US$13.00THE HEART OF MARY |
AMAZONTHE HEART OF MARY.LIFE AND TIMES OF THE HOLY FAMILY
|
Book Four
THE FIRE OF ROME
I
IT commenced with the arrival of Peter, when Claudius
was still on the throne.
Peter had arrived in the month of January, from
Antioch. He was a man without education or birth, poor and common in
appearance. He landed at Ostia; then he came up the River on a fisherman’s
barge. The boat reached the Gardens of Servilius, where the Anio joined the
Tiber, and he saw Rome extending before his eyes. On the right bank the
building-yards, the immense docks, the warehouses of the Emporium, and above
them the temples and monuments crowning the Aventine. On the left, the gardens
of Caesar’s Palace, beyond which rose the fortress of the Janiculum. The barge
went as far as the Velabrum, where the fish-market was, and there the
mysterious traveller lost himself in the crowd.
Peter went to live in the Jewish district, between the
Janiculum and the Vatican. He did not like the Jews, nor did they like him, for
the Jewish colony of Rome, like all the Jewish colonies the world over, had an
excellent information service, and Peter’s journey had been preceded by a
detailed account of the simple man’s activities in Judaea, and his attachment
to the hated and false prophet Jesus of Nazareth.
Moreover, Peter had come to Rome to preach, and he was
thus opposing the popularity of Simon Magus. Peter had met the great impostor
in Samaria, when Simon, surprised at the rapid progress of the new faith and
attracted by the miracles performed by another of the Master’s disciples,
Philip, had offered Peter a large sum of money to teach him the science of
healing by the laying on of hands. Peter had repulsed him in horror, and Simon,
hurt in his pride, yet feeling that the new faith would make much progress, had
decided to forestall the true disciples, and had come to Rome to preach it on
the most attractive basis, the working of miracles.
But Simon was no genuine healer, nor could he work
miracles, and his intrigues were the main cause of the measures ordered by
Emperor Claudius against the followers of the new faith. For the Jews and the
new proselytes quarrelled wildly upon the great point whether the man Jesus,
who was crucified, had been the true Messiah that the Jewish nation expected.
At times the quarrel became as wild as a seditious disturbance, and the
Magistrates, for whom both Jews and Christians were a great nuisance, urged Claudius
to sign a decree expelling the agitators from Rome.
Peter was a simple man, but he had an extraordinary
capacity for making contacts and friendships. Soon he came to know the wealthy
Easterners who lived in the Esquiline and Viminal districts and in their houses
he made the acquaintance of Senator Pudens and his wife Claudia, both of whom
he soon converted to the new faith. Spiritually, the time was most suitable to
the new faith, even among the educated classes, for the animism that was the
essence of the Christian preaching appealed as an attractive novelty to the
Latin minds, which had lost faith in their materialistic Gods. Pudens offered
Peter hospitality in his house, and Peter accepted it, in the first place to
get away from the orthodox Jews who were his bitter enemies, and secondly
because he fully realized that his real work lay among the Roman people.
Meetings and services took place in the house of
Senator Pudens. Peter sat in the chair of Pudens himself, debating and
teaching, and administering baptism and communion. That chair became an object
of veneration to his followers, and it is now in St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome,
enclosed in the stupendous bronze cathedra that Bernini made for it, almost
suspended in mid-air, above the Altar of the Confession.
Next to Peter stood his three coadjutors, Linus,
Cletus and Clemens, to whom he left the care of his disciples and church when
he was away from Rome. Round them stood the newly created deacons and
deaconesses, the latter covered with veils and the former enveloped in the wide
and colourful cloaks of the Dalmats—their mantles were for ever named
dalmatics. The congregation was composed of men from all classes and lands,
workmen in simple tunics stood next to patricians and senators with togas
bordered with purple, slaves and knights, Gauls and Egyptians, Armenians and
Numidians, men of all languages and customs.
The man who presided over those meetings had nothing
that might attract the attention, neither nobility of manner nor intellectual
genius. Peter was a plain and simple man, almost a rustic; but he said that he
had followed the Master and lived with Him and because he was so simple a man,
other men believed him. And he was a man of miracles, too. They brought to him
people who were ill and ailing and he cured them by the simple touch of his
hands. They ranged them along the road where he would pass, and even his shadow
was enough to heal them. He was always dressed in a simple tunic and a kind of
blouse or penula, and over his shoulders he wore a pallium or mantle.
His crisp, iron-grey hair made a halo around his bald patch. His face had an
expression of simplicity and goodness, but his eyes, often filled with tears,
seemed pools enclosing a secret grief. When they enquired of his sorrow, and
asked him if he was not delighted to see his disciples growing to such large
numbers, he replied that nothing would ever make him forget that he had
disowned the Master. He was most anxious to select among his disciples those
who would preach and convert others; and while they spread his faith, they
worked at all trades, or tilled the fields, and all said that they wanted to
serve and not to be served.
When the new faith was properly constituted in Rome
—Peter called it “ his family”—he departed and visited all Italy and the
Western Provinces and then returned to the East. In Rome his coadjutors
continued his work. They preached that patricians and slaves were all brothers
in the eyes of God. And they announced the resurrection of the dead and the
immortality of man. They said that work was holy and pain good for the soul.
They instructed the humble and the slaves in truths that were more profound
than even Plato himself had considered. They disclaimed any merit for such
truths, and said that they came to them from the Master, who was the Son of God
and had been crucified by the Jews and yet had been resurrected on the third
day to return to His rightful place in heaven. They said that there were no
empires and no Roman power, for the whole earth was but the Kingdom of God.
Deacons and Deaconesses were appointed to instruct the
neophytes and assist the needy. It was a spiritual legion, stubbornly fighting
its way amidst pagan life. They visited and helped anybody who was in need. In
choosing those who made the visits they considered the condition, sex and age
of the person to be visited so as to make the visit sweeter and more helpful.
The deaconesses visited the young girls and women and took charge of abandoned
children.
Since the early days of the Republic, the people of
Rome had been divided into tribes and each tribe into ten Curiae. The Curiae
had special buildings for prayers and religious ceremonies. The residents of a
district were expected to take part in those ceremonies and to honour the Gods
of their Curiae. The priests in charge of a pagan parish were called Curions.
Next to this special cult of the district there were temples of the great Gods,
protectors of Rome, to which all the people went on days of celebrations. Peter
retained this organization, and in each district he created meeting-places for
divine services, while they served also as dining-halls for the poor. This was
not a novelty in a strict sense, for each Roman Curia used to hold solemn
dinners, which were an ancient tradition instituted by Romulus and Remus, and
the Christians called them Agapi, followed by the Eucharistia.
To escape persecution the growing followers of Peter
went underground. They sought the catacombs and the grottoes of the Vatican
Hill, which was considered a desecrated place, for people said that, under
Claudius, a great snake was found in a cavern and when it was killed and
opened, a whole child was found in its belly. The entry to the main cavern was
obscured by a huge oak and the people said that the tree was older than Rome
herself. An inscription, upon a plaque of lead, in Etruscan characters, said that
the tree had been an object of veneration since time immemorial. Under that
tree priests and soothsayers used to deliver oracles. Their chants had indeed
given to the deserted hill the name of Vatican—vatis cantus. The apostles of
the new faith made it their favourite abode, and invented a new catchword—they
said that under the new faith the name of the City would soon be changed—Roma,
Amor.
The Romans found the Christian preaching offensive to
their pride and hurtful to their form of life, and yet the preachers gained the
confidence of the lower classes, by raising their lives to the level of their
own preaching, never asking a price for their lessons as street-corner
philosophers used to do, but sharing their last copper with the poor. Those who
attended the secret meetings for curiosity found nothing reprehensible in them.
The strangest thing, in the materialistic world of
Rome, was that many proselytes sold their houses and lands and distributed the
proceeds among the needy, and' declared that there was joy in giving their
earthly goods away, for they were thereby acquiring more beautiful ones. They
undertook to live a blameless life, spoke of miracles, exalted their faith and
said they felt very happy. It was a new philosophy of life.
The Roman world was a great ordered Empire, yet Rome
was in agony. To the confusion of races and peoples, a Roman pattern of
statesmanship had been applied and notwithstanding the laxity in morals, the
main concepts of life survived, the State, the family, the Gods. Rome was heavy
with the centuries that had been filled by wars, conquests, civil strife, the
chasing out of her Kings and the advent of a Republican rule which in course of
time had turned back to the more spectacular attraction of a mock-monarchy
called Caesarism, the obsession of a patriotic ideal and a religious creed that
had submitted the individual to the ideology of the State. Rome was full of the
errors of an imperialism which had become too big to be contained, infected by
the vices of Greece and of the East, weakened by the abandon and corruption of
an aristocracy that was now too old and debased, with the gradual disappearance
of ancient virtues, the absurdity and slow deterioration of a religion which
was a Pantheon of impossible Gods and empty formulae and gestures.
It was at this point that the pagan world realized
that the new faith was attacking its very existence, because it considered the
Roman world as the Kingdom of Satan. And at this point Rome, so lenient and
broadminded and tolerant, turned for once to persecution, because the new
religion preached by a small band of obscure Eastern zealots was overthrowing
the whole Roman conception of life.
II
In the year 61 another man arrived from the East. His
name was Paul. Burrus was then still alive and Praefect of the Praetorians.
The man Paul came to Rome in chains, by order of Nero
Caesar. He had left the port of Caesarea in Palestine, with a Centurion set to
guard him during the journey, and was shipwrecked. Paul and his guard spent
three months of winter at Malta, in the local jail. At last, they took sail
again. A ship from Alexandria called at Malta, and the Centurion embarked with
his prisoner. They made a call at Syracuse, where they spent three days, then
at Reggio in Calabria, where they waited one whole day for the wind to rise,
and at last they proceeded towards the Bay of Pozzuoli near Naples. It was a
leisurely way of travelling, and the Centurion allowed his charge to mix with
the crowds who were soon intrigued by the strange apostle who lost no time in
telling them of his prowess and renown. Indeed, they delayed Paul in Pozzuoli
for seven days. The Centurion closed an eye, half amused and half doubting, not
knowing what really to make of his peculiar charge. When at long last they left
Naples for Rome, Paul was in chains again. But on each side of him marched now
two disciples, Aristarchus and Luke, who had begged the Centurion’s permission
to share the fate of their master.
In Rome, Peter had arranged a great welcome to Paul.
The Christians were to meet him at the Forum of Appius, some twenty leagues
from the City. Paul entered Rome on the sixth day of July, during the yearly
celebrations in honour of Apollo. All the people were garlanded with laurel. On
arriving in the City, the Centurion handed over his prisoner to the Praefect of
the Praetorium, for Paul was a prisoner of State. And Paul was a personal
prisoner of the Emperor because he had called Nero Caesar his greatest enemy.
The Centurion gave a report of the good conduct and
courage of the prisoner during the voyage; and Paul was spared the indignity of
a prison, and permitted to reside in a little house, but chained to his guard.
Each day the guard was changed, and in this way there was no chance of the
prisoner persuading the guard to allow him to escape. The guard was supposed to
protect Paul against the Jews, the declared enemies of the new Christian
religion.
Paul was given residence in one of the busiest
districts of Rome, between the Forum and the Fields-of.Mars, and there he lived
two years, quite close to the spot which is now the Corso. During those two
years he preached to all who had patience to listen to the strange prophet.
To supplement his needs, he was permitted to weave
ropes and canvas for huts. Now and then he was allowed a walk through the City,
always chained to his guard. He spent many hours writing, and one long epistle
he addressed to his friend Philemon, begging his pardon for the misdeeds of an
escaped slave named Onesimus, who had taken shelter in Rome after robbing his
master. The poor devil had lived for a while on the proceeds of his robbery.
Then, reduced to destitution, he had addressed himself to Paul, who converted
him and made him a dignitary of the new faith, and ordered him to present
himself to his master and put himself at his mercy.
Some time after the arrival of Paul, the Emperor felt
curious to learn something of this extraordinary prisoner. The Praetor thought
he could best describe this new prophet by reading to Nero some passages of a
letter Paul had written to his followers in Corinth. The letter had been
intercepted, but later the Police had considered it better to let it go on its
way. One passage said: “Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save
one. Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I stoned, thrice I suffered
shipwreck, a night and a day I have been in the deep; in journey often, in
perils of waters, in perils of robbers, in perils by my own countrymen, in
perils by the heathen, in perils of the city, in perils in the wilderness, in
perils in the sea, in perils among false brethren; in weariness and
painfulness, in watching often, in hunger and thirst, in fasting often, in cold
and nakedess; in Damascus the Governor under Aretas the King kept the City of
the Damascenes with a garrison, desirous to apprehend me, and through a window
in a basket was I let down by the wall, and escaped his hands! ”
Said Nero: “Is the man in earnest, or is he a boaster?”
Yet, the Emperor was told, the greatest danger was
Peter.
The Emperor was duly acquainted with the activities of
Peter and the spreading of the new faith.
“Is it true that they meet in the catacombs?” The
Praetor explained that the Christians buried their dead in a common ground
along the Via Appia, a few miles from the Capuan Gate, and as they were too
poor to build tombs above the ground, they built them under the ground, which
was soft and strong; they had honeycombed the earth, and held their religious
services there. It was difficult to say how many those Christians were, a few
thousand certainly, mostly slaves and artisans. The most peculiar point, the
Emperor was told, was that there was no figuration of their God. They adored an
invisible God. And this constituted a danger, for the great quarrel of the Jews
was indeed that Rome put the image of the Emperor on the coins and called it
Divine. At times the Christians went by symbols—a fish, for instance.
Another point to be watched, the Praetor further explained,
was that the new faith was an association of men and women who were asking
nothing whatever from Nero Caesar. An association of men who seemed to find
happiness in an abstract thought—in the idea of goodness and love. Peter and
Paul asked the Stoic to be humble, the lazy people of Rome to work. They
preached a brotherly love amongst all men because, they said, all men were
equal in the eyes of God.
