hand—De dementia.
VII
Onge the decision was reached and the deed explained
to himself in terms of the superior interest of Rome—“the heroic tradition of
the great Republican times, when all family feelings were brushed aside in the
country’s interests”—the rest was easy. Agrippina herself had shown Nero the
way—poison.
The poisoner Locusta was still alive; indeed, Julius
Pollio, Tribune of a Cohort of Praetorians, had been set to mount guard over
her in her dismal abode; both jailer and protector of the woman who had
supplied the poison that had disposed of Claudius.
The “thing” must be carefully planned. The greatest
secrecy and dissimulation was necessary so as to avoid Agrippina’s suspicions.
The same men that she had placed near Britannicus to protect him were now used
as hired assassins.
At a first attempt the agents tried too small a dose.
The plot miscarried. Britannicus suffered only a slight indisposition and
recovered. Nero took fright: his mother was too deeply versed in the gentle art
of poisoning not to grow suspicious over Britannicus’s sickness.
Locusta was therefore sent for. Nero was so excited
that he beat the woman with his own hands. The old witch pleaded that she had
diluted the strength of the poison to avoid any danger of suspicion.
The following day Locusta set up her laboratory in a
closet of the Emperor’s apartments. She promised to produce “something that
would act like lightning.” For a few days the Imperial apartments were like an
experimental death-chamber. Several poisons were tried upon animals, but they
still proved too slow. On the fifth day Locusta announced, “This will do the
trick.” The poison was served with some food to a pig, which ate it greedily
and dropped dead. Locusta murmured: “It is entirely tasteless.”
That day Nero went into the gardens, still strongly
perturbed. But five months he had been on the Throne, yet he had already
learned many things. Political necessities, as Seneca put it. And, as Seneca
said, the Emperor was above the Law.
He went to look at some new birds in the aviary. They
were delightful little birds, sent from some islands off the Lusitanian coast,
yellow and tiny, singing away all day long. Nero pushed a finger through the
silken net that enclosed the aviary and the birds flew about the cage with a
flutter of wings, taking shelter upon the branches of the dwarf trees that grew
inside the cage, or clinging to the pale-blue net, the colour of air. One of
the birds looked at the Emperor with tiny black eyes, turning its head right
and left, and with a swift wing dropped lightly upon his finger. Nero
approached his face to the mesh, and the bird chirped against the Emperor’s
lips.
It was decided that the poison should be served to
Britannicus under the very eyes of the Emperor: no risks this time 1 It was
customary for the Imperial family to sit occasionally at the Emperor’s table
with the young sons of the Emperor’s personal friends. One of these
dinner-parties was arranged: Agrippina herself and Octavia lay on each side of
the Emperor upon the same couch.
A large Persian carpet of the most brilliant colours
and pleasant designs was spread upon the Imperial couch. At a neighbouring
table, below the Imperial couch, sat Britannicus and on his right was Titus,
the eldest son of Vespasian, who was already spoken of as a promising young man
training to become a valiant General, charming of manner and pleasant of mien.
Agrippina and her son eyed each other suspiciously.
The scene recently made by Agrippina was in everybody’s mind. Britannicus,
still under doctor’s treatment for his recent indisposition, had to keep to a
diet. A special soup was served to him. One of the Imperial tasters placed by
Agrippina to watch over him, scalded his tongue in tasting the soup; then the
bowl was passed to the Prince.
Britannicus found it too hot and returned it to the
servant, who poured some cold broth into it. Britannicus drank it. Had he been
an older man, he would have made his attendant taste it a second time; but he
was young and had the insouciance of youth. In less than a minute the diners
saw Britannicus raise himself on his elbow, transfixed, with one hand pressed
to his throat, and then he fell back upon the cushions. He was dead.
A cry of horror filled the room. Titus, out of
curiosity, put his lips to the cup; he was ill for several months afterwards.
Agrippina looked on, livid with surprise and with terror. From his couch Nero
glanced round. “Do not trouble yourselves, my friends. My brother Britannicus,
as you all know, is subject to fits... Let him be taken to his rooms. He will
soon be better.”
Two African slaves carried the body from the
dining-hall. The dinner went on. Agrippina did not say a word, and she thought
of the terrible prediction she was told long ago, that her son would be Emperor
but would kill his mother. And this, she now thought, was all of her doing. If
the Emperor could now say that Britannicus had merely had a fit, it was she who
had underlined so much the sad fact that Britannicus suffered from epilepsy. If
the Emperor had made use of Locusta, it was she who had first introduced the
poisoner.
The dinner went on in the private banqueting-hall
where bright lights were reflected in the polished marble and golden panels; an
interminable dinner, attended by dancers and mimes and jongleurs.
The very entertainment for a party of young people.
The violence of the poison had made large black spots
on Britannicus’s face. The face had to be smeared with creams and cosmetics so
that the spots might not be seen upon the pyre. And the body was hurriedly
cremated in the Campus Martius. Everything had been carefully arranged.
It was one of those terrible nights of heavy southern
rains. Between lightning and crashes of thunder, the rumour spread rapidly
through the great city: “Britannicus has been murdered!” Crowds of silent
people wrapped in dark cloaks stood in the Campus Martius in spite of the
storm, when a band of soldiers, carrying torches, came to collect the ashes of
the young Prince who had borne such a famous military name. The crowd felt that
within the Palace, high up on the Palatine Hill, tragedies unfolded with all
the terror of a Greek drama. Here and there among the crowd someone spoke in a
quiet, sedate voice: “Dear people of Rome, there are things one must understand...
A throne cannot be shared! It was unavoidable that one of them should die—the
Gods have made their choice.”
In a comer of the vast Fields some barbarians whispered
together, in the vernacular of the Suburra. Suddenly
someone got upon a pillar and uttered strange words: “Babylon shall fall! She
will fall, this City that is keeping all others in bonds! He who adores the
beast shall suffer the flames and the sulphur, before the Angels and before the
Lamb! And the flames of his torments will burn in the centuries of centuries,
per saecula saeculorum”
A patrol of Guards approached: “Keep moving, you
there! ” The man got down from his pillar. The crowd pulled their hoods further
down over their eyes. “Some more Eastern cranks,” muttered the Officer of the
Guard; and with his men he continued his round.
VIII
“From Petronius to his friend Marcus Valerius,
greetings.
“Strange things are happening in Rome. Since
Britannicus’s death our Divine Nero Caesar is undergoing a great change.
Perhaps you have not read in the Gazette the explanation that Nero Caesar
published two days after the ‘thing’. I will quote for your edification a few
lines only: ‘I was looking forward to the privilege of sharing with my beloved
brother the burden of power. The Gods have decided otherwise. They have
condemned me to rule the Empire alone. I can look for comfort only in your
support and that of the Senate. Do not refuse it to me and grant me this
consoling hope, that in my present grief, in this solitude which makes me the
only surviving descendant of a family destined to rule, I shall at least know
the sweetness of being for ever loved by you.
“Knowing only too well the hand that wrote this trash,
one cannot even say that it is Seneca at his best. In the banqueting-halls it
was judged embarrassing; in the taverns, so my barber informed me, it was
considered too false.
“But now the Divine has invented a new form of selfexpression. You know our Rome has some very lurid
districts, alleys where the dregs of the Mediterranean ports live, the scum of
the African shores, of Spain, of Greece, gladiators in search of a job,
deserters from the army, absconders from the law. Streets that at night are far
from safe. Well, now the rumour goes that at night through these narrow lanes a
band of young men are roaming. They go about escorted by hefty and armed
slaves. Their amusement is to push about the citizens who are returning home after
a supper-party. The greatest fun is to kiss the ladies and throw the men into
the sewer. Occasionally they break open a shop. Usually the fun ends in some
brothel or a tavern, where girls are provided, and the party plays tableaux vivants. One night they bumped into Senator Montanus,
who gave our Divine a black eye. Afterwards someone told Montanus that he had
thrashed the Emperor; and the old fool was stupid enough to write to Nero
Caesar and beg to be excused. No one wondered when we read in the Gazette that
Senator Montanus had committed suicide.
“Now, however, our Divine goes out with an escort of
Guards, a thing that makes General Burrus grumble that the Guards should not
see with their own eyes how the Emperor amuses himself. But Nero Caesar calls
it ‘high spirits.’ By the way, a few weeks ago he went to visit his aunt
Domitia, who was very ill. You know that the old girl is very rich. She was
greatly touched by the honour, and caressing her nephew’s chin she said: ‘When
I see that beard shaved, I will be glad to die.’ He turned to his friends: ‘As
soon as I go out I shall go to the guests. Very witty!
“I think the truth of it all is that our Nero Caesar
on suffering from ennui. And Seneca, alas, is not the most entertaining of
counsellors. What he needs is a woman’s love. And sweet Acte is already on the wane.
“Keep well, and do send me a pot of your honey,
flavoured of azaleas.”
IX
It was at this time that Nero met Poppaea. Or, as
Seneca would have said, it was his Daimon that put Poppaea into his life.
Her real name was Lollia Poppaea, daughter of Lollius,
who had been a friend of the dreadful Sejanus, the evil spirit of Emperor
Tiberius. Her mother, Poppaea Sabina, had been considered the most beautiful
woman of her days. She died in the reign of Claudius, owing to the jealousy of
Messalina. Quite young her daughter married Crispinus, a wealthy Knight, who
was Praefect of the Praetorian Cohort, and upon her marriage she discarded her
paternal name of Lollia to assume the name of her maternal grandfather,
Sabinus, a Consular personage who had been decorated with the Triumphal
insignia.
Poppaea was the most famous beauty of her day.
Perfectly educated, her intelligence added grace to her conversation and
manners. She possessed the fascination of those women whose charm comes from
their seriousness, from a touch of melancholy in their appearance, an air of
modesty and reserve. Whenever Poppaea went to the theatre or walked under the
arcades of the Campus taverns, that was the fashionable promenade at sunset,
false, covered her face with a veil.
“Moreover, Poppaea was blonde, and in Rome a real
blonde was a rare flower. Her hair added to her appearance a suavity, a
delicacy of tones. Poppaea appeared in public but rarely, gliding amongst the
men almost without noticing them, radiating modesty. She was indeed ravishing,
bewitching. In Court circles it was whispered that Poppaea had a price, like anyone
else—but a very high one.
When Nero met Poppaea for the first time, she had
recently married Salvius Otho, a rich and brilliant young man, with that touch
of refined elegance that to the Emperor represented the ideal of a fashionable
man. Was Otho’s marriage only a feint in a big game in which Nero would be the
pawn?
