Excerpt from The Son of the Prefect: A Story of the Reign of Tiberius NO wonder then that his great dining hall was splen didly furnished and adorned. NO wonder that its ar ray of Objects was bewildering to the eye. Yet beautiful, rarely beautiful, were many of these costly possessions. There were bronze castings on the chairs and the triclinium that only a true artist could have designed; there were statues and busts of the most perfect Grecian workmanship. And the paintings showed that fine sense of form and color which is to be seen in the wall paintings at Pompeii and in the House of Livia on the Palatine. They all had a com mon theme. They traced out the wanderings of Ulysses, and showed with the same admirable touch the grotesque and gigantic Cyclops and the hound ex piring at the sight of his Old master.
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