Note 105
The historian Sallust, who usefully practised the vices
which he has so eloquently censured, employed the plunder of
Numidia to adorn his palace and gardens on the Quirinal
hill. The spot where the house stood is now marked by the
church of St. Susanna, separated only by a street trom the
baths of Diocletian, and not far distant trom the Salarian
gate. See Nardini, Roma Anpica, p. 192, 193, and the great
Plan of Modern Rome, by Nolli.
The History Of The Decline and Fall
Of The Roman Empire—
Chapter 31