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Rome, 9–8 BC. Nine years have passed. Agrippa is dead and Tiberius has been forced to marry Julia, divorcing his wife Vipsania Agrippina. Still deeply in love, he continues to meet Vipsania secretly, enraging Augustus, but Livia defends him by claiming that Tiberius had informed her of the meetings. Tiberius is briefly comforted by the presence of his brother Drusus, who quarrels with Livia before leaving on campaign. Drusus writes to Tiberius, asking for his brother's help in persuading Augustus to retire and return Rome to a Republic, but the letter is intercepted and read by both Livia and Augustus. Augustus dismisses the letter as youthful impetuousness, but Livia is clearly troubled. Drusus falls from his horse and crushes his leg, and his condition worsens under the oversight of Livia's personal physician. He dies in the presence of his wife, Antonia, and their recently born son Claudius, leaving Tiberius heartbroken. A year later, a drunken Julia enrages Tiberius with taunts about Vipsania, and he strikes her across the face, resulting in his banishment from Rome. Augustus looks forward to sharing his power with his grandsons Lucius and Gaius when they come of age, but Livia is already planning ahead.

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00:00But she got her way in the end.
00:07Nine years passed before a grip of services could be spared.
00:12Then he died.
00:14He poisoned by Livia.
00:17Tiberius divorced his wife and married Julia.
00:21But Drusus, my father, Tiberius' beloved brother.
00:30But then everybody loved my father, except Livia, his mother.
00:36Wicked woman.
00:39You're getting soft.
00:41You wouldn't last a five-hour march if you were in the army, now.
00:45Now throw it!
00:46Oh, come on, throw it!
00:48Antonia throws harder than that.
00:53Oh, shut up!
00:54Throw the wall!
00:58Of course, if you lost her in the stomach of your...
01:00Oh!
01:03Bless you!
01:04Ah!
01:09Ah!
01:13Ah!
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01:48Ah!
01:48Death or surrender?
01:50Oh, get off her.
01:54I never thought I'd see my brother in such a pitiful condition.
01:57You spent ten years in Rome. See how you feel.
02:06Hey.
02:08What's this, huh? Subx?
02:11You're lucky.
02:13You'll go back to the army tomorrow.
02:16I've seen a decent life for a Roman.
02:20Marching, fighting, building forts.
02:25It's one of the best years of my life.
02:27You made the army's life bloody hell.
02:29Well, I marched them hard and I drilled them hard.
02:31But I was fair. I'll bet they say I was fair.
02:34Do you know what they really say about you?
02:36What?
02:39They say that your drills were bloodless battles
02:44and your battles were bloody drills.
02:49Is that what they say?
02:51Really?
02:52Yes.
02:55You know, Drew says that army I took across the Alps.
02:58They were men.
02:59You've never had men like that.
03:00Hey, we've won some victories ourselves, you know.
03:02You didn't win them all.
03:03I know, I know.
03:04For those two legions.
03:06The 12th and the 16th.
03:08You'll never see that like again.
03:10Nothing bothered them.
03:12The heat.
03:13The cold.
03:14The marching.
03:16Oh, I cursed them and I flogged them.
03:20But I cursed and flogged their officers too.
03:23And if there weren't any tents for the men,
03:26I slept out in the open room.
03:29Well, they'll have to take the field again.
03:33You won't let me.
03:35Oh, Augustus.
03:38Keeps me here as his work donkey.
03:41Says he can't spare me.
03:44I'm his chief errand boy.
03:47I spend my time investigating the level of unemployment.
03:56Or reorganizing the city fire brigade.
04:00Added to that,
04:02there's that bitch Julia they made me marry.
04:08Oh, he's just impossible.
04:09You know, sometimes he doesn't speak to me for days.
04:13Well, he was always very broody, according to Drusus,
04:16even as a child.
04:17But Drusus says he can always make him laugh.
04:20Drusus.
04:21Drusus only knows him as a brother.
04:22He ought to be married to him.
04:25You know, Antonia, I'm very easygoing.
04:28Oh, that toe's a drop off.
04:30There's a stiffness in the joint.
04:32It wasn't before you started to work on it.
04:35Daydream, you know.
04:36Ben's down there all day massaging the same toe, if you like.
04:39She's probably in love.
04:41Hope she has better luck than me.
04:43What was I talking about?
04:44About Tiberius.
04:46He never wanted to divorce Vipsania.
04:48That was the trouble.
04:49That wispy stalk of a thing.
04:50I don't know what he saw in her.
04:51There's nothing of her.
04:52She's as thin as a stick.
