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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 the



soldiers the consciousness of guilt。 There were even men who talked in



angry terms of the feebleness and avarice of Galba。 The strictness



once so commended; and celebrated in the praises of the army; was



galling to troops who rebelled against the old discipline; and who had



been accustomed by fourteen years' service under Nero to love the



vices of their emperors; as much as they had once respected their



virtues。 To all this was added Galba's own expression; 〃I choose my



soldiers; I do not buy them;〃 noble words for the commonwealth; but



fraught with peril for himself。 His other acts were not after this



pattern。



  Titus Vinius and Cornelius Laco; one the most worthless; the other



the most spiritless of mankind; were ruining the weak old Emperor; who



had to bear the odium of such crimes and the scorn felt for such



cowardice。 Galba's progress had been slow and blood…stained。 Cingonius



Varro; consul elect; and Petronius Turpilianus; a

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