LUCII CAECILII FIRMIANI LACTANTII LIBER AD DONATUM CONFESSOREM, DE MORTIBUS PERSECUTORUM.
I. 0189C Audivit Dominus orationes tuas, Donate charissime, 0190C 0191A 0192A 0193A
From Maximian, God, the avenger of religion and of His people, turned his eyes to Galerius, the author of the accursed persecution, that in his punishment also He might manifest the power of His majesty. Galerius, too, was purposing to celebrate his twentieth anniversary; and as, under that pretext, he had, by new taxes payable in gold and silver, oppressed the provinces, so now, that he might recompense them by celebrating the promised festival, he used the like pretext for repeating his oppressions. Who can relate in fit terms the methods used to harass mankind in levying the tax, and especially with regard to corn and the other fruits of the earth? The officers, or rather the executioners, of all the different magistrates, seized on each individual, and would never let go their hold. No man knew to whom he ought to make payment first. There was no dispensation given to those who had nothing; and they were required, under pain of being variously tortured, instantly to pay, notwithstanding their inability. Many guards were set round, no breathing time was granted, or, at any season of the year, the least respite from exactions. Different magistrates, or the officers of different magistrates, frequently contended for the right of levying the tax from the same persons. No threshing-floor without a tax-gatherer, no vintage without a watch, and nought left for the sustenance of the husbandman! That food should be snatched from the mouths of those who had earned it by toil, was grievous: the hope, however, of being afterwards relieved, might have made that grievance supportable; but it was necessary for every one who appeared at the anniversary festival to provide robes of various kinds, and gold and silver besides. And one might have said, “How shall I furnish myself with those things, O tyrant void of understanding, if you carry off the whole fruits of my ground, and violently seize its expected produce?” Thus, throughout the dominions of Galerius, men were spoiled of their goods, and all was raked together into the imperial treasury, that the emperor might be enabled to perform his vow of celebrating a festival which he was doomed never to celebrate.
XXXI. Ab hoc Deus, religionis ac populi sui vindex, oculos ad Maximianum alterum transtulit, nefandae persecutionis auctorem, ut in eo etiam virtutem majestatis ostenderet. Jam de agendis et ipse vicennalibus cogitabat; et ut qui jamdudum provincias afflixerat auri argentique indictionibus factis, quae promiserat redderet, etiam in nomine vicennalium securem alteram afflixit. Qua vexatione generis humani exactio celebrata sit, maxime rei annonariae, ecquis enarrare digne potest? Officiorum omnium milites, vel potius carnifices, singulis adhaerebant; cui prius satisfieret, incertum: venia non habentibus nulla; sustinendi multiplices 0243B cruciatus, nisi exhiberetur statim, quod non erat: multis custodiis circumsepto nulla respirandi 0244A facultas: nullo tempore anni vel exigua requies; frequens super hisdem hominibus, vel ipsis judicibus, vel militibus judicum pugna: nulla area sine exactore, nulla vindemia sine custode, nihil ad victum laborantibus relictum. Quae quanquam intolerabilia sint, eripi ab ore hominum cibos labore quaesitos, tamen sustentabile aliquo modo vel spe futurorum. Quid vestis omnis generis? quid aurum? quid argentum? Nonne haec necesse est ex venditis fructibus comparari? Unde igitur hoc, o dementissime tyranne, praestabo, cum omnes fructus auferas, universa nascentia violenter eripias? Quis ergo non bonis suis eversus est, ut opes, quae sub imperio ejus fuerunt, conraderentur ad votum, quod non erat celebraturus.