"He so loathed flattery that he would not allow any senator to approach his
litter, either to pay his respects or on business, and when an ex-consul in
apologising to him attempted to embrace his knees, he drew back in such haste
that he fell over backward.
In fact, if anyone in
conversation or in a set speech spoke of him in too flattering terms, he did not
hesitate to interrupt him, to take him to task, and to correct his language on
the spot.
Being once called "Lord," he warned
the speaker not to address him again in an insulting fashion.
When another spoke of his "sacred duties," and still another
said that he appeared before the senate "by the emperor's authority," he forced
them to change their language, substituting "advice" for "authority" and
"laborious" for "sacred."
[Suetonius,
Life of Tiberius, 27]
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