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            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi035.perseus-eng1:2.8-2.17</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div xml:lang="eng" type="edition" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi035.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" n="2" subtype="speech"><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="8"><p>
               </p><p>But you are so senseless that throughout the whole <pb n="27"/> of your speech
                    you were at variance with yourself; so that you said things which had not only
                    no coherence with each other, but which were most inconsistent with and
                    contradictory to one another; so that there was not so much opposition between
                    you and me as there was between you and yourself. You confessed that your
                    stepfather had been implicated in that enormous wickedness, yet you complained
                    that he had had punishment inflicted on him. And by doing so you praised what
                    was peculiarly my achievement, and blamed that which was wholly the act of the
                    senate. For the detection and arrest of the guilty parties was my work, their
                    punishment was the work of the senate. But that eloquent man does not perceive
                    that the man against whom he is speaking is being praised by him, and that those
                    before whom he is speaking are being attacked by him. <milestone n="19" unit="section"/> But now what an act, I will not say of audacity, (for he is
                    anxious to be audacious,) but (and that is what he is not desirous of) what an
                    act of folly, in which he surpasses all men, is it to make mention of the
                        <placeName key="tgn,7006963">Capitoline Hill</placeName>, at a time when
                    armed men are actually between our benches—when men, armed with
                    swords, are now stationed in this same temple of Concord, O ye immortal gods, in
                    which, while I was consul, opinions most salutary to the state were delivered,
                    owing to which it is that we are all alive at this day. </p><p>Accuse the senate; accuse the equestrian body, which at that time was united with
                    the senate; accuse every order or society, and all the citizens, as long as you
                    confess that this assembly at this very moment is besieged by Ityrean<note anchored="true">Ityra was a town at the foot of Mount Taurus.</note>
                    soldiers. It is not so much a proof of audacity to advance these statements so
                    impudently, as of utter want of sense to be unable to see their contradictory
                    nature. For what is more insane than, after you yourself have taken up arms to
                    do mischief to the republic, to reproach another with having taken them up to
                    secure its safety? On one occasion you attempted even to be witty. O ye good
                    gods, how little did that attempt suit you! <milestone n="20" unit="section"/>
                    And yet you are a little to be blamed for your failure in that instance, too.
                    For you might have got some wit from your wife, who was an actress.
                    “Arms to the gown must yield.” Well, have they not yielded?
                    But afterwards the gown yielded to your arms. Let us inquire then whether <pb n="28"/> it was better for the arms of wicked men to yield to the freedom of
                    the Roman people, or that our liberty should yield to your arms. Nor will I make
                    any further reply to you about the verses. I will only say briefly that you do
                    not understand them, nor any other literature whatever. That I have never at any
                    time been wanting to the claims that either the republic or my friends had upon
                    me; but nevertheless that in all the different sorts of composition on which I
                    have employed myself, during my leisure hours, I have always endeavoured to make
                    my labours among my writings such as to be some advantage to our youth, and some
                    credit to the Roman name. But, however, all this has nothing to do with the
                    present occasion. Let us consider more important matters. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="9"><p><milestone n="21" unit="section"/></p><p>You have said that Publius Clodius was slain by my contrivance. What would men
                    have thought if he had been slain at the time when you pursued him in the forum
                    with a drawn sword, in the sight of all the Roman people; and when you would
                    have settled his business if he had not thrown himself up the stairs of a
                    bookseller's shop, and, shutting them against you, checked your attack by that
                    means? And I confess that at that time I favoured you, but even you yourself do
                    not say that I had advised your attempt. But as for <persName><surname>Milo</surname></persName>, it was not possible even for me to favour his action. For
                    he had finished the business before any one could suspect that he was going to
                    do it. Oh, but I advised it. I suppose <persName><surname>Milo</surname></persName> was a man of such a disposition that he was not able to do
                    a service to the republic if he had not some one to advise him to do it. But I
