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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div xml:lang="eng" type="translation" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi1348.abo020.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" n="13" subtype="chapter"><p>He bore with great mildness the freedom used by his friends, the satirical
					allusions of advocates, and the petulance of philosophers. Licinius Mucianus,
					who had been guilty of notorious acts of lewdness, but, presuming upon his great
					services, treated him very rudely, he re- proved only in private; and when
					complaining of his con- duct to a common friend of theirs, he concluded with
					these words, "However, I am a man." Salvius Liberalis, in pleading the. cause of
					a rich man under prosecution, presuming to say, "What is it to Caesar, if
					Hipparchus possesses a hundred millions of sesterces?" he com- mended him for
					it. Demetrius, the Cynic philosopher,<note anchored="true">Demetrius, who was
						born at Corinth, seems to have been a close imitator of Diogenes, the
						founder of the sect. Having come to Rome to study under Apollonius, he was
						banished to the islands, with other philosophers, by Vespasian.</note> who
					had been sentenced to banishment, meeting him on the road, and refusing to rise
					up or salute him, nay, snarling at him in scurrilous language, he only called
					him a cur.</p></div><div type="textpart" n="14" subtype="chapter"><p>He was little disposed to keep up the memory of affronts or quarrels, nor did he
					harbour any resentment on account of them. He made a very splendid marriage for
					the daughter of his enemy Vitellius, and gave her, besides, a suitable fortune
					and equipage. Being in a great consternation after he was forbidden the court in
					the time of Nero, and asking those about him, what he should do? or, whither he
					should g ? one of those whose office it was to introduce people to the emperor,
					thrusting him out, bid him go to Morbonia.<note anchored="true">There being no
						such place as Morbonia, and the supposed name being derived ftom morbus,
						disease, some critics have supposed that Anticyra, the asylum of the
						incurables, (see CALIGULA, C. xxix) is meant; but the probability is, that
						the expression used by the imperial chamberlain was only a courtly version
						of a phrase not very commonly adopted in the present day. </note> But when
					this same person came afterwards to beg his pardon, he only vented his
					resentment in nearly the same words. He was so far from being influenced by
					suspicion or fear to seek the destruction of any one, that, when his friends
					advised him to beware of Metius Pomposianus, because it was commonly believed,
					on his nativity being cast, that he was destined by fate to the empire, he made
					him consul, promising for him, that he would not forget the benefit
					conferred.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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