Page:The Natural History of Pliny.djvu/18

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LIFE AND WRITINGS OF PLINY.

details connected with his death. I shall therefore draw to a conclusion. The only thing that I shall add is the assurance that I have truthfully related all these facts, of which I was either an eye-witness myself, or heard them at the time of their occurrence, a period when they were most likely to he correctly related. You of course will select such points as you may think the most important. For it is one thing to write a letter, another to write history:—one thing to write for a friend, another to write for the public. Farewell."

Of the mode of life pursued by Pliny, and of the rest of his works, an equally interesting account has been preserved by his nephew, in an Epistle addressed to Macer[1]. We cannot more appropriately conclude than by presenting this Epistle to the reader:—"I am highly gratified to find that you read the works of my uncle with such a degree of attention as to feel a desire to possess them all, and that with this view you inquire, What are their names? I will perform the duties of an index then: and not content with that, will state in what order they were written: for even that is a kind of information which is by no means undesirable to those who are devoted to literary pursuits. His first composition was a treatise 'on the use of the Javelin by Cavalry,' in one Book. This he composed, with equal diligence and ingenuity, while he was in command of a troop of horse. His second work was the 'Life of Q. Pomponius Secundus,' in two Books, a person by whom he had been particularly beloved.—These books he composed as a tribute which was justly due to the memory of his deceased friend. His next work was twenty Books on 'the Wars in Germany,' in which he has compiled an account of all the wars in which we have been engaged with the people of that country. This he had begun while serving in Germany, having been recommended to do so in a dream. For in his sleep he thought that the figure of Drusus Nero[2] stood by him—the same Drusus, who after the most extensive conquests in that country, there met his

  1. B. iii. Ep. 5.
  2. Nero Claudius Drusus, the son of Livia, afterwards the wife of Augustus. He was the father of the Emperor Claudius, and died in Germany of the effects of an accident.