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Featured Book: The Comprehensive New Testament More Books: Online References: Apostolic and Early Church Fathers
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ON
THE EMBASSY TO GAIUS I.
(1) How long shall we, who are aged men, still be like children, being indeed as
to our bodies gray-headed through the length of time that we have lived, but as
to our souls utterly infantine through our want of sense and sensibility,
looking upon that which is the most unstable of all things, namely, fortune, as
most invariable, and that which is of all things in the world the most
steadfast, namely, nature, as utterly untrustworthy? For, like people playing at
draughts, we make changes, altering the position of actions, and considering the
things which are the result of fortune as more durable than those which result
from nature, and the things which proceed in accordance with nature as less
stable than those which are the result of chance. (2) And the reason of all this
is, that we form our judgment of present events without paying any prudential
attention to the future, being influenced by the erroneous guidance of our
outward senses instead of the secret operations of the intellect; for the things
which are openly conspicuous and before our hands so as to be taken up by them,
are comprehended by our eyes, but our reasoning power outstrips them, hastening
onwards to what is invisible and future; but nevertheless, we obscure the vision
of our reason, though it is far more acute than those bodily powers of sight
which are exercised by the eyes, some of us confusing it by indulgence in wine
and satiety, and others by that greatest of all evils, namely, ignorance. (3)
Nevertheless, the existing opportunity and the many and important proportions
which arise to be decided on at the present time, even if some people should be
incredulous that the Deity exercises a providential foresight with regard to
human affairs, and especially on behalf of a nation which addresses its
supplications to him, which belongs especially to the father and sovereign of
the universe, and the great cause of all things; and these propositions are
sufficient to persuade them of this Truth.{1}{there seems some corruption in the
text here.} (4) And this nation of suppliants is in the Chaldaic language called
Israel, but when the name is translated into the Greek language it is called,
"the seeing nation;" which appellation appears to me to be the most
honorable of all things in the world, whether private or public; (5) for if the
sight of elders, or instructors, or rulers, or parents, excites those who behold
them to reverence and orderly conduct, and to an admiration of and desire for a
life of moderation and temperance, how great a bulwark of virtue and excellence
must we not expect to find in those souls which, after having investigated the
nature of every created thing, have learnt to contemplate the uncreated and
Divine Being, the first good of all, the one beautiful, and happy, and glorious,
and blessed being; better, if one is to tell the plain truth, than the good
itself; more beautiful than the beautiful itself; more happy than happiness
itself; more blessed than blessedness itself; and, in short, if anything else in
the world is so, more perfect than any one of the abovementioned things. (6) For
reason cannot make such advances as to attain to a thorough comprehension of
God, who can neither be touched nor handled; but it withdraws from and falls
short of such a height, being unable to employ appropriate language as a step
towards the manifestation (I will not say of the living God, for even if the
whole heaven were to become endowed with articulate voice, it would not be
furnished with felicitous and appropriate expressions to do justice to such a
subject); but even of his subordinate powers, those, for instance, by which he
created the world and by which he reigns over it as its king, and by which he
foresees the future, and all his other beneficent, and chastising, and
corrective powers. (7) Unless, indeed, we ought to class his correction among
his beneficent powers, not only because such a display is a portion of his laws
and ordinances (for law is made up of two things, the honor of the good, and the
chastisement of the wicked), but also because punishment reproves, and very
often even corrects, and ameliorates those who have done wrong; and if it fails
to do so with respect to them, at all events it does so to those who are near
the offenders thus punished; for the punishment of others makes most men better,
for fear lest they themselves should suffer the same things. II.
(8) For who-when he saw Gaius, after the death of Tiberius Caesar, assuming the
sovereignty of the whole world in a condition free from all sedition, and
regulated by and obedient to admirable laws, and adapted to unanimity and
harmony in all its parts, east and west, south and north; the barbarian nations
being in harmony with the Greeks, and the Greeks with the barbarians, and the
soldiers with the body of private citizens, and the citizens with the military;
so that they all partook of and enjoyed one common universal peace-could fail to
marvel at and be amazed at his extraordinary and unspeakable good fortune, (9)
since he had thus succeeded to a ready-made inheritance of all good things,
collected together as it were in one heap, namely, to numerous and vast
treasures of money, and silver and gold, some in bullion, and some in coined
money, and some again being devoted to articles of luxury, in drinking cups and
other vessels, which are made for display and magnificence; and also countless
hosts of troops, infantry, and cavalry, and naval forces, and revenues which
were supplied in a never-ending stream as from a fountain; (10) and the
sovereignty of the most numerous, and most valuable, and important portions of
the habitable world, which is fact one may fairly call the whole world, being
not only all that is bounded by the two rivers, the Euphrates and the Rhine; the
one of which confines Germany and all the more uncivilised nations; and the
Euphrates, on the other hand, bridles Parthia and the nations of the Sarmatians
and Scythians, which are not less barbarous and uncivilised than the Germanic
tribes; but, even as I said before, all the world, from the rising to the
setting sun, all the land in short on this side of the Ocean and beyond the
Ocean, at which all the Roman people and all Italy rejoiced, and even all the
Asiatic and European nations. (11) For as they had never yet all together
admired any emperor who had ever existed at that time, not expecting to have in
future the possession, and use, and enjoyment of all private and public good
things, but thinking that they actually had them already as a sort of
superfluity of prosperity which happiness was waiting to fill to the brim: (12)
accordingly now there was nothing else to be seen in any city, but altars, and
victims, and sacrifices, and men clothed in white garments, and crowned with
garlands, and wearing cheerful countenances, and displaying their joy by the
brightness of their looks, and festivals, and assemblies, and musical contests,
and horse-races, and revels, and feasts lasting the whole night long, with the
music of the flute and of the lyre, and rejoicings, and holidays, and truces,
and every kind of pleasure addressed to every one of the senses. (13) On this
occasion the rich were not better off than the poor, nor the men of high rank
than the lowly, nor the creditors than the debtors, nor the masters than the
slaves, since the occasion gave equal privileges and communities to all men, so
that the age of Saturn, which is so celebrated by the poets was no longer looked
upon as a fiction and a fable, {2}{the golden age was said to have existed
during the reign of Saturn upon earth. So Tibullus and Virgil.} on account of
the universal prosperity and happiness which reigned every where, and the
absence of all grief and fear, and the daily and nightly exhibitions of joy and
festivity throughout every house and throughout the whole people, which lasted
continually without any interruption during the first seven months of his reign.
(14) But in the eighth month a severe disease attacked Gaius who had changed the
manner of his living which was a little while before, while Tiberius was alive,
very simple and on that account more wholesome than one of great sumptuousness
and luxury; for he began to indulge in abundance of strong wine and eating of
rich dishes, and in the abundant license of insatiable desires and great
insolence, and in the unseasonable use of hot baths, and emetics, and then again
in winebibbing and drunkenness, and returning gluttony, and in lust after boys
and women, and in everything else which tends to destroy both soul and body, and
all the bonds which unite and strengthen the two; for the rewards of temperance
are health and strength, and the wages of intemperance are weakness and disease
which bring a man near to death. III.
(15) Accordingly, when the news was spread abroad that he was sick while the
weather was still suitable for navigation (for it was the beginning of the
autumn, which is the last season during which nautical men can safely take
voyages, and during which in consequence they all return from the foreign marts
in every quarter to their own native ports and harbors of refuge, especially all
who exercise a prudent care not to be compelled to pass the winter in a foreign
country); they, forsaking their former life of delicateness and luxury, now wore
mournful faces, and every house and every city became full of depression and
melancholy, their grief being now equal to and counterbalancing the joy which
they experienced a short time before. (16) For every portion of the habitable
world was diseased in his sickness, feeling affected with a more terrible
disease than that which was oppressing Gaius; for his sickness was that of the
body alone, but the universal malady which was oppressing all men every where
was one which attacked the vigor of their souls, their peace, their hopes, their
participation in and enjoyment of all good things; (17) for men began to
remember how numerous and how great are the evils which spring from anarchy,
famine, and war, and the destruction of trees, and devastations, and deprivation
of lands, and plundering of money, and the intolerable fear of slavery and
death, which no one can relieve, all which evils appeared to admit of but one
remedy, namely the recovery of Gaius. (18) Accordingly when his disease began to
abate, in a very short time even the men who were living on the very confines of
the empire heard of it and rejoiced, for nothing is swifter than report, {3}{so
Virgil says, Aen. 4.174.} and immediately every city was full of suspense and
expectation, being continually eager for better news, until at length his
perfect recovery was announced by fresh arrivals, at which news they again
returned to their original cheerfulness, each thinking the health of Gaius to be
his own salvation; (19) and this feeling pervaded every continent and every
island, for no one can recollect so great and general a joy affecting any one
country or any one nation, at the good health or prosperity of their governor,
as now pervaded the whole of the habitable world at the recovery of Gaius, and
at his being able to resume the exercise of his power and having completely got
rid of his sickness. (20) For they all rejoiced, from ignorance of the truth,
like men who are now for the first time beginning to exchange a wandering and
uncivilised mode of life for a social and civilised system, and instead of
dwelling in desert places, and the open air, and the mountain districts, to live
in walled cities, and instead of living without any governor, or protector, or
lawgiver, to be now established under the care of a governor to be a sort of
shepherd and leader of a more domesticated flock; (21) for the human mind is apt
to be blind towards the perception of what is really expedient and beneficial
for it, being influenced rather by conjecture and notions of probability than by
real knowledge. IV.
(22) At all events it was not long before Gaius-who was now looked upon as a
Savior and benefactor, and who was expected to shower down some fresh and
everlasting springs of benefits upon all Asia and Europe, so as to endow the
inhabitants with inalienable happiness and prosperity, both separately to each
individual and generally to the whole state-began, as the proverb has it, at
home, and changed into a ferocity of disposition, or, I should rather say,
displayed the savageness which he had previously overshadowed by pretence and
hypocrisy; (23) for he put to death his cousin who had been left as the partner
of his kingdom, and who was in fact a more natural successor to it than he
himself; for he himself was only Tiberius's grandson by adoption, but the other
was so by blood; arguing as a pretext that he had detected him in plotting
against him, though his very age was a sufficient refutation of any such
accusation; for the unhappy victim was only just emerging from boyhood, and
beginning to rank among the youths. (24) And, as some person say, if Tiberius
had lived a short time longer, Gaius would have been made away with, as he began
to be looked upon by him with unalterable suspicion, and the genuine grandson of
Tiberius would have been named the future emperor, and the inheritor of his
paternal kingdom. (25) But Tiberius was carried off by fate, before he could
bring his designs to their completion; and Gaius thought that he should be able
to escape all evil report which might arise from his transgressing the
principles of justice with respect to his partner by outwitting him. (26) And
the contrivance which he adopted was of the following character. Having
assembled all the chief magistrates, he said: "I am desirous that he who is
my cousin by birth and my brother in affection, in accordance with the
instruction of Tiberius who is now dead, shall be a partner with me in my
absolute authority. But you yourselves perceive that he is as yet a mere child,
and that he is in need of masters, and teachers, and guardians; (27) since what
can be a more desirable blessing for me than that my one mind and one body shall
not be loaded with so great a weight of the cares of government, but for me to
have some one who may be able to lighten and alleviate them by sharing them? I,
therefore," said he: "passing over and being superior to all tutors,
and masters, and guardians, register myself as his father, and him as my
son." V.
(28) With these words he deceived both those who were present and the youth
himself; for his proposal was a mere bait, his intention being not to invest him
with the power which he expected, but to deprive him of even that which he
already had, according to the law affecting coheirs and partners; and
accordingly now he plotted against him with absolute fearlessness, having no
regard for nor fear of any one; for by the laws of the Romans the most complete
and absolute authority over the son belongs to the father, besides the fact of
Gaius having the imperial authority which was wholly irresponsible, since no one
could either venture or had any power to demand an account from him of any thing
whatever that he might do. (29) Accordingly, looking upon this youth to be like
a thirds-man in the games, he proceeded to overthrow him, feeling no compassion,
either for the fact of his having been brought up with him, or his being so
nearly related to him, or for his age, but having no idea of sparing this
miserable youth, doomed to an early death; his own partner in the government,
his co-heir, who had formerly been expected to be all but the absolute emperor,
by reason of his being the nearest relation to Tiberius; for when their fathers
are dead, the grandsons are usually looked upon by their grandfathers as
standing in the position of sons. (30) It is said moreover, that this youth,
being ordered to slay himself with his own hands, while a centurion and a
captain of a thousand were standing by (who had been expressly commanded to take
no part in the horrid deed, since it was not lawful for the descendants of the
emperors to be put to death by any one else; for Gaius remembered the laws amid
his lawless acts, and had some regard for piety in all his impious deeds,
imitating as well as he could the nature of truth); he, not knowing how to kill
himself, for he had never seen any one else put to death, and had never had any
practice in fighting with weapons, which is the usual exercise and course of
instruction for children who are being educated with a view to become leaders
and rulers, on account of the wars which they may have to conduct, at first
exhorted those officers who had come to him to put him to death themselves,
stretching out his neck; (31) but when they did not dare to do so, he himself
taking the sword inquired in his ignorance and want of experience what was the
most mortal place, in order that by a well-directed blow he might cut short his
miserable life; and they, like instructors in misery, led him on his way, and
pointed out to him the part into which he was to thrust his sword; and he,
having thus learnt his first and last lesson, became himself, miserable that he
was, his own murderer under compulsion. VI.
(32) But when this first and greatest undertaking had been accomplished by Gaius,
there being no longer left any one who had any connection with the supreme
authority, to whom any one who bore him ill-will, and who was suspected by him,
could possibly turn his eyes; he now, in the second place, proceeded to compass
the death of Macro, a man who had co-operated with him in every thing relating
to the empire, not only after he had been appointed emperor, for it is a
characteristic of flattery to court those who are in a state of prosperity, but
who had previously assisted him in his measures for securing that authority.
(33) For Tiberius, who was a man of very profound prudence, and the most able to
all the men of his court at perceiving the hidden intentions of any man, and who
was as pre-eminent in intelligence and acuteness as he was in good fortune, did
very often look with suspicion upon Gaius as being evil disposed towards all the
house of Claudius, and as being related to him only on the mother's side,
{4}{caligula was the son of Germanicus and Agrippina.} and he feared for his
grandson, lest he, being left a mere child, should be put to death by him. (34)
And he judged him, moreover, very little fitted for an authority of such
magnitude, both on account of the unsociableness and ferocity of his nature, and
the inequality of his temper; for he was continually giving way to the most
frantic and most inconsistent moods, not preserving any consistency either in
his words or in his actions; (35) all which Macro studied with all his strength
at every opportunity, pacifying the suspicions of Tiberius and all the
prejudices with which he perceived that his mind was inflamed against Gaius by
reason of his ceaseless fear and anxiety for his grandson. (36) For he
represented to him, that Gaius was a person of a good and obedient disposition,
and one who entertained the greatest affection for his cousin, so that out of
his exceeding regard for him he would be willing even to abandon the government
and to yield it up to him by himself, but that excessive modesty was anything
but advantageous to many persons, in consequence of which Gaius, who was of a
most guileless and single-minded disposition, was looked upon by many as crafty
and designing. (37) And when he could not persuade him, by all the arguments
drawn from probabilities which he advanced, he brought forward that which rested
upon specific agreements, adding, "I myself will be his security, I who
deserve to have confidence placed in me, inasmuch as I have given sufficient
proof that I myself am individually a friend to Caesar, and a friend to
Tiberius, since it was I who carried into execution, your intentions respecting
the downfall of Sejanus. (38) And, in short, he was very assiduous, and
energetic, and comprehensive in his praises of Gaius, if, indeed, one may speak
of speeches in defense of a man as equivalent to panegyrics on him, which were
rather addressed to the doing away with the unfavorable impressions and
suspicion, excited by obscure and indistinct hints and accusations. In short,
all the things which any one could say on behalf of any brother or legitimate
child, such and more too did Macro say to Tiberius in behalf of Gaius. (39) And
the cause of this was according to the report which obtained among the
generality of people, not only that Macro had, on the other hand, been greatly
courted by him, as one who had the greatest, or, indeed, all the power under the
empire; but also that Macro's wife was favorable to him, for a reason which
ought not to be mentioned, and she every day urged on, and encouraged, and
entreated her husband to omit no exertion of his zeal and energy on behalf of
the young man. And a wife is a very powerful engine to divert or to persuade the
mind of her husband, especially if she be one of an amorous temperament, for
because of her own consciousness she becomes more given to flattery. (40) And
Macro, being ignorant of the dishonor done to his marriage-bed and to his
family, and looking upon her flattery as a proof of her sincere good will and
affection for him, was deceived, and without being aware of it was led, by her
intrigues, to embrace his bitterest enemies as his best friends. VII.
