[Cleopatra by Jacob Abbott]@TWC D-Link book
Cleopatra

CHAPTER V
3/25

His eccentric manners, his frank and honest air, his Roman simplicity of dress and demeanor, made him conspicuous; and his interposition to save the lives of the captured garrison of Pelusium, and the interest which he took in rendering such distinguished funeral honors to the enemy whom his army had slain in battle, impressed the people with the idea of a certain nobleness and magnanimity in his character, which, in spite of his faults, made him an object of general admiration and applause.

The very faults of such a man assume often, in the eyes of the world, the guise and semblance of virtues.

For example, it is related of Antony that, at one time in the course of his life, having a desire to make a present of some kind to a certain person, in requital for a favor which he had received from him, he ordered his treasurer to send a sum of money to his friend--and named for the sum to be sent an amount considerably greater than was really required under the circumstances of the case--acting thus, as he often did, under the influence of a blind and uncalculating generosity.

The treasurer, more prudent than his master, wished to reduce the amount, but he did not dare directly to propose a reduction; so he counted out the money, and laid it in a pile in a place where Antony was to pass, thinking that when Antony saw the amount, he would perceive that it was too great.
Antony, in passing by, asked what money that was.

The treasurer said that it was the sum that he had ordered to be sent as a present to such a person, naming the individual intended.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books