US$13.00THE HEART OF MARY |
AMAZONTHE HEART OF MARY.LIFE AND TIMES OF THE HOLY FAMILY
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Book Five
I
COME weeks after the grim fete in the Palace Gardens,
Seneca again begged the Emperor’s permission to leave Rome for good and retire
to one of his country houses. He had to use a stick now, he said, for he was
tormented by rheumatism.
The Emperor declined to give his consent. On the
morrow Nero’s old Mentor pleaded a nervous breakdown and absented himself from
Court.
The fact was that the depredations that Carinas and
Acratus had made in Greece and in the East, despoiling the temples to fill the
Emperor’s private collection, made Seneca feel that it was better to be rid of
it all. Seneca was now anxious to dissociate himself from Nero; and
notwithstanding his greed, he was even ready to surrender all the riches the
Emperor had given him. But Nero saw through this game. His former tutor and
Prime Minister wished to escape the odium of remaining a Privy Councillor.
Moreover, Nero felt that the desertion of his old
Minister was fanning all sorts of rumours and slanders. In the course of ten
years he had seen Seneca flatter Claudius alive and insult him when dead. He
had seen him accept without qualms a large share of Britannicus’s estate;
countenance the murder of Agrippina and justify the crime, yet now Seneca
wanted to withdraw from this long complicity. It was the blackest perfidy.
The conspiracy of Piso soon convinced Nero that he was
right about Seneca’s real intentions.
In the first place the Chief of Police reported that
Piso and Seneca were visiting one another too frequently. Tigellinus, jealous
of his colleague Foenius, added the latter’s name to the list, suggesting that
Foenius wished to avenge Agrippina of whom he had been a lover. At the head of
the conspiracy there was Piso, chosen because he came from a family that was
related to the most illustrious houses in Rome. Piso looked the embodiment of
honesty. He was straightforward in his friendships, liberal of mind and purse,
and as agreeable as he was handsome. That was enough to give Piso an aura of
popularity which stimulated his ambitions. As a matter of fact, he was neither
very lofty of mind nor superior in morals, but, as Petronius was wont to say,
Piso had that amiable kind of laxity that makes a ruler easy to exploit and not
too boring to support.
The worst, for his fellow-conspirators even more than
for himself, was that it was more than Piso could do to hold in his hands the
threads of such a conspiracy. Actually, Piso was the nominal rather than the
real head of the conspiracy. The real authors of it were a Tribune of a
Praetorian Cohort by the name of Subrius and the Centurion Sulpicius; two
soldiers of the old stamp, who could not forgive Nero for having turned the
Imperial purple into an actor’s cloak.
At that point the conspirators gained the support of
the Consul-designate Lateranus and Seneca’s nephew, the poet Lucan. Lateranus,
with patriotic fervour and without any personal hate for Nero, and Lucan, on
the other hand, with a pretence of having been slighted by s poetical genius
and success. It had indeed happened that Nero, listening one day to the
exaltation of Caesar’s murderers in a poem read by Lucan at a public lecture,
after much irritation made a movement of impatience and rising suddenly from
his chair left the hall followed by his Court, thus leaving a wide gap in the
audience. And later, Nero let it be known that he did not desire that the poet
Lucan should again be asked to give public readings of verses. The youthful
author of Pharsalia never forgave Nero for this affront. He gave vent to his
hate in the theatres and foyers, and at the Campus Martius he stooped as low as
to scribble insults and epigrams on the walls. One day, in a company of
friends, he quoted a hemistich from a song of Nero which was sung in town, and
added to it an offensive sound Lucan had indeed completely lost his head. On
all occasions he exalted to the sky the assassins of tyrants, insulted Nero in
every way and promised anyone the head of the Emperor.
Strangely enough, among the first to join the
conspiracy were two Senators whose bad reputation did not speak well for their
civic virtues: Flavius Scevinus, whose motives were obscure, and Afranius
Quintanus, against whom Nero had written a satire which was only too true. At
their meetings the conspirators spoke only of the public good and of the crimes
that must be avenged. They induced others to join them, Senecio who was a
childhood friend of Nero, and Natalis, an intimate of Piso who, alas, had very
badly chosen his confidants.
For the Emperor the only fact that really mattered was
that hate and contempt for his present life should have spread among the
Praetorian Guards, the traditional bulwark of the Imperial House. Besides
Subrius and Sulpicius, other officers were reported to have joined the
conspirators: the Tribunes Silvanus and Statius, the Centurions Scaurus and
Venetus, and Foenius, who shared with Tigellinus the Command of the Guards.
When the conspirators saw that they could count on
Foenius, they began to discuss the ways of carrying out the plot. Some wanted
to set fire to the Palace and take advantage of the confusion to strike at the
Emperor. Others suggested an attack on Nero while he was performing on the
stage.
The plotting dragged on for many months, feeding on
mere idle talk, till it became an absurd machination, open to all the
discontented and to the fools. While the months were thus passing, a courtesan
who was a party to the plot, felt so disgusted with the procrastination that
she shook off the dust of Rome and went to take the waters at Baiae. Her name
was Epicharis. At Baiae she contrived to use her professional influence to gain
new recruits to the plot. The officers of the Fleet stationed at Cape Misenum
were handsome and easy to convert. From the pleasantness of the Campanian coast
the execution of the plot seemed an easy matter. Patricians and the very
wealthy had villas at Baiae. From a spa, where gouty people used to go for the
sulphur baths, Baiae had become a fashionable seaside resort. Among the most
luxurious villas there was the one of a popular theatrical impresario, and
another of an army contractor, who had amassed a fortune during the Parthian
War, and was now living in the once famous palace of Lucullus. The Emperor
himself was very fond of Baiae and had a pavilion there.
A frequent visitor of the lovely Epicharis was
Volusius Proculus, one of the Commanders of the Fleet. Volusius had a grudge
against the Emperor, whom he reproached with ingratitude. He felt that he was
badly treated at the time of the murder of Agrippina and he would not hesitate,
he said, to take his vengeance. Guilelessly, Epicharis disclosed to him the
plot. Volusius ran to Nero and lay down all he had learned from the courtesan.
The Emperor was taken aback. The thought had never
occurred to him that he might be unpopular. I” am so generous, I am so
clement.” He repeated Seneca’s words, “Clemency not only increases the glory of
a Prince, but increases the security of the Throne.”
After Volusius’s denunciation, Nero turned the matter
over for some time. The poor naval officer was disconcerted, for he had hoped
for an immediate crisis, with condemnations and deaths, out of which he would
have reaped the gratitude of the Emperor. Instead, Nero simply ordered the
arrest of Epicharis, and confronted the informer with the woman. Volusius
re-affirmed his somewhat vague accusation, which the courtesan denied with a
smile. Her meetings with Volusius had had no witnesses and she was able to deny
everything. But the Chief of Police thought it wiser to keep her in “protective
custody.”
Still Nero wavered. Should he inflict a blow and have
a string of corpses around his Court? He demurred. It seemed to him that his
reign had already lasted a century, an aeon of rare triumphs and terrifying
nightmares. One night he dreamt that his throne had changed into a galley, with
purple sails, floating without a pilot upon the sea, a sea as red as blood. And
in that sea, banging against the sides of the ship, was the corpse of his
mother, her head bobbing up and down on the waves; her head that was still so
beautiful and was shouting horrible prophecies.
The matter of the conspiracy was dropped.
But when the conspirators learned of the arrest of
Epicharis, they were taken by such fright that they decided to act at once. But
where? And how? A dagger or poison?
After much thought and more futile talks, they decided
upon a plan. Piso had a charming villa at Baiae, in a position which Nero had
always found delightful. Now Piso had not been denounced. He should therefore
take advantage of this and invite the Emperor to his house. But Piso declined.
The idea, he said, of violating the rules of hospitality was much too horrible.
Piso was, or pretended to be, a sceptic. Although his
fellow-conspirators had decided to designate him as the next Emperor, he was
not much impressed, and looked upon the plot as a play by dilettanti. He was
considered a virtuous man, but virtue is very often nothing more than a veneer
for our vices. Piso did not believe in the Gods, although he did not use
blasphemous words; he was a libertine, but not a drunkard or a degenerate; his
mode of living was luxurious, but not offensive. In short, Piso was but a man
of his times, without any real qualities, without convictions, without
greatness or anything deep. He was simply a polite and charming gentleman, with
enough cynicism to appear indulgent, and enough amiability to look superior.
But did he really want to be Emperor? Of course, if all went well and his
friends should insist, he would not refuse. If they wanted to assassinate Nero,
it was their own look-out, but really he did not want to have anything to do
with it. It would be repugnant to sit on the Throne of a man one has helped to
murder. A most inelegant idea.
Piso told his friends that he would certainly have
nothing to do with the idea of killing the Emperor in his own house. He simply
could not allow one of his guests to be murdered in his very house. It was a
form of inhospitality that he could not admit. As his friends looked at him
disconcerted, he added, “I even wonder whether a murder, in such circumstances,
might not make the victim popular with the people. If you want to kill Nero,
kill him in Rome, in the full exercise of his Imperial duties, as you would
kill a tyrant. Then you can tell the Roman people that you have acted for their
good. But in my house? Why, afterwards I should have to set fire to my villa.
