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that the licentiousness and lust of that man who thought himself king of the
Sicilians, was much the same. The name of the wife of Aeschrio, a Syracusan, is
Pippa, whose name has been made notorious over all Sicily by that man's profligacy, and many verses were inscribed on
the praetor's tribunal, and over the praetor's head, about that woman. This
Aeschrio, the imaginary husband of Pippa, is appointed as a new farmer of the tenths
of Herbita. When the men of Herbita saw that if the business got into Aeschrio's
hands they should be plundered at the will of a most dissolute woman, they did
against him as far as they thought that they could go. Aeschrio bid on, for he was
not afraid that, while Verres was praetor, the woman, who would be really the
farmer, would ever be allowed to lose by it. The tenths are knocked down to him at
thirty-five thousand medimni, nearly half as much again
as they had fetched the preceding year. The cultivators were utterly destroyed, and
so much the more because in the preceding year they had been drained dry, and almost
ruined. He was aware that they had been sold at so high a price, that more could not
be squeezed out of the people; so he deducts from the sum total three thousand six
hundred medimni, and enters on the registers thirty-one
thousand four hundred.
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