Pinnock's improved edition of Dr. Goldsmith's History of Rome eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 554 pages of information about Pinnock's improved edition of Dr. Goldsmith's History of Rome.

Pinnock's improved edition of Dr. Goldsmith's History of Rome eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 554 pages of information about Pinnock's improved edition of Dr. Goldsmith's History of Rome.

19.  How was this honest sincerity received?

20.  Was the office of legate a respectable one?

21.  Did Dentatus suspect treachery?

22.  What plan of revenge was adopted?

23.  What was the character of his attendants?

24.  How did they commence their base design?

25.  Was Dentatus aware of their treachery, and what resistance did he make?

26.  Did the assassins boldly engage the hero?

27.  What new method of attack did they attempt?

28.  Was this plan successful?

29.  What was the conduct of the decemviri on this occasion?

SECTION II.

  That chastity of look which seems to hang
  A veil of purest light o’er all her beauties. 
  And, by forbidding, most inflames!—­Young.

1.  But a transaction still more atrocious than the former, served to inspire the citizens with a resolution to break all measures of obedience, so as at last to restore freedom.

2.  Ap’pius, sitting one day on his tribunal to dispense justice, saw a maiden of exquisite beauty, aged about fifteen, passing to one of the public schools, attended by a matron, her nurse.  The charms of the damsel, heightened by all the innocence of virgin modesty, caught his attention, and fired his heart.  The day following, as she passed, he found her still more beautiful, and his breast still more inflamed. 3.  He now, therefore, resolved to obtain the gratification of his passion, whatever should be the consequence, and found means to inform himself of the maiden’s name and family. 4.  Her name was Virgin’ia; she was the daughter of Virgin’ius, a centurion, then with the army in the field, and had been contracted to Icil’ius, formerly a tribune of the people, who had agreed to marry her at the end of the present campaign.

5.  Ap’pius at first resolved to break off this match, and to espouse her himself; but the laws of the Twelve Tables had forbidden the patricians to intermarry with the plebeians, and he could not infringe these, as he was the enactor of them. 6.  He determined, therefore, to make her his slave. 7.  After having vainly tried to corrupt the fidelity of her nurse, he had recourse to another expedient, still more wicked.  He fixed upon one Clau’dius, who had long been the minister of his crimes, to assert that the beautiful maid was his slave, and to refer the cause to Ap’pius’s tribunal for decision. 8.  Clau’dius behaved exactly according to his instructions; for, taking with him a band of ruffians like himself, he entered into the public school, where Virginia was found among her female companions, and seizing upon her under pretence that she was the daughter of one of his slaves, was dragging her away, when he was prevented by the people, drawn together by her cries. 9.  At length, after the first heat of opposition was over, he led the weeping virgin to

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Pinnock's improved edition of Dr. Goldsmith's History of Rome from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.