And my villa is so lovely, such a fine position!”
It was, of course, only a ruse. Piso was afraid that a
deed so revolting would incur the odium of the people and destroy his Chances
of ever ascending the Throne, which might then pass to Silvanus, the grandson
of Augustus, or to the Consul Vestinus.
At last, after much hesitation, the conspirators
decided to carry out the plot during the Circus Games for the feast of Ceres,
on the 12th of April. Nero, who now spent his time in the new Palace, would
surely come into the Circus. It would be easy to approach the Emperor, either
during the procession of the Roman ladies who carried with great pomp an egg,
symbol of all life, or during the hunting Of foxes released in pairs in the
Circus with flaming torches attached to their backs. It was agreed that Montanus,
who was strong and courageous, should throw himself at Nero’s feet and beg
monetary help for his private affairs; then he would seize the Emperor’s legs,
throw him on his back, and hold him on the ground while the Tribunes and the
Centurions would finish him with their daggers. Scevinus begged the honour of
the first blow. He showed the fellow-conspirators a little dagger that he had
taken, he said, from the temple of Fortune. While the assassination would take
place, Piso should wait in the temple of Ceres near the River and there the
conspirators would come, guided by Foenius, to lead Piso to the Campus Martius
and present him to the Praetorian Guards to be acclaimed. It was later said
that Antonia, Claudius’s other daughter, had promised to marry Piso for the
purpose of strengthening his claims to the Empire.
A few days later things came to a climax. Scevinus,
the deadliest of the conspirators, returned home from a long talk with Natalis.
This Natalis had been placed by Tigellinus near Scevinus, for the purpose of
keeping an eye on him and on Piso.
Thus, on the very night before the Games, Scevinus,
Who was full of talk and imagination, gave the secret away, his nerves worn out
by too many late parties. Indeed, Scevinus returned home, closed himself in
his study, wrote his Will and then he took out the famous dagger. He tried the
point and called his freedman Milichus. With a mysterious air he whispered to
him, “Quick! Get the point well sharpened! Time is pressing. This is a sacred
dagger and comes from the temple of Fortune at Feren- tum. Tomorrow the
fortunes of the Empire will depend on it! ”
Then Scevinus called his slaves together and freed
them. He read aloud his Will, which contained bizarre legacies. In the middle
of the night he ordered a great banquet. And now and then he enquired about
Milichus, “Why is he so long in bringing the dagger?” At the end the freedman
returned with it, and Scevinus most foolishly uncovered his plans by ordering
his freedman to prepare bandages and make all kinds of absurd preparations.
Milichus guessed his master’s secret and confided his
suspicions to his wife. She urged him to denounce their master—great indeed
would be the prize they would gain by saving the Emperor’s life, and even
greater the danger they were running by keeping silent. At daybreak Milichus
hurried to the Gardens of Servilius where the Emperor was in residence. The
Gardens were on the left bank of the River, on the Ostia side, above the Port,
near the mouth of the Anio. There, under centuries-old trees, along avenues adorned
with Greek statues, Nero enjoyed the quietude of a town retreat that was almost
rural.
Milichus presented himself with a resolute air and
said that he desired to have word with the Emperor. The officer of the Guards
told him to hold his peace and go his way; but Milichus cried so loud that he
was the bearer of a great secret that at last he was brought before
Epaphroditus, the Emperor’s private secretary. Epaphro- ditus listened to the
tale and decided to take him to the Emperor. On bended knee, dramatically
Milichus announced that a great conspiracy was on the point of taking place. He
denounced his master Scevinus and told the Emperor his story in great detail.
One hour later Scevinus was arrested and confronted
with his freedman. He defended himself with much composure, and called
Milichus a scoundrel and a twister. Nero was on the point of believing him,
when unluckily for Scevinus, Milichus’s wife appeared. She told the Emperor of
the secret meeting that had taken place the previous day between Scevinus and
Natalis. The latter was immediately fetched and he and Scevinus were questioned
separately. Their answers disagreed. Threatened with torture, both gave way at
the mere sight of the dreaded instruments. Natalis confessed the plot and named
Piso; then he accused Seneca.
From that moment, confessions and betrayals followed
one another. Scevinus, realizing that he was lost, gave away Senecion,
Quintanus and Lucan. Senecion and Quintanus denounced their best friends; the
poet Lucan, so noble with the pen, accused his own mother.
At that point Nero remembered the courtesan Epicharis
who was still waiting in jail. She was ordered to be questioned again, and
Nero felt sure that a woman would not withstand the tortures at the sight of
which men had collapsed. But Epicharis remained silent. Neither the whip nor
the knife nor the hot irons made her speak. The following day the inquisitors
attempted to renew their examination; Epicharis’s body was broken and bleeding
arid she had to be carried on a stretcher. But rather than give way she
strangled herself with the handkerchief that was attached to the
stretcher-bars.
All Rome trembled. Who had not, in their secret heart,
wished for the Emperor’s death? The Emperor shut himself in the Palace, like an
exile in a lost island. His rooms were guarded day and night. The City walls
were garrisoned with troops as if the enemy were at the gates. The Fleet came
up the Tiber and held the City under her catapults. Arrests were the order of
the day.
At the height of the trials Piso was urged by his
friends to attempt a desperate coup by appealing to the people from the rostra
in the Forum and denouncing the tyrant. But Piso only shrugged his shoulders,
and answered that it was simpler to await in comfort the Imperial order to
commit suicide. When the order came, Piso asked his physician to cut his veins
in the bath, and hastily dictated a Will full of praise for Nero, vainly hoping
to secure a small part of his estate for his wife Arria, whom he had taken away
from his friend Domitius Silus.
After Piso came the turn of Lateranus. He was a
Consul-designate, a man Of some courage. Lateranus was beheaded on the spot
where the condemned slaves were put to death.
And at last came Seneca’s turn.
The old fox had behaved rather equivocally. On the
very day that the plot was to be carried out, Seneca had come near Rome, and
had a meeting with Subrius and some Centurions. For there was a plot within the
plot, the Tribune and some of his friends intended to pass the Empire to Seneca
and get rid of Piso even before the attempt on Nero.
Granius Silvanus, an officer of the Praetorian Guards,
was sent to question Seneca. Granius, too, was in the plot, but the position
was now that each one betrayed the other to save his neck. Seneca admitted that
he had received a visit from Natalis, and very quietly told what had taken
place.
Granius returned to the Palace to report. Nero asked,
“Is he getting ready to die?” Granius answered that he had not seen any sign of
weakness or fear in the old man. Poppaea and Tigellinus, who were with the
Emperor at that moment, sneered with contempt. “Go back at once,” shouted the
Emperor, “tell him to make ready to die.”
Still Granius declined to go to Seneca, and sent a Centurion
in his stead with the Emperor’s message.
When the messenger arrived, Seneca was at dinner, with
his wife and two friends. He listened impassively; then he asked for his Will,
and calmly added to it a few codicils with bequests for his friends. But the
Centurion told him to cut the matter short.
Seneca turned to his family and friends, “As I am
prevented from recognizing your devotion and your services, I leave you the
only thing that I can still dispose of —the example of my life.”
With this last piece of buffoonery the philosopher
made ready to die in the grand manner. His wife and his friends were in tears
whilst Seneca spoke to them words of comfort. Then, he himself shed some tears
in taking leave of his young wife Paulina. She cried out that she would rather
die with him. That seemed to please the old man a great deal and quietly he
watched Paulina preparing to join him in death. The physician opened the veins
of both, but as Seneca was weakened by old age, he bled very slowly, whereupon
he asked that the veins of his ankles be cut too. Suddenly the pain was too
strong, and to cover his suffering he asked Paulina to let herself be
transported to another room. Once alone, Seneca adopted a proud attitude, and
calling for his secretary he commenced to dictate his last words with much
eloquence. He recalled his youthful years and his exile. He mentioned his four
tracts on the Consolation of Philosophy for it was then that they had chosen
him to be Nero’s tutor and Mentor. That was the terrible thing of his life—he
had brought up Nero on good orthodox doctrines. He had babbled to him about
goodness and justice and mercy—and it was all a sham.
Now what was the good of dictating his farewell to
life? Death was slow in coming. Seneca asked the doctor to give him poison and
drank the 'hemlock. “Like Socrates,” he said, for nothing less seemed decorous
enough. But the hemlock had no effect either. Seneca asked to be placed in a
hot bath, and sprinkling with water the friends and slaves who were standing
around him, he invoked Jupiter Liberator. At this the Centurion lost his
patience and shut the lid of the vapour bath with both hands. Thus the great
Seneca died.
The same night Nero’s tutor, philosopher and mentor
was buried, as he had prescribed in the Will he had written in the days of his
good fortune, without pomp or ceremony. Seneca’s death, however, left Nero
pondering. He spoke of it at dinner, albeit it was a rule with him never to
mention sad subjects at table.
