Page:Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1827) Vol 1.djvu/78

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54
THE DECLINE AND FALL

CHAP. II.
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than double the estimate; and the officers of the revenue began to murmur, till the generous Atticus silenced their complaints, by requesting that he might be permitted to take upon himself the whole additional expense[1].

His reputation. The ablest preceptors of Greece and Asia had been invited by liberal rewards to direct the education of young Herod. Their pupil soon became a celebrated orator, according to the useless rhetoric of that age, which, confining itself to the schools, disdained to visit either the forum or the senate. He was honoured with the consulship at Rome ; but the greatest part of his life was spent in a philosophic retirement at Athens, and his adjacent villas ; perpetually surrounded by sophists, who acknowledged, without reluctance, the superiority of a rich and generous riva[2]. The monuments of his genius have perished; some considerable ruins still preserve the fame of his taste and munificence : modern travellers have measured the remains of the stadium which he constructed at Athens. It was six hundred feet in length, built entirely of white marble, capable of holding the whole body of the people, and finished in four years, whilst Herod was president of the Athenian games. To the memory of his wife Regilla he dedicated a theatre, scarcely to be paralleled in the empire : no wood, except cedar, very curiously carved, was employed in any part of the building. The Odeum, designed by Pericles for musical performances, and the rehearsal of new tragedies, had been a trophy of the victory of the arts over barbaric greatness ; as the timbers employed in the construction consisted chiefly of the masts of the Persian vessels. Notwithstanding the repairs bestowed on that ancient edifice by a king of Cappadocia, it was again fallen to decay. Herod restored its ancient beauty and magnificence. Nor was the liberality of
  1. Philostrat. in Vit. Sophist. 1. ii. p. 548.
  2. Aulus Gellius, in Noct. Attic, i. 2. ix. 2. xviii. 10. xix. 12. Philostrat. p. 564.