04:54She has to spend half of every night in bed looking for her.
04:57Julia.
04:58It's true.
04:59If the sheets got a bit crumpled in the night, she disappeared until morning.
05:03It was lucky if they found her when they made the bed.
05:06She's not as thin as that.
05:08I don't know what you call thin.
05:10But I saw old Valerius two days after he starved himself to death and he looked better than she looks now.
05:15Well, I must say I could never see the attraction and after ten years of marriage I thought he'd be quite glad to see the back of her.
05:23That's the trouble.
05:24He was always too glad to see the back of her.
05:29Julia, what on earth do you mean?
05:31He's very strange.
05:34You're much too sensitive a person for me to go into details.
05:38Julia, he doesn't.
05:40I could put up with that.
05:42I'm not like you, Antonia.
05:45I could probably teach him a thing or two.
05:48Watch the coldness.
05:50I can't get near him.
05:52Even snow will melt on a warm day, but not him.
05:56I had no idea.
05:57And he hates Gaius and Lucius.
05:59Now, I mean, how could anyone hate my boys?
06:01They're sweet, aren't they?
06:02They're very sweet.
06:04I thought that I was once mad about him.
06:07What fools we women are.
06:09I blame Augustus for it.
06:10He should never have insisted on the marriage.
06:13Don't blame my father. Blame Livia.
06:15If anyone insisted, she did.
06:17She tried the same thing ten years ago when my first husband died.
06:20But Agrippa got him before her.
06:22I didn't know that.
06:24No, when you were too young.
06:26That's all right. I've had enough.
06:28When Marcellus died, she had everything planned.
06:31She was very clever.
06:32She knew how I felt about Tiberius and she was determined that he should marry him.
06:36But Agrippa had the same idea and at that time Augustus needed him more than he needed her son.
06:42So she had to wait.
06:44And can she wait?
06:45Ye gods, time means nothing to her.
06:48Poor Marcellus.
06:49That must have been terrible for you.
06:51Well, to tell you the truth...
06:54Leave us.
06:55I'll call you.
06:58Off you go.
07:00Go.
07:01To tell you the truth, it's often crossed my mind that Livia might have had a hand in that.
07:11Julia.
07:12Well, I might be wrong.
07:14But he was a strong, healthy man and he never had a serious illness until she got her hands on him.
07:20How full wonder about that woman.
07:25Antonia.
07:27You're so innocent.
07:29Not so innocent.
07:33Ask Drusus.
07:36I might just do that one of these days if I get him into the right mood.
07:40He's very attractive, your husband.
07:43Why is it that when I come in here with you I always cover myself up and if I come in here with anybody else I don't bother?
07:50Well, you should.
07:52I don't approve of all this nakedness.
07:56Oh, Antonia.
07:57Why should I miss you when you leave tomorrow?
08:01Not so hard.
08:03The dirt's ingrained in the skin.
08:05It goes deeper than that.
08:06Oh, your gloom is magnificent.
08:09Not so hard all the same, I'll get my men to do it.
08:11I can't think why you wanted them to do it anyway.
08:14A man should keep himself clean, not have slaves do it.
08:18How's he supposed to scrape his own back?
08:21He gets his brother to do it.
08:23If he hasn't got a brother, he gets his son.
08:25If he hasn't got a son, he gets his friend.
08:27And if he hasn't got a friend, then he should go and hang himself.
08:29Yeah, I've tried it.
08:32Better to have a slave scrape your back.
08:36Hello.
08:38I shall miss you.
08:40You don't have any dark thoughts.
08:42Oh, nonsense. We all have them.
08:44Not like me.
08:46Not like me.
08:47Come on, you're no worse than the rest of us.
08:50I'll tell you something, Drusus.
08:52Sometimes I so hate myself,
08:55I can't bear the thought of me anymore.
09:00You don't know anything about darkness, do you?
09:04Inside darkness.
09:07Blackness.
09:08Ah, stop bragging.
09:09I can match you black for black.
09:12Not you.
09:14Not you.
09:15They say the tree of the Claudians produces two kinds of apples.
09:17The sweet and the sour.
09:19It was never more true than you and me.
09:21And what of our mother?
09:22Which is she?
09:24Olivia?
09:26They say a snake bit her once.
09:28And died.
09:30Hey, hey, that's no longer funny.
09:36I've only cared for three people in my life.
09:38One was our father.
09:39Yes, he was the noblest of us all.
09:41Yes.
09:42The other was Ripsania.
09:43I'm sorry about that.
09:44Why?
09:45Why did you divorce her?
09:46Livier insisted on it.