The Emperor found it all very interesting, but his
Councillors were full of forebodings. Cicero, some said, used to reproach
himself for feeling regretful over the slave he had lost; who denies that a
slave can be as good as his master? Let the slave prove his worth and gain his
freedom. Were there not many freedmen among the Emperor’s councillors and
ministers ? The great problem was that the people of Rome had grown lazy.
People outside Rome lived an ordinary and healthy life. They worked, they were
peasants or craftsmen, they still thought of life as one should. But the people
in Rome did not produce anything any more. They now merely passed on the goods
which were made elsewhere by foreign labour. Rome was too powerful and too
wealthy; and the people had actually fallen into the error of considering
greatness and wealth as their own personal property. The State was merely a
bailiff and an impresario charged with the duty of keeping the people well fed
and amused. Perhaps the fault was that Rome was too full of foreigners. Without
exaggeration, said Nero’s Councillors, when one wanted to hear people speak
Latin one must go into the country and meet the peasants. Everything was Greek
in Rome; even the wives, said the beaux esprits, misconducted themselves a la
grecque! The streets of Rome were full of foreigners. Business men and
intriguers of all sorts seemed to have congregated to exploit the vices of the
great and the corruption of the sovereign people—soothsayers from Thessalia who
sold philtres, Magi from Chaldea who foretold the future, circus acrobats,
psyllae who charmed snakes, dancers from Antioch and Cadix, beautiful
courtesans from Asia Minor, the motley crowd of Greeks who knew so well how to
get into family secrets and thrive on polite blackmail; the versatile Greek who
knew to perfection the gentle art Of managing the lady of the house and her
husband as well as the children and even be willing to court grandmother! The
Greeks, so persuasive, so charming, so indispensable. No household could be
without them. They were butlers, tutors, secretaries and lovers, all at once or
by turn; imposing their fashions, their tastes, their opinions, their habits
which, alas, were not as lofty as their philosophies. At sunset, by the temple
of Castor, the slave-dealers got ready their stalls for the following
market-day. All the slaves were foreigners. They were displayed upon platforms
with feet bare and whitewashed, and tablets hanging from their necks
describing the marvellous virtues or vices of each. When a dealer had a lot of
no particular interest he described it “ suitable as eunuchs.” And in Rome,
nobody worked, nobody wanted to work, only amusement, panem et circenses.
Quite so, quite so, said the Councillors and Ministers
of Nero Caesar, but who was going to change it ?
III
The Emperor was at Tivoli, because the waters were
good for his voice. At the Pavilion the tables had been laid in the garden,
under a pleasant canopy of striped linen and rambling roses and honeysuckle.
Nearby there was a large aviary shaped like a temple, full of rare singing
birds. Marble basins were filled with live fish of all kinds, which the guests
could choose and hand to the cooks. No sooner had the party taken seats on the
dining couches than one elegant wit called for hemlock. The Emperor looked up,
“Has any Centurion already conveyed to you an order to depart from this world?”
“O no,” the gentleman answered; “I want hemlock because it’s an antidote to
wine, and so I will drink myself to death!”
On the tables course followed course, fish, poultry
and game, a roast pig stuffed with live quails that flew away when the
siniscalch cut open its belly. A troupe of chefs solemnly entered the pavilion,
preceded by a troupe of musicians playing flutes. The chefs carried a whole
boar upon a huge silver salver. The boar was stuffed with pheasants, the
pheasants were stuffed with quails and the quails were filled with ortolans; a
marvel of marvels. Near each table a cook watched over the hot-plates, to keep
the seasoned dishes warm. In a crystal bowl a huge fish was cooked under the
eyes of the guests.
As the dinner proceeded, the gluttons retired to the
vomitorium and then returned to gorge themselves again. Others simply let the
attendants wash their hands and faces with perfumed waters, and passed to a
second tent where the tables were even more sumptuous. Golden lamps high above
burned perfumed oils. The guests were crowned afresh with tea-roses, the air
was cooled by feather-fans moved by slaves, the dishes were lighter and more
savoury. The attendants no longer poured falemum into the cups or massicum cooled with snow. They served sherbets made with snow mixed with delicious
syrups and light wines. In the middle of the hall dancers from Antioch
performed a ballet to the tunes of zithers and flutes. They passed around the
tables to allow the guests to admire their lovely figures. In a comer half a
dozen players were gambling for high stakes. The onlookers shrieked' with
laughter when a throw of the dice had deprived one player of his villa at
Capua. Another player proffered to gamble his own life. How brilliant! Would he
really pay?
A great storm had gathered in the sky. The thunder
rolled on the left. The Emperor paled at the bad omen. But to show his disdain
for omens and rumours, the following day he dared to bathe in the waters of the
Marcia fountain. His fashionable physician from Marseilles was against the
stove-bath, and recommended to his patients cold baths, even in winter. But the
very cold waters of the Marcia did not suit the Emperor, who was taken ill. Was
the omen at the dinner-party true ?
During his illness the Court met regularly around the
Emperor’s bed. They discoursed upon Death, the future of the Republic, on who
would—one day—succeed to the Throne. The latter subject was always an
interesting one. If no heir was born, the Caesar House, so painfully continued
through all kinds of adoptions, would inevitably be extinguished with Nero. Who
would the Emperor designate as his successor? The Emperor leaned on his elbow
and laughed. “Why do you want me to mention a name? I would only gain one
friend and lose a hundred!”
But happily there was no need to name a successor, for
soon afterwards the Empress Poppaea gave birth to a child. It was the year 63.
It was not the much-desired heir, as the baby was a girl, but Nero was beside
himself with joy. The baby was born at Anzio, at the villa on the rocky
promontory that Nero had made fashionable, because it was his own birthplace.
Many nobles had followed the Emperor’s lead and made Anzio a delightful winter
resort. The famous Apollo by Praxiteles was there, upon the main terrace of the
Emperor’s villa.
Nero called the baby Claudia and gave her the title of
Augusta, and said he would follow the practice of the Pharaohs and make his
baby daughter heir to the Throne. The Senate ordered a public thanksgiving, two
golden statues for the Goddess Fortune, and voted a temple to Fecundity and
annual games in honour of the Domitia and Claudia Families, to be celebrated at
Anzio.
Nero was immeasurably happy. He said it was an event
that put him at peace with the Gods.
But on the day that the entire Senate came to
felicitate the Emperor, Nero desired that the presence of a certain member of
the opposition should not cloud his happiness. Senator Thrasea was requested to
withdraw.
Why did Nero show such peevishness on a day of
national jubilation? He had, quite true, an account to settle with Senator
Thrasea over the affair of Praetor Antistius; but the animadversion had a
deeper cause. In the first place, Thrasea had married, under Claudius, the
daughter of Cecina Peto and of the famous Arria, a woman who possessed the
courage of her mother who, when her husband was compromised in the revolt of
the Legions in Illiria and was brought to Rome in chains, had followed him into
prison, and when there was no longer any chance to save him, she tendered him
the dagger with which she had already stabbed herself, saying “Take it, Peto,
it does not hurt 1 ” When friends warned Thraseas that he must beware of Nero,
prompted by his wife he replied, “Nero can put me to death, but he cannot destroy
me.” The Emperor, Thrasea thought, was blind to the situation in Rome. Rome was
full of passions, and passions generate discontent. Many people were waiting
for a leader who would deliver them from what they called tyranny, for it is
typical of some men to call tyrannical every government to which they find
themselves in opposition. And the discontented politicians of Rome looked upon
Thrasea as a leader of their secret party. There was Cornutus, a distinguished
gentleman of no importance, the undistinguished poet Caesius Bassanus, two more
poets, Persius and Lucan, united more by their love of letters than by their
mode of life; and several others. Persius had a gentle temperament; he was
very-handsome and as chaste as a virgin, and he loved his mother and sisters
with an exemplary love. Cornutus, his master, had introduced him to Lucan, who
was Seneca’s nephew. They gave public readings of their poems, a fashion which
was much favoured by the Emperor. Lucan had introduced Persius to Seneca, but
the young man had found too great a contrast between Seneca’s writings and his
private life, and considered that the old man’s virtue was merely a pose.
In the second place, Thrasea made a great show of his
being a Stoic. To his friends he spoke openly of his conception of life that
stood poles asunder from the Emperor’s. “ Those who love the pleasures of life
and do not hold Death in disdain, cannot walk along the steep path of freedom.
In the contemplation of the cold peaks of Truth there is a sublime and virile
pleasure incomparably more satisfying than any voluptuousness.”
To this the Court circles replied that the Greeks had
invented Stoicism but were sensible enough to practise it very little. In
truth, it was said at Court with much contempt, Stoicism as it was practised
in Rome had nothing to do with the doctrine of Zeno. It was a vague pantheism
made up to suit one’s political opinions. One was tired of listening to the
usual cant about the fierce austerity of Cato the Elder. Cato, after all, was a
martyr to pride. He had ceased to be a man of his times, to become a myth. But
was the great Cato—somebody asked with sarcasm—was he such a paragon of virtue?
More than once he was picked up drunk in the streets. He was a usurer, a cynic
who approved of young men frequenting the brothels. He kept his slaves
underfed, inciting them to hate one another. He libelled Socrates and denounced
Scipio. And as a widower, he did not disdain having a young female slave coming
to his bed. As for his great-grandson, Cato the Younger had despaired of his
own country, and loved the empty name of Freedom more than that of Rome. When
Rome fell under a Dictatorship, he considered it unworthy of him, and
repudiated his country like a son abandons an infirm and debauched parent. The
result was that by declaring before his suicide that a man must choose between
servitude and death, Cato fortified Caesar by this insane exaggeration of
personal freedom. Yes, it would be some time before the busybodies of the “ancient
freedom” could raise their heads.
IV
The Emperor’s joy was shortlived. His daughter died
when she was but a few weeks old. Poppaea spoke of the evil-eye. The Christians
were mentioned again before the Emperor.
The loss of his child threw Nero into the darkest
grief. He said he felt demented. Tigellinus suggested that he should seek some
relief in amusements. Nero uttered that there was nothing but to let the days
go by. The Gods were forsaking him.
One night he said, “There remains nothing now but for
the world to hear my singing!” Rome, he said, did not understand the poetry
that was in his heart. He would go to Naples, first, in the ancient Parthenope,
the city of songs, where at night one could still hear the Sirens singing. Then
he would go to Greece. Yes, he would sing at Olympia: “That ancient theatre
shall at last have the glory of hearing an Emperor sing.” The Greeks will love
his voice—it was such a long time since Apollo had deserted them! Now Apollo
was walking the earth again in the person of Nero Caesar, and the Earth will be
charmed. The Emperor will lead the choirs at Delos, and the Agathyrses, the
Dropes, the Cretans shall dance their solemn dances around him.
He spoke of visiting Egypt and of playing at
Alexandria. The Orient, he said, fascinated him. The com of Egypt fed the
people of Rome. Its mysterious religion attracted the minds of the savants.
Alexandria still was the centre of the world. Her port, her light-house—one of
the seven wonders of the world—the unique library, Alexander’s tomb, the
philosophical school, the floods of the Nile of which no one knew the sources,
Egypt’s history and monuments, everything was seducing Nero’s imagination. More
than anything else, the memory of Ptolomeus Auletes attracted him, the King who
was, like him, an artist. And the story of Mark Antony and his picturesque love
for Cleopatra ... “I will leave Italy,” Nero said to his friends, “ I want to
build a new Capital of the Empire in the East. My new City will be the greatest
on earth. The East alone can give the measure of my dream!” It was the first
idea, almost the prophecy of what was to happen three centuries later—the
transfer of the Capital of the Empire from Rome to the East. The poetical
attraction of the Orient, more artistic, more enlightened, as counterpoised to
the stiff Roman traditionalism, with the indifference of the people for Art.
Now, said Nero, he must prepare the people for his
absence, and by an Edict he announced his intended departure for Alexandria. He
climbed the Capitol to take leave of Jupiter, thence he descended into the
Forum to make his devotions at the altar of Vesta. In that mysterious temple
were preserved the most sacred things, the pledges of the perpetuity of the
Empire; things so sacred that not even the First Magistrates dared to look at
them. One day Nero had felt overwrought, and an impulse made him penetrate
those mysteries. But no one learnt what he saw in the temple of Vesta. In Rome
it was murmured that the real reason of this sacrilege was a mad desire for the
Vestal Rubria, and that he had taken her by violence.
But the day that he went to the temple of Vesta to ask
the Goddess to protect his journey, he was seized with a strange fear. When he
rose to leave the temple, a corner of his toga was somehow caught. Nero felt as
if an invisible hand was keeping him by force, and trembling in every limb, and
believing that he was seeing an apparition—the terrible Ghost of his
nightmares—he fainted upon the floor.
After this, the idea of the voyage to Egypt was abandoned.
A rumour was put around that the Emperor had seen the grief of the people at
the thought of being separated from him, and his love of Rome was greater in
his heart than any other love. Two Centurions were sent to Egypt to try to
reach the sources of the Nile. The Emperor went only to Naples.
Naples was a strange mixture of Roman and Greek—
crowded with Greeks from Alexandria, whose chief interest was to sell their
corn to the Emperor at a good price. The Emperor sang to them with such
enthusiasm that, notwithstanding a mild earthquake which occurred during the
performance, he went on through the grand’ aria without interruption.
The walls of the theatre seemed to rise up from the ground and quiver. There
were screams of terror, but the crowd was held back from panic by the sight of
the green-robed Emperor who continued to pluck at his harp-strings. To the
excitable Greeks Nero was almost a Hero. Besides, no one was hurt. Nero
declared that it was a sign of Apollo’s approval.