(41) Therefore, as he knew that he had preserved him ten thousand times, when he
was in the most imminent danger of being put to death, he used to offer him
undisguised, sincere, and honest admonitions and advice, with perfect freedom of
speech; for, like a good workman, he was desirous that what he looked upon as
his own work should remain uninjured and indestructible, without being put an
end to, either by himself or by any one else; (42) therefore, whenever he saw
him sleeping at any entertainment he would go round and awaken him, having, at
the same time, a regard for what was becoming and also for his safety, for a man
who is asleep is a good object for treachery; and whenever he beheld him looking
with an excited eye at any dancers, or even sometimes dancing with them, or not
smiling with dignity upon actors of farcical and laughable spectacles, but
rather grinning like a boy, or wholly carried away by the tunes of some
harp-player or chorus, so as on some occasions even to join in their song, he
would, if he was sitting or going near him, give him a nudge, and endeavor to
check him. (43) And very often, when he was reclining near him, he would whisper
in his ear, and admonish him gently and quietly, so that no one else might hear
what was said, saying, "You ought not only not to be like any one else
here, but like no one else whatever, neither at any spectacle, or at anything
that is to be heard, or in anything else that ever affects the outward senses,
but you ought rather to surpass all other men in every action of your life, as
much as you surpass them in your good fortune, (44) for it is unreasonable for
the ruler of all the earth and of all the sea to be subdued by a song or by an
exhibition of dancing, or by any ridiculous jest or piece of acting, or by
anything else of that kind; and not on every occasion, and in every place, to
remember his position as emperor, like a shepherd and protector of the flock,
availing himself of everything that can tend to any kind of amelioration, from
every word, and from every action, of every description whatever." (45)
Then again he would add, "When you are present at any theatrical contest,
or at any gymnastic games, or at any of the contests in the hippodrome, do not
consider the pursuits themselves so much as the behaving correctly in all such
pursuits, and entertain thoughts of this nature: (46) if some men labor in this
manner to bring to perfection things that can in no respect benefit human life,
but which only afford pleasure and amusement to the spectators, in such a way as
to be praised and admired, and to receive rewards, and honors, and crowns, and
to have their names proclaimed as conquerors; what ought that man to do who is
skilful in the most sublime and most important of all arts? (47) Now the
greatest and most excellent of all sciences is the science of government, by
means of which every country which is good and fertile, whether it be champaign
or mountainous, is cultivated, and every sea is navigated without danger by
heavily-laden merchant-vessels, to communicate to the different countries the
useful productions of each, out of a natural desire for participation and
association, so that each land receives what it stands in need of, and sends
abroad in requital those good things of which it has a superfluity; (48) for
envy has never obtained a dominion over the whole of the habitable world, nor
even over those great divisions of it, the whole of Europe or the whole of Asia,
but it lurks in holes like a venomous reptile, creeping out in small districts
to attack an individual man, or a single family, or, if it is very violent and
powerful, perhaps one city; but it never attacks a larger circle of a whole
nation or a whole country, especially ever since your august family has really
begun to rule over all men in every part of the world. (49) "For your house
has discovered and brought to light everything that is good, even in the midst
of evils, and has banished all evils to the extremities of the earth, and beyond
its borders to the very depths of Tartarus, and has brought back, from the most
distant borders of the earth and sea, those profitable and beneficial things
which were in a manner banished into the habitable world around us; and now all
these things are entrusted to your power, to be governed by your authority. (50)
"Accordingly you, having been conducted by nature to the supreme helm of
the world, and having the government of everything placed in your hand, must
guide the universal ship of all mankind in a safe and salutary manner, rejoicing
and delighting in nothing more than in doing good to your subjects; (51) for
different people have different contributions to bestow, which individuals
necessarily offer in their several cities. But the most suitable gift for a
ruler to give is to adopt wise counsels with respect to those who are subject to
his authority, and to execute intentions which have been rightly formed, and to
bestow on them good things without any limitation, with a liberal hand and mind,
except such as it may be better to keep in reserve from a prudent foreknowledge
of the uncertainty of the future." VIII.
(52) The unhappy man kept dinning suggestions of this kind into his ears in the
hope of improving Gaius; but he, being a contentious and quarrelsome person,
turned his mind in the directly opposite direction, as if he were exhorted to do
exactly the contrary, and he conceived a most determined disgust for his
monitor, so as never to behold him with a cheerful countenance; and sometimes
when he saw him at a distance he would speak as follows to those near him: (53)
"Here comes the teacher of one who has no longer any right to be looked
upon as a pupil; -here comes the pedagogue of one who is no longer a child, the
monitor of one who is wiser than himself, the man who thinks it proper that the
emperor should obey his subject, who sets himself up as a man deeply versed by
experience in the science of government, and as a teacher of it, though from
whom he has learnt the principles of sovereign government I know not; (54) for
from the moment that I left my cradle, I have had ten thousand instructors,
fathers, brothers, uncles, cousins, and grandfathers, up to the very founders of
my family, in fact every one related to me either on my father's or my mother's
side, who had acquired absolute power for themselves, even without taking into
consideration the fact that, by their being the authors of my being, they had
implanted in me some degree of royal power and some natural aptitude for
government. (55) For as similitudes of both body and soul exist both in the
form, and position, and motions of men, and also as the inclinations, and
dispositions, and actions of men are preserved in some degree of similitude
through the principles of descent, so also is it probable that the very same
principles should convey an outline of similitude in respect of one's aptitude
for government. (56) Shall any one, then, who is ignorant dare to instruct me
who am the reverse of ignorant? me who, even before my birth, while I was yet in
my mother's womb, was fashioned as an emperor in the workshop of nature? For how
can it be possible for persons, who but a short time before were private
individuals, to contemplate as they should the intentions of an imperial soul?
But some persons in their shameless audacity dare to put themselves forward as
interpreters and perfecters of the principles of government, when in reality
they scarcely ought to be enrolled among those who have any understanding
whatever of the matter." (57) And as he thus diligently labored to alienate
himself from Macro, he began also to invent false but plausible and specious
grounds for blaming and accusing him; for passionate and irritable natures,
especially when belonging to powerful men, are very ingenious at weaving
plausibilities. Now, the pretexts which he made use of against him were of the
following natures. (58) He said Macro thought thus: "Gaius is my work; the
work of Macro. I am more truly, or at all events not less truly, his father than
his own parents. He would have been destroyed, over and over again, by Tiberius,
who thirsted for his blood, if it had not been for me and for my powers of
persuasion. And moreover, when Tiberius was dead, I, who had under my command
the whole force of the army, immediately placed him in the position which
Tiberius had occupied, teaching him that the state had indeed sustained a loss
of one man, but that the imperial authority continued unaltered, as entire as
ever." (59) And many people have given credit to these assertions of his as
if they were true, not being acquainted with the false and crafty disposition of
the speakers; for hitherto the dishonest and designing character of his
disposition was not made manifest. But a few days afterwards the miserable man
was put to death, with his wife, receiving the extremity of punishment as a
reward for his exceeding good will towards his slayer. (60) This is the
consequence of doing kindnesses to ungrateful people; for in return for the
benefits which they have received, they inflict the greatest of injuries on
those from whom they have received them. Accordingly, Macro, who had done
everything in sincerity with the most earnest eagerness and zeal for the good of
Gaius, in the first place in order to save him from death, and afterwards in
order that he by himself might succeed to the imperial authority, received for
his reward the fate which I have mentioned. (61) For it is said that the
wretched man was compelled to kill himself with his own hand; and his wife, too,
experienced the same misery, even though she indeed had at one time been
believed to be on the most intimate terms of familiarity with Gaius; but they
say that none of the allurements of love are stable and trustworthy because it
is a passion which quickly breeds satiety. IX.
(62) But after Macro and all his house had been sacrificed, Gaius then began to
design a third more grievous piece of treachery still. His fatherin-law had been
Marcus Silanus, a man full of wisdom, and very illustrious by birth. He, after
his daughter had died by an early death, still was very attentive and
affectionate to Gaius, showing all imaginable regard for him, not so much like a
father-in-law as like an actual father, and he hoped that he should find that
Gaius also entertained equal good will towards him, transforming himself
according to the principles of equality from a son-in-law into a son; but he
was, without knowing it, cherishing mistaken opinions, and deluding himself,
(63) for he was continually uttering affectionate speeches, keeping back nothing
which could tend to the amelioration and improvement of Gaius's disposition and
way of life and mode of government, speaking with all freedom, and looking upon
his own surpassing nobility of birth and nearness of connection by marriage as
circumstances which gave him grounds for great familiarity and openness, for his
daughter had been dead only a very short time, so that the laws and bonds which
bind such kinsmen were scarcely destroyed, and one may almost say were still
quivering with life, some relics of the breath of vitality being still left, as
it were, and remaining warm in the body. (64) But Gaius, looking upon every
admonition as an insult, because he fancied that he himself was the wisest and
most virtuous of all men, and moreover the most valorous and the most just,
hated all who ventured to offer him instruction more than even his avowed
enemies. (65) Therefore, looking on Silanus as a bore, who only wished to check
the impetuosity and indulgence of his appetites, and discarding all recollection
of and regard for his deceased wife, he treacherously put her father to death,
who was also his own father-in-law. X.
(66) And by this time the matter began to be widely talked about in consequence
of the continual deaths of so many eminent men, so that now these things began
to be spoken of in every mouth as intolerable infamy and wickedness; not indeed
openly, from fear, but gently and under the breath, in whispers; (67) and then
again, by a sudden change (for the multitude is very unstable in everything, in
intentions, and words, and actions), men, disbelieving that one who but a little
while before was merciful and humane could have become altered so entirely, for
Gaius had been looked upon as affable, and sociable, and friendly, began to seek
for excuses for him, and after some search they found such, saying with regard
to his cousin and co-heir in the kingdom things such as these: (68) "The
unchangeable law of nature has ordained that there should be no partnership in
the sovereign power, and it has established by its own unalterable principles
what this man must inevitably have suffered at the hands of his more powerful
coheir. The one who was the more powerful has chastised the other. This is not
murder. Perhaps, indeed, the putting that youth to death was done providentially
for the advantage of the whole human race, since if one portion had been
assigned as subjects to the one, and another portion to the other, there would
have arisen troubles and confusion, and civil and foreign war. And what is
better than peace? and peace is caused by good government on sound principles.
And no government can be good but that which is free from all contentions and
from all disputes, and then everything else is made right by it." (69) And
in reference to the case of Macro, they said, "The man was puffed up with
pride in an immoderate degree; he had no idea of that great lesson which came
from Delphi, 'know thyself.' And they say that knowledge is the cause of
happiness, and that ignorance is the parent of unhappiness. What could have
possessed him to make such an alteration and change in their relative positions
as to thrust himself, who was a subject, into the rank of a governor, and to
depress Gaius, who was the emperor, into the place of a subject? For it is the
part of a ruler to command, and that was what Macro did; but it is the duty of a
subject to obey, and that was what he considered that Gaius was to submit
to." (70) For these inconsiderate men, without giving themselves the
trouble of inquiring into the truth, called the recommendations of Macro
commands, and called him who gave advice a governor, out of ignorance and
insensibility, or else out of flattery suppressing the truth and giving a false
coloring to the nature of both names and things. (71) And in reference to
Silanus they said, "Silanus was a most ridiculous person when he took it
into his head that a father-in-law would have as much influence with his
son-in-law as a real father has with a son. And yet even real fathers who are in
a private station submit to their sons when they are in great offices and in
places of high authority, being quite content with the second place; but this
foolish man, even when he was no longer his father-in-law, kept on claiming
privileges which did not belong to him, without perceiving that with the death
of his daughter the connection which had originated in the marriage of Gaius
with her had also died, (72) for intermarriages are the bonds which unite
families between which there is no kindred, changing alienation into near
connection; but when that bond is dissolved, then the union is dissolved
likewise, especially when it is dissolved by a circumstance which cannot be
altered or remedied, namely, by the death of the woman who was given in marriage
into another family." (73) Such conversations as these were held in every
company, the speakers being wholly influenced by their wish that the emperor
should not appear to be cruel; for as they had hoped that such humanity and
gentleness was seated in the soul of Gaius as had not existed in either of the
previous emperors, they thought it would be a most strange thing if he now made
so great and so sudden a change to an entirely contrary disposition. XI.
(74) Having now, then, entirely accomplished the three undertakings
above-mentioned, with reference to three most important divisions, two of them
belonging to the country, one to the class of counsellors and the other to the
knights, and the third affecting his own relations, and considering that now
that he had thus put down the mightiest and most powerful of his foes, he must
have struck all the rest with the utmost terror, alarming the counsellors by the
death of Silanus (75) (for he was inferior to no one in the senate), and the
knights by the execution of Macro (for he, like the leader of a chorus, had long
been considered the very first man of the knights for reputation and glory), and
all his blood relations by the slaughter of his cousin and joint inheritor of
the kingdom, he no longer chose to remain fettered by the ordinary limits of
human nature, but aspired to raise himself above them, and desired to be looked
upon as a god. (76) And at the beginning of this insane desire they say that he
was influenced by such a train of reasoning as the following: for as the
curators of the herds of other animals, namely cowherds, and goatherds, and
shepherds, are neither oxen nor goats, nor sheep, but men who have received a
more excellent portion, and a more admirable formation of mind and body; so in
the same manner, said he, is it fitting that I who am the leader of the most
excellent of all herds, namely, the race of mankind, should be considered as a
being of a superior nature, and not merely human, but as one who has received a
greater and more holy portion. (77) Accordingly, having impressed this idea on
his mind, like a vain and foolish man as he was, he bore about in himself a
fallacious fable and invention as if it had been a most undeniable truth; and
after he had once carried his boldness and audacity to such a pitch as to compel
the multitude to admit of his most impious deification, he attempted to do other
things consistent with and conformable to it, and in this way he advanced up to
the highest point by slow degrees as if he were ascending up steps. (78) For he
began at first to liken himself to those beings who are called demigods, such as
Bacchus, and Hercules, and the twins of Lacedaemon; turning into utter ridicule
Trophonius, and Amphiaraus, and Amphilochus, and others of the same kind, with
all their oracles and secret ceremonies, in comparison of his own power. (79) In
the next place, like an actor in a theatre, he was continually wearing different
dresses at different times, taking at one time a lion's skin and a club, both
gilded over; being then dressed in the character of Hercules; at another time he
would wear a felt hat upon his head, when he was disguised in imitation of the
Spartan twins, Castor and Pollux; sometimes he also adorned himself with ivy,
and a thyrsus, and skins of fawns, so as to appear in the guise of Bacchus. (80)
And he looked upon himself as being in this respect superior to all of these
beings, because each of them while he had his own peculiar honors had no claim
to those which belonged to the others, but he in his envious ambition
appropriated all the honors of the whole body of demigods at once, or I should
rather say, appropriated the demigods themselves; transforming himself not into
the triple-bodied Geryon, so as to attract all beholders by the multitude of his
bodies; but, what was the most extraordinary thing of all, changing and
transforming the essence of one body into every variety of form and figure, like
the Egyptian Proteus, whom Homer has represented as being susceptible of every
variety of transformation, into all the elements, and into the animals, and
plants, which belong to the different Elements.{5}{the passage in Homer is to be
found at Odyssey 4.363. It is imitated more concisely by Virgil, Georg. 4.410,
who makes Cyrene tell Aristaeus (which is thus translated by
Pope)--"Instant he wears, elusive of the rape, / The mimic force of every
savage shape: / Or glides with liquid lapse a murm'ring stream, / Or wrapt in
flame, he glows at every limb. / Yet still retentive, with redoubled might /
Thro' each vain passive form constrains his flight. / But when, his native shape
resumed, he stands / Patient of conquest, and your cause demands; / The cause
that urg'd the bold attempt declare, / And soothe the vanquish'd with a victor's
prayer. / The bands relaxed, implore the seer to say / What godhead interdicts
the wat'ry way."} (81) And yet why, O Gaius! did you think yourself in need
of spurious honors, such as the temples and statues of the beings
above-mentioned are often filled with? You ought rather to have imitated their
virtues. Hercules purified both the earth and the sea, performing labors of the
greatest possible importance and of the highest benefit to all mankind, in order
to eradicate all that was mischievous and calculated to injure the nature of
each of the elements. (82) Bacchus rendered the vine susceptible of cultivation,
and extracted a most delicious drink from it, which is at the same time most
beneficial to the souls and bodies of men, leading the first to cheerfulness,
working in them a forgetfulness of evils and a hope of blessings, and making the
latter more healthy, and vigorous, and active, and supple. (83) And individually
it renders each man better, and alters populous families and households, leading
them from a squalid and laborious life of vexation to a course of relaxation and
cheerful happiness, and causing to every city on earth, both Grecian and
barbarian, incessant festivity, and mirth, and entertainment, and revelry; for
of all these things is good wine the cause. (84) Again, it is said that the twin
sons of Jupiter, Castor and Pollux, are partakers of immortality. For since the
one was mortal and the other immortal, the one who had had the more excellent
portion assigned to him did not choose to behave in a selfish manner, but rather
to display his good will and affection towards his brother; (85) for having
acquired the idea that eternity was never-ending, and considering that he was to
live for ever, and that his brother was to be dead for ever, and that in
conjunction with his own immortality he should likewise be enduring an undying
sorrow on account of his brother, he conceived and carried out a most marvelous
system of counterbalancing, mingling mortality with himself and immortality with
his brother, and thus he modified inequality, which is the beginning of all
injustice, by equality, which is the fountain of justice. XII.
(86) All these beings, O Gaius! were admired on account of the benefits which
they had conferred on mankind, and they are admired for them even up to the
present time, and they were deservedly thought worthy of veneration and of the
very highest honors. But come now, and tell us yourself in what achievement of
yours do you pride yourself and boast yourself as being in the least similar to
their actions? (87) Have you imitated the twin sons of Jupiter in their
brotherly affection, that I may begin with that point? Did you not rather, O
hard-hearted and most pitiless of men! inhumanly slaughter your brother, the
joint inheritor of the kingdom with you, even before he had arrived at the full
vigor of manhood, when he was still in early youth. Did you not afterwards
banish your sisters, lest they also should cause you any reasonable apprehension
of the deprivation and loss of your imperial power? (88) Have you imitated
Bacchus in any respect? Have you been an inventor of any new blessings to
mankind? Have you filled the whole of the habitable world with joy as he did?
Are all Asia and Europe inadequate to contain the gifts which have been showered
upon mankind by you? (89) No doubt you have invented new arts and sciences, like
a common pest and murderer of your kind, by which you have changed all pleasant
and acceptable things into vexation and sorrow, and have made life miserable and
intolerable to all men everywhere, appropriating to yourself in your intolerable
and insatiable greediness all the good and beautiful things which belonged to
every one else, whether from the east or from any other country of the universe,
carrying off everything from the south, everything from the north, and in
requital giving to and pouring down upon those whom you had plundered every sort
of mischievous and injurious things from your own bitter spirit, everything
which is ever engendered in cruel, and destructive, and envenomed dispositions;
these are the reasons why you appeared to us as a new Bacchus. (90) But I
suppose you imitated Hercules in your unwearied labors and your incessant
displays of valor and virtue; you, O most wretched of men! having filled every
continent and every island with good laws, and principles of justice, and
wealth, and comfort, and prosperity, and abundance of other blessings, you,
wretched man, full of all cowardice and iniquity, who have emptied every city of
all the things which can conduce to stability and prosperity, and have made them
full of everything which leads to trouble and confusion, and the most utter
misery and desolation. (91) Tell me then, O Gaius! do you, after having made all
these contributions to universal destruction, do you, I say, seek to acquire
immortality in order to make the calamities which you have heaped upon mankind,
not of brief duration and short-lived, but imperishable and everlasting? But I
think, on the contrary, that even if you had previously appeared to be a god,
you would beyond all question have been changed on account of your evil
practices into an ordinary nature, resembling that of common perishable mortals;
for if virtues can make their possessors immortal, then beyond all doubt vices
can make them mortal. (92) Do not, therefore, inscribe your name by the side of
that of the twin sons of Jupiter, those most affectionate of deities, you who
have been the murderer and destruction of your brethren, nor claim a share in
the honors of Hercules or Bacchus, who have benefited human life. You have been
the undoer and destroyer of those good effects which they produced. XIII.
