登陆注册
19980900000091

第91章 A.D.54-58(13)

Not one, however, of Sulla's slaves or clients was recognised, and his character, despicable as it was and incapable of a daring act, was utterly at variance with the charge.Still, just as if he had been found guilty, he was ordered to leave his country, and confine himself within the walls of Massilia.

During the same consulship a hearing was given to two conflicting deputations from Puteoli, sent to the Senate by the town council and by the populace.The first spoke bitterly of the violence of the multitude; the second, of the rapacity of the magistrates and of all the chief citizens.That the disturbance, which had gone as far as stoning and threats of fire, might not lead on to bloodshed and armed fighting, Caius Cassius was appointed to apply some remedy.As they would not endure his rigour, the charge of the affair was at his own request transferred to the brothers Scribonii, to whom was given a praetorian cohort, the terror of which, coupled with the execution of a few persons, restored peace to the townspeople.

I should not mention a very trivial decree of the Senate which allowed the city of Syracuse to exceed the prescribed number in their gladiatorial shows, had not Paetus Thrasea spoken against it and furnished his traducers with a ground for censuring his motion."Why,"it was asked, "if he thought that the public welfare required freedom of speech in the Senate, did he pursue such trifling abuses?

Why should he not speak for or against peace and war, or on the taxes and laws and other matters involving Roman interests? The senators, as often as they received the privilege of stating an opinion, were at liberty to say out what they pleased, and to claim that it should be put to the vote.Was it the only worthy object of reform to provide that the Syracusans should not give shows on a larger scale? Were all other matters in every department of the empire as admirable as if Thrasea and not Nero had the direction of them? But if the highest affairs were passed by and ignored, how much more ought there to be no meddling with things wholly insignificant."Thrasea in reply, when his friends asked an explanation, said "that it was not in ignorance of Rome's actual condition that he sought to correct such decrees, but that he was giving what was due to the honour of the senators, in making it evident that those who attended even to the merest trifles, would not disguise their responsibility for important affairs."That same year, repeated demands on the part of the people, who denounced the excessive greed of the revenue collectors, made Nero doubt whether he should not order the repeal of all indirect taxes, and so confer a most splendid boon on the human race.But this sudden impulse was checked by the senators, who, having first heartily praised the grandeur of his conception, pointed out "that the dissolution of the empire must ensue if the revenues which supported the State were to be diminished; for as soon as the customs were swept away, there would follow a demand for the abolition of the direct taxes.Many companies for the collection of the indirect taxes had been formed by consuls and tribunes, when the freedom of the Roman people was still in its vigour, and arrangements were subsequently made to insure an exact correspondence between the amount of income and the necessary disbursements.Certainly some restraint, they admitted, must be put on the cupidity of the revenue collectors, that they might not by new oppressions bring into odium what for so many years had been endured without a complaint."Accordingly the emperor issued an edict that the regulations about every branch of the public revenue, which had hitherto been kept secret, should be published; that claims which had been dropped should not be revived after a year; that the praetor at Rome, the propraetor or proconsul in the provinces, should give judicial precedence to all cases against the collectors; that the soldiers should retain their immunities except when they traded for profit, with other very equitable arrangements, which for a short time were maintained and were subsequently disregarded.However, the repeal of the two per cent.and two-and-a-half per cent.taxes remains in force, as well as that of others bearing names invented by the collectors to cover their illegal exactions.In our transmarine provinces the conveyance of corn was rendered less costly, and it was decided that merchant ships should not be assessed with their owner's property, and that no tax should be paid on them.

Two men under prosecution from Africa, in which province they had held proconsular authority, Sulpicius Camerinus and Pomponius Silvanus, were acquitted by the emperor.Camerinus had against him a few private persons who charged him with cruelty rather than with extortion.Silvanus was beset by a host of accusers, who demanded time for summoning their witnesses, while the defendant insisted on being at once put on his defence.And he was successful, through his wealth, his childlessness, and his old age, which he prolonged beyond the life of those by whose corrupt influence he had escaped.

Up to this time everything had been quiet in Germany, from the temper of the generals, who, now that triumphal decorations had been vulgarised, hoped for greater glory by the maintenance of peace.

Paulinus Pompeius and Lucius Vetus were then in command of the army.

