<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 29. </h2>
<p>Antipater Becomes Intolerable. He Is Sent To Rome, And<br/>
Carries Herod's Testament With Him; Pheroras Leaves His<br/>
Brother, That He May Keep His Wife. He Dies At Home.<br/></p>
<p>1. Now when Antipater had cut off the hopes of the orphans, and had
contracted such affinities as would be most for his own advantage, he
proceeded briskly, as having a certain expectation of the kingdom; and as
he had now assurance added to his wickedness, he became intolerable; for
not being able to avoid the hatred of all people, he built his security
upon the terror he struck into them. Pheroras also assisted him in his
designs, looking upon him as already fixed in the kingdom. There was also
a company of women in the court, which excited new disturbances; for
Pheroras's wife, together with her mother and sister, as also Antipater's
mother, grew very impudent in the palace. She also was so insolent as to
affront the king's two daughters, <SPAN href="#linknote-44"
name="linknoteref-44" id="linknoteref-44">44</SPAN> on which account the king
hated her to a great degree; yet although these women were hated by him,
they domineered over others: there was only Salome who opposed their good
agreement, and informed the king of their meetings, as not being for the
advantage of his affairs. And when those women knew what calumnies she had
raised against them, and how much Herod was displeased, they left off
their public meetings, and friendly entertainments of one another; nay, on
the contrary, they pretended to quarrel one with another when the king was
within hearing. The like dissimulation did Antipater make use of; and when
matters were public, he opposed Pheroras; but still they had private
cabals and merry meetings in the night time; nor did the observation of
others do any more than confirm their mutual agreement. However, Salome
knew every thing they did, and told every thing to Herod.</p>
<p>2. But he was inflamed with anger at them, and chiefly at Pheroras's wife;
for Salome had principally accused her. So he got an assembly of his
friends and kindred together, and there accused this woman of many things,
and particularly of the affronts she had offered his daughters; and that
she had supplied the Pharisees with money, by way of rewards for what they
had done against him, and had procured his brother to become his enemy, by
giving him love potions. At length he turned his speech to Pheroras, and
told him that he would give him his choice of these two things: Whether he
would keep in with his brother, or with his wife? And when Pheroras said
that he would die rather than forsake his wife, Herod, not knowing what to
do further in that matter, turned his speech to Antipater, and charged him
to have no intercourse either with Pheroras's wife, or with Pheroras
himself, or with any one belonging to her. Now though Antipater did not
transgress that his injunction publicly, yet did he in secret come to
their night meetings; and because he was afraid that Salome observed what
he did, he procured, by the means of his Italian friends, that he might go
and live at Rome; for when they wrote that it was proper for Antipater to
be sent to Caesar for some time, Herod made no delay, but sent him, and
that with a splendid attendance, and a great deal of money, and gave him
his testament to carry with him,—wherein Antipater had the kingdom
bequeathed to him, and wherein Herod was named for Antipater's successor;
that Herod, I mean, who was the son of Mariamne, the high priest's
daughter.</p>
<p>3. Sylleus also, the Arabian, sailed to Rome, without any regard to
Caesar's injunctions, and this in order to oppose Antipater with all his
might, as to that law-suit which Nicolaus had with him before. This
Sylleus had also a great contest with Aretas his own king; for he had
slain many others of Aretas's friends, and particularly Sohemus, the most
potent man in the city Petra. Moreover, he had prevailed with Phabatus,
who was Herod's steward, by giving him a great sum of money, to assist him
against Herod; but when Herod gave him more, he induced him to leave
Sylleus, and by this means he demanded of him all that Caesar had required
of him to pay. But when Sylleus paid nothing of what he was to pay, and
did also accuse Phabatus to Caesar, and said that he was not a steward for
Caesar's advantage, but for Herod's, Phabatus was angry at him on that
account, but was still in very great esteem with Herod, and discovered
Sylleus's grand secrets, and told the king that Sylleus had corrupted
Corinthus, one of the guards of his body, by bribing him, and of whom he
must therefore have a care. Accordingly, the king complied; for this
Corinthus, though he was brought up in Herod's kingdom, yet was he by
birth an Arabian; so the king ordered him to be taken up immediately, and
not only him, but two other Arabians, who were caught with him; the one of
them was Sylleus's friend, the other the head of a tribe. These last,
being put to the torture, confessed that they had prevailed with
Corinthus, for a large sum of money, to kill Herod; and when they had been
