Home About Network of subjects Linked subjects heatmap Book indices included Search by subject Search by reference Browse subjects Browse texts

Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database



10227
Seneca The Younger, Apocolocyntosis, 3


nanClaudius began to breathe his last, and could not make an end of the matter. Then Mercury, who had always been much pleased with his wit, drew aside one of the three Fates, and said: "Cruel beldame, why do you let the poor wretch be tormented? After all this torture cannot he have a rest? Four and sixty years it is now since he began to pant for breath. What grudge is this you bear against him and the whole empire? Do let the astrologers tell the truth for once; since he became emperor, they have never let a year pass, never a month, without laying him out for his burial. Yet it is no wonder if they are wrong, and no one knows his hour. Nobody ever believed he was really quite born. Do what has to be done: Kill him, and let a better man rule in empty court." Clotho replied: "Upon my word, I did wish to give him another hour or two, until he should make Roman citizens of the half dozen who are still outsiders. (He made up his mind, you know, to see the whole world in the toga, Greeks, Gauls, Spaniards, Britons, and all.) But since it is your pleasure to leave a few foreigners for seed, and since you command me, so be it." She opened her box and out came three spindles. One was for Augurinus, one for Baba, one for Claudius. "These three," she says, "I will cause to die within one year and at no great distance apart, and I will not dismiss him unattended. Think of all the thousands of men he was wont to see following after him, thousands going before, thousands all crowding about him, and it would never do to leave him alone on a sudden. These boon companions will satisfy him for the nonce.


Intertexts (texts cited often on the same page as the searched text):

None available

Subjects of this text:

subject book bibliographic info
audience Pinheiro et al., Cultural Crossroads in the Ancient Novel (2018) 167
bakhtin Pinheiro et al., Cultural Crossroads in the Ancient Novel (2018) 167
body Pinheiro et al., Cultural Crossroads in the Ancient Novel (2018) 167
britons Tacoma, Models from the Past in Roman Culture: A World of Exempla (2016) 209
citizenship Tacoma, Models from the Past in Roman Culture: A World of Exempla (2016) 209
ethnicity Tacoma, Models from the Past in Roman Culture: A World of Exempla (2016) 209
expulsions Tacoma, Models from the Past in Roman Culture: A World of Exempla (2016) 209
gauls Tacoma, Models from the Past in Roman Culture: A World of Exempla (2016) 209
greeks Tacoma, Models from the Past in Roman Culture: A World of Exempla (2016) 209
migrant identity Tacoma, Models from the Past in Roman Culture: A World of Exempla (2016) 209
seneca the younger Pinheiro et al., Cultural Crossroads in the Ancient Novel (2018) 167
suetonius' Pinheiro et al., Cultural Crossroads in the Ancient Novel (2018) 167