It was also a good opportunity to test the claque on a
big scale. The Legion of the Augustals had been increased to fifteen hundred
officers and men. It was now militarily divided into cohorts. The Captain of
each cohort received a salary of forty thousand sesterces and the rank and file
were paid accordingly. An elegant uniform had been designed for the Augustals.
They wore their hair long and floating in true artists’ style, and a ring on
the middle finger of their left hands. They were now properly trained not only
to applaud, but to express amusement, appreciation and enthusiasm: each
sentiment had its suitable range—the murmur, the exclamation and the
castanettes.
After Naples, Nero went on to Beneventum. One of his
favourites, Vatinius, gave in his honour a great fete. Vatinius was a gross
buffoon, lewd of speech, whom Nero had met during his nocturnal escapades in
Rome. Now he had become an influential personage. This Vatinius hated the
Senate. It was a bugbear with him. One day he told the Emperor: “I hate you, O
Divine Caesar!” “Why, pray?” “Because you are a Senator.” Nero laughed at the
joke: “Vatinius is a step in my descent towards popular taste. My first
admiration was for Seneca. Then I passed on to Tigellinus, now to Vatinius. The
next step will be a monkey.”
In Benevento the Emperor made ready to leave for
Greece; but at the last minute he hesitated, terrified by the fear of a fiasco
before a Greek audience. He decided to return to Rome to train further his
voice.
To celebrate his return, he gave the people fantastic
feasts, in the Forum and on the Capitol. It was a whole year of continuous
festival. All Rome was submerged in a furious Bacchanal. Then, the Neronian
Games were announced. Everyone connected with the Circus, the keepers of the
beasts, the athletes who filled the training gymnasia, the mimes, the clowns,
the comedians, the dancers, the singers, all those who lived and thrived around
the public games, gave vent to their enthusiasm. Those theatrical people
constituted a vast multitude for whom nothing else counted but Nero and his
prodigious talent. In the Public Baths, under the porticoes, in the taverns, in
the sports clubs, in the basilicae, in the markets, in the Forum, people talked
of nothing else but Nero. There was a true Caesar, an Emperor who entirely
lived for the people!
The day the Games commenced, Nero went to preside over
them. He was received with tremendous applause. But after greeting him, a
hundred thousand spectators rose as one man, and begged the Emperor to let them
hear his celestial voice. Nero answered that he would sing at night in the
Palace gardens. The crowd was not satisfied, and called for a song at once. A
song in the people’s own ground, the Circus—Caesar must bow to the demand of
the sovereign people. Nero showed some reluctance but the Praetorians on duty
at the Circus joined in the public request. It was exactly what Nero was
waiting for. As it was of the highest importance to please the Praetorian
Guards, he would make them share the responsibility of his actions. He
announced that he would compete for the Circus prizes. Solemnly his name was
added to the list.
When his turn came, Nero mounted the stage. When he
had previously appeared in a theatre, Burrus and Seneca had assisted him, to
give greater solemnity to the unprecedented event. This time Foenius and
Tigellinus appeared on the Circus stage with the Emperor. They carried his
harp. The Military Tribunes and the Emperor’s intimate Court pressed around him.
Nero sang first a dramatic aria, then he recited some
poems, and lastly acted a tragic part. The applause went to his head, and he
felt he must surpass himself and astonish the people. A kind of fatality urged
him to play the parts of Atreus and of Oedipus and Orestes. The public were
both amazed and fascinated. It was a unique experience to see the Emperor play
the parts of the characters whose tragedies and crimes were so similar to those
of the man acting them on the stage. Each gesture and each word suggested a
confession. It was no longer a dramatic performance, it was a tragic reality.
But the populace was thrilled. The novelty, the
strangeness of the spectacle, Nero’s popularity, all excited the crowd beyond
measure. At the end there was delirious applause. As an actor Nero had
triumphed. And he felt that from that moment he had attained the pinnacle of
popularity.
It was true. Nero, the adored Prince, the applauded
actor, poet and songster, was the sensation of the day. He had truly touched
the very depth of the people’s heart. When he returned to the Palace he gave
vent to his feelings, “Perhaps,” he said, “I personify the last expression of
Paganism. And I know how to keep Rome attentive and charmed.”
V
Resigning himself to the opposition of the diehards,
Nero now turned all his attention to preserving his popularity.
He put on shows, distributed food, granted new favours
to the troops. And again and again he appeared on the stage. To his critics he
replied: “ There is a subtle wisdom in my conduct—so long as the great actor is
applauded, the Emperor is safe.”
He had no longer any serious thought but that of his “professional”
standing. Nothing flattered him more than to be treated as a distinguished
artist. Some astrologers dared to say that one day Fortune would deprive him of
the Empire. He replied with the words that have become immortal, “An artist can
live anywhere.”
He gave infinite attention to his artistry on the
stage. The mask, which, according to custom, he must wear on the stage, was now
the exact reproduction of his own face, but in the mask of the Goddess or
Heroine worn by the actor who was playing with him, he still wanted to see the
features of Poppaea.
During the whole of this year the Emperor lived, so to
speak, on the stage. He had his food served to him at the theatre, at the
gymnasium, in the Forum, anywhere in view of the delighted populace. One day
when he was having his meal at the Palace, which overlooked the Murcia Valley,
he heard the clamour of the multitude impatient over the delay in commencing
the Games. At once Nero rose from his couch and, without waiting for the purple
cloth that was thrown into the arena to give the signal to start, he ordered
his napkin to be thrown from the window to the crowd that was looking up at the
Palace. The crowd were so delighted at this sally that they applauded him
frantically. That night a chronicler recorded the incident for posterity.
One day Petronius entered the Emperor’s private
apartment and found him lying on a bed on his back, with a sheet of lead on his
chest. The Emperor was in the midst of his tricks for the preservation and
improvement of his voice. Indeed, a few minutes later, a masseur approached,
and lifting the sheet of lead, began to rub his Imperial patient with both hands,
following an upward movement towards Nero’s throat, at each stroke raising his
hands and shaking the fingers as if to drop the impurities. The massage lasted
some ten minutes, whereupon Nero rose from the bed, took from the hands of an
attendant a goblet, and began to gargle and spit into a silver bowl. “It helps
the vocal chords immensely,” he said to his friend. “At night I have a clyster
administered. The barber of that Cypriot singer Diodorus gave the tip to my
head-valet. It gives greater power to the lungs.”
Then they passed into the study, and the Emperor
showed a letter to Petronius, “Marcus Ostorius is offering me one million
sesterces for my services to sing at his dinner-party next week. Of course I
will give the fee to charity, but it is most flattering to me as an artist.”
Nero had too much taste not to realize that poetical
and musical compositions were impossible in the vast and tumultuous atmosphere
of the Circus. They required silence and concentration, a closed hall where
tempered lights could better dispose the audience to a lofty performance. He
therefore changed the time of the theatrical shows from midday to the evening.
He invented real theatre-shows. Some criticized him loudly. It was too great a
break from tradition. It was immoral to go to a theatre at night-time, it would
incite people to further debauchery. But there were no scandals, in fact,
people found the new shows rather tame.
The pantomimes, which the Emperor had at one time
banned because of their scurrility, returned now to the City, to the infinite
delight of the people. Nero hit upon a brilliant idea. He turned them into a
mixture of comedy and singing and he wrote several himself. Thus was born the
eternal musical-comedy and the operetta. Apella the Jew was the first popular
operetta to be tried in the Emperor’s private theatre. Those shows were for
private audiences only, and the beautiful little theatre seated one thousand
spectators. Another novelty was that the curtain on the stage was no longer
lowered but raised from the stage at the end of each act, so that the last
things to be seen were the actors’ faces and not their feet. One thing,
however, annoyed the Emperor immensely—the great Jewish actor Demetrius Libenus,
who had amassed a fortune, would not consent to play on the Sabbath.
The mania for acting continued unabated. First thing
in the morning, Tigellinus brought in a great batch of letters from admirers
begging the favour of hearing the Emperor’s heavenly voice. The Emperor ordered
with much delight to have the fan-mail answered individually, and informed the
writers that he would gratify those who desired it in the Gardens. One day a
group of Guards sent a message that they themselves with a crowd of friends
would be happy to hear the Emperor sing, although there were no games that day.
“Assemble them in the Gardens and distribute wine and refreshments,” ordered
the Emperor; “I will sing to them presently.”
But Nero’s favourite pieces were still the tragedies
based on the Greek plays: Canace in Labour, Orestes, Oedipus, Hercules Mad. A
great favourite with the populace was Canace in Labour, but Nero never saw the
joke. For Ganace was the daughter of an Etrurian King, whose incestuous
intercourse with her brother had been discovered in consequence of the cries of
the infant of whom she was delivered, and she killed herself. The joke was that
when Nero performed the piece for the first time, somebody in the audience
asked what he was doing, and a wag replied: “He is labouring in childbirth.”
VI
To emulate and please his Master, Tigellinus gave a
feast even more prodigal than the Circus shows. In the centre of the Ninth
District, which comprised the Pantheon and the Theatre of Pompey, there was the
Pond of Agrippa, fed by the overflow of several aqueducts. It was a beautiful
little lake, surrounded by gardens, temples and sacred groves.
Over this lake Tigellinus built a vast floating
platform, supported by a thousand barrels chained together. Upon the platform
were erected pavilions and porticoes covered with gaily-coloured awnings. On
this floating platform took place a banquet of which the world had seen no
equal. The servants who were chosen to wait upon the Emperor could be
recognized by their long and perfumed hair, their tight ballet-tunics, the
golden bracelets adorning their arms and legs. They could also be recognized by
their effeminate impudence.
Among arches of flowers, lying upon an ivory couch, in
a triclinium of purple, surrounded by his Court, the Emperor banqueted from
vessels of crystal and gold. The most illustrious families attended the feast.
With chains covered with flowers, there were exhibited elephants, tigers, and
lions that Tigellinus had brought from Africa, bearsf rom the Hyperborean
mountains, wolves of Scythia, colossal and monstrous turtles. From the shore
the populace watched the show.
It began at sunset with erotic dances and pantomimes.
When darkness fell, the floating platform was brilliantly lit. Voluptuous songs
rose in the air; choirs, hidden in the groves, answered one another. When the
dinner ended, small boats, their sides encrusted with glittering metals, pulled
slowly to the platform, and the guests left their couches. The boatmen were
naked. They had been chosen among the most handsome Orientals who hawked in
Rome, painted like courtesans. Along the shore, cubicles similar to the low
brothels of the Suburra had been built, lit by torches, and in them there were
beautiful women, ready to give themselves to anyone. Many of them belonged to
illustrious families.
But the Emperor could not be satisfied with this
ordinary pleasure. For him Tigellinus had staged something extraordinary. He
suggested to Nero to celebrate his nuptials with the mime Pythagora and act as
the bride. A mock marriage was performed. The Emperor was seen by all standing
near the statuesque Greek. Upon Nero’s head was placed the white veil of a
bride, the Augurs took the omens, the servants put up the nuptial bed with
purple sheets, and walked in front of the newly married.
All Rome witnessed the sacrilegious embrace. And for
once the crowd did not applaud.
The following day the Emperor left for Anzio,
travelling along the River. As usual, on the banks of the Tiber, there were
faked hostelries where ladies, dressed as chambermaids, pressed the guests to
stay. But this time Nero had no desire to stop. He realized that the “marriage”
with the mime Pythagora was a mistake.
VII
Rome was too big and too old. It was called the
Capital of the World, but all who had seen the world knew that notwithstanding
her size and the many wonderful buildings and monuments, Rome was far from
having the grandeur of some of the cities across the seas. Rome had nothing of
the orderly vastness of Alexandria, nor the solemnity of Carthage, or the
elegance of Athens.
Rome had grown uncontrollably vast, and she was now
beyond any planning control. Firstly she had grown, like the human body, in
size and proportion, and when she could no longer expand longitudinally, she
had grown vertically. She had now reached a population that no one exactly
knew, except that it could be counted in millions—and there was a certain
vanity in the voice of any ostler or barber when he could boast of the “
millions of Rome,” but it was neither easy nor pleasant to live and even less
to move about in Rome. The public buildings, some of which were very
impressive, were hidden and suffocated by the congestion of endless rows of
apartmenthouses and private dwellings. The streets were no more than lanes,
narrow and tortuous, which obstructed the traffic and made any idea of public
transport out of the question.
Time after time Bills were mooted in the Senate for a
drastic modernization of the City, but nothing had ever come of it. There was
always a stubborn opposition that spoke of the sacrilege of destroying the
traditions of Rome; a place could not be pulled down without offending the
deepest spirit of the Roman people (admitting, of course, that such noble
sentiment existed); some absurd wall could not be touched lest it should prove
to be the original wall built by Romulus; and so on and so forth. At the bottom
of it all there were the vested interests of the patrician classes, who had
leased their ground to the speculators who built the rickety and ramshackle
buildings of seven and eight floors divided into hundreds of apartments, and
they knew that they would lose heavily on their investments should any great
town-planning be attempted. The result was that no one knew any more where the
Urbs Roma or Rome proper ended and the Ager Romanus began. The rural territory
had become part of the City and it was utterly idle to persist in the
anachronism that only the people of the Urbs were Roman in the true sense.
Should any census be taken, it would have been only too clear that almost
four-fifths of the population of Rome was composed of foreigners, mostly Greeks
and Levantines, with a good sprinkle of Egyptians.
Half a century before, Augustus had done no more than
take up again the original plan of his adoptive father Julius Caesar, when in
the year 8 BC he had, for reasons of expediency, identified the City with the
fourteen districts into which he divided the ancient and the new, thirteen
districts on the left bank of the Tiber, and the fourteenth upon the right
bank, calling it Regio Transtiberina.