It was remarked at the Palace that after his marriage
Otho came to Court without his beautiful wife. The Emperor, piqued, asked him
why he did not bring the lady to Court. Poppaea was thus introduced to the
Emperor. And Nero fell madly in love with Poppaea.
Wealthy and fastidious, Otho surrounded Poppaea with
every luxury. Poppaea appeared to Nero in the setting of a splendid house,
surrounded by exquisite refinements, decked with pearls and gems; she could
almost say that the Empire could add nothing to her happiness. When Salvius
Otho was asked to dine at the Palace, instead of keeping late hours as it was
the rule, he left quite early “to go back to his adorable wife.” Other day he
showed Nero how to perfume his feet before lying on the dining couch. Another
time, Nero sprinkled some precious perfume on Otho’s gown. The billowing day,
Otho had the honour of entertaining the Emperor and when the guests entered his
dining-hall, this same perfume, poured from silver sprinklers, fell like a dewy
rain upon them and on the marble floor.
One night Nero ordered his litter to carry him to
Otho’s house quite unexpectedly, and begged his friend to let him see Poppaea;
only to see her. But Otho laughed and advised the Emperor to return to bed. It
was a small episode, so understandable in a young man...
All the Court now knew that the Emperor was madly in
love. In love in a way that he had never been before. He had believed that
Poppaea would give herself to him, but Poppaea had remained calm and distant.
One day Nero caught Poppaea’s eyes looking intently at him, and suddenly
averting her glance. He was thrilled, and he spoke to her like any young man
who is in love. “If you refuse me your love, the Empire itself will be for me
an intolerable burden!” Poppaea waited long before answering. At last she
looked at him with eyes filled with tears: “My Lord, I am a married woman; my
husband is young and noble. Were I an ambitious woman, the splendour of your
love would make me forget my duties. But I cannot chase away my lawful
husband.”
A few days later the Court was politely agog. Otho had
fallen in disgrace, but the merciful and generous Emperor was dispatching him
as Governor of the Lusitanian Province—leaving his wife behind. Poppaea was
installed in an official residence.
But she did not bring Nero joy and cheer, only
plaintive reproaches and regrets. She was nothing but an official mistress; the
Emperor was like a little boy under the wing of his mother; Poppaea might one
day be chased out of the Palace; if the Emperor could not bring himself to give
her the rank she deserved, why did he not send her back to her husband? She
sighed; then she added: “The Emperor must at least save her from the hate and
vengeance of Agrippina.”
X
There were people at Court who said that Poppaea had
some Jewish blood. Sure it was that in the secrecy of her rooms Poppaea was
superstitiously toying with the religious practices of the Jews who lived
across the River. It was quite fashionable among the ladies of Rome to take an
interest in the rites of the Jews, who professed to believe in an invisible
God. Without bothering to investigate what was really meant by it, the Roman
ladies were drawn by the mystical inquietude of the
Jews, by their belief in eternity, their certainty that one day a Messiah would
come to deliver the world. Poppaea did not understand what the world wanted to
be delivered from, but the fervour of her Jewish friends found a response in
her temperament, even in her silences, that aura of mystery that exercised such
an ascendancy over her Imperial lover. She almost felt that her new religious
practices increased her power and influence upon the Emperor.
But Poppaea’s real religion was her own beauty. No
other woman ever carried so far the cult of her body. Out of her porphyry bath,
Poppaea contemplated in the long mirrors of polished silver the image of her
body that had the milky whiteness of the Parian marble. She took care to
preserve that exquisite whiteness with baths of asses milk. In a special stabularium, at the farther end of the Palace grounds, were
kept four hundred asses, which supplied the milk for Poppaea’s morning bath.
Whenever she travelled, the four hundred asses made
the journey in advance of her train.
From her husband Otho (who was bald and wore false
hair so cleverly mingled with his own that the fact was not discovered till his
death) Poppaea had learned to cover her face at night with a mask of paste that
protected it from the ill-effects of fresh air. She used a thick cream,
similar to the grease-paint used nowadays by actors in their make-up, and with
this cream mixed with fine powder her masseuse made a kind of porcelain layer
over her face. When she was not attending Palace functions or going out, she
kept this mask on all day, and when she took it off, her face, of a resplendent
whiteness, seemed to blush deliciously at the lightest emotion.
For her hands she used crocodile mucus which made them
soft and white. After her bath her slaves dried her body with swans’ down,
which seemed to cover it with a fine dust, and they stroked her tongue with
flat ivory sticks to make it soft and velvety.
Then she abandoned her body to the hands of her personal
attendants, who vied with one another with the cares of her person. Her
numerous slaves were divided into classes, according to their specialities; the
African masseuses who kept her body firm and supple; the hairdressers and
perfumers from Cyprus; the dressmakers and dressers from Alexandria; those who
had the keeping of her gowns and jewels in perfumed boxes; others who were
expert in lacing her sandals and shoes. In the vast dressing-room the
supervisors of each service stood aside, vigilant and guiding while their
mistress, wrapped in a dressing-gown and seated at the mirror, studied every
curl of her hair or a new inclination of the head.
Poppaea knew that she had the most beautiful hair in
the whole of Rome. It was as warm and brilliant as amber. Many ladies of Rome,
envious of her golden head, used a powder of saffron, a German soap and some
oils and brilliantines of which Martial and Ovid have preserved the recipes. In
his poems Nero sang of Poppaea’s hair, which he called “hair of amber”; and the
illusion was complete when the Tuscan perfumers supplied Poppaea with a new oil
made from ambergris, which exhaled a most suave fragrance. Poppaea wore her
hair all around her brow and as far as the rosy shells of her ears in three
rings of small curls, made with a heated iron curler, alike and symmetrical,
while the rest, drawn back and rolled over her slender nape, was held in
position by little chains and rings of gold. Narrow white ribbons, embroidered
with precious stones, were occasionally used to tie the chignon. At times she
used hairpins adorned with pearls, or single pins fashioned like javelins. Her
jewellers always chose for her pearls from the Red Sea because of their
marvellous and unsurpassed whiteness. At her ears she wore drop ear-rings made
of three diamonds, whose tinkling at each little movement of her head seemed to
play an accompaniment to her speech.
A dark-headed girl from Samos knelt at her feet fixing
the low shoes of Sycione, made of soft white kid,
with soles of thin golden leaf, which enhanced with their metallic tap-tap the
elegance of Poppaea’s steps upon the marble floors. The small slippers enclosed
her feet like a modem court-shoe, and were embroidered with pearls and held
over the instep by straps of gold cord and silk. A clip, shaped like an eagle,
or a crescent, was occasionally used in place of straps.
Before putting on the shoes, the maid enveloped
Poppaea’s feet and legs, as far as the knees, into narrowbands of the finest linen, which were held tight by garters as rich as diadems. Then,
another maid passed upon her head the first tunic, of fine linen; but before
the tunic, an embroidered corsage was adjusted over her breasts, a kind of
brassiere made of strong cloth of wool mixed with gold and silk, that came from
the East. This corsage was the most brilliant part of a lady’s dress, at times
it was as jewelled as a pectoral; and the stole, or long robe which was worn
unfastened over this corsage, was so draped as to show the corsage, although
the stole was held at the waist by a jewelled belt. The throat and the right
arm were left bare, adorned with necklaces and many bracelets.
Dreaming of the Throne and a power that she could
conquer only with her beauty, Poppaea neglected nothing that could charm Nero.
She knew by heart the third Canto of Ovid’s Ars Amatoria, and her womanly instinct added a thousand counsels to those of that poetic
master. Much better than the poet, she knew that there was everything to be
gained by making a lover wait. She knew how to push a rival into the shadow;
she knew that Nature should be improved upon. She practised the art of
deportment and walking under the portico of the Theatre of Pompey, she
perfected the artifice of adding attraction to a fault, she knew how to put a
spark of femininity and levity into her smile. Poppaea was the first woman in
Rome to wear clothes of pure silk, and the only one to enwrap her head with
long veils.
She spent hours at the mirror, studying herself
critically, considering those gestures which she felt could be improved. She
watched the fluttering of her eyelashes and the trembling of her body, and
every movement of her limbs. She had acquired by practice the capacity to put
on whatever expression she desired.
The greatest charm of her face was in the delicate
fascinating nose, and the changeable expression, almost elusive; a face that
could be girlish and petulant, or severe and passionate. Around her nostrils
there were a few pale freckles that gave her smile an intriguing air. Her
mother had taught her to be sparing with the rouge pot and she swallowed some
drops prepared for her by a Syrian slave, that acted as a stimulant and lent
her freshness and vivacity. And to sweeten her breath she chewed pastilles made
of myrtle.
She had a delightful laugh, a thing that can hold a
fascination and be communicative of joy and cheerfulness. She spoke Greek
beautifully, a language that was very fashionable and sounded so much lighter
and appealing than the more solemn Latin.
She had developed her coquetry to the point of returning
to the natural modesty of woman, because she knew that modesty, albeit an
assumed virtue, is the most provocative of charms.
XI
Nothing prompts an enamoured man to action more than a
blow to his vanity. The sadness assumed by Poppaea was in itself enough to hurt
Nero, for what greater prize could a woman demand than to possess his heart?
But relentlessly Poppaea reiterated her reproach, “You are not really the
Emperor; the real ruler of Rome is your mother. You think that you have
confined her to her house, but her house is more important than the Palace. All
decisions of real importance bear the stamp of her authority. The Praetors, the
Aediles, the Tribunes, the more important Senators, all hasten to her, not to
you. And she has amassed an enormous fortune; her gold pieces talk for her
everywhere. I get news and gossip from every side. I hear things that would
never reach your ear. Do you know what the people call you? They call you
‘Empress Nero.’ And they call your mother ‘Agrippina, Emperor of Rome’
Another day she put on the table a gold coin, a bright
new one and flicked it with a little gesture of contempt. Nero looked at her,
already frowning in expectation of the bitter remark that was sure to come. And
come it did. The coin glittered on the marble table, showing, beautifully
minted, the proud head of Agrippina. With a touch of her fingers Poppaea turned
it on the other side: “And what is this?” she said with a hiss of venom in her
voice. “What is this head of an overgrown boy described as Nero Caesar? Who has
authorized the design of this coin that to the end of the earth will convey the
impression of a Diarchy or, worse still, of an Imperial Matriarchate?”
