Home   [800x700]    About


of so many emperors had loosened all the   ties of allegiance between the prince and people; that all the   generals of Philip were disposed to imitate the example of their   master; and that the caprice of armies, long since habituated   to frequent and violent revolutions, might every day raise to   the throne the most obscure of their fellow-soldiers. History can only add, that the rebellion against the emperor Philip   broke out in the summer of the year two hundred and forty- nine, among the legions of Męsia; and that a subaltern officer,   named Marinus, was the object of their seditious choice. Philip   was alarmed. He dreaded lest the treason of the Męsian army   should prove the first spark of a general conflagration.   Distracted with the consciousness of his guilt and of his danger, he communicated the intelligence to the senate. A   gloomy silence prevailed, the effect of fear, and perhaps of   disaffection; till at length Decius, one of the assembly,   assuming a spirit worthy of his noble extraction, ventured to   discover more intrepidity than the emperor seemed to possess.   He treated the whole business with contempt, as a hasty and inconsiderate tumult, and Philip's rival as a phantom of   royalty, who in a very few days would be destroyed by the   same inconstancy that had created him. The speedy   completion of the prophecy inspired Philip with a just esteem   for so able a counsellor; and Decius appeared to him the only   person capable of restoring peace and discipline to an army   whose tumultuous spirit did not immediately subside after the   murder of Marinus. Decius, who long resisted his own   nomination, seems to have insinuated the danger of   presenting a leader of merit to the angry and

Chapter available in: Next