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109 AD
HISTORIES
by P。 Cornelius Tacitus
translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb
BOOK I; January … March; A。D。 69
I BEGIN my work with the time when Servius Galba was consul for
the second time with Titus Vinius for his colleague。 Of the former
period; the 820 years dating from the founding of the city; many
authors have treated; and while they had to record the transactions of
the Roman people; they wrote with equal eloquence and freedom。 After
the conflict at Actium; and when it became essential to peace; that
all power should be centered in one man; these great intellects passed
away。 Then too the truthfulness of history was impaired in many
ways; at first; through men's ignorance of public affairs; which
were now wholly strange to them; then; through their passion for
flattery; or; on the other hand; their hatred of their masters。 And so
between the enmity of the one and the servility of the other;
neither had any regard for posterity。 But while we instinctively
shrink from a writer's adulation; we lend a ready ear to detraction
and spite; because flattery involves the shameful imputation of
servility; whereas malignity wears the false appearance of honesty。
I myself knew nothing of Galba; of Otho; or of Vitellius; either
from benefits or from injuries。 I would not deny that my elevation was
begun by Vespasian; augmented by Titus; and still further advanced
by Domitian; but those who profess inviolable truthfulness must
speak of all without partiality and without hatred。 I have reserved as
an employment for my old age; should my life be long enough; a subject
at once more fruitful and less anxious in the reign of the Divine
Nerva and the empire of Trajan; enjoying the rare happiness of
times; when we may think what we please; and express what we think。
I am entering on the history of a period rich in disasters;
frightful in its wars; torn by civil strife; and even in peace full of
horrors。 Four emperors perished by the sword。 There were three civil
wars; there were more with foreign enemies; there were often wars that
had both characters at once。 There was success in the East; and
disaster in the West。 There were disturbances in Illyricum; Gaul
wavered in its allegiance; Britain was thoroughly subdued and
immediately abandoned; the tribes of the Suevi and the Sarmatae rose
in concert against us; the Dacians had the glory of inflicting as well
as suffering defeat; the armies of Parthia were all but set in
motion by the cheat of a counterfeit Nero。 Now too Italy was
prostrated by disasters either entirely novel; or that recurred only
after a long succession of ages; cities in Campania's richest plains
were swallowed up and overwhelmed; Rome was wasted by
conflagrations; its oldest temples consumed; and the Capitol itself
fired by the hands of citizens。 Sacred rites were profaned; there
was profligacy in the highest ranks; the sea was crowded with
exiles; and its rocks polluted with bloody deeds。 In the capital there
were yet worse horrors。 Nobility; wealth; the refusal or the
acceptance of office; were grounds for accusation; and virtue
ensured destruction。 The rewards of the informers were no less
odious than their crimes; for while some seized on consulships and
priestly offices; as their share of the spoil; others on
procuratorships; and posts of more confidential authority; they robbed
and ruined in every direction amid universal hatred and terror。 Slaves
were bribed to turn against their masters; and freedmen to betray
their patrons; and those who had not an enemy were destroyed by
friends。
Yet the age was not so barren in noble qualities; as not also to
exhibit examples of virtue。 Mothers accompanied the flight of their
sons; wives followed their husbands into exile; there were brave
kinsmen and faithful sons in law; there were slaves whose fidelity
defied even torture; there were illustrious men driven to the last
necessity; and enduring it with fortitude; there were closing scenes
that equalled the famous deaths of antiquity。 Besides the manifold
vicissitudes of human affairs; there were prodigies in heaven and
earth; the warning voices of the thunder; and other intimations of the
future; auspicious or gloomy; doubtful or not to be mistaken。 Never
surely did more terrible calamities of the Roman People; or evidence
more conclusive; prove that the Gods take no thought for our
happiness; but only for our punishment。
I think it proper; however; before I commence my purposed work; to
pass under review the condition of the capital; the temper of the
armies; the attitude of the provinces; and the elements of weakness
and strength which existed throughout the whole empire; that so we may
become acquainted; not only with the vicissitudes and the issues of
events; which are often matters of chance; but also with their
relations and their causes。 Welcome as the death of Nero had been in
the first burst of joy; yet it had not only roused various emotions in
Rome; among the Senators; the people; or the soldiery of the
capital; it had also excited all the legions and their generals; for
now had been divulged that secret of the empire; that emperors could
be made elsewhere than at Rome。 The Senators enjoyed the first
exercise of freedom with the less restraint; because the Emperor was
new to power; and absent from the capital。 The leading men of the
Equestrian order sympathised most closely with the joy of the
Senators。 The respectable portion of the people; which was connected
with the great families; as well as the dependants and freedmen of
condemned and banished persons; were high in hope。 The degraded
populace; frequenters of the arena and the theatre; the most worthless
of the slaves; and those who having wasted their property were
supported by the infamous excesses of Nero; caught eagerly in their
dejection at every rumour。
The soldiery of the capital; who were imbued with the spirit of an
old allegiance to the Caesars; and who had been led to desert Nero
by intrigues and influences from without rather than by their own
feelings; were inclined for change; when they found that the
donative promised in Galba's name was withheld; and reflected that for
great services and great rewards there was not the same room in
peace as in war; and that the favour of an emperor created by the
legions must be already preoccupied。 They were further excited by
the treason of Nymphidius Sabinus; their prefect; who himself aimed at
the throne。 Nymphidius indeed perished in the attempt; but; though the
head of the mutiny was thus removed; there yet remained in many of