<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi010.perseus-eng2" subtype="translation"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="11" resp="perseus"><p> And that you may understand that Cluentius was not induced to prosecute
    Oppianicus by a disposition fond of bringing accusations, or by any fondness for display or
    covetousness of glory, but by nefarious injuries, by daily plots against him, by hazard of his
    life, which has been every day set before his eyes, I must go back a little further to the very
    beginning of the business; and I entreat you, O judges, not to be weary or indignant at my doing
    so—for when you know the beginning, you will much more easily understand the end. <milestone n="5" unit="chapter"/>
   <milestone unit="para"/>Aulus Cluentius Habitus, this man's father, O judges, was a man by far the most distinguished
    for valour, for reputation and for nobleness of birth, not only of the municipality of
     <placeName key="perseus,Larinum">Larinum</placeName>, of which he was a native, but also of all
    that district and neighbourhood. When he died, in the consulship of Sulla and Pompeius, <note anchored="true">a. u. c. 666. Twenty-two years before this time.</note> he left this son, a boy
    fifteen years old, and a daughter grown up and of marriageable age, who a short time after her
    father's death married Aulus Aurius Melinus, her own cousin, a youth of the fairest possible
    reputation, as was then supposed, among his countrymen, for honour and nobleness. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="12" resp="perseus"><p> This marriage subsisted with all respectability and all concord; when
    on a sudden there arose the nefarious lust of an abandoned woman, united not only with infamy
    but even with impiety. For Sassia, the mother of this Habitus, (for she shall be called his
    mother by me, just for the name's sake, although she behaves towards him with the hatred and
    cruelty of an enemy,)—she shall, I say, be called his mother; nor will I even so speak of her
    wickedness and barbarity as to forget the name to which nature entitles her; (for the more
    lovable and amiable the name of mother is, the more will you think the extraordinary wickedness
    of that mother, who for these many years has been wishing her son dead, and who wishes it now
    more than ever, worthy of all possible hatred.) She, then, the mother of Habitus, being charmed
    in a most impious matter with love for that young man, Melinus, her own son-in-law, at first
    restrained her desires as she could, but she did not do that long. Presently, she began to get
    so furious in her insane passion, she began to be so hurried away by her lust, that neither
    modesty, nor chastity, nor piety, nor the disgrace to her family, nor the opinion of men, nor
    the indignation of her son, nor the grief of her daughter, could recall her from her desires.
     </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="13" resp="perseus"><p> She seduced the mind of the young man, not yet matured by
    wisdom and reason, with all those temptations with which that early age can be charmed and
    allured. Her daughter, who was tormented not only with the common indignation which all women
    feel at injuries of that sort from their husbands, but who also was unable to endure the
    infamous prostitution of her mother, of which she did not think that she could even complain to
    any one without committing a sin herself, wished the rest of the world to remain in ignorance of
    this her terrible misfortune, and wasted away in grief and tears in the arms and on the bosom of
    Cluentius, her most affectionate brother. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="14" resp="perseus"><p> However, there is a
    sudden divorce, which appeared likely to be a consolation for all her misfortunes. Cluentia
    departs from Melinus; not unwilling to be released from the infliction of such injuries, yet not
    willing to lose her husband. But then that admirable and illustrious mother of hers began openly
    to exult with joy, to triumph in her delight, victorious over her daughter, not over her lust.
    Therefore she did not choose her reputation to be attacked any longer by uncertain suspicions;
    she orders that genial bed, which two years before she had decked for her daughter on her
    marriage, to be decked and prepared for herself in the very same house, having driven and forced
    her daughter out of it. The mother-in-law marries the son-in-law, no one looking favourably on
    the deed, no one approving it, all foreboding a dismal end to it. </p></div><milestone n="6" unit="chapter"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="15" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>Oh, the incredible wickedness of the woman, and, with the exception of this one single
    instance, unheard of since the world began! Oh, the unbridled and unrestrained lust! Oh, the
    extraordinary audacity of her conduct! To think that she did not fear (even if she disregarded
    the anger of the gods and the scorn of men) that nuptial night and those bridal torches! that
    she did not dread the threshold of that chamber! nor the bed of her daughter! nor those very
    walls, the witnesses of the former wedding! She broke down and overthrew everything in her
    passion and her madness; lust got the better of shame, audacity subdued fear, mad passion
    conquered reason. </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>