(93) But the madness and frenzy to which he gave way were so preposterous, and
so utterly insane, that he went even beyond the demigods, and mounted up to and
invaded the veneration and worship paid to those who are looked upon as greater
than they, as the supreme deities of the world, Mercury, and Apollo, and Mars.
(94) And first of all he dressed himself up with the caduceus, and sandals, and
mantle of Mercury, exhibiting a regularity in his disorder, a consistency in his
confusion, and a ratiocination in his insanity. (95) Afterwards, when he thought
fit to do so, he laid aside these ornaments, and metamorphosed and transformed
himself into Apollo, crowning his head with garlands, in the form of rays, and
holding a bow and arrows in his left hand, and holding forth graces in his
right, as if it became him to proffer blessings to all men from his ready store,
and to display the best arrangement possible on his right hand, but to contract
the punishments which he had it in his power to inflict, and to allot to them a
more confined space on his left. (96) And immediately there were established
choruses, who had been carefully trained, singing paeans to him, the same who
had, a little while before, called him Bacchus, and Evius, and Lyaeus, and sang
Bacchic hymns in his honor when he assumed the disguise of Bacchus. (97) Very
often, also, he would clothe himself with a breastplate, and march forth sword
in hand, with a helmet on his head and a shield on his left arm, calling himself
Mars, and on each side of him there marched with him the attendants of this new
and unknown Mars, a troop of murderers and executioners who had already
performed him all kinds of wicked services when he was raging and thirsting for
human blood; (98) and then when men saw this they were amazed and terrified at
the marvelous sight, and they wondered how a man who did exactly the contrary to
what was done by those beings to whom he claimed to be equal in honor, did not
choose to imitate their virtues, but assumed the outward character of each with
the most abominable conduct. And yet all those ornaments and decorations which
belonged to them were attached to his statues and images, which indicated by
symbols the benefits which the beings who are thus honored confer upon the race
of mankind. (99) Mercury, for instance, requires wings attached to his ankles.
Why so? Is it not because it behoves him to be the interpreter and declarer of
the will of the gods (from which employment, in fact, he derives his Greek name
of Hermes{6}{i.e. from hermeµneuoµ, "to interpret."}), announcing
good news to mankind (for not only no god but no sensible man ever will become
the messenger of evil), and therefore it is necessary for him to be exceedingly
swift-footed, and all but winged, from the unhesitating rapidity with which he
requires the proceed. Since it is right that beneficial news should be announced
with great promptness, just as bad news ought to be brought slowly, unless
indeed any one should prefer saying that such ought to be entirely suppressed in
silence. (100) Again, he takes with him his caduceus or herald's wand, as a
token of reconciliation and peace, for wars receive their respites and
terminations by means of heralds, who restore peace; and wars which have no
heralds to terminate them cause endless calamities to both parties, both to
those who invade their neighbors and to those who are endeavoring to repel the
invasion. (101) But for what purpose did Gaius assume the winged sandals of
Mercury? Was it because he wished to spread with power, and rapidity, and
loudness that miserable and ill-omened intelligence which ought rather to be
buried in silence altogether, conveying his voice everywhere with unceasing
celerity? And yet what need had he of such rapid motion? for even while standing
still he poured forth unspeakable evils upon evils as if from an unceasing
fountain, showering them down upon every portion of the habitable world. (102)
And of what use was the herald's wand to him, who never either said or did
anything bearing upon peace, but who rather filled every house and every city
within Greece and in the countries of the barbarians with civil wars? Let him,
therefore, imposter that he is, lay aside the name of Mercury, since by assuming
it he is only profaning an appellation which does not belong to him. XIV.
(103) Again, of all the attributes of Apollo, what is there which in the least
degree resembles his characteristics? He wears a crown emitting rays all around,
the artist who made it having given a most admirable representation of the beams
of the sun; but how can the sun, or in fact any light at all, be a welcome
object to him, and not rather night, or anything else, if there be such more
completely enveloped darkness, or even anything darker than darkness itself, for
the performance of his lawless actions? Since good actions do require the
brilliancy of noonday for their proper display, but shameful actions, as they
say, are suited to the extreme depths of Tartarus, into which they ought to be
thrust in order to be concealed from sight, as is becoming. (104) Let him also
transpose the things which he bears in each of his hands, and not pollute the
proper arrangement, for let him bear his arrows and his bow in his right hand,
for he knows how with good aim to shoot at and to pierce men and women, and
whole families, and populous cities, to their complete destruction. (105) And
let him either at once throw away his graces altogether, or else let him keep
them in the shade in his left hand, for he has defaced their beauty, directing
all his eyes and exciting all his desires against vast properties, so as to
plunder them in an iniquitous manner, in consequence of which their owners were
murdered, finding themselves unfortunate through their good fortune. (106) But
no doubt he with great felicity gave a new representation of the medical skill
of Apollo, for this god was the inventor of healing medicines, {7}{this is one
of the attributes of Apollo of which he boasts to Daphne, Met. l. 461 (as it is
translated by Dryden)--"Medicine is mine; what herbs and simples grow / In
fields and forests, all their powers I know, / And am the great physician called
below. / Alas, that fields and forests can afford / No remedies to heal their
lovesick lord. / To cure the pains of love no plant avails, / And his own physic
the physician fails."} so as to cause health to men, thinking fit himself
to heal the diseases which were inflicted by others, by reason of the excessive
mildness and gentleness of his own nature and habits, (107) but this man, on the
contrary, loads those who are in good health with disease, and inflicts
mutilations on those who are sound, and in short visits the living with most
cruel death, caused by the hand of man before the time of their natural death,
preparing every imaginable engine of destruction in abundant plenteousness, by
means of which, if he had not himself been previously put to death in accordance
with justice, everything glorious or respectable in every city would long ago
have been destroyed. (108) For his designs were prepared against all those in
authority and all those possessed of riches, and especially against those in
Rome and those in the rest of Italy, by whom such quantities of gold and silver
had been treasured up that even if all the riches of all the rest of the
habitable world had been collected together from its most distant borders, it
would have been found to be very inferior in amount. On this account he began,
he, this hater of the citizens, this devourer of the people, this pestilence,
this destructive evil, began to banish all the seeds of peace from his country,
as if he were expelling evil from holy ground; (109) for Apollo is said to have
been not only a physician but also an excellent prophet, by his oracular
predictions announcing what was likely to conduce to the advantage of mankind,
in order that no one, being overshadowed by uncertainty, going on without seeing
his way before him like a blind man, might hastily fall into unexpected evils as
if they were the greatest benefits; but that men having previously acquired a
knowledge of the future as if it were really present, and looking at it with the
eye of their mind, might guard against future evils just as they can see evils
actually before them with the bodily eye, and in this way secure themselves
against any irremediable disaster. (110) Is it fitting now to compare with these
oracles of Apollo the ill-omened warning of Gaius, by means of which poverty,
and dishonor, and banishment, and death were given premature notice of to all
those who were in power and authority in any part of the world? What connection
or resemblance was there between him and Apollo, when he never paid any
attention to any ties of kindred or friendship? Let him cease, then, this
pretended Apollo, from imitating that real healer of mankind, for the form of
God is not a thing which is capable of being imitated by an inferior one, as
good money is imitated by bad. XV.
(111) A man, indeed, may expect anything rather than that a man endowed with
such a body and such a soul, when both of them are effeminate and broken down,
could ever possibly be made like to the vigor of Mars in either particular; but
this man, like a mummer transforming himself on the stage, putting on all sorts
of masks one after another, sought to deceive the spectators by a series of
fictitious appearances. (112) Come, then, let him be subjected to an examination
in respect of all the particulars of his soul and body, by reason of his utter
unlikeness to the aforesaid deity in every position and in every motion. Was he
not utterly unlike Mars, not in respect only of his appearance as celebrated in
fable, but as to his natural qualities? Mars, who is endued with preeminent
valor, which we know to be a power calculated to avert evil, to be the assistant
and ally of all who are unjustly oppressed, as indeed his very name shows, (113)
for he appears to me to be called Mars from his helping, {8}{the Greek word is
areµgein, from which Philo supposes Areµs, the Greek name of Mars, to be
derived.} which is the same as assisting, being as such the god who is able to
put down wars and to cause peace, of which this representation of his was the
enemy, being the comrade of wars, and the man who changed peace and stability
into disorder and confusion. XVI.
(114) Have we not, then, learned from all these instances, that Gaius ought not
to be likened to any god, and not even to any demi-god, inasmuch as he has
neither the same nature, nor the same essence, nor even the same wishes and
intentions as any one of them; but appetite as it seems is a blind thing, and
especially so when it takes to itself vain-gloriousness and ambition in
conjunction with the greatest power, by which we who were previously unfortunate
are utterly destroyed, (115) for he regarded the Jews with most especial
suspicion, as if they were the only persons who cherished wishes opposed to his,
and who had been taught in a manner from their very swaddling-clothes by their
parents, and teachers, and instructors, and even before that by their holy laws,
and also by their unwritten maxims and customs, to believe that there was but
one God, their Father and the Creator of the world; (116) for all others, all
men, all women, all cities, all nations, every country and region of the earth,
I had almost said the whole of the inhabited world, although groaning over what
was taking place, did nevertheless flatter him, dignifying him above measure,
and helping to increase his pride and arrogance; and some of them even
introduced the barbaric custom into Italy of falling down in adoration before
him, adulterating their native feelings of Roman liberty. (117) But the single
nation of the Jews, being excepted from these actions, was suspected by him of
wishing to counteract his desires, since it was accustomed to embrace voluntary
death as an entrance to immortality, for the sake of not permitting any of their
national or hereditary customs to be destroyed, even if it were of the most
trivial character, because, as is the case in a house, it often happens that by
the removal of one small part, even those parts which appeared to be solidly
established fall down, being relaxed and brought to decay by the removal of that
one thing, (118) but in this case what was put in motion was not a trifle, but a
thing of the very greatest importance, namely, the erecting the created and
perishable nature of a man, as far at least as appearance went, into the
uncreated and imperishable nature of God, which the nation correctly judged to
be the most terrible of all impieties (for it would have been easier to change a
god into man, than a man into God), besides the fact of such an action letting
in other most enormous wickedness, infidelity and ingratitude towards the
Benefactor of the whole world, who by his own power givers abundant supplies of
all kinds of blessings to every part of the universe. XVII.
(119) Therefore a most terrible and irreconcileable war was prepared against our
nation, for what could be a more terrible evil to a slave than a master who was
an enemy? And his subjects are the slaves of the emperor, even if they were not
so to any one of the former emperors, because they governed with gentleness and
in accordance with the laws, but now that Gaius had eradicated all feelings of
humanity from his soul, and had admired lawlessness (for looking upon himself as
the law, he abrogated all the enactments of other lawgivers in every state and
country as so many vain sentences), we were properly to be looked upon not only
as slaves, but as the very lowest and most dishonored of slaves, now that our
ruler was changed into our master. XVIII.
(120) And the mixed and promiscuous multitude of the Alexandrians perceiving
this, attacked us, looking upon it as a most favorable opportunity for doing so,
and displayed all the arrogance which had been smouldering for a long period,
disturbing everything, and causing universal confusion, (121) for they began to
crush our people as if they had been surrendered by the emperor for the most
extreme and undeniable miseries, or as if they had been subdued in war, with
their frantic and most brutal passion, forcing their way into their houses, and
driving out the owners, with their wives and children, which they rendered
desolate and void of inhabitants. (122) And no longer watching for night and
darkness, like ordinary robbers out of fear of being detected, they openly
plundered them of all their furniture and treasures, carrying them off in broad
daylight, and displaying their booty to every one whom they met, as if they had
inherited it or fairly purchased it from the owners. And if a multitude joined
together to share any particular piece of plunder, they divided it in the middle
of the market-place, reviling it and turning it all into ridicule before the
eyes of its real owners. (123) These things were of themselves terrible and
grievous; how could they be otherwise? Surely it was most miserable for men to
become beggars from having been wealthy, and to be reduced on a sudden from a
state of abundance to one of utter indigence, without having done any wrong, and
to be rendered houseless and homeless, being driven out and expelled from their
own houses, that thus, being compelled to dwell in the open air day and night,
they might be destroyed by the burning heat of the sun or by the cold of the
night. (124) Yet even these evils were lighter than those which I am about to
mention; for when the populace had driven together these countless myriads of
men, and women, and children, like so many herds of sheep and oxen, from every
quarter of the city, into a very narrow space as if into a pen, they expected
that in a few days they should find a heap of corpses all huddled together, as
they would either have perished by hunger through the want of necessary food, as
they had not prepared themselves with any thing requisite, through a
foreknowledge of the evils which thus suddenly came upon them; (125) or else
through being crushed and suffocated from want of any adequate space to breathe
in, all the air around them becoming tainted, and all that there was of
vivifying power in their respiration being cut off, or, if one is to say the
truth, utterly expelled, by the breath of those who were expiring among them. By
which, each individual being inflamed, and in a manner oppressed by a descent of
fever upon him, inhaled a hot and unwholesome breath through his nostrils and
mouth, heaping, as the proverb has it, fire on fire; (126) for the power which
resides in the inmost parts changed its nature, and became most excessively
fiery; upon which, when the external breezes, being moderately cool, blow, all
the organs of the respiratory powers flourish, and are in a good and healthy
condition; but when these breezes change and become hot, then those organs must
of necessity be in a bad state, fire being added to fire. XIX.
(127) As they then were no longer able to endure the misery of the place within
which they were enclosed, they poured forth into desolate parts of the
wilderness, and to the shore, and among the tombs, in their eagerness to find
any pure and untainted air. And if any of them had previously been left in the
other parts of the city, or if any had come in thither from the fields out of
ignorance of the evils which had visited their companions, they fell into every
variety of misfortune, being stoned, or else wounded with sharp tiles, or beaten
on the most mortal parts of the body, and especially on the head, with branches
of maple and of oak, in such a way as to cause death. (128) And some of those
persons who are accustomed to pass their time in idleness and inaction, sitting
around, occupied themselves in watching those who, as I have said before, were
thus driven together and crammed into a very small space, as if they were a
force which they were blockading; lest any one should secretly escape without
their perceiving it. And a great many were designing to effect their escape from
want of necessaries, disregarding their own safety from a fear that, if they
remained, the whole body might perish with famine. So those men, expecting that
they would endeavor to escape, kept a continual watch, and the moment that they
caught any one, they immediately put him to death with every circumstance of
insult and cruelty. (129) And there was another company lying in wait for them
on the quays of the river, to catch any Jews who arrived at those spots, and to
plunder them of every thing which they brought for the purposes of traffic; for,
forcing their way into their ships they took out the cargo before the eyes of
its lawful owners, and then, binding the hands of the merchants behind them,
they burnt them alive, taking the rudders, and helms, and punt-poles, and the
benches for the rowers to sit upon, for fuel. (130) And thus these men perished
by a most miserable death being burnt alive in the middle of the city; for
sometimes, for want of other timber they brought piles of faggots together, and
tying them up, they threw them on the miserable victims; and they, being already
half burnt, were killed, more by the smoke of the green wood than by the flames,
as the new faggots gave forth only an unsubstantial and smoky sort of flame, and
were soon extinguished, not being able to be reduced to ashes by reason of their
lightness. (131) And many who were still alive they took and bound, and fastened
their ankles together with thongs and ropes, and then dragged them through the
middle of the market-place, leaping on them, and not sparing their corpses even
after they were dead; for, tearing them to pieces limb from limb, and trampling
on them, behaving with greater brutality and ferocity than even the most savage
beasts, they destroyed every semblance of humanity about them, so that not even
a fragment of them was left to which the rites of burial could be afforded. XX.
(132) But as the governor of the country, who by himself could, if he had chosen
to do so, have put down the violence of the multitude in a single hour,
pretended not to see what he did see, and not to hear what he did hear, but
allowed the mob to carry on the war against our people without any restraint,
and threw our former state of tranquility into confusion, the populace being
excited still more, proceeded onwards to still more shameless and more audacious
designs and treachery, and, arraying very numerous companies, cut down some of
the synagogues (and there are a great many in every section of the city), and
some they razed to the very foundations, and into some they threw fire and burnt
them, in their insane madness and frenzy, without caring for the neighboring
houses; for there is nothing more rapid than fire, when it lays hold of fuel.
