<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi013.perseus-eng2:1.3-1.22</requestUrn>
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            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi013.perseus-eng2:1.3-1.22</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.phi013.perseus-eng2" subtype="translation"><div type="textpart" n="1" subtype="speech"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="3" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>What? Did not that most illustrious man, Publius Scipio, <note anchored="true">This was
      Scipio Nasica, who called on the consul Mucius Scaevola to do his duty and save the republic;
      but as he refused to put any one to death without a trial, Scipio called on all the citizens
      to follow him, and stormed the Capitol, which Gracchus had occupied with his party, and slew
      many of the partisans of Gracchus, and Gracchus himself.</note> the Pontifex Maximus, in his
     capacity of a private citizen, put to death Tiberius Gracchus, though but slightly undermining
     the constitution? And shall we, who are the consuls, tolerate Catiline, openly desirous to
     destroy the whole world with fire and slaughter? For I pass over older instances, such as how
     Caius Servilius Ahala with his own hand slew Spurius Maelius when plotting a revolution in the
     state. There was—there was once such virtue in this republic, that brave men would repress
     mischievous citizens with severer chastisement than the most bitter enemy. For we have a
     resolution <note anchored="true"> This resolution was couched in the form <foreign xml:lang="lat">Videant Consules nequid respublica detrimenti capiat</foreign>; and it exempted
      the consuls from all obligation to attend to the ordinary forms of law, and invested them with
      absolute power over the lives of all the citizens who were intriguing against the republic.
     </note> of the senate, a formidable and authoritative decree against you, O Catiline; the
     wisdom of the republic is not at fault, nor the dignity of this senatorial body. We, we
     alone,—I say it openly, —we, the consuls, are waiting in our duty. </p></div><milestone n="2" unit="chapter"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="4" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>The senate once passed a decree that Lucius Opimius, the consul, should take care that the
     republic suffered no injury. Not one night elapsed. There was put to death, on some mere
     suspicion of disaffection, Caius Gracchus, a man whose family had borne the most unblemished
     reputation for many generations. There was slain Marcus Fulvius, a man of consular rank, and
     all his children. By a like decree of the senate the safety of the republic was entrusted to
     Caius Marius and Lucius Valerius, the consuls. Did not the vengeance of the republic, did not
     execution overtake Lucius Saturninus, a tribune of the people, and Caius Servilius, the
     praetor, without the delay of one single day? But we, for these twenty days have been allowing
     the edge of the senate's authority to grow blunt, as it were. For we are in possession of a
     similar decree of the senate, but we keep it locked up in its parchment—buried, I may say, in
     the sheath; and according to this decree you ought, O Catiline, to be put to death this
     instant. You live,—and you live, not to lay aside, but to persist in your audacity. 
    <milestone unit="para"/>I wish, O conscript fathers, to be merciful; I wish not to appear negligent amid such danger
     to the state; but I do now accuse myself of remissness and culpable inactivity. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="5" resp="perseus"><p> A camp is pitched in <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>, at
     the entrance of Etruria, in hostility to the republic; the number of the enemy increases every
     day; and yet the general of that camp, the leader of those enemies, we see within the
     walls—yes, and even in the senate, —planning every day some internal injury to the republic.
