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                    <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="3" subtype="speech"><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="3"><p><milestone n="6" unit="section"/></p><p>Nor (since now after a long interval we are allowed to speak concerning the
                    republic) is it possible for us to be silent about the Martial legion. For what
                    single man has ever been braver, what single man has ever been more devoted to
                    the republic than the whole of the Martial legion? which, as soon as it had
                    decided that Marcus Antonius was an enemy of the Roman people, refused to be a
                    companion of his insanity; deserted him though consul; which, in truth, it would
                    not have done if it had considered him as consul, who, as it saw, was aiming at
                    nothing and preparing nothing but the slaughter of the citizens, and the
                    destruction of the state. And that legion has encamped at Alba. What city could
                    it have selected either more suitable for enabling it to act, or more faithful,
                    or full of more gallant men, or of citizens more devoted to the republic?
                        <milestone n="7" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>The fourth legion, imitating the virtue of this legion, under the leadership of
                    Lucius Egnatuleius, the quaestor, a most virtuous and intrepid citizen, has also
                    acknowledged the authority and joined the army of Caius Caesar. </p><p>We, therefore, O conscript fathers, must take care that those things which this
                    most illustrious young man, this most excellent of all men has of his own accord
                    done, and still is doing, be sanctioned by our authority; and the admirable
                    unanimity of the veterans, those most brave men, and of the Martial and of the
                    fourth legion, in their zeal for the reestablishment of the republic, be
                    encouraged by our praise and commendation. And let us pledge ourselves this day
                    that their advantage, and honors, and rewards shall he cared for by us as soon
                    as the consuls elect have entered in their magistracy. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="4"><p><milestone n="8" unit="section"/></p><p>And the things which I have said about Caesar and about his army, are, indeed,
                    already well known to you. For by the admirable valor of Caesar, and by the
                    firmness of the veteran soldiers, and by the admirable discernment of those
                    legions which have followed our authority, and the liberty of the Roman people,
                    and the valor of Caesar, Antonius has been repelled from his attempts upon our
                    lives. But these things, as I have said, happened before; but this recent edict
                    of Decimus Brutus, which has just been issued, can certainly not be passed over
                    in silence. For he promises to preserve the province of <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName> in obedience to the senate and people of
                        <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>. O citizen, born for the
                    republic; mindful of the name he bears; imitator of his ancestors! Nor, indeed,
                    was the acquisition of liberty so much an object of desire to our ancestors when
                    Tarquinius was expelled, as, now that Antonius is driven away, the preservation
                    of it is to us. <milestone n="9" unit="section"/> Those men had learned to obey
                    kings ever since the foundation of the city, but we from the time when the kings
                    were driven out have forgotten how to be slaves. And that Tarquinius, whom our
                    ancestors expelled, was not either considered or called cruel or impious, but
                    only The Proud. That vice which we have often borne in private individuals, our
                    ancestors could not endure even in a king. </p><p>Lucius Brutus could not endure a proud king. Shall Decimus Brutus submit to the
                    kingly power of a man who is wicked and impious? What atrocity did Tarquinius
                    ever commit equal to the innumerable acts of the sort which Antonius has done
                    and is still doing? Again, the kings were used to consult the senate; nor, as is
                    the ease when Antonius holds a senate, were armed barbarians ever introduced
                    into the council of the king. The kings paid due regard to the auspices, which
                    this man, though consul and augur, has neglected, not only by passing laws in
                    opposition to the auspices but also by making his colleague (whom he himself had
                    appointed irregularly, and had falsified the auspices in order to do so) join in
                    passing them. <milestone n="10" unit="section"/> Again, what king was ever so
                    preposterously impudent as to have all the profits and kindnesses, and
                    privileges of his kingdom on sale? But what immunity is there, what rights of
                    citizenship, what rewards that this man has not sold to individuals and to
                    cities and to entire provinces.? We have never heard of anything base or sordid
                    being imputed to Tarquinius. But at the house of this man gold was constantly
                    being weighed out in the spinning room, and money was being paid, and in one
                    single house every soul who had any interest in the business was selling the
                    whole empire of the Roman people. We have never heard of any executions of Roman
                    citizens by the orders of Tarquinius; but this man both at Suessa murdered the
                    man whom he had thrown into prison, and at <placeName key="perseus,Brundusium">Brundusium</placeName> massacred about three hundred most gallant men and
                    most virtuous citizens. <milestone n="11" unit="section"/> Lastly, Tarquinius
                    was conducting a war in defense of the Roman people at the very time when he was
                    expelled. Antonius was leading an army against the Roman people at the time
                    when, being abandoned by the legions, he cowered at the name of Caesar and at
                    his army, and neglecting the regular sacrifices, he offered up before daylight
                    vows which he could never mean to perform; and at this very moment he is
                    endeavoring to invade a province of the Roman people. The Roman people,
                    therefore, has already received and is still looking for greater services at the
                    hand of Decimus Brutus than our ancestors received from Lucius Brutus, the
                    founder of this race and name which we ought to be so anxious to preserve.
