[Back to People With a History]
Tacitus: On Homosexuality,
from The Annals
Annals 14: - Degeneracy Under Nero
In Nero's fourth consulship with Cornelius Cossus for his colleague,
a theatrical entertainment to be repeated every five years was
established at Rome in imitation of the Greek festival. Like all
novelties, it was variously canvassed. There were some who declared
that even Cnius Pompeius was censured by the older men of the
day for having set up a fixed and permanent theatre. "Formerly,"
they said, "the games were usually exhibited with hastily
erected tiers of benches and a temporary stage, and the people
stood to witness them, that they might not, by having the chance
of sitting down, spend a succession of entire days in idleness.
Let the ancient character of these shows be retained, whenever
the praetors exhibited them, and let no citizen be under the necessity
of competing. As it was, the morality of their fathers, which
had by degrees been forgotten, was utterly subverted by the introduction
of a lax tone, so that all which could suffer or produce corruption
was to be seen at Rome, and a degeneracy bred by foreign tastes
was infecting the youth who devoted themselves to athletic sports,
to idle loungings and low intrigues, with the encouragement of
the emperor and Senate, who not only granted licence to vice,
but even applied a compulsion to drive Roman nobles into disgracing
themselves on the stage, under the pretence of being orators and
poets. What remained for them but to strip themselves naked, put
on the boxing-glove, and practise such battles instead of the
arms of legitimate warfare? Would justice be promoted, or would
they serve on the knights' commissions for the honourable office
of a judge, because they had listened with critical sagacity to
effeminate strains of music and sweet voices? Night too was given
up to infamy, so that virtue had not a moment left to her, but
all the vilest of that promiscuous throng dared to do in the darkness
anything they had lusted for in the day."
Annals 14:42 A Slave Kills His Master [because of a homosexual infatuation?]
The Issue here is not homosexuality, but the elite's fear of its slaves.
Soon afterwards one of his own slaves murdered the city-prefect, Pedanius Secundus, either because he had been refused his freedom, for which he had made a bargain, or in the jealousy of a love in which he could not brook his master's rivalry. Ancient custom required that the whole slave-establishment which had dwelt under the same roof should be dragged to execution, when a sudden gathering of the populace, which was for saving so many innocent lives, brought matters to actual insurrection. Even in the Senate there was a strong feeling on the part of those who shrank from extreme rigour, though the majority were opposed to any innovation. Of these, Caius Cassius, in giving his vote, argued to the following effect:-
"Often have I been present, Senators, in this assembly when new decrees were demanded from us contrary to the customs and laws of our ancestors, and I have refrained from opposition, not because I doubted but that in all matters the arrangements of the past were better and fairer and that all changes were for the worse, but that I might not seem to be exalting my own profession out of an excessive partiality for ancient precedent. At the same time I thought that any influence I possess ought not to be destroyed by incessant protests, wishing that it might remain unimpaired, should the State ever need my counsels. To-day this has come to pass, since an ex-consul has been murdered in his house by the treachery of slaves, which not one hindered or divulged, though the Senate's decree, which threatens the entire slave-establishment with execution, has been till now unshaken. Vote impunity, in heaven's name, and then who will be protected by his rank, when the prefecture of the capital has been of no avail to its holder? Who will be kept safe by the number of his slaves when four hundred have not protected Pedanius Secundus? Which of us will be rescued by his domestics, who, even with the dread of punishment before them, regard not our dangers? Was the murderer, as some do not blush to pretend, avenging his wrongs because he had bargained about money from his father or because a family-slave was taken from him? Let us actually decide that the master was justly slain.
"Is it your pleasure to search for arguments in a matter already weighed in the deliberations of wiser men than ourselves? Even if we had now for the first time to come to a decision, do you believe that a slave took courage to murder his master without letting fall a threatening word or uttering a rash syllable? Granted that he concealed his purpose, that he procured his weapon without his fellows' knowledge. Could he pass the night-guard, could he open the doors of the chamber, carry in a light, and accomplish the murder, while all were in ignorance? There are many preliminaries to guilt; if these are divulged by slaves, we may live singly amid numbers, safe among a trembling throng; lastly, if we must perish, it will be with vengeance on the guilty. Our ancestors always suspected the temper of their slaves, even when they were born on the same estates, or in the same houses with themselves and thus inherited from their birth an affection for their masters. But now that we have in our households nations with different customs to our own, with a foreign worship or none at all, it is only by terror you can hold in such a motley rabble. But, it will be said, the innocent will perish. Well, even in a beaten army when every tenth man is felled by the club, the lot falls also on the brave. There is some injustice in every great precedent, which, though injurious to individuals, has its compensation in the public advantage."
No one indeed dared singly to oppose the opinion of Cassius, but
clamorous voices rose in reply from all who pitied the number,
age, or sex, as well as the undoubted innocence of the great majority.
Still, the party which voted for their execution prevailed. But
the sentence could not be obeyed in the face of a dense and threatening
mob, with stones and firebrands. Then the emperor reprimanded
the people by edict, and lined with a force of soldiers the entire
route by which the condemned had to be dragged to execution. Cingonius
Varro had proposed that even all the freedmen under the same roof
should be transported from Italy. This the emperor forbade, as
he did not wish an ancient custom, which mercy had not relaxed,
to be strained with cruel rigour.
Annals 15:37 - Nero's Wedding to a Man
Nero, to win credit for himself of enjoying nothing so much as the capital, prepared banquets in the public places, and used the whole city, so to say, as his private house. Of these entertainments the most famous for their notorious profligacy were those furnished by Tigellinus, which I will describe as an illustration, that I may not have again and again to narrate similar extravagance. He had a raft constructed on Agrippa's lake, put the guests on board and set it in motion by other vessels towing it. These vessels glittered with gold and ivory; the crews were arranged according to age and experience in vice. Birds and beasts had been procured from remote countries, and sea monsters from the ocean. On the margin of the lake were set up brothels crowded with noble ladies, and on the opposite bank were seen naked prostitutes with obscene gestures and movements. As darkness approached, all the adjacent grove and surrounding buildings resounded with song, and shone brilliantly with lights. Nero, who polluted himself by every lawful or lawless indulgence, had not omitted a single abomination which could heighten his depravity, till a few days afterwards he stooped to marry himself to one of that filthy herd, by name Pythagoras, with all the forms of regular wedlock. The bridal veil was put over the emperor; people saw the witnesses of the ceremony, the wedding dower, the couch and the nuptial torches; everything in a word was plainly visible, which, even when a woman weds darkness hides.
[For this incident also see Suetonius, Nero 27; Dio Cassius,
Epitome 62:28. Cf. Martial 12:42]]