<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi005.perseus-eng2:2.4.33-2.4.52</requestUrn>
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            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi005.perseus-eng2:2.4.33-2.4.52</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi005.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" subtype="actio" n="2"><div type="textpart" subtype="book" n="4"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="33" resp="perseus"><p>So Pamphilus saved his exquisite goblets. And indeed, before I heard this, though I
                knew that it was a very trifling sort of accomplishment to understand things of that
                sort, yet I used to wonder that he had any knowledge of them at all, as I knew that
                in nothing whatever had he any qualities like a man. <milestone n="15" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/> But when I heard this, I then for the
                first time understood that that was the use of these two Cibyratic brothers; that in
                his robberies he used his own hands, but their eyes. But he was so covetous of that
                splendid reputation of being thought to be a judge of such matters, that lately,
                (just observe the man's madness,) after his case was adjourned, when he was already
                as good as condemned, and civilly dead, at the time of the games of the circus, when
                early in the morning the couches were spread in preparation for a banquet at the
                house of Lucius Sisenna, a man of the first consideration, and when the plate was
                all set out, and when, as was suited to the dignity of Lucius Sisenna, the house was
                full of honourable men, he came to the plate, and began in a leisurely way to
                examine and consider every separate piece. Some marveled at the folly of the man,
                who, while his trial was actually going on, was increasing the suspicion of that
                covetousness of which he was accused; others marveled at his insensibility, that any
                such things could come into his head, when the time for judgment in his cause was so
                near at hand, and when so many witnesses had spoken against him. But Sisenna's
                servants, who, I suppose, had heard the evidence which had been given against him,
                never took their eyes off him, and never departed out of reach of the plate. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="34" resp="perseus"><p>It is the part of a sagacious judge, from small circumstances to form his opinion
                of every man's covetousness or incontinence. And will any one believe that this man
                when praetor, was able to keep either his covetousness or his hands from the plate
                of the Sicilians, when, though a defendant, and a defendant within two days of
                judgment, a man in reality, and in the opinion of all men as good as already
                condemned, he could not in a large assembly restrain himself from handling and
                examining the plate of Lucius Sisenna? </p></div><milestone n="16" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="35" resp="perseus"><p>But that my discourse may return to <placeName key="tgn,7003850">Lilybaeum</placeName>, from which I have made this digression, there is a man
                named Diocles, the son-in-law of Pamphilus, of that Pamphilus from whom the ewer was
                taken away, whose surname is Popillius. From this man he took away every article on
                his sideboard where his plate was set out. He may say, if he pleases, that he had
                bought them. In fact, in this case, by reason of the magnitude of the robbery, an
                entry of it, I imagine, has been made in the account-books. He ordered Timarchides
                to value the plate. How did he do it? At as low a price as any one ever valued any
                thing presented to an actor. Although I have been for some time acting foolishly in
                saying as much about your purchases, and in asking whether you bought the things,
                and how, and at what price you bought them, when I can settle all that by one word.
                Produce me a written list of what plate you acquired in the province of <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>, from whom, and at what price you bought each
                article. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="36" resp="perseus"><p>What will you do? Though I ought not to ask you for these accounts, for I ought to
                have your account-books and to produce them. But you say that you never kept any
                accounts of your expenses in these years. Make me out at least this one which I am
                asking for, the account of the plate, and I will not mind the rest at present. “I
                have no writings of the sort; I cannot produce any accounts.” What then is to be
                done? What do you think that these judges can do? Your house was full of most
                beautiful statues already, before your praetorship; many were placed in your villas,
                many were deposited with your friends; many were given and presented to other
                people; yet you have no accounts speaking of any single one having been bought. All
                the plate in <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>has been taken away.
