Page:Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire vol 1 (1897).djvu/389

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OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
315

with so little probability to the workmen of the mint, Aurelian used his victory with unrelenting rigour.[1] He was naturally of a severe disposition. A peasant and a soldier, his nerves yielded not easily to the impressions of sympathy, and he could sustain without emotion the sight of tortures and death. Trained from his earliest youth in the exercise of arms, he set too small a value on the life of a citizen, chastised by military execution the slightest offences, and transferred the stern discipline of the camp into the civil administration of the laws. His love of justice often became a blind and furious passion; and, whenever he deemed his own or the public safety endangered, he disregarded the rules of evidence, and the proportion of punishments. The unprovoked rebellion with which the Romans rewarded his services exasperated his haughty spirit. The noblest families of the capital were involved in the guilt or suspicion of this dark conspiracy. A hasty spirit of revenge urged the bloody prosecution, and it proved fatal to one of the nephews of the emperor. The executioners (if we may use the expression of a contemporary poet) were fatigued, the prisons were crowded, and the unhappy senate lamented the death or absence of its most illustrious members.[2] Nor was the pride of Aurelian less offensive to that assembly than his cruelty. Ignorant or impatient of the restraints of civil institutions, he disdained to hold his power by any other title than that of the sword, and governed by right of conquest an empire which he had saved and subdued.[3]

He marches into the East, and is assassinatedIt was observed by one of the most sagacious of the Roman princes that the talents of his predecessor Aurelian were better suited to the command of an army than to the government of an empire.[4] Conscious of the character in which nature and experience had enabled him to excel, he again took the field a A.D. 274 Octoberfew months after his triumph. It was expedient to exercise the restless temper of the legions in some foreign war, and the Persian monarch, exulting in the shame of Valerian, still braved with impunity the offended majesty of Rome. At the head of
  1. Vopiscus in Hist. August. p. 222 [xxvi. 38]. The two Victors. Eutropius, ix. 14. Zosimus (l. i. p. 43) mentions only three senators, and places their death before the eastern war.
  2. Nulla catenati feralis pompa senatûs
    Carnificum lassabit opus; nec carcere pleno
    Infelix raros numerabit curia Patres.—Calphurn. Eclog. i. 60.
    [See above, note 88.]
  3. According to the younger Victor, he sometimes wore the diadem [Epit. 35]. Deus and Dominus appear on his medals.
  4. It was the observation of Diocletian. See Vopiscus in Hist. August. p. 224 [xxvi. 44].