Carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero.
Seize the day, counting as little as possible
on tomorrow.
Quintus Horatius Flaccus
Flaccus was a Roman cognomen of the plebeian Fulvii, considered
one of the most illustrious gentes of the city. Cicero and Pliny
state that the family was originally from Tusculum, and that
members still lived there in the 1st century.
As usual for cognomina, "Flaccus" was likely
originally a nickname, probably of Marcus Fulvius Flaccus, the
founder of the family. It has been variously interpreted as meaning
"big ears", "flop ears", "floppy",
or "fatty".
FLACCUS, a cognomen in the plebeian gens Fulvia, one of the
most illustrious in ancient Rome. Cicero and Pliny state that
the family came from Tusculum, where some were still living in
the middle of the 1st century n.c. Of the Fulvii Flacci the most
important were the following:
QUINTUS FULVIUS FLACCUS, son of the first of the family, Marcus,
who was consul with Appius Claudius Caudex in 264. He especially
distinguished himself during the second Punic War. He was consul
four times (237, 224, 212, 209), censor (231) pontifex maximus
(216), praetor urbanus (215). During his first consulships he
did good service against the Ligurians, Gauls and Insubrians.
In 212 he defeated Hanno near Beneventum, and with his colleague
Appius Claudius Pulcher began the siege of Capua. The capture
of this place was considered so important that their imperium
was prolonged, but on condition that they should not leave Capua
until it had been taken. Hannibals unexpected diversion against
Rome interfered with the operations for the moment, but his equally
unexpected retirement enabled Flaccus, who had been summoned
to Rome to protect the city, to return, and bring the siege to
a successful conclusion. He punished the inhabitants with great
severity, alleging in excuse that they had shown themselves bitterly
hostile to Rome. He was nominated dictator to hold the consular
elections at which he was himself elected (209). He was appointed
to the command of the army in Lucania and Bruttium, where he
crushed all further attempts at rebellion. Nothing further is
known of him. The chief authority for his life is the part of
Livy dealing with the period (see PUNIC WARS).
His brother GNAEUS was convicted of gross cowardice against
Hannibal near Herdoriiae in 210, and went into voluntary exile
at Tarquinii. His son, QUINTUS, waged war with signal success
against the Celtiberians in 182181, and the Ligurians in 179.
Having vowed to build a temple to Fortuna Equestris, he dismantled
the temple of Juno Lacinia in Bruttium of its marble slabs. This
theft became known and he was compelled to restore them, though
they were never put back in their places. Subsequently he lost
his reason and hanged himself.
MARCUS FuLVIUS FLACCUS, grandnephew of the first Quintus,
lived in the times of the Gracchi, of whom he was a strong supporter.
After the death of Tiberius Gracchus (133 B.c.) he was appointed
in his place one of the commission of three for the distribution
of the land. He was suspected of having had a hand in the sudden
death of the younger Scipio (129), but there was no direct evidence
against him. When consul in 125, he proposed to confer the Roman
citizenship on all the allies, and to allow even those who had
not acquired it the right of appeal to the popular assembly against
penal judgments. This proposal, though for the time successfully
opposed by the senate, eventually led to the Social War. The
attack made upon the Massilians (who were allies of Rome) by
the Salluvii (Salyes) afforded a convenient excuse for sending
Flaccus out of Rome~ After his return in triumph, he was again
sent away (122), this time with Gaius Gracchus to Carthage to
found a colony, but did not remain absent long. In 121 the disputes
between the optimates and the party of Gracchus culminated in
open hostilities, during which Flaccus was killed, together with
Gracchus and a number of his supporters. It is generally agreed
that Flaccus was perfectly honest in his support of the Gracchan
reforms, but his hot-headedness did more harm than good to the
cause. Cicero (Brulus, 28) speaks of him as an orator of moderate
powers, but a diligent student.
Flaccus , family of the ancient Roman gens of Fulvius. Marcus
Fulvius Flaccus,. a Roman consul in 264 B.C., was the founder
of the family.
His son, Quintus Fulvius Flaccus, was Roman consul four times
(237, 224, 212, 209 B.C.), censor (231), pontifex maximus [high
priest] (216), and urban praetor (215). He distinguished himself
in campaigns against the Gauls, Insubrians, and Ligurians. In
the Second Punic War he triumphed over Hanno, the Carthaginian
general, in 212 BC. He defeated (211) the Carthaginians near
Beneventum, captured (211) Capua after a prolonged siege, and
overcame (209) Hannibal's garrisons in Lucania and Bruttium.
Cnaeus Fulvius Flaccus,. Quintus's brother, was convicted
of cowardice against Hannibal in 210 and went into voluntary
exile.
Quintus Fulvius Flaccus, his son, waged war successfully against
the Celtiberians (182181) and the Ligurians (179). He eventually
went mad and hanged himself.
Marcus Fulvius Flaccus,. grandnephew of the first Quintus,
lived in the 2d cent. B.C. and was a supporter of the liberal
measures of the Gracchi family. As consul in 125, he proposed
to make all allies Roman citizens. This proposal, which met Senate
opposition, led to the Social War. He was sent to subdue the
Salluvii, who had attacked the Massilians, and returned to Rome
in triumph. He was killed in 121 along with Caius Sempronius
Gracchus and a number of his supporters.
Flaccus
(fl´ks) (KEY) , family of the ancient Roman gens
of Fulvius. Marcus Fulvius Flaccus, a Roman consul in 264 B.C.,
was the founder of the family. His son, Quintus Fulvius Flaccus,
was Roman consul four times (237, 224, 212, 209 B.C.), censor
(231), pontifex maximus [high priest] (216), and urban praetor
(215). In the Second Punic War he defeated (211) the Carthaginians
near Beneventum, captured (211) Capua, and overcame (209) Hannibal's
garrisons in Lucania and Bruttium. Cnaeus Fulvius Flaccus, Quintus's
brother, was convicted of cowardice against Hannibal in 210 and
went into voluntary exile. Quintus Fulvius Flaccus, his son,
waged war successfully against the Celtiberians (182181)
and the Ligurians (179). He eventually went mad and hanged himself.
Marcus Fulvius Flaccus, grandnephew of the first Quintus, lived
in the 2d cent. B.C. and was a supporter of the liberal measures
of the Gracchi family. As consul in 125, he proposed to make
all allies Roman citizens. This proposal, which met Senate opposition,
led to the Social War. He was sent to subdue the Salluvii, who
had attacked the Massilians, and returned to Rome in triumph.
He was killed in 121 along with Caius Sempronius Gracchus and
a number of his supporters.
FLACCUS
I. (1) Flaccus Avillius succeeded Sejanus in his hatred of
and hostile designs against the Jewish nation. He was not, indeed,
able to injure the whole people by open and direct means as he
had been, inasmuch as he had less power for such a purpose, but
he inflicted the most intolerable evils on all who came within
his reach. Moreover, though in appearance he only attacked a
portion of the nation, in point of fact he directed his aims
against all whom he could find anywhere, proceeding more by art
than by force; for those men who, though of tyrannical natures
and dispositions, have not strength enough to accomplish their
designs openly, seek to compass them by manoeuvres. (2) This
Flaccus being chosen by Tiberius Caesar as one of his intimate
companions, after the death of Severus, who had been lieutenantgovernor
in Egypt, was appointed viceroy of Alexandria and the country
round about, being a man who at the beginning, as far as appearance
went, had given innumerable instances of his excellence, for
he was a man of prudence and diligence, and great acuteness of
perception, very energetic in executing what he had determined
on, very eloquent as a speaker, and skilful too at discerning
what was suppressed as well as at understanding what was said.
(3) Accordingly in a short time he became perfectly acquainted
with the affairs of Egypt, and they are of a very various and
diversified character, so that they are not easily comprehended
even by those who from their earliest infancy have made them
their study. The scribes were a superfluous body when he had
made such advances towards the knowledge of all things, whether
important or trivial, by his extended experience, that he not
only surpassed them, but from his great accuracy was qualified
instead of a pupil to become the instructor of those who had
hitherto been the teachers of all other persons. (4) However,
all those things in which he displayed an admirable system and
great wisdom concerning the accounts and the general arrangement
of the revenues of the land, though they were serious matters
and of the last importance, were nevertheless not such as gave
any proofs of a soul fit for the task of governing; but those
things which exhibited a more brilliant and royal disposition
he also displayed with great freedom. For instance, he bore himself
with considerable dignity, and pride and pomp are advantageous
things for a ruler; and he decided all suits of importance in
conjunction with the magistrates, he pulled down the overproud,
he forbade promiscuous mobs of men from all quarters to assemble
together, and prohibited all associations and meetings which
were continually feasting together under pretence of sacrifices,
making a drunken mockery of public business, treating with great
vigour and severity all who resisted his commands. (5) Then when
he had filled the whole city and country with his wise legislation,
he proceeded in turn to regulate the military affairs of the
land, issuing commands, arranging matters, training the troops
of every kind, infantry, cavalry, and lightarmed, teaching the
commanders not to deprive the soldiers of their pay, and so drive
them to acts of piracy and rapine, and teaching each individual
soldier not to proceed to any actions unauthorised by his military
service, remembering that he was appointed with the especial
object of preserving peace.
II. (6) Perhaps some one may say here: "Do you then,
my good man, you who have determined to accuse this man, bring
no accusation whatever against him, but on the contrary, weave
long panegyrics in his honour? Are you not doting and mad?"
"I am not mad, my friend, nor am I a downright fool, so
as to be unable to see the consequences of connexion of things.
(7) I praise Flaccus, not because it is right to praise an enemy,
but in order to make his wickedness more conspicuous; for pardon
is given to a man who does wrong from ignorance of what is right;
but he who does wrong knowingly has no excuse, being already
condemned by the tribunal of his own conscience."
