第 30 节
作者:向前      更新:2021-04-30 17:17      字数:9322
  capital; some moved by fear; many by a spirit of adulation; others;
  and by degrees all; that they might not be left behind while the
  rest were going。 From the dregs of the people there thronged buffoons;
  players; and charioteers; known to Vitellius from their infamous
  compliance with his vices; for in such disgraceful friendships he felt
  a strange pleasure。 And now not only were the colonies and towns
  exhausted by having to furnish supplies; but the very cultivator of
  the soil and his lands; on which the harvests were now ripe; were
  plundered like an enemy's territory。
  There were many sanguinary encounters between the soldiers; for ever
  since the mutiny which broke out at Ticinum there had lingered a
  spirit of dissension between the legions and the auxiliary troops;
  though they could unite whenever they had to fight with the rustic
  population。 The most terrible massacre took place at the 7th milestone
  from Rome。 Vitellius was distributing to each soldier provisions ready
  dressed on the same abundant scale as the gladiators' rations; and the
  populace had poured forth; and spread themselves throughout the entire
  camp。 Some with the frolicsome humour of slaves robbed the careless
  soldiers by slily cutting their belts; and then asked them whether
  they were armed。 Unused to insult; the spirit of the soldiers resented
  the jest。 Sword in hand they fell upon the unarmed people。 Among the
  slain was the father of a soldier; who was with his son。 He was
  afterwards recognised; and his murder becoming generally known; they
  spared the innocent crowd。 Yet there was a panic at Rome; as the
  soldiers pressed on in all directions。 It was to the forum that they
  chiefly directed their steps; anxious to behold the spot where Galba
  had fallen。 Nor were the men themselves a less frightful spectacle;
  bristling as they were with the skins of wild beasts; and armed with
  huge lances; while in their strangeness to the place they were
  embarrassed by the crowds of people; or tumbling down in the
  slippery streets or from the shock of some casual encounter; they fell
  to quarrelling; and then had recourse to blows and the use of their
  swords。 Besides; the tribunes and prefects were hurrying to and fro
  with formidable bodies of armed men。
  Vitellius himself; mounted on a splendid charger; with military
  cloak and sword; advanced from the Mulvian bridge; driving the
  Senate and people before him; but deterred by the advice of his
  friends from marching into Rome as if it were a captured city; he
  assumed a civil garb; and proceeded with his army in orderly array。
  The eagles of four legions were borne in front; and an equal number of
  colours from other legions on either side; then came the standards
  of twelve auxiliary squadrons; and the cavalry behind the ranks of the
  infantry。 Next came thirty…four auxiliary cohorts; distinguished
  according to the names or various equipments of the nations。 Before
  each eagle were the prefects of the camp; the tribunes; and the
  centurions of highest rank; in white robes; and the other officers
  by the side of their respective companies; glittering with arms and
  decorations。 The ornaments and chains of the soldiers presented a
  brilliant appearance。 It was a glorious sight; and the army was worthy
  of a better Emperor than Vitellius。 Thus he entered the capital; and
  he there embraced his mother and honoured her with the title of
  Augusta。
  The next day; as if he were addressing the Senate and people of
  another State; he pronounced a high panegyric on himself; extolling
  his own energy and moderation; though his enormities were known to the
  very persons who were present and to the whole of Italy; his
  progress through which had been disgraced by sloth and profligacy。 Yet
  the mob; who had no patriotic anxieties; and who; without
  distinguishing between truth and falsehood; had learnt the lesson of
  habitual flattery; applauded him with shouts and acclamations; and;
  reluctant as he was to assume the name of Augustus; extorted from
  him a compliance as idle as his previous refusal。
  The country; ready to find a meaning in every circumstance; regarded
  it as an omen of gloomy import that Vitellius; on obtaining the office
  of supreme Pontiff; should have issued a proclamation concerning the
  public religious ceremonial on the 18th of July; a day which from
  old times the disasters of Cremera and Allia had marked as unlucky。
  Thus utterly regardless of all law human and divine; with freedmen and
  friends as reckless as himself; he lived as if he were among a set
  of drunkards。 Still at the consular elections he was present in
  company with the candidates like an ordinary citizen; and by shewing
  himself as a spectator in the theatre; as a partisan in the circus; he
  courted every breath of applause from the lowest rabble。 Agreeable and
  popular as this conduct would have been; had it been prompted by noble
  qualities; it was looked upon as undignified and contemptible from the
  remembrance of his past life。 He habitually appeared in the Senate
  even when unimportant matters were under discussion; and it once
  happened that Priscus Helvidius; the praetor elect; had spoken against
  his wishes。 Though at the moment provoked; he only called on the
  tribunes of the people to support his insulted authority; and then;
  when his friends; who feared his resentment was deeper than it
  appeared; sought to appease him; he replied that it was nothing
  strange that two senators in a Commonwealth should disagree: he had
  himself been in the habit of opposing Thrasea。 Most of them laughed at
  the effrontery of such a comparison; though some were pleased at the
  very circumstance of his having selected; not one of the most
  influential men of the time; but Thrasea; as his model of true glory。
  He had advanced to the command of the Praetorian Guard Publius
  Sabinus; a prefect of the cohort; and Julius Priscus; then only a
  centurion。 It was through the influence of Caecina and Valens that
  they respectively rose to power。 Though always at variance; these
  two men left no authority to Vitellius。 The functions of Empire were
  discharged by Caecina and Valens。 They had long before been led to
  suspect each other by animosities scarcely concealed amid the cares of
  the campaign and the camp; and aggravated by unprincipled friends
  and a state of society calculated to produce such feuds。 In their
  struggles for popularity; in their long retinues; and in the vast
  crowds at their levees; they vied with each other and challenged
  comparison; while the favour of Vitellius inclined first to one; and
  then to the other。 There can never be complete confidence in a power
  which is excessive。 Vitellius himself; who was ever varying between
  sudden irritation and unseasonable fondness; they at once despised and
  feared。 Still this had not made them less keen to seize on palaces and
  gardens and all the wealth of the Empire; while a sad and needy throng
  of nobles; whom with their children Galba had restored to their
  country; received no relief from the compassion of the Emperor。 By
  an edict which gratified the leading men of the State; while it
  approved itself even to the populace; Vitellius gave back to the
  returned exiles their rights over their freedmen; although servile
  ingenuity sought in every way to neutralise the boon; concealing money
  in quarters which either obscurity or rank rendered secure。 Some
  freedmen had made their way into the palace of the Emperor; and thus
  became more powerful even than their patrons。
  Meanwhile the soldiers; as their numbers overflowed the crowded
  camp; dispersed throughout the porticoes; the temples; and the whole
  capital; did not know their own headquarters; kept no watch; and
  ceased to brace themselves by toil。 Amidst the allurements of the city
  and all shameful excesses; they wasted their strength in idleness; and
  their energies in riot。 At last; reckless even of health; a large
  portion of them quartered themselves in the notoriously pestilential
  neighbourhood of the Vatican; hence ensued a great mortality in the
  ranks。 The Tiber was close at hand; and their extreme eagerness for
  the water and their impatience of the heat weakened the
  constitutions of the Germans and Gauls; always liable to disease。 To
  make matters worse; the organisation of the service was deranged by
  unprincipled intrigue and favour。 Sixteen Praetorian and four city
  cohorts were being raised; each to consist of a thousand men。 In
  this levy Valens ventured to do more than his rival on the pretence of
  his having rescued Caecina himself from peril。 Doubtless his arrival
  had restored the fortunes of the party; and his victory had reversed
  the unfavourable rumours occasioned by hi