To honour the gods at their sacrifices, no greater mark of
honour has been thought of than to gild the horns of the animals
sacrificed—that is, of the larger victims[1] only. But in warfare,
this species of luxury made such rapid advances, that in the
Epistles of M. Brutus from the Plains of Philippi, we find expressions
of indignation at the fibulæ[2] of gold that were worn
by the tribunes. Yes, so it is, by Hercules! and yet you, the
same Brutus, have not said a word about women wearing gold
upon their feet; while we, on the other hand, charge him with
criminality[3] who was the first to confer dignity upon gold by
wearing the ring. Let men even, at the present day, wear gold
upon the arms in form of bracelets—known as "dardania,"
because the practice first originated in Dardania, and called
"viriolæ" in the language of the Celts, "viriæ"[4] in that of
Celtiberia, let women wear gold upon their arms[5] and
all their fingers, their necks, their ears, the tresses of their
hair; let chains of gold run meandering along their sides;
and in the still hours of the night let sachets filled with pearls
hang suspended from the necks of their mistresses, all bedizened
with gold, so that in their very sleep even they may still
retain the consciousness that they are the possessors of such
At the present day, too, a fashion has been introduced among the men even, of wearing effigies upon their fingers representing Harpocrates[11] and other divinities of Egypt. In the reign of Claudius, also, there was introduced another unusual distinction, in the case of those to whom was granted the right of free admission,[12] that, namely, of wearing the likeness of the emperor engraved in gold upon a ring: a circumstance that gave rise to vast numbers of informations, until the timely elevation of the Emperor Vespasianus rendered them impossible, by proclaiming that the right of admission to the emperor belonged equally to all. Let these particulars suffice on the subject of golden rings and the use of them.
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8. were seen, but comparatively unadorned.
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