                        </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="5"><p><milestone n="12" unit="section"/></p><p>But, while all slavery is miserable, to be slave to a man who is profligate,
                    unchaste, effeminate, never, not even while in fear, sober, is surely
                    intolerable. He, then, who keeps this man out of <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, especially by his own private authority, judges, and
                    judges most truly, that he is not consul at all. We must take care, therefore, O
                    conscript fathers, to sanction the private decision of Decimus Brutus by public
                    authority. Nor, indeed, ought you to have thought Marcus Antonius consul at any
                    time since the Lupercalia. For on the day when he, in the sight of the Roman
                    people, harangued the mob, naked, perfumed, and drunk, and labored moreover to
                    put a crown on the head of his colleague, on that day he abdicated not only the
                    consulship, but also his own freedom. At, all events he himself must at once
                    have become a slave, if Caesar had been willing to accept from him that ensign
                    of royalty. Can I then think him a consul, can I think him a Roman citizen, can
                    I think him a freeman, can I even think him a man, who on that shameful and
                    wicked day showed what he was willing to endure while Caesar lived, and what he
                    was anxious to obtain himself after he was dead? </p><p><milestone n="13" unit="section"/> Nor is it possible to pass over in silence
                    the virtue and the firmness and the dignity of the province of <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>. For that is the flower of <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>; that is the bulwark of the empire of
                    the Roman people; that is the chief ornament of our dignity. But so perfect is
                    the unanimity of the municipal towns and colonies of the province of <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, that all men in that district appear to
                    have united together to defend the authority of this order, and the majesty of
                    the Roman people. Wherefore, O tribunes of the people, although you have not
                    actually brought any other business before us beyond the question of protection,
                    in order that the consuls may be able to hold the senate with safety on the
                    first of January, still you appear to me to have acted with great wisdom and
                    great prudence in giving an opportunity of debating the general circumstances of
                    the republic. For when you decided that the senate could not be held with safety
                    without some protection or other, you at the same time asserted by that decision
                    that the wickedness and audacity of Antonius was still continuing its practices
                    within our walls. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="6"><p><milestone n="14" unit="section"/></p><p>Wherefore, I will embrace every consideration in my opinion which I am now going
                    to deliver, a course to which you, I feel sure, have no objection; in order that
                    authority may be conferred by us on admirable generals, and that hope of reward
                    may be held out by us to gallant soldiers, and that a formal decision may be
                    come to, not by words only, but also by actions, that Antonius is not only not a
                    consul, but is even an enemy. For if he be consul, then the legions which have
                    deserted the consul deserve beating<note anchored="true">Riddle (Dict. Lat in
                        voce) says, that this was the regular punishment for deserters, and was
                        inflicted by their comrades.</note> to death. Caesar is wicked, Brutus is
                    impious, since they of their own heads have levied an army against the consul.
                    But if new honors are to be sought out for the soldiers on account of their
                    divine and immortal merits, and if it is quite impossible to show gratitude
                    enough to the generals, who is there who must not think that man a public enemy,
                    whose conduct is such that those who are in arms against him are considered the
                    saviors of the republic? <milestone n="15" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>Again, how insulting is he in his edicts! how ignorant! how like a barbarian! In
                    the first place, how has he heaped abuse on Caesar, in terms drawn from his
                    recollection of his own debauchery and profligacy For w here can we find anyone
                    who is chaster than this young man? Who is more modest? where have we among our
                    youth a more illustrious example of the old-fashioned strictness.? Who, on the
                    other hand, is more profligate than the man who abuses him? He reproaches the
                    son of Caius. Caesar with his want of noble blood, when even his natural<note anchored="true">Caius Octavius, the real father of Octavius Caesar had been
                        praetor and governor of <placeName key="tgn,7006667">Macedonia</placeName>,
                        and was intending to stand for the consulship when he died.</note> father,
                    if he had been alive, would have been made consul. His mother is a woman of
                        <placeName key="perseus,Aricia">Aricia</placeName>. You might suppose he was
                    saving a woman of <placeName key="tgn,7002359">Tralles</placeName> or of
                        <placeName key="tgn,7002499">Ephesus</placeName>. Just see how we all who
                    come from the municipal towns—that is to say, absolutely all of
                    us—are looked down upon, for how few of us are there who do not come
                    from those towns? and what municipal town is there which he does not despise who
                    looks with such contempt on <placeName key="perseus,Aricia">Aricia</placeName>,
                    a town most ancient as to its antiquity; if we regard its rights, united with us
                    by treaty; if we regard its vicinity, almost close to us; if we regard the high
                    character of its inhabitants, most honorable? <milestone n="16" unit="section"/>
                    It is from <placeName key="perseus,Aricia">Aricia</placeName> that we have
                    received the Voconian and Atinian laws; from <placeName key="perseus,Aricia">Aricia</placeName> have come many of those magistrates who have filled our
                    curule chairs, both in our fathers' recollection and in our own; from <placeName key="perseus,Aricia">Aricia</placeName> have sprung many of the best and
                    bravest of the Roman knights. But if you disapprove of a wife from <placeName key="perseus,Aricia">Aricia</placeName>, why do you approve of one from
                        <placeName key="perseus,Tusculum">Tusculum</placeName>? Although the father
                    of this most virtuous and excellent woman, Marcus Atius Balbus, a man of the
                    highest character, was a man of praetorian rank; but the father of your
                    wife,—a good woman, at all events a rich one,—a fellow of
                    the name of Bambalio, was a man of no account at all. Nothing could be lower
                    than he was, a fellow who got his surname as a sort of insult, derived<note anchored="true">Bambalio is derived from the Greek word <foreign xml:lang="greek">bamba/lw</foreign>, to lisp.</note> from the hesitation of his speech
                    and the stolidity of his understanding. Oh, but your grandfather was nobly born.