      <note anchored="true">This is the same incident that is the subject of the preceding oration
      in defence of Rabirius.</note> If, O Catiline, I should now order you to be arrested, to be
     put to death, I should, I suppose, have to fear lest all good men should say that I had acted
     tardily, rather than that any one should affirm that I acted cruelly. But yet this, which ought
     to have been done long since, I have good reason for not doing as yet; I will put you to death,
     then, when there shall be not one person possible to be found so wicked, so abandoned, so like
     yourself, as not to allow that it has been rightly done. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="6" resp="perseus"><p> As
     long as one person exists who can dare to defend you, yet shall live; but you shall live as you
     do now, surrounded by my many and trusty guards, so that you shall not be able to stir one
     finger against the republic: many eyes and ears shall still observe and watch you, as they have
     hitherto done, though you shall not perceive them. <milestone n="3" unit="chapter"/>
    <milestone unit="para"/>For what is there, O Catiline, that you can still expect, if night is not able to veil your
     nefarious meetings in darkness, and if private houses cannot conceal the voice of your
     conspiracy within their walls;—if everything is seen and displayed? Change your mind: trust me:
     forget the slaughter and conflagration you are meditating. You are hemmed in on all sides; all
     your plans are clearer than the day to us; let me remind you of them. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="7" resp="perseus"><p> Do you recollect that on the 21st of October I said in the senate, that on a
     certain day, which was to be the 27th of October, C. Manlius, the satellite and servant of your
     audacity, would be in arms? Was I mistaken, Catiline, not only in so important, so atrocious,
     so incredible a fact, but, what is much more remarkable, in the very day? I said also in the
     senate that you had fixed the massacre of the nobles for the 28th of October, when many chief
     men of the senate had left <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, not so much for the
     sake of saving themselves as of checking your designs. Can you deny that on that very day you
     were so hemmed in by my guards and my vigilance, that you were unable to stir one finger
     against the republic; when you said that you would be content with the flight of the rest, and
     the slaughter of us who remained? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="8" resp="perseus"><p> What? when you made sure
     that you would be able to seize <placeName key="perseus,Praeneste">Praeneste</placeName> on the
     first of November by a nocturnal attack, did you not find that that colony was fortified by my
     order, by my garrison, by my watchfulness and care? You do nothing, you plan nothing, you think
     of nothing which I not only do not hear, but which I do not see and know every particular of.
      <milestone n="4" unit="chapter"/>
    <milestone unit="para"/>Listen while I speak of the night before. You shall now see that I watch far more actively
     for the safety than you do for the destruction of the republic. I say that you came the night
     before (I will say nothing obscurely) into the Scythe-dealers' street, to the house of Marcus
     Lecca; that many of your accomplices in the same insanity and wickedness came here too. Do you
     dare to deny it? Why are silent? I will prove it if you do deny it; for I see here in the
     senate some men who were there with you. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="9" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>O ye immortal gods, where on earth are we? in what city are we living? what constitution is
     ours? There are here,—here in our body, O conscript fathers, in this the most holy and
     dignified assembly of the whole world, men who meditate my death, and the death of all of us,
     and the destruction of this city, and of the whole world. I, the consul see them; I ask them
     their opinion about the republic, and I do not yet attack, even by words, those who ought to be
     put to death by the sword. You were, then, O Catiline, at Lecca's that night; you divided
      <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName> into sections; you settled where every one was
     to go; you fixed whom you were to leave at <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, whom
     you were to take with you; you portioned out the divisions of the city for conflagration; you
     undertook that you yourself would at once leave the city, and said that there was then only
     this to delay you, that I was still alive. Two Roman knights were found to deliver you from
     this anxiety, and to promise that very night, before daybreak, to slay me in my bed. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="10" resp="perseus"><p> All this I knew almost before your meeting had broken up. I
     strengthened and fortified my house with a stronger guard; I refused admittance, when they
     came, to those whom you sent in the morning to salute me, and of whom I had foretold to many
     eminent men that they would come to me at that time. <milestone n="5" unit="chapter"/>
    <milestone unit="para"/>As, then, this is the case, O Catiline, continue as you have begun. Leave the city at last
     the gates are open; depart. That Manlian camp of yours has been waiting too long for you as its
     general. And lead forth with you all your friends, or at least as many as you can; purge the
     city of your presence; you will deliver me from a great fear, when there is a wall between me
     and you. Among us you can dwell no longer—I will not bear it, I will not permit it, I will not
     tolerate it.. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="11" resp="perseus"><p> Great thanks are due to the immortal gods, and
     to this very Jupiter Stator, in whose temple we are, the most ancient protector of thus city,
     that we have already so often escaped so foul, so horrible, and so deadly an enemy to the
     republic. But the safety of the commonwealth must not be too often allowed to be risked on one
     man. As long as you, O Catiline, plotted against me while I was the consul elect, I defended
     myself not with a public guard, but by my own private diligence. When, in the next consular
      <foreign xml:lang="lat">comitia</foreign>, you wished to slay me when I was actually consul,
     and your competitors also, in the <placeName key="tgn,7006964">Campus Martius</placeName>, I
     checked your nefarious attempt by the assistance and resources of my own friends, without
     exciting any disturbance publicly. In short, as often as you attacked me, I by myself opposed
     you, and that, too, though I saw that my ruin was connected with great disaster to the
     republic. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="12" resp="perseus"><p> But now you are openly attacking the entire
     republic. 