                There is nothing left to any one that can be called his own. A scandalous defence is
                invented, that the praetor bought all that plate; and yet that cannot be proved by
                any accounts. If you do produce any accounts, still there is no entry in them how
                you have acquired what you have got. But of these years during which you say that
                you bought the greatest number of things, you produce no accounts at all. Must you
                not inevitably be, condemned, both by the accounts which you do, and by those which
                you do not produce? </p></div><milestone n="17" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="37" resp="perseus"><p>You also took away at <placeName key="tgn,7003850">Lilybaeum</placeName>whatever
                silver vessels you chose from Marcus Caelius, a Roman knight, a most excellent young
                man. You did not hesitate to take away the whole furniture, of Caius Cacurius, a
                most active and accomplished man, and of the greatest influence in his city. You
                took away, with the knowledge of every body, a very large and very beautiful table
                of citron-wood from Quintus Lutatius Diodorus, who, owing to the kind exertion of
                his interest by Quintus Catulus, was made a Roman citizen by Lucius Sulla. I do not
                object to you that you stripped and plundered a most worthy imitator of yours in his
                whole character, Apollonius, the son of Nico, a citizen of <placeName key="tgn,7003849">Drepanum</placeName>, who is now called Aulus Clodius, of all
                his exquisitely wrought silver plate;—I say nothing of that. For he does not think
                that any injury has been done to him, because you came to his assistance when he was
                a ruined man, with the rope round his neck, and shared with him the property
                belonging to their father, of which he had plundered his wards at Drepanum. I am
                even very glad if you took anything from him, and I say that nothing was ever better
                done by you. But it certainly was not right that the statue of Apollo should have
                been taken away from Lyso of <placeName key="tgn,7003850">Lilybaeum</placeName>, I a
                most eminent man, with whom you had been staying as a guest. But you will say that
                you bought it—I know that—for six hundred <foreign xml:lang="la">sesterces</foreign>. So I suppose: I know it, I say; I will produce the accounts;
                and yet that ought not to have been done. Will you say that the drinking vessels
                with emblems of <placeName key="tgn,7003850">Lilybaeum</placeName>on them were,
                bought from Heius, the minor to whom Marcellus is guardian, whom you had plundered
                of a large sum of money, or will you confess that they were taken by force? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="38" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="Para"/>But why do I enumerate all his ordinary iniquities in
                affairs of this sort, which appear to consist only in robberies committed by him,
                and in losses borne by those whom he plundered? Listen, if you please, O judges, to
                an action of such a sort as will prove to you clearly his extraordinary madness and
                frenzy, rather than any ordinary covetousness. <milestone n="18" unit="chapter"/>
                There is a man of <placeName key="tgn,7005730">Melita</placeName>, called Diodorus,
                who has already given evidence before you. He has been now living at <placeName key="tgn,7003850">Lilybaeum</placeName>many years; a man of great nobility at
                home, and of great credit and popularity with the people among whom he has settled,
                on account of his virtue. It is reported to Verres of this man that he has some
                exceedingly fine specimens of chased work; and among them two goblets called
                Thericlean, <note anchored="true">“Thericles was a potter in the time of
                  Aristophanes, who made earthenware vessels of a peculiar black clay. In subsequent
                  time, any goblets made in imitation of his, whether of wood, silver, or glass,
                  were called Thericlean.”—Graevius.</note>made by the hand of mentor with the most
                exquisite skill. And when Verres heard of this, he was inflamed with such a desire,
                not only of beholding, but also of appropriating them, that he summoned Diodorus,
                and demanded them. He replied, as was natural for a man who took great pride in
                them, that he had not got them at <placeName key="tgn,7003850">Lilybaeum</placeName>; that he had left them at <placeName key="tgn,7005730">Melita</placeName>, in the house of a relation of his. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="39" resp="perseus"><p>On this he immediately sends men on whom he can rely to <placeName key="tgn,7005730">Melita</placeName>; he writes to certain inhabitants of
                  <placeName key="tgn,7005730">Melita</placeName>to search out those vessels for
                him; he desires Diodorus to give them letters to that relation of his—the time
                appeared to him endless till he could see those pieces of plate. Diodorus, a prudent
                and careful man, who wished to keep his own property, writes to his relation to make
                answer to those men who came from Verres, that he had sent the cups to <placeName key="tgn,7003850">Lilybaeum</placeName>a few days before. In the meantime he
                himself leaves the place. He preferred leaving his home, to staying in it and losing
                that exquisitely wrought silver work. But when Verres heard of this, he was so
