< Page:Plutarch's Lives (Clough, v.4, 1865).djvu
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150
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150 POMPEY.

take courage at last, when she saw several of the royal escort coming to meet him, apparently to give him a more honorable reception ; but in the mean time, as Pompcy took Philip by the hand to rise up more easily, Septimiua first stabbed him from behind with his sword ; and after him likewise Salvios and Achillas drew out their swords. He, therefore, taking up his gown with both hands, drew it over his face, and neither saying nor doing any thing unworthy of himself, only groaning a little, endured the wounds they gave him, and so ended his life, in the fifty- ninth year of his age, the very next day after the day of his birth. Cornelia, with her company from the galley, seeing him murdered, gave such a cry that it was heard to the shore, and weighing anchor with all speed, they hoisted sail, and fled. A strong breeze from the shore assisted their flight into the open sea, so that the Egyptians, though desirous to overtake them, desisted from the pur- suit. But they cut off Pompey's head, and threw the rest of his body overboard, leaving it naked upon the shore, to be viewed by any that had the curiosity to see so sad a spectacle. Philip stayed by and watched till they had glutted their eyes in viewing it ; and then wash- ing it with sea-water, having nothing else, he wrapped it up in a shirt of his own for a winding-sheet. Then seek- ing up and clown about the sands, at last he found some rotten planks of a little fisher-boat, not much, but yet enough to make up a funeral pile for a naked body, and that not quite entire. As Philip was busy in gathering and putting these old planks together, an old Roman citi- zen, who in his youth had served in the wars under Pom- pey, came up to him and demanded, who he was that was preparing the funeral of Pompey the Great. And Philip making answer, that he was his freedman, " Nay, then,"

said he, "you shall not have this honor alone; let even

 
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