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received the   education of a Greek, assumed, in a mature age, the familiar   use, and absolute command, of the Latin language; soared   above the heads of his feeble contemporaries; and placed   himself, after an interval of three hundred years, among the   poets of ancient Rome.   

   Chapter XXXI:   

   Invasion Of Italy, Occupation Of Territories By   Barbarians.   
   Part I.   Invasion Of Italy By Alaric. -- Manners Of The Roman Senate And People. -- Rome Is Thrice Besieged, And At Length   Pillaged, By The Goths. -- Death Of Alaric. -- The Goths   Evacuate Italy. -- Fall Of Constantine. -- Gaul And Spain Are   Occupied By The Barbarians. -- Independence Of Britain.   The incapacity of a weak and distracted government may often   assume the appearance, and produce the effects, of a   treasonable correspondence with the public enemy. If Alaric   himself had been introduced into the council of Ravenna, he   would probably have advised the same measures which were   actually pursued by the ministers of Honorius. The king of the   Goths would have conspired, perhaps with some reluctance, to   destroy the formidable adversary, by whose arms, in Italy, as   well as in Greece, he had been twice overthrown. Their active   and interested hatred laboriously accomplished the disgrace   and ruin of the great Stilicho. The valor of Sarus, his fame in   arms, and his personal, or hereditary, influence over the   confederate Barbarians, could recommend him only to the   friends of their country, who despised, or detested, the worthless characters of Turpilio, Varanes, and Vigilantius. By   the pressing instances of the new favorites, these generals,   unworthy as they

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