<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text><body><div n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi1017.phi011.perseus-eng2" type="edition" xml:lang="eng"><div n="6" type="textpart" subtype="card"><p>He would have taken in poor simple Hercules, but
                that Our Lady of Malaria was there, who left her temple and came alone with him: all
                the other gods he had left at Rome. Quoth she, <quote>The fellow's tale is nothing
                    but lies. I have lived with him all these years, and I tell you, he was born at
                    Lyons. You behold a fellow-burgess of Marcus.<note>Reference unknown.</note> As
                    I say, he was born at the sixteenth milestone from Vienne, a native Gaul. So of
                    course he took Rome, as a good Gaul ought to do. I pledge you my word that in
                    Lyons he was born, where Licinus<note>A Gallic slave, appointed by Augustus
                        Procurator of Gallia Lugudunensis, when he made himself notorious by his
                        extortions. See Dion Cass. liv, 21.</note> was king so many years. But you
                    that have trudged over more roads than any muleteer that plies for hire, you
                    must have come across the people of Lyons, and you must know that it is a far
                    cry from Xanthus to the Rhone.</quote> At this point Claudius flared up, and
                expressed his wrath with as big a growl as he could manage. What he said nobody
                understood; as a matter of fact, he was ordering my lady of Fever to be taken away,
                and making that sign with his trembling hand (which<pb n="p.385"/> was always
                steady enough for that, if for nothing else) by which he used to decapitate men. He
                had ordered her head to be chopped off. For all the notice the others took of him,
                they might have been his own freedmen.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>