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Nero's End
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NERO'S END
[299] THE successor of Nero in the line of Roman emperors, was
Galba. Galba, though a son of one of the most illustrious
Roman families, was born in Spain, and he was about forty
years older than Nero, being now over seventy, while Nero
was yet but thirty years of age.
During the whole course of his life, Galba had been a very
distinguished commander, and had risen from one post of
influence and honor to another, until he became one of the
most considerable personages in the state. Nero at length
appointed him to the command of a very large and important
province in Spain. At this station Galba remained some
years, and he was here, attending regularly to the duties of
his government, at the time when Nero returned from his
expedition into Greece. Galba himself, and all the other
governors around him, felt the same indignation at Nero's
cruelties, and crimes, and the
[300] same contempt for his low and degrading vanity and folly,
that prevailed so generally at Rome. In fact, feelings of
exasperation and hatred against the tyrant, began to extend
universally throughout the empire. The people in every
quarter, in fact, seemed ripe for insurrection.
While things were in this state, a messenger arrived one day
at Galba's court, from a certain chieftain of the Gauls,
named Julius Vindex. This messenger came to announce to
Galba that Vindex had revolted against the Roman government
in Gaul. He declared, however, that it was only Nero's power
that Vindex intended to resist, and promised that if Galba
would himself assume the supreme command, Vindex would
acknowledge allegiance to him, and would do all in his power
to promote his cause. He said, moreover that such was the
detestation in which Nero was universally held, that there
was no doubt that the whole empire would sustain Galba in
effecting such a revolution, if he would once raise his
standard. At the same time that this messenger came from
Vindex, another came from the Roman governor of the province
of Gaul, where Vindex resided, to inform
[301] Galba of the revolt, and asking for a detachment of troops
to assist him in putting it down. Galba called a council,
and laid the subject before them.
After some debate one of the councillors rose and said that
there was no more danger in openly joining Vindex in his
rebellion, than there was in debating, in such a council,
what they should do. "It is just as treasonable," said he,
"to doubt and hesitate whether to send troops to put down
the revolt, as it would be openly to rebel; and Nero will so
regard it. My counsel therefore is that, unless you choose
to be considered as aiding the revolution, you should
instantly send off troops to put it down."
Galba was much impressed with the wisdom of this advice. He
felt strongly inclined to favor the cause of Vindex and the
rebels, and on further reflection he secretly determined to
join them, and to take measures for raising a general
insurrection. He did not, however, make known his
determination to any one, but dismissed the council without
declaring what he had concluded to do. Soon afterward he
sent out to all parts of the province, and ordered a general
mustering of the
[302] forces under his command, and of all that could be raised
throughout the province, requiring them to meet at a certain
appointed rendezvous. The army, though not openly informed
of it, suspected what the object of this movement was to be,
and came forward to the work, with the utmost alacrity and
joy.
In the mean time the tidings of Vindex's revolt traveled
rapidly to Rome, and thence to Naples, where Nero was at
this time performing on the public stage. Nero seemed to be
very much delighted to hear the news. He supposed that the
rebellion would of course be very easily suppressed, and
that when it was suppressed he could make it an excuse for
subjecting the province in which it had occurred to fines
and confiscations that would greatly enrich his treasury. He
was extremely pleased therefore at the tidings of the
revolt, and abandoned himself to the theatrical pursuits and
pleasures in which he was engaged, more absolutely and
recklessly than ever.
In the mean time fresh messengers arrived at short intervals
from Rome, to inform Nero of the progress of the rebellion.
The news was that Vindex was gaining strength every
[303] day, and was issuing proclamations to the people calling
upon them everywhere to rise and throw off the ignoble yoke
of oppression which they were enduring. In these
proclamations the emperor was called Brazenbeard, and
designated as a "wretched fiddler." These taunts excited
Nero's ire. He wrote to the Senate at Rome calling upon them
to adopt some measures for putting down this insolent rebel,
and having dispatched this letter, he seemed to dismiss the
subject from his mind, and turned his attention anew to his
dancing and acting.
