Authors:
  • Such was the unhappy condition of the Roman emperors, that, whatever might be their conduct, their fate was commonly the same. A life of pleasure or virtue, of severity or mildness, of indolence or glory, alike led to an untimely grave; and almost every reign is closed by the same disgusting repetition of treason and murder.

    Edward Gibbon, William George Smith (1857). “The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire”, p.75