                agitated that he seemed to every one to be raving, and to be beyond all question
                mad. Because he could not steal the plate himself, he said that he had been robbed
                by Diodorus of some exquisitely wrought vessels; he poured out threats against the
                absent Diodorus; he used to roar out before people; sometimes he could not restrain
                his tears. We have heard in the mythology of Eriphyla being so covetous that when
                she had seen a necklace, made, I suppose, of gold and jewels, she was so excited by
                its beauty, that she betrayed her husband for the sake of it. His covetousness was
                similar; but in one respect more violent and more senseless, because she was
                desiring a thing which she had seen, while his wishes were excited not only by his
                eyes, but even by his ears. </p></div><milestone n="19" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="40" resp="perseus"><p>He orders Diodorus to be sought for over the whole province. He had by this time
                struck his camp, packed up his baggage, and left <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>. Verres, in order by some means or other to bring the man back
                to the province, devises this plan, if it is to be called a plan, and not rather a
                piece of madness. He sets up one of the men he calls his hounds, to say that he
                wishes to institute a prosecution against Diodorus of <placeName key="tgn,7005730">Melita</placeName>for a capital offence. At first all men wondered at such a
                thing being imputed to Diodorus, a most quiet man, and as far removed as any man
                from all suspicion, not only of crime, but of even the slightest irregularity. But
                it soon became evident, that all this was done for the sake of his silver. Verres
                does not hesitate to order the prosecution to be instituted; and that, I imagine,
                was the first instance of his allowing an accusation to be made against an absent
                man. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="41" resp="perseus"><p>The matter was notorious over all <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>,
                that men were prosecuted for capital offences because the praetor coveted their
                chased silver plate; and that prosecutions were instituted against them not only
                when they were present, but even in their absence. Diodorus goes to <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, and putting on mourning, calls on all his
                patrons and friends; relates the affair to every one. Earnest letters are written to
                Verres by his father, and by his friends, warning him to take care what he did, and
                what steps he took respecting Diodorus; that the matter was notorious and very
                unpopular; that he must be out of his senses; that this one charge would ruin him if
                he did not take care. At that time he considered his father, if not in the light of
                a parent, at least in that of a man. He had not yet sufficiently prepared himself
                for a trial; it was his first year in the province; he was not, as he was by the
                time of the affair of Sthenius, loaded with money. And so his frenzy was checked a
                little, not by shame, but by fear and alarm. He does not dare to condemn Diodorus;
                he takes his name out of the list of defendants while he is absent. In the meantime
                Diodorus, for nearly three years, as long as that man was praetor, was banished from
                the province and from his home. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="42" resp="perseus"><p>Every one else, not only Sicilians, but Roman citizens too, settled this in their
                minds, that, since he had carried his covetousness to such an extent, there was
                nothing which any one could expect to preserve or retain in his own possession if it
                was admired ever so little by Verres. <milestone n="20" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/> But after they understood that that brave man, Quintus Arrius, whom
                the province was eagerly looking for, was not his successor, they then settled that
                they could keep nothing so carefully shut up or hidden away, as not to be most open
                and visible to his covetousness. After that, he took away from an honourable and
                highly esteemed Roman knight, named Cnaeus Salidius, whose son he knew to be a
                senator of the Roman people and a judge, some beautiful silver horses which had
                belonged to Quintus Maximus. I did not mean to say this, O judges, for he bought
                those, he did not steal them; </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="43" resp="perseus"><p>I wish I had not mentioned them. Now he will boast, and have a fine ride on these
                horses. “I bought them, I have paid the money for them.” I have no doubt account
                books also will be produced. It is well worth while. Give me then the account-books.
                You are at liberty to get rid of this charge respecting Calidius, as long as I can
                get a sight of these accounts; still, if you had bought them, what ground had
                Calidius for complaining at <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, that,
                though he had been living so many years in <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>as a trader, you were the only person who had so despised and
                so insulted him, as to plunder him in common with all the rest of the Sicilians?
