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Notes Display Latin text | Translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb Book XVI Chapter 35: Death of Thrasea (cont.)[AD 66] | Return to index Previous chapter |
Then he [Note 1] went out into a colonnade, where he was found by the quaestor, joyful rather than otherwise, as he had learnt that Helvidius, his son-in-law, was merely excluded from Italy. When he heard the Senate's decision, he led Helvidius and Demetrius into a chamber, and having laid bare the arteries of each arm, he let the blood flow freely, and, as he sprinkled it on the ground, he called the quaestor to his side and said, "We pour out a libation to Jupiter the Deliverer. Behold, young man, and may the gods avert the omen, but you have been born into times in which it is well to fortify the spirit with examples of courage." Then as the slowness of his end brought with it grievous anguish, turning his eyes on Demetrius ... Note 1: he = Thrasea Event: Death of Thrasea Paetus |