                    rejoiced at it. Well, suppose I did; was I to be the only sorrowful person in
                    the city, when every one else was in such delight? <milestone n="22" unit="section"/>Although that inquiry into the death of Publius Clodius was
                    not instituted with any great wisdom. For what was the reason for having a new
                    law to inquire into the conduct of the man who had slain him, when there was a
                    form of inquiry already established by the laws? However, an inquiry was
                    instituted. <milestone n="23" unit="section"/> And have you now been found, so
                    many years afterwards, to say a thing which, at the time that the affair was
                    under discussion, no one ventured to say against me? But as to the assertion
                    that you have dared to make, and that at great length too, that it was by my
                    means that Pompeius was <pb n="29"/> alienated from his friendship with Caesar,
                    and that on that account it was my fault that the civil war was originated; in
                    that you have not erred so much in the main facts, as (and that is of the
                    greatest importance) in the times. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="10"><p>
               </p><p>When Marcus Bibulus, a most illustrious citizen, was consul, I omitted nothing
                    which I could possibly do or attempt to draw off Pompeius from his union with
                    Caesar. In which, however, Caesar was more fortunate than I, for he himself drew
                    off Pompeius from his intimacy with me. But afterwards, when Pompeius joined
                    Caesar with all his heart, what could have been my object in attempting to
                    separate them then? It would have been the part of a fool to hope to do so, and
                    of an impudent man to advise it. However, two occasions did arise, on which I
                    gave Pompeius advice against Caesar. You are at liberty to find fault with my
                    conduct on those occasions if you can. One was when I advised him not to
                    continue Caesar's government for five years more. The other, when I advised him
                    not to permit him to be considered as a candidate for the consulship when he was
                    absent. And if I had been able to prevail on him in either of these particulars,
                    we should never have fallen into our present miseries. </p><p>Moreover, I also, when Pompeius had now devoted to the service of Caesar all his
                    own power, and all the power of the Roman people, and had begun when it was too
                    late to perceive all those things which I had foreseen long before, and when I
                    saw that a nefarious war was about to be waged against our country, I never
                    ceased to be the adviser of peace, and concord, and some arrangement. And that
                    language of mine was well known to many people,—“I wish, O
                    Cnaeus Pompeius, that you had either never joined in a confederacy with Caius
                    Caesar, or else that you had never broken it off. The one conduct would have
                    become your dignity, and the other would have been suited to your
                    prudence.” This, O Marcus Antonius, was at all times my advice both
                    respecting Pompeius and concerning the republic. And if it had prevailed, the
                    republic would still be standing, and you would have perished through your own
                    crimes, and indigence, and infamy. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="11"><p><milestone n="25" unit="section"/></p><p>But these are all old stories now. This charge, however, is quite a modern one,
                    that Caesar was slain by my contrivance. I am afraid, O conscript fathers, lest
                    I should <pb n="30"/> appear to you to have brought up a sham accuser against
                    myself (which is a most disgraceful thing to do); a man not only to distinguish
                    me by the praises which are my due, but to load me also with those which do not
                    belong to me. For who ever heard my name mentioned as an accomplice in that most
                    glorious action? and whose name has been concealed who was in the number of that
                    gallant band? Concealed, do I say? Whose name was there which was not at once
                    made public? I should sooner say that some men had boasted in order to appear to
                    have been concerned in that conspiracy, though they had in reality known nothing
                    of it than that any one who had been an accomplice in it could have wished to be
                    concealed. <milestone n="26" unit="section"/> Moreover, how likely it is, that
                    among such a number of men, some obscure, some young men who had not the wit to
                    conceal any one, my name could possibly have escaped notice? Indeed, if leaders
                    were wanted for the purpose of delivering the country, what need was there of my
                    instigating the Bruti, one of whom saw every day in his house the image of
                    Lucius Brutus, and the other saw also the image of Ahala? Were these the men to
                    seek counsel from the ancestors of others rather than from their own? and but of
                    doors rather than at home? What? Caius Cassius, a man of that family which could
                    not endure, I will not say the domination, but even the power of any
