<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.phi005.perseus-eng2:2.4.108-2.4.118</requestUrn>
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            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi005.perseus-eng2:2.4.108-2.4.118</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="108" resp="perseus"><p>Nor is it the Sicilians only, but even all other tribes and nations greatly worship
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>of <placeName key="tgn,7003916">Enna</placeName>. In truth, if initiation into those sacred mysteries of the
                Athenians sought for with the greatest avidity, to which people
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>is said to have come in that long
                wandering of hers, and then she brought them corn. How much greater reverence ought
                to be paid to her by those people among whom it is certain that she was born, and
                first discovered corn. And, therefore, in the time of our fathers, at a most
                disastrous and critical time to the republic, when, after the death of Tiberius
                Gracchus, there was a fear that great dangers were portended to the state by various
                prodigies, in the consulship of Publius Mucius and Lucius Calpurnius, recourse was
                had to the Sibylline books, in which it was found set down, “that the most ancient
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>ought to be appeased.” Then,
                priests of the Roman people, selected from the most honourable college of decemvirs,
                although there was in our own city a most beautiful and magnificent temple of
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>, nevertheless went as far as
                  <placeName key="tgn,7003916">Enna</placeName>. For such was the authority and
                antiquity of the reputation for holiness of that place, that when they went thither,
                they seemed to be going not to a temple of
                  <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>, but to
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>herself. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="109" resp="perseus"><p>I will not din this into your ears any longer. I have been some time afraid that my
                speech may appear unlike the usual fashion of speeches at trials unlike the daily
                method of speaking. This I say, that this very <placeName key="tgn,7010621">Ceres</placeName>, the most ancient, the most holy, the very chief of all sacred
                things which are honoured by every people, and in every nation, was carried off by
                Caius Verres from her temple and her home. Ye who have been to <placeName key="tgn,7003916">Enna</placeName>, have seen a statue of
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>made of marble, and in the other
                temple a statue of Libera. They are very colossal and very beautiful, but not
                exceedingly ancient. There was one of brass, of moderate size, but extraordinary
                workmanship, with the torches in its hands, very ancient, by far the most ancient of
                all those statues which are in that temple; that he carried off, and yet he was not
                content with that. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="110" resp="perseus"><p>Before the temple of <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>, in an open and
                an uncovered place, there are two statues, one of
                  <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>, the other of Triptolemus, very
                beautiful, and of colossal size. Their beauty was their danger, but their size their
                safety, because the taking of them down and carrying them off appeared very
                difficult. But in the right hand of
                <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>there stood a beautifully wrought image
                of Victory, and this he had wrenched out of the hand of
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>and carried off. <milestone n="50" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/> What now must be his feelings at the
                recollection of his crimes, when I, at the mere enumeration of them, am not only
                roused to indignation in my mind, but even shudder over my whole body? For thoughts
                of that temple, of that place, of that holy religion come into my mind. Everything
                seems present before my eyes,—the day on which, when I had arrived at <placeName key="tgn,7003916">Enna</placeName>, the priests of
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>came to meet me with garlands of
                vervain, and with fillets; the concourse of citizens, among whom, while I was
                addressing them, there was such weeping and groaning that the most bitter grief
                seemed to have taken possession of the whole. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="111" resp="perseus"><p>They did not complain of the absolute way in which the tenths were levied, nor of
                the plunder of property, nor of the iniquity of tribunals, nor of that man's
                unhallowed lusts, nor of his violence, nor of the insults by which they had been
                oppressed and overwhelmed. It was the divinity of
                  <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>, the antiquity of their sacred
                observances, the holy veneration due to their temple, which they wished should have
                atonement made to them by the punishment of that most atrocious and audacious man.
                They said that they could endure everything else, that to everything else they were
                indifferent. This indignation of theirs was so great, that you might suppose that
                Verres, like another king of hell, had come to <placeName key="tgn,7003916">Enna</placeName>and had carried off, not Proserpina, but
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>herself. And, in truth, that city
                does not appear to be a city, but a shrine of
                  <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>. The people of <placeName key="tgn,7003916">Enna</placeName>think that
                  <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>dwells among them; so that they
                appear to me not to be citizens of that city, but to be all priests, to be all
                ministers and officers of <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="112" resp="perseus"><p>Did you dare to take away out of <placeName key="tgn,7003916">Enna</placeName>the
                statue of <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>? Did you attempt at
                  <placeName key="tgn,7003916">Enna</placeName>to wrench Victory out of the hand of
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>? to tear one goddess from the
                other?—nothing of which those men dared to violate, or even to touch, whose
                qualities were all more akin to wickedness than to religion. For while Publius
                Popillius and Publius Rupilius were consuls, slaves, runaway slaves, and barbarians,
                and enemies, were in possession of that place; but yet the slaves ware not so much
                slaves to their own masters, as you are to your passions; nor did the runaways flee
                from their masters as far as you flee from all laws and from all right; nor were the
                barbarians as barbarous in language and in race as you were in your nature and your
                habits; nor were the enemies as much enemies to men as you are to the immortal gods.