His mind was, however, soon disturbed again, for fresh
messengers continued to come, each bringing reports more
alarming than those of his predecessor. The rebellion was
evidently gaining ground. Nero was convinced that something
must be done. He accordingly broke away, though with great
reluctance, from his amusements at Naples, and proceeded to
Rome. On his arrival at the capital he called a council of
some of his principal ministers of state, and after a short
consultation on the subject of the rebellion—in which,
however, nothing was determined upon—he proceeded to produce
some
newly- [304] invented invented musical instruments which he had brought with him
from Naples, and in which he was greatly interested. After
showing and explaining these instruments to the councilors,
he promised them that he would give them the pleasure before
long of hearing a performance upon them, on the
stage,—"provided," he added jocosely,
"that this Vindex will give me
leave."
The councilors at length withdrew, and Nero remained in his
apartment. On retiring to rest, however, he found that he
could not sleep. His thoughts were running on the musical
instruments which he had been showing, and on the pleasure
which he anticipated in a public performance with them. At
length, at a very late hour, he sent for his councilors to
come again to his apartment. They came, full of excitement
and wonder, supposing that they were thus suddenly summoned
on account of some new and very momentous tidings which had
been received from Gaul. They found, however, that Nero only
wished to give some farther account of the instruments which
he had shown them, and to ask their opinions of certain
improve- [305] ments which had occurred to him since they went away.
Nero did not, however, remain very long in this state of
insane and stupid unconcern; for on the evening of the
following day a courier arrived from the north with the
appalling intelligence that Vindex had made himself master
of Gaul, and that Galba, the most powerful general in the
Roman army, had joined the insurrection with all the legions
under his command, and that he was now advancing toward Rome
at the head of his armies with the avowed purpose of
deposing Nero, and making himself emperor in his stead.
Nero was at first absolutely stupefied at hearing these
tidings. He remained for some time silent and motionless, as
if made completely senseless with consternation. When at
length he came to himself again, he fell into a perfect
frenzy of rage and terror. He overturned the supper table,
tore his garments, threw down two valuable cups to the floor
and broke them to pieces, and then began to dash his head
against the wall, as if he were perfectly insane. He said he
was undone. No man had ever been so wretched. His
domin- [306] ions were to be seized from him while he yet lived, and
held by an usurper; he was utterly ruined and undone.
After a little time had elapsed the agitation and excitement
of his mind took another direction, that of furious anger
against the generals and officers of his army,—not only
those who had actually rebelled, but all others, for he was
jealous and suspicious of all, and said that he believed
that the whole army was engaged in the conspiracy. He was
going to send out orders to the various provinces and
encampments, for the assassination of great numbers of the
officers,—such as he imagined might be inclined to turn
against him,—and he would probably have done so if he had
not been restrained by the influence of his ministers of
state. He also proposed to seize and kill all the Gauls then
in Rome, as a mode of taking vengeance on their countrymen
for joining Vindex in his rebellion, and could scarcely be
prevented from doing this by the urgent remonstrances of all
his friends.
After a time Nero so far recovered his self possession that
he began to make preparations for organizing an army, with
the design of marching against the rebels. He accordingly
[307] ordered troops to be enlisted and arms and ammunition to be
provided,—assessing at the same time heavy taxes upon the
people of Rome to defray the expense. All these
arrangements, however, only increased the general
discontent. The people saw that the preparations which the
emperor was making were wholly inadequate to the crisis, and
that no efficient military operations could ever come from
them. In the first place, he could obtain no troops, for no
men fit for soldiers were willing to enlist,—and so he
undertook to supply the deficiency by requiring every master
of slaves to send him a certain number of his bondmen, and
these bondmen he freed and then enrolled them in his army,
in lieu of soldiers. Moreover, in making provision for the
wants of his army, instead of devoting his chief attention
to securing a sufficiency of arms, ammunition, military
stores, and other such supplies as were required in
preparing for an efficient campaign, he seemed only
interested in getting together actors, dancers, musical
instruments, and dresses for performers on the public stage.
In excuse for this course of procedure, Nero said frankly
that he did not expect that his expedition would
[308] lead to any important military operations. As soon as he
reached the rebel armies his intention was, he said, to
throw himself upon their sense of justice and their loyalty.
