<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:phi1348.abo015.perseus-eng2:39</requestUrn>
            </request>
            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi1348.abo015.perseus-eng2:39</urn>
                <passage>
                    <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.abo015.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" n="39" subtype="chapter"><p>Amongst other things, people admired in him his indifference and unconcern; or,
					to express it in Greek, his <foreign xml:lang="grc">μετεωξία</foreign> and
						<foreign xml:lang="grc">ἀβλεφία</foreign>. Placing himself at table a
					little after Messalina's death, he enquired, "Why the empress did not come?"
					Many of those whom he had condemned to death, he ordered the day after to be
					invited to his table, and to game with him, and sent to reprimand them as
					sluggish fellows for not making greater haste. When he was meditating his
					incestuous marriage with Agrippina, he was perpetually calling her, "My
					daughter, my nursling, born and brought up upon my lap." And when he was going
					to adopt Nero, as if there was little cause for censure in his adopting a
					son-in-law, when he had a son of his own arrived at years of maturity; he
					continually gave out in public, "that no one had ever been admitted by adoption
					into the Claudian family."</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>