But the streets in each district, the one hundred and
sixty streets or vid recorded by the Censors, were unworthy of a great
metropolis. The ancient domus or houses had given place to many thousands of
insulae which, with the exception of the private residences of the great, were
immense blocks of apartments for the middle and working classes. Even the
meaning of domus had changed, for to say ‘a house’ meant now merely one of the dwellings
into which a block was divided, and which were often no more than squalid
hovels of one or two rooms, where whole families lived in cramped and
insanitary conditions. Only the very expensive apartments offered the number
of rooms that were to be found in the traditional domus, the porter lodge or
atrium, the triclinium or diningroom, the tablinum or lounge, the
sleeping-rooms and, if the apartment was on the ground floor, the peristillium
or pleasant courtyard surrounded by a little portico. The rooms of an apartment
were purely and simply rooms that the tenant could use as he thought fit and
practical. Some of these blocks bf flats were immense. There were some that
almost looked like skyscrapers. Gone for ever were the restrictions of Augustus,
that any building to be used as a private dwelling should not exceed an
elevation of sixty feet so as to provide a reasonable measure of safety for the
inhabitants. Martial, a few years later, wrote in one of his amusing ditties
that he had to climb to the third floor, but that was nothing compared with
what another of his fellow-tenants had to do—to climb to the seventh: it was
indeed very often the case that when the top floor was being devoured by the
flames of a fire, the tenants of the flats on the third floor still slept
soundly and undisturbed. The lower floor in the blocks situated in the meaner
streets was divided into shops and storerooms, and the shops were anything but
an embellishment of the streets. The great majority were nothing better than
warehouses, or the workshops of craftsmen. And upon a kind of ledge running
around the four walls, reached by a short flight of stairs, there lived the
family of the shopkeeper, in what unhygienic discomfort may well be imagined.
Nor were the conditions of the tenants of the apartments
proper much better, for there was no water installation, and all water for
domestic purposes had to be brought up from the public fountains. Where no fountain
existed because of lack of aqueducts, as it was in the district on the right
bank of the River, water had to be drawn from the local wells.
Nor were there any lavatories, and although the Cloaca
Maxima, built several centuries before that time, was kept in such an admirable
condition and was so vast that Agrippa was able to traverse it from end to end
in a boat, there was no system of sewers and drains to collect the waste from
each house. The Cloaca Maxima, reaching from the Forum at the foot of the
Aventine as far as the River near the bridge of the Four Heads, and its
affluents, the smaller sewers, collected the garbage and waste from the ground
floors and public lavatories directly built upon them; but there was no direct
collection from the private houses. Only the rich could obviate this horrible
inconvenience by having lavatories built in their houses and cleansed by the
water that reached the house from the main supplies of the aqueducts, and when
the residence was too far away from a main sewer, the waste from the house went
into an underground ditch, which was cleared periodically by a dealer in manure
who had bought the right of clearance.
But the poorer classes and the tenants of the upper
floors had no alternative but to go outside the house, and if they could afford
the small charge they would enter one of the public lavatories which were run
by the conductores foricarum, who contracted them from the Excise. A
horrible and absurd situation, for those public conveniences were public in the
widest sense, like the latrines of an army camp. One went there and met
friends, shamelessly chatting of this and that, and cadging invitations to
dinner. To visit one of these conveniences was to be amused by the people’s
behaviour, no less than by the number of superfluous refinements provided.
Around a circle or a rectangle designed with a certain elegance, a stream of
clear water ran in small ducts before which there were as many as twenty seats,
and the open seats rested upon brackets of stone or marble sculptured like
dolphins, and often, above them, there were little niches with statues of
Heroes or Gods or a small altar dedicated to Fortune, perhaps because that
Goddess was supposed to bring also good health. But the poorest and the meanest
citizens did not even go to a public lavatory, but used the jars purposely left
by the dyers who had bought from the Government the right to place such vessels
outside their establishments to collect the urine necessary for their
industry, or one would run from the apartment with pot in hand and go to empty
it into a vat standing at the bottom of the stairs. Or, worse still, one went
to a near garbage heap, and many streets were infested by such a malodorous
pond for the deposit of excrements. The Histories mention that Cato the Elder
had ordered them to be covered up and done away with, but they were still
extant in Nero’s times, and were often used by the prostitutes to get rid of
an unwanted child. To this picture could be added the danger, that threatened
passers-by after nightfall, of receiving upon their heads the contents of a pot
emptied from a window by a careless lodger.
Crowds congested the streets in day-time, succeeded at
nightfall by a congestion of carts and animals. For all goods and victuals were
carried into the City by night, by an ancient order of Caesar who quite rightly
realized that in such narrow streets, crowded with pedestrians and
sedan-chairs, it was impossible to have a flow of lorries and carts bringing in
merchandise and goods. So that from dawn until sunset no cart was allowed to
circulate within the City, and those who had not finished unloading before
sunrise were obliged to park in a proper place until sunset. But this very
proper order had the disadvantage of turning the night into a bedlam, for
throughout the night the streets resounded with the creaking of wheels and the
stamping of hooves on the slippery stones, and the shouts and swearing of their
vociferous drivers. It was, in fact, impossible in Rome to spend a quiet night.
And in the day-time one might be surrounded by a flock of sheep escorted by a
placid and unhurried shepherd, when it was not a funeral procession complete
with band of flute-players and women mourners wailing at so much an hour.
Rome was indeed a city of great contrasts, from the
quiet districts where the new-rich had built their elegant residences and laid
out their vast gardens, to the noisy and crowded popular districts of the
markets and buildings for the poorer classes. Along the main streets one saw
white-robed Arabs, Gauls in strange coats and trousers, Jews wearing the white
tunic without ornaments that set them apart; Greeks and Spaniards, slaves from
Africa whose dark faces shone out against the scarlet-and-gold liveries with
which their masters adorned them. Strange tongues could be heard, while in the
elaborate litters passed the noble and the rich, old aristocrats and wealthy
freedmen, lying on their cushions, some perusing books or papers, others
conversing with overpainted ladies. The Forum itself, the most Roman of all
places and the very heart of the City, was no longer the severe and solemn
place of former times. Early morning, as soon as the sun gave a golden glow to
the beautiful statues, the vast square began to fill with people. Not far from
the great sundial, the soap-box orators took up their stations and idlers began
to appear in plenty, people who did nothing but lounge about the Forum till
night fell. Then came the brokers, the commission-agents, the bankers, the
money-lenders, to open their offices and banks. In front of the statue of the
She-Wolf, symbol of Rome, an Arab sold sulphur- matches. The air was filled
with the noises and infinite smells of a cosmopolitan crowd, the odour of ripe
fruit and edibles came from the nearby market, and the whiffs of perfume
booths. Only the argiletum was comparatively quiet, the square filled
with rows of book-stalls piled up with the latest publications, some in rolls,
with the title neatly written on the outside or hanging from a tag, some made
up in book-form, in the fashion set some years before by the Empress Livia when
she published her letters to Augustus. But even there a noisy crowd took its
stand later on in the day—the poetasters who could find no publishers and
pestered the passer-by or the well-known customer and read aloud to him their
latest compositions, glad of a few coins or an invitation to supper.
The fact was that too few people did any work in Rome.
Tens of thousands lived idly. Nobody knew how they lived. On patronage
certainly, kept and fed by their wealthy patrons, or by the Emperor. Goods were
manufactured in provincial factories with cheap labour and marketed in Rome at
the lowest price. The wealth of the Empire kept prices low in Rome, and the
City had become an immense bee-hive of idlers and speculators. A huge city
waiting for the catastrophe that would sweep her away.
VIII
The Emperor was at his villa at Anzio, when a courier
was announced with a most urgent message. The courier rushed in and almost
dropped at the Emperor’s feet, and uttered wildly:
“ Rome is on fire.”
Someone nonchalantly remarked, “Another fire! Well,
can’t the firemen put it out?” But the courier waved one hand despairingly:
“ The whole City is burning.”
No one spoke. Nero turned his eyes in the direction of
Rome, although it was impossible to see beyond the hills of Nemi and Monte
Cavo. And the tranquil lapping of the tide against the marble wall of the
terrace seemed to make more dramatic the news he had heard.
The Court was inclined to treat it lightly. Surely it
was only another of the fires that were so frequent in the over-populated
districts of the City. It proved, they said, once again how necessary it was to
rebuild that part of the City on more rational lines. Those houses were all
built in large blocks and of poor material. The firemen’s usual rule was to try
to limit a fire to an “island,” and then let it burn out.
But with the passing of each hour new messengers,
mounted on small Numidian horses that galloped like gazelles, brought fresh
details of the fire. The flames, they said, had reached the shops that
surrounded the Circus, between the Palatine and the Coelius, shops full of oil
and clothes...
By day fall an official report stated that the
magnitude of the fire was unprecedented. And a violent wind was fanning it. The
Circus was like a huge cauldron. From it the flames had already reached the
gardens of the adjoining hills.
The Emperor paced the terrace. The sky over the
distant City, in the declining light of the sunset, appeared red, and the
smoke billowed in great clouds. Other messengers arrived. The Gods, they said,
had ordered this destruction. Entire districts were being destroyed and
hundreds, thousands of people had already perished in the flames. The people
were in panic-stricken flight, shouting and wailing like madmen, imprisoned in
walls of flame. The old part of the City was entirely gone.
Nero asked, “Is it an accident or a crime?” All the
messengers could say was that an accident could not have started eight
different fires in eight different districts, all at the same time.
The Emperor ordered his horse.
He travelled all night, with Tigellinus, his secretary
Epaphroditus, and a small escort of Guards. The night was unusually calm and
starry. At Ariccia, Tigellinus suggested that the Emperor should rest awhile;
but Nero was a good horseman and merely took some food from a platter held by
an ostler. They changed horses and rode on. At dawn they reached the Alban
Hills. Whatever hope Nero had that the fire might be limited to a few districts
was wiped away by the sea of smoky mist that appeared before his eyes from the
summit of the hills. The sight of that yellowish haze was terrifying. Albano
was crowded with people in terrified flight. All enquiries elicited the reply
that the fire had started chi the right bank of the River, perhaps in the
Suburra; it had mysteriously spread simultaneously along the Esquiline and the
higher districts.
Long before the Appian Road, flanked by the tombs of
the ancient families, the Campagna was swarming with a crowd beyond control.
But when the Emperor reached the Capuan Gate strange words caught his ears: “Do
not worry! The fire was started by orders from above... Perhaps it is a new
sort of game ...” Nero pulled the hood of his cloak down over his face, and
entered the City without a word.
The Palace was almost deserted. Most of the staff had
taken flight with the other fugitives. There was no sign however of violence or
intrusion. Diomedes, the Master of the Household, greeted the Emperor with his
usual welcome and backed to open the curtains of the first audience-room.
Without delay the Emperor endeavoured to take stock of the situation.
All he could ascertain at a first hurried conference
was that the fire had started in that part of the great Circus that adjoined
the districts of Mount Coelius and the Palatine. The shops and taverns, full
of inflammable goods, had supplied ample fuel and the sudden wind had fanned
the fire into monstrous tongues of devouring flames.
For many weeks no rain had fallen in Rome. The air
about the Seven Hills was sultry, dry, and parched. In the streets and valleys
it was close and foetid. The heavy heat oppressed the people and when the fire
had started the streets were unusually empty. Some had reported that near the
Circus Maximus dark figures were seen moving among the shops and the wooden
barracks, leaving behind a trail of flames. Was it true or merely a figment of
imagination?
The Emperor was told on all sides that Rome was facing
complete and utter destruction. The immense circumference of the Circus, which
occupied the Murcia Valley, was rapidly being surrounded by the fire. The flames
had devoured the shops, the warehouses, the stables, the considerable material
and props that served for the Games. Carried by the wind over the Palatine, the
fire had lapped the large walls and the great Babylonian steps on the eastern
flanks of the hill. But then the flames had swept to the left, along the newly
built road towards the Forum, and to the right, along the Triumphal Road and
the Coelius district. There the fire had quickly enveloped the crowded Suburra
and rising again over the hills, had reached the Esquiline district.
It was the 13th of July of the year 64—four hundred
and fifty years after Rome was invaded by the Gauls, and the anniversary of the
day on which the Gauls had burned the City.
The whole night, and each succeeding night, the
Emperor toured the ravaged districts, made himself known, announced that help
and victuals would be brought into the City at once, shelters would be erected
for the homeless and Rome would be rebuilt in a very short time.
But the people ignored him. The name of Nero roused no
cheers and everyone was too much concerned in seeking some lost relative or in
running away pushing a cart laden with the few chattels that could be salvaged.
More surprising still was the inability of the firemen
and salvage squads to stem the flames. No sooner was a safety cordon thrown
around a block of houses than mysteriously the flames rose beyond it. Voices
said that torches were being thrown into the houses, deliberately. By whom?
Several times the Emperor risked his life in those
narrow, winding lanes, his face blackened, his hair singed, his tunic
shrivelled. A wealthy freedman, not recognizing him, promised him gold in
plenty as a reward for helping his wife and children out of a burning house.
Nero answered: “I am Caesar, the guardian of my people and I only desire their
love as my reward.” Hour after hour, by day and by night he walked through the
streets, exercising authority, giving orders or planning measures for the
safety of the Capitol and the Forum. He went about on foot, often without
escort. He gathered together officers and young patricians, to each allotting
his particular task, threatening death to anyone who failed Rome in that hour.
But the people were too distracted to recognize the Emperor. Near the ruins of
a temple a man suddenly came upon Nero: “Are you Caesar?” “Yes,” the Emperor
answered, “I am Nero Caesar.” “Then you shall die by my hand, for it is by your
orders that Rome burns.” The Emperor opened his tunic and bared his breast. “The
guilty man takes flight. As I am innocent, I am not afraid to die.” The man
hesitated, and casting the dagger away he departed. Later that man recorded the
episode.