09:47Julia wanted it.
09:49Augustus insisted on it.
09:50It's all the same.
09:51You were so happy you might have refused.
09:56Do you think the monarchy will survive Augustus?
10:02No, I don't.
10:05Rome will be a republic again, I promise you that.
10:07Then perhaps I did it all for nothing.
10:08Is that why you did it?
10:22Is that really?
10:23Is that really?
10:26But there are Julia's sons that come before you anyway.
10:34My poor brother.
10:37So ambitious.
10:39Our mother makes me so.
10:41I miss her so.
10:46Oh God, I miss her so.
10:48It's Sanya.
10:56What did they make me do?
10:58Tiberius.
10:59Tiberius.
11:04What's done is done.
11:09Yeah.
11:12Yes, it's done.
11:14I must forget her.
11:17Yeah.
11:20If Sanya was the second.
11:23She's gone.
11:27You're the third.
11:29Well, you know I feel the same way.
11:32You know.
11:34You should have my nature and I yours.
11:36Why?
11:38I'm the elder, I'm supposed to protect you.
11:40Well, we'll protect each other.
11:42I don't know what from.
11:46There are many things you don't know.
11:50If anything should happen to you.
11:52Ah, now what could happen to me?
11:56Well, you could be killed in battle.
11:58Or you would fall sick or die.
12:00Yes.
12:02And you could cut your throat shaving or choke on a plum stone.
12:07Tiberius, none of us is guaranteed a time.
12:11No.
12:14No.
12:19You're my lifeline into the light.
12:21Six again.
12:26One, two, three, four, five, six.
12:30Hmm.
12:32Now what will you do?
12:34I'll put two legions in the port and stop the corn supply.
12:37Not bad.
12:39Rome can't live without corn.
12:41But you've got your back to the sea and that's not good.
12:44Still, that's your decision.
12:46Lucius, your turn.
12:50Six.
12:51Oh, these dice have got nothing but sixes.
12:54One, two, three, four, five, six.
12:57Belgica!
12:58Belgic's mine!
12:59Go on, throw again.
13:03Two.
13:06One, two.
13:07Two.
13:08I'll take Britain.
13:09No, you can't.
13:10You've only got three legions left.
13:13Julius did it.
13:14He didn't stay long though, did he?
13:16Oh yes!
13:17What is it?
13:19Caesar, your stepson, the noble Drusus Nero, begs to take his lever.
13:23Oh yes, yes.
13:24You can come with me.
13:26Can't finish the game first.
13:27Later we have a duty to perform, and duty comes before pleasure.
13:30Now come and say goodbye to the man who commands all our armies in Germany.
13:34Now come on, come on, come on.
13:36And no sulks.
13:38That's not the Roman way.
13:47So you're leaving us.
13:48Yes, Caesar.
13:49I'm glad to go, I dare say.
13:50I go where I'm sent, Caesar, but if you ask me, yes, I am glad to go.
13:54Well, I don't blame you.
13:55When I was your age, I wanted to be with the army too.
13:57Look, I brought Gaius and Lucius to say goodbye.
14:00Ah, we've been playing Empire.
14:02I've already lost Egypt and Syria.
14:04May I ask Drusus a question?
14:06Yes, go ahead.
14:07How many legions would you need to invade Britain?
14:10Ah, um, four.
14:13Yes, and a great deal of auxiliary cavalry as well.
14:16Couldn't you do it with three?
14:17They're very uncivilized.
14:18It's not worth the risk.
14:20You see, on a fresh venture, you must hit hard and quickly.
14:24If you have to send for reinforcements, it just gives the enemy breathing space.
14:29I'll do it one day.
14:32Well, I doubt it's worth it.
14:34There's nothing of value there and the people make very poor slaves.
14:38Now say goodbye and wait for me upstairs.
14:41Goodbye then.
14:42Goodbye.
14:43Goodbye.
14:44You should read Julius's commentaries on his campaign in Britain.
14:50I've read it.
14:51Twice.
14:52So have I.
14:53Goodbye.
14:55And don't move the tokens while I'm gone.
14:57I know where they are.
15:00They're good boys.
15:01We'll have need of them one day.
15:03Come and, uh, come and walk with me in the garden a moment.
15:07Is, uh, Antonia traveling with you?
15:09Yes.
15:10Will that be all right?
15:11I mean, in her condition.
15:12Oh, yeah.
15:13I didn't realize she was expecting again.
15:15Julia told me.
15:17It's a bit close to the other.
15:18Yes.
15:19Well, what can you do?
15:20Yes, true.
15:21Anyway, we need more children.