Nero was dumbfounded. He answered: “I am an artist,
that is all I care.”
Poppaea smiled: “And your mother saves you the trouble
of being the Emperor. That’s all. And she takes great care to remind the people
not that she is Nero’s mother, but that she is Germanicus’s daughter. That
still counts for a lot. More than your poetry.”
Thus the poison of envy bit into Nero’s heart, adding
to the torments of passion. What shall he do to satisfy this woman? Lurid
thoughts traversed his mind. He thought of sudden illness, of fatal accidents
that can free one from a person who has become a bad dream. He imagined himself
repudiating Octavia, marrying Poppaea, giving the people a great banquet and
feast, the crowd acclaiming him and his new Empress... But Agrippina was there,
the living obstacle between himself and Poppaea. And Nero discovered that he
hated his mother.
One day, when Agrippina spoke again of quitting the
capital, Nero answered that perhaps it would be an excellent idea. “What am I
doing in Rome nowadays?” she said plaintively to her son. “In the Palace in
which I alone have made you Emperor, upon the Throne where you fill the place
that I alone have given you, a concubine plays the role of Empress. Far away from
Rome I shall try to forget your ingratitude.”
Twenty-four hours later Agrippina left Rome for Anzio.
Overjoyed, Nero told Poppaea that no longer would the Empress stand between
them. Poppaea replied: “A mere departure does not change anything.” And her
lovely features were drawn and sad, and there were tears in her eyes.
That night Nero felt that Agrippina must disappear. He
could think of nothing else.
He was afraid to share with anyone the dark plans
maturing in his mind. The thought of them filled him with horror. For he loved
his mother, even when he hated her; maybe he loved her even now. He recalled
how, in the last three years, she had tried to awaken in him a monstrous
desire—by surprise, by insidious approaches. Why did Fate pursue him with this
Oedipus’s and Orestes’s destiny?
Yet, such a dark deed must be shared with accomplices.
One was Tigellinus.
Tophonius Tigellinus was a lecherous man, as lewd of mind as he was in taste and
manners. No one knew for a certainty what father he came from, nor did
Tigellinus boast of any ancestry. All that was known about him was that, in his
youth, Tigellinus had become rich by disposing of three wealthy uncles. As a
young man Tigellinus had one day surprised Agrippina: some said that she had
tried his prowess in bed. Caligula exiled him to Calabria. But while in exile,
he invested his uncles’ money wisely. On his estates he bred horses.
Instinctively his horses had turned their heads towards Rome. One day their
master arrived in Rome and set up as a horse-dealer for the races, and Nero,
who was fond of horses and always on the look-out for first-class
thoroughbreds, had come to know him well.
The other accomplice was Anicetus, Nero’s former
tutor, who was discarded by Agrippina to make place for Seneca. Now Anicetus
had risen to the command of the Misenum’s Fleet. He
was that kind of man who stops at nothing, and’ he had an old account to square
with Agrippina.
No one told Poppaea, but she divined it from the
first. She told Nero that she was sure he would give her the greatest proof of
his love. And she suggested poison: “It is the surest and the simplest way.
And,” she added with sweetness, “the least painful. Also, it can appear
accidental.”
But Nero was frightened. One could risk poison upon an
old man, or an invalid. But a poison was not always sure to work on a vigorous
person, and for many years Agrippina had accustomed her body to the strongest
poisons. The conspirators would risk making fools of themselves.
A dagger? Anicetus shook his head: “Do not spill
blood. To use a dagger is to spread the cry of murder.” And then, Anicetus
expounded a beautiful stratagem. Was he not the Praefect of the Fleet? He knew
therefore all the dangers of the seas. “Supposing something happened to a ship,
far enough from the shore, say that a bulkhead gave way; it would be the end.
Imagine a journey at night, the sky is starry and the wind is sweet, then
something unforeseen happens, the ship is sinking, the illustrious passenger
disappears before help can come...”
“By Jove! ” cried Nero. “It sounds like a naumachy!”
The idea was no longer frightening nor terrifying. It seemed a play, or like
being at the Circus. There was no longer any murder, only an accident, just a
planned accident ... Who would talk of the vengeful Furies or use big solemn
words?
XII
Agrippina had gone to her villa at Anzio, that was
white and elegant, perched on the very tip of the promontory, like a galleon
with all sails set to the wind. The terraced gardens, with their porticoes
shaded by rambling roses, were a delight. Resting her head against the cool
marble of a pillar, Agrippina thought of Rome across the bay, imagined the busy
crowds in the markets, the jostling in the Forum, centre of the world. The
Palace and its gardens, symbol of all that was now denied to her for ever. She
did not regret her lost power, her Lictors, her chariot that was like a
Goddess’s, her invisible presence that was felt even in the Senate, all the
honours that no other woman had ever attained. What she grieved for most deeply
was to have been banished by her son. It seemed but yesterday that he was
looking upon her adoringly. A Chaldean magician, who had studied her horoscope
in the skies, had not long ago foretold her that an extraordinary event was
upon her, “the stars,” he said, “disclosed no more.” What, she thought, could
be more extraordinary than this message from her son regretting her exile and
calling her again to his side?
For it was of no use to live in Rome, in the house of
Antonia, not far from the Palace and yet so far away from it, and be surrounded
by an army of spies who reported her every movement to the Emperor and to
Poppaea, “that woman.” She too had her agents, who mingled with the Emperor’s
Court. In fact, the two parties spied on each other. But she knew that now all
her efforts were fruitless. Britannicus’s death had been a great shock for her,
almost an admonition. She knew she was marked. She felt that “that woman” was
bent on getting rid of her. Since Britannicus had died she had thought of using
Octavia as a tie with the Opposition party, but Octavia was such a silly girl!
She knew that, prompted by “ that woman,” her son had entirely escaped from her
own control. And now there was this letter inviting her to join the Emperor at
Baiae, to celebrate with her son the holy days of Minerva and “renew the affection
that should never have been endangered.”
When Agrippina disembarked on the shore at Cape Misenum from the bireme that had brought her from Anzio, a
small group of courtiers came forward to greet her. She recognized Seneca,
Burrus, Anicetus, Tigellinus. In front of them, all alone, Nero was running
towards the shore—just like a boy. Agrippina threw herself into her son’s arms,
and he kissed her, murmuring the words that once were so often upon his lips:
“The best of mothers!”
The sun was setting in the opalescent sky. The surf
gently washed the beach. The hills along the bay had a benign undulation. It
was such a joy to be again with the gay Court. Nero offered to escort his
mother as far as the white pavilion assigned to her, so white among the dark
trunks of the Mediterranean pines. A litter was waiting to take them. They lay
down, leaning on the silken cushions, chatting pleasantly. A cortege was
formed. The peasants and the fishermen bowed respectfully, the Guards stood at
attention, gaping upon the Imperial demi-gods. In the golden dust raised by the
bearers’ feet they reached Baiae, where supper was waiting.
Two days soon passed full of pleasure and joys. Now
the fateful ship was again crossing the bay. Agrippina lay upon a couch, in the
cabin that had been prepared for her on the forecastle. Travelling with her
were her lady-in-waiting, the Lady Acerronia, and her
bailiff and treasurer Crepereius Gallus. Agrippina
lay without speaking, her mind filled with the beatitude of this renewed life.
When they had parted, her son had kissed her bosom, “the breasts that suckled
me.” Now the ship glided silently, its sails full of wind, the oars cutting the
water rhythmically, each stroke punctuated by the voice of the officer marking
the time. From the shore floated the perfume of the fields and of the forest of
pines.
Suddenly a sinister crash occurred overhead. Agrippina
sat up on her couch. The roof of the cabin thundered down; masses of lead
followed with a thud. Crepereius, hit on the head,
fell down dead. The Lady Acerronia ran out shouting
for help. But Agrippina, merely grazed on the left shoulder, moved out
silently, hiding behind a big coil of ropes. From her hiding-place she saw all
the oarsmen, at a signal, rush to one side of the ship, which heaved steeply,
almost capsizing. A few sailors, caught unaware, swore loudly and disappeared
overboard. Astern, Agrippina caught sight of Acerronia beating the air with her arms, and then dropping into the depths below. With
the suppleness of a cat, Agrippina bent low, ran between the abandoned oars,
and let herself down the side of the ship. She was a splendid swimmer, and the
shore was not far away. She heard Acerronia cry:
“Help! Help! I am the Empress!” Two sailors threw her a rope, and then, the
moment her head was level with them, knocked her savagely with an oar and let
the body drop back into the sea. Agrippina put her head under water, and
raising it only to take breath, swam vigorously towards the shore.
At Baiae the Emperor was sitting up. With him were
Seneca, Burrus and Anicetus. The freedman was lying upon a bed, glancing now
and then at a clepsidra which was slowly marking the
time, and plucking a garland of roses which he pressed nonchalantly to his
nostrils.
Upon his couch lay Nero, pale and restless. Now and
then he rose, and walked up and down, pressing his white hands upon his breast.
Seneca gazed at the floor, with a frown upon his brow. Neither he nor Burrus
had been told, but Seneca guessed that the Dowager-Empress had left on a
fateful journey.
Two hours passed, and Anicetus still plucked roses and
threw them down. The Emperor became more and more restless, and paced up and
down the hall. In the tense silence his sighs sounded like sobs.
Suddenly there were shouts outside, a door was opened
wide, and Nero stared at the entering messenger, who was Agrippina’s freedman
Lucius Agerinus. The man threw himself at the
Emperor’s feet, unable to speak clearly: “The Divine Agrippina, the Empress...
There has been a sinking... The Gods’ protection... The Empress is safe... She
swam to the coast... She has been taken to Bauli...
The Empress sends you word not to be anxious for her; she only desires to
rest.”
Nero dismissed the messenger. Then he turned to
Anicetus, but was unable to speak.
“The coup has failed, that’s all,” murmured the
freedman. Anicetus plucked a few more roses, then he calmly said: “If you
leave her time, she will run to Rome, denounce the attempted murder, arm her
slaves, and maybe tomorrow she will raise the Legions. Even the Senate may rise
against you. If you give her time.”
Nero turned to Burrus and Seneca, but he could only
utter: “My friends...”