                    individual,—he, I suppose, was in need of me to instigate him? a man
                    who even without the assistance of these other most illustrious men, would have
                    accomplished this same deed in <placeName key="tgn,7002470">Cilicia</placeName>,
                    at the mouth of the river Cydnus, if Caesar had brought his ships to that bank
                    of the river which he had intended, and not to the opposite one. <milestone n="27" unit="section"/> Was Cnaeus Domitius spurred on to seek to recover
                    his dignity, not by the death of his father, a most illustrious man, nor by the
                    death of his uncle, nor by the deprivation of his own dignity, but by my advice
                    and authority? Did I persuade Caius Trebonius? a man whom I should not have
                    ventured even to advise. On which account the republic owes him even a larger
                    debt of gratitude, because he preferred the liberty of the Roman people to the
                    friendship of one man, and because he preferred overthrowing arbitrary power to
                    sharing it. Was I the instigator whom Lucius Tillius Cimber followed? a man whom
                    I admired for having performed that action, rather than ever expected that he
                    would <pb n="31"/> perform it; and I admired him on this account, that he was
                    unmindful of the personal kindnesses which he had received, but mindful of his
                    country. What shall I say of the two Servilii? Shall I call them Cascas, or
                    Ahalas? and do you think that those men were instigated by my authority rather
                    than by their affection for the republic? It would take a long time to go
                    through all the rest; and it is a glorious thing for the republic that they were
                    so numerous, and a most honourable thing also for themselves. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="12"><p><milestone n="28" unit="section"/></p><p>But recollect, I pray you, how that clever man convicted me of being an
                    accomplice in the business. When Caesar was slain, says he, Marcus Brutus
                    immediately lifted up on high his bloody dagger, and called on Cicero by name;
                    and congratulated him on liberty being recovered. Why on man above all men?
                    Because I knew of it beforehand? Consider rather whether this was not his reason
                    for calling on me, that, when he had performed an action very like those which I
                    myself had done, he called me above all men to witness that he had been an
                    imitator of my exploits. <milestone n="29" unit="section"/> But you, O stupidest
                    of all men, do you not perceive, that if it is a crime to have wished that
                    Caesar should be slain—which you accuse me of having
                    wished—it is a crime also to have rejoiced at his death? For what is
                    the difference between a man who has advised an action, and one who has approved
                    of it? or what does it signify whether I wished it to be done, or rejoice that
                    it has been done? Is there any one then, except you yourself and these men who
                    wished him to become a king, who was unwilling that that deed should be done, or
                    who disapproved of it after it was done? All men, therefore, are guilty as far
                    as this goes. In truth, all good men, as far as it depended on them, bore a part
                    in the slaying of Caesar. Some did not know how to contrive it, some had not
                    courage for it, some had no opportunity,—every one had the
                    inclination. <milestone n="30" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>However, remark the stupidity of this fellow,—I should rather say, of
                    this brute beast. For thus he spoke:—“Marcus Brutus, whom I
                    name to do him honour, holding aloft his bloody dagger, called upon Cicero, from
                    which it must be understood that he was privy to the action.” Am I
                    then called wicked by you because you suspect that I suspected something; and is
                    he who openly displayed his reeking dagger; named by you that you may do him
                    honour? Be it so. Let this stupidity exist in your language: how much greater is
                    it in your actions and opinions? Arrange matters in this way at last, O consul;
                    pronounce the cause of the Bruti, of Caius Cassius, of Cnaeus Domitius, of Caius
                    Trebonius and the rest to be whatever you please to call it: sleep off that
                    intoxication of yours, sleep it off and take breath. Must one apply a torch to
                    you to waken you while you are sleeping over such an important affair? Will you
                    never understand that you have to decide whether those men who performed that
                    action are homicides or assertors of freedom? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="13"><p><milestone n="31" unit="section"/></p><p>For just consider a little; and for a moment think of the business like a sober
                    man. I who, as I myself confess, am an intimate friend of those men, and, as you
                    accuse me, an accomplice of theirs, deny that there is any medium between these
                    alternatives. I confess that they, if they be not deliverers of the Roman people
