1 To bequeath to posterity a record
of the deeds and characters of distinguished men is an ancient practice which
even the present age, careless as it is of its own sons, has not abandoned
whenever some great and conspicuous excellence has conquered and risen superior
to that failing, common to petty and to great states, blindness and hostility
to goodness. But in days gone by, as there was a greater inclination and a more
open path to the achievement of memorable actions, so the man of highest genius
was led by the simple reward of a good conscience to hand on without partiality
or self-seeking the remembrance of greatness. Many too thought that to write
their own lives showed the confidence of integrity rather than presumption. Of
Rutilius and Scaurus no one doubted the honesty or questioned the motives. So
true is it that merit is best appreciated by the age in which it thrives most
easily. But in these days, I, who have to record the life of one who has passed
away, must crave an indulgence, which I should not have had to ask had I an
indulgence, which I should not have had to ask had I only to inveigh against an
age so cruel, so hostile to all virtue.
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