The two Ministers glanced at one another. It was a
monstrous situation. Yet it admitted no choice. Agrippina was a thoroughly bad
woman and Nero was revealing himself her worthy son. But, in the circumstances,
what was the higher interest of Rome? The vile freedman had just said it:
“Agrippina will raise the Legions.” The atrocious crime would raise a cry among
the Legions and a revolt would mean butchery in Rome, maybe in all the cities
of the Empire. Nero would be deposed, true, but who would be set up as the next
Emperor? Should one risk a new era of massacres, bloodshed and proscriptions
for the sake of a thoroughly bad woman?
Seneca, Prime Minister and philosopher, spoke first.
Without looking at Nero, as though the Emperor’s presence did not count, he
asked of Burrus, Commander of the Guards: “Can you order the troops to strike?
”
“They will not do it. They love the Emperor, but they
revere the memory of Germanicus like a fetish. Not one will touch Germanicus’s
daughter.” Then the General added contemptuously: “Anicetus has started this
mess—let him finish it.”
Without a further word the two Ministers bowed to the
Emperor, and left the room. Nero was now alone with the cynical Anicetus. The
freedman threw away the plucked garland, rose lazily, and calmly he said: “Go
to bed, O Caesar, and try to have happy dreams. I shall work for you.”
A few minutes later Anicetus was galloping towards Bauli, taking with him the triarius Hercules and a centurion of the Fleet named Oloarite.
The three forced Agrippina’s door. She received them
standing, and fiercely asked: “Have you come to finish me?”
With the flat of his sword the triarius gave her a blow on the head. The centurion drew an ugly dagger.
Agrippina backed to the wall. With both hands she
opened her dress and uncovered her beautiful bosom: “Strike at the stomach!”
The blade went down to the hilt. Without a cry Agrippina fell to the ground.
All night Nero paced the room, watched by Seneca who,
fearing a desperate deed, had returned to the distracted Emperor. And all the
time Nero murmured: “The sun! When will the sun rise?” And now and then he
uttered: “The world will understand... My love... Poppaea...” It was frightful
and pitiful.
The horrible night ended at last, and the sun filled
the room. The Emperor shrank from the paleness of the sea and the delicate mist
of dawn, for he was seeing his mother’s ghost. But from all sides triumphant
shouts filled the villa: “Rise, O Nero Caesar! Your faithful Centurions and
Tribunes are coming to renew their oath and vow, and thank the Gods that you
have been preserved to the Empire!”
It was Burrus speaking, Burrus standing at the door
and looking at his Emperor with eyes full of disdain and yet putting upon
Nero’s lips his very justification and his new role: The Gods had spared him...
He had struck to avoid being struck.
To the chiefs of the Army, to the local Magistrates,
to the representatives of the Campanian towns who all day came bringing their
thanks and felicitations, the Emperor repeated his tale, with tears in his
eyes. Later, he found the story quite plausible, and susceptible of
improvement. Seneca helped to prepare a message to the Senate. For a few days
the Emperor believed it himself. Then he suggested that the Court should move
to Naples. Baiae was too dull, the sight of the sea was monotonous, one could
almost imagine that one heard cries in the night.
Nero did not tell anyone that he had nightmares. The
men of the galleon had told strange stories, how the ship was supposed to have
given in under the pressure of the water; but the machinery that should have
crashed down upon the Empress had failed to work properly. Nero could no longer
endure the atmosphere of Baiae. He imagined he heard the flutes of the funeral
beyond the hills. In Naples one would meet more people, and delight in the
popular rejoicing at the Emperor’s escape from the mother who had plotted
against him.
In Rome the obliging Senate invented new flatteries
and honours. Minerva, whose quadriennial Games Nero
had gone to celebrate in Baiae, certainly deserved a statue in the Senate
House, as an ex-voto for having spared the Emperor. Agrippina’s birthday was
entered among the ill-omened days.
From Naples, Seneca advised amenities, pardons, the
recall of political exiles. Everything was going well. Only, at night, the
Emperor could not bear to look into a mirror. He had his mirrors covered. He
moved restlessly from place to place, Sorrento, Salerno, Cuma, Herculaneum,
Pompey, Capua... Every city put up triumphal arches to the Emperor. Before him
marched the Praetorian Guards and the splendid Numidian Cavalry. A squadron of
gigantic African lancers followed, dressed in white and red, marching with long
dancing steps, eyes fixed, spears in the right hands, long bronze shields covering
their left sides. The Imperial escort was dressed in gay silks, with diadems,
necklaces and broad bangles glittering with gems. Surrounding Nero’s litter,
beautiful young slaves, with the slender bodies of Tanagra statuettes,
scattered roses. Upon the silken cushions, the Master of the World, tired,
fatigued, angry with himself, his eyes heavy with sleeplessness and fright, his
face made-up like an idol’s, passed amongst the applauding crowds.
The Court feared he might commit suicide. They begged
him to return to Rome. They urged upon him that the people were anxiously
waiting, that the Empire would wane if the Emperor would not hold it firm in
his grasp.
The Emperor returned to Rome. It was an apotheosis—a
God taking his place in the Roman Pantheon. From the City the people came out
into the country to meet him. The whole route was like a huge amphitheatre, in
which all the people of Rome applauded but one actor, who passed under arches
of flowers amidst the notes of zithers, cetras and
flutes. Everywhere petals of roses rained upon the Imperial procession. Nero
glanced round through his monocle of polished emerald, languidly saluting the
adoring crowds, with his hand laden with rings and holding a handkerchief of
pink silk.
In his fantastic equipage he climbed to the Capitol
and rendered thanks to his brother-god Jupiter. The Roman holiday was starting,
never to end.
|
a
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF NERO
CARLO MARIA FRANZERO
Book One
THE MOTHER AND THE BOY
I
IN the autumn of the year 37 Agrippina found herself
six months gone with child. She consulted a Persian magician who enjoyed a
great reputation in Rome, and the astrologer gave her this terrible horoscope:
“You will give birth to a son, who shall be Emperor but will assassinate his
mother.” Agrippina replied: “Let him murder his mother but be Emperor”. From
that day the life of Agrippina’s child was written. He will be told one day by
his tutor, the philosopher Seneca: “Your destiny is written in the skies and
nothing can change it.”
The boy was born at Anzio, on the 15th of December. It
was the eve of the Saturnalian holidays: what an omen for his life! Agrippina
had an agonizing time. The child was born feet first. The midwives at
Agrippina’s bed ‘shuddered.
II
The father, Domitius Aenobarbus,
was a man of execrable character, and the mother was a thoroughly bad woman.
The cruel character of Domitius was a byword in Rome. He had killed a freedman
of his at a banquet merely for failing to drink as much as he commanded. One
day, in the Forum, Domitius had struck put the eye of a Knight for some heated
words in a dispute. He was so crafty and greedy that during his Praetorship he
defrauded the chariot-owners at the Circus of their prizes in the races. There
were other evil facets to his character: a short time before the death of
Emperor Tiberius he was impeached for incest with his sister Lepida. The best
that could be said of Domitius Aenobarbus was that he
was an aristocrat to his fingertips; the Aenobarbi could indeed boast of seven Consulships, one Triumph and two Censorships. So
illustrious were they as a family that on being admitted into the Patrician
Order they continued to use the same cognomen, with no other prenomen than those of Gneus or
Lucius. And they all had red beards.
Agrippina, born in the year 16, was the eldest
daughter of the great General Germanicus whom Augustus had at one time
cherished as his successor. Agrippina was, therefore, a niece of Emperor
Tiberius. With her two sisters, Drusilla and Julia, as well as their brother
Gaius whom the people had nicknamed Caligula, Agrippina was brought up in the
house of their paternal grandmother Antonia, herself a sister of Mark Antony
and a niece of Augustus. But Caligula had incestuous relations with all his
three sisters, who were girls of extreme beauty. Their aunt surprised him in
Drusilla’s arms. Old Tiberius was told, but the family honour had to be
protected against the lampoons of the populace and even more from the contempt
of the aristocracy; and silence was kept. The fact was that Tiberius, tired of
proscriptions, profoundly disillusioned by the treachery of his friend and
councillor Sejanus, disappointed by the futility of absolute power, and
disenchanted by the neverending nerd to punish,
thought it better to shut his eyes to the peccadilloes of his nieces, and
married them off as quickly as possible and as well as he could.
Tiberius therefore gave Agrippina for wife to Domitius Aenobarbus, and ordered them to celebrate their
marriage in Rome. Everybody knew that the Emperor had chosen such a bad man as
husband for his niece only because Domitius was related to the Caesars and was
a grandnephew of Augustus through his grandmother Octavia.
At the time of her marriage Agrippina was barely
twelve years old. The newly married couple did not keep house together for
long—they had too many grounds for detesting each other. So it happened that
the boy was born nine years after the marriage. After Tiberius’s death Domitius
considered it wiser to effect a reconciliation with his wife, who was a sister
of the new Emperor Caligula; and the result was the birth of the boy. The peace
between husband and wife was made the same night that Tiberius breathed his
last and nine months later, exactly to the day, the boy was born.
Domitius was away when his son was born; impatient of
Caligula’s vagaries he was spending most of his time at his villa at Pyrges in
Tuscany. To his friends who offered him their congratulations, he replied: “Of
myself and Agrippina only a monster can be born.”
Agrippina asked her husband to choose a name for the
child. Domitius mockingly suggested calling him Claudius, in honour of uncle
Claudius, the Prince who enjoyed the reputation of being a fool. This Claudius
was not, although it was quite true that he stuttered so much that it was
impossible to listen to him and keep a straight face. Agrippina, however,
declined her husband’s suggestion and the boy, according to usage, was called
Lucius and entered in the rolls as Lucius Domitius Aenobarbus.
When the baby was three years old, his uncle Emperor
Caligula banished him with his mother to the island of Ponza, on a charge of
conspiracy. The accusation was in a way quite true, for Agrippina had been
senseless enough to conspire with her lover Lepidus, who was also a minion of
her brother the Emperor. Caligula was so angry that he compelled Agrippina to
travel to her place of exile carrying upon her knees the ashes of her executed
lover.
Caligula was then at the peak of his madness. He had
threatened to banish Jupiter to the island of Crete and had announced that he
was taking the Moon as his mistress. He openly carried on incestuous relations
with his sisters and opened in the Palace a public brothel from which he
collected the fees.
While Agrippina was in exile, her husband Domitius
died of dropsy in his retreat at Pyrges. Caligula tried to confiscate his large
estate, and ordered that the boy should be taken from his mother and entrusted
to his paternal aunt Lepida.
Little Lucius Domitius was thus brought into the house
of Domitia Lepida, who, not wanting the boy, placed him under the care of two
rather unusual tutors—a dancer and a coiffeur.
