Page:The Children's Plutarch, Romans.djvu/89

 to be heard by passers-by. They were messengers from the Samnite people, who were at war with Rome, and they brought Manius a large gift of gold in order to gain the favor of so valiant a foe.

“No,” he said, “a man who can be satisfied with such a supper as this has no need of gold; and I think it more glorious to conquer the Samnites than to take their gold.” The messengers went away looking foolish.

So Cato would look at the ancient cottage and say to himself:

“I should like to live as Manius lived, in a very simple style; and I should like to be a famous man in Rome, as he was.”

His clothes were coarse. He worked with his slaves, ate the same kind of bread as they did, and drank the same kind of drink. Not only could he work; he could talk in a witty, sensible way, and when a neighbor went to law before a judge Cato would often speak on his behalf, so that, after a while, he went to act as a pleader, or speaker, in the law courts of Rome. People would repeat his shrewd sayings, such as:

“Wise men learn more from fools than fools from the wise; for the wise avoid the errors of fools, while fools do not profit by the examples of the wise.”

And another:

“I do not like a soldier who moves his hands