[38]
To this morose and severe
old man Caelius would reply, that he had not departed from the right path
from being led away by any passion. What proof could he give? That he had
been at no expense, at no loss; that he had not borrowed any money. But it
was said that he had. How few people are there who can avoid such a report,
in a city so prone to evil speaking! Do you wonder that the neighbour of
that woman was spoken of unfavourably, when her own brother could not escape
being made the subject of conversation by profligate men? But to a gentle
and considerate father such as his is, whose language would be,
“Has he broken the doors? they shall be mended; has he torn his
garments? they shall be repaired;”the cause of his son is easily
explained. For what circumstances could there be in which he would not be
able easily to defend himself? I am not saying anything now against that
woman: but if there were a woman totally unlike her, who made herself common
to everybody; who had always some one or other openly avowed as her lover;
to whose gardens, to whose house, to whose baths the lusts of every one had
free access as of their own right; a woman who even kept young men, and made up for the parsimony of their fathers by her liberality;
if she lived, being a widow, with freedom, being a lascivious woman, with
wantonness, being a rich woman, extravagantly, and being a lustful woman,
after the fashion of prostitutes; am I to think any one an adulterer who
might happen to salute her with a little too much freedom?
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