(133) I omit to mention the ornaments in honor of the emperor, which were
destroyed and burnt with these synagogues, such as gilded shields, and gilded
crowns, and pillars, and inscriptions, for the sake of which they ought even to
have abstained from and spared the other things; but they were full of
confidence, inasmuch as they did not fear any chastisement at the hand of Gaius,
as they well knew that he cherished an indescribable hatred against the Jews, so
that their opinion was that no one could do him a more acceptable service than
by inflicting every description of injury on the nation which he hated; (134)
and, as they wished to curry favor with him by a novel kind of flattery, so as
to allow, and for the future to give the rein to, every sort of ill treatment of
us without ever being called to account, what did they proceed to do? All the
synagogues that they were unable to destroy by burning and razing them to the
ground, because a great number of Jews lived in a dense mass in the
neighborhood, they injured and defaced in another manner, simultaneously with a
total overthrow of their laws and customs; for they set up in every one of them
images of Gaius, and in the greatest, and most conspicuous, and most celebrated
of them they erected a brazen statue of him borne on a four-horse chariot. (135)
And so excessive and impetuous was the rapidity of their zeal, that, as they had
not a new chariot for four horses ready, they got a very old one out of the
gymnasium, full of poison, mutilated in its ears, and in the hinder part, and in
its pedestal, and in many other points, and as some say, one which had already
been dedicated in honor of a woman, the eminent Cleopatra, who was the great
grandmother of the last. (136) Now what amount of accusation he brought against
those who had dedicated this chariot on this very account is notorious to every
one; for what did it signify if it was a new one and belonging to a woman? Or
what if it was an old one and belonging to a man? And what, in short, if it was
wholly dedicated to the name of some one else? Was it not natural that those who
were offering up a chariot of this sort on behalf of the emperor should be full
of cautious fear, lest some one might lay an information against them before our
emperor, who took such especial care that every thing which at all affected or
related to himself should be done in the most dignified manner possible? (137)
But these men expected to be most extravagantly praised, and to receive greater
and more conspicuous advantages as rewards for their conduct, in thus dedicating
the synagogues to Gaius as new pieces of consecrated ground, not because of the
honor which was done to him by this proceeding, but because in this way they
exhausted every possible means of insulting and injuring our nation. (138) And
one may find undeniable and notorious proofs of this having been the case. For,
in the first place, one may derive them from about ten kings or more who reigned
in order, one after another, for three hundred years, and who never once had any
images or statues of themselves erected in our synagogues, though there were
many of their relations and kinsmen whom they considered, and registered as, and
spoke of as gods. (139) And what would they not have done in the case of those
whom they looked upon as men? a people who look upon dogs, and wolves, and
lions, and crocodiles, and numerous other beasts, both terrestrial and aquatic,
and numerous birds, as gods, and erect in their honor altars, and temples, and
shrines, and consecrated precincts, throughout the whole of Egypt? XXI.
(140) Perhaps some people who would not have opened their mouths then will say
now: "They were accustomed to pay respect to the good deeds done by their
governors rather than to their governors themselves, because the emperors are
greater than the Ptolemies, both in their dignities and in their fortunes, and
are justly entitled to receive higher honors." (141) Then, O ye most
foolish of all mankind! that I may not be compelled to utter any thing
disrespectful of blasphemous, why did you never think Tiberius, who was emperor
before Gaius, who indeed was the cause that Gaius ever became emperor, who
himself enjoyed the supreme power by land and sea for three and twenty years,
and who never allowed any seed of war to smoulder or to raise its head, either
in Greece or in the territory of the barbarians, and who bestowed peace and the
blessings of peace up to the end of his life with a rich and most bounteous hand
and mind upon the whole empire and the whole world; why, I say, did you not
consider him worthy of similar honor? (142) Was he inferior in birth? No; he was
of the most noble blood by both parents. Was he inferior in his education? Who,
of all the men who flourished in his time, was either more prudent or more
eloquent? Or in his age? What king or emperor ever lived to more prosperous old
age than he? Moreover, he, even while he was still a young man, was called the
old man as a mark of respect because of his exceeding wisdom. This man, though
he was so wise, and so good, and so great, was passed over and disregarded by
you. (143) Again, why did you not pay similar honor to him who exceeded the
common race of human nature in every virtue, who, by reason of the greatness of
his absolute power and his own excellence, was the first man to be called
Augustus, not receiving the title after another by a succession of blood as a
part of his inheritance, but who was himself the origin of his successors,
having that title and honor? He who first became emperor, when all the affairs
of the state were in disorder and confusion; (144) for the islands were in a
state of war against the continents, and the continents were contending with the
islands for the pre-eminence in honor, each having for their leaders and
champions the most powerful and eminent of the Romans who were in office. And
then again, great sections of Asia were contending against Europe, and Europe
against Asia, for the chief power and dominion; {9}{he alludes here to the war
between Caesar and Pompey. Pompey had been governor of Syria, and Virgil speaks
of him as relying on his eastern forces, Aen. 6.832 (as it is translated by
Dryden)--"The pair you see in equal armor shine, / Now, friends below, in
close embraces join; / But when they leave the shady realms of night, / And
clothed in bodies breathe your upper light, / With mortal hate each other shall
pursue, / What wars, what wounds, what slaughter shall ensue. / From Alpine
heights the father first descends, / His daughter's husband in the plain
attends, / His daughter's husband arms his eastern friends."} the European
and Asiatic nations rising up from the extremities of the earth, and waging
terrible wars against one another over all the earth, and over every sea, with
enormous armaments, so that very nearly the whole race of mankind would have
been destroyed by mutual slaughter and made utterly to disappear, if it had not
been for one man and leader, Augustus, by whose means they were brought to a
better state, and therefore we may justly call him the averter of evil. (145)
This is Caesar, who calmed the storms which were raging in every direction, who
healed the common diseases which were afflicting both Greeks and barbarians, who
descended from the south and from the east, and ran on and penetrated as far as
the north and the west, in such a way as to fill all the neighboring districts
and waters with unexpected miseries. (146) This is he who did not only loosen
but utterly abolish the bonds in which the whole of the habitable world was
previously bound and weighed down. This is he who destroyed both the evident and
the unseen wars which arose from the attacks of robbers. This is he who rendered
the sea free from the vessels of pirates, and filled it with Merchantmen.{10}{he
is attributing an honor to Augustus which does not belong to him. It was Pompey
who cleared the sea of pirates.} (147) This is he who gave freedom to every
city, who brought disorder into order, who civilized and made obedient and
harmonious, nations which before his time were unsociable, hostile, and brutal.
This is he who increased Greece by many Greeces, and who Greecised the regions
of the barbarians in their most important divisions: the guardian of peace, the
distributor to every man of what was suited to him, the man who proffered to all
the citizens favors with the most ungrudging liberality, who never once in his
whole life concealed or reserved for himself any thing that was good or
excellent. XXII.
(148) Now this man who was so great a benefactor to them for the space of three
and forty years, during which he reigned over Egypt, they passed over in silence
and neglect, never erecting any thing in their synagogues to do him honor; no
image, no statue, no inscription. (149) And yet if ever there was a man to whom
it was proper that new and unprecedented honors should be voted, it was
certainly fitting that such should be decreed to him, not only because he was as
it were the origin and fountain of the family of Augustus, not because he was
the first, and greatest, and universal benefactor, having, instead of the
multitude of governors who existed before, entrusted the common vessel of the
state to himself as one pilot of admirable skill in the science of government to
steer and govern; for the verse, "The
government of many is not Good,"{11}{hom. Il. 2:204.} is
very properly expressed, since a multitude of votes is the cause of every
variety of evil; but also because the whole of the rest of the habitable world
had decreed him honors equal to those of the Olympian gods. (150) And we have
evidence of this in the temples, and porticoes, and sacred precincts, and
groves, and colonnades which have been erected, so that all the cities put
together, ancient and modern, which exhibit magnificent works, are surpassed, by
the beauty and magnitude of the buildings erected in honor of Caesar, and
especially by those raised in our city of Alexandria. (151) For there is no
sacred precinct of such magnitude as that which is called the Grove of Augustus,
and the temple erected in honor of the disembarkation of Caesar, which is raised
to a great height, of great size, and of the most conspicuous beauty, opposite
the best harbor; being such an one as is not to be seen in any other city, and
full of offerings, in pictures, and statues; and decorated all around with
silver and gold; being a very extensive space, ornamented in the most
magnificent and sumptuous manner with porticoes, and libraries, and men's
chambers, and groves, and propylaea, and wide, open terraces, and court-yards in
the open air, and with everything that could contribute to use or beauty; being
a hope and beacon of safety to all who set sail, or who came into harbor. XXIII.
(152) Therefore, though they had such admirable pretexts for such conduct, and
all the nations in every part of the world inclined to agree with them, they
nevertheless neither made any innovations in their synagogues, but kept the law
in every particular; and refused any marks of respect and veneration which might
have been looked upon as due to Caesar. Perhaps some cautious and sensible
person may ask: "Why were all these honors denied to him?" I will tell
the reason, without suppressing any thing. (153) They were aware of the
attention which he paid to every thing, and of the very exceeding care which he
took that the national laws and customs prevailing in each nation should be
confirmed and preserved, being equally anxious for the preservation of the
rights of foreign nations in this respect, as for those of the Romans; and that
he received his honors, not for the destruction of the laws existing in any
people, filling himself with pride and arrogance, but in a spirit of proper
conformity with the magnitude of so vast an empire, which is dignified and
honored by such marks of respect being paid to the emperor. (154) And there is
most undeniable proof that he was never influenced or puffed up by the excessive
honors paid to him, in the fact that he did not approve of any one's addressing
him as master or god, but if any one used such expressions he was angry; and we
may see it too in his approbation of the Jews, who he well knew most religiously
avoided all such language. (155) How then did he look upon the great division of
Rome which is on the other side of the river Tiber, which he was well aware was
occupied and inhabited by the Jews? And they were mostly Roman citizens, having
been emancipated; for, having been brought as captives into Italy, they were
manumitted by those who had bought them for slaves, without ever having been
compelled to alter any of their hereditary or national observances. (156)
Therefore, he knew that they had synagogues, and that they were in the habit of
visiting them, and most especially on the sacred sabbath days, when they
publicly cultivate their national philosophy. He knew also that they were in the
habit of contributing sacred sums of money from their first fruits and sending
them to Jerusalem by the hands of those who were to conduct the sacrifices.
(157) But he never removed them from Rome, nor did he ever deprive them of their
rights as Roman citizens, because he had a regard for Judaea, nor did he never
meditate any new steps of innovation or rigour with respect to their synagogues,
nor did he forbid their assembling for the interpretation of the law, nor did he
make any opposition to their offerings of first fruits; but he behaved with such
piety towards our countrymen, and with respect to all our customs, that he, I
may almost say, with all his house, adorned our temple with many costly and
magnificent offerings, commanding that continued sacrifices of whole burnt
offerings should be offered up for ever and ever every day from his own
revenues, as a first fruit of his own to the most high God, which sacrifices are
performed to this very day, and will be performed for ever, as a proof and
specimen of a truly imperial disposition. (158) Moreover, in the monthly
divisions of the country, when the whole people receives money or corn in turn,
he never allowed the Jews to fall short in their reception of this favor, but
even if it happened that this distribution fell on the day of their sacred
sabbath, on which day it is not lawful for them to receive any thing, or to give
any thing, or in short to perform any of the ordinary duties of life, he charged
the dispenser of these gifts, and gave him the most careful and special
injunctions to make the distribution to the Jews on the day following, that they
might not lose the effects of his common kindness. XXIV.
(159) Therefore, all people in every country, even if they were not naturally
well inclined towards the Jewish nation, took great care not to violate or
attack any of the Jewish customs of laws. And in the reign of Tiberius things
went on in the same manner, although at that time things in Italy were thrown
into a great deal of confusion when Sejanus was preparing to make his attempt
against our nation; (160) for he knew immediately after his death that the
accusations which had been brought against the Jews who were dwelling in Rome
were false calumnies, inventions of Sejanus, who was desirous to destroy our
nation, which he knew alone, or above all others, was likely to oppose his
unholy counsels and actions in defense of the emperor, who was in great danger
of being attacked, in violation of all treaties and of all honesty. (161) And he
sent commands to all the governors of provinces in every country to comfort
those of our nation in their respective cities, as the punishment intended to be
inflicted was not meant to be inflicted upon all, but only on the guilty; and
they were but few. And he ordered them to change none of the existing customs,
but to look upon them as pledges, since the men were peaceful in their
dispositions and natural characters, and their laws trained them and disposed
them to quiet and stability. XXV.
(162) But Gaius puffed himself up with pride, not only saying, but actually
thinking that he was a god. And then he found no people, whether among the
Greeks or among the barbarians, more suitable than the Alexandrians to confirm
him in his immoderate and unnatural ambition; for they are in an extraordinary
degree inclined to flattery, and trick, and hypocrisy, being thoroughly
furnished with all kinds of cajoling words, and prone to confuse every thing
with their unbridled and licentious talk. (163) And the name of God is held in
so little veneration among them, that they have given it to ibises, and to the
poisonous asps which are found in their country, and to many other savage beasts
which exist in it. So that they, very naturally, giving in to all kinds of
addresses and invocations to him, addressed him as God, deceiving men of shallow
comprehension, who were wholly inexperienced in the impiety prevailing in Egypt,
though they are detected by those who are acquainted with their excessive folly,
or, I should rather say, with their preposterous impiety. (164) Of which, Gaius,
having no experience, imagined that he was really believed by the Alexandrians
to be God, since they, without any disguise, openly and plainly used all the
appellations without any limitation, with which they were accustomed to invoke
the other gods. (165) In the next place, he believed that the innovations which
they made with respect to their synagogues, were all made with a pure
conscience, and from a sincere honor and respect for him, partly being
influenced by the ephemerides in the way of memorial, which some persons sent
him from Alexandria; for these things were what he very much delighted to read,
to such a degree that the writings of all other authors, whether in prose or in
poetry, were looked upon by him as absolutely odious in comparison with the
delight which these documents afforded him, and partly by the language of some
of his domestics, who were continually jesting with him and ridiculing all
serious things. XXVI.
(166) The greater portion of these men ere Egyptians, wicked, worthless men, who
had imprinted the venom and evil disposition of their native asps and crocodiles
on their own souls, and gave a faithful representation of them there. And the
leader of the whole Egyptian troops, like the coryphaeus of a chorus, was a man
of the name of Helicon, an accursed and infamous slave, who had been introduced
into the imperial household to its ruin; for he had acquired a slight smattering
of the encyclical sciences, by imitation of and rivalry with his former master,
who gave him to Tiberius Caesar. (167) And at that time he had no especial
privilege, since Tiberius had a perfect hatred of all youthful sallies of wit
for the mere purposes of amusement, as he, from almost his earliest youth, was
of a solemn and austere disposition. (168) But when Tiberius was dead, and Gaius
succeeded to the empire, he then, following a new master, who invited him to
every description of relaxation and luxury, such as could delight every one of
his outward senses, said to himself: "Rise up, O Helicon! now is your
opportunity. You have now an auditor, and a spectator, who is of all men in the
world the best calculated to receive the exhibition of your talents favorably.
You are a man of very attractive natural talents. You are able to joke graceful,
and to say witty, things beyond any one else. You are skilful in all kinds of
amusements, and trifling, and fashionable sports. And you are equally
accomplished in those branches of the encyclical education which are not so
ordinarily met with. Moreover, you have a readiness of speech and repartee which
is far from unpleasing. (169) If therefore you mingle with your jestings any
little stimulus which is in the least unwelcome or painful, so as to excite not
only laughter but any feelings of bitterness, on the part of one who is always
ready to suspect evil, you will be deliberately alienating from yourself a
master who is the very well inclined by nature to listen to any accusations
which are brought before him in a joking manner; for his ears, as you well know,
are always open, and are constantly on the watch to listen to all those who are
in the habit of interweaving accusations of others with their sycophancy. (170)
And do not seek for any more abundant causes; for you have a sufficient
foundation with respect to the customs of the Jews and the national laws of that
people, in which you yourself were bred up, and in which you have been
instructed from your very earliest childhood, not by one man only, but by that
most chattering and vexatious portion of the city of Alexandria. So now, make an
exhibition of your learning." XXVII.
(171) By these preposterous and accursed arguments he excited his own
expectations, and trained himself, and inflamed his own wishes; and then he
attended upon and courted Gaius, day and night, never leaving him for a moment,
but being with him at all times and on all occasions, and employing every moment
when he was by himself, or when he was resting, to pour forth accusations
against our nation, like a most infamous man as he was, exciting pleasure in the
mind of the emperor by ridiculing the Jews and their laws and customs, that thus
his calumnies might wound us the more effectually; for he never openly confessed
himself to be our accuser, nor could he in fact make such a confession; but he
went by all kinds of crooked paths, and practiced
every sort of manoeuvre, and thus was a more dangerous and formidable enemy than
even those men who openly recorded their hatred of and hostility towards us.
(172) They say also that some of the ambassadors of the Alexandrians, being
completely aware of this, had secretly hired him by considerable bribes, and not
only by money but by hopes of future honors, which they led him to expect he
might attain to at no distant period, when Gaius should come to Alexandria.
(173) And he, being continually declaiming of that time in which, while his
master was present, and in conjunction with him, he should be almost supreme in
his power over a large portion of the world (for it was notorious enough that by
his assiduous courting of Gaius, he would be able to acquire power over the most
illustrious portion of the citizens, and over all those who are held in especial
honor by the most magnificent and glorious city, {12}{there seems some
corruption in the text here.} promised every thing). (174) We, therefore, being
for a long time unsuspicious of this natural enemy, who as plotting against us
from his concealment, took precautions only against our external foes; but when
we perceived that he too was to be guarded against, we searched into the matter
carefully, considering every expedient to see if we could, by any means,
propitiate and conciliate the man who was thus aiming and shooting at us, by
every means and from every place, with great accuracy of aim and power of
injuring us; (175) for he was in the habit of playing at ball with him, and of
exercising himself in gymnastic sports with him, and of bathing with him, and
breakfasting with him, and he was with Gaius when he was wont to go to rest,
filling the part of chamberlain and chief body-guard to him, an office which was
not entrusted to any one else, so that he alone had all kinds of favorable
opportunities for being listened to at leisure by the emperor, when he was
removed from any external tumults and distractions, and able quietly to hear
what he principally desired. (176) And he mingled numbers of satirical and
quizzing observations with his more formal and serious accusations, in order to
excite pleasure in his hearers by that means, and to do us the greatest possible
amount of injury; for the quizzing and ridiculing appeared, as he used it, to be
the principal object at which he aimed, though it was in reality only his
indirect one; and the accusations which he launched against us appeared to be
mere casual observations, dropped accidentally, though in reality they were his
primary and sole object, while he was trying every expedient possible, (177) and
so, like sailors who have a fair wind blowing on their stern, he was borne
onwards with a full sail before a favorable gale, heaping upon us and stringing
together one accusation after another, while the mind of his hearer was
fashioned in a more solid and retentive mould, so that the recollection of the
accusations was not easily eradicated. XXVIII.
