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of the Saturnalia, Romulus prepared a   feast for the deities of Olympus, who had adopted him as a   worthy associate, and for the Roman princes, who had reigned   over his martial people, and the vanquished nations of the earth. The immortals were placed in just order on their   thrones of state, and the table of the Cęsars was spread below   the Moon in the upper region of the air. The tyrants, who   would have disgraced the society of gods and men, were   thrown headlong, by the inexorable Nemesis, into the   Tartarean abyss. The rest of the Cęsars successively advanced   to their seats; and as they passed, the vices, the defects, the   blemishes of their respective characters, were maliciously   noticed by old Silenus, a laughing moralist, who disguised the   wisdom of a philosopher under the mask of a Bacchanal. As   soon as the feast was ended, the voice of Mercury proclaimed   the will of Jupiter, that a celestial crown should be the reward   of superior merit. Julius Cęsar, Augustus, Trajan, and   Marcus Antoninus, were selected as the most illustrious   candidates; the effeminate Constantine was not excluded from   this honorable competition, and the great Alexander was   invited to dispute the prize of glory with the Roman heroes.   Each of the candidates was allowed to display the merit of his   own exploits; but, in the judgment of the gods, the modest   silence of Marcus pleaded more powerfully than the elaborate   orations of his haughty rivals. When the judges of this awful   contest proceeded to examine the heart, and to scrutinize the   springs of action, the superiority of the Imperial Stoic appeared still more decisive and conspicuous. Alexander and   Cęsar, Augustus, Trajan, and Constantine, acknowledged,   with a blush, that fame,

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