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juftice be regarded as members of equal value to the public, who have no children to expofe to danger for its fafety. But you, whofe age is already far advanced, compute the greater fhare of happiness your longer time hath afforded for fo much gain, perfuaded in yourfelves the remainder will be but fhort, and enlighten that space by the glory gained by thefe. It is greatnefs of foul alone that never grows old; nor is it wealth that delights in the latter ftage of life, as fome give out, fo much as

honour.

To you, the fons and brothers of the deceased, whatever number of you are here, a field of hardy contention is opened. For him, who no longer is, every one is ready to commend, fo that to whatever height you push your de ferts, you will scarce ever be thought to equal, but to be fomewhat inferior to thefe. Envy will exert itself against a competitor whilft life remains; but when death ftops the competition, affection will applaud without reftraint.

If, after this, it be expected from me to fay any thing to you, who are now reduced to a state of widowhood, about female virtue, I fhall exprefs it all in one fhort admonition :-It is your greateft glory not to be deficient in the virtue peculiar to your fex, and to give the men as little handle as poffible to talk of your behaviour, whether well or ill.

I have now discharged the province allotted me by the laws, and faid what I thought most pertinent to this affembly. Our departed friends have by facts been already honoured. Their children, from this day till they arrive at manhood, fhall be educated at the public expence of the ftate*, which hath appointed fo beneficial a meed for thefe, and all future relics of the public contests. For wherever the greatest rewards are propofed for virtue, there the beft of patriots are ever to be found. Now, let every one refpectively indulge the decent grief for his departed friends, Thucydides.

and then retire.

The law was, that they should be inftructed at the public expence, and when come to age prefented with a complete fuit of armour, and hopoured with the firft feats in all public places.

§ 2. HAMLET to the Players..

And

Speak the fpeech, I pray you, as I pronounced it to you, trippingly on the tongue. But if you mouth it, as many of our players do, I had as lieve the town crier had spoke my lines. do not faw the air too much with your hand; but ufe all gently for in the very torrent, tempeft, and, as I may fay, whirlwind of your paffion, you must acquire and beget a temperance that may give it fmoothnefs. Oh! it offends me to the foul, to hear a robuftous periwigpated fellow tear a paffion to tatters, to very rags, to fplit the ears of the groundlings; who (for the most part) are capable of nothing, but inexplicable dumb thews and noise. Pray you, avoid it.

Be not too tame neither; but let your own difcretion be your tutor. Suit the action to the word, the word to the action; with this fpecial obfervance, that you o'eritep not the modefty of nature: for any thing fo overdone, is from the purpofe of playing; whofe end is-to hold, as 'twere the mirror up to nature; to fhew Virtue her own feature, Scorn her own image, and the very age and body of the time his form and preffure. Now, this overdone, or come tardy off, though it make the unfkilful laugh, cannot but make the judicious grieve; the cenfure of one of which muft, in your allowance, o'erweigh a whole theatre of others. Oh! there be

players that I have feen play, and heard others praife, and that highly, that, neither having the accent of Chriftian, nor the gait of Chriftian, Pagan, nor man, have fo ftrutted and bellowed, that I have thought fome of nature's journeymen had made them, and not made them well; they imitated humanity fo abominably.

And let thofe that play your clowns, fpeak no more than is fet down for them for there be of them that will themfelves laugh, to fet on fome quantity of barren fpectators to laugh too; though, in the mean time, fome necesfary queftion of the play be then to be confidered: that's villainous, and fhews a moft pitiful ambition in the fool that uses it. Shakespeare.