III. (8) For having received a government which was intended
to last six years, for the first five years, while Tiberius Caesar
was alive, he both preserved peace and also governed the country
generally with such vigour and energy that he was superior to
all the governors who had gone before him. (9) But in the last
year, after Tiberius was dead, and when Gaius had succeeded him
as emperor, he began to relax in and to be indifferent about
everything, whether it was that he was overwhelmed with most
heavy grief because of Tiberius (for it was evident to everyone
that he grieved exceedingly as if for a near relation, both by
his continued depression of spirits and his incessant weeping,
pouring forth tears without end as if from an inexhaustible fountain),
or whether it was because he was disaffected to his successor,
because he preferred devoting himself to the party of the real
rather than to that of the adopted children, or whether it was
because he had been one of those who had joined in the conspiracy
against the mother of Gaius, having joined againsther at the
time when the accusations were brought against her, on account
of which she was put to death, and having escaped through fear
of the consequence of proceeding against him. (10) However, for
a time he still paid some attention to the affairs of the state,
not wholly abandoning the administration of his government; but
when he heard that the grandson of Tiberius and his partner in
the government had been put to death at the command of Gaius,
he was smitten with intolerable anguish, and threw himself on
the ground, and lay there speechless, being utterly deprived
of his senses, for indeed his mind had long since been enervated
by grief. (11) For as long as that child lived he did not despair
of some sparks still remaining of his own safety, but now that
he was dead, he considered that all his own hopes had likewise
died with him, even if a slight breeze of assistance might still
be left, such as his friendship with Macro, who had unbounded
influence with Gaius in his authority; and who, as it is said,
had very greatly contributed to his obtaining the supreme power,
and in a still higher degree to his personal safety, (12) since
Tiberius had frequently thought of putting Gaius out of the way,
as a wicked man and one who was in no respects calculated by
nature for the exercise of authority, being influenced also partly
by his apprehensions for his grandson; for he feared lest, when
he himself was dead, his death too would be added to the funerals
of his family. But Macro had constantly bade him discard these
apprehensions from his mind, and had praised Gaius, as a man
of a simple, and honest, and sociable character; and as one who
was very much attached to his cousin, so that he would willingly
yield the supreme authority to him alone, and the first rank
in everything. (13) And Tiberius, being deceived by all these
representations, without being aware of what he was doing, left
behind him a most irreconcileable enemy, to himself, and his
grandson, and his whole family, and to Macro, who was his chief
adviser and comforter, and to all mankind; (14) for when Macro
saw the Gaius was forsaking the way of virtue and yielding to
his unbridled passions, following them wherever they led him
and against whatever objects they led him, he admonished and
reproved him, looking upon him as the same Gaius who, while Tiberius
was alive, was mild-tempered and docile; but to his misery he
suffered most terrible punishment for his exceeding good-will,
being put to death with his wife, and children, and all his family,
as a grievous and troublesome object to his new sovereign. (15)
For whenever he saw him at a distance coming towards him, he
used to speak in this manner to those who were with him: "Let
us not smile; let us look sad: here comes the censor and monitor;
the all-wise man, he who is beginning now to be the schoolmaster
of a full-grown man, and of an emperor, after time itself has
separated him from and discarded the tutors of his earliest infancy."
IV. (16) When, therefore, Flaccus learnt that he too was put
to death, he utterly abandoned all other hope for the future,
and was no longer able to apply himself to public affairs as
he had done before, being enervated and wholly broken down in
spirit. (17) But when a magistrate begins to despair of his power
of exerting authority, it follows inevitably, that his subjects
must quickly become disobedient, especially those who are naturally,
at every trivial or common occurrence, inclined to show insubordination,
and, among people of such a disposition, the Egyptian nation
is pre-eminent, being constantly in the habit of exciting great
seditions from very small sparks. (18) And being placed in a
situation of great and perplexing difficulty he began to rage,
and simultaneously, with the change of his disposition for the
worse, he also altered everything which had existed before, beginning
with his nearest friends and his most habitual customs; for he
began to suspect and to drive from him those who were well affected
to him, and who were most sincerely his friends, and he reconciled
himself to those who were originally his declared enemies, and
he used them as advisers under all circumstances; (19) but they,
for they persisted in their ill-will, being reconciled with him
only in words and in appearance, but in their actions and in
their hearts they bore him incurable enmity, and though only
pretending a genuine friendship towards him, like actors in a
theatre, they drew him over wholly to their side; and so the
governor became a subject, and the subjects became the governor,
advancing the most unprofitable opinions, and immediately confirming
and insisting upon them; (20) for they became executors of all
the plans which they had devised, treating him like a mute person
on the stage, as one who was only, by way of making up the show,
inscribed with the title of authority, being themselves a lot
of Dionysiuses, demagogues, and of Lampos, a pack of cavillers
and word-splitters; and of Isidoruses, sowers of sedition, busy-bodies,
devisers of evil, troublers of the state; for this is the name
which has, at last, been given to them. (21) All these men, having
devised a most grievous design against the Jews, proceeded to
put it in execution, and coming privately to Flaccus said to
him, (22) "All your hope from the child of Tiberius Nero
has now perished, and that which was your second best prospect,
your companion Macro, is gone too, and you have no chance of
favour with the emperor, therefore we must find another advocate,
by whom Gaius may be made propitious to us, (23) and that advocate
is the city of Alexandria, which all the family of Augustus has
honoured from the very beginning, and our present master above
all the rest; and it will be a sufficient mediator in our behalf,
if it can obtain one boon from you, and you cannot confer a greater
benefit upon it than by abandoning and denouncing all the Jews."
(24) Now though upon this he ought to have rejected and driven
away the speakers as workers of revolution and common enemies,
he agrees on the contrary to what they say, and at first he made
his designs against the Jews less evident, only abstaining from
listening to causes brought before his tribunal with impartiality
and equity, and inclining more to one side than to the other,
and not allowing to both sides an equal freedom of speech; but
whenever any Jew came before him he showed his aversion to him,
and departed from his habitual affability in their case; but
afterwards he exhibited his hostility to them in a more conspicuous
manner.
V. (25) Moreover, some occurrences of the following description
increased that folly and insolence of his which was derived from
instruction rather than from nature. Gaius Caesar gave Agrippa,
the grandson of Herod the king, the third part of his paternal
inheritance as a sovereignty, which Philip the tetrarch, who
was his uncle on his father's side, had previously enjoyed. (26)
And when he was about to set out to take possession of his kingdom,
Gaius advised him to avoid the voyage from Brundusium to Syria,
which was a long and troublesome one, and rather to take the
shorter one by Alexandria, and to wait for the periodical winds;
for he said that the merchant vessels which set forth from that
harbour were fast sailers, and that the pilots were most experienced
men, who guided their ships like skilful coachmen guide their
horses, keeping them straight in the proper course. And he took
his advice, looking upon him both as his master and also as a
giver of good counsel. (27) Accordingly, going down to Dicaearchia,
and seeing some Alexandrian vessels in the harbour, looking all
ready and fit to put to sea, he embarked with his followers,
and had a fair voyage, and so a few days afterwards he arrived
at his journey's end, unforeseen and unexpected, having commanded
the captains of his vessels (for he came in sight of Pharos about
twilight in the evening) to furl their sails, and to keep a short
distance out of sight in the open sea, until it became late in
the evening and dark, and then at night he entered the port,
that when he disembarked he might find all the citizens buried
in sleep, and so, without any one seeing him, he might arrive
at the house of the man who was to be his entertainer. (28) With
so much modesty then did this man arrive, wishing if it were
possible to enter without being perceived by any one in the city.
For he had not come to see Alexandria, since he had sojourned
in it before, when he was preparing to take his voyage to Rome
to see Tiberius, but he desired at this time to take the quickest
road, so as to arrive at his destination with the smallest possible
delay. (29) But the men of Alexandria being ready to burst with
envy and ill-will (for the Egyptian disposition is by nature
a most jealous and envious one and inclined to look on the good
fortune of others as adversity to itself), and being at the same
time filled with an ancient and what I may in a manner call an
innate enmity towards the Jews, were indignant at any one's becoming
a king of the Jews, no less than if each individual among them
had been deprived of an ancestral kingdom of his own inheritance.
(30) And then again his friends and companions came and stirred
up the miserable Flaccus, inviting, and exciting, and stimulating
him to feel the same envy with themselves; saying, "The
arrival of this man to take upon him his government is equivalent
to a deposition of yourself. He is invested with a greater dignity
of honour and glory than you. He attracts all eyes towards himself
when they see the array of sentinels and bodyguards around him
adorned with silvered and gilded arms. (31) For ought he to have
come into the presence of another governor, when it was in his
power to have sailed over the sea, and so to have arrived in
safety at his own government? For, indeed, if Gaius did advise
or rather command him to do so, he ought rather with earnest
solicitations to have deprecated any visit to this country, in
order that the real governor of it might not be brought into
disrepute and appear to have his authority lessened by being
apparently disregarded." (32) When he heard this he was
more indignant than before, and in public indeed he pretended
to be his companion and his friend, because of his fear of the
man who directed his course, but secretly he bore him much ill-will,
and told every one how he hated him, and abused him behind his
back, and insulted him indirectly, since he did not dare to do
so openly; (33) for he encouraged the idle and lazy mob of the
city (and the mob of Alexandria is one accustomed to great license
of speech, and one which delights above measure in calumny and
evil-speaking), to abuse the king, either beginning to revile
him in his own person, or else exhorting and exciting others
to do so by the agency of persons who were accustomed to serve
him in business of this kind. (34) And they, having had the cue
given them, spent all their days reviling the king in the public
schools, and stringing together all sorts of gibes to turn him
into ridicule. And at times they employed poets who compose farces,
and managers of puppet shows, displaying their natural aptitude
for every kind of disgraceful employment, though they were very
slow at learning anything that was creditable, but very acute,
and quick, and ready at learning anything of an opposite nature.