“He was an envious man,” Nero said. “He was covetous
and grasping. He loved riches, he was intemperate in his desires, he amassed
wealth by any means, he imposed enormous usury upon the Provinces and shared
the spoils of innocent victims. He betrayed friendships, he was disloyal in
his duties, he was as humble and fawning in his exile as he was proud and
selfish in the days of his fortune. He was devoted only to one person—himself.”
Then he added: “Yes, Seneca was all this. And he was
my tutor.” And with that queer mixture of naiveté and sarcasm, Nero looked
enquiringly around at his guests. No one spoke. After a while, he added: “After
such a career, Seneca had the impudence to recommend his life to the admiration
of posterity! Really, he overdid his last scene.”
II
Terror and persecutions are like the ripples that a
little stone causes when tossed into the still waters of a pond; each
successive ripple becomes larger and larger, till the last one seems to
overflow the banks. Under the incessant denunciations the number of
conspirators on trial grew and grew. Nero discovered the most unexpected
enemies hidden in his own Palace. At all hours of the day companies of
Praetorians were marching through the City and across the fields bringing new
political agitators to the prisons hastily built in the very gardens of the
Palace.
Before the Security Tribunal, where the Emperor sat
between his two assessors, Tigellinus and Foenius in their capacity of
Praefects of the Praetorium (one was going to betray him and the other had
already done so), Nero himself examined the accused. The judges again called
Scevinus, who was of an impressionable nature and easily carried away. It was
clear that he had not yet spoken all he knew. But at the very moment that Nero
was making ready to question Scevinus once more, his principal accomplices were
there, yet free and unsuspected; some judges themselves. Subrius the Tribune
was only awaiting a sign from Foenius to strike. His hand rested upon the hilt
of his sword, his eyes questioning his chief. But Foenius held his hand, for
Nero was surrounded by the German Liege-Guards whose devotion knew no bounds.
Moreover, behind the Emperor stood Cassius, a man of Herculean strength. As in
some play about a fabulous tyrant, the Giant stood guard over his Lord. And
Foenius was a cautious man. But his cleverness was going to defeat him. He
thought it wise to appear over-zealous, and he accused his own accomplices
pitilessly. Nero himself and Tigellinus were surprised by his ferocity. But
Scevinus felt indignant, “Say it yourself, Foenius. Reveal to our divine Nero
Caesar the details of our plot, which you know as well as us.”
Next day was the turn of Subrius, who, disgusted by
the cowardice of his accomplices, proudly cried aloud his own guilt. Nero was
deeply moved by the defection of an officer of the Praetorians. “Why did you
conspire against me?” he asked Subrius. The answer was, “Because I hate you. No
one was more faithful than I when you deserved our affection. Yet now there is
only hate and contempt for the murderer of his mother and of his wife; for the
Emperor who has turned comedian!”
Nero felt overwhelmed. The accusations were as new to
him as the reasons of those black deeds were old and forgotten. The ancient
frankness of the Roman soul survived. Freedom of speech was still granted to
the accused and there were only two tunes among Nero’s subjects—flattery or
insolence. Had he, the Emperor, mistaken flattery for truth? Subrius’s answer
was a great shock; the greatest shock Nero had received, for he was honestly
convinced of the superior reasons of State that had dictated the death of his
mother; and his fame as an artist was his own personal achievement and glory.
As for the fire of Rome, he was entirely and absolutely innocent. Had he not
transformed a misfortune into an opportunity for rebuilding a more splendid and
modern city? Had not the idea of Rome and the needs of the people been his only
concern? “Why? Why?” he petulantly asked Subrius.
Subrius died like a soldier, coldly appraising the
sword that was going to sever his head. All the Praetorian officers died well.
Only Foenius shed tears and sighed over his Will. Young Lucan, on the example
of his uncle, opened his veins in a hot bath and then suddenly remembered a
passage in his unfinished poem Pharsalia in which he had prepared to describe
the agony of a soldier dying as he was now dying. Signalling to a secretary he
dictated six lines, asking that they should be added to his poem.
For political reasons the Consul Vestinus was only proscribed,
for Vestinus had married Statilia, although the Emperor was one of her many
lovers. On the day of his sentence Vestinus attended to the duties of his
office and gave a dinner as though he had nothing to fear. A Tribune brought
him Nero’s reproach for living in a house that was like a fortress dominating
the Forum and possessing a family of slaves that was like an army. Vestinus
quietly took leave of his guests, retired to his bathroom and his doctor cut
his veins.
Seneca’s young wife was spared. But the islands of the
Aegean Sea were now peopled with exiles, who met in groups as large as
colonies. The purge was vast and drastic.
Afterwards the temple of Jupiter on the Capitol was
filled with offerings. The victims’ relatives garlanded their houses with
laurel, waited in the streets and threw themselves at the Emperor’s knees. His
hands became weary with kisses. In a sudden rush of emotion, and to forget the
terror of it all, the Emperor distributed gifts to those who had served him
well. Natalis was honoured, the freedman Milichus was ostensibly remunerated
and granted permission to add the epithet of Saviour to his name. The Praetorians
were ordered to assemble in the Campus Martius and the Emperor in person
distributed a bonus of one thousand sesterces to each man. It was also
announced that in future they should receive the grain free, at the Emperor’s
expense. The Senate held a special sitting, and at the Emperor’s request
conferred the ornaments of Triumph on Petronius and Tigellinus and on Nerva who
was Praetor-designate. Nerva and Tigellinus, as an additional honour, were
voted triumphal statues in the Forum and in the Palace grounds. Nerva, who was
one day to become Emperor and had already adopted as his son Trajan, remained
through all his life loyal to the memory of Nero. And it was upon Nerva’s
example that the favourable opinion which Trajan held of Nero reseed.
After this, things became more normal again. Thanksgivings
were rendered to all the Gods and in particular to the Sun who had cast his
light upon such a tenebrous plot. It was decided to erect a temple to the
Goddess Salus upon the spot where Scevinus had taken out his dagger, first
evidence of the plot. It had already been voted that the month of April should
be called with Nero’s name; Senator Cerialis now proposed that a temple should
be erected to Nero. But about this Nero felt the same as Tiberius who had
always declined all divine honours. He said that he would rather be exalted as
a great artist than a second-rate God.
The conspiracy had another result: that of bringing
into prominence a certain Nymphidius. He was the son of a courtesan who was
well known to all the officers in Rome. Nymphidius’s tall stature and a certain
ferocious air gave him a resemblance to Caligula, and indeed, he liked to boast
that the late Emperor was his father. Nero chose this bogus Imperial bastard to
succeed Foenius as Praefect of the Praetorians. He made a good pair with
Tigellinus.
A few nights later, after dinner, the Emperor passed
his hand under Petronius’s arm and walked out with him into the gardens.
“Petronius,” he said, “I want you to be my Prime
Minister.”
Petronius turned his head slightly to look at the
Emperor. He found the offer rather strange and for one fleeting moment he felt
a touch of annoyance lest it should prove too tiresome to decline the offer
with good grace.
Nero said again, “Will you accept?”. Petronius was not
only an Epicure, but a man of taste and perfect distinction. Born in
Marseilles, of an immensely wealthy father, he had come quite young to Rome,
and throughout his life he always had shown himself above all the positions he
had held. Social life he had pursued with aristocratic ease and when entrusted
with the government of Bithynia he had displayed a vigorous intelligence. After
his return to Rome, Nero had taken to him at once. The Emperor had nicknamed
him the Arbiter of Elegance, and Petronius had not disliked the name. After
all, it was a good description. In all delicate questions Nero consulted his
taste. His advice was often accepted, and nothing was worn or done by the Beaux
at Court that was not first commended by Petronius. He was—now the Emperor
thought—a man whom Nature had gifted with a nonchalance that took him easily
through life. An expert in the art of enjoying life, neither violent nor debauched,
always expressing the most licentious thoughts in pure language. A man who knew
how to avoid excess and put distinction and grace into his vices. He gave the
day to sleep, away from business, vulgarities and troublesome people, and the
night he spent in pleasures with a few well-chosen friends, men who could talk
well and knew that a dinner-party is made of good conversation as well as of
good food and wine. Nero greatly enjoyed Petronius’s company; his way of
walking slowly, with an air of indolence and fatigue; his drawl in speech; his
economy of gestures, and his person that seemed tired by too long resting, yet
there was no trace of pose in anything he did. Nero felt that if Petronius
would now be his Prime Minister, he might find a new incentive to live and rule
in a different atmosphere. Petronius was sure to bring it about. The populace
of Rome adored him. Perhaps the very crowd found him so different, so
gentlemanly, so more Roman than all the clowns that danced around the Court.
And Tigellinus’s conception of life and pleasure seemed to smack of the
servants’ quarters and of brothels. Nor did Tigellinus take very seriously his
master’s artistic aspirations. Petronius instead was the personification of Art
itself.
