Tacitus: The Histories, Volumes I and II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 447 pages of information about Tacitus.

Tacitus: The Histories, Volumes I and II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 447 pages of information about Tacitus.

Unanimity was gradually restored in the senate by the holding of a 45 trial according to ancient precedent, before a court of the whole house.  A senator named Manlius Patruitus complained that he had been beaten before a mob of people in the colony of Siena by order of the local magistrates.  Nor had the affront stopped there.  They had held a mock funeral before his eyes, and had accompanied their dirges and lamentations with gross insults levelled at the whole senate.  The accused were summoned; their case was tried; they were convicted and punished.  A further decree of the senate was passed admonishing the commons of Siena to pay more respect to the laws.  About the same time Antonius Flamma was prosecuted by Cyrene for extortion, and exiled for the inhumanity of his conduct.

Meanwhile, a mutiny almost broke out among the soldiers.  The men 46 who had been discharged by Vitellius[356] came together again in support of Vespasian, and demanded re-admission.  They were joined by the selected legionaries who had also been led to hope for service in the Guards, and they now demanded the pay they had been promised.  Even the Vitellians[357] alone could not have been dispersed without serious bloodshed, but it would require immense sums of money to retain the services of such a large number of men.  Mucianus accordingly entered the barracks to make a careful estimate of each man’s term of service.  He formed up the victorious troops with their own arms and distinctive decorations, each company a few paces from the next.  Then the Vitellians who had surrendered, as we have described, at Bovillae,[358] and all the other soldiers who had been hunted down in the city and its neighbourhood, were marched out almost entirely without arms or uniforms.  Mucianus then had them sorted out, and drew up in separate corps the troops of the German army, of the British army, and of any others that were in Rome.  Their first glance at the scene astounded them.  Facing them they saw what looked like a fighting front bristling with weapons, while they were caught in a trap, defenceless and foul with dirt.  As soon as they began to be sorted out a panic seized them.  The German troops in particular were terrified at their isolation, and felt they were being told off for slaughter.  They embraced their comrades and clung upon their necks, asking for one last kiss, begging not to be left alone, crying out, ‘Our cause is the same as yours, why should our fate be different?’ They appealed now to Mucianus, now to the absent emperor, and lastly to the powers of Heaven, until Mucianus came to the rescue of their imaginary terrors by calling them all ‘sworn servants of one emperor’, for he found that the victorious army was joining in and seconding their tears with cheering.  On that day the matter ended there.  A few days later, when Domitian addressed them, they received him with renewed confidence, refused his offer of lands, and begged for enlistment and their pay instead.  This was only a petition, but one that could not be refused:  so they were admitted to the Guards.  Subsequently, those who had grown old and completed the regular term of service[359] were honourably discharged.  Others were dismissed for misbehaviour, but one by one at different times, which is always the safest method of weakening any kind of conspiracy.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Tacitus: The Histories, Volumes I and II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.