REQUIRED READING
FOR THE
Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle for 1883-4.
May.
READINGS FROM ROMAN HISTORY.
SELECTED BY WILLIAM CLEAVER WILKINSON.
It has not been the compiler’s purpose in these extracts to produce a continuous sketch of the history of Rome. That, in the space assigned, would be impossible. It has not been his purpose to present to readers incidents or events in Roman story judged to be the most important or the most striking of all that were open to his choice. That, too, would require more room than could here be commanded. His purpose has been simply, from the long historic panorama of Rome, to cut out a few pictures, at the same time interesting enough, compact enough, and complete enough within themselves, to deserve and to admit being shown to readers of The Chautauquan, in the comparatively small space that could be allotted to them in these columns.
We begin with a tale taken from the legendary part of Roman history. Livy tells it for us, Mr. George Baker being his English interpreter, a practical one and excellent. A war is in progress between the Romans and the Albans.