15:22Especially among the nobility.
15:24People aren't getting married earlier.
15:26Yes.
15:27I must do something about that.
15:32Have you, uh, have you said goodbye to Lydia?
15:35Well, she knows I'm here.
15:36She's with the Parthian ambassador.
15:37Oh, yes, yes, yes.
15:38And she worked so hard for me.
15:40Your mother is a very fine woman.
15:42I'd have given up long ago if it weren't for her.
15:45It is an immense burden to place on the shoulders of just one man.
15:49Yes, it is, it is.
15:51It's really too much.
15:53Oh, I sometimes have a longing, you know, to be just a private citizen again.
15:56And it's been 20 years now since Mark Antony died.
15:59And I took it all on my own.
16:01And I blame him, you know.
16:03I mean, what a fool that man was.
16:05The whole of the Eastern Empire was his.
16:07If he'd been a proper husband to my sister, things would have been very different.
16:12Is it too late?
16:13Yes?
16:14Is it too late to lay down the burdens of office?
16:17And let the Senate rule?
16:18Yes.
16:20You're just like your father.
16:22Always wanting the Republic.
16:25He was my enemy too at one time.
16:30I'll never be there.
16:32No.
16:34No, I didn't mean that.
16:36Be like it.
16:37You couldn't do better.
16:40I did him wrong once, you know.
16:42Oh, yes.
16:43Yes, yes.
16:44I took your mother from him.
16:47And that has weighed with me over the years.
16:52Still, we're a family.
16:55And we all work together for the greater good of Rome.
17:00My brother.
17:01Oh, yes, yes, yes.
17:02Tiberius.
17:03Oh, he's a puzzle to me.
17:05Like the Sphinx.
17:06It's like having a large dog lying about the house all day, watching everything and saying nothing.
17:12He wants to leave Rome.
17:13Yes, I know, I know.
17:14He never stops telling me.
17:15But I need him here and that's a fact.
17:17I mean, what would I do without him until the boys grow up?
17:19Yes, still an unwilling horse.
17:21Yes, yes.
17:22He's more trouble than walking on foot.
17:24But we're not horses.
17:25He can't hold you what we want.
17:27And frankly, what does he want?
17:28He wants to sit on a rock all day.
17:31Rhodes or Capri and throw stones at the sea.
17:33Why, I don't know.
17:34No, no, no, no, no.
17:35We can't have it.
17:37Ah, here's your mother.
17:40So, you're off again.
17:41Yes, mother.
17:42You read the dispatches that came from Germany yesterday?
17:45The Kierowski are giving trouble again.
17:47I'll give them trouble enough.
17:48Don't worry.
17:49Shall we ever civilize these Germans, Drusus?
17:51I doubt it.
17:52Well, you know how I feel.
17:53I mean, conquer a people.
17:54He must be temperate.
17:56But when agreements have been broken, punishments must be severe.
18:01What do the Parthians want?
18:03They want a Roman god to worship.
18:05They want to dedicate a temple to you.
18:08No, I won't have it.
18:09I've said so before.
18:10We've abolished kings in Rome, mother.
18:12And you now give us living gods.
18:14They won't be in Rome, Drusus.
18:15They'll be in Syria.
18:16What harm is there in a temple built in your name where primitive people may come against you?
18:21No, no, look.
18:22It makes me uneasy, dear.
18:23I feel in my heart it's...
18:25It's not right.
18:27Wiley, we may offend those gods that already look after us and oversee our destiny.
18:31But these people...
18:32No!
18:33You must tell them no.
18:34Well, I must get back to the boys and finish the game.
18:38Now, look after Antonia.
18:40No accidents.
18:42Who knows what great Romans she may be carrying.
18:48Gods go with you.
18:49I shall ask the boys to die with us today.
18:54They can listen to the discussion with the ambassadors.
18:57It'll be good for them.
19:01Leave him alone.
19:02Don't encourage him to step down from office.
19:05Your mother!
19:06Your mother!
19:07And do you really want us to drift into a hereditary monarchy?
19:10Become sinks of corruption like the eastern potentates?
19:13Rome will never be a republic again.
19:16Well, we needn't quarrel about it.
19:22Come let me kiss you and say goodbye.
19:28You know you mustn't mind if you dislike me.
19:35A mother can't love all her children.
19:38You shouldn't have come here.
19:48It's wrong.
19:49It's wrong.
19:50Don't send me away.
19:51Please, Vipsania.
19:53Do you want to make trouble for me?
19:55No.
19:56No.
19:57Then go away.
20:00It's dangerous.