On the fourth night, while the Emperor was taking a
little rest after a brief meal, Tigellinus said: “Caesar, why don’t you compose
a poem on the Fire of Rome? What a subject for such a poet!”
Nero looked towards the gardens devastated by the
flames: “Immortal deeds, immortal songs,” he uttered. In ages to come the soldiers will sing these
same songs by their camp fires. The common people will chant them like a great
lament. A song that might be sung till the end of time...”
He seized his lyre, and leaving the room he walked out
to the terrace. There he paused, and stood surveying the ruined City below and
the sky that hung like a pall above the ruins of Rome. His friends who had
followed a few paces behind saw that he was declaiming, but the words were
drowned in the noise. Soon the Emperor stopped. For a short while he stood with
his two hands upon the parapet of the terrace, staring below. Then he lifted
his eyes to the mournful sky once more, and turning on his heels he descended
the steps and re-entered the room.
But at the foot of the hill, from the hovels of the
Suburra, a man ran out and scurried hither and thither crying aloud, “ Nero has
caused Rome to be burned so that he may sing to the accompaniment of the
flames!” The name of the man was Hilliel, a Jew of the Gaulonite tribe. By
morning the story had gone from mouth to mouth, that Nero Caesar had mounted
the Tower of Maecenas, to sing the song of the Fire of Rome. Thus Nero’s
lament, that had remained unsung, gained immortal fame.
IX
The fire lasted six days and seven nights, and nothing
could bring the flames under control. The flames devoured everything with such
hungry violence that the danger disheartened the most courageous. Soon the
Second, Third and Fifth Districts were an immense pyre in which the populace,
mostly composed of excitable Orientals, saw the temples of Isis and Serapis
crumble with their abodes. The cries of infants, the screams of women, the
blind hurry of those who were fleeing and those who were endeavouring to help,
made a chaos in which each one became an obstacle to another. The houses
crashing down amidst clouds of red smoke, the shrieks of the victims, the dense
choking smoke which the wind turned into a suffocating lava, the robbers
plundering and pilfering, made the scene an inferno of terror and tragedy.
People had camped in the temple of Mars. In the
cemeteries the larger tombs had been seized. The shops were sacked for bread.
Everywhere bands of slaves, now without masters or overseers, threw themselves
upon the escaping citizens, and butchered them to steal their small bundles of
goods. Germans, Africans, Asiatics, all shouted in a babel of tongues. Around
the Palace the Praetorian Guards were camped, armed with lances, with orders to
draw blood should the crowd attempt a coup.
On the sixth day the mounting tide of fire was halted
at the foot of the Esquiline Hill, by demolishing the houses in its path. The
crowd by then had mostly taken refuge in the fields outside the City. Others
camped in the public squares where they obstructed the work. And so, at last,
it was possible to take stock of the calamity. Of the fourteen Districts of
Rome, only four were left standing. Three had been razed to the ground. The
other seven were a cemetery of darkened, tumbling walls.
With two-thirds of the City destroyed, the most
precious monuments of Rome had disappeared—the temple that King Servius Tullius
had erected to the Moon, the temple of Jupiter Stator which was dedicated to
Romulus, the great altar that Evander had consecrated to Hercules, the ancient
palace of King Numa, the Penates of the Roman people, and the temple of Vesta
with all the mysterious pledges of the greatness of Rome which were deposited
in the sanctuary and the great trees of the cloister from which was suspended
the shorn hair of the Vestal Virgins. Over the Capitol the flames had risen as
high as the great statue of Jupiter itself. At the sight of this, the desolate
crowd felt that Rome was indeed moving relentlessly towards her doom and many
threw themselves into the flames to perish with their unfortunate City.
Rome, the epitome of the World! Rome who had contained
all the other cities. Rome within whose walls one could recognize, in the same
way as the smaller churches are nowadays marked upon the floor of a great
Cathedral, the boundaries of Alexandria the Opulent, Antioch the Beautiful and
Athens the Splendid! What amassed wealth, what accumulated spoils had perished!
But most irreparable was the loss of the masterpieces of Greek art, the
paintings, the statues, the manuscripts.
A world of ashes and a weary people are without
feeling, and the dark and dour amongst them now spoke openly against Nero,
accusing him of being the cause of the City’s ruin. Three or four hundred
thousand people were homeless, without clothes and food. In dull amazement they
contemplated the ruins of what had been Rome. Like flocks of sheep they
wandered about the chaotic streets, gaping at the ruins of palaces and temples.
But others marched about in bands shouting angry protests. It was urgent that
shelter and food be found for the populace.
The Emperor ordered his Gardens to be opened, as well
as the vast Campus Martius and the Monuments of Agrippa. He gave orders to
build immediately huts and shelters and addressed an urgent appeal to the
neighbouring cities for food and clothing. Bread, wheat and oil were
distributed. No effort was spared to comfort and quieten the people.
Nevertheless the strange tale still went round—that on
the night of the third day, when the flames were at their highest, the Emperor
had climbed the Tower of Maecenas, in the dress of a tragic actor, and sang a
poem upon the Fire of Rome.
When rumour of it reached the Palace, a Privy Council
was called. It was no use denying the obvious. And it would be idle, at that
juncture, to start seeking the detractors and instigators. The populace was in
no mood to take sides, for or against. The fire had been too overwhelming a
calamity to allow thought for anything else.
Said Tigellinus: “Why not make political capital of
it? “Yes,” he said, “let us humour the
people, and ask them why has the Emperor ordered Rome to be burnt? Then tell
them it was because he wanted to rebuild another Rome more beautiful than the
old one and give the Romans a more splendid City...”
Nero listened with a frown on his brow. If such had
been his intention, would he have commenced the fire from the great Circus?
That vast place of enjoyment would be very valuable to offer some distraction
to the crowd. The House of Passage, that Caligula had built and which crowned
the Palatine like a diadem, linked by tall arches to the Nympheum of Claudius,
and from there extending towards the Esquiline as far as the gardens of
Maecenas, that wonderful building too had disappeared. How would the people
believe that Nero had ordered its destruction? Indeed, the anxiety to save the
treasures contained in the House of Passage had been one of the reasons for the
Emperor’s hurried departure for Rome. How could anyone believe that he had
ordered their destruction?
X
As soon as the fire was dead, the customary
propitiatory sacrifices were offered to the Gods. To placate the Gods was
tantamount to putting the blame on them.
The Sybil’s Books were consulted. Prayers were
addressed to Proserpine. Ceres was included, too, although it was not quite
clear where the Goddess of crops and fertility came in. The ladies went in
procession to Juno, first on the Capitol, then at Juno’s temple by the sea,
which gave them an opportunity to stay away for a while. The floor of the
temple and the statue of the Goddess were washed with purified waters. No one
could be certain that Jupiter’s Consort was thus appeased, but everyone was
aware that the Emperor’s enemies were not. Senator Subrius was openly attacking
the Emperor, and was boasting of his desire to kill Nero; and the populace
called Subrius pulcherrimum animum—a most beautiful soul.
The people accepted the clothes and the com and the
wine that the Government so liberally distributed. They settled themselves as
best they could in the public shelters whilst many found a profitable
occupation in pilfering the ruined houses; and the Chief of Police advised
that, in view of the present mood of the people, it was best to close both eyes
to this.
At the end of the second week Nero informed his Councillors
that he proposed to send a message to the Senate announcing that he was going
to commence at once the rebuilding of Rome. And opening some rolls, he disclosed
his plans for the new Rome.
Without delay, almost miraculously, the rebuilding of
the City came to life. Huge armies of builders and carpenters were drafted from
all the Provinces of the Empire to rebuild Rome according to the new plans. The
streets were enlarged. Houses, in each district, were built in the same style
and of the same elevation on both sides of the streets. There were well-proportioned
squares from which arboured avenues spread star-like. Public buildings were
built of a size proportionate to the needs and of a style in keeping with the
neighbouring houses. Each block of private dwellings was provided with a large
courtyard. The main streets were furnished with arcades under which people
could shop in all weathers. House-owners were ordered to build of stone each
block of houses, and that each must be detached. There must be water-reservoirs
to be used in case of fires. The Emperor suggested that the frontages would
look all the better if the houses had porticoes that could serve as shelter
from both rain and sun, and he took upon himself the enormous cost of all those
embellishments, for the house-owners soon allied themselves into an
association, clamouring for a State subsidy. To promote speed in rebuilding,
prizes and bonuses were offered to anyone who would build a house within a
given time.
The ships that brought wheat from Egypt and Africa
were used, on their return journey, to clear away the debris, which was dumped
on the marshy land along the coast of Ostia. Down the Tiber there was a
continuous passage of ships bringing food to the City and carrying away the
rubbish. From all new buildings wood was eliminated or confined to fixtures,
thus reducing to a minimum the risk of future fires. A Decree was issued
preventing the wealthy owners from monopolizing water in their gardens and
fishing-ponds; in fact, water was made a public property, and a new Corps of
Watermen was created to inspect and keep guard on fountains and conduits; a new
and more equitable division of all the sources of water was made and all citizens
were to share in this benefit.
The Emperor was very proud of his new city-planning.
Women, however, whispered that the piazzas in front of the houses made it
difficult for lovers to meet unobserved.
The sight of the empty spaces left by the
disappearance of the House of Passage was a great temptation to Nero to rebuild
a new Palace. The Palatine dominated Rome. It was visible from all parts of the
City; and it was the finest District of Rome. The House of Passage went from
the Palatine to the Coelius above the Imperial Road. It would be absurd to
leave it an eyesore of ruins.
Nero loved the spectacular. The power and glamour
surrounding the Throne fostered in him the sense of the fantastic. He felt now
that it was his duty to rebuild for the Emperor a new Palace worthy of Rome.
He sent for the architects Severus and Celer, and
ordered them to prepare the plans. The new Palace should be of gigantic
proportions, magnificent, and full of originality. It should contain such
marvels of arts to surpass and eclipse every other royal residence, present or
past. The architects were told that they could draw upon the Treasury, in fact
upon the whole Empire.
The new Palace was built in seven months. It was
called Domus Aurea.
XI
The plans for the new Palace covered a surface equal,
in modem terms, to the Tuileries and Louvre Palaces in Paris and their gardens
altogether.
As the fire had devoured more than two-thirds of the
City, it was impossible to retrace under the ruins the narrow and small houses
that had composed the popular Districts called the Suburra. Many owners, whose
estates were due to pass automatically to the State or to the Emperor, had
perished in the disaster. In a society selfishly given to celibacy and very
largely composed of freedmen and individuals from all the comers of the world,
the Emperor was, by law, entitled to the largest share of their succession. The
impossibility of dividing the ruins equitably rendered it expedient, in the
interest of the legitimate heirs themselves, that the Emperor should claim and
apportion the whole estate. And the gaps created by the fire made it advisable
to enlarge the Palace Grounds, so as to clear away the ruins that marred the
view between the Esquiline and Coelius Hills and the Palatine. Out of those
ruins rose Nero’s Golden House. It was a group of palaces, almost a small town
in itself.
Like all patrician houses in Rome, it had a great
courtyard in front and in the centre was erected a colossal statue of Nero,
modelled by the sculptor Zenadore who at that time was in great renown for a
statue of Mercury of gigantic proportions, which he had made for the city of
Avernum in France. Zenadore made the statue of Nero one hundred and twenty feet
high, cast in an alloy made of the richest metals. This statue remained standing
for many years facing the new Circus Maximus, and the Romans, long after Nero’s
death, used to say, “Let’s go to the Colossus.” Thus came to the new
amphitheatre the popular name of Colosseum.
Behind this statue opened an immense peristyle one
thousand steps long, with three rows of columns. The floor of the peristyle was
of mosaic, made of coloured marbles, which surrounded the plinths of the
columns, while the capitals, adorned with golden leaves, harmonized with the
paintings upon the ceiling. Those paintings, gay or serious, were executed by
many artists, working under the direction of “ the majestic Fabulus,” so called
because he never worked without his toga and handled his palette and his brushes
with great solemnity. Fabulus had studied under Ludius, who, at the time of
Augustus, excelled for his seascapes and country scenes, and from the painter
Pyroticus Fabulus had learned the art of representing fruit and animals in
small pictures, thus starting among those Roman connoisseurs the taste for
miniatures and still-life pictures. But Fabulus’s speciality were his large
compositions, such as “Phoedre ready to hang herself after being rejected by
Hippolitus,” or the large mural of “Coriolanus being disarmed by his mother.”
The art of painting on stone and of colouring marble
had just been invented. Praxiteles used to say indeed that his most beautiful
statue was “the one which was painted by Nicias.” For the Greek: artists had learnt
to colour their marble statues by painting them or by injecting a dye into the
stone. They put a blush upon the cheeks of a statue representing a young girl.
The Romans went a step further and on certain occasions they dressed with
magnificent garments and armour the statues of their Gods and famous men. This
new device of colouring marble was extensively used in ornamenting the vast
floor and long walls of the peristyle. It was also found most useful in the
composition of mosaics, which require a great variety of colours, as well as in
the decoration of rooms and galleries where the use of a uniform tone increased
the effect, and varied according to the purpose of the place.
Under the porches and in the peristyle were large
mural paintings depicting scenes from mythology and history. For that kind of
painting the painters used colours mixed with Carthagenian wax which they dried
off by means of a hot iron as soon as the colours were applied. This gave a
surface that withstood the open air and it was what we now call encaustic. In
some of the galleries the columns were bounded at the base by a wall as high as
the hip of a man. The space within that wall was filled with earth and planted
with shrubs and rare plants which, during the summer days, when the polychrome
curtains were drawn, perfumed the shaded galleries.
It was not enough to build a splendid residence, for
it was also necessary to furnish adequately the rooms, the halls, the
galleries, the baths. It was necessary to give life to the apartments and
gardens, to put in them bronzes and marbles, statues and groups.