                what ground had he for declaring that he would demand his plate back again from you,
                if he had sold it to you of his own free will? Moreover, how could you avoid
                restoring it to Cnaeus Calidius; especially when he was such an intimate friend of
                Lucius Sisenna, your defender, and as you had restored their property to the other
                friends of Sisenna? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="44" resp="perseus"><p>Lastly, I do not suppose you will deny that by the intervention of Potamo, a friend
                of yours, you restored his plate to Lucius Cordius, an honourable man, but not more
                highly esteemed than Cnaeus Calidius; and it was he who made the cause of the rest
                more difficult to plead before you; for though you had promised many men to restore
                them their property, yet, after Cordius had stated in his evidence that you had
                restored him his, you desisted from making any more restorations, because you saw
                that you lost your plunder, and yet could not escape the evidence against you. Under
                all other praetors Cnaeus Calidius, a Roman knight, was allowed to have plate finely
                wrought; he was permitted to be able from his own stores to adorn and furnish a
                banquet handsomely, when he had invited a magistrate or any superior officer. Many
                men in power and authority have been with Cnaeus Calidius at his house; no one was
                ever found so mad as to take from him that admirable and splendid plate; no one was
                found bold enough to ask for it; no one impudent enough to beg him to sell it. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="45" resp="perseus"><p>For it is an arrogant thing, an intolerable thing, O judges, for a praetor to say
                to an honourable, and rich, and well-appointed man in his province, “Sell me those
                chased goblets.” For it is saying, “You do not deserve to have things which are so
                beautifully made; they are better suited to a man of my stamp.” Are you, O Verres,
                more worthy than Calidius? whom (not to compare your way of life with his, for they
                are not to be compared, but) I will compare you with in respect of this very dignity
                owing to which you make yourself out his superior. You gave eighty thousand <foreign xml:lang="la">sesterces</foreign>to canvassing agents to procure your election as
                praetor; you gave three hundred thousand to an accuser not to press hardly upon you:
                do you, on that account, look down upon and despise the equestrian order? Is it on
                that account that it seemed to you a scandalous thing that Calidius should have
                anything that you admired rather than that you should? </p></div><milestone n="21" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="46" resp="perseus"><p>He has been long boasting of this transaction with Calidius, and telling every one
                that he bought the things. Did you also buy that censer of Lucius Papilius, a man of
                the highest reputation, wealth, and honour, and a Roman knight? who stated in his
                evidence that, when you had begged for it to look at, you returned it with the
                emblems torn off; so that you may understand that it is all taste in that man, not
                avarice; that it is the fine work that he covets, not the silver. Nor was this
                abstinence exercised only in the case of Papirius; he practiced exactly the same
                conduct with respect to every censer in <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>; and it is quite incredible how many beautifully wrought
                censers there were. I imagine that, when <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>was at the height of its power and opulence, there were
                extensive workshops in that island; for before that man went thither as praetor
                there was no house tolerably rich, in which there were not these things, even if
                there was no other silver plate besides; namely, a large dish with figures and
                images of the gods embossed on it, a goblet which the women used for sacred
                purposes, and a censer. And all these were antique, and executed with the most
                admirable skill, so that one may suspect everything else in <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>was on a similar scale of magnificence; but
                that though fortune had deprived them of much, those things were still preserved
                among them which were retained for purposes of religion. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="47" resp="perseus"><p>I said just now, O judges, that there were many censers, in almost every house in
                fact; I assert also, that now there is not even one left. What is the meaning of
                this? what monster, what prodigy did we send into the province? Does it not appear
                to you that he desired, when he returned to <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, to satisfy not the covetousness of one man, not his own eyes
                only, but the insane passion of every covetous man, for as soon as he ever came into
                any city, immediately the Cibyratic hounds of his were slipped, to search and find
                cut everything. If they found any large vessel, any considerable work, they brought
                it to him with joy; if they could hunt out any smaller vessel of the same sort, they
                looked on those as a sort of lesser game, whether they were dishes, cups, censers,
                or anything else. What weepings of women, what lamentations do you suppose took
                place over these things? things which may perhaps seem insignificant to you, but
                which excite great and bitter indignation, especially among women, who grieve when
                those things are torn from their hands which they have been accustomed to use in
                religious ceremonies, which they have received from their ancestors, and which have
                always been in their family. </p></div><milestone n="22" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="48" resp="perseus"><p>Do not now wait while I follow up this charge from door to door, and show you that
                he stole a goblet from Aeschylus, the Tyndaritan; a dish from another citizen of
                  <placeName key="perseus,Tyndaris">Tyndaris</placeName>named Thraso; a censer from
                Nymphodorus of <placeName key="tgn,7003808">Agrigentum</placeName>. When I produce