                    and saviours of the republic, are worse than assassins, worse than homicides,
                    worse even than parricides: since it is a more atrocious thing to murder the
                    father of one's country, than one's own father. You wise and considerate man,
                    what do you say to this? If they are parricides, why are they always named by
                    you, both in this assembly and before the Roman people, with a view to do them
                    honour? Why has Marcus Brutus been, on your motion, excused from obedience to
                    the laws, and allowed to be absent from the city more than ten days?<note anchored="true">Brutus was the <foreign xml:lang="lat">Praetor urbanus</foreign>
                        this year, and that officer's duty confined him to the city; and he was
                        forbidden by law to be absent more than ten days at a time during his year
                        of office.</note> Why were the games of Apollo celebrated with incredible
                    honour to Marcus Brutus? why were provinces given to Brutus and Cassius? why
                    were quaestors assigned to them? why was the number of their lieutenants
                    augmented? And all these measures were owing to you. They are not homicides
                    then. It follows that in your opinion they are deliverers of their country,
                    since there can be no other alternative. <milestone n="32" unit="section"/> What
                    is the matter? Am I embarrassing you? For perhaps you do not quite understand
                    propositions which are stated disjunctively. Still this is the sum total of my
                    conclusion; that since they are acquitted by you of wickedness, they are at the
                    same time pronounced most worthy of the very most honourable rewards. </p><p>Therefore, I will now proceed again with my oration. I will write to them, if any
                    one by chance should ask whether what you have imputed to me be true, not to
                    deny it to any one. In truth, I am afraid that it must be considered either a
                    not very creditable thing to them, that they should have concealed the fact of
                    my being an accomplice; or else a most discreditable one to me that I was
                    invited to be one, and that I shirked it. For what greater exploit (I call you
                    to witness, O august <persName><surname>Jupiter</surname></persName>!) was ever
                    achieved not only in this city, but in all the earth? What more glorious action
                    was ever done? What deed was ever more deservedly recommended to the everlasting
                    recollection of men? Do you, then, shut me up with the other leaders in the
                    partnership in this design, as in the Trojan horse? I have no objection; I even
                    thank you for doing so, with whatever intent you do it. <milestone n="33" unit="section"/> For the deed is so great a one, that I can not compare the
                    unpopularity which you wish to excite against me on account of it, with its real
                    glory. </p><p>For who can be happier than those men whom you boast of having now expelled and
                    driven from the city? What place is there either so deserted or so uncivilized,
                    as not to seem to greet and to covet the presence of those men wherever they
                    have arrived? What men are so clownish as not, when they have once beheld them,
                    to think that they have reaped the greatest enjoyment that life can give? And
                    what posterity will be ever so forgetful, what literature will ever be found so
                    ungrateful, as not to cherish their glory with undying recollection? Enroll me
                    then, I beg, in the number of those men. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="14"><p><milestone n="34" unit="section"/></p><p>But one thing I am afraid you may not approve of. For if I had really been one of
                    their number, I should have not only got rid of the king, but of the kingly
                    power also out of the republic; and if I had been the author of the piece, as it
                    is said, believe me, I should not have been contented with one act, but should
                    have finished the whole play. Although, if it be a crime to have wished that
                    Caesar might be put to death, beware, I pray you, O Antonius, of what must be
                    your own case, as it is notorious that you, when at <placeName key="tgn,7008368">Narbo</placeName>, formed a plan of the same sort with Caius Trebonius; and
                    it was on account of your participation in that design that, when Caesar was
                    being killed, we saw you called aside by Trebonius But I (see how far I am from
                    any horrible inclination toward,) praise you for having once in your life had a
                    righteous intention; I return you thanks for not having revealed the matter; and
                    I excuse you for not having accomplished your purpose. <milestone n="35" unit="section"/> That exploit required a man. </p><p>And if any one should institute a prosecution against you, and employ that test
                    of old Cassius, “who reaped any advantage from it?” take
                    care, I advise you, lest you suit that description. Although, in truth, that
                    action was, as you used to say, an advantage to every one who was not willing to