III
When the boy was four years old, Emperor Caligula was
assassinated in the Circus during the annual Games in honour of Augustus’s
memory. It was the month of February Of the year 41. The mad Emperor’s body was
left on the spot where it was butchered by Cassius Cherea, a Tribune of the
Praetorian Cohort. His wife Cesonia— an abandoned
woman who used to give Caligula love philtres to inflame his passion for
her—was killed with her own daughter upon the Emperor’s body, on the flagged
floor of the high-vaulted gallery of the Circus.
The Senate wanted to restore the Republic, for after
Tiberius and Caligula the House of the Caesars had no other pretender but old
Claudius, about whom nobody bothered. But while in the Senate House the
greybeards chattered about the great speech with which their President would
on the morrow announce to the sovereign people the restoration of the Roman
Republic—the Speech, the great dada of democratic politicians of all.
times!—some soldiers of the Praetorian Guards wandered about the Palace, and on
the upper floor they came upon a foot protruding from behind a tapestry. The
soldiers pulled the foot and out with it came Prince Claudius, the butt of all
jokes, hiding in fright behind the tapestry. The soldiers led Claudius to a
terrace, and calling to a group of comrades below, they hailed him the new
Emperor. Claudius thought it another joke, in his absurd life of scholar and
Court buffoon. That night the Jewish King Agrippa, who lived in Rome and knew
the value of being a friend of the Caesars, went to the Guards’ barracks where
Claudius had been taken by the Praetorians and had a talk with him. What was
there to be afraid of in the Senate? The Senators would only quarrel among
themselves, and the Magistrates, each appointed by the late Emperor, would not
oppose Caligula’s uncle. As for the people, well, the people of Rome would
applaud the winner, whoever it might be.
The Jewish King Agrippa was right. The Praetorian
Guards and the Roman crowd hailed the new Emperor Claudius. Soon afterwards the
Senate came in a body to the Palace to make obeisance. Claudius was not such an
idiot after all. He offered the Senators protection against the indignant
Praetorians, and soon the dotard appeared for what he really was—an old erudite
but full of commonsense, fundamentally a good man; deferential towards the
Senate and paternal towards the people. The medal had its reverse, for the old
man had an incredible weakness for wine and women. He ate and drank till he
could no longer stand, and he indulged with women to great excess. Day after
day episodes occurred only too reminiscent of the jokes that had been current
at the Palace under the previous Court; the Emperor fell asleep after his
meals, and did not mind when some of the guests shot olive stones at him, or a
courtier poked him in the ribs with his ivory stick to awaken him. And he often
snored during an audience. He was tall and well built, but his foibles made him
look absurd. He laughed immoderately and could be ignoble in his rage. When he
walked he dragged the right leg, and his knees were always weak. And his voice,
when he held forth on some pet subject—a practice of which, like many other
scholarly men, he was only too fond—his voice sounded like a fog-horn.
But he was good at heart and one of the first things
he did was to sign a decree allowing Agrippina to return from exile. She took
back her son, and married again, this time Crispus Passienus the orator, after inducing him to divorce his wife, who was another Domitia,
sister of the late Aenobarbus. Her boy Lucius lost
the coiffeur and the dancer as tutors and Agrippina entrusted him to a new
tutor, the freedman Anicetus. Of this Anicetus— who was to play such an
important part in his future life —Nero used to say in later years: “ He was a
freedman, which means that he knew the difference from being a slave; he was a
decent scholar, and he had no morals.”
IV
A few years later Agrippina’s second husband died. Passienus had been a quiet and peaceful man, with only one
great passion. Near Tusculum, where he had a villa, there was an ancient grove
of beeches, consecrated since olden times to Diana. Passienus was romantically and strangely fond of one of the beeches and used to spend
hours near the tree; embracing it, kissing it, sleeping with its shadow within
his arms. Agrippina took no notice of such whims and indeed she induced Passienus to make her boy Lucius his sole heir. Thus little
Lucius inherited a huge estate.
But Agrippina had higher aims, and she turned to the
freedman Narcissus, who acted as Prime Minister to Emperor Claudius. Through
Narcissus she ingratiated herself with the Emperor, who was readily susceptible
to the wiles of scheming women. It did not take Claudius long to fall in love
with Agrippina, particularly as he was more than tired of his dreadful wife
Messalina. Not a good word could have been said about the Empress, and
Agrippina had one great advantage over Messalina, the advantage of having been
born in the House of the Caesars and having grown up amidst the intrigues and
dangers of the Imperial Court. Clever and cunning, she pushed the wantonness of
Messalina to the limit—and took good care to make it public.
And there were two boys: Agrippina’s son Lucius
Domitius, who was now ten years old, with good features and a clever mind
justifying his mother’s fondest hopes. He was the only grandchild of Germanicus
and all the heritage of glory left by the popular hero stood behind him.
Wherever he appeared the crowd hailed him with sympathy. The other boy,
Messalina’s child, was Britannicus, a frail and delicate boy suffering from
palsy, and looked upon in wonder by the people as the child of an old dotard
and a dissolute mother.
It came into Claudius’s head to celebrate the Secular
Games before the century ended. It was a drunkard’s whim but it kept the Court
agog for months. Vitellius had returned from the Governorship of Palestine. He
was so adoring a favourite of the Empress Messalina that he begged to be
allowed to carry one of her slippers for ever next to his heart. On going to an
audience at the Palace he saluted Claudius in oriental fashion, and
felicitating with him on the resolution about the Secular Games, he added: “May
you, O Divine, celebrate these Games very often!”
During the Secular Games the young sons of the most
illustrious families performed in the Circus an ancient play, which was called
the Trojan Game. Virgil has described this performance of noble youths in Book
V of the Aeneid. “The young men, riding caparisoned horses, appear splendid,
advancing en masse under the eyes of
their delighted parents. Their well-dressed hair is decked by a garland, in the
right hand they carry a long sharp javelin, a light quiver is suspended upon
their back, and from their neck dangles upon their chest a chain of gold. The boys
advance in three squadrons, commanded by three seniors. They make the tour of
the Circus, amidst the applause, and many of them are recognized and hailed by
name, for the people see in them the images of their glorious ancestors. It was
an occasion in which the people showed to the children of the great families
the affection or the indifference that their parents inspired.
In the same squadron were Lucius Domitius, aged
eleven, and Prince Britannicus, two years younger, son of Claudius and
Messalina, and Domitius’s cousin. Young Britannicus played his part with all
the advantage that his birth and position of Heir Apparent gave him; yet, the
greatest applause went to Lucius Domitius and the names of Agrippina and of
Germanicus sounded loudly when Lucius was hailed.
Soon afterwards a rumour went round the wineshops of
Rome that Messalina had tried to have Lucius Domitius assassinated. Who had
spread the rumour? Was it Agrippina herself? Voices said that Messalina saw in
this young boy a potential rival to her own son. But the Gods had protected
Domitius, for at the moment when the hired murderers advanced into his room to
kill him in his sleep a dragon had jumped out from the bed and chased the
assassins away. Young Lucius swore to everyone that in his bedroom he had never
seen anything bigger than a playful and harmless Egyptian snake of the kind
that were kept to keep away mice. But Agrippina knew only too well the value of
a properly presented story and she immediately instructed her jeweller to make
for Lucius a golden bracelet interlaced with the skin of the dragon found near
his bed, a bracelet that her son wore constantly throughout his life as a
talisman and a token of gratitude to his thoughtful mother.
At last Messalina understood that she had in Agrippina
a rival more redoubtable than the boy, who by now was openly considered by
Agrippina’s clique as another Heir Presumptive next to Britannicus. Messalina
decided to dispose of, at any price, both mother and son; but her own dissolute
life proved her undoing. Blinded by amorous passion, she took the opportunity
when Claudius was absent from Rome of having a marriage performed between
herself and her latest lover, the handsome Silius. That the people were not
shocked by such a sacrilegious scandal only emphasized the general standard of
morals. Indeed, the populace laughed about it, and the Mother Superior of the
Vestal Virgins spoke in Messalina’s defence. Amidst the general indifference
and with the Court undecided, the Prime Minister Narcissus took the final
decision. He brought the Emperor back to Rome, made Messalina depart, chased
away the Mother Superior of the Vestal Virgins and endeavoured to rouse some
indignation in Claudius. When he found that the old man was totally indifferent
to the misdeeds of the Empress, Narcissus ordered Messalina to be killed, which
was done at the very moment when Claudius was suggesting that the Empress
should appear before him to explain her conduct. They let Claudius grumble and
placed him at table for dinner. The old glutton reclined with a sigh upon his
couch, and proceeded with his food. Later, when the Emperor was gorged with his
meal, Narcissus informed him that the Empress was dead. Claudius glanced at his
Minister with quizzical eyes; then he took the glass that the cup-bearer was
proffering, and lay back on his cushions with a sigh—no one could tell whether
it was of resignation or relief. As he appeared to be completely drunk, the
proper slave came and tickled the Imperial throat with a peacock feather dipped
into perfumed oil, and Claudius relieved his stomach in the approved fashion.
Two Nubian giants lifted him up, sound asleep, and carried him to his
apartments. A few days later, when Messalina’s name was already banished from
general conversation, the Emperor seating himself at the table would still ask
why the Empress was late for dinner.
Some months afterwards the Emperor was officially told
that it was advisable that he should remarry. Claudius was now well over sixty
and looked considerably older. He was by no means a desirable husband. Pallas,
the Imperial Treasurer, had been charged by Agrippina with the task of settling
the wedding. Pallas was not new to the intrigues of the Imperial House for it
was he who, years previously, had been sent by Antonia, Agrippina’s
grandmother, to reveal to Tiberius the treachery of Sejanus. As for Agrippina,
she felt that it would be wrong to use the influence and good services of
Narcissus, as it would be placing her future in his hands. Therefore, she had
accepted Pallas’s courtship, and granted him her favours. All things
considered, it was less of a weakness on her part than an honour to the
freedman; and so Claudius found himself urged to the marriage from all sides.
V
In his dotage, Claudius had long since left the
conduct of all public and Court affairs to his three favourites: Pallas, who
acted as Treasurer; Narcissus, First Secretary of State, and Callistus, whose
duty it was to deal with the petitions addressed to the Emperor. Callistus had
exercised the same office under Caligula, his title of favour was that having
received from Caligula orders to kill Uncle Claudius, he had the courage, so he
said, to disobey the orders. Narcissus was an efficient and loyal Secretary of
State. As for Pallas, who claimed descent from the Kings of Arcadia, he kept
everybody at a distance with his haughty airs. It was indeed whispered that the
proud Pallas never spoke to his servants, but passed his orders to them in
writing.
