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understanding was often deceived by the   unsuspecting goodness of his heart. Artful men, who study the   passions of princes, and conceal their own, approached his   person in the disguise of philosophic sanctity, and acquired   riches and honors by affecting to despise them. His excessive indulgence to his brother, * his wife, and his son, exceeded the   bounds of private virtue, and became a public injury, by the   example and consequences of their vices.   Faustina, the daughter of Pius and the wife of Marcus, has   been as much celebrated for her gallantries as for her beauty.   The grave simplicity of the philosopher was ill calculated to engage her wanton levity, or to fix that unbounded passion for   variety, which often discovered personal merit in the meanest   of mankind. The Cupid of the ancients was, in general, a very   sensual deity; and the amours of an empress, as they exact on   her side the plainest advances, are seldom susceptible of   much sentimental delicacy. Marcus was the only man in the   empire who seemed ignorant or insensible of the irregularities   of Faustina; which, according to the prejudices of every age,   reflected some disgrace on the injured husband. He promoted   several of her lovers to posts of honor and profit, and during a   connection of thirty years, invariably gave her proofs of the   most tender confidence, and of a respect which ended not with   her life. In his Meditations, he thanks the gods, who had   bestowed on him a wife so faithful, so gentle, and of such a   wonderful simplicity of manners. The obsequious senate, at   his earnest request, declared her a goddess. She was   represented in her temples, with the attributes of Juno,   Venus, and Ceres; and it was decreed, that, on

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