180 PLrS'Y's yATUEAL HISTOET. [Book VII. 



CHAP. 35. (35.) — tee iiosT chaste jiateoxs. 



Sulpicia, the daughter of Paterculus, and wife of Fulvius 

 Flaccus, has been considered, in the judgment of matrons, to 

 have been the chastest of women. She was selected from one 

 hundred Roman ladies, who had been previously named, to 

 dedicate a statue of Yenus, in obedience to the precepts con- 

 tained in the SibyUine books. -^ Again, Claudia gave strong 

 proof of her piety and virtue, on the occasion of the introduc- 

 tion into Ptome of the ^Mother of the gods.'-^ 



CHAP. 36. (36.) INSTANCES OP THE HIGHEST DEGPwEE OF 



AFFECTIOX. 



Infinite is the number of examples of affection which have 

 been known in all parts of the world : but one in particular 

 occurred at Eome, to which no other can possibly be com- 

 pared. A woman of quite the lower class, and whose name 

 has consequently not come down to us, having lately given 

 birth to a child, obtained permission to visit her mother,^° who 

 was confined in prison ; but was always carefully searched by 

 the gaoler before being admitted, to prevent her from intro- 



'* "^e have this anecdote related by Valerius Maximus, B. viii. c. 15. 

 He informs ns, that it was the statue of Venus Verticordia which was 

 ordered to be consecrated; the more readily to win the hearts of the 

 maidens and matrons from wanton thoughts to a life of chastity. — B. 



-9 Her story is told at great length by OA-id, in the Fasti, E. iv. 1. 305, 

 et seq. Her name was Claudia Quinta, and she is supposed to have been 

 the sister of Appius Claudius Pulcher, and grand-daughter of Appius Clau- 

 dius Csecus. The vessel which was conveying the statue of Cybele from 

 Pessinus to Rome having stuck fast on a shallow at the mouth of the Tiber, 

 the soothsayers declared that none but a really chaste woman could move 

 it. Claudia, who had been previously accused of unchastity, being in the 

 number of the matrons who had accompanied Scipio to Ostia to receive the 

 statue, immediately presented herself, and calling upon the goddess to vin- 

 dicate her innocence, seized the rope, and the vessel moved forthv^'ith. A 

 statue was afterwards erected to her in the vestibule of the temple of the 

 goddess. 



^ Solinus and Festus diflFer somewhat from Pliny, in stating that it 

 was her father whose life was thus saved by the affectionate daughter. 

 Valerius Maximus, who tells the story, says that the family was "ingenui 

 sanguinis," meaning "of genteel origin." Such families were, however, 

 sometimes reduced, even among the Eomans, to a level with the plebeian 

 classes. 