                my witnesses from <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>he may select whom
                he pleases for me to examine about dishes, goblets, and censers. Not only no town,
                no single house that is tolerably well off will be found to have been free from the
                injurious treatment of this man; who, even if he had come to a banquet, if he saw
                any finely wrought plate, could not, O judges, keep his hands from it. There is a
                man named Cnaeus Pompeius Philo, who was a native of <placeName key="perseus,Tyndaris">Tyndaris</placeName>; he gave Verres a supper at his visa
                in the country near <placeName key="perseus,Tyndaris">Tyndaris</placeName>; he did
                what Sicilians did not dare to do, but what, because he was a citizen of <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, he thought he could do with impunity, he put
                before him a dish on which were some exceedingly beautiful figures. Verres, the
                moment he saw it, determined to rob his host's table of that memorial of the Penates
                and of the gods of hospitality. But yet, in accordance with what I have said before
                of his great moderation, he restored the rest of the silver after he had torn off
                the figures; so free was he from all avarice! </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="49" resp="perseus"><p>What want you more? Did he not do the same thing to Eupolemus of Calacta, a noble
                man, connected with, and an intimate friend of the Luculli; a man who is now serving
                in the army under Lucius Lucullus? He was supping with him; the rest of the silver
                which he had set before him had no ornament on it, lest he himself should also be
                left without any ornament; but there were also two goblets, of no large size, but
                with figures on them. He, as if he had been a professional diner-out, who was not to
                go away without a present, on the spot, in the sight of all the other guests, tore
                off the figures. I do not attempt to enumerate all his exploits of this sort; it is
                neither necessary nor possible. I only produce to you tokens and samples of each
                description of his varied and universal rascality. Nor did he behave in these
                affairs as if he would some day or other be called to account for them, but
                altogether as if he was either never likely to be prosecuted, or else as if the more
                he stole, the less would be his danger when he was brought before the court;
                inasmuch as he did these things which I am speaking of not secretly, not by the
                instrumentality of friends or agents, but openly, from his high position, by his own
                power and authority. </p></div><milestone n="23" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="50" resp="perseus"><p>When he had come to <placeName key="tgn,7003947">Catina</placeName>, a wealthy,
                honourable, influential city, he ordered Dionysiarchus the proagorus, that is to
                say, the chief magistrate, to be summoned before him; he openly orders him to take
                care that all the silver plate which was in anybody's house at <placeName key="tgn,7003947">Catina</placeName>, was collected together and brought to him.
                Did you not hear Philarchus of Centuripa, a man of the highest position as to noble
                birth, and virtue, and riches, say the same thing on his oath; namely, that Verres
                had charged and commanded him to collect together, and order to be conveyed to him,
                all the silver plate at Centuripa, by far the largest and wealthiest city in all
                  <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>? In the same manner at <placeName key="tgn,1043116">Agyrium</placeName>, all the Corinthian vessels there were
                there, in accordance with his command, were transported to <placeName key="perseus,Syracuse">Syracuse</placeName>by the agency of Apollodorus, whom you
                have heard as a witness. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="51" resp="perseus"><p>But the most extraordinary conduct of all was this; when that painstaking and
                industrious praetor had arrived at Haluntium, he would not himself go up into the
                town, because the ascent was steep and difficult; but he ordered Archagathus of
                Haluntium, one of the noblest men, not merely in his own city, but in all <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>, to be summoned before him, and gave him a
                chance to take care that all the chased silver that there was at Haluntium, and
                every specimen of Corinthian work too, should be at once taken down from the town to
                the seaside. Archagathus went up into the town. That noble man, as one who wished to
                be loved and esteemed by his fellow citizens, was very indignant at having such an
                office imposed upon him, and did not know what to do. He announces the commands he
                has received. He orders every one to produce what they had. There was great
                consternation, for the tyrant himself had not gone away to any distance; lying on a
                litter by the sea-side below the town, he was waiting for Archagathus and the silver
                plate. What a gathering of people do you suppose took place in the sown? what an
                uproar? what weeping of women? they who saw it would have said that the Trojan horse
                had been introduced, and that the city was taken. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="52" resp="perseus"><p>Vessels were brought out without their cases; others were wrenched out of the hands
                of women; many people's doors were broken open, and their locks forced. For what
                else can you suppose? Even if ever, at a time of war and tumult, arms are demanded
                of private citizens, still men give them unwillingly, though they know that they are
                giving them for the common safety. Do not suppose then that any one produced his
                carved plate out of his house for another man to steal, without the greatest
                distress. Everything is brought down to the shore. The Cibyratic brothers are
                summoned; they condemn some articles; whatever they approve of has its figures in
                relief or its embossed emblems torn off. And so the Haluntines, having had all their
                ornaments wrenched off, returned home with the plain silver. </p></div></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>