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The Assassination of Caligula
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THE ASSASSINATION OF CALIGULA
[34] THE emperor Caligula came to his death in the following
manner:
Of course his wanton and remorseless tyranny often awakened
very deep feelings of resentment, and very earnest desires
for revenge in the hearts of those who suffered by it; but
yet so absolute and terrible was his power, that none dared
to murmur or complain. The resentment, however, which the
cruelty of the emperor awakened, burned the more fiercely
for being thus restrained and suppressed, and many covert
threats were made, and many secret plots were formed, from
time to time, against the tyrant's life.
Among others who cherished such designs, there was a man
named Cassius Chærea, an officer of the army, who, though
not of high rank, was nevertheless a man of considerable
distinction. He was a captain, or, as it was styled in those
days, a centurion. His command, therefore, was small, but it
was in the
[35] prætorian cohort, as it was called, a sort of body-guard of
the commander-in-chief, and consequently a very honorable
corps. Chærea was thus a man of considerable distinction on
account of the post which he occupied, and his duties, as
captain in the life guards, brought him very frequently into
communication with the emperor. He was a man of great
personal bravery, too, and was on this account held in high
consideration by the army. He had performed an exploit at
one time, some years before, in Germany, which, had gained
him great fame. It was at the time of the death of Augustus,
the first emperor. Some of the German legions, and among
them one in which Chærea was serving, had seized upon the
occasion to revolt. They alledged many and grievous acts of
oppression as the grounds of their revolt, and demanded
redress for what they had suffered, and security for the
future. One of the first measures which they resorted to in
the frenzy of the first outbreak of the rebellion, was to
seize all the centurions in the camp, and to beat them
almost to death. They gave them sixty blows each, one for
each of their number, and then turned them, bruised,
wounded,
[36] and dying, out of the camp. Some they threw into the Rhine.
They revenged themselves thus on all the centurions but one.
That one was Chærea. Chærea would not suffer himself to be
taken by them, but seizing his sword he fought his way
through the midst of them, slaying some and driving others
before him, and thus made his escape from the camp. This
feat gained him great renown.
One might imagine from this account that Chærea was a man of
great personal superiority in respect to size and strength,
inasmuch as extraordinary muscular power, as well as
undaunted courage, would seem to be required to enable a man
to make his way against so many enemies. But this was not
the fact. Chærea was of small stature and of a slender and
delicate form. He was modest and unassuming in his manners,
too, and of a very kind and gentle spirit. He was thus not
only honored and admired for his courage, but he was
generally beloved for the amiable and excellent qualities of
his heart.
The possession of such qualities, however, could not be
expected to recommend him
[37] particularly to the favor of the emperor. In fact, in one
instance it had the contrary effect. Caligula assigned to
the centurions of his guard, at one period, some duties
connected with the collection of taxes. Chærea, instead of
practicing the extortion and cruelty common on such
occasions, was merciful and considerate, and governed
himself strictly by the rules of law and of justice in his
collections. The consequence necessarily was that the amount
of money received was somewhat diminished, and the emperor
was displeased. The occasion was, however, not one of
sufficient importance to awaken in the monarch's mind any
very serious anger, and so, instead of inflicting any heavy
punishment upon the offender, he contented himself with
attempting to tease and torment him with sundry vexatious
indignities and annoyances.
It is the custom sometimes, in camps, and at other military
stations, for the commander to give every evening, what is
called the parole or password, which consists usually
of some word or phrase that is to be communicated to all the
officers, and as occasion may require to all the soldiers,
whom for any reason it may be necessary to send to and fro
[38] about the precincts of the camp during the night. The
sentinels, also, all have the password, and accordingly,
whenever any man approaches the post of a sentinel, he is
stopped and the parole is demanded. If the stranger gives it
correctly, it is presumed that all is right, and he is
allowed to pass on,—since an enemy or a spy would have no
means of knowing it.
Now, whenever it came to Chærea's turn to communicate the
parole, the emperor was accustomed to give him some
ridiculous or indecent phrase, intended not only to be
offensive to the purity of Chærea's mind, but designed,
also, to exhibit him in a ridiculous light to the
subordinate officers and soldiers to whom he would have to
communicate it. Sometimes the password thus given was some
word or phrase wholly unfit to be spoken, and sometimes it
was the name of some notorious and infamous woman; but
whatever it was, Chærea was compelled by his duty as a
soldier to deliver it to all the corps, and patiently to
submit to the laughter and derision which his communication
awakened among the vile and wicked soldiery.