He would acknowledge whatever had been wrong in his past
government, and promise solemnly that his sway in future
should be more mild and beneficent; and he had no doubt that
thus the whole disturbance would be quelled. The revolted
troops would at once return to their duty, and the musical
and theatrical preparations which he was making were
intended for a series of grand festivities to celebrate the
reconciliation.
Of course such insane and hopeless folly as this awakened a
sentiment of universal contempt and indignation among the
people of Rome. The greatest excitement and confusion
prevailed throughout the city; and, as is usual in times of
public panic, money and provisions were hid away by those
who possessed them, in secret hoards; and this soon
occasioned a great scarcity of food. The city, in fact, was
threatened with famine. In the midst of the alarm and
anxiety which this state of things occasioned, two ships
arrived from Egypt, at Ostia, and the news produced
[309] a general rejoicing,—it being supposed, of course, that the
ships were laden with corn. It proved, however, that there
was no corn on board. Instead of food for the metropolis,
the cargo consisted of sand, intended to
form the arena of
some of the emperor's amphitheaters, for the gladiators and
wrestlers to stand upon, in contending. This incident seemed
to fill the cup of public indignation to the brim; and, as
news arrived just at this time that the rebellion had
extended into Germany, and that all the legions in the
German provinces had gone over to Galba, Nero's power began
to be considered at an end. Tumults prevailed everywhere
throughout the city, and assemblies were held, threatening
open defiance to the authority of the emperor, and declaring
the readiness of the people to acknowledge Galba so soon as
he should arrive.
Nero was now more terrified than ever. He knew not what to
do. He fled from his palace, and sought a retreat in certain
gardens near—acting in this, however, under the influence of
a blind and instinctive fear, rather than from any rational
hope of securing his safety by seeking such a place of
refuge.
[310] In fact, he was now perfectly distracted with terror. He
procured some poison before he left his palace, and carried
it in a small golden box with him to the gardens; but he had
not strength or resolution to take it. He then conceived of
the plan, of flying from Rome altogether. He would go at
once to Ostia, he said, and there embark on board a ship and
sail for Egypt, where, it might be supposed, he would be out
of the reach of his enemies. He asked his officers and
attendants if they would accompany him in this flight. But
they refused to go.
Then he began to talk of another plan. He would go and meet
Galba as a suppliant, and, falling upon his knees before the
conqueror, would implore him to spare his life. Or he would
go into the Roman Forum, and make a humble and supplicatory
address to the people there, imploring their forgiveness for
his cruelties and crimes, and solemnly promising never to be
guilty of such excesses again, if they would pardon and
protect him. The by-standers told him that such a
proceeding was wholly out of the question; for if he were to
go forth for such a purpose from his retreat, the people
were in such a frenzy of
[311] excitement against him, that they would tear him to pieces
before he could reach the Rostra. In a word, the distracted
thoughts of the wretched criminal turned this way and that,
in the wild agitation with which remorse and terror filled
his mind, vainly seeking some way of escape from the awful
dangers which were circling and narrowing so rapidly around
him. There was, in fact, no hope now left for him—no refuge,
no protection, no possibility of escape; and so, after
suddenly seizing, and as suddenly abandoning, one
impracticable scheme after another, his mind became wholly
bewildered, and he sank down, at length, into a condition of
blank and hopeless despair.
Although the insurrection had become very general in the
provinces, the troops in the city, consisting chiefly of the
emperor's guards, yet remained faithful; and now as the
night was coming on, they were stationed as usual at their
respective posts in various parts of the city and at the
palace gates. Nero retired to rest. He found, however, that
he could not sleep. At midnight he rose, and came forth from
his apartment. He was surprised to find that there was no
sentinel at
[312] the door. On farther examination he found to his amazement
that the palace guards had been wholly withdrawn. He was
thunderstruck at making this discovery. He returned into the
palace and aroused some of the domestics, and then went
forth with them to the residences of some of his chief
ministers, who resided near, to ask for help. He could,
however, nowhere gain admission. He found the houses all
closely shut up, and by all his knocking at the doors he
could get no answer from any persons within. He then came
back in great distress and alarm to his own apartment. He
found that it had been broken into during the short time
that he had been gone, and rifled of every thing valuable
that it contained. Even his golden box of poison had been
carried away. In a word the great sovereign of half the
world found that he had been abandoned by all his adherents,
and left in a condition of utter and absolute exposure. The
guards had concluded to declare for Galba, and had
accordingly gone away, leaving the fallen tyrant to his
fate.