(35) For why did he not show his indignation, why did he not
commit them to prison, why did he not chastise them for their
insolent and disloyal evil speaking? And even if he had not been
a king but only one of the household of Caesar, ought he not
to have had some privileges and especial honours? The fact is
that all these circumstances are an undeniable evidence that
Flaccus was a participator in all this abuse; for he who might
have punished it with the most extreme severity, and entirely
checked it, and who yet took no steps to restrain it, was clearly
convicted of having permitted and encouraged it; but whenever
an ungoverned multitude begins a course of evil doing it never
desists, but proceeds from one wickedness to another, continually
doing some monstrous thing.
VI. (36) There was a certain madman named Carabbas, afflicted
not with a wild, savage, and dangerous madness (for that comes
on in fits without being expected either by the patient or by
bystanders), but with an intermittent and more gentle kind; this
man spent all this days and nights naked in the roads, minding
neither cold nor heat, the sport of idle children and wanton
youths; (37) and they, driving the poor wretch as far as the
public gymnasium, and setting him up there on high that he might
be seen by everybody, flattened out a leaf of papyrus and put
it on his head instead of a diadem, and clothed the rest of his
body with a common door mat instead of a cloak and instead of
a sceptre they put in his hand a small stick of the native papyrus
which they found lying by the way side and gave to him; (38)
and when, like actors in theatrical spectacles, he had received
all the insignia of royal authority, and had been dressed and
adorned like a king, the young men bearing sticks on their shoulders
stood on each side of him instead of spear-bearers, in imitation
of the bodyguards of the king, and then others came up, some
as if to salute him, and others making as though they wished
to plead their causes before him, and others pretending to wish
to consult with him about the affairs of the state. (39) Then
from the multitude of those who were standing around there arose
a wonderful shout of men calling out Maris; and this is the name
by which it is said that they call the kings among the Syrians;
for they knew that Agrippa was by birth a Syrian, and also that
he was possessed of a great district of Syria of which he was
the sovereign; (40) when Flaccus heard, or rather when he saw
this, he would have done right if he had apprehended the maniac
and put him in prison, that he might not give to those who reviled
him any opportunity or excuse for insulting their superiors,
and if he had chastised those who dressed him up for having dared
both openly and disguisedly, both with words and actions, to
insult a king and a friend of Caesar, and one who had been honoured
by the Roman senate with imperial authority; but he not only
did not punish them, but he did not think fit even to check them,
but gave complete license and impunity to all those who designed
ill, and who were disposed to show their enmity and spite to
the king, pretending not to see what he did see, and not to hear
what he did hear. (41) And when the multitude perceived this,
I do not mean the ordinary and well-regulated population of the
city, but the mob which, out of its restlessness and love of
an unquiet and disorderly life, was always filling every place
with tumult and confusion, and who, because of their habitual
idleness and laziness, were full of treachery and revolutionary
plans, they, flocking to the theatre the first thing in the morning,
having already purchased Flaccus for a miserable price, which
he with his mad desire for glory and with his slavish disposition,
condescended to take to the injury not only of himself, but also
of the safety of the commonwealth, all cried out, as if at a
signal given, to erect images in the synagogues, (42) proposing
a most novel and unprecedented violation of the law. And though
they knew this (for they are very shrewd in their wickedness),
they adopted a deep design, putting forth the name of Caesar
as a screen, to whom it would be impiety to attribute the deeds
of the guilty; (43) what then did the governor of the country
do? Knowing that the city had two classes of inhabitants, our
own nation and the people of the country, and that the whole
of Egypt was inhabited in the same manner, and that Jews who
inhabited Alexandria and the rest of the country from the Catabathmos
on the side of Libya to the boundaries of Ethiopia were not less
than a million of men; and that the attempts which were being
made were directed against the whole nation, and that it was
a most mischievous thing to distress the ancient hereditary customs
of the land; he, disregarding all these considerations, permitted
the mob to proceed with the erection of the statues, though he
might have given them a vast number of admonitory precepts instead
of any such permission, either commanding them as their governor,
or advising them as their friend.
VII. (44) But he, for he was eagerly cooperating in all that
was being done amiss, thought fit to use his superior power to
face the seditious tumult with fresh additions of evil, and as
far as it depended on him, one may almost say that he filled
the whole of the inhabited world with civil wars; (45) for it
was sufficiently evident that the report about the destruction
of the synagogues, which took its rise in Alexandria would be
immediately spread over all the districts of Egypt, and would
extend from that country to the east and to the oriental nations,
and from the borders of the land in the other direction, and
from the Mareotic district which is the frontier of Libya, towards
the setting of the sun and the western nations. For no one country
can contain the whole Jewish nation, by reason of its populousness;
(46) on which account they frequent all the most prosperous and
fertile countries of Europe and Asia, whether islands or continents,
looking indeed upon the holy city as their metropolis in which
is erected the sacred temple of the most high God, but accounting
those regions which have been occupied by their fathers, and
grandfathers, and great grandfathers, and still more remote ancestors,
in which they have been born and brought up, as their country;
and there are even some regions to which they came the very moment
that they were originally settled, sending a colony of their
people to do a pleasure to the founders of the colony. (47) And
there was reason to fear lest all the populace in every country,
taking what was done in Egypt as a model and as an excuse, might
insult those Jews who were their fellow citizens, by introducing
new regulations with respect to their synagogues and their national
customs; (48) but the Jews, for they were not inclined to remain
quiet under everything, although naturally entirely disposed
towards peace, not only because contests for natural customs
do among all men appear more important than those which are only
for the sake of life, but also because they alone of all the
people under the sun, if they were deprived of their houses of
prayer, would at the same time be deprived of all means of showing
their piety towards their benefactors, which they would have
looked upon as worse than ten thousand deaths, inasmuch as if
their synagogues were destroyed they would no longer have any
sacred places in which they could declare their gratitude, might
have reasonably said to those who opposed them: (49) You, without
being aware of it, are taking away honour from your lords instead
of conferring any on them. Our houses of prayer are manifestly
incitements to all the Jews in every part of the habitable world
to display their piety and loyalty towards the house of Augustus;
and if they are destroyed from among us, what other place, or
what other manner of showing that honour, will be left to us?
(50) For if we were to neglect the opportunity of adhering to
our national customs when it is afforded to us, we should deserve
to meet with the severest punishment, as not giving any proper
or adequate return for the benefits which we have received; but
if, while it is in our power to do so, we, in conformity with
our own laws which Augustus himself is in the habit of confirming,
obey in everything, then I do not see what great, or even what
small offence can be laid to our charge; unless any one were
to impute to us that we do not transgress the laws of deliberate
purpose, and that we do not intentionally take care to depart
from our national customs, which practices, even if they at first
attack others, do often in the end visit those who are guilty
of them. (51) But Flaccus, saying nothing that he ought to have
said, and everything which he ought not to have said, has sinned
against us in this manner; but those men whom he has studied
to gratify, what has been their design? Have they had the feelings
of men wishing to do honour to Caesar? Was there then a scarcity
of temples in the city, the greatest and most important parts
of which are all allotted to one or other of the gods, in which
they might have erected any statues they pleased? (52) We have
been describing the evidence of hostile and unfriendly men, who
seek to injure us with such artifice, that even when injuring
us they may not appear to have been acting iniquitously, and
yet that we who are injured by them cannot resist with safety
to ourselves; for, my good men, it does not contribute to the
honour of the emperor to abrogate the laws, to disturb the national
customs of a people, to insult those who live in the same country,
and to teach those who dwell in other cities to disregard unanimity
and tranquillity.
VIII. (53) Since, therefore, the attempt which was being made
to violate the law appeared to him to be prospering, while he
was destroying the synagogues, and not leaving even their name,
he proceeded onwards to another exploit, namely, the utter destruction
of our constitution, that when all those things to which alone
our life was anchored were cut away, namely, our national customs
and our lawful political rights and social privileges, we might
be exposed to the very extremity of calamity, without having
any stay left to which we could cling for safety, (54) for a
few days afterwards he issued a notice in which he called us
all foreigners and aliens, without giving us an opportunity of
being heard in our own defence, but condemning us without a trial;
and what command can be more full of tyranny than this? He himself
being everything--accuser, enemy, witness, judge, and executioner,
added then to the two former appellations a third also, allowing
any one who was inclined to proceed to exterminate the Jews as
prisoners of war. (55) So when the people had received this license,
what did they do? There are five districts in the city, named
after the first five letters of the written alphabet, of these
two are called the quarters of the Jews, because the chief portion
of the Jews lives in them. There are also a few scattered Jews,
but only a very few, living in some of the other districts. What
then did they do? They drove the Jews entirely out of four quarters,
and crammed them all into a very small portion of one; (56) and
by reason of their numbers they were dispersed over the sea-shore,
and desert places, and among the tombs, being deprived of all
their property; while the populace, overrunning their desolate
houses, turned to plunder, and divided the booty among themselves
as if they had obtained it in war. And as no one hindered them,
they broke open even the workshops of the Jews, which were all
shut up because of their mourning for Drusilla, {1}{she was the
sister of the emperor, and at her death her brother ordered that
divine honours should be paid to her.} and carried off all that
they found there, and bore it openly through the middle of the
market-place as if they had only been making use of their own
property. (57) And the cessation of business to which they were
compelled to submit was even a worse evil than the plunder to
which they were exposed, as the consequence was that those who
had lent money lost what they had lent, and as no one was permitted,
neither farmer, nor captain of a ship, nor merchant, nor artisan,
to employ himself in his usual manner, so that poverty was brought
on them from two sides at once, both from rapine, as when license
was thus given to plunder them they were stripped of everything
in one day, and also from the circumstance of their no longer
being able to earn money by their customary occupations.
