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But as to Fortune, her gait is hasty, her looks bold,
her hope arrogant; and leaving Virtue far behind her, she
enters the lists, not, as she is described, with light wings,
balancing herself in the air, or lightly tripping with her
tiptoes upon the convexity of the globe, as if she were
presently to vanish away out of sight. No, she does not
appear here in any such doubtful and uncertain posture;
but as the Spartans say that Venus, when she passed over
the Eurotas, put off her gewgaws and female ornaments,
and armed herself with spear and shield for the sake of
Lycurgus; so Fortune, having deserted the Persians and
Assyrians, did swiftly fly over Macedonia, and quickly
threw off her favorite Alexander the Great, and after that,
having passed through the countries of Egypt and Syria,
and oftentimes by turns supported the Carthaginians, she
did at last fly over Tiber to the Palatine Mount, and there
she put off her wings, her Mercurial shoes, and left her
slippery and deceitful globe. Thus she entered Rome, as
one that was to be resident there, and thus she comes to
the bar in this controversy. She is no more uncertain, as
Pindar describes her; she does not henceforth guide a
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double helm, but continues constant to the Romans, and
therefore may be called the sister of Eunomia and Persuasion, and the daughter of Providence, as Alcman describes
her pedigree. This is certain in the opinion of all men.
that she holds in her hand the Horn of Plenty, not that
which is filled with verdant fruits, but that which pours
forth abundance of all things which the earth or the sea,
the rivers or the metals, or the harbors afford. Several
illustrious and famous men are seen to accompany her,
Numa Pompilius from the Sabines, and Priscus from Tarquinii, whom, being foreigners and strangers, Fortune
seated on the throne of Romulus. Aemilius Paulus also,
bringing back his army from Perseus and the Macedonians,
and triumphing in an unbloody and entire victory, does
greatly magnify and extol Fortune. The same does Caecilius Metellus, that brave old gentleman surnamed Macedonicus, whose corpse was carried forth to its funeral by
his four sons, Quintus Balearicus, Lucius Diadematus,
Marcus Metellus, and Caius Caprarius, and his two sons-in-law,—who were all six honorable men, and of consular dignity,—and also by his two grandsons, who were
famous for the good offices they did to the commonwealth,
both abroad by their heroical actions and at home by the
administration of justice. Aemilius Scaurus, from a mean
estate and a meaner family, was raised by Fortune to that
height of dignity that he was chosen Prince of the Senate.
It was Fortune that took Cornelius Sylla out of the bosom
of Nicopolis the whore, and exalted him above the Cimbrian triumphs of Marius and the dignity of his seven
consulships, giving him at once the powers of a monarch
and a dictator; upon which account he adopted himself
and all his memorable actions to Fortune, crying out with
Oedipus in Sophocles, I think myself the son of Fortune.1 In the Roman tongue he was called Felix, the
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happy; but he writ himself to the Greeks Lucius Cornelius Sylla Venustus, i. e. Beloved of Venus,—which is
also the inscription on all his trophies, both those at Chaeronea with us, and those in honor of his victories over
Mithridates; and that not without reason, since it is not
the Night, as Menander thought, but Fortune, that enjoys
the greatest part of Venus.
1 Soph. Oed. Tyr. 1080.
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