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<TEI.2><text lang="en"><body><div1 type="book" n="1" org="uniform" sample="complete"><div2 type="poem" n="1" org="uniform" sample="complete"><p><milestone ed="p" n="61" unit="card" /></p>
     <p>But a great majority of mankind, misled by a wrong desire, cry, "No sum is enough; because
      you are esteemed in proportion to what you possess." What can one do to such a tribe as this?
      Why, bid them be wretched, since their inclination prompts them to it. As a certain person is
      recorded [to have lived] at <placeName key="perseus,Athens" authname="perseus,Athens">Athens</placeName>, <milestone ed="p" n="65" unit="line" />covetous and rich, who was wont to despise the talk of the people
      in this manner: "The crowd hiss me; but I applaud myself at home, as soon as I contemplate my
      money in my chest." The thirsty Tantalus catches at the streams, which elude his lips. Why do
      you laugh? The name changed, the tale is told of you. <milestone ed="p" n="70" unit="line" />You sleep upon your bags, heaped up on every side, gaping over them, and are obliged to
      abstain from them, as if they were consecrated things, or to amuse yourself with them as you
      would with pictures. Are you ignorant of what value money has, what use it can afford? Bread,
      herbs, a bottle of wine may be purchased; to which [necessaries], <milestone ed="p" n="75" unit="line" />add [such others], as, being withheld, human nature would be uneasy with itself.
      What, to watch half dead with terror, night and day, to dread profligate thieves, fire, and
      your slaves, lest they should run away and plunder you; is this delightful? I should always
      wish to be very poor in possessions held upon these terms.</p>
     <p><milestone ed="p" n="80" unit="line" />But if your body should be disordered by being seized
      with a cold, or any other casualty should confine you to your bed, have you one that will
      abide by you, prepare medicines, entreat the physician that he would set you upon your feet,
      and restore you to your children and dear relations?</p>
     <p>Neither your wife, nor your son, desires your recovery; <milestone ed="p" n="85" unit="line" />all your neighbors, acquaintances, [nay the very] boys and girls hate you. Do you wonder
      that no one tenders you the affection which you do not merit, since you prefer your money to
      every thing else? If you think to retain, and preserve as friends, the relations which nature
      gives you, without taking any pains; <milestone ed="p" n="90" unit="line" />wretch that you
      are, you lose your labor equally, as if any one should train an ass to be obedient to the
      rein, and run in the Campus [Martius]. Finally, let there be some end to your search; and, as
      your riches increase, be in less dread of poverty; and begin to cease from your toil, that
      being acquired which you coveted: <milestone ed="p" n="95" unit="line" />nor do as did one
      Umidius (it is no tedious story), who was so rich that he measured his money, so sordid that
      he never clothed himself any better than a slave; and, even to his last moments, was in dread
      lest want of bread should oppress him: but his freed-woman, <milestone ed="p" n="100" unit="line" />the bravest of all the daughters of Tyndarus,<note anchored="yes" n="6" resp="Watson" place="unspecified">
       <p>As if she had been another Clytemnestra, the daughter of Tyndarus, who cut off her
        husband's head with an ax. <cit>
         <quote lang="la">Fortissima Tyndaridarum</quote>
         <bibl n="Hor. S. 1.1.100" default="NO" valid="yes" />
        </cit>, from the accusative of <foreign lang="la">Tyndaris</foreign>, viz. <foreign lang="la">Tyndarida</foreign>, comes the noun <foreign lang="la">Tyndarida</foreign>,
         <foreign lang="la">Tyndaridae</foreign> etc.</p>
      </note> cut him in two with a hatchet. "What therefore do you persuade me to? That I should
      lead the life of Naevius, or in such a manner as a Nomentanus?"</p>
     <p>You are going [now] to make things tally, that are contradictory in their natures.<note anchored="yes" n="7" resp="McCaul" place="unspecified">
       <p><cit>
         <quote lang="la">Pugnantia frontibus adversis</quote>
         <bibl n="Hor. S. 1.1.103" default="NO" valid="yes" />
        </cit> means what we express by "diametrically opposite." The allusion in <foreign lang="la">frontibus adversis</foreign> is to a fight between bulls or rams, who butt each other with
        their heads. </p>
      </note> When I bid you not be a miser, I do not order you to become a debauchee or a prodigal.</p>
     <p><milestone ed="p" n="105" unit="line" />There is some difference between the case of
       <placeName key="tgn,1123466" authname="tgn,1123466">Tanais</placeName> and his son-in-law Visellius: there is a mean
      in things; finally, there are certain boundaries, on either side of which moral rectitude can
      not exist. I return now whence I digressed. Does no one, after the miser's example, like his
      own station, but rather praise those who have different pursuits; <milestone ed="p" n="110" unit="line" />and pines, because his neighbor's she-goat bears a more distended udder; nor
      considers himself in relation to the greater multitude of poor; but labors to surpass, first
      one, and then another? Thus the richer man is always an obstacle to one that is hastening [to
      be rich]: <milestone ed="p" n="115" unit="line" />as when the courser whirls along the chariot,
      dismissed from the place of starting; the charioteer presses upon those horses which outstrip
      his own, despising him that is left behind coming on among the last. Hence it is, that we
      rarely find a man who can say he has lived happy, and content with his past life, can retire
      from the world like a satisfied guest.<note anchored="yes" n="8" resp="TAB" place="unspecified">
       <p>Cf. <cit>
         <bibl n="Lucr. 3.951" default="NO" valid="yes">Lucret. iii. 951,</bibl>
         <quote lang="la">Cur non, ut plenus vitae conviva recedis?</quote>
        </cit> See Orelli. </p>
      </note>
      <milestone ed="p" n="120" unit="line" />Enough for the present: nor will I add one word more,
      lest you should suspect that I have plundered the escrutoire of the blear-eyed Crispinus. </p>
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