20:02Open the shutter.
20:04Let me look at you again.
20:08Please, please, go away.
20:18Is it true?
20:22Yes.
20:24Yes, it's true.
20:26Getting married again?
20:27Yes.
20:31I won't hide.
20:32I won't hide!
20:34I'll kill you!
20:35You're mine!
20:36You're my wife!
20:40I am not your wife.
20:42You divorced me.
20:45Don't.
20:47Don't.
20:48Please, you must leave me alone.
20:51We mustn't see each other again.
20:53Do you love him?
20:54Do you love her?
20:55No.
20:56No, I hate her.
20:57He's very kind to me.
21:02But why must you marry her again?
21:04Because I must put an end to you following me.
21:07You're coming to see me.
21:09Your mother spies her everywhere.
21:12I don't care about that.
21:14You are married to Augusta's daughter.
21:16You can't treat her as if she were no one.
21:19Don't get married again.
21:22I beg you.
21:24I couldn't bear it.
21:26And am I to spend the rest of my life alone?
21:29You wouldn't be alone.
21:31I promise you.
21:33Iberius, it was not my doing.
21:35I didn't divorce you.
21:36You divorced me.
21:38I didn't want to.
21:39They made me do it.
21:42They couldn't have made me.
21:47Oh, I'm sorry.
21:48I didn't mean that.
21:50I didn't mean that.
21:54It was hard for you, I know.
21:56I know.
21:57Harder for you than it would have been for me.
21:59You've never done it.
22:01I should have killed myself first.
22:03It's done now.
22:04There's no going back.
22:10Let's die together.
22:15Let's kill ourselves.
22:17Let's go into our bathroom.
22:19Open our veins.
22:21And when they find us,
22:23our blood will be mingling and caressing in the water.
22:26Oh, my baby, my baby.
22:28It's too late.
22:30It's too late.
22:31Lost.
22:33Lost.
22:34I go from darkness into darkness.
22:36Come through it and so will I.
22:37But how will I come through it, Vipsania?
22:41I'm afraid of what I'll become without you.
22:43Why should you be afraid?
22:45Because of your sweetness.
22:48We had a deputation here six months ago from Palmyra.
22:53And Augustus refused, I remember.
22:56The thought of deification makes him uneasy.
23:00It might make us all uneasy.
23:02We're not all worthy of it.
23:03No, no, of course.
23:05But his mind is made up.
23:08Yes.
23:10But so is mine.
23:12I cannot allow his natural modesty to interfere with his political judgment.
23:18I know that if the Senate were convinced that his deification were politically useful,
23:23he would not be displeased.
23:24But he himself will exert no pressure and, of course, he would not be present at any of the debates.
23:31Of course.
23:33There'll be some opposition in the Senate.
23:36But, er, I'll take the line that...
23:38I'll tell you what line to take.
23:40You were seen.
23:41I'm in broad daylight.
23:42You were seen going in and you were seen coming out.
23:44I won't have it.
23:45And it's not the first time.
23:46I went to congratulate her on her coming marriage.
23:49Don't congratulate her.
23:50Leave her be.
23:51And you didn't go for that reason.
23:52Not at all for that reason.
23:54You treat my daughter with respect.
23:56Respect you, hear me?
23:57I didn't ask for this marriage.
23:58You asked me.
23:59Didn't she ask for it?
24:00But, by thunder, I won't have it made a mockery of.
24:02He's been seeing his former wife with you, please.
24:04And it's not the first time.
24:06My dear, I think you exaggerate.
24:07I exaggerate nothing.
24:09He met you in the street the other day.
24:10Oh, yes, you did.
24:11I heard about it.
24:12I hear everything, everything.
24:13Nothing escapes me.
24:14He didn't dare speak to her in public,
24:16but he followed her all through the city
24:18like a moonstruck calf for everyone to see.
24:23Do not make a laughing stock of my family,
24:25or as quick as boiled asparagus, I'll have you out.
24:28Out!
24:35You listen to me.
24:38Mark Cantony was twice the man you are.
24:40And when he spat on my sister,
24:42he learned a lesson that he didn't live long enough to profit from.
24:45Do you understand me?
24:47Julia and I don't get on.
24:48Damn you!
24:49I don't want to hear about it!
24:50You'll get on whether you like it or not!
24:51And you'll leave that woman alone!
24:54Well, let me go away.
24:55Let me leave Rome.
24:57What am I to do with him?
24:59Now, tell me.
25:00You're his mother.
25:01Now, speak to him.
25:02It's a gripper all over again.
25:04He doesn't mean it.