§ 3. The

$3. The Character of MARIUS. The birth of Marius was obfcure, though fome call it equeftrian, and his education wholly in camps; where he learnt the first rudiments of war, under the greatest mafter of that age, the younger Scipio, who deftroyed Car. thage; till by long fervice, diftinguifhed valour, and a peculiar hardinefs and patience of difcipline, he advanced himfelf gradually through all the fteps of military honour, with the reputation of a brave and complete foldier. The obfcurity of his extraction, which depreffed him with the nobility, made him the greater favourite of the people; who, on all occafions of danger, thought him the only man fit to be trufted with their lives and fortunes; or to have the command of a difficult and defperate war: and in truth, he twice delivered them from the most defperate, with which they had ever been threatened by a foreign enemy. Scipio, from the obfervation of his martial talents, while he had yet but an inferior command in the army, gave a kind of prophetic teftimony of his future glory; for being. afked by fome of his officers, who were fupping with him at Numantia, what general the republic would have, in cafe of any accident to himfelf? That man, replied he, pointing to Marius at the bottom of the table. In the field he was cautious and provident; and while he was watching the most favourable opportunities of action, affected to take all his measures from augurs and diviners; nor ever gave battle, till by pretended omens and divine admonitions he had infpired his foldiers with a confidence of victory; fo that his enemies dreaded him as fomething more than mortal; and both friends and foes believed him to act always by a peculiar impulfe and direction from the gods. His merit however was wholly military, void of every accomplishment of learning, which he openly affected to defpife; fo that Arpinum had the fingular felicity to produce the most glorious contemner, as well as the most illuftrious improver, of the arts and eloquence of Rome*. He made no figure, there

* Arpinum was also the native city of Cicer o

fore, in the gown, nor had any other way of fuftaining his authority in the city, than by cherishing the natural jealoufy between the fenate and the people; that by his declared enmity to the one he might always be at the head of the other; whofe favour he managed, not with any view to the public good, for he had nothing in him of the ftatef man or the patriot, but to the advance. ment of his private intereft and glory. In short, he was crafty, cruel, covetous, and perfidious; of a temper and talents greatly ferviceable abroad, but turbu lent and dangerous at home; an implacable enemy to the nobles, ever seeking occafions to mortify them, and ready to facrifice the republic, which he had faved, to his ambition and revenge. After a life fpent in the perpetual toils of foreign or domestic wars, he died at laft in his bed, in a good old age, and in his feventh confulthip; an honour that no Roman before him ever attained.

Middleton.

$4. ROMULUS to the People of Rome,

after building the City.

If all the ftrength of cities lay in the height of their ramparts, or the depth of their ditches, we should have great reafon to be in fear for that which we have now built. But are there in rea

lity any walls too high to be faled by a valiant enemy and of what use are ramparts in inteftine divifions? They may ferve for a defence against sudden incurfions from abroad; but it is by courage and prudence chiefly, that the invafions of foreign enemies are repel. led; and by unanimity, fobriety, and juftice, that domeftic feditions are prevented. Cities fortified by the ftrongest bulwarks have been often feen to yield to force from without, or to tumults from within. An exact military difcipline, and a steady obfervance of civil polity, are the furest barriers against thefe evils,

But there is still another point of great importance to be confidered. The profperity of fome rifing colonies, and the speedy ruin of others, have in a great measure been owing to their form of government. Were there but one manner of ruling ftates and cities that could

make

make them happy, the choice would not be difficult, but I have learnt, that of the various forms of government among the Greeks and Barbarians, there are three which are highly extolled by thofe who have experienced them; and yet that no one of thefe is in all refpects perfect, but each of them has fome innate and incurable defect. Chufe you, then, in what manner this city fhall be governed. Shall it be by one man? fhall it be by a felect number of the wifest among us? or fhall the legislative power be in the people? As for me, I fhall fubmit to whatever form of adminiftration you fhall please to establish. As I think myfelf not unworthy to command, fo neither am I unwilling to obey. Your having chofen me to be the leader of this colony, and your calling the city after my name, are honours fufficient to content me; honours of which, living or dead, I never can be deprived.

Hooke.

§ 5. The Character of SYLLA. Sylla died after he had laid down the dictatorship, and restored liberty to the republic, and, with an uncommon great nefs of mind, lived many months as a private fenator, and with perfect fecurity, in that city where he had exercifed the most bloody tyranny: but nothing was thought to be greater in his character, than that, during the three years in which the Marians were mafters of Italy, he neither diffembled his refolution of purfuing them by arms, nor neglected the war which he had upon his hands; but thought it his duty, firft to chaftife a foreign enemy, before he took his revenge upon citizens. His family was noble and patrician, which yet, through the indolency of his ancestors, had made no figure in the republic for many generations, and was almoft funk into obfcurity, till he produced it again into light, by afpiring to the honours of the ftate. He was a lover and patron of polite letters, having been carefully inftituted himself in all the learning of Greece and Rome; but from a peculiar gaiety of temper, and fondness for the company of mimics and players, was drawn, when young, into a life of luxury and pleafure; fo