If there was any dreadful punishment to be
[39] inflicted, or cruel deed of any kind to be performed,
Caligula took great pleasure in assigning the duty to
Chærea, knowing how abhorrent to his nature it must be. At
one time a senator of great distinction named Propedius, was
accused of treason by one of his enemies. His treason
consisted, as the accuser alledged, of having spoken
injurious words against the emperor. Propedius denied that
he had ever spoken such words. The accuser, whose name was
Timidius, cited a certain Quintilia, an actress, as his
witness. Propedius was accordingly brought to trial, and
Quintilia was called upon before the judges to give her
testimony. She denied that she had ever heard Propedius
utter any such sentiment as Timidius attributed to him.
Timidius then said that Quintilia was testifying falsely:
he declared that she had heard Propedius utter such words,
and demanded that she should be put to the torture to compel
her to acknowledge it. The emperor acceded to this demand,
and commanded Chærea to put the actress to the torture.
It is, of course, always difficult to ascertain the precise
truth in respect to such transactions as those that are
connected with plots
[40] and conspiracies against tyrants, since every possible
precaution is, of course, taken by all concerned to conceal
what is done. It is probable, however, in this case, that
Propedius had cherished some hostile designs against
Caligula, if he had not uttered injurious words, and that
Quintilia was in some measure in his confidence. It is even
possible that Chærea may have been connected with them in
some secret design, for it is said that when he received the
orders of Caligula to put Quintilia to the torture he was
greatly agitated and alarmed. If he should apply the torture
severely, he feared that the unhappy sufferer might be
induced to make confessions or statements at least, which
would bring destruction on the men whom he most relied upon
for the overthrow of Caligula. On the other hand, if he
should attempt to spare her, the effect would be only to
provoke the anger of Caligula against himself, without at
all shielding or saving her. As, however, he was proceeding
to the place of torture, in charge of his victim, with his
mind in this state of anxiety and indecision, his fears were
somewhat relieved by a private signal given to him by
Quintilia, by which she intimated to
[41] him that he need feel no concern,—that she would be faithful
and true, and would reveal nothing, whatever might be done
to her.
This assurance, while it allayed in some degree Chærea's
anxieties and fears, must have greatly increased the mental
distress which he endured at the idea of leading such a
woman to the awful suffering which awaited her. He could
not, however, do otherwise than to proceed. Having arrived
at the place of execution, the wretched Quintilia was put to
the rack. She bore the agony which she endured while her
limbs were stretched on the torturing engine, and her bones
broken, with patient submission, to the end. She was then
carried, fainting, helpless, and almost dead, to Caligula,
who seemed now satisfied. He ordered the unhappy victim of
the torture to be taken away, and directed that Propedius
should be acquitted and discharged.
Of course while passing through this scene the mind of
Chærea was in a tumult of agitation and excitement,—the
anguish of mind which he must have felt in his compassion
for the sufferer, mingling and contending with the desperate
indignation which burned in his bosom against the author of
all these
mis- [42] eries. He was wrought up, in fact, to such a state of
frenzy by this transaction, that as soon as it was over he
determined immediately to take measures to put Caligula to
death. This was a very bold and desperate resolution.
Caligula was the greatest and most powerful potentate on
earth. Chærea was only a captain of his guard, without any
political influence or power, and with no means whatever of
screening himself from the terrible consequences which might
be expected to follow from his attempt, whether it should
succeed or fail.
So thoroughly, however, was he now aroused, that he
determined to brave every danger in the attainment of his
end. He immediately began to seek out among the officers of
the army such men as he supposed would be most likely to
join him,—men of courage, resolution, and faithfulness, and
those who, from their general character or from the wrongs
which they had individually endured from the government,
were to be supposed specially hostile to Caligula's
dominion. From among these men he selected a few, and to
them he cautiously unfolded his designs. All approved of
them. Some, it is true, declined taking
[43] any active part in the conspiracy, but they assured Chærea
of their good wishes, and promised solemnly not to betray
him.
The number of the conspirators daily increased. There was,
however, at their meetings for consultation, some difference
of opinion in respect to the course to be pursued. Some were
in favor of acting promptly and at once. The greatest danger
which was to be apprehended, they thought, was in delay. As
the conspiracy became extended, some one would at length
come to the knowledge of it, they said, who would betray
them. Others, on the other hand, were for proceeding
cautiously and slowly. What they most feared was rash and
inconsiderate action. It would be ruinous to the enterprise,
as they maintained, for them to attempt to act before their
plans were fully matured.