                    Yes, he was that Tuditanus who used to put on a cloak and buskins, and then go
                    and scatter money from the rostra among the people. I wish he had bequeathed his
                    contempt of money to his descendants! You have, indeed, a most glorious nobility
                    of family! <milestone n="17" unit="section"/> But how does it happen that the
                    son of a woman of <placeName key="perseus,Aricia">Aricia</placeName> appears to
                    you to be ignoble, when you are accustomed to boast of a descent on the mother's
                    side which is precisely the same?<note anchored="true">Julia, the mother of
                        Antonius and sister of Lucius Caesar, was also a native of <placeName key="perseus,Aricia">Aricia</placeName>.</note> Besides, what insanity
                    is it for that man to say any thing about the want of noble birth in men's
                    wives, when his father married Numitoria of <placeName key="tgn,6002129">Fregellae</placeName>, the daughter of a traitor, and when he himself has
                    begotten children of the daughter of a freedman. However, those illustrious men
                    Lucius Philippus, who has a wife who came from <placeName key="perseus,Aricia">Aricia</placeName>, and Caius Marcellus, whose wife is the daughter of an
                    Arician, may look to this; and I am quite sure that they have no regrets on the
                    score of the dignity of those admirable women. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="7"><p>
               </p><p>Moreover, Antonius proceeds to name Quintus Cicero, my brother's son, in his
                    edict; and is so mad as not to perceive that the way in which he names him is a
                    panegyric on him. For what could happen more desirable for this young man, than
                    to be known by every one to be the partner of Caesar's counsels, and the enemy
                    of the frenzy of Antonius? <milestone n="18" unit="section"/> But this gladiator
                    has dared to put in writing that he had designed the murder of his father and of
                    his uncle. Oh the marvelous impudence, and audacity, and temerity of such an
                    assertion! to dare to put this in writing against that young man, whom I and my
                    brother, on account of his amiable manners, and pure character, and splendid
                    abilities, vie with one another in loving, and to whom we incessantly devote our
                    eyes, and ears, and affections! And as to me, he does not know whether he is
                    injuring or praising me in those same edicts. When he threatens the most
                    virtuous citizens with the same punishment which I inflicted on the most wicked
                    and infamous of men, he seems to praise me as if he were desirous of copying me;
                    but when he brings up again the memory of that most illustrious exploit, then he
                    thinks that he is exciting some odium against me in the breasts of men like
                    himself. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="8"><p><milestone n="19" unit="section"/></p><p>But what is it that he has done himself? When he had published all these edicts,
                    he issued another, that the senate was to meet in a full house on the
                    twenty-fourth of November. On that day he himself was not present. But what were
                    the terms of his edict? These, I believe, are the exact words of the end of it:
                    “If any one fails to attend, all men will be at liberty to think him
                    the adviser of my destruction and of most ruinous counsels.” What are
                    ruinous counsels? those which relate to the recovery of the liberty of the Roman
                    people? Of those counsels I confess that I have been and still am an adviser and
                    prompter to Caesar. Although he did not stand in need of any one's advice; but
                    still I spurred on the willing horse, as it is said. For what good man would not
                    have advised putting you to death, when on your death depended the safety and
                    life of every good man, and the liberty and dignity of the Roman people? </p><p><milestone n="20" unit="section"/> But when he had summoned us all by so severe
                    an edict, why did he not attend himself? Do you suppose that he was detained by
                    any melancholy or important occasion? He was detained drinking and feasting. If,
                    indeed, it deserves to be called a feast, and not rather gluttony. He neglected
                    to attend on the day mentioned in his edict; and he adjourned the meeting to the
                    twenty-eighth. He then summoned us to attend in the Capitol; and at that temple
                    he did arrive himself, coming up through some mine left by the Gauls. Men came,
                    having been summoned, some of them indeed men of high distinction, but forgetful
                    of what was due to their dignity. For the day was such, the report of the object
                    of the meeting such, such too the man who had convened the senate, that it was
                    discreditable for a senate to feel no fear for the result. And yet to those men
                    who had assembled he did not dare to say a single word about Caesar, though he
                    had made up his mind<note anchored="true">He had intended to propose to the
                        senate to declare Octavius a public enemy. We must recollect that in these
                        orations Cicero, even when he speaks of Caius Caesar, means Octavius.</note>
                    to submit a motion respecting him to the senate. There was a man of consular
                    rank who had brought a resolution ready drawn up. <milestone n="21" unit="section"/> Is it not now admitting that he is himself an enemy, when
                    he does not dare to make a motion respecting a man who is leading an army
                    against him while he is consul? For it is perfectly plain that one of the two
                    must be an enemy; nor is it possible to come to a different decision respecting
                    adverse generals. If then Caius. Caesar be an enemy, why does the consul submit
                    no motion to the senate? If he does not deserve to be branded by the senate,
                    then what can the consul say, who, by his silence respecting him, has confessed
                    that he himself is an enemy? In his edicts he styles him Spartacus, while in the
                    senate he does not venture to call him even a bad citizen. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="9"><p>
               </p><p>But in the most melancholy circumstances what mirth does he not provoke? I have
                    committed to memory some short phrases of one edict, which he appears to think
                    particularly clever; but I have not as yet found any one who has understood what
                    he intended by them. <milestone n="22" unit="section"/> “That is no
                    insult which a worthy man does.” Now, in the first place, what is the
                    meaning of “worthy?” For there are many men worthy of
                    punishment, as he himself is. Does he mean what a man does who is invested with
                    any dignity?<note anchored="true">It is quite impossible to give a proper idea of
                        Cicero's meaning here. He is arguing on the word <foreign xml:lang="lat">dignus</foreign>, from which <foreign xml:lang="lat">dignitas</foreign> is
                        derived. But we have no means of keeping up the play on the words in
                        English.</note> if so, what insult can be greater? Moreover, what is the
                    meaning of “doing an insult?” Who ever uses such an
                    expression? Then comes, “Nor any fear which an enemy
                    threatens.” What then? is fear usually threatened by a friend? Then
                    came many similar sentences. Is it not better to be dumb, than to say what no
                    one can understand? Now see why his tutor, exchanging pleas for plows, has had
                    given to him in the public domain of the Roman people two thousand acres of land
                    in the Leontine district, exempt from all taxes, for making a stupid man still
                    stupider at the public expense. </p><p><milestone n="23" unit="section"/> However, these perhaps are trifling matters.