that when he was fent quæftor to Marius, in the Jugurthine war, Marius complained, that in fo rough and def perate a fervice chance had given him fo foft and delicate a quæftor. But, whether roufed by the example, or ftung by the reproach of his general, he behaved himfelf in that charge with the greateft vigour and courage, fuffering no man to outdo him in any part of military duty or labour, making himself equal and familiar even to the lowest of the foldiers, and obliging them all by his good offices and his money; fo that he foon acquired the favour of the army, with the character of a brave and skilful commander; and lived to drive Marius himself, banifhed and profcribed, into that very province where he had been contemned by him at firft as his quæftor. He had a wonderful faculty of concealing his paffions and purposes; and was fo different from himself in different circumftances, that he seemed as it were to be two men in one: no man was ever more mild and moderate before victory; none more bloody and cruel after it. In war, he practifed the fame art that he had feen fo fuccefsful to Marius, of raising a kind of enthufiafm and contempt of danger in his army, by the forgery of aufpices and divine admonitions; for which end, he carried always about with him a little ftatue of Apollo, taken from the temple of Delphi; and whenever he had refolved to give battle, used to embrace it in fight of the foldiers, and beg the fpeedy confirmation. of its promifes to him. From an uninterrupted courfe of fuccefs and profperity, he affumed a furname, unknown before to the Romans, of Felix, or the Fortunate; and would have been fortunate indeed, fays Velleius, if his life had ended with his victories. Pliny calls it a wicked title, drawn from the blood and oppreffion of his country; for which pofterity would think him more unfortunate, even than those whom he had put to death. He had one felicity, however, peculiar to himself, of being the only man in hiftory, in whom the odium of the most barbarous cruelties was extinguished by the glory of his great acts. Cicero, though he had a good opinion of his caufe, yet detefled

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the inhumanity of his victory, and never fpeaks of him with respect, nor of his government but as a proper tyranny; calling him," a master of three most peftilent vices, luxury, avarice, cru"elty.' He was the firit of his family whofe dead body was burnt: for, having ordered Marius's remains to be taken out of his grave, and thrown into the river Anio, he was apprehenfive of the fame infult upon his own, if left to the ufual way of burial. A little before his death, he made his own epitaph, the fum of which was, "that no man had ever gone beyond him, in doing "good to his friends, or hurt to his Middleton.

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$6. HANNIBAL to SCIPIO AFRICANUS, at their Interview preceding the Battle of Zama.

Since fate has fo ordained it, that I, who began the war, and who have been fo often on the point of ending it by a compleat conqueft, fhould now come of my own motion to ask a peace; I am glad that it is of you, Scipio, I have the fortune to afk it. Nor will this be among the leaft of your glories, that Hannibal, victorious over fo many Roman generals, fubmitted at laft to you.

I could with, that our fathers and we had confined our ambition within the limits which nature feems to have pre. fcribed to it; the fhores of Africa, and the fhores of Italy. The gods did not give us that mind. On both fides we have been fo eager after foreign poffeffions, as to put our own to the hazard of war. Rome and Carthage have had, each in her turn, the enemy at her gates. But fince errors paft may be more easily blamed than corrected, let it now be the work of you and me to put an end, if poffible, to the obftinate contention. For my own part, my years, and the experience I have had of the inftability of fortune, inclines me to leave nothing to her determination, which reafon can decide. But much I fear, Scipio, that your youth, your want of the like experience, your uninterrupted fuccefs, may render you averfe from the thoughts of peace. He whom fortune has never failed, rarely reflects upon her inconfancy. Yet, without recurring to for

mer examples, my own may perhaps fuffice to teach you moderation. I am that fame Hannibal, who, after my victory at Cannæ, became mafter of the greatest part of your country, and deliberated with myfelf what fate I should decree to Italy and Rome. And nowfee the change! Here, in Africa, I am come to treat with a Roman, for my own prefervation and my country's. Such are the fports of fortune. Is the then to be trufted becaufe fhe fmiles? An advantageous peace is preferable to the hope of victory. The one is in your own power, the other at the pleasure of the gods. Should you prove victorious, it would add little to your own glory, or the glory of your country; if vanquished, you lofe in one hour all the honour and reputation you have been fo many years acquiring. But what is my aim in all this?- -that you should content yourself with our ceffion of Spain, Sicily, Sardinia, and all the islands between Italy and Africa. A peace on thefe conditions will, in my opinion, not only fecure the future tranquillity of Carthage, but be fufficiently glorious for you, and for the Roman name. And do not tell me, that fome of our citizens dealt fraudulently with you in the late treaty-it is I, Hannibal, that now afk a peace: I ask it, because I think it expedient for my country; and, thinking it expedient, I will inviolably maintain it. Hooke.

