Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
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ch. 503.50 [Note] Accordingly, some of the younger senators were sent to the camp, which was then on Mount Vecilius. They informed the three decemvirs who were in command that by every possible means they were to prevent the soldiers from mutinying. Verginius caused a greater commotion in the camp than the one he had left behind in the City. The sight of his arrival with a body of nearly 400 men from the City, who, fired with indignation, had enlisted themselves as his comrades, still more the weapon still clenched in his hand and his blood-besprinkled clothes, attracted the attention of the whole camp. The civilian garb seen in all directions in the camp made the number of the citizens who had accompanied him seem greater than it was.
Questioned as to what had happened, Verginius for a long time could not speak for weeping; at length when those who had run up stood quietly round him and there was silence, he explained everything in order just as it happened. Then lifting up his hands to heaven he appealed to them as his fellow-soldiers and implored them not to attribute to him what was really the crime of Appius, nor to look upon him with abhorrence as the murderer of his children. His daughter's life was dearer to him than his own, had she been allowed to live in liberty and purity; when he saw her dragged off as a slave-girl to be outraged, he thought it better to lose his child by death than by dishonour. It was through compassion for her that he had fallen into what looked like cruelty, nor would he have survived her had he not entertained the hope of avenging her death by the aid of his fellow-soldiers. For they, too, had daughters and sisters and wives; the lust of Appius was not quenched with his daughter's life, nay rather, the more impunity it met with the more unbridled would it be. Through the sufferings of another they had received a warning how to guard themselves against a like wrong. As for him, his wife had been snatched from him by Fate, his daughter, because she could no longer live in chastity, had met a piteous but an honourable death. There was no longer in his house any opportunity for Appius to gratify his lust, from any other violence on that man's part he would defend himself with the same resolution with which he had defended his child; others must look out for themselves and for their children.
To this impassioned appeal of Verginius the crowd
replied with a shout that they would not fail him in
his grief or in the defence of his liberty. The
civilians mingling in the throng of soldiers told the
same tragic story, and how much more shocking this
incident was to behold than to hear about; at the same
time they announced that affairs were in fatal
confusion at
They marched in military order to the City and
occupied the
The meeting of the senate was presided over by Sp.
Oppius. They decided not to adopt any harsh measures,
as it was through their own lack of energy that the
sedition had arisen. Three envoys of consular rank
were sent to the army to demand in the name of the
senate by whose orders they had abandoned their camp,
and what they meant by occupying the
Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
<<Liv. 3.49 | Liv. 3.50 (Latin) | >>Liv. 3.51 |