Nero called desperately to his servants to send for a
gladiator to thrust him through with a sword, but no one
would go. "Alas!"
[313] he exclaimed, "has it come to this? Am I so utterly
abandoned that I have not even enemies left who are willing
to kill me?"
After a little time he began to be a little more composed,
and expressed a wish that he knew of some place in the
environs of the city where he could go and conceal himself
for a little time until he could determine what to do. One
of the servants of his household named Phaon, told him that
he had a country-house near the city, where, perhaps, Nero
might hide. Nero immediately resolved to go there. The
better to conceal his flight he disguised himself in mean
apparel, and tied a handkerchief about his face; and then
mounting on horseback in company with two or three
attendants, he proceeded out of the city. As he went, it
thundered and lightened from time to time, and Nero was
greatly terrified. He supposed that the commotion of the
elements was occasioned by the spirits of those whom he had
murdered coming now to persecute and torment him in the hour
of his extremity.
He passed, during his ride, a station of the guard which
happened to be on his way, and heard the soldiers cursing
him as he went by,
[314] and expressing joy at his downfall. Soon after this he
overheard a passenger whom his party met on the road, say to
his companion, when he saw Nero and his attendants riding
by, "These men no doubt are going in pursuit of the
emperor." Another man whom they met on the way stopped them
to ask what news there was in town about the emperor. In
these occurrences, though they of course tended to increase
the agitation and excitement of Nero's mind, there was
nothing particularly alarming; but at length an incident
happened which frightened the fugitive extremely. He was
passing a place where a carcass lay by the side of the road.
Some soldiers of the guard were standing near. The horse
that Nero rode was startled at the sight of the carcass, and
springing suddenly shook down the handkerchief from Nero's
face. One of the soldiers by this means obtained a view of
his countenance, and exclaimed that that was the emperor.
Nero was so much alarmed at this that he hastened on, and as
soon as he was out of the view of the men who had seen him,
he leaped from his horse, and calling upon his attendants to
dismount too and follow him, he ran into
[315] an adjoining thicket, among bushes and briers, and thence
the whole party made their way circuitously round to the
rear of Phaon's grounds. Here they stopped and hid
themselves till they could contrive some way to get through
or over the wall.
There was a pit near by, which had been made by digging for
sand. Phaon proposed that Nero should hide in this pit until
an opening could be made in the wall. But Nero refused to do
this, saying that he would not be buried before he was dead.
So he remained hid in the thickets while Phaon went to work
to make an opening in the wall.
The wall was not of a very substantial character; if it had
been, it would not have been possible for Phaon, with the
means at his command, to have effected a passage. As it was,
he succeeded, though with difficulty, in loosening some of
the stones, so as gradually to make an opening.
Nero was engaged, while this work was going on, in pulling
the briers out of his clothes and flesh, and being thirsty,
he went down to a ditch that was near, and drank, taking up
the water in his hands. As he drank, he
[316] groaned out, "Oh,
can it be that I have come to this!"
PHAON AT THE WALL
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In the mean time, Phaon went on with his work, and soon
succeeded in making a hole in the wall sufficient for his
purpose, and then the men dragged Nero through. They brought
him into the house, and shut him up in a small and secret
apartment there.
Nero now felt relieved from the extreme terror which he had
suffered during his flight
[317] but the feelings of terror subsided in his mind, only to
give place to the still more dreadful pangs of remorse and
horror. He moaned continually in his anguish, and
incessantly repeated the words, "My father, my mother, and
my wife doom me to destruction." These were indeed the words
of one of the tragedies which he had been accustomed to act
upon the stage, but they expressed the remorse and anguish
of his mind so truly, that they recurred continually to his
lips. Phaon and the men who had brought him to the house,
finding it impossible to calm him, and seeing no hope of his
final escape from death, and perhaps, moreover, wishing to
relieve themselves of what was now fast becoming a serious
burden to them, recommended to him to kill himself,—and
thus, as they said, since he must die, die like a man.
