BOOK THE FOURTH
16. Chapter XVI
(continued)
'Never fear,' answered Clodius; 'old Diomed is delighted at the notion of
marrying his daughter to a nobleman, and will come down largely with the
sesterces. You will see that I shall not lock them up in the atrium. It
will be a white day for his jolly friends, when Clodius marries an heiress.'
'Say you so?' cried Lepidus; 'come, then, a full cup to the health of the
fair Julia!'
While such was the conversation--one not discordant to the tone of mind
common among the dissipated of that day, and which might perhaps, a century
ago, have found an echo in the looser circles of Paris--while such, I say,
was the conversation in the gaudy triclinium of Lepidus, far different the
scene which scowled before the young Athenian.
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