a public career, the highest honours of the State came to him unsought. He was sole Consul in 510 A.D., and was ultimately raised by Theodoric to the dignity of Magister Officiorum, or head of the whole civil administration. He was no less happy in his domestic life, in the virtues of his wife, Rusticiana, and the fair promise of his two sons, Symmachus and Boethius; happy also in the society of a refined circle of friends. Noble, wealthy, accomplished, universally esteemed for his virtues, high in the favour of the Gothic King, he appeared to all men a signal example of the union of merit and good fortune. His felicity seemed to culminate in the year 522 A.D., when, by special and extraordinary favour, his two sons, young as they were for so exalted an honour, were created joint Consuls and rode to the senate-house attended by a throng of senators, and the acclamations of the multitude. Boethius himself, amid the general applause, delivered the public speech in the King's honour usual on such occasions. Within a year he was a solitary prisoner at Pavia, stripped of honours, wealth, and friends, with death hanging over him, and a terror worse than death, in the fear lest those dearest to him should be involved in the worst results of his downfall. It is in this situation that the opening of the 'Consolation of Philosophy' brings Boethius before us. He represents himself as seated in his prison distraught with grief, indignant at the injustice of his misfortunes, and seeking relief for his melancholy in writing verses descriptive of his condition. Suddenly there appears to him the Divine figure of Philosophy, in the guise of a woman of superhuman dignity and beauty, who by a succession of discourses convinces him of the vanity of regret for the lost gifts of fortune, raises his mind once more to the contemplation of the true good, and makes clear to him the mystery of the world's moral government.
INDEX
OF
VERSE INTERLUDES.
BOOK I.?THE SORROWS OF BOETHIUS.
SONG                                          PAGE
  I. BOETHIUS' COMPLAINT                         3
 II. HIS DESPONDENCY                             9
III. THE MISTS DISPELLED                        12
 IV. NOTHING CAN SUBDUE VIRTUE                  16
  V. BOETHIUS' PRAYER                           27
 VI. ALL THINGS HAVE THEIR NEEDFUL ORDER        33
VII. THE PERTURBATIONS OF PASSION               38
BOOK II.?THE VANITY OF FORTUNE'S GIFTS.
   I. FORTUNE'S MALICE                           47
  II. MAN'S COVETOUSNESS                         51
 III. ALL PASSES                                 55
  IV. THE GOLDEN MEAN                            62
   V. THE FORMER AGE                             70
  VI. NERO'S INFAMY                              76
 VII. GLORY MAY NOT LAST                         82
VIII. LOVE IS LORD OF ALL         
    
		
	
	
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