Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
<<Liv. 1.47 | Liv. 1.48 (Latin) | >>Liv. 1.49 |
ch. 481.48Servius had been summoned by a breathless
messenger, and arrived on the scene while Tarquin was speaking. As soon as he
reached the vestibule, he exclaimed in loud tones, What is the meaning of this, Tarquin?
How dared you, with such insolence, convene the senate or sit in that chair whilst I am
alive? Tarquin replied fiercely that he was occupying his father's seat, that a king's son
was a much more legitimate heir to the throne than a slave, and that he, Servius, in playing
his reckless game, had insulted his masters long enough. Shouts arose from their
respective partisans, the people made a rush to the senate-house, and it was evident that he
who won the fight would reign. Then Tarquin, forced by sheer necessity into proceeding
to the last extremity, seized Servius round the waist, and being a much younger and
stronger man, carried him out of the senate-house and flung him down the steps into the
Forum below. He then returned to call the senate to order. The officers and attendants of
the king fled. The king himself, half dead from the violence, was put to death by those
whom Tarquin had sent in pursuit of him. It is the current belief that this was done at
Tullia's suggestion, for it is quite in keeping with the rest of her wickedness. At all events,
it is generally agreed that she drove down to the Forum in a two-wheeled car, and,
unabashed by the presence of the crowd, called her husband out of the senate-house and
was the first to salute him as king. He told her to make her way out of the tumult, and
when on her return she had got as far as the top of the Cyprius Vicus, where the temple of
Diana lately stood, and was turning to the right on the Urbius Clivus, to get to the
Servius Tullius reigned forty-four years, and even a wise and good successor would
have found it difficult to fill the throne as he had done. The glory of his reign was all the
greater because with him perished all just and lawful kingship in
Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
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