But Nero would have in his Palace only fine works of
art, the masterpieces of the great artists. An Artistic Commission was
therefore sent to Greece and Asia to collect all that was worthy of the
Emperor. Never was a collection of sculptures and pictures and objets-d’art more
speedily and with less regard for cost!
President of the Collecting Commission was Acratus, a
freedman of Nero, assisted by the philosopher Carinas. The two ransacked Greece
to the last village. The temples of Delphi alone yielded five hundred statues.
But here and there the people rose in protest against this abduction of their
Gods and Heroes. Acratus and Carinas had, at times, to ask the local garrisons
to keep the populace quiet. The “Venus of Milo” lost her arms in the combat and
one night a group of citizens went to steal her back from the quay where the
statue lay ready to be packed and shipped. They hid her so well that for nearly
eighteen centuries the “Venus of Milo” was lost to mankind.
More than two thousand statues went to people the
galleries of the Golden House. A multitude of guests, silent and immobile,
surrounded the Emperor who wanted to be amphitryon of all the Heroes and Gods.
Nero displayed even greater luxury in the decoration
of his baths. The water of the sea and the sulphur water of Albula, near
Tivoli, were conveyed through special ducts and pipes to the Emperor’s baths
and the swimming-pools. In winter, the reservoirs were heated and in summer the
water could be refreshed by throwing snow into it, collected from the mountains
and kept in special cellars.
The walls and floors of the baths were adorned with
mosaics or lined with rare marbles. Mother-of-pearl and the rarest stones that
one could find in the mountains of Asia Minor were used lavishly in the private
apartments of the Emperor. The bedrooms, both of the Empress and of the
principal guests, had beds made of scented wood, inlaid with gold and covered
with rich Oriental tapestries, or with coverlets embroidered with pearls from
the Red Sea arranged in arabesque designs. The walls were lined with panelling
made of revolving ivory tablets set on pivots which turned at a touch, showing
each time a different picture. Those panels were also arranged in such a way
that they could throw flowers. Hidden machines could, at a touch, spray
perfumes upon the floors, and in the ceilings of the dining-halls there were
hidden conduits from which fell a gentle rain of perfume upon the diners.
Nero’s own bedroom was a vast apartment in which he
kept his private collection. There hung the most exquisite paintings, in
frames of carved ivory or delicate woods, and upon a special table stood the
golden statuette of Victory with the lovely limbs, the faithful companion of
all the Caesars, a beautiful precious thing that Nero superstitiously carried
with him on all his travels. The Emperor’s bed was covered with a rare cloth of
golden brocade, woven upon purple silk, and was adorned with pearls and precious
stones.
Nero was highly superstitious, and as he believed in
the magic virtue of stones, the walls of the sleeping alcove were encrusted
with talismans of all kinds. There was the horn of Ammon, a gold-coloured
stone, which had the virtue of giving the sleeper prophetical dreams; there was
the jasper, favourable to those who had to deliver harangues; the amethyst,
which prevented drunkenness, and the sacred agate of the Isle of Crete, which
gave protection against the bite of spiders and snakes. But Nero did not know
that a workman had placed, just where his pillow touched the wall, the blackstone
spotted with blood, the baroptene which inspired monstrous things.
Next to those talismans, the dactyliotheque of Nero
was the rarest and richest treasury in the world. All the temples of Rome and
Greece were robbed to provide ornaments for the Emperor’s private apartment.
From the Capitol itself the collection of gems of King Mithridates, which had
been consecrated to Jupiter by Pompey the Great, was pilfered of the choicest
specimens’ and treasures. Upon consoles of marble and tables of cedarwood,
pearls, diamonds and other precious gems sparkled in bowls of alabaster or
agate. There was the famous opal which had belonged to Mark Antony, who had
proscribed Senator Nonius for the purpose of confiscating the gem. There was
the sardonyx of Polycarpus Tyrant of Samos, taken from the temple of the
Goddess Concordia to whom the Empress Livia had consecrated it within a horn of
gold, the agate of Pyrrhus the famous enemy of Rome—a stone into which Nature
had carved the image of Apollo and his nine sisters with their attributes and
symbols. And there was the beautiful emerald which Nero used as a monocle at
the gladiatorial combats in the Circus, and the rarest of gems, a marvel
discovered in the gold mines of Lamsacum—the celebrated emerald which had
belonged to Alexander the Great.
Upon other tables were arranged a profusion of statuettes
of bronze and brass, the latter a metal which was a great novelty and was
manufactured with much skill at Corinth. And there were the first pieces of
Chinese ceramics ever seen in the Western world, brought by the caravans of
Parthian merchants trading beyond Persia, and stem-cups of a fine exquisite
substance that was neither glass nor porcelain and were called by the Romans
murrine cups; and Nero had one of rare beauty, bought for him for three hundred
talents. He furthermore had two small cups of rock-crystal, transparent and
delicate like the thinnest glass. Upon a plinth of precious marble rested a
statue fifteen inches high in smoked jasper, representing Nero himself wearing
a breastplate. There was also the Serapis, cut from one big emerald, and the
statue of topaz which was made for Queen Arsinoe. In this apartment too was
kept the golden lyre which Nero played to accompany his singing and
declamations. The Imperial lyre rested upon a stand of ivory, surrounded by the
golden crowns that Nero had won in the competitions of music and poetry.
Next to the Imperial apartments rose a great dome,
representing the Heavens. It was the roof of the dining- hall, the chief
masterpiece of the Golden House. For upon the interior of that cupola, stars
and constellations traced in gold and diamonds rose and set according to their
heavenly course. Fixed to turning pivots, the stars marked the Day and the
Night, and reproduced the course of the Sun and the Moon and of the main stars
of the firmament, depicted with all the nuances of light and shadow, f The
whole banqueting room had been conceived to harmonize with that marvellous
cupola: while the Sky moved over the guests’ heads, their feet rested upon
Hell, the black frogs of the Styx and all the Kingdom of Pluto. It was a vast
composition in the taste of the great mosaic that was in the temple of Fortune
at Preneste. A figurative map of Ethiopia had recently been presented to Nero J
and this had prompted him to have the walls of his dining-hall painted with
figurations of all lands and rivers and seas of the known world, with the
rivers traced and the principal cities represented by their chief buildings.
Amidst those pictures, in which all the Provinces of the Empire were depicted,
with their special products and crops, their animals, their inhabitants and
particular customs, the Emperor could at a glance embrace the whole Empire. He
was able indeed to say that, like Jupiter upon Olympus, he had his world under
his eyes.
Afterwards many guests came to hate that room, for the
revolving ceiling made one feel giddy, especially when the cups of Falernum had
been too plentiful; but the machinery that made the room rotate was a marvel of
engineering and its architect was rewarded with a fabulous prize. The wonder
was that he was not liquidated to prevent him building another hall like it.
The many buildings forming the Golden House rose on
the shores of an artificial lake, which was large enough to allow small ships
to manoeuvre. In the vast gardens, lakes and ponds of fresh- and sea-water were
laid, in which strange fish swam. Further away, all the animal monsters of the
Indies and of Africa were enclosed in a small Zoo, both for amusement and for
use in the Circus. Nero’s old racing horses, that had won prizes in the races,
were pensioned in magnificent stables; their saddle-cloths were bordered with
purple like a Senator’s toga. In the midst of meadows and pastures were huge
aviaries, filled with rare and beautiful birds. To a monkey, of which the
Emperor was particularly fond, was assigned a special house and the ape was
attended by numerous servants. Next to this was the house of Asturcon, Nero’s
favourite horse.
But the greatest novelty was to have enclosed within
boundaries fields, dark forests and solitudes stocked with wild animals. There
were monsters too—the hermaphrodite mules, and an anthropoid presented to the
Emperor from Egypt. From the Near East had come the art of dyeing the wool of
live animals and upon those fields grazed sheep of divers gay colours. There
were rivulets and brooks, made picturesque by small mills, vineyards and
fields, their unexpected rural touch enhancing by contrast the marvels of art
and the beauty of the landscape. Upon an elevation rose a small temple
dedicated to Seia, the God of crops. The temple was built of an extraordinary
stone which had just been discovered and has never been found again: “Under the
reign of Nero,” wrote Pliny, “there was brought to Rome from Cappadocia a white
stone, as hard as marble and transparent even within its coloured veins. Nero
built with this stone the temple of Seia. When the door and the windows were
closed, one felt within that little sanctuary the light that was outside, but
not as we see it through the stone called specularia, but as though instead of
corning through the stone the light was enclosed inside. It was a most seducive
effect”
When the whole palace and gardens were ready, Nero
made a grand tour of the place. The party then returned to the forecourt, the
Emperor smiled with appreciation and said: “Now I have a house worthy of a
great artist.”
XII
Th luexury of Nero’s and Poppaea’s life involved enormous
expenditure. Nero loved prodigality and splendour. To Spiculus the gladiator he
gave houses and land which had belonged to Consuls who had earned a Triumph.
For the moneylender Paneros he ordered a funeral worthy of a King. He never
wore the same dress twice. When he travelled, a thousand carriages transported
his luggage. The couriers who preceded his train, riding beautiful horses, were
huge negroes adorned with necklaces and big bangles on their arms and legs,
whilst the mules that pulled the carriages were shod in silver, and their
drivers wore dresses of pure Caucasian wool.
The fire of Rome had brought to a climax the
extravagance of Nero’s life; it had created a gulf which threatened to swallow
his popularity and his fortune. To recapture the people’s affection Nero had
recourse once again to the Circus games, with increased magnificence. His
impresario Julianus brought the extravagance to the point of fixing buttons of
amber to the nets that divided the arena from the audience. On one occasion,
all the “props” for the games were made of this precious substance, including
the gladiators’ weapons and the biers for the dead!
Day after day the combats of gladiators, the chariot
races, the fights with animals went on, as well as the free distributions of
meals and com, not to mention the lotteries which gave everybody hope of
winning a rich prize. Never were the Games so splendid. Panem et Circenses!
Bread and amusement became the rule of life. The die-hards were often
complaining that it was not so in olden times, but the politicians cynically
replied that it was a sign of complete maturity to be fond of pleasure: indeed,
to satisfy the people’s inordinate passion for pleasure was the only way to
keep going.
Hastily repaired at an enormous cost, the Circus
Maximus witnessed shows of unprecedented splendour.
Roughly constructed of timber under Tarquinius Drusus
and enlarged later under the Empire, the Circus had become a most superb
building. Julius Caesar had extended it, surrounding the arena with a moat ten
feet deep and as many broad, to protect the spectators against danger from the
chariots during the races. Claudius rebuilt the carceres in marble, and gilded
the metae, that were the two focal points of the arena where the
chariots took the turn. The Circus was the main centre of attraction in Rome;
it was six hundred and twenty-five feet long and two hundred feet wide, and was
big enough for two hundred thousand spectators. It was a by-word in Rome, and
Nero, who was vain, said it in the sense that when he took part in a race all
Rome rushed to the Circus to applaud him.
The Circus’s Games had a religious origin, for they
had been instituted by Romulus. King Tarquinius gave them greater pomp,
following the ancient Etruscan custom. Tarquinius was a great king, and for
that he was expelled, for the people always want the misrule of a Republic
after a great king. Later, the Senate decreed that the Republic should provide
the Games with State money. Since then, the Magistrates had charge of the
Games. Some looked after the administrative side, others were actually in
charge of the programmes and made detailed arrangements with the impresarios
who offered new turns and provided the artists for the theatrical shows, the
gladiators for the combats and the beasts for the fights. The Curule Edile
presided at the Games in Triumphal dress.
The great Gods in whose honour the Games were held,
descended from the Capitol in solemn procession to come and sit among the
people in the Circus, and before entering the Circus the procession traversed
the Forum, headed by the Edile standing upon a chariot drawn by four white
horses. The Senators and all the Magistrates followed on foot or horseback,
according to their rank and dignity. On one occasion when Augustus was ill, he
insisted on following the procession lying on a litter. Behind the Senators
came the youths of fourteen and fifteen, who were already considered worthy of
watching the Games, then came the sons of the aristocracy on horseback, the
other classes followed on foot and divided into companies; all in perfect
order, like a grand military parade.
After them came the chariot-drivers in war dress;
there never were fewer than a hundred chariots, belonging to the four racing
stables into which the Turf Club was divided, each recognizable by its racing
colours and even more by the beauty of the horses and their distinctive
harness; the Albata or the Whites, the Russata or the Reds, the Veneta or the
Blues, and the Prasina or the Greens. It was a great sight, and it always drew
the most thunderous applause.
After the horses came the athletes, each team marching
together, naked and ready for the fight; then came the troupes of dancers,
escorted by their musicians and choirs. The dancers wore long scarlet tunics
with belts of polished copper, carrying a small sword at the belt and a short
spear adorned with bright feathers and plumes. Some of them had helmets of
brass adorned with aigrettes, for they danced the Pyrrhic dance, marching in
time, each troupe headed by a band-master.
Then followed the choirs of Satyrs dressed in goats’
skins with tufts of long hair on their caps, and Silenes wearing rough tunics,
chosen for their hairy chests and huge bellies and bibulous faces. They
parodied in comic always the serious dances, to the accompaniment of music
especially composed to enhance their amusing gestures.
The Gods came last, preceded and escorted by a large
number of priests and attendants. The statues were carried upon litters on
stands or upon gilt chariots drawn by four horses led by children of noble
families holding the bridle, with crowns of oak and pearls upon their heads and
dressed in purple and gold.
The four Pontiffs of the four Colleges closed the
impressive march. The procession advanced along the streets strewn with
flowers, under canopies of veils drawn from roof to roof, the houses and
temples being hung with carpets and tapestries, and at every crossroad stood
acolytes burning incense and perfumes in silver pans.
