Barbara’s defiance escalates Tavius’s bid
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
After a low bid is made, Barbara attempts to defend herself. Sevcheria emphasizes Barbara's 'fiery spirit', encouraging potential buyers to double their bids due to her perceived strength and resistance.
Bidding continues, reaching 2,500 sestertia, then Tavius abruptly bids ten thousand, shocking everyone and securing Barbara's purchase. Sevcheria confirms the sale to Tavius.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Righteously indignant and determined; her physical and verbal defiance reveal a refusal to be reduced to an object, even as the system forces her into that role.
Barbara, paraded onto the auction block, becomes the focal point of the scene as she physically resists a bidder’s advance by kicking his hand and verbally defies the crowd with her unbroken spirit. Her defiance—highlighted by Sevcheria as ‘fiery spirit’—escalates the bidding war, culminating in Tavius’s dominant offer. Though ultimately purchased, her resistance is a quiet act of rebellion against the dehumanizing system, marking her as more than a commodity.
- • Assert her humanity and agency in the face of dehumanization.
- • Disrupt the auction’s transactional nature, even if only temporarily.
- • Her worth is not defined by the bids placed on her.
- • Defiance, even in small acts, is a rejection of the system’s power.
Professionally detached with a predatory undercurrent; his enthusiasm for the bids masks a cold indifference to the humanity of the slaves.
Sevcheria, the slave auctioneer, dominates the scene with calculated professionalism, his voice cutting through the crowd’s murmurs to highlight Barbara’s defiance as a selling point. He rebukes a bidder for physically testing the merchandise, then amplifies the tension by framing her resistance as a commodity—‘the fiery spirit’—that justifies higher bids. His role as the system’s enforcer is evident in his smooth transition from taunting the crowd to finalizing the sale to Tavius, treating human suffering as mere transactional theater.
- • Maximize the auction’s profit by leveraging Barbara’s defiance as a selling point.
- • Maintain control over the bidding process, ensuring no bidder oversteps auction rules (e.g., physically testing the slave).
- • Defiance in slaves is a marketable trait that can drive up bids.
- • The auction is a performance where his role is to facilitate transactions, not moral judgments.
Ruthlessly determined; his bid is a calculated move to assert his status, and his satisfaction is evident in the crowd’s stunned reaction.
Tavius, a wealthy Roman aristocrat, shocks the marketplace with his exorbitant bid of 10,000 sestertia for Barbara. His offer silences the crowd and secures her purchase, framing the transaction as a display of imperial power and entitlement. The bid is less about Barbara herself and more about Tavius’s ability to dominate the auction—and by extension, the social hierarchy of Nero’s Rome. His ruthless determination underscores his role as a key player in the city’s brutal economy.
- • Acquire Barbara as a high-status slave for Nero’s palace, reinforcing his connection to imperial power.
- • Demonstrate his financial and social dominance over the other bidders.
- • Wealth and status are the ultimate currencies in Rome.
- • Defiance in slaves like Barbara can be broken—or exploited for his own gain.
Cautiously indifferent; his dismissal of the auction suggests a deliberate avoidance of moral engagement, though his later actions may reveal underlying discomfort.
The Doctor, accompanied by Vicki, briefly observes the auction’s setup before dismissing it as ‘nothing to interest you’ and leaving the scene. His detachment from the brutality unfolding—prioritizing their mission to Nero’s court—foreshadows his later moral reckoning when he must navigate the same systems of power and oppression. His decision to leave reflects a calculated focus on their immediate goals, though it also hints at his discomfort with the auction’s dehumanizing spectacle.
- • Avoid drawing attention to himself and Vicki in the marketplace.
- • Maintain focus on their mission to Nero’s court, where their credentials will be tested.
- • Direct intervention in the auction would jeopardize their cover and mission.
- • Some horrors must be observed from a distance to preserve their ability to act effectively.
Initially frustrated (rebuked by Sevcheria), then competitive (escalates bids). His emotional state is tied to the thrill of the auction and the desire to ‘win.’
The First Bidder, an aggressive participant in the auction, initially tests Barbara’s resistance by reaching for her leg, only to be rebuked by Sevcheria. He later bids 2,500 sestertia, competing with other bidders but ultimately outmatched by Tavius’s dominant offer. His actions reflect the predatory dynamics of the marketplace, where slaves are treated as objects to be tested and purchased.
- • Acquire Barbara as a slave for personal or household use.
- • Outbid competitors to assert his own status in the marketplace.