further examined before Saturninus, the president of Syria, they were sent
to Rome.</p>
<p>4. However, Herod did not leave off importuning Pheroras, but proceeded to
force him to put away his wife; <SPAN href="#linknote-45"
name="linknoteref-45" id="linknoteref-45">45</SPAN> yet could he not devise
any way by which he could bring the woman herself to punishment, although
he had many causes of hatred to her; till at length he was in such great
uneasiness at her, that he cast both her and his brother out of his
kingdom. Pheroras took this injury very patiently, and went away into his
own tetrarchy, [Perea beyond Jordan,] and sware that there should be but
one end put to his flight, and that should be Herod's death; and that he
would never return while he was alive. Nor indeed would he return when his
brother was sick, although he earnestly sent for him to come to him,
because he had a mind to leave some injunctions with him before he died;
but Herod unexpectedly recovered. A little afterward Pheroras himself fell
sick, when Herod showed great moderation; for he came to him, and pitied
his case, and took care of him; but his affection for him did him no good,
for Pheroras died a little afterward. Now though Herod had so great an
affection for him to the last day of his life, yet was a report spread
abroad that he had killed him by poison. However, he took care to have his
dead body carried to Jerusalem, and appointed a very great mourning to the
whole nation for him, and bestowed a most pompous funeral upon him. And
this was the end that one of Alexander's and Aristobulus's murderers came
to.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 30. </h2>
<p>When Herod Made Inquiry About Pheroras's Death A Discovery<br/>
Was Made That Antipater Had Prepared A Poisonous Draught For<br/>
Him. Herod Casts Doris And Her Accomplices, As Also<br/>
Mariamne, Out Of The Palace And Blots Her Son Herod Out Of<br/>
His Testament.<br/></p>
<p>1. But now the punishment was transferred unto the original author,
Antipater, and took its rise from the death of Pheroras; for certain of
his freed-men came with a sad countenance to the king, and told him that
his brother had been destroyed by poison, and that his wife had brought
him somewhat that was prepared after an unusual manner, and that, upon his
eating it, he presently fell into his distemper; that Antipater's mother
and sister, two days before, brought a woman out of Arabia that was
skillful in mixing such drugs, that she might prepare a love potion for
Pheroras; and that instead of a love potion, she had given him deadly
poison; and that this was done by the management of Sylleus, who was
acquainted with that woman.</p>
<p>2. The king was deeply affected with so many suspicions, and had the
maid-servants and some of the free women also tortured; one of which cried
out in her agonies, "May that God that governs the earth and the heaven
punish this author of all these our miseries, Antipater's mother!" The
king took a handle from this confession, and proceeded to inquire further
into the truth of the matter. So this woman discovered the friendship of
Antipater's mother to Pheroras, and Antipater's women, as also their
secret meetings, and that Pheroras and Antipater had drunk with them for a
whole night together as they returned from the king, and would not suffer
any body, either man-servant or maidservant, to be there; while one of the
free women discovered the matter.</p>
<p>3. Upon this Herod tortured the maid-servants every one by themselves
separately, who all unanimously agreed in the foregoing discoveries, and
that accordingly by agreement they went away, Antipater to Rome, and
Pheroras to Perea; for that they oftentimes talked to one another thus:
That after Herod had slain Alexander and Aristobulus, he would fall upon
them, and upon their wives, because, after he Mariamne and her children he
would spare nobody; and that for this reason it was best to get as far off
the wild beast as they were able:—and that Antipater oftentimes
lamented his own case before his mother, and said to her, that he had
already gray hairs upon his head, and that his father grew younger again
every day, and that perhaps death would overtake him before he should
begin to be a king in earnest; and that in case Herod should die, which
yet nobody knew when it would be, the enjoyment of the succession could
certainly be but for a little time; for that these heads of Hydra, the
sons of Alexander and Aristobulus, were growing up: that he was deprived
by his father of the hopes of being succeeded by his children, for that
his successor after his death was not to be any one of his own sons, but
Herod the son of Mariamne: that in this point Herod was plainly
distracted, to think that his testament should therein take place; for he
would take care that not one of his posterity should remain, because he
was of all fathers the greatest hater of his children. Yet does he hate
his brother still worse; whence it was that he a while ago gave himself a
hundred talents, that he should not have any intercourse with Pheroras.