While the triumphal procession of the Gods proceeded
towards the Circus through the Forum and the Velabrum, the populace was already
crowding the Circus to its utmost capacity. From the Euripe, the large ditch
which separated the lower range of seats from the arena and protected the
public from the chariots and the savage beasts, up to the colonnade that
crowned the uppermost tier, the multitude seated on the steps chattered and
munched melon-seeds, and their noise could be heard as far as the Murcia Valley
below the aristocratic Palatine or the Hill, as it was called. Suddenly someone
shouted that he had espied the procession. All eyes became fixed upon the arena
where the sand of specularia stone glittered and shone like a golden snow under
the sun. Upon that resplendent arena the procession entered and displayed
itself. Finally, the golden statue of the Winged Victory appeared. The two
hundred thousand spectators rose as one man, saluting the Eternal Protectress
of the Empire.
The procession made the tour of the arena; a propitiatory
sacrifice was solemnly offered to the Gods, whose statues were placed with
measured and precise gestures upon the Spina, the wide wall that divided the
arena lengthways, or sometimes in the little temple under the pulvinar, that
was the Imperial box. The Magistrates, the Senators and the Vestal Virgins, all
mounted the stairs to the large tribune which rose right above the dungeons and
stables from which chariots and beasts would emerge. In the Imperial box the
Emperor was surrounded by his Court, while the adjoining boxes and steps were
filled with members of the aristocracy. It was a gorgeous show ; the jewels and
bright dresses; the fashionable ladies indulging in silken raiments imported
from the East; the elegant courtiers in white togas bordered with purple; the
shimmering breastplates and waving plumes of the Praetorian Guards.
Then the Games commenced. The Edile advanced holding
in his right hand a roll of scarlet cloth, and threw it vigorously into the
arena. The cloth unrolled like a tongue of flame or a jet of blood: it was the
signal. The Heralds blew their long silver trumpets, and four chariots rushed
out of the stables’ great gates and hurtled into the arena towards the starting
line.
The first day barely sufficed for the chariot races,
and the Games might indeed last thirty, forty, or even one hundred days. But
the races were always the first show. Grooms in spectacular dresses held the
horses at the bridle and the drivers made much display with the reins in one
hand, the long whip in the other, a tight-fitting helmet of silver or gold on
their head, their heels and legs swathed in bands of linen, the body in a short
tunic of the colours of their stable, and wrapped around the waist were the
long reins which the driver could, in case of emergency, cut with the dagger
that was at his hip. Thus the chariots took position while the splendid horses
held high their heads caparisoned with a gilded branch, their long tails turned
up in a tight knot, the manes braided with silken ribbons and pearls, the pectorals
glittering with golden ornaments and charms, the necks adorned with nets and
the colours of their stables.
When all the competitors were in line, a trumpet was
blown and the Edile gave the starting signal. For the races the Edile was
dressed in a rich scarlet tunic, similar to the tunic of Jupiter Capitolinus.
He had an embroidered toga of Tyrian red “ as large as a tent,” as Martial put
it, and he was indeed a show all in himself, that gorgeous President of the
Games, bedecked like an idol, holding in his right hand an ivory stick topped
with an eagle with outstretched wings, and on his head a crown of golden leaves
so heavy that an attendant had to hold it* and so rich that Martial wrote that
one single rose from that wonderful garland would have sufficed to make a rare
goblet for him!
The races, especially when the chariots were drawn by
six horses or more, were so dangerous that from the moment the horses started
and the dust began to fly under the narrow wheels the multitude applauded in
wild excitement. The greatest danger to the competitors was in the risk of
coming into collision with the axle-hubs of a rival chariot, that might
overturn the vehicles and kill drivers and horses. Moreover, in each race the
chariots had to go seven times round the arena, a total of two and a half
miles, and as the two turning points at each end of the elliptical course were
always on the left of the team of horses, a successful turn, when there were
four horses or more, depended upon the agility of the two outer steeds, which
were called funales because instead of being coupled to the yoke they
were attached only by a rope. For the whole team was actually held by the
driver in his hands, only the inner horses being yoked to the small saddles
sticking out from the long pole that was attached to the middle of the
chariot’s axle. The harness consisted of a bridle and a pair of reins, which
passed through rings attached to the collar-bands and long enough to be tied to
the waist of the charioteer. If the bend was turned at too narrow an angle the
fragile chariot might break. On the other hand, if the turning was taken too
wide, the chariot would lose ground or risk being hit by another. The drivers
therefore strained all the time to incite the horses and at the same time to
look back to avoid a collision with the chariots behind. Not for nothing the
victorious auriga celebrated his victories with inscriptions that left nothing
to the imagination: Occupavi et Vici— I kept the lead and won. Or he was the
outsider that had won 100-1, Erupi et Vici. After each race special telegraphists
released a storm of carrier pigeons that would bring to the sporting patrician
in the country or to an official abroad the news of the victory of his
favourite team.
And what splendid horses.' They came from the best
stud-farms of Italy, Spain, North Africa and Greece, reared from the finest
thoroughbreds, taken in hand at three years and trained for two, and when five
years old put to the strenuous races of the Circus. Those with more staying
power were put at the yoke, while the more spirited were used as funales;
and each animal, upon the door of its box, had its pedigree and a full record
of its performances. Their names were inscribed upon the oil lamps that the
hawkers sold as souvenirs. Often a fond owner would have the name of his
favourite horse inlaid in the mosaic floor of his country house: Win or lose,
we love you, O Polidoxe! Of Tuscus we know that he won 386 races. Victor was
true to his name 429 times. And the drivers! Apart from the prize money, the
successful aurigae received fantastic salaries from the owners to retain their
services. Rome was proud of the drivers who had won a thousand victories. They
were called miliarii, and the names have survived of Scorpo who won 1,043
races, of Apaphrodite who had won 1,467 victories, of Pompey the Browny with
3,559 victories, and of Diodes who, having won 3,000 races with pairs of horses
and 1,462 with four- in-hands, retired at last with 35 million sesterces in the
bank.[‡‡‡‡] In the cafes of Rome, in the barbers’ shops and the Public Baths,
everybody spoke of the love affairs and escapades of the most famous drivers.
Their portraits were stencilled upon the walls and the curio-shops sold their
busts in plaster and bronze. Between the races the bookmakers took the bets.
On the following days there were athletic matches, and
the gladiators’ combats. Acrobats climbed at great speed the solid tortoise
that thirty other companions formed with their shields held above their heads.
Under the feet of the climbing racers the mobile tortoise trembled and clanged,
for the racers wore boots with great iron nails and the blood soon sparkled on
the arena. Real battles succeeded single duels; men fought against wild beasts;
Thracian horsemen gave thrilling bull-fights; African elephants, carrying huge
turrets filled with gladiators in armour, charged one another. From all the
corners of the earth the most feocious beasts or the strangest animals were
collected for the Games. The Ocean was dragged of its monsters no less than the
Desert, for the naumachias were now very popular. In the East and in the Desert
beyond the fertile plains of Lybya and Mauritania native huntsmen set traps
for rare beasts to be sent to the Rome impresarios.
In the intervals between the games, the poets visited
the noblest beauties in their boxes, scattering epigrams and elegant quips.
Slaves in white tunics with their hair held by a scarlet ribbon distributed
sherbets and iced melons and cakes, shouting their wares from tier to tier; a
novelty instituted by Nero. Soon the attendants drew back the huge velarium of
scarlet and yellow cloth that protected the spectators from the sun. The sky
was now turning amethyst and a gentle breeze blew from the Alban Hills. From
numerous pipes a fine rain of perfume fell upon the crowd. The attendants
watered the arena to keep the dust down, and in the small conduit at the foot
of each tier the water ran bright and clear, diffusing a pleasant freshness.
It was true that the greater number of bestiaries and
gladiators left the Circus by the Libitine Gate, their corpses drawn by hooks,
and others were carried away to die in the dressing-rooms where the managers
cursed and counted their losses. But the winners had received palms, crowns,
purses filled with gold and, more precious than all, their freedom, for Nero
had set a rule that no gladiator should see his polluce verso, the Emperor’s
thumb turned down. “ Why ask for their death? Alive they will adore me; dead,
they will curse me in Hell.”
Soon the people near the eastern gate would begin to shout
with joy and proffer their hands. It was the Edile rapidly traversing the
middle gangway, and like a labourer sowing his field he scattered right and
left handfuls of wooden balls engraved with a number. Those who were lucky
enough to catch a ball would on the morrow present themselves to the Palace
stewards and receive a gift corresponding to their number—a piece of furniture,
an ornament, a vase, a statuette, a small painting, a purse filled with silver,
a slave, a beautiful dagger. Some were lucky enough to win a cottage in the
country or an apartment in town... The audience chanted and lifted their arms
towards the Imperial box: “Ave, Nero Caesar, our Charming Prince!” The Emperor
looked at them through his emerald monocle, nodding his head in acknowledgment.
But Games and Public Works were draining the Treasury.
Nero was obliged to make the Praetorian Guards wait for their pay, and the
Praetorians were his real standby. Other things influenced the situation—the
great influx of foreigners coming to Rome after acquiring in the Provinces the
right of residence and the restlessness of slaves brought about by the new
Christian doctrine. All this increased the number of groups hostile to the
Emperor. It was not an easy thing to clothe and feed the army of paupers created
by the fire of Rome, and not as an ambitious extravagance, but because of the
frequent shipwrecks around Cape Misenum the Government planned to cut a Canal
across the Pontine Marshes, to enable the barges loaded with grain to travel
safely to Rome. Yet the beaux of Rome lamented that the works in the Pontine
Marshes ruined the vineyards where the Gecube vine was grown!
Nor was the populace grateful. Nero felt the shudder
of isolation. Tigellinus took stock of the situation, and again whispered his
advice: “Nothing will do but to discover the culprits who set fire to Rome.
That alone will interest and satisfy the people.”
All at once the Emperor was surrounded by voices
accusing the Christians. His Ministers, the Senators, the priests in the
temples, philosophers, men of letters, everybody, Roman and foreigner, rose to
accuse the Christians.
At last Nero called a Privy Council. As at all
meetings at which Nero presided, business began with an interchange of
witticisms. Then Nero got near the real matter in hand:
“The paternal administration of Claudius and my own
liberal policy have made it possible for those men Peter and Paul to preach
their new God in all the Provinces and even in my Praetorium.”
Tigellinus answered tartly, “ The Emperor’s over-generous
tolerance of the Christians will be otherwise interpreted.”
Poppaea supported Tigellinus. The Emperor looked
around and rested his eyes upon Seneca, who had been asked to attend the
Council. In a mocking voice the Emperor said, “The Christians! I wish you would
tell me something about these Christians. I hear that you are an admirer of the
man Paul.”
Seneca answered, “It is an animistic religion. Rather
complex to explain in a few words.”
But Tigellinus asked, “Has the Emperor ever heard
their hymns? They call fire and horrors upon Rome... The Christians are a
common crowd, mostly slaves and low-class foreigners. It would give the
greatest satisfaction and pleasure to the Roman people to see the punishment of
these slaves and foreigners who have caused fire of Rome.”
Seneca lifted a finger in his didactic manner. He
would put it in this way, he said. He was not interested in their
superstitions; they were neither very original nor particularly attractive. But
what should cause concern, from a political angle, was entirely another point.
“These Christians,” he went on, “are spreading strange social theories. They
say that slavery is wrong; that slaves and masters are equal. This can be so,
and I am not interested whether this is or is not subversive. But the fact is,
where would anyone be if there were no slaves? There would no longer be labour
for the mines or the factories.”
Seneca paused to wet his lips at his cup of plain
water and Nero looked at him impassively, thinking how clever and lucid the old
fox could be; how masterly he could turn anything good or bad into a sound
reason of State ... Seneca continued, “ These Christians are preaching a new
social order—a dangerous game. They believe in the equality of all men, and
this new concept attracts the slaves and the poverty-stricken. It is something
more dynamic than Spartacus’s movement. It is of no use to apply a milder and
blander form of slavery for all Romans are doing it nowadays. But this new
Christian gospel goes further and deeper.”
The Emperor smiled, pleased as he always was by a
brilliant speech, and he looked around the Council table, at his Ministers and
advisers, one by one. There was Lollius, President of the Senate, wearing the
new style of shoes with the very thick wooden soles, which made it awkward for
a corpulent man to walk. There was Foenius, the Commander-adjunct of the
Praetorians, honest and intelligent as a soldier could be, but certainly caring
one way or another, anxious only to see the Emperor preserve his popularity.
There was Seneca, hiding his real mind as he had been doing for a long time,
and there was Tigellinus, eager to see the Christians punished for the fire.
Tigellinus—it would be curious to know what secret cause Tigellinus had for
hating the Christians so much... And there was Poppaea, unofficial member of
the Privy Council, whose view counted for so much nevertheless, even with him.
The Emperor did not look at the Jewish lawyer, who had been invited to attend
merely in an informative capacity, to give the views of the country from which
the Christian religion had come.
The Christians, the Emperor thought, might provide a
solution. The populace hated them thoroughly, and would therefore be satisfied.
The Christians, as Tigellinus said, were mostly foreigners and freed slaves.
There were also some Romans among them; but these could be quietly spared if
need be. Or perhaps their punishment would act as a salutary example to the
people of Rome not to meddle in alien religions and return more wholeheartedly
to their proper Gods. Indeed, the punishment could be offered as a sacrifice to
Jupiter Capitolinus and to Apollo. Yes, Apollo might be pleased, for he was too
often forgotten in the medley of foreign deities. Afterwards the Emperor would
announce his departure for Greece and maybe Apollo would be favourable to his
artistic tour.
The Chief of Police now spoke, saying that this new
superstition was making followers by the thousand, especially among the lower
classes. It changed their heart— the lower classes had no mind, they only had a
heart which pushed them hither and thither. This new religion took them away
from the beliefs of their fathers, upon which Roman life rested. The Emperor
would be surprised, the Chief of Police went on, to learn how many converts
this man Peter and the other man Paul, who at this moment was not in Rome, had
made in the very Palace.
