Titus Livius, Ab Urbe Condita 3.48.4-5

Seeing no help anywhere, Verginius asks Appius to forgive a father's grief and allow him to question the nurse privately with Verginia present; granted permission, he leads his daughter and the nurse aside to the butcher's stalls near the shrine of Cloacina, and there seizing a knife from a butcher he declares that he sets her free in the only way he can, plunges the knife into her chest, and turning back toward the tribunal dedicates Appius and his life to the gods with her blood.

 

Tier 1

Ubi Verginius vidit nihil auxilii venire umquam, "quaeso," inquit, "Appi, primum ignosce dolore patris, si in alio modo dixi male et inclementius in te; deinde, permittas me interrogare nutricem in hoc loco de virgine, de hoc verum est, ut, si pater falsus sum, discedam hinc animo contento.

Gratia data, Verginius ducit filiam et nutricem prope ad tabernas prope templum Veneris Cloacinae, quibus nunc nomen est Novis, et in eo loco, cultro sumpto ab lanio (a butcher), "conservo libertatem tuam," inquit, "hoc in uno modo possum, filia."

Deinde pectus puellae cultro transfigit et respectans ad Tribunal Verginius "Consecro" inquit, "Appi, te et caput tuum hoc sanguine."

Written by Robert Amstutz