The Works of Horace eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 281 pages of information about The Works of Horace.

The Works of Horace eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 281 pages of information about The Works of Horace.

Since (circumlocutions apart) you are in dread of poverty hear by what means you may grow wealthy.  If a thrush, or any [nice] thing for your own private [eating], shall be given you; it must wing way to that place, where shines a great fortune, the possessor being an old man:  delicious apples, and whatever dainties your well-cultivated ground brings forth for you, let the rich man, as more to be reverenced than your household god, taste before him:  and, though he be perjured, of no family, stained with his brother’s blood, a runaway; if he desire it, do not refuse to go along with him, his companion on the outer side.  What, shall I walk cheek by jole with a filthy Damas?  I did not behave myself in that manner at Troy, contending always with the best.  You must then be poor.  I will command my sturdy soul to bear this evil; I have formerly endured even greater.  Do thou, O prophet, tell me forthwith how I may amass riches and heaps of money.  In troth I have told you, and tell you again.  Use your craft to lie at catch for the last wills of old men:  nor, if one or two cunning chaps escape by biting the bait off the hook, either lay aside hope, or quit the art, though disappointed in your aim.  If an affair, either of little or great consequence, shall be contested at any time at the bar; whichever of the parties live wealthy without heirs, should he be a rogue, who daringly takes the law of a better man, be thou his advocate:  despise the citizen, who is superior in reputation, and [the justness of] his cause, if at home he has a son or a fruitful wife. [Address him thus:] “Quintus, for instance, or Publius (delicate ears delight in the prefixed name), your virtue has made me your friend.  I am acquainted with the precarious quirks of the law; I can plead causes.  Any one shall sooner snatch my eyes from me, than he shall despise or defraud you of an empty nut.  This is my care, that you lose nothing, that you be not made a jest of.”  Bid him go home, and make much of himself.  Be his solicitor yourself:  persevere, and be steadfast:  whether the glaring dog-star shall cleave the infant statues; or Furius, destined with his greasy paunch, shall spue white snow over the wintery Alps.  Do not you see (shall someone say, jogging the person that stands next to him by the elbow) how indefatigable he is, how serviceable to his friends, how acute? [By this means] more tunnies shall swim in, and your fish-ponds will increase.

Further, if any one in affluent circumstances has reared an ailing son, lest a too open complaisance to a single man should detect you, creep gradually into the hope [of succeeding him], and that you may be set down as second heir; and, if any casualty ahould dispatch the boy to Hades, you may come into the vacancy.  This die seldom fails.  Whoever delivers his will to you to read, be mindful to decline it, and push the parchment from you:  [do it] however in such a manner, that you may catch with an oblique glance, what the first page intimates to be in the second clause:  run over with a quick eye, whether you are sole heir, or co-heir with many.  Sometimes a well-seasoned lawyer, risen from a Quinquevir, shall delude the gaping raven; and the fortune-hunter Nasica shall be laughed at by Coranus.

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The Works of Horace from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.