138-78 B.C. page one
In
his younger days he lived in hired lodgings, at a low rate, which in
aftertimes was adduced against him as proof that he had been fortunate
above his quality. When he was boasting and magnifying himself for his
exploits in Libya, a person of noble station made answer, "And how can
you be an honest man, who, since the death of a father who left you
nothing, have become so rich?"
The time in which he lived was no
longer an age of pure and upright manners, but had already declined,
and yielded to the appetite for riches and luxury; yet still, in the
general opinion, they who deserted the hereditary poverty of their
family were as much blamed as those who had run out a fair patrimonial
estate. And afterwards, when he had seized the power into his hands,
and was putting many to death, a freedman, suspected of having
concealed one of the proscribed, and for that reason sentenced to be
thrown down the Tarpeian rock, in a reproachful way recounted how they
had lived long together under the same roof, himself for the upper
rooms paying two thousand sesterces, and Sylla for the lower three
thousand; so that the difference between their fortunes then was no
more than one thousand sesterces, equivalent in Attic coin to two
hundred and fifty drachmas. And thus much of his early fortune.
His general personal appearance may be known by his statues; only
his blue, eyes, of themselves extremely keen and glaring, were
rendered all the more forbidding and terrible by the complexion of his
face, in which white was mixed with rough blotches of fiery red.
Hence, it is said, he was surnamed Sylla, and in allusion to it one of
the scurrilous jesters at Athens made the verse upon him
.
Nor is it out of place to make use of marks of character like these,
in the case of one who was by nature so addicted to raillery, that
in his youthful obscure years he would converse freely with players
and professed jesters, and join them in all their low pleasures. And
when supreme master of all, he was often wont to muster together the
most impudent players and stage-followers of the town, and to drink
and bandy jests with them without regard to his age or the dignity
of his place, and to the prejudice of important affairs that
required his attention.
When he was once at table, it was not in
Sylla's nature to admit of anything that was serious, and whereas at
other times he was a man of business and austere of countenance, he
underwent all of a sudden, at his first entrance upon wine and
good-fellowship, a total revolution, and was gentle and tractable with
common singers and dancers, and ready to oblige any one that spoke
with him. It seems to have been a sort of diseased result of this
laxity that he was so prone to amorous pleasures, and yielded
without resistance to any temptation of voluptuousness, from which
even in his old age he could not refrain. He had a long attachment for
Metrobius, a player. In his first amours, it happened that he made
court to a common but rich lady, Nicopolis by name, and what by the
air of his youth, and what by long intimacy, won so far on her
affections, that she rather than he was the lover, and at her death
she bequeathed him her whole property. He likewise inherited the
estate of a step-mother who loved him as her own son. By these means
he had pretty well advanced his fortunes.
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LUCIUS Cornelius Sylla was descended of a patrician or noble family.
Of his ancestors, Rufinus, it is said, had been consul, and incurred a
disgrace more signal than his distinction. For being found possessed
of more than ten pounds of silver plate, contrary to the law, he was
for this reason put out of the senate. His posterity continued ever
after in obscurity, nor had Sylla himself any opulent parentage.
"Sylla is a mulberry sprinkled o'er with meal."
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