['Taking the stoical view', under the foot of public opinion - Uffizi Museum, April 2017]
On Tiberius it was said:
"... he was self-contained and patient in the face of abuse and slander, and of lampoons on himself and his family, often asserting that in a free country there should be free speech and free thought. When the senate on one occasion demanded that cognisance be taken of such offences and those guilty of them, he said: "We have not enough spare time to warrant involving ourselves in more affairs; if you open this loophole you will find no time for any other business; it will be an excuse for laying everybody's quarrels before you." A most unassuming remark of his in the senate is also a matter of record":
"If so-and-so criticises me I shall take care to render an account of my acts and words; if he persists, our enmity will be mutual."
[Suetonius, Life of Tiberius, 28]
N.B Its worth mentioning that not all agree on the emperor Tiberius's good nature. In some reports, he is not anything like as unassuming and liberal as described here. Other references - especially later in his reign - point towards a darker and more brooding ego, more than capable of petty spite, revenge and malevolence. It's not at all like Suetonius to miss sticking the knife in, so we need to look at a evolving personality: egalitarian and carefree in his early reign - likely before the Sejanus coup - moving to spiteful, paranoid and mean in his later years.