(178) Accordingly, we being in a great strait and in most difficult
circumstances, we, though we had availed ourselves of every expedient which we
could possibly think of in order to propitiate and conciliate Helicon, could
find no means of doing so and no access to him, since no one dared either to
accost or to approach him, by reason of his exceeding insolence and cruelty with
which he behaved to every one; and also because we were not aware, whether there
was any especial reason for his alienation from the Jewish nation; since he was
also exciting and exasperating his master against our people, and, accordingly,
we left off laboring at this point, and turned our attention to what was of
greater importance. For it appeared good to present to Gaius a memorial,
containing a summary of what we had suffered, and of the way in which we
considered that we deserved to be treated; (179) and this memorial was nearly an
abridgment of a longer petition which we had sent to him a short time before, by
the hand of king Agrippa; for he, by chance, was staying for a short time in the
city, while on his way into Syria to take possession of the kingdom which had
been given to him; (180) but we, without being aware of it, were deceiving
ourselves, for before also we had done the same, when we originally began to set
sail, thinking that as we were going before a judge we should meet with justice;
but he was in reality an irreconcilable enemy to us, attracting us, as far as
appearance went, with favorable looks and cheerful address; (181) for, receiving
us favorably at first, in the plains on the banks of the Tiber (for he happened
to be walking about in his mother's garden), he conversed with us formally, and
waved his right hand to us in a protecting manner, giving us significant tokens
of his good will, and having sent to us the secretary, whose duty it was to
attend to the embassies that arrived, Obulus by name, he said, "I myself
will listen to what you have to say at the first favorable opportunity." So
that all those who stood around congratulated us as if we had already carried
our point, and so did all those of our own people, who are influenced by
superficial appearances. (182) But I myself, who was accounted to be possessed
of superior prudence, both on account of my age and my education, and general
information, was less sanguine in respect of the matters at which the others
were so greatly delighted. "For why," said I, after pondering the
matter deeply in my own heart, "why, when there have been such numbers of
ambassadors, who have come, one may almost say, from every corner of the globe,
did he say on that occasion that he would hear what we had to say, and no one
else? What could have been his meaning? for he was not ignorant that we were
Jews, who would have been quite content at not being treated worse than the
others; (183) but to expect to be looked upon as worthy to receive especial
privileges and precedence, by a master who was of a different nation and a young
man and an absolute monarch, would have seemed like insanity. But it would seem
that he was showing civility to the whole district of the Alexandrians, to which
he was thus giving a privilege, when promising to give his decision speedily;
unless, indeed, disregarding the character of a fair and impartial hearer, he
was intending to be a fellow suitor with our adversaries and an enemy of ours,
instead of behaving like a judge." XXIX.
(184) Having these ideas in my mind, I resisted the sanguine hopes of the
others, and had no rest in my mind day or night. But while I was thus giving way
to despondency and lamenting over my ignorance of the future (for it was not
safe to postpone matters), on a sudden another most grievous and unexpected
calamity fell upon us, bringing danger not on one section of the Jews only, but
on all the nation together. (185) For we had come from Rome to Dicaearchia
attending upon Gaius; and he had gone down to the seaside and was remaining near
the gulf, having left for a while his own palaces, which were numerous and
superbly furnished. (186) And while we were anxiously considering his
intentions, for we were continually expecting to be summoned, a man arrived,
with blood-shot eyes, and looking very much troubled, out of breath and
palpitating, and leading us away to a little distance from the rest (for there
were several persons near), he said, "Have you heard the news?" And
then when he was about to tell us what it was he stopped, because of the
abundance of tears that rose up to choke his utterance. (187) And beginning
again, he was a second and a third time stopped in the same manner. And we,
seeing this, were much alarmed and agitated by suspense, and entreated him to
tell us what the circumstance was on account of which he said that he had come;
for he could not have come merely to weep before so many witnesses. "If,
then," said we, "you have any real cause for tears, do not keep your
grief to yourself; we have been long ago well accustomed to misfortune."
(188) And he with difficulty, sobbing aloud, and in a broken voice, spoke as
follows: "Our temple is destroyed! Gaius has ordered a colossal statue of
himself to be erected in the holy of holies, having his own name inscribed upon
it with the title of Jupiter!" (189) And while we were all struck dumb with
astonishment and terror at what he had told us, and stood still deprived of all
motion (for we stood there mute and in despair, ready to fall to the ground with
fear and sorrow, the very muscles of our bodies being deprived of all strength
by the news which we had heard); others arrived bearing the same sad tale. (190)
And then we all retired and shut ourselves up together and bewailed our
individual and common miseries, and went through every circumstance that our
minds could conceive, for a man in misfortune is a most loquacious animal,
wrestling as we might with our misery. And we said to one another, "We have
sailed hither in the middle of winter, in order that we might not be all
involved in violation of the law and in misfortunes proceeding from it, without
being aware what a winter of misery was awaiting us on shore, far more grievous
than any storm at sea. For of the one nature is the cause, which has divided the
seasons of the year and arranged them in due order, but nature is a thing which
exerts a saving power; but the other storm is caused by a man who cherishes no
ideas such as become a man, but is a young man, and a promoter of all kinds of
innovation, being invested with irresponsible power over all the world.
"And youth, when combined with absolute power and yielding to irresistible
and unrestrained passion, is an invincible evil. (191) And will it be allowed to
us to approach him or to open our mouth on the subject of the synagogues before
this insulter of our holy and glorious temple? For it is quite evident that he
will pay no regard whatever to things of less importance and which are held in
inferior estimation, when he behaves with insolence and contempt towards our
most beautiful and renowned temple, which is respected by all the east and by
all the west, and regarded like the sun which shines everywhere. (192) And even
if we were allowed free access to him, what else could we expect but an
inexorable sentence of death? But be it so; we will perish. For, indeed, a
glorious death in defense of and for the sake of the preservation of our laws,
is a kind of life. "But, indeed, if no advantage is derived from our death,
would it not be insanity to perish in addition to what we now have to endure,
and this too, while we appear to be ambassadors, so that the calamity appears
rather to affect those who have sent us than those who remain? (193) Not but
what those of our fellow countrymen who are by nature most inclined to detest
all wickedness, will accuse us of impiety, as if we, in the extremity of
dangers, when our whole country was tossed about and threatened, were
remembering some private interests of our own out of selfishness. For it is
necessary that small things must yield to great ones, and that private objects
must yield to the general interests; since, when they are destroyed, there is an
end of the constitution and of the nation. (194) For how can it be holy or
lawful for us to struggle in any other manner, pointing out that we are citizens
of Alexandria, over whom a danger is now impending, that namely, of the utter
destruction of the general constitution of the Jewish nation; for in the
destruction of the temple there is reason to fear that this man, so fond of
innovation and willing to dare the most audacious actions, will also order the
general name of our whole nation to be abolished. (195) "If, therefore,
both the objects on account of which we were sent are overthrown, perhaps some
one will say, What then, did they not know that they had to negotiate for a safe
return? But I would reply to such a man, You either have not the genuine
feelings of a nobly born man, or else you were not educated like one, and have
never been trained in the knowledge of the sacred scriptures; for men who are
truly noble are full of hope, and the laws too implant good hopes in all those
who do not study them superficially but with all their hearts. (196) Perhaps
these things are meant as a trial of the existing generation to see how they are
inclined towards virtue, and whether they have been taught to bear evils with
resolute and firm minds, without yielding at the first moment; all human
considerations then are discarded, and let them be discarded, but let an
imperishable hope and trust in God the Savior remain in our souls, as he has
often preserved our nation amid inextricable difficulties and distresses." XXX.
(197) These were the sort of things which we said, bewailing at the same time
our unexpected calamities, and yet also encouraging one another with the hope of
a change to a more tranquil and peaceful state of things. And after a little
consideration and delay, we said to those who had brought us this doleful news,
"Why sit ye here quietly, having just kindled sparks of eagerness in our
ears by which we are set on fire and rendered all in a blaze, when you ought
rather to add to what you have told us an account of the causes which have
operated on Gaius." (198) And they replied, "You know the principal
and primary cause of all; for that indeed is universally known to all men. He
desires to be considered a god; and he conceives that the Jews alone are likely
to be disobedient; and that therefore he cannot possibly inflict a greater evil
or injury upon them than by defacing and insulting the holy dignity of their
temple; for report prevails that it is the most beautiful of all the temples in
the world, inasmuch as it is continually receiving fresh accessions of ornament
and has been for an infinite period of time, a never-ending and boundless
expense being lavished on it. And as he is a very contentious and quarrelsome
man, he thinks of appropriating this edifice wholly to himself. (199) And he is
excited now on this subject to a much greater degree than before by a letter
which Capito has sent to him. "Capito is the collector of the imperial
revenues in Judaea, and on some account or other he is very hostile to the
nations of the country; for having come thither a poor man, and having amassed
enormous riches of every imaginable description by plunder and extortion, he has
now become afraid lest some accusation may be brought against him, and on this
account he has contrived a design by which he may repel any such impeachment,
namely, by calumniating those whom he has injured; (200) and a circumstance
which we will now mention, has given him some pretext for carrying out his
design.40,200 "There
is a city called Jamnia; one of the most populous cities in all Judaea, which is
inhabited by a promiscuous multitude, the greatest number of whom are Jews; but
there are also some persons of other tribes from the neighboring nations who
have settled there to their own destruction, who are in a manner sojourners
among the original native citizens, and who cause them a great deal of trouble,
and who do them a great deal of injury, as they are continually violating some
of the ancestral national customs of the Jews. (201) These men hearing from
travellers who visit the city how exceedingly eager and earnest Gaius is about
his own deification, and how disposed he is to look unfavorably upon the whole
race of Judaea, thinking that they have now an admirable opportunity for
attacking them themselves, have erected an extemporaneous altar of the most
contemptible materials, having made clay into bricks for the sole purpose of
plotting against their fellow citizens; for they knew well that they would never
endure to see their customs transgressed; as was indeed the case. (202)
"For when the Jews saw what they had done, and were very indignant at the
holiness and sanctity and beauty of the sacred place being thus obscured and
defaced, they collected together and destroyed the altar; so the sojourners
immediately went to Capito who was in reality the contriver of the whole affair;
and he, thinking that he had made a most lucky hit, which he had been seeking
for a long time, writes to Gaius dilating on the matter and exaggerating it
enormously; (203) and he, when he had read the letter, ordered a colossal statue
gilt all over, much more costly and much more magnificent than the rich altar
which had been erected in Jamnia, by way of insult to be set up in the temple of
the metropolis, having for his most excellent and sagacious counsellors Helicon,
that man of noble birth, a chattering slave, a perfect scum of the earth, and a
fellow of the name of Apelles, a tragic actor, who when in the first bloom of
youth, as they say, made a market of his beauty, and when he was past the
freshness of youth went on the stage; (204) and in fact all those who go on the
stage selling themselves to the spectators, and to the theatres, are not lovers
of temperance and modesty, but rather of the most extreme shamelessness and
indecency. "On this account Apelles was taken into the rank of a fellow
counsellor of the emperor, that Gaius might have an adviser with whom he might
indulge in mocking jests, and with whom he might sing, passing over all
considerations of the general welfare of the state, as if everything in every
quarter of the globe was enjoying profound peace and tranquility under the laws.
(205) "Therefore Helicon, this scorpion-like slave, discharged all his
Egyptian venom against the Jews; and Apelles his Ascalonite poison, for he was a
native of Ascalon; and between the people of Ascalon and the inhabitants of the
holy land, the Jews, there is an irreconcileable and neverending hostility
although they are bordering nations." (206) When we heard this we were
wounded in our souls at every word he said and at every name he mentioned; but
those admirable advisers of admirable actions a little while afterwards met with
the fit reward of their impiety, the one being bound by Gaius with iron chains
for other causes, and being put to the torture and to the rack after periods of
relief, as is the case with people affected with intermittent diseases; and
Helicon was put to death by Claudius Germanicus Caesar, for other wicked
actions, that, like a madman as he was, he had committed; but there occurrences
took place at a later date. XXXI.
(207) And the letter respecting the erection of the statue was written not in
plain terms, but with as much caution and prudence as possible, taking every
measure which could tend to security; for he commands Petronius, the lieutenant
and governor of all Syria, to whom indeed he wrote the letter, to lead half the
army which was on the Euphrates, to guard against any passage of that river by
any of the eastern kings or nations, into Judaea as an escort to the statue; not
in order to honor its erection with any especial pomp, but to chastise with
death any attempt that might be made to hinder it. (208) What sayest thou, O
master? Are you making war upon us, because you anticipate that we will not
endure such indignity, but that we will fight on behalf of our laws, and die in
defense of our national customs? For you cannot possibly have been ignorant of
what was likely to result from your attempt to introduce these innovations
respecting our temple; but having previously learnt with perfect accuracy what
was likely to happen as well as if it had already taken place, and knowing the
future as thoroughly as if it were actually present, you commanded your general
to bring up an army in order that the statue when erected might be consecrated
by the first sacrifice offered to it, being of a most polluted kind, stained
with the blood of miserable men and women. (209) Accordingly Petronius, when he
had read what he was commanded to do in this letter, was in great perplexity,
not being able to resist the orders sent to him out of fear, for he heard that
the emperor's wrath was implacable not only against those who did not do what
they were commanded to do, but who did not do it in a moment; and on the other
hand, he did not see how it was easy to perform them, for he knew that the Jews
would willingly, if it were possible, endure ten thousand deaths instead of one,
rather than submit to see any forbidden thing perpetrated with respect to their
religion; (210) for all men are eager to preserve their own customs and laws,
and the Jewish nation above all others; for looking upon their laws as oracles
directly given to them by God himself, and having been instructed in this
doctrine from their very earliest infancy they bear in their souls the images of
the commandments contained in these laws as sacred; (211) and secondly, as they
continually behold the visible shapes and forms of them, they admire and
venerate them in their minds and they admit such foreigners as are disposed to
honor and worship them, to do so no less than their own native fellow citizens.
But all who attempt to violate their laws, or to turn them into ridicule, they
detest as their bitterest enemies, and they look upon each separate one of the
commandments with such awe and reverence that, whether one ought to call it the
invariable good fortune or the happiness of the nation, they have never been
guilty of the violation of even the most insignificant of them; (212) but above
all other observances their zeal for their holy temple is the most predominant,
and vehement, and universal feeling throughout the whole nation; and the
greatest proof of this is that death is inexorably pronounced against all those
who enter into the inner circuit of the sacred precincts (for they admit all men
from every country into the exterior circuit), unless he be one of their own
nation by blood. (213) Petronius, having regard to these considerations, was
very reluctant to attempt what he was commanded to do, considering what a great
and wicked piece of daring he should be committing, and invoking all the
deliberative powers of his soul as to a council, he inquired into the opinion of
each of them, and he found every faculty of his mind agreeing that he should
change nothing of these observances and customs which had been hallowed from the
beginning of the world; in the first place because of the natural principles of
justice and piety by which they were dictated, and secondly because of the
danger which threatened any attempt at innovation upon them, not only from God,
but also from the people who would be insulted by such conduct. (214) He also
gave a thought to the circumstances of the nation itself, to its exceeding
populousness, so that it was not contained as every other nation was by the
circuit of the one region which was allotted to it for itself, but so that, I
may almost say, it had spread over the whole face of the earth; for it is
diffused throughout every continent, and over every island, so that everywhere
it appears but little inferior in number to the original native population of
the country. (215) Was it not, then, a most perilous undertaking to draw upon
himself such innumerable multitudes of enemies? And was there not danger of
allies and friends from all quarters arriving to their assistance? It would be a
result of very formidable danger and difficulty, besides the fact that the
inhabitants of Judaea are infinite in numbers, and a nation of great stature and
personal strength, and of great courage and spirit, and men who are willing to
die in defense of their national customs and laws with unshrinking bravery, so
that some of those who calumniate them say that their courage (as indeed is
perfectly true) is beyond that of any barbarian nation, being the spirit of free
and nobly born men. (216) And the state of all the nations which lie beyond the
Euphrates added to his alarm; for he was aware that Babylon and many others of
the satrapies of the east were occupied by the Jews, knowing this not merely by
report but likewise by personal experience; for every year sacred messengers are
sent to convey large amounts of gold and silver to the temple, which has been
collected from all the subordinate governments, travelling over rugged, and
difficult, and almost impassable roads, which they look upon as level and easy
inasmuch as they serve to conduct them to piety. (217) Therefore, being
exceedingly alarmed, as was very natural, lest if they heard of the
unprecedented design of erecting this colossal statue in the temple, they might
on a sudden direct their march that way and surround him, some on one side and
some on the other, so as to hem him in completely, and co-operating with and
joining one another might treat the enemy who would be thus enclosed in the
midst of them with terrible severity, he hesitated long, attaching great weight
to all these considerations. (218) Then again he was drawn in the opposite
direction by considerations of a contrary character, saying to himself,
"This is the command of one who is my master and a young man, and of one
who judges everything which he wishes to have done to be expedient and becoming,
and who is resolved that everything which he has once decided on shall be at
once performed even though it may be the most injurious measure possible and
full of all contention and insolence; and now having passed beyond all human
nature he has actually recorded himself to be God; and great danger of my life
impends over me whether I oppose him or whether I comply with his commands; if I
comply with them the result will very probably be war, and one that perhaps may
be attended with doubtful success and which will be far from turning out as it
is expected to do; and if I oppose him I shall then be exposed to the open and
implacable hatred of Gaius." (219) And with this opinion of his, many of
those Romans who were joined with him in the administration of the affairs of
Syria coincided, knowing that the anger of Gaius and the punishments which he
would inflict would come upon them first as being accomplices in the
disobedience to the injunctions which he had sent; (220) but at last when it
arrived the fashion of the statue afforded them a pretext for delay during which
they might have time for a more deliberate consideration of the matter; for they
did not send any man from Rome (as it appears to me because the providence of
God overruled the matter in this way, who thus invisibly stayed the hand of
these wicked doers), nor did he command the most skilful man or him who was
accounted so in Syria to manage the matter, since while he was pressing on this
lawless action with all speed a war was suddenly kindled. (221) Therefore having
now opportunity to consider what course would be most advantageous (for when
great events suddenly come altogether, they break down and perplex the mind), he
commanded the statue to be made in some one of the bordering regions. (222)
Therefore Petronius, sending for the most skilful and renowned artists in
Phoenicia, gave them the materials requisite for the making of the statue; and
they took them to Sidon, and there proceeded to make it. He also sent for the
magistrates of the Jews and the priests and rulers of the people, both to
announce to them the commands which he had received from Gaius and also to
counsel them to submit cheerfully to the commands which had been imposed by
their master, and to give due consideration to the dangers before their eyes;
for that the most warlike of the military powers in Syria were all ready, and
would soon cover all the country with dead bodies; (223) for he thought that if
he could previously weaken their resolution he would be able by their means to
work upon all the rest of the multitude and to persuade them not to oppose the
will of the emperor; but, as was natural, he was wholly disappointed in his
expectations; for it is said indeed that they were amazed at his first words,
and that at first they were utterly overwhelmed by his announcement of their
real danger and misery, and that they stood speechless and poured forth a
ceaseless abundance of tears as if from a fountain, tearing their beards and the
hair of their head, and saying, (224) "We who were formerly very fortunate,
have now advanced through many events to an exceeding old age that we might at
last behold what no one of our ancestors ever saw. With what eyes can we endure
to look upon these things? Let them rather be torn out, and let our miserable
lives and our afflicted existence be put an end to, before we behold such an
evil as this, such an intolerable spectacle which it is impious to hear of or to
conceive." XXXII.