IX. (58) And though these were evils sufficiently intolerable,
yet nevertheless they appear actually trifling when compared
with those which were subsequently inflicted on them, for poverty
indeed is a bitter evil, especially when it is caused by the
machinations of one's enemies, still it is less than insult and
personal ill treatment even of the slightest character. (59)
But now the evils which were heaped upon our people were so excessive
and inordinate, that if a person were desirous to use appropriate
language, he would never call them insults of assaults, but,
as it appears to me, he would actually be wholly at a loss for
suitable expressions, on account of the enormity of the cruelties
now newly invented against them, so that if the treatment which
men experience from enemies who have subdued them in war, however
implacable they may be by nature, were to be compared with that
to which the Jews were subjected, it would appear most merciful.
(60) Enemies, indeed, plunder their conquered foes of their money,
and lead away multitudes in captivity, having incurred the same
risk of losing all that they had if they themselves had been
defeated. Not but that in all such cases there are very many
persons for whom their relations and friends put down a ransom,
and who are thus emancipated from captivity, inasmuch as though
their enemies could not be worked upon by compassion, they could
by love of money. But what is the use of going on in this way,
some one will say, for as long as men escape from danger it signifies
but little in what way their preservation is brought to pass?
(61) Moreover, it has often happened that enemies have granted
to those who have fallen in battle the honour of funeral rites,
those who were gentle and humane burying them at their own expense,
and those who have carried on their enmity even against the dead
giving up their bodies to their friends under a truce, in order
that they might not be deprived of the last honour of all, the
customary ceremonies of sepulture. (62) This, then, is the conduct
of enemies in time of war; let us now see what was done by those
who a little while before had been friends in time of peace.
For after plundering them of everything, and driving them from
their homes, and expelling them by main force from most of the
quarters of the city, our people, as if they were blockaded and
hemmed in by a circle of besieging enemies, being oppressed by
a terrible scarcity and want of necessary things, and seeing
their wives and their children dying before their eyes by an
unnatural famine (63) (for every other place was full of prosperity
and abundance, as the river had irrigated the corn lands plentifully
with its inundations, and as all the champaign country, which
is devoted to the purposes of bearing wheat, was this year supplying
a most abundant over-crop of corn with very unusual fertility),
(64) being no longer able to support their want, some, though
they had never been used to do so before, came to the houses
of their friends and relations to beg them to contribute such
food as was absolutely necessary as a charity; others, who from
their high and free-born spirit could not endure the condition
of beggars, as being a slavish state unbecoming the dignity of
a freeman, came down into the market with no other object than,
miserable men that they were, to buy food for their families
and for themselves. (65) And then, being immediately seized by
those who had excited the seditious multitude against them, they
were treacherously put to death, and then were dragged along
and trampled under foot by the whole city, and completely destroyed,
without the least portion of them being left which could possibly
receive burial; (66) and in this way their enemies, who in their
savage madness had become transformed into the nature of wild
beasts, slew them and thousands of others with all kinds of agony
and tortures, and newly invented cruelties, for wherever they
met with or caught sight of a Jew, they stoned him, or beat him
with sticks, not at once delivering their blows upon mortal parts,
lest they should die speedily, and so speedily escape from the
sufferings which it was their design to inflict upon them. (67)
Some persons even, going still great and greater lengths in the
iniquity and license of their barbarity, disdained all blunter
weapons, and took up the most efficacious arms of all, fire and
iron, and slew many with the sword, and destroyed not a few with
flames. (68) And the most merciless of all their persecutors
in some instances burnt whole families, husbands with their wives,
and infant children with their parents, in the middle of the
city, sparing neither age nor youth, nor the innocent helplessness
of infants. And when they had a scarcity of fuel, they collected
faggots of green wood, and slew them by the smoke rather than
by fire, contriving a still more miserable and protracted death
for those unhappy people, so that their bodies lay about promiscuously
in every direction half burnt, a grievous and most miserable
sight. (69) And if some of those who were employed in the collection
of sticks were too slow, they took their own furniture, of which
they had plundered them, to burn their persons, robbing them
of their most costly articles, and burning with them things of
the greatest use and value, which they used as fuel instead of
ordinary timber. (70) Many men too, who were alive, they bound
by one foot, fastening them round the ankle, and thus they dragged
them along and bruised them, leaping on them, designing to inflict
the most barbarous of deaths upon them, (71) and then when they
were dead they raged no less against them with interminable hostility,
and inflicted still heavier insults on their persons, dragging
them, I had almost said, though all the alleys and lanes of the
city, until the corpse, being lacerated in all its skin, and
flesh, and muscles from the inequality and roughness of the ground,
all the previously united portions of his composition being torn
asunder and separated from one another, was actually torn to
pieces. (72) And those who did these things, mimicked the sufferers,
like people employed in the representation of theatrical farces;
but the relations and friends of those who were the real victims,
merely because they sympathized with the misery of their relations,
were led away to prison, were scourged, were tortured, and after
all the ill treatment which their living bodies could endure,
found the cross the end of all, and the punishment from which
they could not escape.
X. (73) But after Flaccus had broken through every right,
and trampled upon every principle of justice, and had left no
portion of the Jews free from the extreme severity of his designing
malice, in the boundlessness of his wickedness he contrived a
monstrous and unprecedented attack upon them, being ever an inventor
of new acts of iniquity, (74) for he arrested thirty-eight members
of our council of elders, which our saviour and benefactor, Augustus,
elected to manage the affairs of the Jewish nation after the
death of the king of our own nation, having sent written commands
to that effect to Manius Maximus when he was about to take upon
himself for the second time the government of Egypt and of the
country, he arrested them, I say, in their own houses, and commanded
them to be thrown into prison, and arranged a splendid procession
to send through the middle of the market-place a body of old
men prisoners, with their hands bound, some with thongs and others
with iron chains, whom he led in this plight into the theatre,
a most miserable spectacle, and one wholly unsuited to the times.
(75) And then he commanded them all to stand in front of their
enemies, who were sitting down, to make their disgrace the more
conspicuous, and ordered them all to be stripped of their clothes
and scourged with stripes, in a way that only the most wicked
of malefactors are usually treated, and they were flogged with
such severity that some of them the moment they were carried
out died of their wounds, while others were rendered so ill for
a long time that their recovery was despaired of. (76) And the
enormity of this cruelty is proved by many other circumstances,
and it will be further proved most evidently and undeniably by
the circumstance which I am about to mention. Three of the members
of this council of elders, Euodius, and Trypho, and Audro, had
been stripped of all their property, being plundered of everything
that was in their houses at one onset, and he was well aware
that they had been exposed to this treatment, for it had been
related to him when he had in the first instance sent for our
rulers, under pretence of wishing to promote a reconciliation
between them and the rest of the city; (77) but nevertheless,
though he well knew that they had been deprived of all their
property, he scourged them in the very sight of those who had
plundered them, that thus they might endure the twofold misery
of poverty and personal ill treatment, and that their persecutors
might reap the double pleasure of enjoying riches which did in
no respect belong to them, and also of feasting their eyes to
satiety on the disgrace of those whom they had plundered. (78)
Now, though I desire to mention a circumstance which took place
at that time, I am in doubt whether to do so or not, lest if
it should be looked upon as unimportant, it may appear to take
off from the enormity of these great iniquities; but even if
it is unimportant in itself, it is nevertheless an indication
of no trifling wickedness of disposition. There are different
kinds of scourges used in the city, distinguished with reference
to the deserts or crimes of those who are about to be scourged.
Accordingly, it is usual for the Egyptians of the country themselves
to be scourged with a different kind of scourge, and by a different
class of executioners, but for the Alexandrians in the city to
be scourged with rods by the Alexandrian lictors, (79) and this
custom had been preserved, in the case also of our own people,
by all the predecessors of Flaccus, and by Flaccus himself in
the earlier periods of his government; for it is possible, it
really is possible, even in ignominy, to find some slight circumstance
of honour, and even in ill treatment to find something which
is, to some extent, a relaxation, when any one allows the nature
of things to be examined into by itself, and to be confined to
its own indispensable requirements, without adding from his own
ingenuity any additional cruelty or treachery, to separate and
take from it all that is mingled with it of a milder character.
(80) How then can it be looked upon as anything but most infamous,
that when Alexandrian Jews, of the lowest rank, had always been
previously beaten with the rods, suited to freemen and citizens,
if ever they were convicted of having done anything worthy of
stripes, yet now the very rulers of the nation, the council of
the elders, who derived their very titles from the honour in
which they were held and the offices which they filled, should,
in this respect, be treated with more indignity than their own
servants, like the lowest of the Egyptian rustics, even when
found guilty of the very worst of crimes? (81) I omit to mention,
that even if they had committed the most countless iniquities,
nevertheless the governor ought, out of respect for the season,
to have delayed their punishment; for with all rulers, who govern
any state on constitutional principles, and who do not seek to
acquire a character for audacity, but who do really honour their
benefactors, it is the custom to punish no one, even of those
who have been lawfully condemned, until the famous festival and
assembly, in honour of the birth-day of the illustrious emperor,
has passed. (82) But he committed this violation of the laws
at the very season of this festival, and punished men who had
done no wrong; though certainly, if he ever determined to punish
them, he ought to have done so at a subsequent time; but he hastened,
and would admit of no delay, by reason of his eagerness to please
the multitude who was opposed to them, thinking that in this
way he should be able, more easily, to gain them over to the
objects which he had in view. (83) I have known instances before
now of men who had been crucified when this festival and holiday
was at hand, being taken down and given up to their relations,
in order to receive the honours of sepulture, and to enjoy such
observances as are due to the dead; for it used to be considered,
that even the dead ought to derive some enjoyment from the natal
festival of a good emperor, and also that the sacred character
of the festival ought to be regarded. (84) But this man did not
order men who had already perished on crosses to be taken down,
but he commanded living men to be crucified, men to whom the
very time itself gave, if not entire forgiveness, still, at all
events, a brief and temporary respite from punishment; and he
did this after they had been beaten by scourgings in the middle
of the theatre; and after he had tortured them with fire and
sword; (85) and the spectacle of their sufferings was divided;
for the first part of the exhibition lasted from the morning
to the third or fourth hour, in which the Jews were scourged,
were hung up, were tortured on the wheel, were condemned, and
were dragged to execution through the middle of the orchestra;
and after this beautiful exhibition came the dancers, and the
buffoons, and the flute-players, and all the other diversions
of the theatrical contests.
