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AGAINST AVARICE AND LUXURY.

Horace

Nor ivory, nor a fretted ceiling adorned with gold, glitters in my

house: no Hymettian beams rest upon pillars cut out of the extreme parts

of Africa; nor, a pretended heir, have I possessed myself of the palace

of Attalus, nor do ladies, my dependants, spin Laconian purple for my

use. But integrity, and a liberal vein of genius, are mine: and the man

of fortune makes his court to me, who am but poor. I importune the gods

no further, nor do I require of my friend in power any larger

enjoyments, sufficiently happy with my Sabine farm alone. Day is driven

on by day, and the new moons hasten to their wane. You put out marble to

be hewn, though with one foot in the grave; and, unmindful of a

sepulcher, are building houses; and are busy to extend the shore of the

sea, that beats with violence at Baiae, not rich enough with the shore

of the mainland. Why is it, that through avarice you even pluck up the

landmarks of your neighbor's ground, and trespass beyond the bounds of

your clients; and wife and husband are turned out, bearing in their

bosom their household gods and their destitute children? Nevertheless,

no court more certainly awaits its wealthy lord, than the destined limit

of rapacious Pluto. Why do you go on? The impartial earth is opened

equally to the poor and to the sons of kings; nor has the life-guard

ferryman of hell, bribed with gold, re-conducted the artful Prometheus.

He confines proud Tantalus; and the race of Tantalus, he condescends,

whether invoked or not, to relieve the poor freed from their labors.

 

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