Gently, almost hesitatingly, the Emperor touched again
his friend’s arm. How strange it was that with Petronius he almost felt shy!
“Shall I announce at once that I have appointed you my Prime Minister?” And
Nero looked at Petronius’s handsome face and slightly cynical eyes.
Petronius flicked the stem of a flower with his ivory
cane, paused, and then shook his head. “Nero Caesar,” he said, “it is a great
honour—or is it a favour you are asking of me? But it is too late.”
“Why too late? Think of the years ahead, of the
greatness we can bring to Rome! With your clear judgment, with my great
Art...”
Petronius shook his head again, “ It is too late, Nero
Caesar. I am tired of life. You see, one should not live too long. Life becomes
a frightening thing. Men like you and I should die young.”
III
A marked change was taking place in Nero. While the
Senate lowered itself to abject adulation, Nero’s pride seemed to touch the
limit of folly. Petronius’s refusal to become Prime Minister spurred Nero to
return to his writings and to the stage. He felt he wanted to show his friend
that he was above mere human beings. He was angry with Petronius, yet he needed
his presence. The cynical and mocking eyes of the Arbiter Elegantiarum were a
mirror in which Nero saw hints on how to correct many of his acts and thoughts.
One day a certain Bassius from Carthage, a man who had
recently been knighted, arrived in Rome with the tale that he was on the point
of discovering the treasure of Queen Dido, which, according to an ancient
legend, was buried centuries before in a cavern. This Bassius showed a free
hand to some Court officials, thereby obtaining an audience of the Emperor, a
thing that was no longer easy since Piso’s plot. The story of Dido’s treasure
sounded a very tall one. But a queer thought crossed Nero’s mind. The idea of a
fantastic treasure trove could be most convenient for all sorts of purposes.
It was thereupon announced that a fleet would be placed at the disposal of
Bassius and the newspapers published articles about the Treasure Fleet. The
romantic story of Queen Dido, deserted by her lover Aeneas, was duly polished
up. Orators and poets were instructed to celebrate the good luck that would put
into the Emperor’s hands untold riches with which to indulge his munificence
and amuse the Roman people.
In that chimera Nero found a pretext to engage in
expenses even greater than before. For several months the Ministers had been
busy with plans for a Canal which was to join Ostia with the Lake of Avernus,
beyond Naples, so that ships could pass through without a sea voyage. Really it
was a fantastic idea to build such a canal one hundred and sixty miles long and
of a breadth sufficient to permit ships with five banks of oars to pass each
other; yet the Emperor had ordered all prisoners from every part of the Empire
to be brought to Italy and set to work. To finance the scheme—he now said—he
would have the immense treasure of Queen Dido. “ Anyway,” Nero told the Senate,
“the revenue of the Empire is much too great, and it would only make money
cheap if we kept it in the banks.”
Queen Dido’s treasure soon proved what it was, a fairy
tale, for Bassius, assisted by an army of native workmen, dug up the soil of
Carthage and, of course, found nothing; and after a time he killed himself in
disgust. When the Emperor found himself in difficulties with his Canal plans,
all sorts of means were devised to get funds. Three- fourths of the estates of
the richest freedmen were brought compulsorily into the Exchequer upon their
decease with the excuse that the freedmen bore the name of a family without
sufficient reason. The estates of all such persons who in their Wills had not
been sufficiently mindful of the Emperor were confiscated and the lawyers who
had drawn up the Wills were heavily fined. Private individuals were forbidden
to use garments dyed the colour of amethystine or Tyrian purple as pertaining
to the Emperor,! and those who wore them were fined. When no other money could
be raised, the temples were rifled of the rich offerings; gold and silver
statues were melted down, not excluding the statues of the House Gods of Rome,
who were kept in the Capitol and considered the City’s Protectors.
At the same time, Nero was very busy with the stage.
For the second celebration of the Games instituted by him, he planned to show
Rome what an artist the Emperor was. The Senate, somewhat alarmed, tried to
avoid the repetition of this absurdity by granting in advance to the Emperor
the Eloquence and Poetry Prizes. But Nero refused them: He did not need any
favour to assure him of victory, the equity of the judges was enough.
On the day of the Games, Nero commenced by declaiming
a poem of his own composition. The crowd in the Circus rose as one man and
asked to be granted the favour of witnessing all the Emperor’s talents.
Whereupon Nero formally entered the competition. His name was enlisted, for
like all other competitors, he submitted to the rules. Two hundred thousand
spectators applauded him in the way they applauded the popular comedians. Was
it the novelty, or was it mass hysteria? The crowd clapped and shouted in a transport
of joy.
On the second day there was such a rush for places in
the Circus that several people were squeezed or trampled to death in the
corridors leading to the upper tiers. Special Police and secret agents,
distributed among the audience, controlled the public. Once the performance had
started, no one was allowed to leave the Circus. Some women gave birth to
babies during the show. Other people pretended to faint and were taken away on
stretchers. In the great Senate box, General Vespasian, who had eaten too much,
fell asleep while Nero was singing his grand aria. Amidst the silence and
suspense, at the very moment when the Emperor was warbling his most delicate
notes, a deep snoring was heard. To save Vespasian, already invested with the
Consular dignity, his friends signed a humble petition; but Vespasian had to
keep away from Court for some time.
Nero won all the prizes. With a hint of pique he told
Petronius, “Now I am really popular.”
IV
Poppaea was worried. She was again with child; but the
Emperor was neglecting her. The hope of giving Nero an heir was no longer
enough to make her feel secure. She paid many visits to the magician Joah. Many
a night a plain litter was brought to the side-door of her private apartments
and her favourite lady-in-waiting whispered the address to the head-bearer. The
carriers lifted the palanquin and started on their soft-footed run, rapidly
disappearing through the alleys that descended from the Palatine to the Jewish
quarter across the River. The head-bearer 'knocked at a door that was promptly
opened and the Empress, wrapped in ,a dark cloak, swiftly crossed the sombre
threshold, while the litter took its stand round the comer, and men of the
Imperial Bodyguard in plain clothes hovered round the magician’s house.
This soothsayer Joah, a Jew, had been much in fashion
in the last years of Claudius’s reign, for it was said that he performed
miracles. But it was a risky thing to be too famous or popular under Nero and
the shrewd Jew was now content with a small but select clientele Of wealthy
ladies, among whom was the Empress. And of late, Poppaea came more and more to
consult the magician Joah, for all he had foretold for her had come to pass.
Now Poppaea stood in the room full of shadows, hung with panels embroidered
with strange symbols, and she bent her pretty head before the tall and lean
magician, whose white beard and bright eyes gleamed in the mysterious darkness.
Joah looked at her a long time, then he said:
“I have the answer to what you are going to ask me.”
The magician placed a hand upon the Empress’s shoulder, and at his bidding she
lay herself down on the floor. And she heard strange noises coming from the
earthen floor; shrieks and cries that seemed to come from the bowels of the
Earth. Slowly Poppaea unveiled her eyes, and saw that the room was filled with
a vapour that smelled of pungent spices. Upon the floor great spiders’ webs
glimmered in the dim light and the magician stepped between them and halted
before an altar. There he stood a while, looking dark and gaunt, murmuring
words that she could not understand. At last he stepped back, noiselessly, and
walked around Poppaea three times, drawing around her a white circle of light.
With a rod he drew a cross, which meant the balance of the Universe. Poppaea
covered her eyes once more, for she could not bear the glare of that circle of
light. The magician ordered her to hold a small sheaf of com with her left
hand, and with her right hand to count three times twenty-seven grains. Poppaea
did as she was told, and detached and counted with her lips twenty-seven
grains, and then again and again, dropping them in a small cup made of copper.
The magician took the cup and poured the grains into a silver bowl, which he
filled with water from a ewer, and handed it to Poppaea, ordering her to drink
it. She lifted the bowl, inside which the grains of com sparkled like diamonds
and when she took a sip from it, the water seemed to bum her through.
The magician took the bowl from her hands. He made
passes with his fingers around her throat. Then he said, “Take heed! A new
child will be your death.”
Back at the Palace, Poppaea brooded over this
prophecy. It was indeed a terrifying one. She had prayed so ardently to be
given another child, to replace tire lost one. She remembered Nero’s tender joy
when their little daughter was born, although he was disappointed that it was
not a son to bring up as an heir. How could a new child be her death? Would she
die in childbirth? Or would Nero tire of her during her pregnancy?
V
Only a few weeks went by. One day, long after sunset,
the Emperor came back from a chariot race, slightly inebriated, for he had
paused in the paddock to drink with the winners and chat with the fashionable
courtesans.
The Emperor entered his private apartment with an
unsteady gait, leaning heavily on the arms of two slaves. The Empress was
seated there, awaiting his return. She looked at him with disgust, and let an
insult escape her lips. She mocked him for playing the actor and the
charioteer. She mentioned her former husband Otho. She gave vent to her
jealousy and her present ennui.
The moment was ill-chosen. The Emperor looked at
Poppaea nonplussed. Then, with a drunken gesture, he jabbed her in the stomach
with his sandalled foot.