(225) In this way did they bewail their fate; but when the inhabitants of the
holy city and of all the region round about heard of the design which was in
agitation, they all arrayed themselves together as if at a concerted signal,
their common misery having given them the word, and went forth in a body, and
leaving their cities and their villages and their houses empty, they hastened
with one accord into Phoenicia, for Petronius happened to be in that country at
the moment. (226) And when some of the guards of Petronius saw a countless
multitude hastening towards them they ran to their general to bring him the
news, and to warn him to take precautions, as they expected war; and while they
were relating to him what they had seen, he was still without any guards; and
the multitude of the Jews suddenly coming upon him like a cloud, occupied the
whole of Phoenicia, and caused great consternation among the Phoenicians who
thus beheld the enormous population of the nation; (227) and at first so great
an outcry was raised, accompanied with weeping and beating of the breast, that
the very ears of those present could not endure the vastness of the noise; for
it did not cease when they ceased, but continued to vibrate even after they were
quiet: then there were approaches to the governor, and supplications addressed
to him such as the occasion suggested; for calamities are themselves teachers of
what should be done in an existing emergency. And the multitude was divided into
six companies, one of old men, one of young men, one of boys; and again in their
turn one band of aged matrons, one of women in the prime of life, and one of
virgins; (228) and when Petronius appeared at a distance all the ranks, as they
had been appointed, fell to the ground, uttering a most doleful; howling and
lamentation, mingled with supplications. But when he commanded them to rise up,
and to come nearer to him, they would for a long time hardly consent to rise,
and scattering abundance of dust upon their heads, and shedding abundance of
tears, they put both their hands behind them like captives who are fettered in
this way, and thus they approached him. (229) Then the body of the old men,
standing before him, addressed him in the following terms: "We are, as you
see, without any arms, but yet as we passed along some persons have accused us
as being enemies, but even the very weapons of defense with which nature has
provided each individual, namely our hands, we have averted from you, and placed
in a position where they can do nothing, offering our bodies freely an easy aim
to any one who desires to put us to death. (230) We have brought unto you our
wives, and our children, and our whole families, and in your person we will
prostrate ourselves before Gaius, having left not one single person at home,
that you may either preserve us all, or destroy us all together by one general
and complete destruction. Petronius, we are a peaceful nation, both by our
natural disposition and by our determined intentions, and the education which
has been industriously and carefully instilled into us has taught us this lesson
from our very earliest infancy. (231) When Gaius assumed the imperial power we
were the first people in all Syria to congratulate him, Vitellius at that time
being in our city, from whom you received the government as his successor, to
whom writings concerning these matters were sent, and the happy news proceeding
onwards from our city, where it had been received with joy, reached the other
cities with similar acceptance. (232) Ours was the first temple which received
sacrifices for the happy reign of Gaius. Did it do so that it might be the first
or the only temple to be deprived of its customary modes of worship? "We
have now left our cities, we have abandoned our houses and our possessions, we
will cheerfully contribute to you all our furniture, all our cattle, and all our
treasures, everything in short which belongs to us, as a willing booty. We shall
think that we are receiving them, not giving them up. We only ask one thing
instead of and to counterbalance all of them, namely, that no innovations may
take place in respect of our temple, but that it may be kept such as we have
received it from our fathers and our forefathers. (233) And if we cannot prevail
with you in this, then we offer up ourselves for destruction, that we may not
live to behold a calamity more terrible and grievous than death. We hear that
great forces of infantry and cavalry are being prepared by you against us, if we
oppose the erection and dedication of this statue. No one is so mad as, when he
is a slave, to oppose his master. We willingly and readily submit ourselves to
be put to death; let your troops slay us, let them sacrifice us, let them cut us
to pieces unresisting and uncontending, let them treat us with every species of
cruelty that conquerers can possibly practice,
(234) but what need is there of any army? We ourselves, admirable priests for
the purpose, will begin the sacrifice, bringing to the temple our wives and
slaying our wives, bringing our brothers and sisters and becoming fratricides,
bringing our sons and our daughters, that innocent and guiltless age, and
becoming infanticides. Those who endure tragic calamities must needs make use of
tragic language. (235) Then standing in the middle of our victims, having bathed
ourselves deeply in the blood of our kinsfolk (for such blood will be the only
bath which we shall have wherewith to cleanse ourselves for the journey to the
shades below), we will mingle our own blood with it, slaughtering ourselves upon
their bodies. (236) And when we are dead, let this commandment be inscribed over
us as an epitaph, 'Let not even God blame us, who have had a due regard to both
considerations, pious loyalty towards the emperor and the reverential
preservation of our established holy laws.' "And this will be what will be
deservedly said of us if we give up our miserable life, holding it in proper
contempt. (237) We have heard of a most ancient tradition, which has been handed
down throughout Greece by their historians, who have affirmed that the head of
the Gorgon had such mighty power, that those who beheld it immediately became
stones and rocks. But this appears only to be a fiction and fable, the truth
being that great, and unexpected, and wonderful events do often bring after them
great disaster; for instance, the anger of a master causes death, or calamities
equivalent to death. (238) "Do you suppose (may God forbid that any such
event should ever take place) that if any of our countrymen were to see this
statue being brought into our temple, it would not change them into stones?
Their limbs being all congealed, and their eyes becoming fixed so as not to be
capable of motion, and their whole body losing all its natural motions in every
one of its united parts and limbs! (239) We will, however, now, O Petronius,
address to you one last and most righteous and just request; we say that you
ought not to do what you are commanded, but we entreat you to grant us a
respite, and we most earnestly supplicate you to delay a little while till we
appoint an embassy, and send it to approach your master, and to convey our
entreaties to him. (240) Perhaps in our embassy we may find some argument or
other to persuade him, either by bringing before him all the considerations
respecting the honor of God, or the preservation of our indestructible and
unalterable laws, or by urging upon him that we ought not to be subjected to a
worse fate than all the nations even in the very most remote extremities of the
earth, who have been allowed to preserve their national customs; with reference
to which his grandfather and great-grandfather came to a righteous decision when
they confirmed and set the seal to our customs with all care. (241) Perhaps when
he hears these arguments he will be more merciful to us. The intentions of the
great do not always continue the same, and those which are adopted in anger are
the quickest to change. We have been grievously calumniated. Suffer us to refute
the false accusations which have been brought against us. It is hard to be
condemned without being heard in our own defense. (242) "And if we fail to
convince him, what will after that prevent him from doing the things which he at
present intends to do? Until, then, we have sent this embassy, do not cut off
all the hopes of so many myriads of men, since our zeal and earnestness is
displayed not in the cause of gain, but in that of religion; though indeed we
speak foolishly in using such an expression as that, for what can be a more real
and beneficial gain to them than holiness?" XXXIII.
(243) They uttered these complaints and entreaties with great agony and misery
of soul, with exceeding sobbing and difficulty of speech, for all their limbs
sweated with apprehension, and their ceaseless tears flowed in torrents, so that
all who heard them, and Petronius himself, sympathised with their sorrow, for he
was by nature a man very kind and gentle in his natural disposition, so that he
was easily influenced by what was now said or heard; and what was said appeared
to be entirely just, and the misery of those whom he now beheld appeared most
pitiable; (244) and rising up, and retiring with his fellow counsellors, he took
counsel as to what he ought to do, and he saw that those who a short time before
opposed the wishes of the Jews with all their might were now wavering and
perplexed, and that those who had previously been hesitating were now for the
most part inclined to compassion, at which he was pleased. Nevertheless, though
he was well acquainted with the disposition of the emperor, and how implacable
and inexorable he was in his anger, (245) he still had himself some sparks of
the Jewish philosophy and piety, since he had long ago learnt something of it by
reason of his eagerness for learning, and had studied it still more ever since
he had come as governor of the countries in which there are vast numbers of Jews
scattered over every city of Asia and Syria; or partly because he was so
disposed in his mind from his spontaneous, and natural, and innate inclination
for all things which are worthy of care and study. Moreover, God himself appears
often to suggest virtuous ideas to virtuous men, by which, while benefiting
others, they will likewise be benefited themselves, which now was the case with
Petronius. What then was his resolution? (246) Not to hurry on the artists, but
to persuade them to continue to finish the statue which they had in hand, taking
pains and laboring as far as might be possible not to be inferior to the most
renowned models, but to take plenty of time, so as to make their work perfect,
since things which are done in a hurry are very often inferior, but things which
are done with great pains and skill require a length of time. (247) But the
embassy which they entreated leave to send he determined not to permit, for he
considered that it would not be safe for him to allow it; still he determined
not to oppose those who wished to refer the whole matter to the supreme
sovereign and master, but neither to agree with nor to contradict the multitude,
for he considered that either line of conduct was fraught with danger. (248)
Moreover, he determined to write a letter to Gaius, not in any respect accusing
the Jews, and on the other hand not giving any accurate account of their
entreaties and supplications, and to explain the delay which was taking place in
the erection of the statue, partly because the preparation of it required a
certain space of time for its completion, and partly, he reminded him, that the
season of the year was in some degree the cause of unavoidable delay, in which
there was no question but that Gaius must of necessity acquiesce, (249) for it
was just at that moment the very height of the wheat harvest and of all the
other cereal crops; and he said that he was afraid lest out of despair of the
preservation of their national and hereditary laws and customs, the men might
conceive such a contempt for life as either themselves to lay waste their lands,
or to burn all the corn-bearing district, whether mountainous or champaign
country, and, therefore, that he might require a guard to secure a careful
gathering in of the crops, and that not only of such as were borne on the arable
land but of those produced by fruitbearing trees; (250) for he himself was
intending, as is said, to sail to Alexandria in Egypt, but so great a general
did not choose to cross the open sea both by reason of the danger and also of
the numerous fleet which would be required as his escort, and also from his
regard for his own person, as everything requisite for his comfort would be more
easily provided if he took the circuitous route through Asia and Syria; (251)
for he would, if he coasted along, be able to sail every day and land every
night, especially if he took with him a sufficient number of ships of war, and
not transports, in which a coasting voyage is more successful, just as one
across the open sea is better for merchantmen. (252) Therefore it was necessary
that abundant quantities of forage and food should be prepared for his cattle in
every one of the Syrian cities, and especially in all such as were on the coast,
for a numerous multitude would be proceeding both by land and sea, collected not
only from Rome itself and from Italy, but that which had also followed him from
all the other provinces of the empire as far as Syria, being partly the regular
guard of the magistrates, and partly the regular army of infantry and cavalry,
and the naval force, and also a troops of servants but little inferior in number
to the army. (253) Moreover, there was need not only of such an abundance of
supplies as might be sufficient for all necessary purposes, but also for all the
superfluous prodigality of which Gaius was fond. If he reads these writings
perhaps he will not only not be angry, but will be even pleased with our
prudential caution, as having caused this delay not from any regard for the
Jews, but for the sake of providing for the collection of the harvest. XXXIV.
(254) And when his assessors had delivered their opinions, he commanded letters
to be written, and appointed active men, who were accustomed to make rapid
journey, to convey them. And they, when they had arrived at their journey's end,
delivered the letters; but the emperor, before he had finished reading them,
became swollen with anger, and went on making marks at every page, in fury and
indignation; (255) and when he had come to the end of the letter, he clapped his
hands together, saying, "Of a truth, Petronius, you seem but little to
comprehend that you are the subject of the emperor; the uninterrupted series of
governments to which you have been preferred have filled you with guile. Up to
the present time it seems to me that you have no notion of acknowledging that
you know, even by hearsay, that Gaius is emperor, but you shall very speedily
find it out by your own experience, (256) for you are careful about the laws of
the Jews, a nation which I hate above every other, and you are indifferent about
the imperial commands of your sovereign. You fear the multitude. Had you not
with you then the military forces which all the eastern nations, and the chief
of them all, the Parthians, fear? (257) But you pitied them, you paid more
attention to feelings of compassion than to the express commands of Gaius.
"Make your pretext of the harvest, but you yourself shall soon find that
you have brought on your own head a punishment which cannot be averted by any
pretexts of excuses. Blame the necessity for collecting the crops, and for
making adequate provision for my armies, for even if a complete scarcity were to
oppress Judaea, still are there not vast regions on its borders of great
fertility and productiveness, sufficient and able to supply all necessary food,
and to make up for the deficiency of one district? (258) But why do I speak in
this way before acting? And why is there no one who anticipates my intentions?
He who delays shall first find out that he is receiving the wages of his delay
by suffering in his own person. I will say no more, but I shall not forget the
matter." (259) And after a brief interval, he dictated to one of his
secretaries an answer to Petronius, praising him in appearance for his prudence,
and for his careful and accurate consideration of the future, for he was very
careful with respect to the governors of the provinces, seeing that they had at
all times great facilities for making innovations or revolutions, especially if
they happened to be in districts of importance, and in command of powerful
armies such as was on the Euphrates for the protection of Syria. (260)
Therefore, being very civil to him in words and in his letters, he concealed his
anger till a favorable opportunity, though he was very much exasperated; but at
the end of the letter, after having mentioned every other subject, he desired
him not to be so anxious about anything as about the speedy erection and
dedication of the statue, for that by this time the harvest must have been able
to be got in, whether the excuse was originally an honest and true or only a
plausible one. XXXV.
(261) However a short time afterwards King Agrippa arrived in Rome, according to
custom, to pay his respects to Gaius, and he knew absolutely nothing either of
what Petronius had written in his letter, or of what Gaius had written in his
first or second epistle, but by his irregular motions and agitations, and by the
excitement which shone in his eyes, he conjectured that he had some anger
smouldering beneath, and he considered, and pondered, and turned over every
matter in every direction, racking his brain for every reason, whether great or
small, to see whether he had said or done anything unbecoming, (262) and when he
felt sure that he had done absolutely nothing, he conjectured, as was natural,
that it was some one else with whom he was offended. But again, when he saw that
he looked morosely at him, and that he kept his eyes continually fixed on him,
and on no one else who was ever present, he began to be alarmed, and though he
often thought of putting the question to him, he restrained himself, reflecting
in this manner: "Perhaps by doing so I may draw down on myself the threats
which as it is are destined for others, by bringing upon myself a suspicion of
being a busybody, and a rash and audacious man." (263) Therefore, when
Gaius saw that he was in a state of great alarm and perplexity, for he was very
acute at comprehending a man's inmost designs and feelings from his outward
appearance and expression of countenance, he said, "You are embarrassed, O
Agrippa. I will relieve you from your perplexity. (264) Though you have lived
with me for such a length of time, are you yet ignorant that I speak not only
with my voice, but also with my eyes, intimating everything, to say the least of
it, as much in one way as in the other? (265) Your loyal and excellent fellow
citizens, the only nation of men upon the whole face of the earth by whom Gaius
is not esteemed to be a god, appear now to be even desiring to plot my death in
their obstinate disobedience, for when I commanded my statue in the character of
Jupiter to be erected in their temple, they raised the whole of their people,
and quitted the city and the whole country in a body, under pretence of
addressing a petition to me, but in reality being determined to act in a manner
contrary to the commands which I had imposed upon them." (266) And when he
was about to add other charges against them Agrippa fell into such a state of
grief that he changed into all sorts of colors, becoming at the same moment
bloodshot, and pale, and livid, (267) for he was all over agitation and
trembling from the top of his head down to his feet, and a quivering and shaking
seized upon and disordered all his limbs and every member of his body, all his
sinews, and muscles, and nerves being relaxed and enfeebled, so that he fainted
away, and would have fallen down if some of the bystanders had not supported
him. And they being commanded to carry him home, bore him to his palace, where
he lay for some time in a state of torpor without any one understanding what
sudden misfortune had brought him into this state. (268) Therefore Gaius was
exasperated still more against our nation, and cherished a more furious anger
against us than before, "For," said he, "if Agrippa, who is my
most intimate and dearest friend, and one bound to me by so many benefits, is to
completely under the influence of his national customs that he cannot bear even
to hear a word against them, but faints away to such a degree as to be near
dying, what must one expect will be the feelings of others who have no motive or
influence to draw them the other way?" (269) Agrippa, then, during all that
day and the greater portion of the next day, lay in a state of profound stupor,
being completely unconscious of everything that passed; but about evening he
raised his head a little, and for a short time opened, though with difficulty,
his languid eyes, and with dim and indistinct vision looked upon the people who
surrounded him, though he was not as yet able to distinguish clearly between
their several forms and features; (270) and then again relapsing into sleep, he
became tranquil, getting into a better condition than at first, as those about
him could conjecture from his breathing and from the state of his body. (271)
And afterwards, when he awoke again, and rose up, by asked, "Where now am
I? Am I with Gaius? Is my lord himself here?" And they replied, "Be of
good cheer; you are by yourself in your own palace. (272) Gaius is not here. You
have now had a sufficient tranquil sleep, but now turn and raise yourself, and
rest upon your elbow, and recognize those who are about you; they are all your
own people, those of your friends, and freedmen, and domestics, who honor you
above all others, and who are honored by you in return." (273) And he, for
he was now beginning to recover from his state of stupefaction, saw feelings of
sympathy in every one's face, and when his physicians ordered most of them to
leave the room, that they might refresh his body with anointing and seasonable
food, (274) "Go," said he, "for you must by all means take care
that I may have a more carefully regulated way of life, for it is not sufficient
for me, unfortunate man that I am, to ward off hunger by a bare, and scanty, and
economical, and precise use of necessary food; nor should I have attended to any
such matters if it had not been my object to provide my miserable nation with
the last resource which my mind suggests to me by way of assisting it."