Nero looked up, “And what should the Emperor do with
them? The Chief of Police shrugged his
shoulders. The example must come from Caesar’s house, and those had already
been arrested. As a precautionary measure or in anticipation of the Emperor’s
decisions? For both.
Tigellinus cried out: “To what purpose a trial? Why
allow them to preach from the witness-box? Better try some of the leaders, and
announce a general sentence. They brag of being Christians, they are all
self-confessed. In every tavern there is but one subject of conversation: ‘What
punishment will be devised for the Christians? ’ ” Tigellinus extended his two
hands towards the Emperor in the attitude of a supplicant to a God, “ O Divine
Caesar, it is important that the people shall speak of you only as a great
artist.”
That night it was announced that the trial of the
Christians would soon commence. The announcement met with general approval.
XIII
When the Chief of Police was ordered to collect the
evidence against the Christians he found that his heaviest task was not to
solicit but to stem the flood of informers. The strangest thing was that few
asked for a reward. Who was sending them? Whose hand, or what motive, was
behind that avalanche of information? Some of it was very interesting.
A young freedman of Poppaea, Narcissus by name, sent
in a neat report:
Some months
before the fire a Christian, believing that I was a new convert, took me to a
room where many Christian chiefs were assembled. I was told that in this room,
hidden under the floor, were kept the rolls on which are written the chronicles
of their religion, for the Deacons feared that certain hostile Jews who dwelt
in the Grove of the Muses might try to steal them. In that room, that night, I
saw the two main gospellers, Simon Peter and Paul of Tarsus, and a certain
Tabeel whom they also called Rufus. Simon Peter, who had only recently
returned to Rome, told of his preaching and organizing in other lands, then
they all fell silent and intent. The room was now in darkness, lit only by the
wavering flames of three torches set upon an altar. After a little while the
man Tabeel began to toss and groan and mutter, acting like a Sybil before she
gives out her prophecy. Presently he rose, his face quite changed, and where
there had been only the man Tabeel there were now two persons—Tabeel and a
stranger. Tabeel began to interpret for this stranger, who said, ‘He who dwells
within me now is one who passed away through violent death into a holy life. I
see him being stoned, and he is lying upon the ground, bloody sweat upon his
brow, while the young men cast their cloaks at the feet of his persecutors and
run away with fear and shame.’
“The man Paul cried out, ‘Tell us his name!’ Tabeel
answered, ‘He gives me no name,’ and Paul said, ‘It is Stephen; it is Stephen
whom I caused to be put to death in the days of my ignorance.’
“Then Tabeel sighed and groaned louder and louder, and
went on: ‘Stephen is now in the form of an Angel and rejoices in that torture
and death. And he says to me: “Behold, I come bearing tidings of the end.”
Stephen is pointing to two dark Angels. They have wind in their wings, and fly
over the city of Rome. The first Angel stretches up his hand and plucks a star
from the sky. He is casting this star into the very centre of Rome. I see the
star falling in places we all know, close beside the Circus. It kindles and
fights up a twisted street. Now the Capuan Gate is all aflame, and a great fire
is rising and spreading like a peacock’s tail. People are running and fleeing.
The whole City is in an uproar. The flames of the falling stars spread swiftly,
and the two Angels blow upon them. The Angel of Destruction is announcing quite
loudly, “Babylon is passing, Rome is no more, her pride is crushed.” I see the
temple of the Moon falling under the flames; the shrine of Vesta, the mighty
temple of Jupiter, they all fall. The flames, like vipers of fire, climb the
hills up to the Palace of Caesar. It is the end, the Day of Atonement, when the
Dead rise and stand before our Lord.’
“Peter and Paul cried: ‘Tell us the day, the time of
this! ’ But Tabeel groaned and tossed, and only said, ‘I cannot see; there is
again darkness around me.’ He tossed and groaned; and speaking in the tongue of
the Jews he said: ‘ Another summer will not pass before this City is destroyed
by fire. There shall be great tribulations and many signs and wonders; but they
are signs of the coming of Christ. And woe to Rome and to Caesar!
“Everybody in the chamber beat their breasts, and
cried aloud in prayer. Tabeel fell back upon the ground and lay there. Simon
Peter said: ‘ Brethren, bear these things in your hearts and impart them to no
man. For they declare that the time is near at hand; keep watch, therefore, and
be prepared.’ He quickly gave the assembly his blessing, and marvelling and
muttering all went into the dark street.”
Another report said:
“On the first night of the fire a frenzied group was
seen gathered around a man they called Hillel, who is another Chief of the
Christians and well known amongst them as having preached at all times the
destruction of Rome. There was also Peter; but although Peter called them to
their chamber of assembly, Hillel cried, ‘The Christ is coming at any moment;
the Heavens are opening; He will appear in all His Glory! ’ And he urged them
all to sing hymns and thanksgiving to the Lord who was giving them the first
sign by setting fire to the City. All the younger men marched down the street,
chanting what they call the Psalm of David, with radiant faces, their eyes
ablaze with hope, delight and ecstasy, believing that the Last Judgment had
come and that soon they would be carried up to the Heavens.
“Hillel,” said the report, “was seen again with a
great band of followers, watching a burning mansion, and their faces were so
full of joy that people around them cried in protest: ‘Are you so glad of this
destruction? ’ And the Christians answered, ‘Yes, for it is a sign of the end.’
Peter and Mark asked their followers to help to save the victims and the
wounded; but Hillel said, ‘Why waste our labour? At any hour the Christ will
appear from the clouds and the Last Trumpet will sound, and we shall be
encircled by a host of Angels and carried into the Heavens
Another informer said that this attitude of Hillel had
caused great dissensions among the Christians, and after the fire Peter with
Mark had summoned Hillel to their presence and endeavoured to reason with him,
but they could not change his passion and fanaticism, and he still talked of
the wrath of God upon Rome. Whereupon Peter summoned all the faithful to a
lonely place outside the City, and he announced that the time had come to
determine the future of the Church in Rome, and while he and Mark and Linus
were of one accord, Hillel stood apart. He proposed that his first Deacon Linus
be the Overseer of the Church in Rome when he himself might go to other lands
to preach the Word; but he denounced Hillel as having forfeited the faith of
the Lord Jesus by refusing to save a woman who was perishing in the flames.
Hillel, he said, would have us hate our neighbours, which is against our faith.
But Hillel spoke with vehement passion, telling of the suffering of die Jews at
the hands of the Romans, and again he affirmed that the fire was the first sign
of the end of Rome. There came shouts of ‘ I am for Hillel the Gaulonite,’ or ‘
I am for Simon Peter of Galilee.’ The gathering broke up in turmoil and since
then the Christians, said the report, were divided in Galileans and
Gaulonites.”
But the Chief of Police felt that that story was of no
import to the case.
One day a small packet of letters was placed on his
desk, a correspondence between Seneca and Paul of Tarsus. There were the
original letters from Paul, and neat copies of the letters from Seneca,
prepared by an amanuensis of the great man. “For posterity,” thought the Chief of
Police, “and how very useful! ” Eagerly he scanned the letters. They were of no
terrific import but showed beyond doubt that Seneca was in close touch with one
of the principal leaders of the Christians, and the followers of this new religion
were now indicted as responsible for the fire of Rome.
“Annaeus Seneca to Paul, greetings. I suppose, Paul,
you have been informed of that conversation which passed yesterday between me
and my Lucilius, concerning hypocrisy and other subjects; for there were some
of your disciples in company with us. I desire you to believe that we much wish
for your conversation. We were much delighted with your book of many Epistles,
which you have written to some cities. Of such sentiments, I suppose, you were
not the author, but only the instrument of conveying, though sometimes both the
author and the instrument.”
Again from Seneca to Paul, “I have completed some
volumes of your letters and divided them into their proper parts. I am
determined to read them to Nero Caesar, and if any favourable opportunity
happens, you also shall be present, when they are read...”
And Paul to Seneca, “ As often as I read your letters
I imagine you present with me. I hope that we shall presently see each other.”
But another letter from Paul to Seneca said: “Concerning those things about
which you wrote to me, it is not proper for me to mention anything in writing
with pen and ink...”
Some months later Paul was writing, “ Although I know
the Emperor is interested in our religion, I desire that for the future you
will not mention me, for you had need be careful, lest by showing your
affection for me you should offend your master.”
And there was one from Seneca, of recent date:
“Annaeus Seneca to Paul, greetings. All happiness to you, my dearest Paul. Do
you not suppose I am extremely concerned and grieved that your innocence should
bring you into sufferings? And that all the people should suppose the
Christians so criminal, and imagine all the misfortunes that have happened to
Rome to be caused by you? But let us bear the charge with a patient temper... ”
The Chief of Police made some notes from the letters,
then he put them away safely—they would come in useful some other time, and for
some other purpose. And he grinned, thinking of the Empress’s surprise, and of
Tigellinus’s astonishment should they hear this latest craze of our
over-confident philosopher Seneca, former Prime Minister.
XIV
The trial of the Christians took place during the
summer, the year 64. It was a quick affair.
A motley of prisoners stood in the Praetor’s Court,
many of them slaves, ill-clad, dark men from the East. Here and there a
better-dressed Roman of the lower classes. There were a few white-robed women,
Eustachia, Mary who was lady-companion to the Lady Pomponia Graecina, wife of
General Pomponius who had been a commander in Britain, and was now one of the
steadiest converts to the new faith. There were also Claudia and Melania.
The prisoners’ leaders and spokesmen were Patrobas,
Hillel and Junia. The medium Tabeel was brought in between two guards.
One by one the spies and witnesses gave evidence. They
said that the prisoners had refused to help the citizens to put out the fire,
and many had openly rejoiced at the sight of the great fire—and this was a
partial truth. Patrobas was called upon to speak for the defence and he said
that it was true that they all belonged to one community and worshipped Jesus
of Galilee, who was the Son of God.
“ Then,” he was asked, “ are you all Galileans? ”
“Call us Galileans, if you like.” Therefore in the
records of the trial the Christians were all described as Galileans.
But Patrobas denied any charge of incendiarism. He
said his companions were all sober men who would abstain from deeds of
violence, as it was contrary to their faith.
The Judge was beginning to doubt the testimony of the
informers, when Hillel was summoned and questioned. With crazy eyes and fierce
manner Hillel declared, “ The Christians have not set the City on fire—it was
Jesus, the Son of God, who caused the Angels to cast down flaming stars from
the Heavens to destroy Rome. O you Romans, our God is the friend of the poor
and of the slave, and the end of Rome is at hand, and we rejoice at the burning
of Rome for it is the beginning of the end. We would not help those who were
perishing because it is well that all Romans should die! ”
At this there was great excitement among the public.
The Judge said that it was plain that all who admitted they were Galileans were
confessing that they were members of a revolutionary society which had as its
purpose the destruction of Rome. They were therefore enemies of Rome, and as
such their punishment was death.
After the sentence a vast crowd went before the Palace
to acclaim the Emperor. How far the demonstration was a spontaneous one, nobody
cared to enquire.
Nero appeared on the terrace, raising his right arm in
gratification. It was indeed the first time that a demonstration had taken
place before the Palace—the new Palace—since the great fire.
Producers, directors and artists were called into consultation
upon the form of a mass execution of Christians. At last it was decided to give
a mythological fete in the Vatican Gardens—a huge gala night.
The Christians were arrested en masse. Soon the
prisons were full and prisoners were placed in the dungeons of the Circus.
The first day three thousand Christians were tied to
stakes, wrapped in clothes soaked with tar and oil. The stakes, joined
crossways and fixed under the chin of the victims, were planted at intervals
along the paths and walks of the vast gardens, around the small green alcoves,
within the thickets, inside the little temples, near the statues and all around
the race-course.
Then, at night, those living statues were lit. The
sulphur and the bitumen of their clothes flared up, raising thick, deep red
flames. It was a fantastic spectacle. The dark gardens became a series of
flaming avenues, of vibrating torches. The bodies writhed; their arms,
purposely left free, beat the air, which was filled with horrible cries. The
human torches seemed to be jumping towards the sky. Dense clouds of smoke
carried the acrid smell of a huge sacrificial offering. From thousands of dying
mouths rose a cry of agony. Here and there voices were heard, “I forgive my
enemies. I am ascending to join God my Father in Heaven.”
The crowd was admitted to promenade along those
flaming avenues. Many victims had been sewn inside skins of animals, and were
now driven before the crowd. Patrobas led the band and looking towards the
Emperor’s box he cried out a prayer for Nero’s soul. Melania, dressed as Dirce,
her naked body lashed to the horns of an angry bull, was applauded as a great
sight, the bull tossing its head and Charging round the arena.
When the fete was at its height, Nero, dressed as
Apollo, on a chariot of ivory drawn by twelve Bacchantes, appeared on the
yellow sand of the main avenue. A troupe of Nymphs burned frankincense before
the chariot; another scattered petals of roses. The procession, escorted by
bearers carrying torches reflected by mirrors, made the tour of the gardens,
greatly acclaimed. Servants of the Palace passed the word that a fresh supply
of iced wines and a sumptuous supper was awaiting the people of Rome.
While the Vatican was thus flooded with triumphal
light and sinister flames, at a spot above the opening of the Vatican grottoes
the families of the victims knelt in prayers. When the fete was over and the
crowds were leaving the gardens singing ribald songs along the Via Triumphalis,
the Christians came out of their catacombs and collected the martyrs’ ashes and
bones. Before daylight the pious procession had disappeared again in the
mysterious galleries and tunnels cut into the soft bowels of the hills.
The Chief of Police reported that all was quiet in
Rome and talk in the taverns was of unanimous praise. Nero toyed with his
necklace of large pearls: “Now we shall be able to get on with our task of
rebuilding a more splendid Rome.”
|