During the night Poppaea died of a haemorrhage.
VI
Poppaea’s death threw Nero into extreme depression.
Instead Of burning the corpse, in Roman fashion, Nero ordered that it should be
embalmed in the Egyptian style. He gave Poppaea the funeral of an Eastern
Queen. He himself recited the funeral oration from the rostra in the Forum, and
with touching words, he recalled the memory of his little daughter who had died
in the cradle.
For days Rome was full of the funeral’s pomp and
around the bier were burnt all the perfumes that Arabia could produce in one
whole year. Poppaea was buried in the Augusteum, the tomb of the Caesars.
Nero was most sincere in his grief for Poppaea. He
regretted her as one regrets a source of joy that can be found no more. Someone
mentioned a woman who was extraordinarily like Poppaea. Nero ordered her to
come to the Palace, and endeavoured to feel some passion for her. But it was
not possible to recall a vanished charm, or to deceive the mysterious impulses
of love.
In the midst of those sentimental complications
another political plot was discovered. The Praetor Sosianus was named. It
seemed almost a diversion from the grief of mourning Poppaea. Then an epidemic
came as a change. Nearly thirty thousand died of the plague in the course of a
few weeks. Every house had its dead. Funerals filled the streets and from the
Campus Martius the smoke of the pyres spread a pall over the City. At the same
time storms and tempests, winds and lightnings caused disasters everywhere. A
Knight, by the name of Cossianus, fell ill with a disease called the lichen. It
had occurred only once in Rome, under Tiberius; a terrible disease, which
showed in the face, beginning under the chin. The populace called it mentagre because it gave a ridiculous appearance to the victim’s chin. Strangely enough,
the lichen spared the slaves, the middle-classes and the common people. It was
truly an aristocratic disease. Cossianus, sick with lichen, was a great friend
of Nero. The Emperor, sorry to lose him, ordered his doctor to try all means to
save him. The doctor replied that the only physician who could cure lichen was
in Alexandria. Nero gave orders that a fast galley should sail for Egypt to
fetch this physician. But when the Egyptian doctor arrived, he gave Cossianus
an “heroic” medicine, made with cantharides. The patient died the same day.
But when the epidemic abated, the treason trials were
started again, this time against Senator Thrasea. Thrasea’s fault was that he
led such an irreproachable life that the Senate could find no alternative but
to be on his side. There is nothing worse than to be a champion of uprightness
in lax times. There was therefore only one avenue open—to make Thrasea
unpleasing to the Emperor. As usual, Tigellinus hit upon a clever idea.
King Tiridates had just arrived in Rome. Son of
Arsacides, King of the Parthians, Tiridates had come to Rome from the Middle
East to humble himself at Nero Caesar’s knees. He had come to seal the peace
with Rome. There should be no more wars in the Empire. Tiridates’s journey from
far-away Persia was a Royal Progress. In all countries the people applauded his
passage; hospitality was showered upon the Prince and his suite. Tiridates had
declined to travel by sea, for he belonged to the Magi, and his religion
forbade him to spit into the sea or defile the waters with his excrements. He
merely consented to cross the Hellespont, for the crossing was very short and
he could do it without committing an impious act.
The Imperial Government had appointed Vivianus,
son-in-law of General Corbulo, as official escort with a force of cavalry.
Tiridates was bringing with him the Princes of his family and all his train of
three thousand Parthian horsemen. Next to him rode his Queen, her head enclosed
in a golden helmet, the lowered visor hiding her face. Notwithstanding the
contribution of all the Provinces, the entertainment of Tiridates cost the
Treasury the equivalent of nearly twenty thousand pounds a day.
The journey took nine months, from the farthest lands
of Persia, always on horseback, by easy stages. When the procession reached the
soil of Italy it was met by the Imperial carriages, sent by the Emperor; and
Tiridates, instead of entering Rome direct, was first taken to Naples, to pay
obeisance to the Emperor who was there on holiday. As a matter of fact, this
was a little ruse of Nero’s, meant to show the Senate and the people that the
first homage was due to the Emperor, not to Rome.
When he appeared before Nero, Tiridates greeted him in
Oriental fashion. He bent his knee, called the Emperor his Lord and gave
adoration. Nevertheless, he refused to discard his sword, but to show that he
meant no ill, he asked that the sword be nailed to the scabbard.
Nero, with his taste for the theatrical, found that
gesture much to his taste. Accordingly, he asked Tiridates to follow him to
Rome, and entertained him en route. The cost of those entertainments was
enormous. The gladiators were paid the highest fees, arms were of the best,
animals and beasts were brought from Africa and India, beautiful curtains
covered the open theatres, sumptuous refreshments were offered to the guests
and expensive trinkets and gifts were given away in lotteries at the end of the
shows. The luxury was such that in the foyer of the theatres were exhibited
statues and portraits of the most famous gladiators and even models of the
rarest beasts to be seen in the games.
Tiridates was so impressed by the show at Pozzuoli
that he felt it incumbent on him to take part in person in that great feast in
his honour and calling for his bow and arrows, from his seat in the Imperial
box he transfixed the wild beasts as they entered the arena and planted banderillas in two bulls. The courtiers whispered that he meant to remind the Emperor and
the Cabinet of the Parthians’ skill with such arms.
When at last the Imperial train approached Rome, the
people and the Senate came outside the walls to meet the Emperor and his Royal
guest. All the citizens were dressed in white; and the garlanded houses and
decorated palaces made a great sight. Before the temples frankincense smoked
in great burners and the statues of the Gods were dressed in magnificent
clothes.
But the weather was foul. It rained continuously.
There was no chance of showing the Armenian King to the people. Nero was much
annoyed.
At last the rains stopped. The Palace was at once
bustling with orders. Marvellous games were organized at Pompey’s Theatre. The
entire interior was renovated. The scenic arch was richly gilded, as well as
the edges of the tiers of the auditorium. The great canopy above the public was
of purple cloth, embroidered in the centre with the Emperor dressed as Apollo
riding his chariot through the Heavens. A splendid buffet was provided after
the show and Nero sang to a select audience. This performance so astounded
Tiridates that a few days later he let the Emperor guess his feelings by
saying, “You have in General Corbulo a superior servant.” But Nero
misunderstood the innuendo, and showered upon Tiridates presents of immense
value.
Yet, in the midst of the rejoicing and splendour, a
crime was brewing. Senator Thrasea had once more been forbidden to appear with
the Senate at the Emperor’s reception. By this Nero meant to show Tiridates
that he was no less powerful in Rome than an Eastern King in his palace.
Thrasea wrote to the Emperor to ask what offence had he committed to deserve
such a snub. Nero opened the letter eagerly, for he hoped to find in it some
words of fear or regret that would diminish Thrasea’s character, but there were
none. Whereupon the Emperor called a meeting of the Senate in the temple of
Venus Genitrix.
The fact was that during the last few years Thrasea
had altogether abstained from taking part in the Senate’s sittings, openly
saying that that noble assembly was reduced to a farce. Nevertheless his
friends enjoined him to attend this very special meeting and avoid an open
provocation. But the following day two Cohorts of Praetorian Guards occupied
the beautiful temple of Venus, that Julius Caesar had built of white marble in
the centre of the Forum. Troops lined the square and a motley crowd of apparently
idle citizens took positions around the temple, carrying swords under their
togas. Indeed, the Senators had to force their way through to enter the
building.
Fearing that Thrasea might not attend, Nero decided to
send his Imperial Message to the Senate by the hand of the Quaestor. Thus both
the Emperor and the accused kept away. In his message the Emperor mentioned no
name, but bitterly deplored the indifference of certain Senators who neglected
public affairs for the pleasure of their gardens. The orator Marcellus was
ready to act as formal accuser, and Tigellinus had rallied his son-in-law
Capito, who had a personal grudge against Thrasea for having supported the
people of Cilicia in their charges of malversation against him. Tigellinus had
drawn up a list of charges against Thrasea: he had walked out of the Senate
during the debate on Agrippina’s death; he had not been present at Poppaea’s
funeral, and lastly, when Nero was afflicted by a bad cold which threatened to
spoil his golden voice, Thrasea had not taken part in the sacrificial
offerings for the Emperor’s recovery.
The indictment was conducted in a vulgar manner.
Thrasea was summarily sentenced, with liberty to choose whichever form of death
he preferred. Thrasea was at his house, calmly walking with his friend the
philosopher Demetrius, discussing with him upon the nature of the soul. The
Quaestor arrived, carrying the intimation of arrest by order of the Senate.
Thrasea met the Magistrate under the shady portico of his house. He read with
composure the Senatus-Consulte, then, entering his private room with Demetrius,
tendered his arm to his doctor. As the blood gushed out and fell upon the
floor, Thrasea turned to the Quaestor, “Let us offer a libation to Jupiter
Liberator. Young man, you have been born in an age when it is desirable to strengthen
the soul with an example of fortitude...”