Finally, Nero seemed to yield to their urgings. He said that
he would kill himself as they desired. They might go out and
dig a grave for him and prepare wood and water for washing
the body. While giving these orders he moaned and groaned
continually, as if in a state of delirium.
In the mean time the morning had come,
[318] and at Rome all was excitement and commotion. The Senate
came together and proclaimed Galba emperor. They also passed
a decree pronouncing Nero an enemy to the state, and
sentencing him to be punished as such in the ancient manner.
When this news transpired, a friend of Phaon wrote a letter
to him, giving an account of what the Senate had done, and
sent it off with the utmost haste by a trusty messenger. The
messenger arrived at Phaon's house, and brought the letter
in. Nero seized it from Phaon's hands, and read it. "What is
the ancient manner?" he asked, in a tone of great anxiety
and terror. They told him that it was to be stripped naked,
and then to be secured by having his head fastened in a
pillory, and in that position to be whipped to death. At
hearing this, Nero broke forth in fresh groans and
lamentations. He could not endure such a death as that, he
said, and he would kill himself, therefore, at once, if they
would give him a dagger.
There were daggers at hand. Nero took them, examined the
points of them with a trembling touch, seemed undecided, and
finally put them away again, saying that his hour was not
yet quite come. Presently he
[319] took one of the daggers again, and made a new attempt to
awaken in himself sufficient resolution to strike the blow,
but his courage failed him. He moaned and raved all this
time in the most incoherent and distracted manner. He even
begged that one of the attendants who were with him would
take the dagger and kill himself first, in order to
encourage Nero by letting him see that it was not after all
so dreadful a thing to die. But no one of the attendants
seemed sufficiently devoted to his master to be willing to
render him such a service as this.
In the midst of this perplexity and delay a noise was heard
as of horsemen riding up to the door. Nero was terrified
anew at the sound. They were coming, he said, to seize him.
He immediately drew one of the daggers, and putting it to
his throat, attempted desperately to nerve himself to the
work of driving it home. But he could not do it. The noise
at the door in the mean time increased. Nero then gave the
dagger to one of the men standing by, and begged that he
would kill him. The man took the dagger with great
reluctance, but presently gave the
[320] fatal stab, and Nero sank down upon the ground mortally
wounded.
At this moment the door was suddenly opened, and the
soldiers that had just arrived came in. They had been sent
by the Senate to search for the fugitive and bring him back
to Rome. The centurion who commanded these men, advanced
into the room, and looked at the fallen emperor, as he lay
upon the floor, weltering in his blood. He had been
commanded to bring the prisoner to the city, if possible,
alive; and he accordingly ordered the soldiers to come to
the dying man and endeavor to stanch his wounds and save
him. But it was too late. Nero stared at them as they
advanced to take hold of him, with a wild and frightful
expression of countenance, which shocked all who saw him,
and in the midst of this agony of terror, he sank down and
died.
The news of the tyrant's death spread with the utmost
rapidity in all directions. A courier immediately set off
for the north to carry tidings of the event to Galba. People
flocked from all quarters to the house of Phaon to gaze on
the lifeless body, and to exult in the monster's death. The
people of the
[321] city gave themselves up to the wildest and most extravagant
joy. They put on caps such as were worn by manumitted slaves
when first obtaining their freedom, and roamed about the
city expressing in every possible way the exultation they
felt at their deliverance, and breaking down and destroying
the statues of Nero wherever they could find them.
In the mean time Galba was steadily advancing on the way to
Rome. In due time he made his entry into the city, and
embassadors came to him there from all parts of the Roman
world to acknowledge him as the reigning emperor. At this
time he was seventy-three years old. So that the number
seventy-three of which the oracle had warned Nero to beware,
denoted the age of his rival and enemy,—not his own.
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