                    I ask now, why all on a sudden he became so gentle in the senate, after having
                    been so fierce in his edicts? For what was the object of threatening Lucius
                    Cassius, a most fearless tribune of the people, and a most virtuous and loyal
                    citizen, with death if he came to the senate? of expelling Decimus Carfulenus, a
                    man thoroughly attached to the republic, from the senate by violence and threats
                    of death? of interdicting Titus Canutius, by whom he had been repeatedly and
                    deservedly harassed by most legitimate attacks, not only from the temple itself,
                    but from all approach to it? What was the resolution of the senate which he was
                    afraid that they would stop by the interposition of their veto? That, I suppose,
                    respecting the supplication in honor of Marcus Lepidus, a most illustrious man!
                    Certainly there was a great danger of our hindering an ordinary compliment to a
                    man on whom we were every day thinking of conferring some extraordinary honor.
                        <milestone n="24" unit="section"/> However, that he might not appear to have
                    had no reason at all for ordering the senate to meet, he was on the point of
                    bringing forward some motion about the republic when the news about the fourth
                    legion came; which entirely bewildered him, and hastening to flee away, he took
                    a division on the resolution for decreeing this supplication, though such a
                    proceeding had never been heard of before.<note anchored="true">The general
                        proceeding on such occasions being to ask each senator's opinion separately,
                        which gave those who chose an opportunity for pronouncing some encomium on
                        the person honored.</note>
                    </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="10"><p>
               </p><p>But what a setting out was his after this! what a journey when he was in his robe
                    as a general! How did he shun all eyes, and the light of day, and the city, and
                    the forum! How miserable was his flight! how shameful! how infamous! Splendid,
                    too, were the decrees of the senate passed on the evening of that very day; very
                    religiously solemn was the allotment of the provinces; and heavenly indeed was
                    the opportunity, when every one got exactly what he thought most desirable.
                        <milestone n="25" unit="section"/> You are acting admirably, therefore, O
                    tribunes of the people, in bringing forward a motion about the protection of the
                    senate and consuls; and most deservedly are we all bound to feel and to prove to
                    you the greatest gratitude for your conduct. For how can we be free from fear
                    and danger while menaced by such covetousness and audacity? And as for that
                    ruined and desperate man, what more hostile decision can be passed upon him than
                    has already been passed by his own friends? His most intimate friend, a man
                    connected with me too, Lucius Lentulus, and also Publius Naso, a man destitute
                    of covetousness, have shown that they think that they have no provinces assigned
                    them, and that the allotments of Antonius are invalid. Lucius. Philippus, a man
                    thoroughly worthy of his father and grandfather and ancestors, has done the
                    same. The same is the opinion of Marcus Turanius, a man of the greatest
                    integrity and purity of life. The same is the conduct of Publius Oppius and
                    those very men,—who, influenced by their friendship for Marcus
                    Antonius, have attributed to him more power than they would perhaps really
                    approve of,—Marcus Piso, my own connection, a most admirable man and
                    virtuous citizen, and Marcus Vehilius, a man of equal respectability, have both
                    declared that they would obey the authority of the senate. <milestone n="26" unit="section"/> Why should I speak of Lucius. Cinna? whose extraordinary
                    integrity, proved under many trying circumstances, makes the glory of his
                    present admirable conduct less remarkable; he has altogether disregarded the
                    province assigned to him; and so has Caius Cestius, a man of great and firm
                    mind. </p><p>Who are there left then to be delighted with this heaven-sent allotment? Lucius
                    Antonius and Marcus Antonius! O happy pair! for there is nothing that they
                    wished for more. Caius. Antonius has <placeName key="tgn,7006667">Macedonia</placeName>. Happy, too, is he! For he was constantly talking
                    about this province. Caius Calvisius has <placeName key="tgn,7001242">Africa</placeName>. Nothing could be more fortunate, for he had only just
                    departed from <placeName key="tgn,7001242">Africa</placeName>, and, as if he had
                    divined that he should return, he left two lieutenants at <placeName key="tgn,7018163">Utica</placeName>. Then Marcus Iccius has <placeName key="tgn,7003122">Sicily</placeName>, and Quintus Cassius Spain. I do not
                    know what to suspect. I fancy the lots which assigned these two provinces, were
                    not quite so carefully attended to by the gods. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="11"><p><milestone n="27" unit="section"/></p><p>O Caius Caesar (I am speaking of the young man), what safety have you brought to
                    the republic! How unforeseen has it been! how sudden! for if he did these things
                    when flying, what would he have done when he was pursuing? In truth, he had said
                    in a harangue that he would be the guardian of the city; and that he would keep
                    his army at the gates of the city till the first of May. What a fine guardian
                    (as the proverb goes) is the wolf of the sheep! Would Antonius have been a
                    guardian of the city, or its plunderer and destroyer? And he said too that he
                    would come into the city and go out as he pleased. What more need I say? Did he
                    not say, in the hearing of all the people, while sitting in front of the temple
                    of Castor, that no one should remain alive but the conqueror? <milestone n="28" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>On this day, O conscript fathers, for the first time after a long interval do we
                    plant our foot and take possession of liberty. Liberty, of which, as long as I
                    could be, I was not only the defender, but even the savior. But when I could not
                    be so, I rested; and I bore the misfortunes and misery of that period without
                    abjectness, and not without some dignity. But as for this most foul monster, who
                    could endure him, or how could any one endure him? What is there in Antonius
                    except lust, and cruelty, and wantonness, and audacity? Of these materials he is
                    wholly made up. There is in him nothing virtuous, nothing moderate, nothing
                    modest, nothing virtuous. <milestone n="29" unit="section"/> Wherefore, since
                    the matter has come to such a crisis that the question is whether he is to make
                    atonement to the republic for his crimes, or we are to become slaves, let us at
                    last, I beseech you, by the immortal gods. O conscript fathers, adopt our
                    fathers' courage, and our fathers' virtue so as either to recover the liberty
                    belonging to the Roman name and race, or else to prefer death to slavery. We
                    have borne and endured many things which ought not to be endured in a free city:
                    some of us out of a hope of recovering our freedom, some from too great a
                    fondness for life. But if we have submitted to these things, which necessity and
                    a sort of forcer which may seem almost to have been put on us by destiny, have
                    compelled us to endure; though, in point of fact, we have not endured them; are
                    we also to bear with the most shameful and inhuman tyranny of this profligate
                    robber? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="12"><p><milestone n="30" unit="section"/></p><p>What will he do in his passion, if ever he has the power, who, when he is not
                    able to show his anger against any one, has been the enemy of all good men? What
                    will he not dare to do when victorious, who, without having gained any victory,
                    has committed such crimes as these since the death of Caesar? has emptied his
                    well-filled house? has pillaged his gardens? has transferred to his own mansion
                    all their ornaments? has sought to make his death a pretext for slaughter and
                    conflagration? who, while he has carried two or three resolutions of the senate
                    which have been advantageous to the republic, has made every thing else
                    subservient to his own acquisition of gain and plunder? who has put up
                    exemptions and annuities to sale? who has released cities from obligations? who
                    has removed whole provinces from subjection to the Roman empire? who has
                    restored exiles? who has passed forged laws in the name of Caesar, and has
                    continued to have forged decrees engraved on brass and fixed up in the Capitol,
                    and has set up in his own house a domestic market for all things of that sort?
