Lucius Annaeus Seneca,  De consolatione ad Marciam  6.22.4-5  (A.D. 33-41):

Propone illud acerbissimum tibi tempus, quo Seianus patrem tuum clienti suo Satrio Secundo congiarium dedit. Irascebatur illi ob unum aut alterum liberius dictum, quod tacitus ferre non potuerat Seianum in cervices nostras ne imponi quidem, sed escendere. Decernebatur illi statua in Pompei theatro ponenda, quod exustum Caesar reficiebat; exclamavit Cordus tunc vere theatrum perire. Quid ergo? 5. Non rumperetur supra cineres Cn. Pompei constitui Seianum et in monimentis maximi imperatoris consecrari perfidum militem?

Recall that time, so bitter for you, when Sejanus handed over your father to his client, Satrius Secundus, as a largess. He was angry because your father, not being able to endure in silence that a Sejanus should be set upon our necks, much less climb there, had spoken out once or twice rather boldly. Sejanus was being voted the honor of a statue, which was to be set up in the theater of Pompeius, just then being restored by Tiberius after a fire. Whereupon Cordus exclaimed: "Now the theater is ruined indeed!" What! Was it not to burst with rage—to think of a Sejanus planted upon the ashes of Gnaeus Pompeius, a disloyal soldier hallowed by a statue in the monuments of the greatest general?  (J. Basore, trans.)