25:05He doesn't want to go.
25:06Didn't you hear what he said?
25:08He's unhappy.
25:10He didn't mean it.
25:11Oh!
25:12It's not unnatural for a man to see his former wife now and then.
25:16They may have things to discuss.
25:18After all, I saw his father several times after you and I were married.
25:21That was different!
25:22Well, not so very different.
25:23And you, if I recall, saw Julia's mother from time to time.
25:26Yes, but not in secret!
25:29Well, I don't remember being present.
25:30Oh, you may not have been, but it was not in secret!
25:33Well, how secret was this?
25:36I knew about it.
25:40You knew about it?
25:42Of course.
25:43He told me.
25:45You never said anything to me.
25:47Have you so little to occupy your time that I must keep you informed of the comings and goings of everyone in the household?
25:53You're always complaining you have too much to think about and not enough time to think about it in.
25:58Perhaps you'd care to see the laundry lists in future.
26:01All right, I was hasty.
26:17But you understand?
26:19I felt I had cause.
26:24Tiberius, listen.
26:26I'm not blind.
26:27I know that you and Julia aren't the most perfectly matched couple in the world.
26:31But what can you do?
26:32These things happen.
26:34But we can't go cutting the knot every time we have a quarrel.
26:37Especially us.
26:38We have to set an example.
26:40Olivia, you'll back me on this?
26:41Oh, but of course.
26:42We have duties and responsibilities which far outweigh our private...
26:45Exactly!
26:50Now, Tiberius, you play fair with me, eh?
26:54Don't sulk.
26:57And if it's a matter of a little thing on the side here and there.
26:59And I'm not encouraging, mind.
27:01Who's to know?
27:02Between you and me.
27:03And forgetting that your mother's here for the moment.
27:05If that's ever possible.
27:08Yes.
27:09Well, we can wink at it between men.
27:12But it's not.
27:14I don't like it.
27:15Do you understand?
27:16It's not right.
27:18Now, you play fair with me and you'll see.
27:20I can be generous too.
27:25Good.
27:27Good.
27:32If there's one thing I hate, it's a family round.
27:34I mean, what does it cost to be kind to one another?
27:36To be sympathetic and understanding?
27:39Yes?
27:40An imperial messenger has arrived from Germany, Caesar.
27:42Send him in.
27:48A dispatch from Drusus Nero for his noble brother.
27:50Tiberius, let's hear what he says.
27:52It's news from Germany.
27:53Tiberius, let's hear what he says.
27:54It's news from Germany.
27:55The Holy Spirit.
27:56My dear Tiberius.
27:57A period of enforced rest due to a slight head wound.
27:58Has given me much time to ponder and reflect on the state of our beloved Rome.
28:02my dear tiberius a period of enforced rest due to a slight head wound has given me much time
28:12to ponder and reflect on the state of our beloved rome he's wounded not seriously he says a slight
28:18such was the extent of the corruption and petty place seeking that i found in
28:24go on the handwriting it's surely you can read more than that yes um well he goes on to say uh
28:44well honestly sir it's not worth reading i think my brother was perhaps not himself when he read it
28:54the corruption and petty place seeking that i found in rome that i have come to the conclusion
29:17that it is the inevitable consequence of the continued exercise of supreme power by augustus
29:24could we not persuade him even compel him to retire i firmly believe he is ready to do this but for
29:35the stubbornness of our mother olivia who derived such satisfaction from the exercise of supreme power
29:42through him there's more do you want to read it the letter is clearly treasonable no no no no you feel
29:56strongly about it i understand he's wrong i understand it then again perhaps he's right perhaps i should retire
30:12i've said so often enough will you allow him to insult me in this fashion he's your son not mine
30:21his wound might have affected him uh he speaks of giddiness at the end yes
30:28yes that's it he's a little bit deranged those german for us they can affect a man
30:42i call him back for a rest be good to see him again yes i think you're right we should have him back
30:49and i'll send a doctor with a letter he's got a doctor oh army doctors what do they know no no no no
30:55i'll send my own he'll know how to take care of him
30:58easy that's right that's the doctor which one which one ours of course and tell him to hurry lift
31:12him onto the bed and be careful oh well like gods i'll make eunuchs of you you blocker right get this
31:20away a lot of you crucified it's all right it's all right all right clear out oh it's terrible it's a
31:33mess we'll get it cleaned hurry up with that water
31:40what happened my horse fell on me i couldn't get out crushed my leg against jagged rock and then