As for having surrendered all the affairs to those
three freedmen, Claudius was telling his most trusted friend Burrus, Commander
of the Praetorian Guard: “You are always railing against the freedmen who fill
high positions at Court. I didn’t start this habit! It was my great- uncle
Augustus who preferred to entrust the highest offices at Court to his most
faithful freedmen.” Perhaps he knew that slavery generates those virtues that
freeborn men so seldom possess, gratitude and loyalty.
When it came to recommending a new wife for the
Emperor, Callistus supported the candidature of Lollia Paulina on the ground
that she had no children and so would love the three children that Claudius
already had from his previous marriages, Britannicus and Octavia, born of
Messalina, and Antonia, born of Claudius’s second wife, Aelia Petina. Narcissus
advised Claudius to take back his first wife Aelia Petina, whom he had
repudiated for Messalina. Pallas sponsored Agrippina.
Yet, there was a great obstacle to the success of
Agrippina. She was Claudius’s niece, and both Divine and Roman laws forbade the
marriage.
But Agrippina was not discouraged. She knew that
Claudius was very amorous. And she was beautiful. Hers was a beauty that was
both sensual and pure. At thirty-two, Agrippina retained all the attractions of
youth, together with an ardent ripeness; and she possessed a science of
voluptuousness that was an irresistible invitation to an old and declining
sensualist. When Claudius tasted Agrippina’s kisses he felt that he was for the
first time savouring the pleasures of real love. He sighed, he moaned, he panted
within her soft white arms, but when he tried to lie with her, she drew away:
“What would her ancestors think of Germanicus’s daughter openly becoming the
mistress of the Emperor who was her uncle? Of course she loved him, but there
was no hope! Did not the Emperor feel that no other woman had suffered so much
longing in his arms?”
Behind the scenes, whenever his duties closeted him
with the Emperor, Pallas pointed out to Claudius the immense advantages of such
an alliance: “Bring into your family a first daughter of Germanicus, whose
memory is still revered by the Army and by the people... Agrippina is young and
beautiful and she comes from the line of the Caesars. She will give you an
heir—a new Augustus.”
Yet still Claudius hesitated, and grumbled, “It would
be incest. What would the Senate say? And the Priests?” But all the Court was
now on Agrippina’s side and one of the loudest was Vitellius, who no longer
carried Messalina’s slipper against his heart. A popular demonstration in
favour of Agrippina was staged and the Senate passed a decree exempting the
Emperor from the Law that prevented a marriage between uncle and niece. The
Roman populace marched to the Palatine clamouring that Claudius should marry
his own niece. Old Claudius desired nothing better.
VI
Claudius wore himself out, or what was left of him
after his bouts of eating and drinking, in the white arms of Agrippina, strange
creature that she was. Her body was her weapon. She could be haughty and
frigid, but when she thought it advantageous she could lend her body to
contacts and caresses that would have disgusted a prostitute of the Suburra. Yet she came out of those debaucheries almost
untouched. It was as if the Gods had endowed her with a capacity to be reborn
afresh; night after night.
Barely eighteen months later, in the month of October
of the year 50, Claudius informed the Senate that he proposed to adopt his
wife’s son, Lucius Domitius. Gneus Domitius’s
sardonic suggestion, when he told his wife to call the child Claudius in
mockery of his uncle, had now come true. After the adoption, Lucius was named
Nero Claudius Drusus Germanicus. Claudius after his new father, Germanicus in
memory of his maternal grandfather, Nero in memory of a paternal uncle. And
Nero meant strong and valiant. The boy was far from strong, his mother thought,
and not particularly inclined to be valiant, with spindly legs, and his
protruding and shortsighted eyes that never seemed to look anyone straight in
the face. But through a long series of divorces, second marriages, poisoning
and adoptions, the House of the Caesars kept its line unbroken.
VII
Life at the Palace was dull for young Nero. Since his
mother had married the Emperor, he had felt more lonely, more deserted. He now
often thought of the words that his mother had spoken to him on the day of his
adoption by the Emperor. He was on a terrace receiving his lessons, when his
mother had advanced through the curtains of brightly-painted leather, “From
today you will be Nero Claudius. One day you will be called Nero Caesar!” As
she spoke the words she turned and disappeared again through the
curtains—tall, beautiful, majestic. The tutor at the desk did not dare to
interrupt the reverie of his young pupil, as he stared beyond the terrace of
the Imperial Gardens stretching down the slopes of the Palatine Hill.
Nero was a mere lad of thirteen, with somewhat massive
features and protruding eyes. Heavy eyelids and a hint of nearsightedness gave the pale blue eyes a dreamy air. His hair had a strong tinge of auburn,
almost a copper-red, and dressed in thick masses, like a halo, it made the high
forehead look pale and noble. The boy had turned to his tutor, the freedman
Anicetus, and touching his head he said, “The very hair of my father.” He spoke
in Greek, for it delighted him to speak that tongue so fluently and with such a
pure Attic accent: “We Aenobarbs are aristocrats to
our fingertips.”
He was a strange boy, who had always relied upon his
beautiful and loving mother. Now every day Senators and Knights came to bend
their backs or their knees before him. The worst of it was that they came
secretly, introduced by Pallas or by some servant, and they came to beg favours
of him. Favours? Was he, then, in a position to grant favours to men who bore
such great names? Yes, they told him, he had only to pass their requests to the
Empress—his mother. Young Nero was learning human baseness.
Not yet had he a clear idea of what power came from
being a member of the Imperial Family, but every day he could see the signs of
the stupendous prestige enjoyed by his mother. Agrippina had obtained what no
other Empress had achieved before; the same honours due to the Emperor. When
Ambassadors came to prostrate themselves before Claudius Caesar, they made
obeisance also to the Divine Agrippina. Dressed in the paludamentum,
the regal mantle of purple and gold, Agrippina took the salute of the
standards. The Senate revered her. One day she surpassed all limits of pride
and ascended the Capitol in the chariot reserved for the statues of the Gods.
Upon the new gold coins her profile was shown next to the Emperor’s. Young Nero
was fascinated by this image of Agrippina upon the bright golden coins. His
mother!
A small group of carefully chosen patrician boys were
now admitted to sit with Prince Nero at lessons; among them were the two sons
of General Vespasian, Titus and Domitian, and, of course, young Prince
Britannicus. The tutors reported regularly to the Empress on Prince Nero’s
progress. They said that he seemed over-sensitive to poetry, and strangely
imbued with a sense of the dramatic. The Circus, and even more the Stage,
attracted him with a kind of morbid fascination. Anicetus fostered this passion
for the theatre, and often took him secretly to see a new play or some famous
tragic actor. When at sunset, Nero returned from having shared the enthusiasm
of the delirious crowd in the Circus, in a spectacle that was thrilling in its
terrible horror, he could no laager keep his eyes upon the book or concentrate
on his wiring-tablets. One day a tutor caught him describing to his schoolmates
the ghastly death of a famous chariotdriver of the
“Greens,” the Imperia! racing colours. The driver had fallen from the chariot
in the heat of the race and was dragged around the arena by the horses, a
terrible loss for the “Greens.” The tutor asked what it was all about. Nero
replied that he was describing the tragic end of Hector being dragged by
Achilles behind his chariot around the walls of Troy. But why this useless lie?
Young Nero’s tastes and inclinations were developing
rapidly. He was passionately fond of mimic dances. He loved painting and music,
but more than anything else he loved poetical composition. He was fascinated by
the poetry and beauty of drama, and was thrilled by the sense of the
theatrical, in life as well as on the stage. Since his mother Agrippina was
installed as Empress, Nero delighted to breathe the solemn pomp that his mother
had brought to Court; the aura of sovereignty that she diffused; the ceremonial,
the hieraticism by which she was surrounded. He felt that now his life too had
truly become a grandiose performance. Of power, so far, he had seen only the
mirage. His flatterers told him that he was full of genius.
Rapidly, his appearance was becoming very remarkable.
Not very tall and rather thick-set, he had nevertheless acquired dignity in
his demeanour and in his walk. His hair, thick and naturally curled, was rather
attractive with its deep colour of copper. His eyes were blue, slightly misty,
overhung by the heavy arch of his eyebrows. His nose was noble and his
expression disdainful, sometimes hard, but always melancholic and embittered.
With a full mouth, drooping wearily at the comers so that his visage showed a
pensive air, he appeared maturer than his years. It was a face that one could
admire or dislike, but one that could not be dismissed as commonplace. It was a
face which seldom showed a smile to remind one of how young he was. A
changeable masque, disclosing the disquiet and the urge of an unstable spirit,
of a passionate and restless mind, of a thirsting heart which would never be
placated or satisfied. And it was the mirror of a heart that was yet untilled.
So far, no master had sown upon it either evil nor good. His pleasure had been
his law. Had he been born the son of an ordinary man he would undoubtedly have
turned to the Arts. Perhaps Beauty was the only thing in which he seriously
believed. Music and poetry and sculpture roused in him violent or delicate
emotions and he spent countless hours trying to draw and model. He loved to
pass his fingers over the strings of a lyre. No one took these attempts very
seriously. Worst still, no one told him that the lesson of Art is a long one.
full of effort and concentration. From the platform upon which Fortune had
placed him, he thought the summit was near and that he could easily attain it.
It was at this stage that his mother decided to give
him as a tutor the philosopher Seneca. The first result of Agrippina’s decision
was to cause the eclipse of Anicetus. A small thing in itself, yet it was to
have incalculable consequences, because from that moment dated the pro found,
almost bestial hatred of the freedman Anicetus for Agrippina.
VIII
The tutor, Lucius Annaeus Seneca, was a Spaniard bornin the year 6 BC at Cordova, where his father
Marcus, himself a man of letters, was a teacher of rhetoric. While Lucius
Seneca was still a child, he was sent to Rome and placed under the care of his
mother’s sister. Subsequently his father followed with the rest of the family
prospered rapidly, and put his son to school under the celebrated Stoics. Young
Seneca, imbibing the precepts of the Pythagoreans, scrupulously abstained from
eating the flesh of animals. When Tiberius threatened to punish some Jews and
Egyptians who abstained from certain meats, Seneca was persuaded by his father
to give up this austere practice. Seneca soon displayed talents as an eloquent
speaker, but dreading the jealousy of Caligula, who aspired to oratorical
excellence, he thought it better to abandon that pursuit and gave himself to
philosophy, applying at the same time for the offices of State. He soon
obtained the office of Quaestor; but after being involved in a scandalous love
affair Caligula banished him to Corsica.