XI. (86) And why do I dwell on these things? for a second
mode of barbarity was afterwards devised against us, because
the governor wished to excite the whole multitude of the army
against us, in accordance with the contrivance of some foreign
informer. Now the information which was laid against the nation
was, that the Jews had entire suits of armour in their houses;
therefore, having sent for a centurion, in whom he placed the
greatest confidence, by name Castor, he ordered him to take with
him the boldest soldier of his own band, to go with haste, and,
without saying a word to any one, to enter the houses of the
Jews, and to search them, and see whether there was any store
of arms laid up in them; (87) and he ran with great speed to
perform the commands which had been given him. But they, having
no suspicion of his intentions, stood at first speechless with
astonishment, their wives and their children clinging to them,
and shedding abundance of tears, because of their fear of being
carried into captivity, for they were in continual expectation
of that, looking upon it as all that was wanting to complete
their total misery. (88) But when they heard from some of those
who were sent to make the search an inquiry as to where they
had laid up their arms, they breathed awhile, and opening all
their secret recesses displayed everything which they had, (89)
being partly delighted and partly grieving; delighted at the
opportunity of repelling the false accusation which was thus
brought against them by its own character, but indignant, in
the first place, because calumnies of such a nature, when concocted
and urged against them by their enemies, were believed beforehand;
and, secondly, because their wives, who were shut up, and who
did not actually come forth out of their inner chambers, and
their virgins, who were kept in the strictest privacy, shunning
the eyes of men, even of those who were their nearest relations,
out of modesty, were now alarmed by being displayed to the public
gaze, not only of persons who were no relations to them, but
even of common soldiers. (90) Nevertheless, though a most rigorous
examination took place, how great a quantity of defensive and
offensive armour do you think was found? Helmets, and breast-plates,
and shields, and daggers, and javelins, and weapons of every
description, were brought out and piled up in heaps; and also
how great a variety of missile weapons, javelins, slings, bows,
and darts? Absolutely not a single thing of the kind; scarcely
even knives sufficient for the daily use of the cooks to prepare
and dress the food. (91) From which circumstance, the simplicity
of their daily manner of life was plainly seen: as they made
no pretence to magnificence or delicate luxury; the nature of
which things is to engender satiety, and satiety is apt to engender
insolence, which is the beginning of all evils. (92) And indeed
it was not a long time before that, that the arms had been taken
away from the Egyptians throughout the whole country by a man
of the name of Bassus, to whom Flaccus had committed this employment.
But at that time one might have beheld a great fleet of ships
sailing down and anchoring in the harbours afforded by the mouths
of the river, full of arms of every possible description, and
numerous beasts of burden loaded with bags made of skins sewn
together and hanging like panniers on each side so as to balance
better, and also almost all the waggons belonging to the camp
filled with weapons of every sort, which were brought in rows
so as to be all seen at once, and arranged together in order.
And the distance between the harbour and the armoury in the king's
palace in which the arms were commanded to be deposited was about
ten stadia; (93) it was then very proper to investigate the houses
of the men who had amassed such quantities of arms; for as they
had often actually revolted, they were naturally liable to be
suspected of designing revolutionary measures, and it was quite
fitting that, in imitation of the sacred games, those who had
superintended the collection of the arms should keep a new triennial
festival in Egypt, in order that they might not again be collected
without any one being aware of it, or else that at all events
only a few might be collected instead of a great number, from
the people not having time enough to assemble any great number.
(94) But why were we to be exposed to any treatment of the sort?
For when were we ever suspected of any tendency to revolt? And
when did we bear any other than a most peaceful character among
all men? And the habits in which we daily and habitually indulge,
are they not irreproachable, tending to the lawful tranquillity
and stability of the state? In fact, if the Jews had had arms
in their houses, would they have submitted to be stripped of
above four hundred dwellings, out of which they were turned and
forcibly expelled by those who plundered them of all their properties?
Why then was not this search made in the houses of those people
who had arms, if not of their own private property, at all events
such as they had carried off from others? (95) The truth is,
as I have said already, the whole business was a deliberate contrivance
designed by the cruelty of Flaccus and of the multitude, in which
even women were included; for they were dragged away as captives,
not only in the market-place, but even in the middle of the theatre,
and dragged upon the stage on any false accusation that might
be brought against them with the most painful and intolerable
insults; (96) and then, when it was found that they were of another
race, they were dismissed; for they apprehended many women as
Jewesses who were not so, from want of making any careful or
accurate investigation. And if they appeared to belong to our
nation, then those who, instead of spectators, became tyrants
and masters, laid cruel commands on them, bringing them swine's
flesh, and enjoining them to eat it. Accordingly, all who were
wrought on by fear of punishment to eat it were released without
suffering any ill treatment; but those who were more obstinate
were given up to the tormentors to suffer intolerable tortures,
which is the clearest of all possible proofs that they had committed
no offence whatever beyond what I have mentioned.
XII. (97) But it was not out of his own head alone, but also
because of the commands and in consequence of the situation of
the emperor that he sought and devised means to injure and oppress
us; for after we had decreed by our votes and carried out by
our actions all the honours to the emperor Gaius, which were
either within our power or allowable by our laws, we brought
the decree to him, entreating him that, as it was not permitted
to us to send an embassy ourselves to bear it to the emperor,
he would vouchsafe to forward it himself. (98) And, after he
had read all the articles contained in the decree, and having
often nodded his head in token of his approbation of them, smiling,
and being very much delighted, or else pretending to be pleased,
he said: "I approve of you very greatly in all things, for
your piety and loyalty, and I will forward it as you request,
or else I myself will act the part of your ambassador, that Gaius
may be aware of your gratitude. (99) And I myself will bear witness
in your favour to all that I know of the orderly disposition
and obedientcharacter of your nation, without exaggerating anything;
for truth is the most sufficient of all panegyrics." (100)
At these promises we were greatly delighted, and we gave him
thanks, hoping that the decree would be thoroughly read and appreciated
by Gaius. And indeed it was natural enough, since all the things
that are promptly and carefully sent by the lieutenant-governors
are read and examined without delay by you; (101) but Flaccus,
wholly neglecting all our hopes, and all his own words, and all
his own promises, retained the decree, in order that you, above
all the men under the sun, might be looked upon as enemies to
the emperor. Was not this the conduct of one who had been vigilant
afar off, and who had long been contriving his design against
us, and who was not now yielding to some momentary impulse, and
attacking us on a sudden without any previous contrivance with
unreasonable impetuosity, being led away by some fresh motive?
(102) But God, as it seems, he who has a care for all human affairs,
scattered his flattering speeches cunningly devised to mislead
the emperor, and baffled the counsels of his lawless disposition
and the manoeuvres which he was employing, taking pity on us,
and very soon he brought matters into such a train that Flaccus
was disappointed of his hopes. (103) For when Agrippa, the king,
came into the country, we set before him all the designs which
Flaccus had entertained against us; and he set himself to rectify
the business, and, having promised to forward the decree to the
emperor, he taking it, as we hear, did send it, accompanied with
a defence relating to the time at which it was passed, showing
that it was not lately only that we had learnt to venerate the
family of our benefactors, but that we had from the very first
beginning shown our zeal towards them, though we had been deprived
of the opportunity of making any seasonable demonstration of
it by the insolence of our governor. (104) And after these events
justice, the constant champion and ally of those who are injured,
and the punisher of everything impious, whether it be action
or man, began to labour to work his overthrow. For at first they
endured the most unexampled insults and miseries, such as had
never happened under any other of our governors, ever since the
house of Augustus first acquired the dominion over earth and
sea; (105) for some men of those who, in the time of Tiberius,
and of Caesar his father, had the government, seeking to convert
their governorship and viceroyalty into a sovereignty and tyranny,
filled all the country with intolerable evils, with corruption,
and rapine, and condemnation of persons who had done no wrong,
and with banishment and exile of such innocent men, and with
the slaughter of the nobles without a trial; and then, after
the appointed period of their government had expired, when they
returned to Rome, the emperors exacted of them an account and
relation of all that they had done, especially if by chance the
cities which they had been oppressing sent any embassy to complain;
(106) for then the emperors, behaving like impartial judges,
listening both to the accusers and to the defendant on equal
terms, not thinking it right to pre-judge and pre-condemn anyone
before his trial, decided without being influenced either by
enmity or favour, but according to the nature of truth, and pronouncing
such a judgment as seemed to be just. (107) But in the case of
Flaccus, that justice which hates iniquity did not wait till
the term of his government had expired, but went forward to meet
him before the usual time, being indignant at the immoderate
extravagance of his lawless iniquity.
XIII. (108) And the manner in which he was cut short in his
tyranny was as follows. He imagined that Gaius was already made
favourable to him in respect of those matters, about which suspicion
was sought to be raised against him, partly by his letters which
were full of flattery, and partly by the harangues which he was
continually addressing to the people, in which he courted the
emperor by stringing together flattering sentences and long series
of cunningly imagined panegyrics, and partly too because he was
very highly thought of by the greater part of the city. (109)
But he was deceiving himself without knowing it; for the hopes
of wicked men are unstable, as they guess what is more favourable
to them while they suffer what is quite contrary to it, as in
fact they deserve. For Bassus, the centurion, was sent from Italy
by the appointment of Gaius with the company of soldiers which
he commanded. (110) And having embarked on board one of the fastest
sailing vessels, he arrived in a few days at the harbour of Alexandria,
off the island of Pharos, about evening; and he ordered the captain
of the ship to keep out in the open sea till sunset, intending
to enter the city unexpectedly, in order that Flaccus might not
be aware of his coming beforehand, and so be led to adopt any
violent measures, and render the service which he was commanded
to perform fruitless. (111) And when the evening came, the ship
entered the harbour, and Bassus, disembarking with his own soldiers,
advanced, neither recognizing nor being recognized by any one;
and on his road finding a soldier who was one of the quaternions
of the guard, he ordered him to show him the house of his captain;
for he wished to communicate his secret errand to him, that,
if he required additional force, he might have an assistant ready.
