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Notes Display Latin text | Translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb Book XI Chapter 33: Fall of Messalina. Narcissus leads the way[AD 48] | Next chapter Return to index Previous chapter |
There was equal alarm on the emperor's side. They put but little trust in Geta, who commanded the praetorians, a man swayed with good case to good or evil. Narcissus in concert with others who dreaded the same fate, declared that the only hope of safety for the emperor lay in his transferring for that one day the command of the soldiers to one of the freedmen, and he offered to undertake it himself. And that Claudius might not be induced by Lucius Vitellius and Largus Caecina to repent, while he was riding into Rome, he asked and took a seat in the emperor's carriage. Event: Fall of Messalina |