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ILLUSTRATIONS

VOLUME III

PAGE

Frontispiece

Famous painting of the head of Jesus Christ (page 23),
By Gabriel Max.
Queen Thusnelda, wife of Arminius, taken prisoner by
the soldiers of the Roman general Germanicus,
Painting by H. Koenig.

Nero, accompanied by his debauched court, playing on
his golden lute, views the crucifixion of the Chris-
tian martyrs,

Painting by Wilhelm von Kaulbach.

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O vast and wonderful a construction was the Roman world, so different from our own, that we are apt to imagine it as an arrangement far more deliberately planned, far more mechanically complete, than it appeared to its own inhabitants.

From a cursory glance, we may carry away wholly mistaken conceptions of its thought and purpose. Thus, for instance, the Roman Republic never assumed the definite design of conquering the world; its people had only the vaguest conception of whither the world might extend. They merely quarrelled with their neighbors, defeated and then annexed them.

At almost any time after Hannibal's death, Rome might have marched her legions, practically unopposed, over all the lands within her reach. Yet she permitted a century and a half to elapse ere Pompey asserted her sovereignty over Asia. It was left for Augustus to take the final step, and, by absorbing Egypt, make his country become in name what it had long been in fact, the ruler of the civilized world.

Thus, too, we think of Augustus as a kindly despot, supreme, and governed only by his own will. But his compatriots looked on him as simply the chief citizen of their republic. They considered that of their own free will, to escape the dangers of further civil war, they had chosen to confer upon

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