5.
Aulus Cluentius Habitus, this man's father, O judges, was a man by far the most
distinguished for valour, for reputation and for nobleness of birth, not only of the
municipality of Larinum, of which he was a
native, but also of all that district and neighbourhood. When he died, in the consulship of
Sulla and Pompeius, 1 he left this son, a boy fifteen years old, and a daughter grown up and of
marriageable age, who a short time after her father's death married Aulus Aurius Melinus, her
own cousin, a youth of the fairest possible reputation, as was then supposed, among his
countrymen, for honour and nobleness.
[12]
This marriage
subsisted with all respectability and all concord; when on a sudden there arose the nefarious
lust of an abandoned woman, united not only with infamy but even with impiety. For Sassia, the
mother of this Habitus, (for she shall be called his mother by me, just for the name's sake,
although she behaves towards him with the hatred and cruelty of an enemy,)—she
shall, I say, be called his mother; nor will I even so speak of her wickedness and barbarity
as to forget the name to which nature entitles her; (for the more lovable and amiable the name
of mother is, the more will you think the extraordinary wickedness of that mother, who for
these many years has been wishing her son dead, and who wishes it now more than ever, worthy
of all possible hatred.) She, then, the mother of Habitus, being charmed in a most impious
matter with love for that young man, Melinus, her own son-in-law, at first restrained her
desires as she could, but she did not do that long. Presently, she began to get so furious in
her insane passion, she began to be so hurried away by her lust, that neither modesty, nor
chastity, nor piety, nor the disgrace to her family, nor the opinion of men, nor the
indignation of her son, nor the grief of her daughter, could recall her from her desires.
[13]
She seduced the mind of the young man, not yet matured by
wisdom and reason, with all those temptations with which that early age can be charmed and
allured. Her daughter, who was tormented not only with the common indignation which all women
feel at injuries of that sort from their husbands, but who also was unable to endure the
infamous prostitution of her mother, of which she did not think that she could even complain
to any one without committing a sin herself, wished the rest of the world to remain in
ignorance of this her terrible misfortune, and wasted away in grief and tears in the arms and
on the bosom of Cluentius, her most affectionate brother.
[14]
However, there is a sudden divorce, which appeared likely to be a consolation for all her
misfortunes. Cluentia departs from Melinus; not unwilling to be released from the infliction
of such injuries, yet not willing to lose her husband. But then that admirable and illustrious
mother of hers began openly to exult with joy, to triumph in her delight, victorious over her
daughter, not over her lust. Therefore she did not choose her reputation to be attacked any
longer by uncertain suspicions; she orders that genial bed, which two years before she had
decked for her daughter on her marriage, to be decked and prepared for herself in the very
same house, having driven and forced her daughter out of it. The mother-in-law marries the
son-in-law, no one looking favourably on the deed, no one approving it, all foreboding a
dismal end to it.
This text is part of:
Search the Perseus Catalog for:
1 a. u. c. 666. Twenty-two years before this time.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.