(112) And when he heard that he was supping at some persons'
house in company with Flaccus, he did not relax in his speed,
but hastened onward to the dwelling of his entertainer; for the
man with whom they were feasting was Stephanion, one of the freedmen
of Tiberius Caesar; and withdrawing to a short distance, he sends
forward one of his own followers to reconnoitre, disguising him
like a servant in order that no one might notice him or perceive
what was going forward. So he, entering in to the banqueting-room,
as if he were the servant of one of the guests, examined everything
accurately, and then returned and gave information to Bassus.
(113) And he, when he had learnt the unguarded condition of the
entrances, and the small number of the people who were with Flaccus
(for he was attended by not more than ten or fifteen slaves to
wait upon him), gave the signal to his soldiers whom he had with
him, and hastened forward, and entered suddenly into the supperroom,
he and the soldiers with him, who stood by with their swords
girded on, and surrounded Flaccus before he was aware of it,
for at the moment of their entrance he was drinking health with
some one, and making merry with those who were present. (114)
But when Bassus had made his way into the midst, the moment that
he saw him he became dumb with amazement and consternation, and
wishing to rise up he saw the guards all round him, and then
he perceived his fate, even before he heard what Gaius wanted
with him, and what commands had been given to those who had come,
and what he was about to endure, for the mind of man is very
prompt at perceiving at once all those particulars which take
a long time to happen, and at hearing them all together. (115)
Accordingly, every one of those who were of this supper party
rose up, being through fear unnerved, and shuddering lest some
punishment might be affixed to the mere fact of having been supping
with the culprit, for it was not safe to flee, nor indeed was
it possible to do so, since all the entrances were already occupied.
So Flaccus was led away by the soldiers at the command of Bassus,
this being the manner in which he returned from the banquet,
for it was fitting that justice should begin to visit him at
a feast, because he had deprived the houses of innumerable innocent
men of all festivity.
XIV. (116) This was the unexampled misfortune which befell
Flaccus in the country of which he was governor, being taken
prisoner like an enemy on account of the Jews, as it appears
to me, whom he had determined to destroy utterly in his desire
for glory. And a manifest proof of this is to be found in the
time of his arrest, for it was the general festival of the Jews
at the time of the autumnal equinox, during which it is the custom
of the Jews to live in tents; (117) but none of the usual customs
at this festival were carried out at all, since all the rulers
of the people were still oppressed by irremediable and intolerable
injuries and insults, and since the common people looked upon
the miseries of their chiefs as the common calamity of the whole
nation, and were also depressed beyond measure at the individual
afflictions to which they were each of them separately exposed,
(118) for griefs are redoubled when they happen at the times
of festival, when those who are afflicted are unable to keep
the feast, both by reason of the deprivation of their mirthful
cheerfulness, which a general assembly requires, and also from
the presence of sorrow by which they were now overcome, without
being able to find any remedy for such terrible disasters. (119)
And while they were yielding to excessive sorrow, and feeling
overwhelmed by most severe anguish, and they were all collected
in their houses at the approach of night, some persons came in
to inform them of the apprehension of the governor which had
then taken place. And they thought that this was to try them,
and was not the truth, and were grieved all the more from thinking
themselves mobbed, and that a snare was thus laid for them; (120)
but when a tumult arose through the city, and the guards of the
night began to run about to and fro, and when some of the cavalry
were heard to be galloping with the utmost speed and with all
energy to the camp and from the camp, some of them, being excited
by the strangeness of the event, went forth from their houses
to inquire what had happened, for it was plain that something
strange had occurred. (121) And when they heard of the arrest
that had taken place, and that Flaccus was now within the toils,
stretching up their hands to heaven, they sang a hymn, and began
a song of praise to God, who presides over all the affairs of
men, saying, "We are not delighted, O Master, at the punishment
of our enemy, being taught by the sacred laws to submit to all
the vicissitudes of human life, but we justly give thanks to
thee, who hast had mercy and compassion upon us, and who hast
thus relieved our continual and incessant oppressions."
(122) And when they had spent the whole night in hymns and songs,
they poured out through the gates at the earliest dawn, and hastened
to the nearest point of the shore, for they had been deprived
of their usual places for prayer, and standing in a clear and
open space, they cried out, (123) "O most mighty King of
all mortal and immortal beings, we have come to offer thanks
unto thee, to invoke earth and sea, and the air and the heaven,
and all the parts of the universe, and the whole world in which
alone we dwell, being driven out by men and robbed of everything
else in the world, and being deprived of our city, and of all
the buildings both private and public within the city, and being
made houseless and homeless by the treachery of our governor,
the only men in the world who are so treated. (124) You suggest
to us favourable hopes of the setting straight of what is left
to us, beginning to consent to our prayers, inasmuch as you have
on a sudden thrown down the common enemy of our nation, the author
and cause of all our calamities, exulting in pride, and trusting
that he would gain credit by such means, before he was removed
to a distance from us, in order that those who were evilly afflicted
might not feel their joy impaired by learning it only by report,
but you have chastised him while he was so near, almost as we
may say before the eyes of those whom he oppressed, in order
to give us a more distinct perception of the end which has fallen
upon him in a short time beyond our hopes."
XV. (125) And besides what I have spoken of there is also
a third thing, which appears to me to have taken place by the
interposition of divine providence; for after he had set sail
at the beginning of winter, for it was rightly ordained that
he should have his fill of the dangers of the sea, inasmuch as
he had filled all the elements of the universe with his impieties,
after suffering innumerable hardships he with difficulty got
safety to Italy, and the moment that he had arrived there he
was pursued by accusations which were brought against him, and
which were brought before two of his greatest enemies, Isidorus
and Lampo, (126) who a little while before were in the position
of subjects to him, calling him their master, and benefactor,
and saviour, and names of that sort, but who now were his adversaries,
and that too displaying a power not only equal to but far superior
to his own, not merely from the confidence which men feel in
the justice of their cause, but, what was a matter of great moment,
because they saw that the Judge of all human affairs was his
irreconcileable enemy, being about now to take upon himself the
form of a judge from a prudent determination not to appear to
condemn any one beforehand unheard, and not to act the part of
an enemy, who before hearing either accusation or defence, has
already condemned the defendant in his mind, and has sentenced
him to the most severe punishments. (127) But nothing is so terrible
as for men who have been the more powerful to be accused by their
inferiors, and for those who have been rulers to be impeached
by their former subjects, which is as if masters were being prosecuted
by their natural or purchased slaves.
XVI. (128) And yet even this in my opinion was a lighter evil
when compared with another which was greater still; for it was
not people who were merely in the simple rank of subjects who
now, discarding that position and conspiring together, on a sudden
attacked him with their accusations; but those who did so were
men who during the chief part of the time that he had had the
government of the country had been in a position of the greatest
enmity and hatred to him, Lampo having been under a prosecution
for impiety against Tiberius Caesar, and having been almost worn
out by the matter which had been thus impending over his head
fore two years; (129) for the judge who had a grudge against
him caused all sorts of delays and every possible protraction
of the cause on various pretexts, wishing even if he escaped
from the accusation, at all events to keep the terror of the
future as uncertain hanging over his head for the longest possible
period, so as to make his life more miserable even than death.
(130) And then again when he seemed to have come off victorious,
saying that he was insulted and injured in his property (for
he was compelled to become a gymnasiarch), either by being economical
and illiberal in his expenses, pretending that he had not sufficient
wealth for such unlimited expenditure, or perhaps really not
having enough; but before he came to the trial, making a parade
of being very rich, but when he did come to the proof then appearing
not to be a man of exceeding wealth, having acquired nearly all
the riches which he had by unjust actions. (131) For standing
by the rulers when they gave judgment, he took notes of all that
took place on the trial as if he were a clerk; and then he designedly
passed over or omitted such and such points, and interpolated
other things which were not said. And at times, too, he made
alterations, changing and altering, and perverting matters, and
turning things up-side down, aiming to get money by every syllable,
or, I might rather say, by every letter, like a hunter after
musty records, (132) whom the whole people with one accord did
often with great felicity and propriety of expression call a
pen-murderer, as slaying numbers of persons by the things which
he wrote, and rendering the living more miserable than even the
dead, as, though they might have got the victory and been in
comfort, they were subjected to miserable defeat and poverty,
their enemies having bought victory, and triumph, and wealth,
of a man who sold and made his market of the properties of others.
(133) For it was impossible for rulers who had the charge of
so vast a country entrusted to them, when affairs of every sort,
both private and public, were coming in upon them fresh every
day, to remember everything which they had heard, especially
as they had not only to fill the part of judges, but also to
take accounts of all the revenues and taxes, the investigation
into which occupied the greater portion of the year. (134) And
the man to whom it was entrusted to take charge of that most
important of all deposits, namely, justice, and of those most
holy sentiments which had been delivered and urged before them,
caused forgetfulness to the judges, registering those who ought
to have had sentence in their favour as defeated, and those who
ought to have been defeated as victorious, after the receipt
of his accursed pay, or, to speak more properly, wages of iniquity.
XVII. (135) Such, then, was the character of Lampo, who was
now one of the accusers of Flaccus. And Isidorus was in no respect
inferior to him in wickedness, being a man of the populace, a
low demagogue, one who had continually studied to throw everything
into disorder and confusion, an enemy to all peace and stability,
very clever at exciting seditions and tumults which had no existence
before, and at inflaming and exaggerating such as were already
excited, taking care always to keep about him a disorderly and
promiscuous mob of all the refuse of the people, ready for every
kind of atrocity, which he had divided into regular sections
as so many companies of soldiers. (136) There are a vast number
of parties in the city whose association is founded in no one
good principle, but who are united by wine, and drunkenness,
and revelry, and the offspring of those indulgencies, insolence;
and their meetings are called synods and couches by the natives.
