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208
THE DECLINE AND FALL
CHAP. VII.
_____virtues had already acquired the love and esteem of the Romans, and whose authority over the province would give weight and stability to the enterprise. Gordianus, their proconsul, and the object of their choice, refused, with unfeigned reluctance, the dangerous honour; and begged with tears that they would suffer him to terminate in peace a long and innocent life, without staining his feeble age with civil blood. Their menaces compelled him to accept the imperial purple, his only refuge indeed against the jealous cruelty of Maximin; since, according to the reasoning of tyrants, those who have been esteemed worthy of the throne deserve death, and those who deliberate have already rebelled[1].
- ↑ Herodian, 1. vii. p. 239; Hist. August, p. 153.
- ↑ Hist. August, p. 152. The celebrated house of Pompey in carinis, was usurped by Marc Antony, and consequently became, after the triumvir's death, a part of the imperial domain. The emperor Trajan allowed and even encouraged the rich senators to purchase those magnificent and useless palaces, (Plin. Panegyric, c. 50.) and it may seem probable that, on this occasion, Pompey's house came into the possession of Gordian's great grandfather.
- ↑ The Claudian, the Numidian, the Carystian, and the Synnadian. The colours of Roman marbles have been faintly described and imperfectly distinguished. It appears, however, that the Carystian was a sea-green, and that the marble of Synnada was white mixed with oval spots of purple. See Salmasius ad Hist. August, p. 164.