Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Works of Cornelius Tacitus, Vol. 2 of 4: With an Essay on the Life and Genius of Tacitus; Notes, Supplements and Maps
Why his wife was not of the party (a) 9 Scipio made anfwer, She is dead.
III. Claudius was, for fome time, in fufpenfe. He was inclined to favour Afiaticus, but Vitel lius interpofed. W ith tears in his eyes, he talked of the friendfhip which had long fubfifi ed between the prifoner and himfelf; he menti oned their mutual habits at the court of Antonia, the emperor s mother; he fiated the public me rit of Afiaticus; and, in particular, the glory of his late expedition into Britain; he omitted no thing that'could excite compaffion, but, at lafi, concluded (with a firoke of treachery), that to allow him to choofe his mode of dying was an indulgence due to fo di?inguifhed a chara�ter. This cruel fpecies of clemency was adopted by Claudius. The friends of Afiaticujs recom mended ab?inence, as a mode of death eafy and gradual. He fcorned the pretended lenity, and betook himfelf to his ulual exercifes. He bath ed and fupped with alacrity of mind. To die, he faid, by the 1ntrigues of an artful woman.
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