As the family was not allowed to give Thrasea a solemn
funeral, the images of his ancestors could not precede him in the Forum and be
placed around the speaker’s tribune, nor rest upon curule chairs during the
obituary oration. His son-in-law Helvidius, himself sentenced to exile, helped
to prepare a pyre, and a few undertakers assisted without pomp at the
cremation. The pyre of the staunchest die-hard burned silently during the
night, like an abandoned house. Then the widowed Arria, her daughter and Thrasea’s
son-in-law collected the ashes and enclosed them in an urn, which was hastily
walled up with the lamp that the Romans believed would burn for ever with the
spirit of the dead. Towards dawn, after a night spent in those sad duties,
Thrasea’s family were surprised to hear an immense noise, the voice of the
crowd. It was the populace acclaiming the Emperor who was going to the Forum to
crown Tiridates King of Armenia.
Five Cohorts were drawn up on parade in the Forum. The
Emperor arrived and seated himself upon an ivory chair on the rostra, in
triumphal dress, against a glittering background of standards and ensigns.
Tiridates advanced towards him on a stage erected for the purpose and threw
himself at Nero’s feet. The Emperor raised him quickly with his right hand, and
kissed him. Then Tiridates spoke his petition in humble terms, which an
interpreter repeated in Latin. In solemn words Nero replied that he was giving
to Tiridates the crown of Armenia. Whereupon Tiridates was made to sit on a
stool low enough to allow the Emperor to take away the simple tiara and replace
it with the diadem, which was the cap worn by the Persian Kings, high and
stiff, encircled around the head by a golden ribbon upon a blue ground
embroidered with white dots. The acclamations of the multitude filled the sky.
When the coronation was over, the guests were asked to
remain in their places. Nero took from his head the laurel crown, and ordered
two bearers to carry it to the Capitol and to go and shut the temple of Janus.
“A new Augustan peace,” he said, “is now rising upon the Empire.”
VII
One of the reasons that had prompted Nero to show
Tiridates such magnificence and generosity was his ardent desire to be
initiated into the secrets of magic. In his present position, outside and above
human society, having attained the peak of absolute power, yet surrounded by
dangers obscure and mysterious, Nero felt the dizziness of both pride and fear.
He had only a vague idea of Persian magic which employed the spheres, the air
and the stars, lamps, water, basin and hatchet. Unable to restrain his curiosity,
Nero asked Tiridates to initiate him in those secrets.
Tiridates would only have been too glad to discharge
with some magic the debt for the crown of Armenia; but neither himself nor his
priests could infuse into the Emperor any mysterious power, nor open to him the
mysteries of Persian theurgy. The priests that Tiridates had brought in his
train were unable to explain their failure. They told the Emperor that Nature
refused to disclose her secrets to those who had red spots on their body, but
Nero had no defect or mark whatever upon his body. Nero suspected that Oriental
magic was merely a highly perfected art of poisoning. However, he added one
more gift to Tiridates by granting him the right to rebuild the city of
Artaxata that Corbulo had destroyed; and lent him a number of architects and
engineers. Later on, Tiridates tried to attract to his kingdom a greater number
of Roman architects and engineers; but the Governor was wise enough to give a
frontier-visa only to those who had the Imperial permit.
Tiridates made the return journey by sea—the
religious taboos about not polluting the sea counted only on an outward
journey! He visited Athens and the other great cities of Greece; and once home,
he rebuilt Artaxata and called it Neronia.
Nero, still hankering after the Persian magic, then invited
Tiridates’s brother, Vologese, to come to Rome, but Vologese answered that he
should consider it a rare honour to receive the Emperor in his kingdom. Nero
considered the reply an insult, but circumstances at home made him limit his
defiance to a show of the flag.
Soon, however, it became necessary to reopen the
Temple of Janus, for the Jewish war had broken out. On this occasion Nero
showed great commonsense, for notwithstanding his annoyance with Vespasian for
the poor opinion that excellent General had shown of the Emperor’s singing, he
entrusted him with the conduct of the war; and Vespasian, already famous for
his victories in Britain, left for Palestine with his son Titus.
But Nero was on the quest for magic. One day he asked:
“Who is this man who claims that he can fly?”
It was Simon Magus, the cleverest impostor of the
time. Contemporary of Jesus, Simon was now a man of ripe age. He had come to
Rome several years before from the Province of Samaria in Judaea, accompanied
by a woman named Helen, a slave he had purchased in Tyre. The woman helped him
in his magic rites, acting as a kind of receptionist and assistant during the
sittings that he gave to Roman ladies. Under Emperor Claudius, Simon Magus had
had a hand in the sedition that troubled the Jewish district across the Tiber.
Under Nero he helped to turn against the Christians the accusation of having
caused the fire of Rome. With the growing bands of Galileans, he did not
altogether deny the divinity of Jesus, but he claimed to be himself the
re-incarnation of God the Father. And with his fashionable clients he conveniently
mixed all the Gods. Indeed, he pretended that his woman Helen was no less than
the re-incarnation of Minerva, while he himself was a child of Jupiter. To the
Christians he administered baptisms, and made them see a flame floating upon a
basin of water. To the Syrians he had presented this woman Helen as Barbelo,
the daughter of Baal; for the philosophically-minded Greeks the same woman was
one of the Eons, the embodiment of Intelligence, the go-between spirits between
God and Man, of whom the Neo-Platonists of Alexandria claimed to have
determined the number and nature.
But in Rome, Simon was cunning enough not to imitate
the Christian Apostles, who addressed themselves to the common people. He
looked instead to the great and powerful. He had secured the patronage of
Agrippa, son of Herod and of Mariamne the Great. Tiberius had thrown him into
jail, but Caligula had set him free and presented him with golden chains as
heavy as the iron ones that Tiberius had tied round his ankles. His audacity,
and some extraordinary feats he accomplished by conjuring, made him pass for a
supernatural genius.
After the failure of Tiridates’s priests to initiate
him into Magic, Nero sent for Simon. He had heard the magician boast that he
could fly. Nero challenged him to fly and placed his purse at the magician’s
disposal for the undertaking.
The great experiment took place in the small Neronian
Circus. Simon had constructed an apparatus resembling the mythical one of
Icarus. He opened his wings upon a platform higher than the highest range of
seats, and courageously jumped into emptiness. But after flapping his great
wings for a few seconds, Simon crashed to the ground in front of the Imperial
box. The ostiarii dragged away the body of the Magus, bespattered with blood.
Simon had not died of his great fall, for the
apparatus lessened the crash; but ashamed by his failure, he soon afterwards
threw himself from the roof of his house, and made an end of himself. Nero
angrily told his friends, “Neither the astrologers nor the Magi are able to
teach me what I am anxious to learn; yet the shabby Apostles from Galilee
pretend to teach me what I do not care to know.”
VIII
Soon afterwards the order went out to throw Peter in
prison.
So far, neither Peter nor Mark had been arrested.
Peter was lying ill in the house provided by the Lady Pomponia Graecina, the
Briton wife of General Pomponius. From his sick-bed Peter dictated to the
scribe Silvanus several letters to be dispatched to Paul and to the heads of
the churches in Greece and in the East, informing them of the persecutions in
Rome and exhorting them to hold fast to their faith.
But Pomponia’s servants brought the news that the
Guards were searching for Simon Peter. So it was decided that at nightfall he
should set out alone, meeting a carriage some little distance from Rome, to be
conveyed to a surer hiding place.
An hour before his departure Peter told Mark of the
time when Jesus was arrested and he had followed Him to the Palace of the High
Priest, and how he had waited there through the night, sick with fear; and in
turn two women had questioned him and twice he had denied all knowledge of
Jesus, and again he had denied it when questioned a third time. The memory of
that denial had followed him through the years, and it was now in his mind, in
this lonely hour.
Later, a solitary man in disguise, leaning upon a
staff, walked along the Appian Way. But no sooner had he left behind the Capuan
Gate than he saw a vision of Jesus. Peter looked up in surprise, and asked:
“Quo vadis, Domine?” And the shade of Jesus answered: “I am going to Rome to be
crucified a second time.” And so Peter wept as a child at the feet of the
shadow upon the flag-stones of the Appian Way; and then he turned and went back
again to Pomponia’s house. In spite of his seventy years he was now radiant and
happy as a young boy. That very evening he gave himself up to the Guards, and
on the morrow was taken before a Magistrate and summarily condemned.
Two days later Simon Peter hung from a cross in the
Vatican Gardens. Mark, Linus and a veiled woman watched from afar; then at dawn
they collected the ashes and the bones of the first Apostle, and buried them in
a catacomb not far from the Circus, in the Vatican Valley.
Then Silvanus the scribe wrote down a report of the
end of Peter, and hid it in the catacombs outside the City.
IX
The curse of the Caesars was their inability to
produce an heir. Julius Caesar had no heir and left the Empire to his adoptive
son Octavianus Augustus; Augustus had no son from Livia and she could find no
better way than poison to secure the Throne for Tiberius, her son by her first
marriage. Tiberius left the succession to his nephew Caligula; Caligula, also
without any heir, was succeeded by his uncle Claudius, and although Claudius
had a son, Britannicus, he did not come to the Throne, for Agrippina had
prepared the way for her son Nero.
