The Women of the Caesars by Guglielmo Ferrero
page 31 of 147 (21%)
page 31 of 147 (21%)
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more illustrious with inherited glory as it was poorer in wealth than
that which Victory had prepared for Augustus on the Palatine. [Illustration: The young Augustus.] We know--it is Suetonius who tells us--that this house on the Palatine built by Augustus, in which Livia spent the larger part of her life, was small and not at all luxurious. In it there was not a single piece of marble nor a precious mosaic; for forty years Augustus slept in the same bedchamber, and the furniture of the house was so simple that in the second century of our era it was exhibited to the public as an extraordinary curiosity. The imperial pair had several villas, at Lanuvium, at Palestrina, at Tivoli, but all of them were unpretentious and simple. Nor was there any more pomp and ceremony about the dinners to which they invited the conspicuous personages of Rome, the dignitaries of the state and the heads of the great families. Only on very special occasions were six courses served; usually there were but three. Moreover, Augustus never wore any other togas than those woven by Livia; woven not indeed and altogether by Livia's hands,--though she did not disdain, now and then, to work the loom,--but by her slaves and freed-women. Faithful to the traditions of the aristocracy, Livia counted it among her duties personally to direct the weaving-rooms which were in the house. As she carefully parceled out the wool to the slaves, watching over them lest they steal or waste it, and frequently taking her place among them while they were at work, she felt that she too contributed to the prosperity and the glory of the empire. Simplicity, loyalty, industry, an absolute surrender of one's own personality to the family and its interests,--these, in the great families, were the traditional feminine virtues which lived again in |
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