Essays: First Series by Ralph Waldo Emerson Essay 8 Page 21

that they will not soothe their enemies by petitions, or the show of sorrow, but wear their own habitual greatness. Scipio, charged with peculation, refuses to do himself so great a disgrace as to wait for justification, though he had the scroll of his accounts in his hands, but tears it to pieces before the tribunes.

Socrates’s condemnation of himself to be maintained in all honor in the Prytaneum, during his life, and Sir Thomas More’s playfulness at the scaffold, are of the same strain. In Beaumont and Fletcher’s “Sea Voyage,” Juletta tells the stout captain and his company, —

Jul. Why, slaves, ‘tis in our power to hang ye.

Master. Very likely,

‘Tis in our powers, then, to be hanged, and scorn ye.