Dialogues of the Dead eBook

George Lyttelton, 1st Baron Lyttelton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Dialogues of the Dead.

Dialogues of the Dead eBook

George Lyttelton, 1st Baron Lyttelton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Dialogues of the Dead.

DIALOGUE XV.

OCTAVIA—­PORTIA—­ARRIA.

Portia.—­How has it happened, Octavia, that Arria and I, who have a higher rank than you in the Temple of Fame, should have a lower here in Elysium?  We are told that the virtues you exerted as a wife were greater than ours.  Be so good as to explain to us what were those virtues.  It is the privilege of this place that one can bear superiority without mortification.  The jealousy of precedence died with the rest of our mortal frailties.  Tell us, then, your own story.  We will sit down under the shade of this myrtle grove and listen to it with pleasure.

Octavia.—­Noble ladies, the glory of our sex and of Rome, I will not refuse to comply with your desire, though it recalls to my mind some scenes my heart would wish to forget.  There can be only one reason why Minos should have given to my conjugal virtues a preference above yours, which is that the trial assigned to them was harder.

Arria.—­How, madam! harder than to die for your husband!  We died for ours.

Octavia.—­You did for husbands who loved yon, and were the most virtuous men of the ages they lived in—­who trusted you with their lives, their fame, their honour.  To outlive such husbands is, in my judgment, a harder effort of virtue than to die for them or with them.  But Mark Antony, to whom my brother Octavius, for reasons of state, gave my hand, was indifferent to me, and loved another.  Yet he has told me himself I was handsomer than his mistress Cleopatra.  Younger I certainly was, and to men that is generally a charm sufficient to turn the scale in one’s favour.  I had been loved by Marcellus.  Antony said he loved me when he pledged to me his faith.  Perhaps he did for a time; a new handsome woman might, from his natural inconstancy, make him forget an old attachment.  He was but too amiable.  His very vices had charms beyond other men’s virtues.  Such vivacity! such fire! such a towering pride!  He seemed made by nature to command, to govern the world; to govern it with such ease that the business of it did not rob him of an hour of pleasure.  Nevertheless, while his inclination for me continued, this haughty lord of mankind who could hardly bring his high spirit to treat my brother, his partner in empire, with the necessary respect, was to me as submissive, as obedient to every wish of my heart, as the humblest lover that ever sighed in the vales of Arcadia.  Thus he seduced my affection from the manes of Marcellus and fixed it on himself.  He fixed it, ladies (I own it with some confusion), more fondly than it had ever been fixed on Marcellus.  And when he had done so he scorned me, he forsook me, he returned to Cleopatra.  Think who I was—­the sister of Caesar, sacrificed to a vile Egyptian queen, the harlot of Julius, the disgrace of her sex!  Every outrage was added that could incense me still

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Dialogues of the Dead from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.