<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0914.phi001.perseus-eng3:4.15.3-4.16.1</requestUrn>
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            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0914.phi001.perseus-eng3:4.15.3-4.16.1</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text><body><div n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi0914.phi001.perseus-eng3" type="edition" xml:lang="eng"><div n="4" subtype="book" type="textpart"><div n="15" subtype="chapter" type="textpart"><div n="3" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> He was not to be dealt with like an ordinary citizen. For, though born
							amongst a free people under laws and settled rights, in a City from
							which he knew that royalty had been expelled, and in the very same year,
							the sons of the king's sister, children of the consul who liberated his
							country, had, on the discovery of a conspiracy for restoring royalty,
							been beheaded by their own father-a City from which Collatinus </p></div><div n="4" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> Tarquin the consul had been ordered to lay down his office and go into
							exile, because the very name of Tarquin was detested-a City in which
							some years later Spurius Cassius had been punished for entertaining
							designs of sovereignty-a City in which recently the decemvirs had been
							punished by confiscation, exile, and death because of a tyranny as
							despotic as that of kings-in <emph>that</emph> City Maelius had
							conceived hopes of sovereignty! </p></div><div n="5" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> And who was this man? Although no nobility of birth, no honours, no
							services to the State paved the way for any man to sovereign power,
							still it was their consulships, their decemvirates, the honours achieved
							by them and their ancestors and the splendour of their families that
							raised the ambitions of the Claudii and the Cassii to an impious height.
						</p></div><div n="6" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> But Spurius Maelius, to whom the tribuneship of the plebs was a thing to
							be wished for rather than hoped for, a wealthy corn-factor, hoped to buy
							the liberty of his fellow-citizens for a couple of pounds of spelt, and
							imagined that by throwing a little corn to </p></div><div n="7" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> them he could reduce to slavery the men who had conquered all the
							neighbouring States, and that he whom the State could hardly stomach as
							a senator would be tolerated as a king, possessing the power and
							insignia of Romulus, who had sprung from the gods and been carried back
							to the gods! </p></div><div n="8" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p> His act must be regarded as a portent quite as much as a crime; for that
							portent his blood was not sufficient expiation, those walls within which
							such madness had been conceived must be levelled to the ground, and his
							property, contaminated by the price of treason, confiscated to the
							State. </p></div></div><div n="16" subtype="chapter" type="textpart"><div n="1" subtype="section" type="textpart"><p>So far the Dictator. He then gave orders for the house to be forthwith
							razed to the ground, that the place where it stood might be a perpetual
							reminder of impious hopes crushed. </p></div></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>