Chærea was of the former opinion. He was very impatient to
have the deed performed. He was ready himself, he said, to
perform it, at any time; his personal duties as an officer
of the guard, gave him frequent occasions of access to the
emperor, and he was ready to avail himself of any of them to
kill the monster. The emperor went often, he said, to the
[44] capitol, to offer sacrifices, and he could easily kill him
there. Or, if they thought that that was too public an
occasion, he could have an opportunity in the palace, at
certain religious ceremonies which the emperor was
accustomed to perform there, and at which Chærea himself was
usually present. Or, he was ready to throw him down from a
tower where he was accustomed to go sometimes for the
purpose of scattering money among the populace below. Chærea
said that he could easily come up behind him on such an
occasion, and hurl him suddenly over the parapet down to the
pavement below. All these plans, however, seemed to the
conspirators too uncertain and dangerous, and Chærea's
proposals were accordingly not agreed to.
At length, the time drew near when Caligula was to leave
Rome to proceed to Alexandria in Egypt, and the conspirators
perceived that they must prepare to act, or else abandon
their design altogether. It had been arranged that there was
to he a grand celebration at Rome previous to the emperor's
departure. This celebration, which was to consist of games,
and sports, and dramatic performances of various kinds, was
to
con- [45] tinue for three days, and the conspirators determined,
after much consultation and debate, that Caligula should be
assassinated on one of those days.
After coming to this conclusion, however, in general, their
hearts seemed to fail them in fixing the precise time for
the perpetration of the deed, and two of the three days
passed away accordingly without any attempt being made. At
length, on the morning of the third day, Chærea called the
chief conspirators together, and urged them very earnestly
not to let the present opportunity pass away. He represented
to them how greatly they increased the danger of their
attempts by such delays, and he seemed himself so full of
determination and courage, and addressed them with so much
eloquence and power, that he inspired them with his own
resolution, and they decided unanimously to proceed.
The emperor came to the theater that day at an unusually
early hour, and seemed to be in excellent spirits and in an
excellent humor. He was very complaisant to all around him,
and very lively, affable, and gay. After performing certain
ceremonies, by which it devolved upon him to open the
festivities of the
[46] day, he proceeded to his place, with his friends and
favorites about him, and Chærea, with the other officers
that day on guard, at a little distance behind him.
The performances were commenced, and every thing went on as
usual until toward noon. The conspirators kept their plans
profoundly secret, except that one of them, when he had
taken his seat by the side of a distinguished senator, asked
him whether he had heard any thing new. The senator replied
that he had not. "I can then tell you something," said he,
"which perhaps you have not heard, and that is, that in the
piece which is to be acted to-day, there is to be
represented the death of a tyrant." "Hush!" said the
senator, and he quoted a verse from Homer, which meant, "Be
silent, lest some Greek should overhear."
It had been the usual custom of the emperor, at such
entertainments, to take a little recess about noon, for rest
and refreshments. It devolved upon Chærea to wait upon him
at this time, and to conduct him from his place in the
theater to an adjoining apartment in his palace which was
connected with the theater, where there was provided a bath
and
[47] various refreshments. When the time arrived, and Chærea
perceived, as he thought, that the emperor was about to go,
he himself went out, and stationed himself in a passage-way
leading to the bath, intending to intercept and assassinate
the emperor when he should come along. The emperor, however,
delayed his departure, having fallen into conversation with
his courtiers and friends, and finally he said that, on the
whole, as it was the last day of the festival, he would not
go out to the bath, but would remain in the theater; and
then ordering refreshments to be brought to him there, he
proceeded to distribute them with great urbanity to the
officers around him.
In the mean time, Chærea was patiently waiting in the
passage-way, with his sword by his side, all ready for
striking the blow the moment that his victim should appear.
Of course the conspirators who remained behind were in a
state of great suspense and anxiety, and one of them, named
Minucianus, determined to go out and inform Chærea of the
change in Caligula's plans. He accordingly attempted to
rise, but Caligula put his hand upon his robe, saying, "Sit
still, my
[48] friend. You shall go with me presently." Minucianus
accordingly dissembled his anxiety and agitation of mind
still a little longer, but presently, watching an
opportunity when the emperor's attention was otherwise
engaged, he rose, and, assuming an unconcerned and careless
air, he walked out of the theater.
He found Chærea in his ambuscade in the passage-way, and he
immediately informed him that the emperor had concluded not
to come out. Chærea and Minucianus were then greatly at a
loss what to do. Some of the other conspirators, who had
followed Minucianus out, now joined them, and a brief but
very earnest and solemn consultation ensued. After a
moment's hesitation, Chærea declared that they must now go
through with their work at all hazards, and he professed
himself ready, if his comrades would sustain him in it, to
go back to the theater, and stab the tyrant there in his
seat, in the midst of his friends. Minucianus and the others
concurred in this design, and it was resolved immediately to
execute it.