Seneca had a rankling memory of that episode. He was a
proud Spanish youth, already the favourite of fortune, engaged in teaching the
doctrines of Pythagoras. Many ladies came to his lectures; one of them was
Julia Lucilla, the beautiful sister of Emperor Caligula. One day, after the
lecture, she asked him to explain to her a point in moral philosophy which she
could not quite grasp. They sat in her sedan-chair and he explained the point
to her. But Caligula, who knew his sisters only too well, did not approve of
such tête-à-tête enlightenment in moral philosophy, and the adventure
cost the young philosopher eight years of banishment to the island of Corsica.
The wild solitude of that island was an excellent
ground for noble thought but the philosophical mind of Seneca was of the type
which finds that noble teaching and the composition of lofty essays has nothing
to do with one’s secret leanings and tastes; and while his beautifully worded
essays and books on Life and Morals gained him a reputation in Rome as an
upright mind and an unflinching character, privately Seneca wrote letters to
the powerful. He begged favours. He humbled himself. He sold his soul—for ever.
After that, for the rest of his life, he was to be merely a sham, a cardboard
facade offered to his contemporaries and to posterity; the sham of being a
great philosopher. Once, years afterwards, he was asked why he wrote such noble
essays in praise of poverty, when he loved so much his wealth. Seneca tried to
explain by replying that a writer should never put too much sincerity in his
work, lest he should lose his balance of artistic detachment. He had written
three tracts on the Consolation of Life; and he was well aware that Petronius
used to say about him: “As big a humbug as a philosopher.”
When at last Seneca was allowed to return to the City,
his long, lean figure was clothed in a grey toga and his face, of a yellowish
colour, was tinged with the hectic flush of tuberculosis. That he was
inordinately greedy for money he took great care to hide, although in Rome,
where only money mattered, valuable acquisitions and wealth were the recognized
signs of success. Outwardly, Seneca’s sole desire was to write brilliant essays
and tracts, with solid sentences carefully polished, upon Life and Death, Youth
and Old Age, or The Pleasures of a Simple Life. It was much easier to expound
high principles and praise poverty from the comfort of a splendid house.
Anything outside his interests left him untouched.
True, his private life remained, at least outwardly,
quite decent, although the luxury he loved to surround himself with was
singularly greater than what one could reasonably expect of an advocate of
austerity. Rut the reasons that prompted Agrippina to choose Seneca as tutor
for her son were of a different nature.
The principal reason was that in the eyes of the
Senate, of the upper-classes and the sober-minded middle-classes who had
remained stodgily conservative and republican, Seneca was a paragon of all the
ancient virtues. At a time when few had any virtue left it was easy to assume
an attitude of virtuousness by admiring virtue in somebody else. No one could
reproach Seneca with any crimes; not even the supposed adultery for which he
had been exiled to Corsica. Kept away from Rome for many years, Seneca appeared
as the living symbol of righteousness persecuted by despotism. Time and
distance had made him look a great character—greater than he really was.
In engaging Seneca as a tutor for Nero, Agrippina was
therefore looking to the future. In this moment she had power; but what would
happen when Claudius died? Only if she could assure the Throne for her son
would the future be safe, and this she could do only by rallying to her side
the sympathies of the moderate parties. Seneca as a tutor to young Nero was the
very man to make the necessary impression.
It did not take Seneca long to size up his Imperial
pupil. Even less time was needed to guess what he would be able to make of him,
or more precisely what he would never be able to make of him.
Nero was now fourteen years old, an over-intelligent
and over-sensitive adolescent, spoilt by flattery, ambitious and indolent, a
boy whose childhood had been sad and mortifying. Now he found himself suddenly
thrown into a dream world, an atmosphere of continuous apotheosis. How could a
tutor explain to his pupil that absolute power is merely the antithesis of
servitude?
Seneca, after all, was a man of his time. In his
deepest heart he was an astute opportunist, whose uplifting speeches and books
dissembled his weakness. Away from his library he was but a rhetorician who
might delude himself that he was accomplishing a mission and preparing for Rome
the ideal sovereign, a new Augustus.
That was Seneca, the great tutor of Nero, always ready
to settle his young pupil’s difficulties with a well-turned aphorism. “The
happy man,” he told Nero, “is not the one who knows, but the one who acts. Life
must be lived, not idly contemplated in thought. Better a life composed of a
thousand bad deeds than a splendid one only imagined in the mind.” Or he would
say: “The ability to conceive and expound ethical truths is not necessarily
coupled with a corresponding power to realize them in practice. In fact, a man
may be justified in living a variegated life for the purpose of acquiring those
experiences that will lead his mind to higher speculative thoughts.” And he
would add: “To appreciate the nobility of poverty one need not necessarily be a
pauper. In fact, the poor are probably the only ones who could never be
converted to a life of abstinence.”
Maybe Seneca knew his own limitations, and felt that
the end would justify the means. Soon indeed he realized that to preserve an
influence over his pupil he must employ flattery. To instil into Nero the need
for an apparent uprightness—if not the love of it—Seneca recourse to the
flattering refrain of all the courtiers: “Remember that you will be Caesar!”
The same words Nero had heard for the first time from
his mother’s lips: “You will be Caesar!” But how differently she spoke them 1
And Nero adoringly called her “The best of mothers.” He still found himself
deeply troubled by his mother’s presence, strangely troubled indeed. He would
have been unable to say what mysterious feeling composed his love for his
mother. And his mother only addressed herself to the strongest and most ardent
feeling of any youth—to his pride.
Seneca, too, found it easier to reach Nero’s soul
through his pride. “Should one day you mount the Throne, remember that amongst
all the humans you have been chosen to play the part of a God. You will carry
the life and destiny of all the Empire within your hands. You will be the best
loved and maybe the most hated. You will be burdened by the terrible load of
your greatness.”
Yes, it was Seneca the philosopher who had been chosen
to be Nero’s teacher. He brought him up on good orthodox doctrines and he
babbled to him about goodness and justice and mercy, but it was all a sham.
IX
Nero was barely fourteen when he received the toga virilis, the dress of a man, three years before the
legal time. It was as though the adoption by the Emperor had made him come of
age.
The ceremony took place on the 16th of the Kalends of
April—the 17th of March in the year 51. On the eve, he was dressed according to
tradition, in a white tunic with saffron stripes, as a sign of good omen, and
was put to bed in this tunic. The following morning he was called early, and
before leaving the Palace he consecrated to the House Gods the gown of his
boyhood and placed around the Penates his golden chain, the bulla, the golden
ball that every boy wore around his neck as a charm during his childhood. An
Imperial train of attendants escorted him to the Capitol. There, in the ancient
temple of Jupiter, he made offerings and sacrifices and at the hands of the
High Priest he received the white toga that made him a man. So dressed, he
descended into the Forum, where a clamouring and applauding crowd was waiting
to receive him. The whole City was in festive mood, for it was the holiday of
Bacchus, the Bacchanalia. Masquerading 'bands of children ran about the
streets, escorting the procession of their elder brothers who went to receive
the toga on the same day as Prince Nero. At the cross-roads, the Priestesses of
the God Bacchus, their heads crowned with ivy, fried small cakes dipped in
honey, which they sold to the new men. The Government and the Emperor had been
generous with free distributions of corn to the people and bounties of silver
to the troops, and since early morning the Circus Maximus, which Claudius had
recently adorned with new fences of marble and gilded pillars, had opened the
gates to one hundred thousand spectators. For the first time Nero took his
place in the pulvinar, the Imperial box, wearing the triumphal dress.
The following day, upon a proposal of the Senate, he
was named Consul-designate; was proclaimed Princeps Juventutis,
and received the Proconsular powers extra-muros,
which was an extraordinary dignity, unprecedented, conferring upon him the
supreme command of all the armies camped outside the City walls. And to make
him more popular with people and troops, money was again distributed in his
name. At his passage the populace shouted “Nero Imperator! Nero Caesar! Nero
Divine!” Games were held in his name. The crowds shouted themselves hoarse for
this red-headed adolescent who appeared day after day in the Imperial box,
impassive and yet giddy with applause, proudly dressed in the triumphal toga
edged with purple and gold.
What could Seneca do? He could neither take his pupil
away, nor condemn the mode of life of an Heir Apparent. Years afterwards Nero
was to say: “My tutor taught me the principles of Stoicism. He told me that our
soul is the image of God, and that real happiness is to be found in the peace
of a pure conscience, and wise is the man who can master his passions. And he
said that I must be offered all temptations and perils, so as to be trained to
master my passions.” But in those days whilst he repeated his tutor’s beautiful
maxims he tasted the furtive pleasures that his tutor counselled him to avoid.
“ You see,” he said one day to a friend, “one should
not preach so much austerity to a young man; it makes him long to savour the
opposite.”
But Seneca was an inveterate schemer. He perceived
that he would lose all influence upon his pupil should he not give him the
means to gain applause and admiration. So he taught him eloquence, and composed
for him splendid and lofty speeches that Nero recited before a select audience,
with well-rehearsed gestures and appropriate inflections of voice. Nero loved
this kind of game, which was fashionable, and many authors and poets used to be
invited in the patrician houses to read their manuscripts and recite their
compositions; and famous lawyers repeated in private their great orations of
the Courts. Seneca engaged for Nero a master of rhetoric, who trained him to
show his bravura in preparing speeches and orations according to all the technique
of sophistry that was the current fashion, and Nero passed whole days learning
the speeches by heart and practising the postures and gestures and accents.
X
At sixteen Nero was solemnly married to Britannicus’s
sister, Octavia. In all truth she was now Nero’s adoptive sister, but the great
Caesar family had always been a confused medley of adulteries and incests.
There was no love whatever between bride and groom.
Octavia was a child of nine, and Nero disliked her intensely. But in
Agrippina’s mind the union was designed to make sure of the Throne for her son.