                    be a slave, still it was so to you above all men, who are not merely not a
                    slave, but are actually a king; who delivered yourself from an enormous burden
                    of debt at the temple of Ops; who, by your dealings with the account-books,
                    there squandered a countless sum of money; who have had such vast treasures
                    brought to you from Caesar's house; at whose own house there is set up a most
                    lucrative manufactory of false memoranda and autographs, and a most iniquitous
                    market of lands, and towns, and exemptions, and revenues. <milestone n="36" unit="section"/> In truth, what measure except the death of Caesar could
                    possibly have been any relief to your indigent and insolvent condition? You
                    appear to be somewhat agitated. Have you any secret fear that you yourself may
                    appear to have had some connection with that crime? I will release you from all
                    apprehension; no one will ever believe it; it is not like you to deserve well of
                    the republic; the most illustrious men in the republic are the authors of that
                    exploit; I only say that you are glad it was done; I do not accuse you of having
                    done it. </p><p>I have replied to your heaviest accusations, I must now also reply to the rest of
                    them. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="15"><p><milestone n="37" unit="section"/></p><p>You have thrown in my teeth the camp of Pompeius and all my conduct at that time.
                    At which time, indeed, if, as I have said before, my counsels and my authority
                    had prevailed, you would this day be in indigence, we should be free and the
                    republic would not have lost so many generals and so many armies. For I confess
                    that, when I saw that these things certainly would happen, which now have
                    happened, I was as greatly grieved as all the other virtuous citizens would have
                    been if they had foreseen the same things. I did grieve, I did grieve, O
                    conscript fathers, that the republic which had once been saved by your counsels
                    and mine, was fated to perish in a short time. Nor was I so inexperienced in and
                    ignorant of this nature of things, as to be disheartened on account of a
                    fondness for life, which while it endured would wear me out with anguish, and
                    when brought to an end would release me from all trouble. But I was desirous
                    that those most illustrious men, the lights of the republic, should live: so
                    many men of consular rank, so many men of praetorian rank, so many most
                    honorable senators; and besides them all the flower of our nobility and of our
                    youth; and the armies of excellent citizens. And if they were still alive, under
                    ever such hard conditions of peace (for any sort of peace with our
                    fellow-citizens appeared to me more desirable than civil war), we should be
                    still this day enjoying the republic. </p><p><milestone n="38" unit="section"/> And if my opinion had prevailed, and if those
                    men, the preservation of whose lives was my main object, elated with the hope of
                    victory, had not been my chief opposers, to say nothing of other results, at all
                    events you would never have continued in this order, or rather in this city. But
                    say you, my speech alienated from me the regard of Pompeius? Was there any one
                    to whom he was more attached? any one with whom he conversed or shared his
                    counsels more frequently? It was, indeed, a great thing that we, differing as we
                    did respecting the general interests of the republic, should continue in
                    uninterrupted friendship. But I saw clearly what his opinions and views were,
                    and he saw mine equally. I was for providing for the safety of the citizens in
                    the first place, in order that we might be able to consult their dignity
                    afterward. He thought more of consulting their existing dignity. But because
                    each of us had a definite object to pursue, our disagreement was the more
                    endurable. <milestone n="39" unit="section"/> But what that extra ordinary and
                    almost godlike man thought of me is known to those men who pursued him to
                        <placeName key="tgn,7002373">Paphos</placeName> from the battle of
                    Pharsalia. No mention of me was ever made by him that was not the most honorable
                    that could be, that was not full of the most friendly regret for me; while he
                    confessed that I had had the most foresight, but that he had had more sanguine
                    hopes. And do you dare taunt me with the name of that man whose friend you admit
                    that I was, and whose assassin you confess yourself? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="16"><p>
               </p><p>However, let us say no more of war in which you were too fortunate. I will not
                    reply even with those jests to which you have said that I gave utterance in the
                    camp. That camp was in truth full of anxiety, but although men are in great
                    difficulties, still, provided they are men, they sometimes relax their minds.