                    who has imposed laws on the Roman people? and who, with armed troops and guards,
                    has excluded both the people and the magistrates from the forum? who has filled
                    the senate with armed men? and has introduced armed men into the temple of
                    Concord when he was holding a senate there? who ran down to <placeName key="perseus,Brundusium">Brundusium</placeName> to meet the legions, and
                    then murdered all the centurions in them who were well affected to the republic?
                    who endeavored to come to <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName> with
                    his army to accomplish our massacre and the utter destruction of the city? </p><p><milestone n="31" unit="section"/> And he, now that he has been prevented from
                    succeeding in this attempt by the wisdom and forces of Caesar, and the unanimity
                    of the veterans, and the valor of the legions, even now that his fortunes are
                    desperate, does not diminish his audacity, nor, mad that he is, does he cease
                    proceeding in his headlong career of fury. He is leading his mutilated army into
                        <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>; with one legion, and that too
                    wavering in its fidelity to him, he is waiting for his brother Lucius, as he can
                    not find any one more nearly like himself than him. But now what slaughter is
                    this man, who has thus become a captain instead of a matador, a general instead
                    of a gladiator, making, wherever he sets his foot! He destroys stores, he slays
                    the flocks and herds, and all the cattle, wherever he finds them; his soldiers
                    revel in their spoil; and he himself, in order to irritate his brother, drowns
                    himself in wine. Fields are laid waste; villas are plundered; matrons, virgins,
                    well-horn boys are carried off and given up to the soldiery; and Marcus Antonius
                    has done exactly the same wherever he has led his army. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="13"><p><milestone n="32" unit="section"/></p><p>Will you open your gates to these most infamous brothers? will you ever admit
                    them into the city? will you not rather, now that the opportunity is offered to
                    you, now that you have generals ready, and the minds of the soldiers eager for
                    the service, and all the Roman people unanimous; and all <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName> excited with the desire to recover its
                    liberty,—will you not, I say, avail yourself of the kindness of the
                    immortal gods? You will never have an opportunity if you neglect this one. He
                    will be hemmed in in the rear, in the front, and in flank, if he once enters
                        <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>. Nor must he be attacked by
                    arms alone, but by our decrees also. Mighty is the authority, mighty is the name
                    of the senate when all its members are inspired by one and the same resolution.
                    Do you not see how the forum is crowded? how the Roman people is on tiptoe with
                    the hope of recovering its liberty? which now, beholding us, after a long
                    interval, meeting here in numbers, hopes too that we are also met in freedom.
                        <milestone n="33" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>It was in expectation of this day that I avoided the wicked army of Marcus.
                    Antonius, at a time when he, while inveighing against me, was not aware for what
                    an occasion I was reserving myself and my strength. If at that time I had chosen
                    to reply to him, while he was seeking to begin the massacre with me, I should
                    nor now be able to consult the welfare of the republic. But now that I have this
                    opportunity, I will never, O conscript fathers, neither by day nor by night,
                    cease considering what ought to be thought concerning the liberty of the Roman
                    people, and concerning your dignity. And whatever ought to be planned or done, I
                    not only will never shrink from, but I will offer myself for, and beg to have
                    entrusted to me. This is what I did before while it was in my power; when it was
                    no longer in my power to do so, I did nothing. But now it is not only in my
                    power, but it is absolutely necessary for me, unless we prefer being slaves to
                    fighting with all our strength and courage to avoid being slaves. <milestone n="34" unit="section"/> The immortal gods have given us these protectors,
                    Caesar for the city, Brutus for <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>.
                    For if he had been able to oppress the city we must have become slaves at once;
                    if he had been able to get possession of <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, then it would not have been long before every good man
                    must have perished and all the rest have been enslaved. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="14"><p>
               </p><p>Now then that this opportunity is afforded to you, O conscript fathers, I entreat
                    you in the name of the immortal gods, seize upon it; and recollect at last that
                    you are the chief men of the most honorable council on the whole face of the
                    earth. Give a token to the Roman people that your wisdom shall not fail the
                    republic, since that too professes that its valor shall never desert it either.
