[22]
and it is not strange that while he is
surveying at the same time both the things which are past, and those which seem to be
impending; when he alone has, the authority to establish peace, and the power of
carrying on war; when all are looking to him alone, and he alone is directing all
things; when he is occupied incessantly by such numerous and such important affairs that
he cannot breathe freely, it is not strange, I say, if he fails to notice some things;
especially when so many men are watching his, busy condition, and catch their
opportunity of doing something of this sort the moment he looks away. To this is added,
that although he is fortunate, as indeed he is, yet no man can have such good fortune,
as in a vast household to have no one, whether slave or freedman, of worthless
character.
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