[Cleopatra by Jacob Abbott]@TWC D-Link book
Cleopatra

CHAPTER XII
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She rejected every medical remedy that was offered her, and would not eat, and lived thus some days without food.

Octavius, to whom every thing relating to his captive was minutely reported by her attendants, suspected her design.

He was very unwilling that she should die, having set his heart on exhibiting her to the Roman people, on his return to the capital, in his triumphal procession.

He accordingly sent her orders, requiring that she should submit to the treatment prescribed by the physician, and take her food, enforcing these his commands with a certain threat which he imagined might have some influence over her.

And what threat does the reader imagine could possibly be devised to reach a mind so sunk, so desperate, so wretched as hers?
Every thing seemed already lost but life, and life was only an insupportable burden.


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