[171]
Did Habitus, then, envy the life of this men?
If he had hated him bitterly and utterly, ought he not to have wished him to live as long as
possible? Would an enemy have hastened his death, when death was the only refuge which he had
left from his calamity? If the man had had any virtue or any courage, he would have killed
himself, (as many brave men have done in many instances, when in similar misfortunes.) How is
it possible for an enemy to have wished to offer to him what he must himself have wished for
eagerly For now indeed, what evil has death brought him? Unless, perchance, we are influenced
by fables and nonsense, to think that he is enduring in the shades below the punishments of'
the wicked, and that he has met with more enemies there than he left behind here; and that he
has been driven headlong into the district and habitation of wicked spirits by the avenging
furies of his mother-in-law, of his wife, of his brother, and of his children. But if these
stories are false, as all men are well aware that they are, what else has death taken from him
except the sense of his misery? Come now, by whose instrumentality was the poison
administered? By that of Marcus Asellius.
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