(137) In all these parties or the greater number of them Isidorus
is said to have borne the bell, the leader of the feast, the
chief of the supper, the disturber of the city. Then, whenever
it was determined to do some mischief, at one signal they all
went forth in a body, and did and said whatever they were told.
(138) And on one occasion, being indignant with Flaccus because,
after he had appeared originally to be a person of some weight
with him, he afterwards was no longer courted in an equal degree,
having hired a gang of fellows from the training schools and
men accustomed to vociferate loudly, who well their outcries
as if in regular market to those who are inclined to buy them,
he ordered them all to assemble at the gymnasium; (139) and they,
having filled it, began to heap accusations on Flaccus without
any particular grounds, inventing all kinds of monstrous accusations
and all sorts of falsehoods in ridiculous language, stringing
long sentences together, so that not only was Flaccus himself
alarmed but all the others who were there at this unexpected
attack, and especially, as it may be conjectured, from the idea
that there must certainly have been some one behind the scenes
whom they were studying to gratify, since they themselves had
suffered no evil, and since they were well aware that the rest
of the city had not been ill-treated by him. (140) Then, after
they had deliberated awhile, they determined to apprehend certain
persons of them and to inquire into the cause of this indiscriminate
and sudden rage and madness. And the men who were arrested, without
being put to the torture, confessed the truth and added proofs
to their words by what had been done, detailing the pay which
had been already given and that which, in accordance with his
promises, was subsequently to be paid, and the men who were appointed
to distribute it as the leaders of the sedition, and the place
where it was to break out, and the time when the giving of the
bribes was to take place. (141) And when every one, as was very
natural, was indignant at this, and when the city was mightily
offended, that the folly of some individuals should attach to
it so as to dim its reputation, Flaccus determined to send for
some of the most honourable men of the people, and, on the next
day to bring forward before them those who had distributed the
bribes, that he might investigate the truth about Isidorus, and
also that he might make a defence of his own system of government,
and prove that he had been unjustly calumniated; and when they
heard the proclamation there came not only the magistrates but
also the whole city, except that portion which was about to be
convicted of having been the agents of corruption or the corrupted.
And they who had been employed in this honourable service, being
raised up on the platform, (142) that they might be elevated
and conspicuous and be recognised by all men, accused Isidorus
as having been the cause of all the tumults and of the accusations
which had been brought against Flaccus, and as having given money
and bribes to no small number of them by himself. "Since
else," said they, "where could we have got such great
abundance? (143) We are poor men, and are scarcely able to provide
our daily expenses for absolute necessaries: and what evil did
we ever suffer from the governor, so as to be forced to bear
him ill will? Nay, but it is he who was the cause of all these
things, the author of them all, he who is always envious of those
who are in prosperity, and an adversary of all stability and
wholesome law." And when those who were present came to
the knowledge of these things, (144) for what was thus said was
a very evident proof and evidence of the intentions of the person
accused, they all raised an outcry, some calling out that he
should be degraded, others that he should be banished, others
that he should be put to death, and these last were the most
numerous; and the others changed their tone and joined them,
so that at last they all cried out, with one accord and with
one voice, to slay the common pest of the land, the man to whom
it was owing that, ever since he had arrived in the country and
taken any part in public affairs, no part of the city or of the
common interests had ever been left in a sound or healthy condition;
(145) and he, indeed, being convicted by his conscience, fled
away in-doors, fearing lest he should be seized; but Flaccus
did nothing against him, thinking that now that he had voluntarily
removed himself, everything in the city would soon be free from
sedition and contention.
XVIII. (146) I have related these events at some length, not
for the sake of keeping old injuries in remembrance, but because
I admire that power who presides over all freemen's affairs,
namely, justice, seeing that those men who were so generally
hostile to Flaccus, those by whom of all men he was most hated,
were the men who now brought their accusations against him, to
fill up the measure of his grief, for it is not so bitter merely
to be accused as to be accused by one's confessed enemies; (147)
but this man was not merely accused, though a governor, by his
subjects, and that by men who had always been his enemies, when
he had only a short time before been the lord of the life of
every individual among them, but he was also apprehended by force,
being thus subjected to a twofold evil, namely, to be defeated
and ridiculed by exulting enemies, which is worse than death
to all right-minded and sensible people. (148) And then see what
an abundance of disasters came upon him, for he was immediately
stripped of all his possessions, both of those which he inherited
from his parents and of all that he had acquired himself, having
been a man who took especial delight in luxury and ornament;
for he was not like some rich men, to whom wealth is an inactive
material, but he was continually acquiring things of every useful
kind in all imaginable abundance; cups, garments, couches, miniatures,
and everything else which was any ornament to a house; (149)
and besides that, he collected a vast number of servants, carefully
selected for their excellencies and accomplishments, and with
reference to their beauty, and health, and vigour of body, and
to their unerring skill in all kinds of necessary and useful
service; for every one of them was excellent in that employment
to which he was appointed, so that he was looked upon as either
the most excellent of all servants in that place, or, at all
events, as inferior to no one. (150) And there is a very clear
proof of this in the fact that, though there were a vast number
of properties confiscated and sold for the public benefit, which
belonged to persons who had been condemned, that of Flaccus alone
was assigned to the emperor, with perhaps one or two more, in
order that the law which had been established with respect to
persons convicted of such crimes as his might not be violated.
(151) And after he had been deprived of all his property, he
was condemned to banishment, and was exiled from the whole continent,
and that is the greatest and most excellent portion of the inhabited
world, and from every island that has any character for fertility
or richness; for he was commanded to be sent into that most miserable
of all the islands in the Aegaean Sea, {2}{this was a common
place of banishment for criminals, Juvenal 1.72.} called Gyara,
and he would have been left there if he had not availed himself
of the intercession of Lepidus, by whose means he obtained leave
to exchange Gyara for Andros, which was very near it. (152) Then
he was sent back again on the road from Rome to Brundusium, a
journey which he had taken a few years before, at the time when
he was appointed governor of Egypt and the adjacent country of
Libya, in order that the cities which had then seen him exulting
and behaving with great insolence in the hour of his prosperity,
might now again behold him full of dishonour. (153) And thus
he being now become a conspicuous mark by reason of this total
change of fortune, was overwhelmed with more bitter grief, his
calamities being constantly rekindled and inflamed by the addition
of fresh miseries, which, like relapses in sickness, compel the
recollection of all former disasters to return, which up to that
time appeared to be buried in obscurity.
XIX. (154) And after he had crossed the Ionian Gulf he sailed
up the sea which leads to Corinth, being a spectacle to all the
cities in Peloponnesus which lie on the coast, when they heard
of his sudden reverse of fortune; for when he disembarked from
the vessel all the evil disposed men who bore him ill will ran
up to see him, and others also came to sympathize with him--men
who are accustomed to learn moderation from the misfortunes of
others. (155) And at Lechaeum, crossing over the isthmus into
the opposite gulf, and having arrived at Cenchreae, the dockyard
of the Corinthians, he was compelled by the guards, who would
not permit him the slightest respite, to embark immediately on
board a small transport and to set sail, and as a foul wind was
blowing with great violence, after great sufferings he with difficulty
arrived safe at the Piraeus. (156) And when the storm had ceased,
having coasted along Attica as far as the promontory of Sunium,
{3}{now Cape Colonna.} he passed by all the islands in order,
namely, Helena, and Ceanus, and Cythnos, and all the rest which
lie in a regular row one after another, until at last he came
to the point of his ultimate destination, the island of Andros,
(157) which the miserable man beholding afar off poured forth
abundance of tears down his cheeks, as if from a regular fountain,
and beating his breast, and lamenting most bitterly, he said,
"Men, ye who are my guards and attendants in this my journey,
I now receive in exchange for the glorious Italy this beautiful
country of Andros, which is an unfortunate island for me. (158)
I, Flaccus, who was born, and brought up, and educated in Rome,
the heaven of the world, and who have been the schoolfellow and
companion of the granddaughters of Augustus, and who was afterwards
selected by Tiberius Caesar as one of his most intimate friends,
and who have had entrusted to me for six years the greatest of
all his possessions, namely, Egypt. (159) What a change is this!
In the middle of the day, as if an eclipse had come upon me,
night has overshadowed my life. What shall I say of this little
islet? Shall I call it my place of banishment, or my new country,
or harbour and refuge of misery? A tomb would be the most proper
name for it; for I, miserable that I am, am now in a manner conducted
to my grave, attending my own funeral, for either I shall destroy
my miserable life through my sorrow, or if I am able to cling
to life among my miseries, I shall in that case find a distant
death, which will be felt all the time of my life." (160)
These, then, were the lamentations which he poured forth, and
when the vessel came near the harbour he landed, stooping down
to the very ground like men heavily oppressed, being weighed
down by his calamities as if the heaviest of burdens was placed
upon his neck, without being able to look up, or else not daring
to do so because of the people whom he might meet, and of those
who came out to see him and who stood on each side of the road.
(161) And those men who had conducted him hither, bringing the
populace of the Andrians, exhibited him to them all, making them
all witnesses of the arrival of the exile in their island. (162)
And they, when they had discharged their office, departed; and
then the misery of Flaccus was renewed, as he no longer beheld
any sight to which he was accustomed, but only saw sad misery
presented to him by the most conspicuous evidence, while he looked
around upon what to him was perfect desolation, in the middle
of which he was placed; so that it seemed to him that a violent
execution in his native land would have been a lighter evil,
or rather, by comparison with his present circumstances, a most
desirable good; and he have himself up to such violence of grief,
that he was in no respect different from a maniac, and leaped
about, and ran to and fro, and clapped his hands, and smote his
thighs, and threw himself upon the ground, and kept continually
crying out, (163) "I am Flaccus! who but a little while
ago was the governor of the mighty city, of the populous city
of Alexandria! the governor of that most fertile of all countries,
Egypt! I am he on whom all those myriads of inhabitants turned
their eyes! who had countless forces of infantry, and cavalry,
and ships,formidable, not merely by their number, but consisting
of all the most eminent and illustrious of all my subjects! I
am he who was every day accompanied when I went out by countless
companies of clients! (164) But now, was not all this a vision
rather than reality? and was I asleep, and was this prosperity
which I then beheld a dream--phantoms marching through empty
space, fictions of the soul, which perhaps registered non-existent
things as though they had a being? Doubtless, I have been deceived.
