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Updated: June 28, 2025


He now, therefore, found it was time to think of a successor, and fixed upon Calig'ula: willing, perhaps, by the enormity of Calig'ula's conduct, with which he was well acquainted, to lessen the obloquy of his own. Still, however, he seemed desirous to avoid his end; and strove, by change of place, to cut off the inquietude of his own reflections.

If any person desired to be revenged on an enemy, by bargaining with Com'modus for a sum of money, he was permitted to destroy him in any manner he thought proper. He commanded a person to be cast to the wild beasts for reading the life of Calig'ula in Sueto'nius. He ordered another to be thrown into a burning furnace, for accidentally overheating his bath.

He restored Jude'a to Her'od Agrip'pa, which Calig'ula had taken from Her'od Antipas, his uncle, the man who had put John the Baptist to death, and who was banished by order of the present emperor. He even undertook to gratify the people by foreign conquest.

Cassius Cher'ea, a tribune of the Prætorian bands, was the person who at last freed the world from this tyrant. Besides the motives which he had in common with other men, he had received repeated insults from Calig'ula, who took all occasions of turning him into ridicule, and impeaching him with cowardice, merely because he happened to have an effeminate voice.

At that instant, while he was hesitating, Aspore'nus, one of the conspirators, persuaded Calig'ula to go to the bath, and take some slight refreshment, that he might the better enjoy the rest of the entertainment. 25. The emperor, rising up, the conspirators used every precaution to keep off the throng, and to surround him themselves, under pretence of great assiduity.

They even went so far as to command, by an edict, that all Christians should leave the city; but Tibe'rius, by another edict, threatened death to such as should accuse them; by which means they continued unmolested during the rest of his reign. The vices of Calig'ula were concealed under the appearance of virtue in the beginning of his reign.

One of those who was thus exposed, crying out that he was innocent, Calig'ula ordered him to be taken up, his tongue to be cut out, and then thrown into the amphitheatre as before. 2.

Cher'ea began to apprehend that deferring the completion of the conspiracy might be the means of divulging it; he even dreaded that the honour of killing the tyrant might fall to the lot of some other person bolder than himself. At last he resolved to defer the execution of his plot only to the day following, when Calig'ula should pass through a private gallery, to some baths near the palace.

Under what name did he assume divine honours? Of what farther absurdities was he guilty? Relate other follies of his? What was his principal vice? Give an instance of his domestic extravagance? For him no prayers are poured, no pæans sung, No blessings chanted from a nation's tongue. Brereton. The impiety, however, of Calig'ula was but subordinate to his cruelties.

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