                    There is no need for my warning you: there is no one so foolish as not to
                    perceive that if we go to sleep over this opportunity we shall have to endure a
                    tyranny which will be not only cruel and haughty, but also ignominious and
                    flagitious. <milestone n="35" unit="section"/> You know the insolence of
                    Antonius; you know his friends, you know his whole household. To be slaves to
                    lustful, wanton, debauched, profligate, drunken gamblers, is the extremity of
                    misery combined with the extremity of infamy. And if now (but may the immortal
                    gods avert the omen!) that worst of fates shall befall the republic, then, as
                    brave gladiators take care to perish with honor, let us too, who are the chief
                    men of all countries and nations, take care to fall with dignity rather than to
                    live as slaves with ignominy. </p><p><milestone n="36" unit="section"/> There is nothing more detestable than
                    disgrace; nothing more shameful than slavery. We have been born to glory and to
                    liberty; let us either preserve them or die with dignity. Too long have we
                    concealed what we have felt: now at length it is revealed: every one has plainly
                    shown what are his feelings to both sides, and what are his inclinations. There
                    are impious citizens, measured by the love I bear my country, too many; but in
                    proportion to the multitude of well-affected ones, very few; and the immortal
                    gods have given the republic an incredible opportunity and chance for destroying
                    them. For, in addition to the defenses which we already have, there will soon be
                    added consuls of consummate prudence, and virtue, and concord, who have already
                    deliberated and pondered for many months on the freedom of the Roman people.
                    With these men for our advisers and leaders, with the gods assisting us, with
                    ourselves using all vigilance and taking great precautions for the future, and
                    with the Roman people acting with unanimity, we shall indeed be free in a short
                    time, and the recollection of our present slavery will make liberty sweeter.
                        </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="15"><p><milestone n="37" unit="section"/></p><p>Moved by these considerations, since the tribunes of the people have brought
                    forward a motion to insure that the senate shall be able to meet in safety on
                    the first of January, and that we may be able to deliver our sentiments on the
                    general welfare of the state with freedom, I give my vote that Caius Pansa and
                    Aulus Hirtius, the consuls elect, do take care that the senate be enabled to
                    meet in safety on the first of January; and, as an edict has been published by
                    Decimus Brutus, <foreign xml:lang="lat">imperator</foreign> and consul elect, I vote
                    that the senate thinks that Decimus Brutus, <foreign xml:lang="lat">imperator</foreign> and consul, deserves excellently well of the republic,
                    inasmuch as he is upholding the authority of the senate, and the freedom and
                    empire of the Roman people; <milestone n="38" unit="section"/> and as he is also
                    retaining the province of Gallia Citerior, a province full of most virtuous and
                    brave men, and of citizens most devoted to the republic, and his army, in
                    obedience to the senate, I vote that the senate judges that he, and his army,
                    and the municipalities and colonies of the province of <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, have acted and are acting properly, and
                    regularly, and in a manner advantageous to the republic. And the senate thinks
                    that it will be for the general interests of the republic that the provinces
                    which are at present occupied by Decimus Brutus and by Lucius Plancus, both
                    imperators, and consuls elect, and also by the officers who are in command of
                    provinces, shall continue to be held by them in accordance with the provisions
                    of the Julian law, until each of these officers has a successor appointed by a
                    resolution of the senate; and that they shall take care to maintain those
                    provinces and armies in obedience to the senate and people of <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, and as a defense to the republic. And
                    since, by the exertions and valor and wisdom of Caius Caesar, and by the
                    admirable unanimity of the veteran soldiers, who, obeying his authority, have
                    been and are a protection to the republic, the Roman people has been defended,
                    and is at this present time being defended, from the most serious dangers.
                        <milestone n="39" unit="section"/> And as the Martial legion has encamped at
                    Alba, in a municipal town of the greatest loyalty and courage, and has devoted
                    itself to the support of the authority of the senate, and of the freedom of the
                    Roman people; and as the fourth legion, behaving with equal wisdom and with the
                    same virtue, under the command of Lucius Egnatuleius the quaestor, an
                    illustrious citizen, has defended and is still defending the authority of the
                    senate and the freedom of the Roman people; I give my vote, That it is and shall
                    be an object of anxious care to the senate to pay due honor and to show due
                    gratitude to them for their exceeding services to the republic: and that the
                    senate hereby orders that when Caius Pansa and Aulus Hirtius, the consuls elect,
                    have entered on their office, they take the earliest opportunity of consulting
                    this body on these matters, as shall seem to them expedient for the republic,
                    and worthy of their own integrity, and loyalty.</p></div></div><div type="textpart" n="4" subtype="speech"><head>THE FOURTH ORATION OF M. T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS. CALLED ALSO THE FOURTH PHILIPPIC.</head><div type="textpart" subtype="argument" n="arg"><head>THE ARGUMENT.</head><p>After delivering the preceding speech in the senate, Cicero proceeded to the
                        forum, where he delivered the following speech to the people, to give them
                        information of what had been done.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="1"><milestone n="1" unit="section"/><p>The great numbers in which you are here met this day, O Romans, and this
                    assembly, greater than, it seems to me, I ever remember, inspires me with both
                    an exceeding eagerness to defend the republic, and with a great hope of
                    reestablishing it. Although my courage indeed has never failed; what has been
                    unfavorable is the time; and the moment that that has appeared to show any dawn
                    of light, I at once have been the leader in the defense of your liberty. And if
                    I had attempted to have done so before, I should not be able to do so now. For
                    this day, O Romans (that you may not think it is but a trifling business in
                    which we have been engaged), the foundations have been laid for future actions.