Young and strong and able-bodied, Nero could not
believe that he would have no son. Being now a widower, he turned his eyes upon
Antonia, Claudius’s other daughter, and offered her the chair that had been
occupied by Poppaea.
In Rome some whispered that Antonia had a good memory
and could not forgive the man who had poisoned her brother and done away with
her sister; but in the Palace many took up Nero’s defence. Britannicus, after
all, might have been poisoned by Agrippina to clear away all obstacles from her
son’s path, and as for Octavia, the poor girl was a bore.
However, Antonia refused the offer of the Imperial
hand, which was, to say the least, tactless on her part. At a Privy Council,
Tigellinus recalled that Piso had once offered Antonia his name and surely she
was conversant with the old plot. Antonia’s days were cut short.
The Imperial hand was therefore offered to Statilia
Messalina, widow of Vestinus. She accepted with pleasure. At a party at
Petronius’s it was murmured that the pleasure was not so great for Nero, for
Statilia had long been his mistress.
Yet no other woman could efface the memory of Poppaea.
Her memory haunted Nero like a heady and clinging perfume. Nowhere else could
he find the same delicate beauty, the same charm, the same intoxication. He
tried to forget her; he plunged into new attractions and pleasures. He could
find nothing but lassitude and regret.
It was during one of those moods, that no pleasure
could assuage, that the Emperor met Sporus.
Sporus was a most remarkable young man, whose features
strangely recalled Poppaea’s. The boy was somewhat broader than Poppaea, but
otherwise he recalled her entire person in a startling way—the same forehead,
the hair, the freckles about the nostrils, the stubborn changeable mouth...
People said that a surgeon had performed upon Sporus a clever operation, which
had changed his sex. Sure it was that when Tigellinus introduced Sporus to
Nero, he had been mutilated—in fact, he could pass for a woman. And he was the
image of Poppaea.
Nero married the boy.
And Rome did not protest! After this abysmal folly
there was no longer balance or restraint in Nero’s life. Sporus was renamed
Sabina, in memory of Poppaea. He was made to wear the dresses and the jewellery
of the dead Empress and he was given a lady-in-waiting, Calvia Crispinilki.
Yet nothing could cure Nero’s spleen. Strange and
cruel appetites seized him. And one night he dressed in a lion’s skin, and
abandoned himself to bestial experiences upon young girls tied to marble
pillars in his Gardens.
Now the Emperor usually resided in the small pavilion
in the Gardens of Servilius, on the road to Ostia. He preferred this pavilion
to the splendours of the Golden House. In the Gardens of Servilius he had
erected his finest statues, and the river that flowed below made it easy to
slip out of Rome unnoticed, for visits to Anzio or Baiae.
But the Emperor was ill. In physicians he had little
confidence. At the beginning of his reign he had opened on the Esquiline Hill a
School of Medicine and appointed as Head Physician a follower of Hippocrates,
named Andromachus, who accompanied by his students made regular visits to sick
persons in the poorer districts. But Nero had not much faith in his College of
Physicians. Besides, Rome’s physicians were split into many schools and
factions. There were the Methodics, who ascribed all diseases to harmful
secretions, and effected their cures through dieting and internal applications
of cold and hot water. There was the new Sicilian School led by Athenaeus of
Attala, which was called the Pneumatic School, and proclaimed that the soul was
all-important and if the soul was treated the health of the body would ensue.
Tired of his Physician-in-Ordinary who could only
order him a strict diet and forbid apples because they made the voice harsh and
pears because they caused congestion of the chest, and no more peaches because
they dissipated vital fluids around the heart, Nero favoured the Pneumatic
School because in their kind of psychoanalytical methods he could see some of
the magical practices which held such a fascination for him.
Perhaps his illness was psychological rather than
physical. One day Nero sent for Athenaeus himself. The head of the Pneumatic
School was a mild and smiling Greek with a long beard and magnetic eyes. He
looked intently at the Imperial invalid. Then, he led him to the couch, closed
Nero’s eyes with his fingers, and ordered him to breathe deeply through his
nose and asked him to hold the breath and count up to seven and release the
breath through the mouth very slowly. Nero did as he was told, and felt a kind
of relief and a feeling of greater calmness. After a few visits, Athenaeus left
with the Emperor a number of small tablets upon which in brightly coloured
letters were inscribed a few words intended to buoy up the Emperor’s spirits.
On the first tablet, in blue and gold, that were the colours of calm and peace,
there was written “I am very calm.” The Emperor was instructed to lie on his
back and gaze intently at this tablet. Then he should pass to another tablet,
upon which, in red and blue, was written “I feel very strong.” Then he would
gaze at lilac and yellow letters: “Apollo is smiling upon me”; and the next
tablet of pure orange and green said: “ I am a great poet.” This last tablet
gave Nero a feeling of intense joy. He held it in his hands and stared at it a
long time: “ I am a great poet.”
Athenaeus’s therapy worked wonders. The Emperor
confided to his friends that his was a strange illness. It was, he said, the
disease of all poets and artists, the fear of ennui and of death. Only in Art
could he find an escape. And he worked again at his poems and his singing with
renewed pleasure and energy. Once more at Court the only topic was music,
artistic perfection and the marvels of Art. At times, the Emperor spoke of
becoming a new Alexander and of his intention to extend the Empire to the far-away
Indies. For a century in Rome they had thought of it, but now the idea was
again taking shape. The Imperial General Staff received orders to work out the
plans of a campaign. The Finance Minister said that the money for the campaign
could be easily raised. Only the Generals dared to point out that nothing could
be done till Judaea was brought to heel, the Province that lay athwart the
route to the East and was a festering sore. But the Emperor brushed aside all
objections. His campaign, he said, with a mysterious smile around his lips,
would not be a fighting one—he would conquer the East with his poetical Art.
At that time Nero’s appearance was changing in an
extraordinary way, like the appearance of an actor who had assumed a new role.
He had become very fat, his neck seemed enormous and his fleshy face had lost
the former boyish appearance. It looked harder, like the face of an Oriental
despot. It was not an ugly face; but a mask seemed to rest over the once gay
visage. It was now like the face of a God, but a God radiating an aura of
egotism and self-assurance.
And he became strangely superstitious. If he sneezed
about midday, slaves had to run to the sun-dial to sec whether it was already
past noon, for if one sneezed after noon it was a very bad omen. If his toga
caught on a chair or if he stumbled on entering a room he would not leave the
Palace that day. One morning he ran bareheaded into the temple of Castor,
whispered a question into the ear of the wooden figures and rushed out into the
street to listen to the words of the first passer-by; in the accidental words
he would find the answer to his question. One day he was resting on a stone
bench in Vesta’s temple and when he tried to rise he staggered and was held
back by the fold of his cloak. Petronius was with him and, leaning upon his
friend’s arm the Emperor asked: “What does it portend? Am I to die?” And he
recalled that it was the second time that a similar accident had happened to
him in the temple of Vesta.
But a few days later, Ambassadors arrived from the
Greek cities, bringing to the Emperor the crowns decreed to him in their
dramatic contests. Nero received the Ambassadors with much pleasure, without
making them wait for an audience, and he admitted them to his table. Some of
the envoys, emboldened by the Emperor’s charming manners, during dinner begged
him to allow them to enjoy his celestial voice. Nero was only too glad to
oblige. The guests applauded warmly. Nero turned to his friends and pointed out
how truly the Greeks were connoisseurs of good music and poetry! Suddenly he
spoke again of his desire to visit Greece and take part in the artistic contests.
The envoys Were somewhat taken aback, and muttered that they were sure that
Athens and Olympia would look forward to such a great honour.
It was at that time that the beaux esprits of Rome
were much amused by an incident that sent the poet Cornutus into exile. The
respected master of Persius and Lucan was asked by the Emperor what he thought
of the idea of composing a History of Rome in poetry and dividing the subject
into four hundred books. Mildly Cornutus answered that it was difficult to
imagine how anyone would ever read four hundred books. “Why,” said Nero, “has
not Chrissipus composed a greater number of books” “Yes,” answered Cornutus,
“but the difference is that Chrisippus’s books are useful and help to improve
the customs of the people.”
X
One day Acte went to see the Emperor and spoke to him
about the Christians—such a weary subject! She was no longer the humble slave,
the devoted mistress, whose frail beauty had the perfume of Arcadian violets.
Life had moved on for all. Nero was surprised to see before him a woman of cold
beauty, of pure eyes, of plain dress; a woman who was looking at him almost
with estrangement. One should never look back at the love of yesteryear.
Acte mentioned the fine, sound philosophy and teaching
of Paul of Tarsus. She was, Acte said, under his personal protection. Paul? Was
he the same man Paul who was so troublesome with his long diatribes, a kind of
advocate gone wrong? And was he not at present under arrest ?