(275) Accordingly, he, shedding abundance of tears, and eating just what was
necessary without any sauce or seasoning, and drinking no mixed wine but only
tasting water, soon left off eating. "My miserable stomach," said he,
"recoils from the things which it demanded; and now what ought I do to but
address myself to Gaius with respect to existing circumstances?" XXXVI.
(276) And having taken tablets, he writes to him in the following manner:
"O master, fear and shame have taken from me all courage to come into your
presence to address you; since fear teaches me to dread your threats; and shame,
out of respect for the greatness of your power and dignity, keeps me silent. But
a writing will show my request, which I now here offer to you as my earnest
petition. (277) In all men, O emperor! a love of their country is innate, and an
eagerness for their national customs and laws. And concerning these matters
there is no need that I should give you information, since you have a heart-felt
love of your own country, and a deeply-seated respect for your national customs.
And what belongs to themselves appears beautiful to every one, even if it is not
so in reality; for they judge of these things not more by reason than by the
feelings of affection. (278) And I am, as you know, a Jew; and Jerusalem is my
country, in which there is erected the holy temple of the most high God. And I
have kings for my grandfathers and for my ancestors, the greater part of whom
have been called high priests, looking upon their royal power as inferior to
their office as priests; and thinking that the high priesthood is as much
superior to the power of a king, as God is superior to man; for that the one is
occupied in rendering service to God, and the other has only the care of
governing them. (279) Accordingly I, being one of this nation, and being
attached to this country and to such a temple, address to you this petition on
behalf of them all; on behalf of the nation, that it may not be looked upon by
you in a light contrary to the true one; since it is a most pious and holy
nation, and one from the beginning most loyally disposed to your family. (280)
"For in all the particulars in which men are enjoined by the laws, and in
which they have it in their power to show their piety and loyalty, my nation is
inferior to none whatever in Asia or in Europe, whether it be in respect of
prayers, or of the supply of sacred offerings, or in the abundance of its
sacrifices, not merely of such as are offered on occasions of the public
festivals, but in those which are continually offered day after day; by which
means they show their loyalty and fidelity more surely than by their mouth and
tongue, proving it by the designs of their honest hearts, not indeed saying that
they are friends to Caesar, but being so in reality. (281) "Concerning the
holy city I must now say what is necessary. It, as I have already stated, is my
native country, and the metropolis, not only of the one country of Judaea, but
also of many, by reason of the colonies which it has sent out from time to time
into the bordering districts of Egypt, Phoenicia, Syria in general, and
especially that part of it which is called Coelo-Syria, and also with those more
distant regions of Pamphylia, Cilicia, the greater part of Asia Minor as far as
Bithynia, and the furthermost corners of Pontus. And in the same manner into
Europe, into Thessaly, and Boeotia, and Macedonia, and Aetolia, and Attica, and
Argos, and Corinth and all the most fertile and wealthiest districts of
Peloponnesus. (282) And not only are the continents full of Jewish colonies, but
also all the most celebrated islands are so too; such as Euboea, and Cyprus, and
Crete. "I say nothing of the countries beyond the Euphrates, for all of
them except a very small portion, and Babylon, and all the satrapies around,
which have any advantages whatever of soil or climate, have Jews settled in
them. (283) So that if my native land is, as it reasonably may be, looked upon
as entitled to a share in your favor, it is not one city only that would then be
benefited by you, but ten thousand of them in every region of the habitable
world, in Europe, in Asia, and in Africa, on the continent, in the islands, on
the coasts, and in the inland parts. (284) And it corresponds well to the
greatness of your good fortune, that, by conferring benefits on one city, you
should also benefit ten thousand others, so that your renown may be celebrated
in every part of the habitable world, and many praises of you may be combined
with thanksgiving. (285) "You have thought the native countries of some of
your friends worthy of being admitted to share all the privileges of the Roman
constitution; and those who but a little while ago were slaves, became the
masters of others who also enjoyed your favor in a higher, or at all events not
in a lower degree, and they were delighted too at the causes of your
beneficence. (286) And I indeed am perfectly aware that I belong to the class
which is in subjection to a lord and master, and also that I am admitted to the
honor of being one of your companions, being inferior to you in respect of my
birthright and natural rank, and inferior to no one whomsoever, not to say the
most eminent of all men, in good will and loyalty towards you, (287) both
because that is my natural disposition, and also in consequence of the number of
benefits with which you have enriched me; so that if I in consequence had felt
confidence to implore you myself on behalf of my country, if not to grant to it
the Roman constitution, at least to confer freedom and a remission of taxes on
it, I should not have thought that I had any reason to fear your displeasure for
preferring such a petition to you, and for requesting that most desirable of all
things, your favor, which it can do you no harm to grant, and which is the most
advantageous of all things for my country to receive. (288) "For what can
possibly be a more desirable blessing for a subject nation than the good will of
its sovereign? It was at Jerusalem, O emperor! that your most desirable
succession to the empire was first announced; and the news of your advancement
spread from the holy city all over the continent on each side, and was received
with great gladness. And on this account that city deserves to meet with favor
at your hands; (289) for, as in families the eldest children receive the highest
honors as their birthright, because they were the first to give the name of
father and mother to their parents, so, in like manner, since this is first of
all the cities in the east to salute you as emperor, it ought to receive greater
benefit from you than any other; or if not greater, at all events as great as
any other city. (290) "Having now advanced these pleas on the ground of
justice, and made these petitions on behalf of my native country, I now come at
last to my supplication on behalf of the temple. O my lord and master, Gaius!
this temple has never, from the time of its original foundation until now,
admitted any form made by hands, because it has been the abode of God. Now,
pictures and images are only imitations of those gods who are perceptible to the
outward senses; but it was not considered by our ancestors to be consistent with
the reverence due to God to make any image or representation of the invisible
God. (291) Agrippa, when he came to the temple, did honor to it, and he was thy
grandfather; and so did Augustus, when by his letters he commanded all first
fruits from all quarters to be sent thither; and by the continual sacrifice. And
thy great grandmother ...( 292) "On which account, no one, whether Greek or
barbarian, satrap, or king, or implacable enemy; no sedition, no war, no
capture, no destruction, no occurrence that has ever taken place, has ever
threatened this temple with such innovation as to place in it any image, or
statue, or any work of any kind made with hands; (293) for, though enemies have
displayed their hostility to the inhabitants of the country, still, either
reverence or fear has possessed them sufficiently to prevent them from
abrogating any of the laws which were established at the beginning, as tending
to the honor of the Creator and Father of the universe; for they knew that it is
these and similar actions which bring after them the irremediable calamities of
heavensent afflictions. On which account they have been careful not to sow an
impious seed, fearing lest they should be compelled to reap its natural harvest,
in a fruit bearing utter destruction. XXXVII.
(294) "But why need I invoke the assistance of foreign witnesses when I
have plenty with whom I can furnish you from among your own countrymen and
friends? Marcus Agrippa, your own grandfather on the mother's side, the moment
that he arrived in Judaea, when Herod, my grandfather, was king of the country,
thought fit to go up from the sea-coast to the metropolis, which was inland.
(295) And when he had beheld the temple, and the decorations of the priests, and
the piety and holiness of the people of the country, he marveled, looking upon
the whole matter as one of great solemnity and entitled to great respect, and
thinking that he had beheld what was too magnificent to be described. And he
could talk of nothing else to his companions but the magnificence of the temple
and every thing connected with it. (296) "Therefore, every day that he
remained in the city, by reason of his friendship for Herod, he went to that
sacred place, being delighted with the spectacle of the building, and of the
sacrifices, and all the ceremonies connected with the worship of God, and the
regularity which was observed, and the dignity and honor paid to the high
priest, and his grandeur when arrayed in his sacred vestments and when about to
begin the sacrifices. (297) And after he had adorned the temple with all the
offerings in his power to contribute, and had conferred many benefits on the
inhabitants, doing them many important services, and having said to Herod many
friendly things, and having been replied to in corresponding terms, he was
conducted back again to the sea coast, and to the harbor, and that not by one
city only but by the whole country, having branches strewed in his road, and
being greatly admired and respected for his piety. (298) "What again did
your other grandfather, Tiberius Caesar, do? does not he appear to have adopted
an exactly similar line of conduct? At all events, during the three and twenty
years that he was emperor, he preserved the form of worship in the temple as it
had been handed down from the earliest times, without abrogating or altering the
slightest particular of it. XXXVIII.
(299) "Moreover, I have it in my power to relate one act of ambition on his
part, though I suffered an infinite number of evils when he was alive; but
nevertheless the truth is considered dear, and much to be honored by you. Pilate
was one of the emperor's lieutenants, having been appointed governor of Judaea.
He, not more with the object of doing honor to Tiberius than with that of vexing
the multitude, dedicated some gilt shields in the palace of Herod, in the holy
city; which had no form nor any other forbidden thing represented on them except
some necessary inscription, which mentioned these two facts, the name of the
person who had placed them there, and the person in whose honor they were so
placed there. (300) But when the multitude heard what had been done, and when
the circumstance became notorious, then the people, putting forward the four
sons of the king, who were in no respect inferior to the kings themselves, in
fortune or in rank, and his other descendants, and those magistrates who were
among them at the time, entreated him to alter and to rectify the innovation
which he had committed in respect of the shields; and not to make any alteration
in their national customs, which had hitherto been preserved without any
interruption, without being in the least degree changed by any king of emperor.
(301) "But when he steadfastly refused this petition (for he was a man of a
very inflexible disposition, and very merciless as well as very obstinate), they
cried out: 'Do not cause a sedition; do not make war upon us; do not destroy the
peace which exists. The honor of the emperor is not identical with dishonor to
the ancient laws; let it not be to you a pretence for heaping insult on our
nation. Tiberius is not desirous that any of our laws or customs shall be
destroyed. And if you yourself say that he is, show us either some command from
him, or some letter, or something of the kind, that we, who have been sent to
you as ambassadors, may cease to trouble you, and may address our supplications
to your master.' (302) "But this last sentence exasperated him in the
greatest possible degree, as he feared least they might in reality go on an
embassy to the emperor, and might impeach him with respect to other particulars
of his government, in respect of his corruption, and his acts of insolence, and
his rapine, and his habit of insulting people, and his cruelty, and his
continual murders of people untried and uncondemned, and his never ending, and
gratuitous, and most grievous inhumanity. (303) Therefore, being exceedingly
angry, and being at all times a man of most ferocious passions, he was in great
perplexity, neither venturing to take down what he had once set up, nor wishing
to do any thing which could be acceptable to his subjects, and at the same time
being sufficiently acquainted with the firmness of Tiberius on these points. And
those who were in power in our nation, seeing this, and perceiving that he was
inclined to change his mind as to what he had done, but that he was not willing
to be thought to do so, wrote a most supplicatory letter to Tiberius. (304) And
he, when he had read it, what did he say of Pilate, and what threats did he
utter against him! But it is beside our purpose at present to relate to you how
very angry he was, although he was not very liable to sudden anger; since the
facts speak for themselves; (305) for immediately, without putting any thing off
till the next day, he wrote a letter, reproaching and reviling him in the most
bitter manner for his act of unprecedented audacity and wickedness, and
commanding him immediately to take down the shields and to convey them away from
the metropolis of Judaea to Caesarea, on the sea which had been named Caesarea
Augusta, after his grandfather, in order that they might be set up in the temple
of Augustus. And accordingly, they were set up in that edifice. And in this way
he provided for two matters: both for the honor due to the emperor, and for the
preservation of the ancient customs of the city. XXXIX.
(306) "Now the things set up on that occasion were shields, on which there
was no representation of any living thing whatever engraved. But now the thing
proposed to be erected is a colossal statue. Moreover, then the erection was in
the dwelling-house of the governor; but they say, that which is now contemplated
is to be in the inmost part of the temple, in the very holy of holies itself,
into which, once in the year, the high priest enters, on the day called the
great fast, to offer incense, and on no other day, being then about in
accordance with our national law also to offer up prayers for a fertile and
ample supply of blessings, and for peace of all mankind. (307) And if any one
else, I will not say of the Jews, but even of the priests, and those not of the
lowest order, but even those who are in the rank next to the first, should go in
there, either with him or after him, or even if the very high priest himself
should enter in thither on two days in the year, or three or four times on the
same day, he is subjected to inevitable death for his impiety, (308) so great
are the precautions taken by our lawgiver with respect to the holy of holies, as
he determined to preserve it alone inaccessible to and untouched by any human
being. "How many deaths then do you not suppose that the people, who have
been taught to regard this place with such holy reverence, would willingly
endure rather than see a statue introduced into it? I verily believe that they
would rather slay all their whole families, with their wives and children, and
themselves last of all, in the ruins of their houses and families, and Tiberius
knew this well. (309) And what did your great-grandfather, the most excellent of
all emperors that ever lived upon the earth, he who was the first to have the
appellation of Augustus given him, on account of his virtue and good fortune; he
who diffused peace in every direction over earth and sea, to the very furthest
extremities of the world? (310) Did not he, when he had heard a report of the
peculiar characteristics of our temple, and that there is in it no image or
representation made by hands, no visible likeness of Him who is invisible, no
attempt at any imitation of his nature, did not he, I say, marvel at and honor
it? for as he was imbued with something more than a mere smattering of
philosophy, inasmuch as he had deeply feasted on it, and continued to feast on
it every day, he partly retraced in his recollection all the precepts of
philosophy which his mind had previously learnt, and partly also he kept his
learning alive by the conversation of the literary men who were always about
him; for at his banquets and entertainments, the greatest part of the time was
devoted to learned conversation, in order that not only his friends' bodies but
their minds also might be nourished. XL.
(311) "And though I might be able to establish this fact, and demonstrate
to you the feelings of Augustus, your great grandfather, by an abundance of
proofs, I will be content with two; for, in the first place, he sent
commandments to all the governors of the different provinces throughout Asia,
because he heard that the sacred first fruits were neglected, enjoining them to
permit the Jews alone to assemble together in the synagogues, (312) for that
these assemblies were not revels, which from drunkenness and intoxication
proceeded to violence, so as to disturb the peaceful condition of the country,
but were rather schools of temperance and justice, as the men who met in them
were studiers of virtue, and contributed the first fruits every year, sending
commissioners to convey the holy things to the temple in Jerusalem. (313)
"And, in the next place, he commanded that no one should hinder the Jews,
either on their way to the synagogues, or when bringing their contributions, or
when proceeding in obedience to their national laws to Jerusalem, for these
things were expressly enjoined, if not in so many words, at all events in
effect; (314) and I subjoin one letter, in order to bring conviction to you who
are our mater, what Gaius Norbanus Flaccus wrote, in which he details what had
been written to him by Caesar, and the superscription of the letter is as
follows: (315)- CAIUS
NORBANUS FLACCUS, PROCONSUL, TO THE GOVERNORS OF THE EPHESIANS,
GREETING. "'Caesar
has written word to me, that the Jews, wherever they are, are accustomed to
assemble together, in compliance with a peculiar ancient custom of their nation,
to contribute money which they send to Jerusalem; and he does not choose that
they should have any hindrance offered to them, to prevent them from doing this;
therefore I have written to you, that you may know that I command that they
shall be allowed to do these things.' (316) "Is not this a most convincing
proof, O emperor, of the intention of Caesar respecting the honors paid to our
temple which he had adopted, not considering it right that because of some
general rule, with respect to meetings, the assemblies of the Jews, in one place
should be put down, which they held for the sake of offering the first fruits,
and for other pious objects? (317) "There is also another piece of
evidence, in no respect inferior to this one, and which is the most undeniable
proof of the will of Augustus, for he commanded perfect sacrifices of whole
burnt offerings to be offered up to the most high God every day, out of his own
revenues, which are performed up to the present time, and the victims are two
sheep and a bull, with which Caesar honored the altar of God, well knowing that
there is in the temple no image erected, either in open sight or in any secret
part of it. (318) But that great ruler, who was inferior to no one in
philosophy, considered within himself, that it is necessary in terrestrial
things, that an especial holy place should be set apart for the invisible God,
who will not permit any visible representation of himself to be made, by which
to arrive at a participation in favorable hopes and the enjoyment of perfect
blessings. (319) "And your grandmother, Julia Augusta, following the
example of so great a guide in the paths of piety, did also adorn the temple
with some golden vials and censers, and with a great number of other offerings,
of the most costly and magnificent description; and what was her object in doing
this, when there is no statue erected within the temple? for the minds of women
are, in some degree, weaker than those of men, and are not so well able to
comprehend a thing which is appreciable only by the intellect, without any aid
of objects addressed to the outward senses; (320) but she, as she surpassed all
her sex in other particulars, so also was she superior to them in this, by
reason of the pure learning and wisdom which had been implanted in her, both by
nature and by study; so that, having a masculine intellect, she was so
sharpsighted and profound, that she comprehended what is appreciable only by the
intellect, even more than those things which are perceptible by the outward
senses, and looked upon the latter as only shadows of the former. XLI.