Still, to avoid keeping the soldiers in idleness, the first completed the embankment begun sixty-three years before by Drusus to confine the waters of the Rhine, while Vetus prepared to connect the Moselle and the Arar by a canal, so that troops crossing the sea and then conveyed on the Rhone and Arar might sail by this canal into the Moselle and the Rhine, and thence to the ocean.Thus the difficulties of the route being removed, there would be communication for ships between the shores of the west and of the north.

同类推荐
  • 武陵记

    武陵记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洞玄灵宝自然九天生神章经解义

    洞玄灵宝自然九天生神章经解义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Erewhon

    Erewhon

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 两卷无量寿经宗要

    两卷无量寿经宗要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 东阳夜怪录

    东阳夜怪录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 首席医后

    首席医后

    本该在现代逍遥自在的首席主治医师,居然会因为一场手术被卷入了未知的世界里,还好自己可以凭着一身的医术混下去。什么王爷,将军,皇帝,公主我和你们很熟吗,我从来都是一个人。
  • 一品庸仙

    一品庸仙

    孤苦少年,山中采药,惊遇仙子,然资质奇差;修真之道,逆天之路,劫难重重,一个庸材少年如何步步前行;一品庸仙,一个少年庸材修真的故事…
  • 太玄风云录

    太玄风云录

    废物少爷,意外重生。一把破剑,内藏乾坤。拜剑灵,学剑技。一人一剑,闯荡大陆,入禁地,斩妖兽,挫强敌,任你神通再大,我皆一剑破之。且看主角如何在强者如林的世界里一步步走向登临巅峰!
  • 剑圣拯救世界

    剑圣拯救世界

    虚空将吞噬世界。拥有神秘玉石之人,得到抵抗虚空的力量。想要更强,那就去掠夺。即便是剑圣,也想要拯救世界。
  • 谁许你红尘初装

    谁许你红尘初装

    大家好,我素新人,所以写得不太好,请多多包涵~
  • 江楼晚眺,景物鲜奇

    江楼晚眺,景物鲜奇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 每天读一点世界史

    每天读一点世界史

    对于纷繁复杂却又异彩纷呈的世界史,人们通常只有些片段式的印象,虽然想要完整了解整个世界,可现在工作学习这么忙,哪里有闲暇时间看厚厚几大本的历史书呢?如果你也有这样的烦恼,不妨翻翻这本书!本书一改以地区划分的传统写法,以整个世界的发展脉络作为纵线,以各地区发展的对比为横线,纵横交错之间可以帮助读者短时间内厘清同时代的各国历史,从整体和地区两个视角了解世界史的全貌,建构起完整的世界观。
  • 末日之灾

    末日之灾

    7月18日,阴,已经连续一周没见到过其他人了,或者说,没见到其他还活着的人。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 冷魅太子医毒妃

    冷魅太子医毒妃

    她,被未婚夫背叛,穿越之后发誓再也不爱一人!她,是软弱无能的穆府大小姐,娘已死,爹不喜,孤苦无依却被妹妹残害。两人于同年同月同日死,于是灵魂互换,她们都为对方再活一世!三妹妄想成为嫡女?那么,她就来帮三妹一把!三夫人想要让她不孕不育?可以啊,那就让二夫人替代吧!二弟想要残害她?那还得问过她的灵力!在发簪中的空间遇见前人,才终于恍然自己和她互换了身体,从此,她会替她的前辈重活一生!领教妹妹们的阴谋诡计,看遍世人的千姿百态,对这世态炎凉的世界,她只能长叹一声......只有变强才是正道!
  • 苦女将军

    苦女将军

    谁道女子不能从军?古有花木兰,今有雨苦女。一个历史上的未有王朝零王朝,一个纷纷乱世,战争侵蚀着人们的生活。一个父母双亡的孤女雨苦女,有缘拜一高人为师。本为改变命运,却不知正一步步撼动着整个零王朝。谁会知道成了一代女将的她,却是个冷漠淡然的女子。当身份揭穿,她的命运随风飘零,不知何所归,却遇到了一生淡然洒脱的逍遥王,历经生死,正当互有好感时,却又有了当今皇上,帝国统帅为之动容。那么,她该如何选择呢?