Pallas does not elude Nero's wrath forever: …
Years: 63 - 63
Pallas does not elude Nero's wrath forever: he is killed on Nero's orders in 63—possibly to gain access to his large fortune, part of which was his by right as Pallas' official patron.
Some money must have gone to Pallas' family, as a descendant of his became consul in 167.
According to Suetonius, Nero "showed neither discrimination nor moderation in putting to death whomsoever he pleased" during this period.
Roman satirist Aulus Persius Flaccus has ignored Nero’s outrages, instead directing his intensely metaphorical style to six brief satires on familiar, timeless stoic topics.
According to the Life contained in the manuscripts, Persius was born into an equestrian family at Volterra, a small Etruscan city in the province of Pisa, of good stock on both parents' side.
When six years old he lost his father; his stepfather died a few years later.
At the age of twelve, Persius came to Rome, where he was taught by Remmius Palaemon and the rhetor Verginius Flavus.
During the next four years he developed friendships with the Stoic Lucius Annaeus Cornutus, the lyric poet Caesius Bassus, and the poet Lucan.
Lucan would become a generous admirer of all Persius wrote.
He also became close friends with Thrasea Paetus, the husband of Arria, a relative of Persius's; over the next ten years Persius and Thrasea Paetus share many travels together.
Later, he had met Seneca, but was not impressed by his genius.
In his boyhood, Persius had written a tragedy dealing with an episode in Roman history, and another work, probably on travel (although this would have been before the travels with Thrasea Paetus).
Reading the satires of Lucilius made Persius want to write like him, and he set to work on a book of his own satires.
But he writes seldom and slowly; a premature death (uitio stomachi) prevented him from completing the book; he died on November 24, 62 at 27.
He has been described as having "a gentle disposition, girlish modesty and personal beauty", and is said to have lived a life of exemplary devotion towards his mother Fulvia Sisenna, his sister and his aunt.
To his mother and sister he left his considerable fortune.
Cornutus suppresses all his work except the satires, to which he makes some slight alterations before handing it over to Bassus for editing.
It proves an immediate success.
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