31:46toy to shreds trying to get to its feet the doctor's coming what what did the guardsmen
31:52mean which one the one arrived from rome today he's your mother's personal physician
31:59well that was kind of uh he'll have more to look at than just a head wound won't he where is he
32:04we found a room for him he doesn't look too happy i think he's already missing the comforts of home
32:08he brought a letter with him too from caesar well where is it i have it here i give it to you after
32:28now you give it to me now
32:39rufus
32:42what happened the horse fell and crushed his leg
32:44oh no no i'm all right well i've been invited politely back to rome why i'm not sure but i think i can get
33:04you're not be moving far on that leg only if i'm any judge of wounds
33:22i don't understand a simple thought how could it happen they could be bad sometimes to bring him so
33:31close to death's door well it's a good excuse for not coming home why do you say that because i've
33:38heard such reasons before don't raise your voice to me for what reason could he have who knows we
33:44know he has the whole of the western armies at his back perhaps he'll come when it suits him
33:51i must go to my brother he's 500 miles away if it's as serious as the letter says he could be dead
33:56even now all the same i must go to him i'd make a sacrifice not for prayers perhaps he won't be taken
34:04from us take him our love
34:10well go go go go quickly
34:11the senate today voted to make me a god in palmyra they'll put a little statue to me in the temple
34:26and people will bring offerings to me asking me to bring rain or cure their father's gout
34:31tell me lydia if i'm a god even in palmyra how do i cure gout
34:48what is it my love what do you want
34:52that's it yes yes of course i'll bring them
35:14he wants me to fetch the children
35:22is he now but it's near
35:46what is it gangrene
35:49crept slowly up through him nothing seemed to stop it
35:55where's the staff sergeant he wasn't allowed near him
36:00he took the case out of his hands
36:19what's that it was just a simple fall
36:26what happened to your skill i i came too late his condition was too far gone i came too late
36:35where are you
36:36i'm one of them
36:44your juices
36:46juices look at me
36:50it's i
36:50tiberius
36:58you and your damn plum stones
37:01she read the letter
37:06I couldn't stop her
37:10she was there when I got it
37:13I couldn't think it would have anything in it
37:17Rome had her severe mother
37:23and Gaius
37:27and Lucius
37:29a cruel stepmother
37:33Jusus
37:44Jusus
37:47Jusus
37:49no
37:52no
37:54no
37:56you didn't wait
38:04you didn't wait
38:07look
38:09I brought you little Claudius
38:11and you didn't wait
38:16shouldn't have died
38:27and that's a fact
38:29somebody blundered
38:32and that's a fact
38:33come
38:37your meal is ready Caesar
38:43will you have it now or shall I take it away
38:58will you have it now or shall I take it away
39:10yes
39:15yes
39:15yes
39:22yes
39:24yes
39:25yes
39:27yes
39:28yes
39:29Very good.
39:45I think the cook's on form today for a change.
39:48Try that.
39:51There.
39:59The garlic's a little overdone for my taste.
40:03You're always complaining about the garlic.
40:14A good swallow now.
40:25Yes, I know this one.
40:26It's from the north, about five years old.
40:29We had a very bad summer then.
40:31The grapes had a little less sugar in them.
40:33Oh, stop showing off.
40:35We'll fill it up.
40:37Then you can go. I'm very busy.
40:40Another history, Caesar?
40:41Yes.
40:42Of the Etruscans again?
40:44No, of my family.
40:47Ah.
40:48Did you ever read my history of the Etruscans?
40:51No.
40:52I got it down from the library once, but I couldn't get into it.
40:56Very well written, of course.
40:58Oh, very well written.
40:59Is something the matter, Caesar?
41:01Ah.
41:02The fact is, when you know that someone's trying to poison you, nothing tastes right.
41:08Absolutely nothing.
41:09Oh, come now, Caesar.
41:10Who would try and poison you?
41:11You're beloved of everyone.
41:12Oh, don't butter me up.
41:13You know very well you would want to poison me.
41:16My wife, that's who.
41:17And that slimy son of hers.
41:20For all I know, you're in league with a pair of them.
41:24In my opinion, Caesar, the only person likely to poison us here is the cook.
41:28I wish you'd let me get rid of him.
41:31He's a Greek.
41:32And the only thing he ever thinks of doing is stuffing vine leaves.
41:36Will you take it away?
41:38I'm not hungry.
41:39May I ask how the current work is coming?
41:48Well, enough.
41:57May I ask how far you've got?
41:59The death of my father.
42:01Ah, the noble Drusus.
42:04A tragedy that one should lose one's father so young.
42:07Yes.
42:09Yes.
42:10Ah.
42:21A tragedy for us all.