And when Pheroras said, Wherein have we done him any harm? Antipater
replied, "I wish he would but deprive us of all we have, and leave us
naked and alive only; but it is indeed impossible to escape this wild
beast, who is thus given to murder, who will not permit us to love any
person openly, although we be together privately; yet may we be so openly
too, if we have but the courage and the hands of men."</p>
<p>4. These things were said by the women upon the torture; as also that
Pheroras resolved to fly with them to Perea. Now Herod gave credit to all
they said, on account of the affair of the hundred talents; for he had no
discourse with any body about them, but only with Antipater. So he vented
his anger first of all against Antipater's mother, and took away from her
all the ornaments which he had given her, which cost a great many talents,
and cast her out of the palace a second time. He also took care of
Pheroras's women after their tortures, as being now reconciled to them;
but he was in great consternation himself, and inflamed upon every
suspicion, and had many innocent persons led to the torture, out of his
fear lest he should leave any guilty person untortured.</p>
<p>5. And now it was that he betook himself to examine Antipater of Samaria,
who was the steward of [his son] Antipater; and upon torturing him, he
learned that Antipater had sent for a potion of deadly poison for him out
of Egypt, by Antiphilus, a companion of his; that Theudio, the uncle of
Antipater, had it from him, and delivered it to Pheroras; for that
Antipater had charged him to take his father off while he was at Rome, and
so free him from the suspicion of doing it himself: that Pheroras also
committed this potion to his wife. Then did the king send for her, and bid
her bring to him what she had received immediately. So she came out of her
house as if she would bring it with her, but threw herself down from the
top of the house, in order to prevent any examination and torture from the
king. However, it came to pass, as it seems by the providence of God, when
he intended to bring Antipater to punishment, that she fell not upon her
head, but upon other parts of her body, and escaped. The king, when she
was brought to him, took care of her, [for she was at first quite
senseless upon her fall,] and asked her why she had thrown herself down;
and gave her his oath, that if she would speak the real truth, he would
excuse her from punishment; but that if she concealed any thing, he would
have her body torn to pieces by torments, and leave no part of it to be
buried.</p>
<p>6. Upon this the woman paused a little, and then said, "Why do I spare to
speak of these grand secrets, now Pheroras is dead? that would only tend
to save Antipater, who is all our destruction. Hear then, O king, and be
thou, and God himself, who cannot be deceived, witnesses to the truth of
what I am going to say. When thou didst sit weeping by Pheroras as he was
dying," then it was that he called me to him, and said, "My dear wife, I
have been greatly mistaken as to the disposition of my brother towards me,
and have hated him that is so affectionate to me, and have contrived to
kill him who is in such disorder for me before I am dead. As for myself, I
receive the recompence of my impiety; but do thou bring what poison was
left with us by Antipater, and which thou keepest in order to destroy him,
and consume it immediately in the fire in my sight, that I may not be
liable to the avenger in the invisible world." This I brought as he bid
me, and emptied the greatest part of it into the fire, but reserved a
little of it for my own use against uncertain futurity, and out of my fear
of thee.</p>
<p>7. When she had said this, she brought the box, which had a small quantity
of this potion in it: but the king let her alone, and transferred the
tortures to Antiphilus's mother and brother; who both confessed that
Antiphilus brought the box out of Egypt, and that they had received the
potion from a brother of his, who was a physician at Alexandria. Then did
the ghosts of Alexander and Aristobulus go round all the palace, and
became the inquisitors and discoverers of what could not otherwise have
been found out and brought such as were the freest from suspicion to be
examined; whereby it was discovered that Mariamne, the high priest's
daughter, was conscious of this plot; and her very brothers, when they
were tortured, declared it so to be. Whereupon the king avenged this
insolent attempt of the mother upon her son, and blotted Herod, whom he
had by her, out of his tretament, who had been before named therein as
successor to Antipater.</p>
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