                    For the senate has no longer been content with styling Antonius an enemy in
                    words, but it has shown by actions that it thinks him one. <milestone n="2" unit="section"/> And now I am much more elated still, because you too with
                    such great unanimity and with such a clamor have sanctioned our declaration that
                    he is an enemy. </p><p>And indeed, O Romans, it is impossible but that either the men must be impious
                    who have levied armies against the consul, or else that he must be an enemy
                    against whom they have rightly taken arms. And this doubt the senate has this
                    day removed—not indeed that there really was any; but it has prevented
                    the possibility of there being any. Caius Caesar, who has upheld and who is
                    still upholding the republic and your freedom by his zeal and wisdom, and at the
                    expense of his patrimonial estate, has been complimented with the highest
                    praises of the senate. <milestone n="3" unit="section"/>
               </p><p>I praise you,—yes, I praise you greatly, O Romans, when you follow with
                    the most grateful minds the name of that most illustrious youth, or rather boy;
                    for his actions belong to immortality, the name of youth only to his age. I can
                    recollect many things; I have heard of many things; I have read of many things;
                    but in the whole history of the whole world I have never known any thing like
                    this. For, when we were weighed down with slavery, when the evil was daily
                    increasing, when we had no defense, while we were in dread of the pernicious and
                    fatal return of Marcus Antonius from <placeName key="perseus,Brundusium">Brundusium</placeName>, this young man adopted the design which none of us
                    had ventured to hope for, which beyond all question none of us were acquainted
                    with, of raising an invincible army of his father's soldiers, and so hindering
                    the frenzy of Antonius, spurred on as it was by the most inhuman counsels, from
                    the power of doing mischief to the republic. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="2"><p><milestone n="4" unit="section"/></p><p>For who is there who does not see clearly that, if Caesar had not prepared an
                    army, the return of Antonius must have been accompanied by our destruction? For,
                    in truth, he returned in such a state of mind, burning with hatred of you all,
                    stained with the blood of the Roman citizens, whom he had murdered at Suessa and
                    at <placeName key="perseus,Brundusium">Brundusium</placeName>, that he thought
                    of nothing but the utter destruction of the republic. And what protection could
                    have been found for your safety and for your liberty if the army of Caius Caesar
                    had not been composed of the bravest of his father's soldiers? And with respect
                    to his praises and honors,—and he is entitled to divine and
                    everlasting honors for his godlike and undying services,—the senate
                    has just consented to my proposals, and has decreed that a motion be submitted
                    to it at the very earliest opportunity. <milestone n="5" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>Now who is there who does not see that by this decree Antonius has been adjudged
                    to be an enemy? For what else can we call him, when the senate decides that
                    extraordinary honors are to be devised for those men who are leading armies
                    against him? What? did not the Martial legion (which appears to me by some
                    divine permission to have derived its name from that god from whom we have heard
                    that the Roman people descended) decide by its resolutions that Antonius was an
                    enemy before the senate had come to any resolution? For if he be not an enemy,
                    we must inevitably decide that those men who have deserted the consul are
                    enemies. Admirably and seasonably, O Romans, have you by your cries sanctioned
                    the noble conduct of the men of the Martial legion, who have come over to the
                    authority of the senate, to your liberty, and to the whole republic; and have
                    abandoned that enemy and robber and parricide of his country. <milestone n="6" unit="section"/> Nor did they display only their spirit and courage in doing
                    this, but their caution and wisdom also. They encamped at Alba, in a city
                    convenient, fortified, near, full of brave men and loyal and virtuous citizens.
                    The fourth legion imitating the virtue of this Martial legion, under the
                    leadership of Lucius. Egnatuleius, whom the senate deservedly praised a little
                    while ago, has also joined the army of Caius Caesar. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="3"><p>
               </p><p>What more adverse decisions, O Marcus Antonius, can you want? Caesar, who has
                    levied an army against you, is extolled to the skies. The legions are praised in
                    the most complimentary language, which have abandoned you, which were sent for
                    into <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName> by you; and which, if you
                    had chosen to be a consul rather than an enemy, were wholly devoted to you. And
                    the fearless and honest decision of those legions is confirmed by the senate, is
                    approved of by the whole Roman people,—unless, indeed, you today, O
                    Romans, decide that Antonius is a consul and not an enemy. <milestone n="7" unit="section"/> I thought, O Romans, that you did think as you show you do.
                    What? do you suppose that the municipal towns, and the colonies, and the
                    prefectures have any other opinion? All men are agreed with one mind; so that
                    every one who wishes the state to be saved must take up every sort of arms
                    against that pestilence. What? does, I should like to know, does the opinion of
                    Decimus Brutus, O Romans, which you can gather from his edict, which has this
                    day reached us, appear to any one deserving of being lightly esteemed? Rightly
                    and truly do you say No, O Romans. For the family and name of Brutus has been by
                    some especial kindness and liberality of the immortal gods given to the
                    republic, for the purpose of at one time establishing, and at another of
                    recovering, the liberty of the Roman people. <milestone n="8" unit="section"/>
                    What then has been the opinion which Decimus Brutus has formed of Marcus
                    Antonius? He excludes him from his province. He opposes him with his army. He
                    rouses all <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName> to war, which is
                    already roused of its own accord, and in consequence of the judgment which it
                    has itself formed. If Antonius be consul, Brutus is an enemy. Can we then doubt
                    which of these alternatives is the fact? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="4"><p>
               </p><p>And just as you now with one mind and one voice affirm that you entertain no
                    doubt, so did the senate just now decree that Decimus Brutus deserved
                    excellently well of the republic, inasmuch as he was defending the authority of
                    the senate and the liberty and empire of the Roman people. Defending it against
                    whom? Why, against an enemy. For what other sort of defense deserves praise?
                        <milestone n="9" unit="section"/> In the next place the province of
                        <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName> is praised, and is deservedly
                    complimented in most honorable language by the senate for resisting Antonius.