After Acte’s departure Nero asked for the list of the
prisoners of State. The Praetor Helius laid the list before the Emperor. This
man Paul of Tarsus, he said, was a strange prisoner; it was, in fact, not clear
what the charge was about. He was charged as one of the leaders of the
Galileans, the treasonable persons who had set fire to Rome. And if he was one
of their chiefs he should be charged with treason and sentenced to death like
all the others.
But when the man came before Helios for examination,
Helios was somewhat troubled with the nobility of his manner and the eloquence
of his speech. He was more like an ancient patrician than a provincial traitor.
Moreover, this man Paul was a Roman citizen. It would be for the Emperor to
decide the issue.
Paul was therefore entered for appearance before the
Imperial Tribunal.
Some months earlier, Linus and Pudens had met Paul
near the Three Taverns. Paul had gone to live in the house of Linus 'for a
while, instructing brethren to set out for other lands and carry the word.
Before long, however, news was brought to the house that Alexander the
coppersmith, who had his shop near the Capuan Gate, had denounced the presence
of Paul in Rome to Helius the Tribune, and indeed soon afterwards Paul was
arrested. He was a Roman citizen and Helius committed him to trial in the
Praetorium.
While Paul was in prison awaiting trial, his friend
Luke —for whom the Lady Pomponia had obtained a permit to visit his friend each
day—tried to persuade him to invite his “son” Timothy to come to Rome. Many
hours Paul hesitated, and he refused to dictate the letter to Luke; but at last
with pained and reluctant fingers he wrote the letter to Timothy himself.
“Paul, an Apostle of Jesus the Christ by the will of God according to the
promise of life which is in Christ Jesus—to Timothy, my beloved son, grace, mercy
and peace from God the Father and our Lord Christ Jesus. Greatly desiring to
see thee, being mindful of thy tears, that I may be filled with joy—” Day after
day Paul toiled at the writing of that letter, for the fingers, being stiff
with rheumatism, could only shape a few sentences each day. Luke might have
written the whole of the letter, if Paul had agreed to dictate it, in little
more than two hours; but Paul felt he must write it with his hand. And when at
last he neared the end of the letter, he bade Timothy to come speedily to Rome
and bring Mark with him, and he asked for a cloak lightly discarded in the heat
of summer and which was now his great need. So when Luke came at sunrise to
visit him in prison, and again entreated Paul to accept his cloak, Paul proudly
told him that in a short while Mark and Timothy would bring all he needed from
Troas, find he handed Luke the letter written with such toil and pain.
Before the day of the trial, Luke reminded Paul that
they had still no tidings of Timothy, and added: “The Gospel of Jesus as
recorded by His servant Paul has not been written, and those sayings and doings
of thine will be lost to the world.”
“Write out thy heart, Luke, and all that God would
have men know will be recorded.”
On the eve of the trial Paul sent a message: “Bid Luke
to set down a faithful record of our journeys and all that knowledge he has of
Christ.”
Towards the evening the Guards led Paul to the baths,
that he shall be dean and decent to appear before Nero Caesar. Afterwards, in
the darkness of his cell, Paul listened for a while to the hum of the City;
then he slept easily, like a child.
Caesar’s Court was crowded, all the privileged people
filling the hall, eager to see a man who was said to be different from all
other men. When the prisoner was brought in, he blinked at the brilliant robes
of the Knights, patricians and freedmen, and the glittering breastplates of the
Guards.
The Emperor entered and took his seat, smiling and
waving to the public. Great applause welcomed him. Then the proceedings were
opened. Witnesses were called; and again Alexander the coppersmith recounted
the riots caused by Paul in every city he had entered in Asia, Syria and
Greece. Other witnesses testified against the character and life of the
Galileans.
The Prosecution summed up: The man Paul of Tarsus was
the head, or one of the heads, of a conspiracy which was spreading from Judaea
to all the Provinces. The Galileans called themselves followers of a Jewish
rebel named Jesus or Christ, who was crucified in Jerusalem at the time of
Emperor Tiberius, under Governor Pontius Pilate at the request of the Jewish
Sanhedrin. These Galileans did not believe in any God, even less in the Divine
Majesty of Rome embodied in the August Person of Caesar. It was ,a fact proven
at previous trials that during the Great Fire the impiety of these Galileans
was such that they sang ribald songs of joy when the temple of Hercules and the
temple of the Moon crashed in flames.
Nero, who had been glancing now and then at Paul, had
a feeling that he had seen the prisoner before. Suddenly the Emperor
remembered the circumstances of his encounter with Paul, and said, “It is hard
to believe that the prisoner could be a party to such a list of crimes.” At
such Paul cried out, “O Caesar, I deny them all. They are lies!”
It was out of order for a prisoner to speak without
being addressed, but the Emperor looked again at the prisoner and hung his head
in thought. Nero was now remembering Paul’s words when he had met him one night
returning from his revels and they had walked together beside the River, and
Paul had spoken to him of things and deeds that sounded so beautiful that might
have turned into poems.
But the Prosecutor went on: “The prisoner is a
magician. It is said that his sect practises dreadful mysteries. It is now a
public fact that one of the chiefs had confessed at his trial that Rome was set
on fire by the magic of their God.”
The prisoner was asked to exculpate himself. He said,
“We Galileans, have preached only love and charity, making them the rule of our
life. We have taught obedience to our rulers. The Man we call the Christ was
the Son of the true God and He walked the Earth in the guise of a man
recommending obedience to Caesar, bringing hope to the humble and the poor,
announcing the comfort of the resurrection of the soul in life eternal after
death.”
At this the Emperor rose and withdrew. To those near
him he said, “This Jew says that the dead will live on. Is there a life beyond
the grave, a life of shades such as we see at times in our dreams?”
The Emperor seemed in great agitation. Tigellinus
realized that evil dreams had again troubled Nero’s nights. “Do not believe in
Heaven or Hell, O Divine! The Gods are old and gouty. The dead sleep for ever.”
But the Emperor was obdurate. “I believe that this
Jew, honest man or necromancer as he may be, cursed me one night two years
before the fire, when I encountered him and walked with him by the Tiber. He
speaks well and commands attention.” With this Nero returned to the Court and
the trial was resumed.
Paul was motioned to continue and he told of the
appearance of the apparition of Christ on the road to Damascus. And he spoke of
his encounter with the Master, and of what it had meant to him and of what it
might mean to all men.
Suddenly Nero put a question to him, “You call yourself
a seer. Tell me, then, shall Caesar reign over the Empire of the Dead? ”
Paul answered boldly, “Caesar’s mind is high and
noble, and he will understand when I say that Caesar will not reign over an
empire beyond the grave, for there the first shall be the last and the last
first.”
From the Court someone shouted, “Shame! Shame!” The
Emperor looked at the prisoner intently. Then he murmured to the judges, “This
man is like all the Galileans”; and he rose from his seat and left the Court
with a frown on his brow.
After the sentence Paul was taken to the Tullianum to
await execution. A rope was tied round his waist, and he was lowered into the
dark, icy cell. The Tullianum was also known as the Sepulchre.
Some days later, early in the morning, Paul was drawn
out with a hook, and was marched out of the City. Now Timothy had arrived in
Rome, and he awaited the departure together with Luke and Linus. The Centurion
was a kindly man, and permitted the aged prisoner and the young man to embrace,
and allowed his two friends to escort him to the place of execution. So the
little procession marched down the Sacred Way, round the Palatine and the
Aventine, and out by the Ostian Gate. They came to a hollow between the hills,
where the block was ready. The Centurion allowed Paul to withdraw a little way
and pray. Then Paul returned to the Centurion and said, “I am ready.” Two
guards led the prisoner to the block; and swiftly, with the great sword, the
head was severed from the shoulders of Paul of Tarsus—with the sword, because
he was a Roman citizen.
The body lay all day in the charnel pit. Late at
night, by the light of the moon, four men with lanterns came to the pit, gave a
piece of silver to the watchman, and they wrapped the body and head of Paul of
Tarsus in the old cloak that Timothy had dutifully brought from Troas. The four
men were Luke, Mark, Timothy and Onesiphorus. Then they carried their burden to
the garden of the Lady Pomponia Graccina, whom they called Lucina. She and her
women washed the body with spices and oil, and laid it in a tomb. To the end of
her days the Lady Pomponia from Britain watched over Paul’s grave, and no
Gentile knew of her secret treasure; and few Christians were aware that Paul
did lie there. Upon this place is now the great Basilica of St. Paul’s-Outside-
the-Walls.
Rome was quiet. The scribe at the Palace had nothing
to enter in his records. Some days later, at dinner, Tigellinus was saying,
“The temple of Janus will soon be closed. The Jewish War will soon be over.
Thanks to our Nero Caesar peace reigns throughout the Empire.”
“But it angers the patricians,” answered Petronius, “and
the financiers.”
Nero looked round with an amused look. “I am certainly
proud of it, my friends. Posterity will remember me as the second Augustus. But
they will also remember me for my triumphs in Greece! We shall leave for Greece
within three days, my friends!”
It was the end of the year 66.
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