The execution of the plan, however, in the precise form in
which it had been resolved upon was prevented by a new turn
which
af- [49] fairs had taken in the theater. For while Minucianus and the
two or three conspirators who had accompanied him were
debating in the passage-way, the others who remained, knowing
that Chærea was expecting Caligula to go out, conceived the
idea of attempting to persuade him to go, and thus to lead
him into the snare which had been set for him. They
accordingly gathered around, and without any appearance of
concert or of eagerness, began to recommend him to go and
take his bath as usual. He seemed at length disposed to
yield to these persuasions, and rose from his seat; and
then, the whole company attending and following him, he
proceeded toward the doors which conducted to the palace.
The conspirators went before him, and under pretense of
clearing the way for him they contrived to remove to a
little distance all whom they thought would be most disposed
to render him any assistance. The consultations of Chærea
and those who were with him in the inner passage-way were
interrupted by the coming of this company.
Among those who walked with the emperor at this time were
his uncle Claudius and other distinguished relatives.
Caligula advanced
[50] along the passage, walking in company with these friends,
and wholly unconscious of the fate that awaited him, but
instead of going immediately toward the bath he turned aside
first into a gallery or corridor which led into another
apartment, where there were assembled a company of boys and
girls, that had been sent to him from Asia to act and dance
upon the stage, and who had just arrived. The emperor took
great interest in looking at these performers, and seemed
desirous of having them go immediately into the theater and
let him see them perform. While talking on this subject
Chærea and the other conspirators came into the apartment,
determined now to strike the blow.
Chærea advanced to the emperor, and asked him in the usual
manner what should be the parole for that night. The emperor
gave him in reply such an one as he had often chosen before,
to insult and degrade him. Chærea instead of receiving the
insult meekly and patiently in his usual manner, uttered
words of anger and defiance in reply; and drawing his sword
at the same instant he struck the emperor across the neck
and felled him to the floor. Caligula filled the
apart- [51] ment with his cries of pain and terror; the other conspirators
rushed in and attacked him on all sides; his friends,—so far
as the adherents of such a man can be called friends,—fled
in dismay. As for Caligula's uncle Claudius, it was not to
have been expected that he would have rendered his nephew
any aid, for he was a man of such extraordinary mental
imbecility that he was usually considered as not possessed
even of common sense; and all the others who might have been
expected to defend him, either fled from the scene, or stood
by in consternation and amazement, leaving the conspirators
to wreak their vengeance on their wretched victim, to the
full.
In fact though while a despot lives and retains his power,
thousands are ready to defend him and to execute his will,
however much in heart they may hate and detest him, yet when
he is dead, or when it is once certain that he is about to
die, an instantaneous change takes place and every one turns
against him. The multitudes in and around the theater and
the palace who had an hour before trembled before this
mighty potentate, and seemed to live only to do his bidding,
were filled with joy to see him brought to the
[52] dust. The conspirators, when the success of their plans and
the death of their oppressor was once certain, abandoned
themselves to the most extravagant joy. They cut and stabbed
the fallen body again and again, as if they could never
enough wreak their vengeance upon it. They cut off pieces of
the body and bit them with their teeth in their savage
exultation and triumph. At length they left the body where
it lay, and went forth into the city where all was now of
course tumult and confusion.
The body remained where it had fallen until late at night.
Then some attendants of the palace came and conveyed it
away. They were sent, it was said, by Cæsonia, the wife of
the murdered man. Cæsonia had an infant daughter at this
time, and she remained herself with the child, in a retired
apartment of the palace while these things were transpiring.
Distracted with grief and terror at the tidings that she
heard, she clung to her babe, and made the arrangements for
the interment of the body of her husband without leaving its
cradle. She imagined perhaps that there was no reason for
supposing that she or the child were in any immediate
danger, and
ac- [53] cordingly she took no measures toward effecting an escape.
If so, she did not understand the terrible frenzy to which
the conspirators had been aroused, and for which the long
series of cruelties and indignities which they had endured
from her husband had prepared them. For at midnight one of
them broke into her apartment, stabbed the mother in her
chair, and taking the innocent infant from its cradle,
killed it by beating its head against the wall.
CAESONIA
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[54] Atrocious as this deed may seem, it was not altogether
wanton and malignant cruelty which prompted it. The
conspirators intended by the assassination of Caligula not
merely to wreak their vengeance on a single man, but to
bring to an end a hated race of tyrants; and they justified
the murder of the wife and child by the plea that stern
political necessity required them to exterminate the line,
in order that no successor might subsequently arise to
re-establish the power and renew the tyranny which they had
brought to an end. The history of monarchies is continually
presenting us with instances of innocent and helpless
children sacrificed to such a supposed necessity as this.
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