- • Slaves are property to be handled and tested before purchase.
- • Higher bids reflect greater value—and greater prestige for the buyer.
Surprised and fascinated; their murmurs reflect a mix of shock at Tavius’s bid and morbid curiosity about the auction’s outcome.
The crowd of marketplace men reacts with murmurs of surprise and curiosity as Tavius’s bid of 10,000 sestertia silences the room. Their collective presence amplifies the auction’s tension, serving as a chorus that validates Tavius’s dominance. Though they do not bid themselves, their reactions—whispers, gasps, and murmurs—underscore the spectacle’s impact on Roman society, where slavery is both normalized and sensationalized.
- • Witness the spectacle of the auction as entertainment.
- • Validate the social hierarchy through their collective reaction to Tavius’s dominance.
- • Auctions are public performances that reinforce Rome’s social order.
- • Their role is to observe, not to challenge, the system.
Competitively engaged; his bid is a calculated move, but his emotional investment is secondary to Tavius’s dominant play.
The Second Bidder contributes to the auction’s competitive tension by offering 2,000 sestertia for Barbara. Though his bid is overshadowed by Tavius’s final offer, his participation amplifies the spectacle, turning the auction into a battleground of escalating bids. His role is that of a secondary player in the power dynamics of the marketplace, driven by opportunism rather than dominance.
- • Secure Barbara as a slave for personal or household use at a favorable price.
- • Participate in the auction’s spectacle, even if he doesn’t ‘win.’
- • Auctions are about strategy as much as desire.
- • Even secondary bidders play a role in shaping the market’s dynamics.
Mildly curious but deferential; her questions are met with dismissal, reinforcing her role as a follower in the group’s hierarchy.
Vicki, curious and wide-eyed, questions the Doctor about the auction’s commotion but is quickly dismissed as they leave the scene. Her brief engagement with the event reflects her youthful inquisitiveness, though her loyalty to the Doctor’s lead prevents her from lingering. Her departure with the Doctor underscores the group’s prioritization of their mission over the immediate suffering around them—a dynamic that will later force moral confrontations.
- • Understand the nature of the auction and its significance.
- • Follow the Doctor’s lead without question.
- • The Doctor’s judgment is trustworthy, even if she doesn’t fully grasp the situation.
- • Her role is to observe and learn, not to intervene.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Tavius’s 10,000 sestertia bid for Barbara is the climactic moment of the auction, symbolizing the dehumanizing economics of slavery in Nero’s Rome. The bid is not merely a transactional offer but a deliberate provocation—a statement of power that silences the crowd and secures Barbara’s fate. The exorbitant sum reflects Tavius’s entitlement and his role as a key player in the imperial court’s brutal economy, where human lives are commodified and defiance is a marketable trait. The bid’s symbolic weight lies in its ability to reduce Barbara to a possession while elevating Tavius’s status.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Market Place (Interior) serves as the battleground for the auction, where the brutal economics of slavery are performed as spectacle. The crowded space, filled with bidders and onlookers, amplifies the tension of the event, turning Barbara’s defiance into a commodity and Tavius’s bid into a statement of power. The marketplace’s atmosphere is one of predatory opportunism, where human lives are reduced to bids and resistance is met with calculated exploitation. The location’s role is both practical—a venue for transactions—and symbolic—a microcosm of Rome’s dehumanizing social order.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Roman Slavery System is the invisible hand guiding the auction, where Barbara’s defiance is framed as a selling point and her humanity is erased in the pursuit of profit. Sevcheria, as the auctioneer, embodies the system’s ruthless efficiency, treating slaves as merchandise to be tested, bid upon, and sold to the highest bidder. Tavius’s exorbitant bid is not just a personal transaction but a reinforcement of the system’s power dynamics, where wealth and status dictate who controls human lives. The auction itself is a ritual of the system, normalizing the commodification of people and the erasure of their agency.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"SEVCHERIA: "I am delighted, gentlemen, to see how much you have appreciated today's merchandise. Let us prove how much so when you begin the bidding. Very well, gentlemen. How many sestertia am I bid for this fine female example of the beautiful, hard working, Britannic race?""
"MAN 1ST: "Five hundred!""
"SEVCHERIA: "Come, come sir. We all enjoy a good joke, but today we are interested in serious offers only.""
"SEVCHERIA: "Take note gentlemen, of the fiery spirit. Think about your bids—double it.""
"TAVIUS: "Ten thousand.""