42:24Yes, and for Rome.
42:26And especially for my uncle.
42:28He was never the same again.
42:31Amen.
42:59Amen.
43:00Amen.
43:01Well, sons of Agrippa,
43:26the daylight's fled and the stars are out.
43:32It's time for decent people to lock their doors and go to sleep.
43:39Go.
43:40Come up.
43:42You can see me to my bed.
43:45And then go to your own.
43:47No, no.
43:54Yes, we've eaten well and drunk well.
43:59Do well, perhaps.
44:04Ah, that loves you.
44:07Poor Julia.
44:09She can't take the wine as she used to.
44:12And even dear Antonia nods a little.
44:15What...
44:18What were you thinking tonight, my dear?
44:21Ah, of poor Drusus.
44:25Yes, yes, yes, I...
44:28I was thinking of him tonight, too.
44:32Rome cannot afford such a loss.
44:37Ah!
44:40I pray to the gods that these boys
44:43will be as noble and as virtuous as he was.
44:47But...
44:49You mustn't dwell on it.
44:51Many years come by.
44:53And that's quite long enough for grief.
44:56Amour is not the Roman way, you know.
45:00Yes.
45:03Musicians, play us out.
45:06Let us have music to take us to our sleep.
45:13A year?
45:17Is that all it is?
45:21One little year?
45:23Good night, lady.
45:44Pretty sight, isn't she?
45:46I must get away from her.
45:51I must leave Rome.
45:54You'll stay.
45:57You'll have patience, as I have.
46:01Where has your patience got you?
46:04You've lost him, mother.
46:07You've lost him to those two boys.
46:10If you leave Rome, I'll wash my hands of you once and for all.
46:18And shed not a single tear.
46:21That's not surprising.
46:23I saw you shed none for my brother.
46:26No, my brother.
46:27I'm sorry, dear.
46:28Not a single tear.
46:29I saw you.
46:30I'm sorry, dear.
46:32I was sorry, dear dear.
46:36I'm all gone.
46:39No.
46:40Not a single tear.
46:41I don't know, nothing.
46:42It's all over them, too, but...
46:43You're all gone.
46:44are they all gone
46:54oh Tiberius is having such a beautiful dream
47:03Tiberius
47:10sleep with me tonight
47:13let me go with your fat drunken cow
47:26fat fat
47:29if I'm fat I'm fat where a woman should be fat not skinny like a boy
47:34go to bed my dear and I'll send you one up
47:37he's very pretty I promise you I've had him myself
47:41he reminds me of your ex-wife
47:46not a hair on his body and he's even skinnier behind
47:50there'll be no divorce done
47:53I don't care what he is
47:54you married him and that's the end of it
47:56look what he did look what your son did to my daughter
47:58now what kind of a man is that tell me
48:00I've never liked him never
48:02he's your son Lillian but I have to tell you I've never liked him
48:05I want a divorce
48:06no divorce you've been married three times already how many more marriages do you want
48:10that's not my fault I was widowed twice
48:12well how a woman can get us out widowed twice is beyond me
48:15that's not fair
48:16well it shows damn poor judgment that's all I can say
48:18I never asked to be married to a griffa
48:19you asked to be married to this one and married you'll stay
48:22ask for that husband of yours he can clear out of Rome I'm finished with him
48:25tell him to pack his bags and go I don't even want to see him I never want his name mentioned in this house again ever
48:29I never want his name mentioned in this house again ever
48:31well how am I supposed to live
48:33neither married nor divorced
48:35you live as befits a Roman matron that's how you live
48:37and heaven help you if you don't
48:47why can't they get on
48:49what do they want from life
48:51I'm supposed to rule an emperor I can't even rule my own family
48:55thank God for these boys that's all I can say
48:57but you'll help me won't you
48:59I mean what would we do without these boys living without a grip of sons allow one hope
49:07in three or four years time they'll be old enough to take some of this burden off our backs
49:11oh they're promising all right
49:14aren't you my little beauties
49:16very promising
49:18still
49:20you've a long way to go haven't you
49:23a long
49:25long way
49:29we must take good care of them Augustus
49:31and we shall I promise you
49:33the very best of care
49:35ah
49:37that's how it should be
49:39stay like that a moment
49:41what a pitch you make
49:43it expresses the true spirit of the Roman family
49:45the spirit of the Roman family
49:47you
49:49you
49:53you
49:55you
49:57you
49:59you
50:01you
50:03you
50:15you
50:17you
50:19you
50:21you
50:23you
50:39you
50:41you
50:43you
50:45you
50:59you
51:01you
51:03you
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