The nuptials were celebrated according to the strict
religious rites of the patrician classes. Nero and his kin went to the private
temple of the Emperor, where Octavia was waiting with her small court, robed in
a long white gown, and with a woollen girdle around her slender waist. The long
veil of the Vestal Virgins, the fiammeum, enveloped
her entirely, enclosing her in a cloud of purple and gold. Before the
House-Gods, Nero and Octavia promised to accept one another as father and
mother of their future children. There was a banquet at the Palace for friends
and relatives, after which the bride was conducted by little boys and girls to
the nuptial chamber, preceded by freedwomen carrying nuptial torches against
the evil eye. Nero received his bride on the threshold of his apartments, where
the lintel of the door was draped in white. The room was decorated with the
statues of the Gods and Goddesses presiding over the marriage, the draperies
were then let down to prevent indiscretions.
But it was all a farce, for Octavia was led out again
through another door. It was thought useless and shameful to give the young man
such a child-wife, and Agrippina felt that the consummation of the marriage
might spoil the bride’s chance of having children in her proper time. It might
even have scandalized the populace. Octavia would be kept apart, while completing
her education, at least until she should reach puberty.
XI
During the first three months after Nero’s mock
marriage to Octavia, Agrippina pondered a great deal. She felt that it was now
time for action. And Pallas was urging her to it.
All Italy was resounding with festivities and celebrations.
Shortly before Nero’s marriage a great gathering had taken place at Lake Pucino
for the opening of the canal that was to join the Lake with the River Liri.
Nineteen thousand men were amassed on ships for a splendid show of naval
combat. People had come to the shores of the Lake from Latium, Apulia and
Abruzzi, on foot, on mules, on donkeys, on horseback; from cities and villages
peasants and townsfolk had massed on the hill-sides surrounding the Lake to
enjoy the great show and above all to watch the opening of the floodgates that
would let the waters into the canal and bring new fertility to the barren
lands.
The Emperor and the Empress accompanied by Nero had
come to preside over the display. Agrippina was dressed in a garment of golden
tissue that glittered in the sun. The naumachia was a most splendid spectacle.
But when the floodgates were opened, nothing happened. The gradient of the
water had been misjudged; the immense work was to be done again.
Agrippina accused Narcissus, who had been in charge of
the works, of having cheated the Treasury. The First Secretary of State and
Emperor’s favourite answered back, “How dare you accuse me? What about your own
misdeeds? Have you not pushed out of the way the very son of the Emperor?”
The situation was growing tense. But Nero, who was now
the Emperor’s son-in-law as well as his adoptive son, submerged the Senate
under a flood of eloquence, reciting with admirable composure the orations that
Seneca composed for him. The tutor saw quite clearly that his pupil was not in
the least interested in his teaching. In fact, philosophy bored him. For the
time being it was a novelty and an amusement to deliver speeches, and while
the? young man passed the hours in learning them by heart he was doing no
mischief. Nero was thus playing the part of a public advocate. He defended the
rights of cities damaged by fire or oppressed by taxes. He invoked freedom for
the good peoples of Rhodes; and when fie spoke of Ilion, he surpassed himself:
“O Father Conscripts, if true it is that no other sentiment is more sacred to
us than that which joins us with the memory of our forefathers, is not the city
to which Rome owes her very birth deserving that we should love her like a
mother?” After this telling speech the obliging Senators thronged round the
young orator, kissing in admiration the hem of his toga.
XII
Claudius was very old. Moreover, he was becoming
senile. He still ate too much and drank too much and he was too fond of women.
No longer was he the Claudius of former years, always a weakling but also a
.busy scholar and an excellent administrator. Now he abandoned himself to the
pleasures of the banqueting hall, attended by four women—a blonde Syrian, a
huge negress with purple lips, a slim Jewess who made him savour cruel
caresses, and a bronze-coloured Egyptian.
Agrippina watched these scenes with inscrutable eyes.
The ceiling of the banqueting hall opened, roses and perfumed water rained
gently upon the guests. Naked slaves served and danced among the tables.
Ephebes came to lie with the guests, conversing amiably. When the excitement of
the feast seemed to flag, beautiful dancers accomplished the union of Psyche
and Cupid to the accompaniment of flutes and lyres.
Narcissus made a supreme effort to outbid Agrippina.
He chose the moment when the Augusta, as Agrippina was now called, had obtained
the sentence of death against her sister-in-law Domitia Lepida. Narcissus took
his chance, and attacked Agrippina openly. He calculated that this
unjustifiable sentence would make the Empress unpopular. The only crime of
Lepida was that she exercised upon Nero an influence that displeased Agrippina.
Nero was commencing to show an inclination to poetry. His aunt Lepida felt that
such an outlet might do him good, and prompted him to cultivate his taste for
Art. Nero was delighted by his aunt’s encouragement and praise.
There were in Agrippina’s life crimes big and small,
some dictated by her determination to remove all obstacles from her path,
others that arc difficult to explain. What caused Agrippina to do away with her
sister-in-law Lepida, paternal aunt to Nero? Lepida had received Nero as a
little boy in her house and the young man was not insensible to the friendship
that had grown between them in his bad days. But with Agrippina, maternal love
was a mixture of personal ambition, egotism and pride. Perhaps there were two
other reasons. One was that Lepida could rival with Agrippina in wealth,
influence and beauty; and the other was that Agrippina knew only too well that
Lepida’s morals were as bad as her own and that Lepida was capable of the same
crimes that she herself might commit. Agrippina decided therefore that it was
time to be rid of her sister-in-law. An absurd accusation of sorcery was
brought against Lepida, and Lepida was lost. The Palace, awed with terror,
remained silent.
One morning, before the crowd of courtiers, Narcissus
advanced towards Prince Britannicus, paid him reverence, embraced him and cried
aloud: “O disinherited Prince, when shall you have the courage to chase from
this Palace those who have taken your place? May the Gods protect you till the
day when you will call around yourself all those who are disgusted by incest,
prostitution and treasons!”
A few days after this scene Narcissus was taken ill.
His doctors advised his immediate departure for Sinuessa,
in the Campania, along the shores of the Thyrrenian sea.
The situation in the Palace was now very tense.
Claudius showed an unusual affection for his son Britannicus and one evening at
dinner in drunken mood he went so far as to say that it was his destiny to
watch the misbehaviour of his wives and punish them afterwards. He muttered
vague words about giving Britannicus the toga virilis and presenting the young boy to the people of Rome “Who will, at last, have a
real Caesar.”
The hour had come.
Agrippina dined with her husband, a thing that
occasionally still pleased the old man; moreover, it was a good excuse for
keeping away from the banqueting hall the usual favourites whose tongues were
loose. Soon after the hors-d’oeuvres a dish of mushrooms was brought to the
table, of a variety of which Claudius was extremely fond. Halotus,
the taster at the Imperial table, tasted some of the sauce and presented the
dish with his own hands to the Emperor. Agrippina ate some smaller mushrooms
and looked approvingly to Claudius pointing to the biggest ones. Claudius ate
them with relish and asked for more. Agrippina lay on the couch, and watched
him anxiously. Had Locusta been equal to her reputation of infallible poisoner?
With Narcissus away to relieve his gout in Campania, Agrippina had found it
easier to win over to the conspiracy not only Pallas but Claudius’s own doctor,
Xenophon. Seneca had not been actually informed, but the old fox was certainly
well aware.
The poison, Locusta had said, would act almost
instantaneously. But it was not until an hour later, when the poison had
entered the blood, that they saw Claudius shiver and turn pale and hold his
stomach with both hands, his teeth chattering. The diners, knowing well the
irascible temper of the old man, sent hurriedly for doctor Xenophon.
In that body always full of viands and wine, the
violence of the poison seemed lost and produced only strong evacuations.
Claudius stopped groaning. Agrippina thought he would survive.
In the meantime, the doctor arrived and examined the
Emperor cursorily. It was, he said, only a touch of indigestion. “Let me, O
Divine, tickle your throat with a feather; you will empty your stomach and feel
better at once.” But the feather had been dipped into the same poison. Claudius
allowed the doctor to give him the treatment, vomited and said he felt better.
In fact he spoke of going on with the dinner. But the cramps in his stomach
returned. “What you need,” said the doctor, “is a wash-out and some rest.” Then
Xenophon turned to the Court: “It is merely a passing ailment. Tomorrow the
Divine Claudius will celebrate his recovery with a new banquet.”
The slaves lifted the Emperor from the couch, and
carried him to his apartment. No one saw him alive again.
The agony lasted forty-eight hours and was
excruciating. That enormous body, rotted by gluttony and amorous excesses,
still had an extraordinary resilience. Agrippina spent long hours at Claudius’s
bedside. She touched his forehead, almost caressingly, waiting for the moment
when it would turn cold. She held his hands in her own, feeling his pulse which
was beating hard and strong against her fingers. Would death never come? Would
it not be better to order a slave to suffocate him with a pillow, as Caligula
had done with Tiberius? Afterwards she could easily be rid of the slave ...
Luckily the pains prevented Claudius from speaking.
When he tried to sit up, a sudden giddiness brought him down again. He moved,
he rolled, and a deep nausea shook that immense stomach. Like a man tormented
by sea-sickness, the retching efforts left him exhausted. His hands pressed his
liver. Agrippina passed her fingers under the linen, touching the swollen body;
under the taut skin she could feel a bigness, hard as a stone.
Claudius rattled. A foetid smell rose from the bed.
No, Agrippina had nothing more to fear. The Emperor could no longer utter a
word, no longer make an intelligible sign. At the end of the second day he
passed away.
Agrippina ran to the children’s room, hysterical with
relief and happiness; she hugged the children amidst kisses and tears: “My
little Britannicus! O image of your Father! Octavia, my darling, whom I love as
my own daughter!”
On the terrace where they had their lessons, Seneca
was busy making Nero rehearse the speech that he must deliver to the soldiers
in the camp and to the Senate.
At this time the Senate was making offerings to the
Gods and thanked Jupiter for the better news of Claudius. The people were told
that the Emperor was confined to his bed.
The deception went on all day and throughout the
night. The civic crown of Augustus and the naval crown of Claudius still stood
outside the Palace.
The following day at noon, the groups of idle people
always lingering before the Palace saw the great doors thrown open and upon the
threshold appeared not the sleepy Claudius but his adoptive son, with eyes
downcast, his face pale and grave. Among the crowd some furtive messengers from
the Court whispered the news: “Claudius is dead! Claudius is dead...” But
suddenly the Praetorian Guards massed themselves around the Palace Square
commanded by Burrus their General, in full dress. With breastplates glittering
they raised their halberds and standards and let their cries ring out to the
people of Rome:
“Long live Nero, Emperor and Caesar!
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