    <milestone unit="para"/>You are summoning to destruction and devastation the temples of the immortal gods, the houses
     of the city, the lives of all the citizens; in short, all <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>. Wherefore, since I do not yet venture to do that which is the best thing,
     and which belongs to my office and to the discipline of our ancestors, I will do that which is
     more merciful if we regard its rigour, and more expedient for the state. For if I order you to
     be put to death, the rest of the conspirators will still remain in the republic; if as I have
     long been exhorting you, you depart, your companions, those worthless dregs of the republic,
     will be drawn off from the city too. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="13" resp="perseus"><p> What is the matter,
     Catiline? Do you hesitate to do that which I order you which you were already doing of your own
     accord? The consul orders an enemy to depart from the city. Do you ask me, Are you to go into
     banishment? I do not order it; but, if you consult me, I advise it. <milestone n="6" unit="chapter"/>
    <milestone unit="para"/>For what is there, O Catiline, that can now afford you any pleasure in this city? for there
     is no one in it, except that band of profligate conspirators of yours, who does not fear
     you,—no one who does not hate you. What brand of domestic baseness is not stamped upon your
     life? What disgraceful circumstance is wanting to your infamy in your private affairs? From
     what licentiousness have your eyes, from what atrocity have your hands, from what iniquity has
     your whole body ever abstained? Is there one youth, when you have once entangled him in the
     temptations of your corruption, to whom you have not held out a sword for audacious crime, or a
     torch for licentious wickedness? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="14" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>What? when lately by the death of your former wife you had made your house empty and ready
     for a new bridal, did you not even add another incredible wickedness to this wickedness? But I
     pass that over, and willingly allow it to be buried in silence, that so horrible a crime may
     not be seen to have existed in this city, and not to have been chastised. I pass over the ruin
     of your fortune, which you know is hanging over you against the ides of the very next month; I
     come to those things which relate not to the infamy of your private vices, not to your domestic
     difficulties and baseness, but to the welfare of the republic and to the lives and safety of us
     all. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="15" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/> Can the limit of this life, O Catiline, can the breath of
     this atmosphere be pleasant to you, when you know that there is not one man of those here
     present who is ignorant that you, on the last day of the year, when Lepidus and Tullus were
     consuls, stood in the assembly armed; that you had prepared your hand for the slaughter of the
     consuls and chief men of the state, and that no reason or fear of yours hindered your crime and
     madness, but the fortune of the republic? And I say no more of these things, for they are not
     unknown to every one. How often have you endeavoured to slay me, both as consul elect and as
     actual consul? how many shots of yours, so aimed that they seemed impossible to be escaped,
     have I avoided by some slight stooping aside, and some dodging, as it were, of my body? You
     attempt nothing, you execute nothing, you devise nothing that call be kept hid from me at the
     proper time; and yet you do not cease to attempt and to contrive. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="16" resp="perseus"><p> How often already has that dagger of yours been wrested from your hands? how
     often has it slipped through them by some chance, and dropped down? and yet you cannot any
     longer do without it; and to what sacred mysteries it is consecrated and devoted by you I know
     not, that you think it necessary to plunge it in the body of the consul. <milestone n="7" unit="chapter"/>
    <milestone unit="para"/>But now, what is that life of yours that you are leading? For I will speak to you not so as
     to seem influenced by the hatred I ought to feel, but by pity, nothing of which is due to you.
