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Ch. 4: Caelatura, Antique Plate

Ch. 4: Caelatura, Antique Plate Page of 377 Ch. 4: Caelatura, Antique Plate Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
CAELATURA.
145
between the Centaurs and Lapithaä, where the vessels snatched from the table supplied the combatants with weapons. This preposterous piece of barbarity came into such favour as to be adopted even in country towns. Well does Pliny exclaim hereupon, " Our age has done things that posterity, will deem mere fables."
Heliogabalus was the first to make his entire " batterie de cuisine " out of silver : some of the pieces, adds Lam-pridius, weighed one hundred pounds each, and were chased with the most lascivious designs. His cousin and successor, on the other hand, reduced the whole service of plate used in the palace to the very moderate limits of two hundred pounds ; and this too, notes the historian, entirely plain : gold plate was totally excluded from his table.* The Romans carried their services of plate about with them in their remotest expeditions. " To my own knowledge," says Pliny, " Pompeius Paulinus, though no more than the son of a Roman knight of Aries (and afterwards disin­herited), had with him 12,000 pounds weight of plate when serving in the army campaigning against the most savage of all races." Meaning the army of the Ehine, in which the historian himself had held a command in the cavalry.
Rare, indeed, were the specimens of these torentic won­ders of the Greek school, that had escaped time and the melting-pot, until a fortunate discovery in 1830 enriched
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