                    But if that province considered him the consul, and still refused to receive
                    him, it would be guilty of great wickedness. For all the provinces belong to the
                    consul of right, and are bound to obey him. Decimus Brutus, <foreign xml:lang="lat">imperator</foreign> and consul elect, a citizen born for the republic,
                    denies that he is consul; <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName> denies
                    it; all <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName> denies it; the senate
                    denies it; you deny it. Who then thinks that he is consul except a few robbers?
                    Although even they themselves do not believe what they say; nor is it possible
                    that they should differ from the judgment of all men, impious and desperate men
                    though they be. But the hope of plunder and booty blinds their minds men whom no
                    gifts of money, no allotment of land nor even that interminable auction has
                    satisfied; who have proposed to themselves the city, the properties and fortunes
                    of all the citizens as their booty; and who, as long as there is something for
                    them to seize and carry off, think that nothing will be wanting to them;
                        <milestone n="10" unit="section"/> among whom Marcus Antonius (O ye immortal
                    gods, avert, I pray you, and efface this omen), has promised to divide this
                    city. May things rather happen O Romans as you pray that they should, and may
                    the chastisement of this frenzy fall on him and on his friend. And, indeed, I
                    feel sure that it will be so. For I think that at present not only men but the
                    immortal gods have all united together to preserve this republic. For if the
                    immortal gods foreshow us the future, by means of portents and prodigies then it
                    has been openly revealed to us that punishment is near at hand to him, and
                    liberty to us. Or if it was impossible for such unanimity on the part of all men
                    to exist without the inspiration of the gods, in either case how can we doubt as
                    to the indications of the heavenly deities? </p><p>It only remains, O Romans, for you to persevere in the sentiments which you at
                    present display. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="5"><p><milestone n="11" unit="section"/></p><p>I will act, therefore, as commanders are in the habit of doing when their army is
                    ready for battle, who, although they see their soldiers ready to engage, still
                    address an exhortation to them; and in like manner I will exhort you who are
                    already eager and burning to recover your liberty. You have not—you
                    have not, indeed, O Romans, to war against an enemy with whom it is possible to
                    make peace on any terms whatever. For he does not now desire your slavery, as he
                    did before, but he is angry now and thirsts for your blood. No sport appears
                    more delightful to him than bloodshed, and slaughter, and the massacre of
                    citizens before his eyes. <milestone n="12" unit="section"/> You have not, O
                    Romans, to deal with a wicked and profligate man, but with an unnatural and
                    savage beast. And, since he has fallen into a well, let him be buried in it. For
                    if he escapes out of it, there will be no inhumanity of torture which it will be
                    possible to avoid. But he is at present hemmed in, pressed, and besieged by
                    those troops which we already have, and will soon be still more so by those
                    which in a few days the new consuls will levy. Apply yourselves then to this
                    business, as you are doing. Never have you shown greater unanimity in any cause;
                    never have you been so cordially united with the senate. And no wonder. For the
                    question now is not in what condition we are to live, but whether we are to live
                    at all, or to perish with torture and ignominy. <milestone n="13" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>Although nature, indeed, has appointed death for all men: but valor is accustomed
                    to ward off any cruelty or disgrace in death. And that is an inalienable
                    possession of the Roman race and name. Preserve, I beseech you, O Romans, this
                    attribute which your ancestors have left you as a sort of inheritance. Although
                    all other things are uncertain, fleeting, transitory; virtue alone is planted
                    firm with very deep roots; it can not be undermined by any violence; it can
                    never be moved from its position. By it your ancestors first subdued the whole
                    of <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>; then destroyed <placeName key="perseus,Carthage">Carthage</placeName>, overthrew <placeName key="tgn,7017511">Numantia</placeName>, and reduced the most mighty kings
                    and most warlike nations under the dominion of this empire. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="6"><p><milestone n="14" unit="section"/></p><p>And your ancestors, O Romans, had to deal with an enemy who had also a republic,
                    a senate-house, a treasury, harmonious and united citizens, and with whom, if
                    fortune had so willed it, there might have been peace and treaties on settled
                    principles. But this enemy of yours is attacking your republic, but has none
                    himself; is eager to destroy the senate, that is to say, the council of the
                    whole world, but has no public council himself; he has exhausted your treasury,
                    and has none of his own. For how can a man be supported by the unanimity of his
                    citizens, who has no city at all? And what principles of peace can there be with
                    that man who is full of incredible cruelty, and destitute of faith? <milestone n="15" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>The whole then of the contest, O Romans, which is now before the Roman people,
                    the conqueror of all nations, is with an assassin, a robber, a Spartacus.<note anchored="true">Spartacus was the general of the gladiators and slaves in the
                        Servile war.</note> For as to his habitual boast of being like Catilina, he
                    is equal to him in wickedness, but inferior in energy. He, though he had no
                    army, rapidly levied one. This man has lost that very army which he had. As,
                    therefore, by my diligence, and the authority of the senate, and your own zeal
                    and valor, you crushed Catilina, so you will very soon hear that this infamous
                    piratical enterprise of Antonius has been put down by your own perfect and
                    unexampled harmony with the senate, and by the good fortune and valor of your
                    armies and generals. <milestone n="16" unit="section"/> I, for my part, as far
                    as I am able to labor, and to effect any thing by my care, and exertions, and
                    vigilance, and authority, and counsel, will omit nothing which I may think
                    serviceable to your liberty. Nor could I omit it without wickedness after all
                    your most ample and honorable kindness to me. However, on this day, encouraged
                    by the motion of a most gallant man, and one most firmly attached to you, Marcus
                    Servilius, whom you see before you, and his colleagues also, most distinguished
                    men, and most virtuous citizens; and partly, too, by my advice and my example,
                    we have, for the first time after a long interval, fired up again with a hope of
                    liberty.</p></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>