     You came a little while ago into the senate in so numerous an assembly, who of so many friends
     and connections of yours saluted you? If this in the memory of man never happened to any one
     else, are you waiting for insults by word of mouth, when you are overwhelmed by the most
     irresistible condemnation of silence? Is it nothing that at your arrival all those seats were
     vacated? that all the men of consular rank, who had often been marked out by you for slaughter,
     the very moment you sat down, left that part of the benches bare and vacant? With what feelings
     do you think you ought to bear this? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="17" resp="perseus"><p> On my honour, if my
     slaves feared me as all your fellow-citizens fear you, I should think I must leave my house. Do
     not you think you should leave the city? If I saw that I was even undeservedly so suspected and
     bated by my fellow-citizens, I would rather flee from their sight than be gazed at by the
     hostile eyes of every one. And do you, who, from the consciousness of your wickedness, know
     that the hatred of all men is just and has been long due to you, hesitate to avoid the sight
     and presence of those men whose minds and senses you offend? If your parents feared and hated
     you, and if you could by no means pacify them, you would, I think, depart somewhere out of
     their sight. Now, your country, which is the common parent of all of us, hates and fears you,
     and has no other opinion of you, than that you are meditating parricide in her case; and will
     you neither feel awe of her authority, nor deference for her judgment, nor fear of her power?</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="18" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/> And she, O Catiline, thus pleads with you, and after a
     manner silently speaks to you:—There has now for many years been no crime committed but by you;
     no atrocity has taken place without you; you alone unpunished and unquestioned have murdered
     the citizens, have harassed and plundered the allies; you alone have had power not only to
     neglect all laws and investigations, but to overthrow and break through them. Your former
     actions, though they ought not to have been borne, yet I did bear as well as I could; but now
     that I should be wholly occupied with fear of you alone, that at every sound I should dread
     Catiline, that no design should seem possible to be entertained against me which does not
     proceed from your wickedness, this is no longer endurable. Depart, then, and deliver me from
     this fear; that, if it be a just one, I may not be destroyed; if an imaginary one, that at
     least I may at last cease to fear. </p></div><milestone n="8" unit="chapter"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="19" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>If, as I have said, your country were thus to address you, ought she not to obtain her
     request, even if she were not able to enforce it? What shall I say of your having given
     yourself into custody? what of your having said, for the sake of avoiding suspicion, that you
     were willing to dwell in the house of Marcus Lepidus? And when you were not received by him,
     you dared even to come to me, and begged me to keep you in my house; and when you had received
     answer from me that I could not possibly be safe in the same house with you, when I considered
     myself in great danger as long as we were in the same city, you came to Quintus Metellus, the
     praetor, and being rejected by him, you passed on to your associate, that most excellent man,
     Marcus Marcellus, who would be, I suppose you thought, most diligent in guarding you, most
     sagacious hi suspecting you, and most bold in punishing you; but how far can we think that man
     ought to be from bonds and imprisonment who has already judged himself deserving of being given
     into custody? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="20" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>Since, then, this is the case, do you hesitate, O Catiline, if you cannot remain here with
     tranquillity, to depart to some distant laud, and to trust your life, saved from just and
     deserved punishment, to flight and solitude? Make a motion, say you, to the senate, (for that
     is what you demand) and if thus body votes that you ought to go into banishment, you say that
     you will obey. I will not make such a motion, it is contrary to my principles, and yet I will
     let you see what these men think of you. Be gone from the city, O Catiline, deliver the
     republic from fear; depart into banishment, if that is the word you are waiting for. What now,
     O Catiline? Do you not perceive, do you not see the silence of these men; they permit it, they
     say nothing; why wait you for the authority of their words when you see their wishes in their
     silence?</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="21" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/> But had I said the same to this excellent young man,
     Publius Sextius, or to that brave man, Marcus Marcellus, before this time the senate would
     deservedly have laid violent hands on me, consul though I be, in this very temple. But to you,
     Catiline, while they are quiet they approve, while they permit me to speak they vote, while
     they are silent they are loud and eloquent. And not they alone, whose authority forsooth is
     dear to you, though their lives are unimportant, but the Roman knights too, those most
     honourable and excellent men, and the other virtuous citizens who are now surrounding the
     senate, whose numbers you could see, whose desires you could know, and whose voices you a few
     minutes ago could hear,—yes, whose very hands and weapons I have for some time been scarcely
     able to keep off from you; but those, too, I will easily bring to attend you to the gates if
     you leave these places you have been long desiring to lay waste. </p></div><milestone n="9" unit="chapter"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="22" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>And yet, why am I speaking? that anything may change your purpose? that you may ever amend
     your life? that you may meditate flight or think of voluntary banishment? I wish the gods may
     give you such a mind; though I see, if alarmed at my words you bring your mind to go into
     banishment, what a storm of unpopularity hangs over me, if not at present, while the memory of
     your wickedness is fresh, at all events hereafter. But it is worthwhile to incur that, as long
     as that is but a private misfortune of my own, and is unconnected with the dangers of the
     republic. But we cannot expect that you should be concerned at your own vices, that you should
     fear the penalties of the laws, or that you should yield to the necessities of the republic,
     for you are not, O Catiline, one whom either shame can recall from infamy, or fear from danger,
     or reason from madness.</p></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>