                How, then, can a man beg for any mercy who has surpassed slaves in baseness, runaway
                slaves in rashness, barbarians in wickedness, and enemies in inhumanity? </p></div><milestone n="51" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="113" resp="perseus"><p>You heard Theodorus and Numinius and Nicasio, deputies from <placeName key="tgn,7003916">Enna</placeName>, say, in the name of their state, that they had
                this commission from their fellow-citizens, to go to Verres, and to demand from him
                the restoration of the statues of <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>and
                of Victory. And if they obtained it then they were to adhere to the ancient customs
                of the state of <placeName key="tgn,7003916">Enna</placeName>, not to give any
                public testimony against him although he had oppressed <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>, since these were the principles which they had received from
                their ancestors. But if he did not restore them, then they were to go before the
                tribunal, to inform the judges of the injuries they had received, but, far above all
                things, to complain of the insults to their religion. And, in the name of the
                immortal gods I entreat you, O judges, do not you despise, do not you scorn or think
                lightly of their complaints. The injuries done to our allies are the present
                question; the authority of the laws is at stake; the reputation and the honesty of
                our courts of justice is at stake. And though all these are great considerations,
                yet this is the greatest of all,—the whole province is so imbued with religious
                feeling, such a superstitious dread arising out of that man's conduct has seized
                upon the minds of all the Sicilians, that whatever public or private misfortunes
                happen, appear to befall them because of that man's wickedness. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="114" resp="perseus"><p>You have heard the Centuripans, the Agyrians, the Catenans, the Herbitans, the
                Ennans, and many other deputies say, in the name of their states, how great was the
                solitude in their districts, how great the devastation, how universal the flight of
                the cultivators of the soil how deserted, how uncultivated, how desolate every place
                was. And although there are many and various injuries done by that man to which
                these things are owing, still this one cause, in the opinion of the Sicilians, is
                the most weighty of all; for, because of the insults offered to
                    <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>, they believe that all the crops
                and gifts of <persName><surname>Ceres</surname></persName>have perished in these
                districts. Bring remedies, O judges, to the insulted religion of the allies;
                preserve your own, for this is not a foreign religion, nor one with which you have
                no concern. But even if it were, if you were unwilling to adopt it yourselves, still
                you ought to be willing to inflict heavy punishment on the man who had violated it.
              </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="115" resp="perseus"><p>But now that the common religion of all nations is attacked in this way, now that
                these sacred observances are violated which our ancestors adopted and imported from
                foreign countries, and have honoured ever since,—sacred observances, which they
                called Greek observances, as in truth they were,—even if we were to wish to be
                indifferent and cold about these matters, how could we be so? <milestone n="52" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/> I will mention the sacking of one city,
                also, and that the most beautiful and highly decorated of all, the city of
                  <placeName key="perseus,Syracuse">Syracuse</placeName>. And I will produce my
                proofs of that, O judges, in order at length to conclude and bring to an end the
                whole history of offences of this sort. There is scarcely any one of you who has not
                often heard how <placeName key="perseus,Syracuse">Syracuse</placeName>was taken by
                Marcus Marcellus, and who has not sometimes also read the account in our annals.
                Compare this peace with that war; the visit of this praetor with the victory of that
                general; the debauched retinue of the one with the invincible army of the other; the
                lust of Verres with the continence of Marcellus;—and you will say that <placeName key="perseus,Syracuse">Syracuse</placeName>was built by the man who took it; was
                taken by the man who received it well established and flourishing. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="116" resp="perseus"><p>And for the present I omit those things which will be mentioned, and have been
                already mentioned by me in an irregular manner in different parts of my speech—what
                the market-place of the Syracusans, which at the entrance of Marcellus was preserved
                unpolluted by slaughter, on the arrival of Verres overflowed with the blood of
                innocent Sicilians; that the harbour of the Syracusans, which at that time was shut
                against both our fleets and those of the Carthaginians, was, while Verres was
                praetor, open to Cilician pirates, or even to a single piratical galley. I say
                nothing of the violence offered to people of noble birth, of the ravishment of
                matrons, atrocities which then, when the city was taken, were not committed, neither
                through the hatred of enemies, nor through military licence, nor through the customs
                of war or the rights of victory. I pass over, I say, all these things which were
                done by that man for three whole years. Listen rather to acts which are connected
                with those matters of which I have hitherto been speaking. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="117" resp="perseus"><p>You have often heard that the city of <placeName key="perseus,Syracuse">Syracuse</placeName>is the greatest of the Greek cities, and the most beautiful
                of all. It is so, O judges, as it is said to be; for it is so by its situation,
                which is strongly fortified, and which is on every side by which you can approach
                it, whether by sea or land, very beautiful to behold. And it has harbours almost
                enclosed within the walls, and in the sight of the whole city, harbours which have
                different entrances, but which meet together, and are connected at the other end. By
                their union a part of the town, which is called the island, being separated from the
                rest by a narrow arm of the sea, is again joined to and connected with the other by
                a bridge. </p></div><milestone n="53" unit="chapter"/><milestone unit="Para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="118" resp="perseus"><p>That city is so great that it may be said to consist of four cities of the largest
                size; one of which, as I have said, is that “Island,” which, surrounded by two
                harbours, projects out towards the mouth and entrance of each. In it there is a
                palace which did belong to king Hiero, which our praetors are in the habit of using;
                in it are many sacred buildings, but two, which have a great pre-eminence over all
                the others,—one a temple of Diana, and the other one, which before the arrival of
                that man was the most ornamented of all, sacred to Minerva. At the end of this
                island is a fountain of sweet water, the name of which is Arethusa, of incredible
                size, very full of fish, which would be entirely overwhelmed by the waves of the
                sea, if it were not protected from the sea by a rampart and dam of stone. </p></div></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>