                        <milestone n="40" unit="section"/> But the fact that the same man finds
                    fault with my melancholy, and also with my jokes, is a great proof that I was
                    very moderate in each particular. </p><p>You have said that no inheritances come to me. Would that this accusation of
                    yours were a true one; I should have more of my friends and connections alive.
                    But how could such a charge ever come into your head? For I have received more
                    than twenty millions of sesterces in inheritances. Although in this particular I
                    admit that you have been more fortunate than I. No one has ever made me his heir
                    except he was a friend of mine, in order that my grief of mind for his loss
                    might be accompanied also with some gain, if it was to be considered as such.
                    But a man whom you never even saw, Lucius Rubrius, of <placeName key="perseus,Casinum">Casinum</placeName>, made you his heir. <milestone n="41" unit="section"/> And see now how much he loved you, who, though he
                    did not know whether you were white or black, passed over the son of his
                    brother, Quintus Fufius, a most honorable Roman knight, and most attached to
                    him, whom he had on all occasions openly declared his heir (he never even names
                    him in his will), and he makes you his heir whom he had never seen, or at all
                    events had never spoken to. </p><p>I wish you would tell me, if it is not too much trouble, what sort of countenance
                    Lucius Turselius was of; what sort of height; from what municipal town he came;
                    and of what tribe he was a member. “I know nothing,” you
                    will say, “about him, except what farms he had.” Therefore,
                    he, disinheriting his brother, made you his heir. And besides these instances,
                    this man has seized on much other property belonging to men wholly unconnected
                    with him, to the exclusion of the legitimate heirs, as if he himself were the
                    heir. <milestone n="42" unit="section"/> Although the thing that struck me with
                    most astonishment of all was, that you should venture to make mention of
                    inheritances, when you yourself had not received the inheritance of your own
                    father. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="17"><p>
               </p><p>And was it in order to collect all these arguments, O you most senseless of men,
                    that you spent so many days in practicing declamation in another man's villa?
                    Although, indeed (as your most intimate friends usually say), you are in the
                    habit of declaiming, not for the purpose of whetting your genius, but of working
                    off the effects of wine. And, indeed, you employ a master to teach you jokes, a
                    man appointed by your own vote and that of your boon companions; a rhetorician,
                    whom you have allowed to say whatever he pleased against you, a thoroughly
                    facetious gentleman; but there are plenty of materials for speaking against you
                    and against your friends. But just see now what a difference there is between
                    you and your grandfather. He used with great deliberation to bring forth
                    arguments advantageous for the cause he was advocating; you pour forth in a
                    hurry the sentiments which you have been taught by another. <milestone n="43" unit="section"/> And what wages have you paid this rhetorician? Listen,
                    listen, O conscript fathers, and learn the blows which are inflicted on the
                    republic. You have assigned, O Antonius, two thousand acres<note anchored="true">I have translated <foreign xml:lang="lat">jugerum</foreign>,
                            “<gloss>an acre</gloss>,” because it is usually so
                        translated, but in point of fact it was not quite two-thirds of an English
                        acre. At the same time it was nearly three times as large as the Greek
                            <foreign xml:lang="greek">ple/qron</foreign>, which is often translated
                            <gloss>acre</gloss> also.</note> of land, in the Leontine district, to
                    Sextus Clodius, the rhetorician, and those, too, exempt from every kind of tax,
                    for the sake of putting the Roman people to such a vast expense that you might
                    learn to be a fool. Was this gift, too, O you most audacious of men, found among
                    Caesar's papers? But I will take another opportunity to speak about the Leontine
                    and the Campanian district; where he has stolen lands from the republic to
                    pollute them with most infamous owners. For now, since I have sufficiently
                    replied to all his charges, I must say a little about our corrector and censor
                    himself. And yet I will not say all I could, in order that if I have often to
                    battle with him I may always come to the contest with fresh arms; and the
                    multitude of his vices and atrocities will easily enable me to do so. </p></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>