§ 7. Scrpio's Anf-wer.

I knew very well Hannibal, that it was the hope of your return which emboldened the Carthaginians to break the truce with us, and to lay afide all thoughts of a peace, when it was juft upon the point of being concluded; and your prefent propofal is a proof of it. You retrench from their conceffions every thing but what we are, and have been long, poffeffed of. But as it is your care that your fellow-citizens fhould have the obligations to you of being cafed from a great part of their burden, fo it ought to be mine that they draw no advantage from their perfidioufnefs. Nobody is more fenfible than I am of the weakness of man, and the power of fortune, and that whatever

we

we enterprize is fubject to a thousand chances. If, before the Romans paffed into Africa, you had of your own accord quitted Italy, and made the offers you now make, I believe they would not have been rejected. But as you have been forced out of Italy, and we are mafters here of the open country, the fituation of things is much altered. And, what is chiefly to be confidered, the Carthaginians, by the late treaty which we entered into at their request, were, over and above what you offer, to have restored to us our prifoners without ranfom, delivered up their fhips of war, paid us five thoufand talents, and to have given hostages for the performance of all. The fenate accepted thefe conditions, but Carthage failed on her part; Carthage deceived us. What then is to be done? Are the Carthaginians to be releafed from the most important articles of the treaty, as a reward of their breach of faith? No, certainly. If, to the conditions before agreed upon, you had added fome new articles to our advantage, there would have been matter of reference to the Roman people; but when, instead of adding, you retrench, there is no room for deliberation. The Carthaginians therefore muft fubmit to us at difcretion, or must vanquish us in battle.

Hooke.

§ 8. The Character of POMPEY. Pompey had early acquired the furname of the Great, by that fort of merit which, from the conftitution of the republic, neceffarily made him great; a fame and fuccefs in war, fuperior to what Rome had ever known in the most celebrated of her generals. He had triumphed, at three feveral times, over the three different parts of the known world, Europe, Afia, Africa; and by his victories had almost doubled the extent, as well as the revenues, of the Roman do minion; for, as he declared to the people on his return from the Mithridatic war, he had found the leffer Afia the boundary, but left it the middle of their empire. He was about fix years older than Cæfar; and while Cæfar, immerfed in pleafures, oppreffed with debts, and fufpected by all honeft men, was hardly able to fhew his

head, Pompey was flourishing in the height of power and glory: and, by the confent of all parties, placed at the head of the republic. This was the post that his ambition feemed to aim at, to be the first man in Rome; the leader. not the tyrant of his country; for he more than once had it in his power to have made himself the master of it without any risk, if his virtue, or his phlegm at least, had not restrained him: but he lived in a perpetual expecation of receiving from the gift of the people, what he did not care to seize by force; and, by fomenting the dif orders of the city, hoped to drive them to the neceffity of creating him dictator. It is an obfervation of all the hiftorians, that while Cæfar made no difference of power, whether it was conferred or ufurped, whether over those who loved, or thofe who feared him; Pompey feemed to value none but what was offered; nor to have any defire to govern, but with the good-will of the governed. What leifure he found from his wars, he employed in the study of polite letters, and efpecially of eloquence, in which he would have acquired great fame, if his genius had not drawn him to the more dazzling glory of arms; yet he pleaded feveral caufes with applaufe, in the defence of his friends and clients; and fome of them in conjunction with Cicero. His language was copious and elevated; his fentiments juft; his voice fweet; his action noble, and full of dignity. But his talents were better formed for arms than the gown; for though in both he obferved the fame difcipline, a perpetual modefty, temperance, and gravity of outward behaviour; yet in the li cence of camps the example was more rare and ftriking. His perfon was ex. tremely graceful, and imprinting refpect; yet with an air of referved haughtinefs, which became the general better than the citizen. His parts were plaufible, rather than great; fpecious, rather than penetrating; and his views of politics but narrow; for his chief infrument of governing was diffimulation; yet he had not always the art to conceal his real fentiments. As he was a better fol. dier than a fetefman, fo what he gained in the camp he ufually left in the city; and though adored when abroad, was

often

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