(321) "Therefore, O master, having all these examples most nearly connected
with yourself and your family, of our purposes and customs, derived from those
from whom you are sprung, of whom you are born, and by whom you have been
brought up, I implore you to preserve those principles which each of those
persons whom I have mentioned did preserve; (322) they who were themselves
possessed of imperial power do, by their laws, exhort you, the emperor; they who
were august, speak to you who are also Augustus; your grandfathers and ancestors
speak to their descendant; numbers of authorities address one individual, all
but saying, in express words: Do not you destroy those things in our councils
which remain, and which have been preserved as permanent laws to this very day;
for even if no mischief were to ensue from the abrogation of them, still, at all
events, the result would be a feeling of uncertainty respecting the future, and
such uncertainty is full of fear, even to the most sanguine and confident, if
they are not despisers of divine things. (323) "If I were to enumerate the
benefits which I myself have received at your hands, the day would be too short
for me; besides the fact that it is not proper for one who has undertaken to
speak on one subject to branch off to a digression about some other matter. And
even if I should be silent, the facts themselves speak and utter a distinct
voice. (324) You released me when I was bound in chains and iron. Who is there
who is ignorant of this? But do not, after having done so, O emperor! bind me in
bonds of still greater bitterness: for the chains from which you released me
surrounded a part of my body, but those which I am now anticipating are the
chains of the soul, which are likely to oppress it wholly and in every part;
(325) you abated from me a fear of death, continually suspended over my head;
you received me when I was almost dead through fear; you raised me up as it were
from the dead. Continue your favor, O master, that your Agrippa may not be
driven wholly to forsake life; for I shall appear (if you do not do so) to have
been released from bondage, not for the purpose of being saved, but for that of
being made to perish in a more conspicuous manner. (326) "You have given me
the greatest and most glorious inheritance among mankind, the rank and power of
a king, at first over one district, then over another and a more important one,
adding to my kingdom the district called Trachonitis and Galilee. Do not then, O
master! after having loaded me with means of superfluity, deprive me of what is
actually necessary. Do not, after you have raised me up to the most brilliant
light, cast me down again from my eminence to the most profound darkness. (327)
I am willing to descend from this splendid position in which you have placed me;
I do not deprecate a return to the condition in which I was a short time ago; I
will give up everything; I look upon everything as of less importance than the
one point of preserving the ancient customs and laws of my nation unaltered; for
if they are violated, what could I say, either to my fellow countrymen or to any
other men? It would follow of necessity that I must be looked upon as one of two
things, either as a betrayer of my people, or as one who is no longer accounted
a friend by you. And what could be a greater misery than either of these two
things? (328) For if I am still reckoned among the company of your friends, I
shall then receive the imputation of treason against my own nation, if neither
my country is preserved free from all misfortune, nor even the temple left
inviolate. For you, great men, preserve the property of your companions and of
those who take refuge in your protection by your imperial splendour and
magnificence. (329) And if you have any secret grief or vexation in your mind,
do not throw me into prison, like Tiberius, but deliver me from any anticipation
of being thrown into prison at any future time; command me at once to be put out
of the way. For what advantage would it be to me to live, who place my whole
hopes of safety and happiness in your friendship and favor?" XLII.
(330) Having written this letter and sealed it, he sent it to Gaius, and then
shutting himself up he remained in his own house, full of agony, confusion, and
disorder, and anxiety, as to what was the best way of approaching and addressing
the emperor; for he and his people had incurred no slight danger, but they had
reason to apprehend expulsion from their country, and slavery, and utter
destruction, as impending not only over those who were dwelling in the holy
land, but over all the Jews in every part of the world. (331) But the emperor,
having taken the letter and read it, and having considered every suggestion
which was contained in it, was very angry, because his intentions had not been
executed: and yet, at the same time, he was moved by the appeals to his justice
and by the supplications which were thus addressed to him, and in some respects
he was pleased with Agrippa, and in some he blamed him. (332) He blamed him for
his excessive desire to please his fellow countrymen, who were the only men who
had resisted his orders and shown any unwillingness to submit to his
deification; but he praised him for concealing and disguising none of his
feelings, which conduct he said was a proof of a liberal and noble disposition.
(333) Therefore being somewhat appeased, at least as far as appearance went, he
condescended to return a somewhat favorable answer, granting to Agrippa that
highest and greatest of all favors, the consent that this erection of his statue
should not take place; and he commanded letters to be written to Publius
Petronius the governor of Syria, enjoining him not to allow any alterations or
innovations to be made with respect to the temple of the Jews. (334)
Nevertheless, though he did grant him the favor, he did not grant it without any
alloy, but he mingled with it a grievous terror; for he added to the letter, - "If
any people in the bordering countries, with the exception of the metropolis
itself, wishing to erect altars or temples, nay, images of statues, in honor of
me and of my family are hindered from doing so, I charge you at once to punish
those who attempt to hinder them, or else to bring them before the
tribunal." (335) Now this was nothing else but a beginning of seditions and
civil wars, and an indirect way of annulling the gift which he appeared to be
granting. For some men, more out of a desire of mortifying the Jews than from
any feelings of loyalty towards Gaius, were inclined to fill the whole country
with erections of one kind or another. But they who beheld the violation of
their national customs practiced
before their eyes were resolved above all things not to endure such an injury
unresistingly. But Gaius, judging those who were thus excited to disobedience to
be worthy of the most severe punishment possible, a second time orders his
statue to be erected in the temple. (336) But by the providence and care of God,
who beholds all things and governs all things in accordance with justice, not
one of the neighboring nations made any movement at all; so that there was no
occasion for these commands being carried into effect, and these inexorably
appointed calamities all terminated in only a moderate degree of blame. (337)
What advantage, then, was gained? some one will say; for even when they were
quiet, Gaius was not quiet; but he had already repented of the favor which he
had showed to Agrippa, and had re-kindled the desires which he had entertained a
little while before; for he commanded another statue to be made, of colossal
size, of brass gilt over, in Rome, no longer moving the one which had been made
in Sidon, in order that the people might not be excited by its being moved, but
that while they remained in a state of tranquility and felt released from their
suspicions, it might in a period of peace be suddenly brought to the country in
a ship, and be suddenly erected without the multitude being aware of what was
going on. XLIII.
(338) And he was intending to do this while on his voyage along the coast during
the period which he had allotted for his sojourn in Egypt. For an indescribable
desire occupied his mind to see Alexandria, to which he was eager to go with all
imaginable haste, and when he had arrived there he intended to remain a
considerable time, urging that the deification about which he was so anxious,
might easily be originated and carried to a great height in that city above all
others, and then that it would be a model to all other cities of the adoration
to which he was entitled, inasmuch as it was the greatest of all the cities of
the east, and built in the finest situation in the world. For all inferior men
and nations are eager to imitate great men and great states. (339) Moreover,
Gaius was in other respects a man in whose nature there was nothing stable or
trustworthy so that, even if he did anything good or kind, he speedily repented
of it, and in such a manner that he soon attempted to annul what he had done in
such a way as to cause even greater affliction and injury to those whom he had
favored. (340) For instance, he released some prisoners, and then for no reason
whatever he threw them into prison a second time, inflicting upon them a second
calamity more grievous than the first, namely, that which was caused by
unexpected misfortune. (341) Again, he condemned some persons to banishment who
had expected sentence of death; not because they were conscious of having
committed crimes deserving of death, or indeed of any punishment at all, even
the lightest, but because of the extravagant inhumanity of their master they did
not expect to escape. Now to these men, banishment was a downright gain, and
equivalent almost to a restoration, since they looked upon it that they had
escaped the greatest of all evils, the danger of death. (342) But no long period
elapsed before he sent some soldiers after them, though no new circumstances had
arisen, and put to death simultaneously the most excellent and nobly-born of the
exiles who were living in the different islands as their own countries, and who
were bearing their misfortunes in the most contented manner, inflicting in this
way the greatest and most pitiable and unexpected misery on many of the noblest
families in Rome. (343) And if he ever gave any one a sum of money as a gift, he
demanded it back again at some future time, not a simple loan but he also
required interest and compound interest, and often treating the persons
themselves who had received it from him as thieves, and punishing them with the
severest penalties for having stolen it; for he was not contented that those
miserable men should return what had been given to them, but he compelled them
also to give up all their property which they had inherited from their parents,
or relations, or from any friends, or which, having selected a life of industry
and profit, they had acquired by their own resources. (344) And those who
appeared to be in the greatest credit with him, and who lived with him in a
round of pleasure, as one may say, with great appearances of friendship and good
will, were greatly injured by him, being compelled to expend large sums in
irregular, and illegal, and sudden journeys, and in entertainments; for they
lavished whole properties in the preparation of a single banquet, so that they
were compelled to have recourse to usurers, so vast was his prodigality; (345)
therefore many men deprecated the receiving of any favors from him, thinking not
only that it was of no advantage, but even that they were only a bait and a
snare to lead them into intolerable suffering. (346) So great therefore was his
inequality of temper towards every one, and most especially towards the nation
of the Jews to which he was most bitterly hostile, and accordingly beginning in
Alexandria he took from them all their synagogues there, and in the other
cities, and filled them all with images and statues of his own form; for not
caring about any other erection of any kind, he set up his own statue every
where by main force; and the great temple in the holy city, which was left
untouched to the last, having been thought worthy of all possible respect and
preservation, he altered and transformed into a temple of his own, that he might
call it the temple of the new Jupiter, the illustrious Gaius. (347) What is this
that you say? Do you, who are a man, seek to take to yourself the air and the
heaven, not being content with the vast multitude of continents, and islands,
and nations, and countries of which you enjoy the sovereignty? And do you not
think any one of the gods who are worshipped in that city or by our people
worthy of any country or city or even of any small precinct which may have been
consecrated to them in old time, and dedicated to them with oracles and sacred
hymns, and are you intending to deprive them of that, that in all the vast
circumference of the world there may be no visible trace or memorial to be found
of any honor or pious worship paid to the true real living God? (348) Truly you
are suggesting fine hopes to the race of mankind; are you ignorant that you are
opening the fountains of evils of every kind, making innovations, and committing
acts of audacious impiety such as it is wicked to do and even to think of? XLIV.
(349) It is worth while to make mention of what we both saw and heard, when we
were sent for to encounter a contest on behalf of our national constitution; for
the moment that we entered into the presence of the emperor we perceived, from
his looks and from the state of agitation in which he was, that we had come not
before a judge but before an accuser, or rather I should say before the open
enemy of those whom he looked upon as opposed to his will; (350) for it would
have been the part of a judge to sit with assessors selected because of their
virtue and learning, when a question of the greatest importance was being
investigated which had lain dormant for four hundred years, and which was now
raised for the first time among many myriads of Alexandrian Jews; and it would
have been proper for the contending parties with their advocates to stand on
each side of him, and for him to listen to them both in turn; first to the
accusation and then in turn to the defense, according to a period measured by
water, {13}{the time allotted to the speeches of advocates in the Athenian
courts of justice was measured by a waterclock, klepsydra, something like our
hour-glass of sand.} and then retiring the judge should deliberate with his
assessors as to what he ought publicly to deliver as his sentence on the justice
of the case; but what was actually done resembled rather the conduct of an
implacable tyrant, exhibiting uncontrolled authority and displeasure and pride.
(351) For besides that he in no particular behaved in the manner which I have
just been describing as proper, having sent for the managers of two gardens, the
Maecenatian and the Lamian garden, and they are near one another and close to
the city, in which he had spent three or four days, for that was the place in
which this theatrical spectacle, aimed at the happiness of a whole nation, was
intended to be enacted in our presence, he commanded all the outer buildings to
be opened for him, for that he wished to examine them all minutely; (352) but
we, as soon as we were introduced into his presence, the moment that we saw him,
bent to the ground with all imaginable respect and adoration, and saluted him
calling him the emperor Augustus; and he replied to us in such a gentle and
courteous and humane manner that we not only despaired of attaining our object,
but even of preserving our lives; (353) for, said he, "You are haters of
God, inasmuch as you do not think that I am a god, I who am already confessed to
be a god by every other nation, but who am refused that appellation by
you." And then, stretching up his hands to heaven, he uttered an
ejaculation which it was impious to hear, much more would it be so to repeat it
literally. (354) And immediately all the ambassadors of the opposite portion
were filled with all imaginable joy, thinking that their embassy was already
successful, on account of the first words uttered by Gaius, and so they clapped
their hands and danced for joy, and called him by every title which is
applicable to any one of the gods. XLV.
(355) And while he was triumphing in these super-human appellations, the
sycophant Isidorus, seeing the temper in which he was, said, "O master, you
will hate with still juster vehemence these men whom you see before you and
their fellow countrymen, if you are made acquainted with their disaffection and
disloyalty towards yourself; for when all other men were offering up sacrifices
of thanksgiving for your safety, these men alone refused to offer any sacrifice
at all; and when I say, 'these men,' I comprehend all the rest of the
Jews." (356) And when we all cried out with one accord, "O Lord Gaius,
we are falsely accused; for we did sacrifice, and we offered up entire
hecatombs, the blood of which we poured in a libation upon the altar, and the
flesh we did not carry to our homes to make a feast and banquet upon it, as it
is the custom of some people to do, but we committed the victims entire to the
sacred flame as a burnt offering: and we have done this three times already, and
not once only; on the first occasion when you succeeded to the empire, and the
second time when you recovered from that terrible disease with which all the
habitable world was afflicted at the same time, and the third time we sacrificed
in hope of your victory over the Germans." (357) "Grant," said
he, "that all this is true, and that you did sacrifice; nevertheless you
sacrificed to another god and not for my sake; and then what good did you do me?
Moreover you did not sacrifice to me." Immediately a profound shuddering
came upon us the first moment that we heard this expression, similar to that
which overwhelmed us when we first came into his presence. (358) And while he
was saying this he entered into the outer buildings, examining the chambers of
the men and the chambers of the women, and the rooms on the ground floor, and
all the apartments in the upper story, and blaming some points of their
preparation as defective, and planning alterations and suggesting designs, and
giving orders himself to make them more costly (359) and then we being driven
about in this way followed him up and down through the whole place, being mocked
and ridiculed by our adversaries like people at a play in the theatre; for
indeed the whole matter was a kind of farce: the judge assumed the part of an
accuser, and the accusers the part of an unjust judge, who look upon the
defendants with an eye of hostility, and act in accordance with the nature of
truth. (360) And when a judge invested with such mighty power begins to reproach
the person who is on his trial before him it is necessary to be silent; for it
is possible even to defend one's self in silence, and especially for people who
are able to make no reply on any of the subjects which he was not investigating
and desiring to understand, inasmuch as our laws and our customs restrained our
tongues, and shut and sewed up our mouths. (361) But when he had given some of
his orders about the buildings, he then asked a very important and solemn
question; "why is it that you abstain from eating pig's flesh?" And
then again at this question such a violent laughter was raised by our
adversaries, partly because they were really delighted, and partly as they
wished to court the emperor out of flattery, and therefore wished to make it
appear that this question was dictated by wit and uttered with grace, that some
of the servants who were following him were indignant at their appearing to
treat the emperor with so little respect, since it was not safe for his most
intimate friends to do so much as smile at his words. (362) And when we made
answer that, "different nations have different laws, and there are some
things of which the use of forbidden both to us and to our adversaries;"
and when some one said, "there are also many people who do not eat lamb's
flesh which is the most tender of all meat," he laughed and said,
"they are quite right, for it is not nice." (363) Being joked with and
trifled with and ridiculed in this manner, we were in great perplexity; and at
last he said in a rapid and peremptory manner, "I desire to know what
principles of justice you recognize with regard to your constitution."
(364) And when we began to reply to him and to explain it, he, as soon as he had
a taste of our pleading on the principles of justice, and as soon as he
perceived that our arguments were not contemptible, before we could bring
forward the more important things which we had to say, cut us short and ran
forward and burst into the principal building, and as soon as he had entered he
commanded the windows which were around it to be filled up with the transparent
pebbles very much resembling white crystal which do not hinder the light, but
which keep out the wind and the heat of the sun. (365) Then proceeding on
deliberately he asked in a more moderate tone, "What are you saying?"
And when we began to connect our reply with what we had said before, he again
ran on and went into another house, in which he had commanded some ancient and
admirable pictures to be placed. (366) But when our pleadings on behalf of
justice were thus broken up, and cut short, and interrupted, and crushed as one
may almost say, we, being wearied and exhausted, and having no strength left in
us, but being in continual expectation of nothing else than death, could not
longer keep our hearts as they had been, but in our agony we took refuge in
supplications to the one true God, praying him to check the wrath of this
falsely called god. (367) And he took compassion on us, and turned his mind to
pity. And he becoming pacified merely said, "These men do not appear to me
to be wicked so much as unfortunate and foolish, in not believing that I have
been endowed with the nature of God;" and so he dismissed us, and commanded
us to depart. XLVI.
(368) Having then escaped from what was rather a theatre and a prison than a
court of justice (for as in a theatre, there was a great noise of people
hissing, and groaning, and ridiculing us in an extravagant manner, and as in a
prison, there were many blows inflicted on our bodies, and tortures, and things
to agitate our whole souls by the blasphemies which those around us uttered
against the Deity, and the threats which they breathed forth against ourselves,
and which the emperor himself poured forth with such vehemence, being indignant
with us not in behalf of any one else, for in that case he would soon have been
appeased, but because of himself and his great desire to be declared a god, in
which desire he considered that the Jews were the only people who did not
acquiesce, and who were unable to subscribe to it), (369) we at last recovered
our breath, not because we had been afraid of death from a base hankering after
life, since we would have cheerfully embraced death as immortality if our laws
and customs could have been established by such means, but because we knew that
we should be destroyed with great ignominy, without any desirable object being
secured by such means, for whatever insults ambassadors are subjected to are at
all times referred to those who sent them. (370) It was owing to these
considerations that we were able to hold up our heads for a while, but there
were other circumstances which terrified us, and kept us in great perplexity and
distress to hear what the emperor would decide, and what he would pronounce, and
what kind of sentence he would ultimately deliver; for he heard the general
tenor of our arguments, though he disdained to attend to some of our facts. But
would it not be a terrible thing for the interests of all the Jews throughout
the whole world to be thrown into confusion by the treatment to which we, its
five ambassadors, were exposed? (371) For if he were to give us up to our
enemies, what other city could enjoy tranquility? What city would there be in
which the citizens would not attack the Jews living in it? What synagogue would
be left uninjured? What state would not overturn every principle of justice in
respect of those of their countrymen who arrayed themselves in opposition to the
national laws and customs of the Jews? They will be overthrown, they will be
shipwrecked, they will be sent to the bottom, with all the particular laws of
the nation, and those too which are common to all and in accordance with the
principles of justice recognized in every city. (372) We, then, being
overwhelmed with affliction, in our misery perplexed ourselves with such
reasonings as these; for even those who up to this time had seemed to cooperate
with us were now wearied of taking our part. Therefore, when we called them
forth, they being within, did not remain, but came forth privily in fear,
knowing well the desire which the emperor had to be looked upon as God. (373) We
have now related in a concise and summary manner the cause of the hatred of
Gaius to the whole nation of the Jews; we must now proceed to make our palinode
to Gaius.{14} |
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