[27]
Oppianicus asks, and most earnestly entreats Sassia to marry him. But she does not marvel at
his audacity,—does not scorn and reject his impudence, she is not even alarmed at
the idea of the house of Oppianicus, red with her husband's blood; but she says that she has a
repugnance to this marriage, because he has three sons. Oppianicus, who coveted Sassia's
money, thought that he must seek at home for a remedy for that obstacle which was opposed to
his marriage. For as he had an infant son by Novia, and as a second son of his, whom he had
had by Papia, was being brought up under his mother's
eye at Teanum in Apulia, which is about eighteen
miles from Larinum, on a sudden, without alleging
any reason, he sends for the boy from Teanum, which he had previously never been accustomed to
do, except at the time of the public games, or on days of festival. His miserable mother,
suspecting no evil, sends him. He pretended to set out himself to Tarentum; and on that very day the boy, though at the eleventh hour he had been
seen in public in good health, died before night, and the next day was burnt before daybreak.
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