(165) These things were but a shadow and no real things, imitations
of reality and not a real truth, which makes falsehood evident;
for as after we have awakened we find none of those things which
appeared to us in our dreams, but all such things have fled in
a body and disappeared, so too, all that brilliant prosperity
which I formerly enjoyed has now been extinguished in the briefest
moment of time."
XX. (166) With such discourses as these, he was continaully
being cast down, and in a manner, as I may say, prostrated; and
avoiding all places where he might be likely to meet with many
persons on account of the shame which clung to him, he never
went down to the harbour, nor could he endure to visit the market--lace,
but shut himself up in his house, where he kept himself close,
never venturing to go beyond the outer court. (167) But sometimes
indeed, in the deepest twilight of the dawn, when every one else
was still in bed, so that he could be seen by no one whatever,
he would go forth out of the city and spend the entire day in
the desolate part of the island, turning away if any one seemed
likely to meet him; and being torn as to his soul with the memorials
of his misfortunes which he saw about him in his house, and being
devoured with anguish, he went back home in the darkness of the
night, praying, by reason of his immoderate and never-ending
misery, that the evening would become morning, dreading the darkness
and the strange appearances which represented themselves to him
when he went to sleep, and again in the morning he prayed that
it might be evening; {4}{this is evidently taken from #De 28:66,
"And thy life shall hang in doubt before thee; and thou
shalt fear day and night, and shalt have none assurance of thy
life: in the morning thou shalt say, Would God it were even!
and at even thou shalt say, Would God it were morning! for the
fear of thine heart wherewith thou shalt fear, and for the sight
of thine eyes which thou shalt see."} for the darkness which
surrounded him was opposed to everything light or cheerful. (168)
And a few months afterwards, having purchased a small piece of
land, he spent a great deal of his time there living by himself,
and bewailing and weeping over his fate. (169) It is said too,
that often at midnight he became possessed like those who celebrate
the rites of the Corybantes, and at such times he would go forth
out of his farm-house and raise his eyes to heaven and to the
stars, and beholding all the beauty really existing in the world,
he would cry out, (170) "O King of gods and men! you are
not, then, indifferent to the Jewish nation, nor are the assertions
which they relate with respect to your providence false; but
those men who say that that people has not you for their champion
and defender, are far from a correct opinion. And I am an evident
proof of this; for all the frantic designs which I conceived
against the Jews, I now suffer myself. (171) I consented when
they were stripped of their possessions, giving immunity to those
who were plundering them; and on this account I have myself been
deprived of all my paternal and maternal inheritance, and of
all that I have ever acquired by gift or favour, and of everything
else that ever became mine in any other manner. (172) In times
past I reproached them with ignominy as being foreigners, though
they were in truth sojourners in the land entitled to full privileges,
in order to give pleasure to their enemies who were a promiscuous
and disorderly multitude, by whom I, miserable man that I was,
was flattered and deceived; and for this I have been myself branded
with infamy, and have been driven as an exile from the whole
of the habitable world, and am shut up in this place. (173) Again,
I led some of them into the theatre, and commanded them to be
shamelessly and unjustly insulted in the sight of their greatest
enemies; and therefore I justly have been myself led not into
a theatre or into one city, but into many cities, to endure the
utmost extremity of insult, being ill-treated in my miserable
soul instead of my body; for I was led in procession through
the whole of Italy as far as Brundusium, and through all Peloponnesus
as far as Corinth, and through Attica, and all the islands as
far as Andros, which is this prison of mine; (174) and I am thoroughly
assured that even this is not the limit of my misfortunes, but
that others are still in store for me, to fill up the measures
as a requital for all the evils which I have done. I put many
persons to death, and when some of them were put to death by
others, I did not chastise their murderers. Some were stoned;
some were burnt alive; others were dragged through the middle
of the market-place till the whole of their bodies were torn
to pieces. (175) And for all this I know now that retribution
awaits me, and that the avengers are already standing as it were
at the goal, and are pressing close to me, eager to slay me,
and every day, or I may rather say, every hour, I die before
my time, enduring many deaths instead of one, the last of All."{5}{this
is like the passage in Shakespeare--"Cowards die many times
before their deaths; / The brave men only taste of death but
once."} (176) And he was continually giving way to dread
and to apprehension, and shaking with fear in every limb and
every portion of his body, and his whole soul was trembling with
terror and quivering with palpitation and agitation, as if nothing
in the world could possibly be a comfort to the man now that
he was deprived of all favourable hopes; (177) no good omen ever
appeared to him, everything bore a hostile appearance, every
report was ill-omened, his waking was painful, his sleep fearful,
his solitude resembling that of wild beasts, nevertheless the
solitude of his herds was what was most pleasant to him, any
dwelling in the city was his greatest affliction; his safe reproach
was a solitary abiding in the fields, a dangerous, and painful,
and unseemly way of life; every one who approached him, however
justly, was an object of suspicion to him. (178) "This man,"
he would say, "who is coming quickly hither, is planning
something against me, he does not look as if he were hastening
for any other object, but he is pursuing me; this pleasant looking
man is laying a snare for me; this free-spoken man is despising
me; this man is giving me meat and drink as they feed cattle
before killing them. (179) How long shall I, hardhearted that
I am, bear up against such terrible calamities? I well know that
I am afraid of death, since out of cruelty the Deity will not
punish me violently, to cut short my miserable life, in order
to load me to excess with irremediable miseries, which he treasures
up against me, to do a pleasure to those whom I treacherously
put to death."
XXI. (180) While repeating these things over and over again
and writhing with his agony, he awaited the end of his destiny,
and his uninterrupted sorrow agitated, and disturbed, and overturned
his soul. But Gaius, being a man of an inhuman nature and insatiable
in his revenge, did not, as some persons do, let go those who
had been once punished, but raged against them without end, and
was continually contriving some new and terrible suffering for
them; and, above all men, he hated Flaccus to such a degree,
that he suspected all who bore the same name, from his detestation
of the very appellation; (181) and he often repented that he
had condemned him to banishment and not to death, and though
he had a great respect for Lepidus who had interceded for him,
he blamed him, so that he was kept in a state of great alarm
from fear of punishment impending over him, for he feared lest,
as was very likely, he, because he had been the cause of another
person having been visited by a lighter punishment, might himself
have a more severe one inflicted upon him. (182) Therefore, as
no one any longer ventured to say a word by way of deprecating
the anger of the emperor, he gave loose to his fury, which was
now implacable and unrestrained, and which, though it ought to
have been mitigated by time, was rather increased by it, just
as recurring diseases are in the body when a relapse takes place,
for all such relapses are more grievous than the original attacks.
(183) They say that on one occasion Gaius, being awake at night,
began to turn his mind to the magistrates and officers who were
in banishment, and who in name indeed were looked upon as unfortunate,
but who in reality had now thus acquired a life free from trouble,
and truly tranquil and free. (184) And he gave a new name to
this banishment, calling it an emigration, "For," said
he, "it is only a kind of emigration the banishment of these
men, inasmuch as they have all the necessaries of life in abundance,
and are able to live in tranquillity, and stability, and peace.
But it is an absurdity for them to be living in luxury, enjoying
peace, and indulging in all the pleasures of a philosophical
life." (185) Then he commanded the most eminent of these
men, and those who were of the highest rank and reputation, to
be put to death, giving a regular list of their names, at the
head of which list was Flaccus. And when the men arrived at Andros,
who had been commanded to put him to death, Flaccus happened,
just at that moment, to be coming from his farm into the city,
and they, on their way up from the port, met him, (186) and while
yet at a distance they perceived and recognised one another;
at which he, perceiving in a moment the object for which they
were come (for every man's soul is very prophetic, especially
of such as are in misfortune), burning out of the road, fled
and ran away over the rough ground, forgetting, perhaps, that
Andros was an island and not the continent. And what is the use
of speed in an island which the sea washes all round? for one
of two things must of necessity happen, either that if the fugitive
advances further he must be carried into the sea, or else arrested
when he has reached the farthest boundary. (187) Therefore, in
a comparison of evils, destruction by land must be preferable
to destruction by sea, since nature has made the land more closely
akin to man, and to all terrestrial animals, not only while they
are alive, but even after they are dead, in order that the same
element may receive both their primary generation and their last
dissolution. (188) The officers therefore pursued him without
stopping to take breath and arrested him; and then immediately
some of them dug a ditch, and the others dragged him on by force
in spite of all his resistance and crying out and struggling,
by which means his whole body was wounded like that of beasts
that are despatched with a number of wounds; (189) for he, turning
round them and clinging to his executioners, who were hindered
in their aims which they took at him with their swords, and who
thus struck him with oblique blows, was the cause of his own
sufferings being more severe; for he was in consequence mutilated
and cut about the hands, and feet, and head, and breast, and
sides, so that he was mangled like a victim, and thus he fell,
justice righteously inflicting on his own body wounds equal in
number to the murders of the Jews whom he had unlawfully put
to death. (190) And the whole place flowed with blood which was
shed from his numerous veins, which were cut in every part of
his body, and which poured forth blood as from a fountain. And
when the corpse was dragged into the trench which had been dug,
the greater part of the limbs separated from the body, the sinews
by which the whole of the body is kept together being all cut
through. (191) Such was the end of Flaccus, who suffered thus,
being made the most manifest evidence that the nation of the
Jews is not left destitute of the providential assistance of
God