<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi035.perseus-eng1:7.arg-7.9</requestUrn>
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            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi035.perseus-eng1:7.arg-7.9</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="7" subtype="speech"><div type="textpart" subtype="argument" n="arg"><head>THE ARGUMENT.</head><p>After the senate had decided on sending them, the ambassadors immediately set
                        out, though Servius Sulpicius was in a very bad state of health. In the
                        meantime the partisans of Antonius in the city, with Calenus at their head,
                        were endeavoring to gain over the rest of the citizens, by representing him
                        as eager for an accommodation and they kept up a correspondence with him,
                        and published such of his letters as they thought favorable for their views.
                        Matters being in this state, Cicero, at an ordinary meeting of the senate,
                        made the following speech to counteract the machinations of this party and
                        to warn the citizens generally of the danger of being deluded by them.</p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="1"><milestone n="1" unit="section"/><p>We are consulted to day about matters of small importance, but still perhaps
                    necessary, O conscript fathers. The consul submits a motion to us about the
                    Appian road and about the coinage; the tribune of the people one about the
                    Luperci. And although it seems easy to settle such matters as those, still my
                    mind can not fix itself on such subjects, being anxious about more important
                    matters. For our affairs, O conscript fathers, are come to a crisis, and are in
                    a state of almost extreme danger. It is not without reason that I have always
                    feared and never approved of that sending of ambassadors. And what their return
                    is to bring us I know not; but who is there who does not see with how much
                    languor the expectation of it infects our minds? For those men put no restraint
                    on themselves who knew that the senate has revived so as to entertain hopes of
                    its former authority, and that the Roman people is united to this our order;
                    that all <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName> is animated by one
                    common feeling; that armies are prepared, and generals ready for the armies;
                        <milestone n="2" unit="section"/> even already they are inventing replies
                    for Antonius and defending them. Some pretend that his demand is that all the
                    armies be disbanded. I suppose then we sent ambassadors to him, not that he
                    should submit and obey this our body, but that he should offer us conditions,
                    impose laws upon us, order us to open <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName> to foreign nations; especially while we were to leave him
                    in safety from whom there is more danger to be feared than from any nation
                    whatever. <milestone n="3" unit="section"/> Others say that he is willing to
                    give up the nearer <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName> to us, and that
                    he will be satisfied with the farther <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>. Very kind of him! in order that from thence be may
                    endeavor to bring not merely legions, but even nations against this city. Others
                    say that he makes no demands now but such as are quite moderate. <placeName key="tgn,7006667">Macedonia</placeName> he calls absolutely his own, since
                    it was from thence that his brother Caius was recalled. But what province is
                    there in which that fire-brand may not kindle a conflagration? Therefore those
                    same men like provident citizens and diligent senators, say that I have sounded
                    the charge, and they undertake the advocacy of peace. Is not this the way in
                    which they argue? “Antonius ought not to have been irritated; he is a
                    reckless and a bold man; there are many bad men besides him.” (No
                    doubt, and they may begin and count themselves first.) And they warn us to be on
                    our guard against them. Which conduct then is it which shows the more prudent
                    caution; chastising wicked citizens when one is able to do so, or fearing them?
                        </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="2"><p><milestone n="4" unit="section"/></p><p>And these men speak in this way, who on account of their trifling disposition
                    used to be considered friends of the people. From which it may be understood
                    that they in their hearts have at all times been disinclined to a good
                    constitution of the state, and they were not friends of the people from
                    inclination. For how comes it to pass that those men who were anxious to gratify
                    the people in evil things, now, on an occasion which above all others concerns
                    the people's interests, because the same thing would be also salutary for the
                    republic, now prefer being wicked to being friends of the people? <milestone n="5" unit="section"/> This noble cause of which I am the advocate has made
                    me popular, a man who (as you know) has always opposed the rashness of the
                    people. And those men are called, or rather they call themselves, consulars;
                    though no man is worthy of that name except those who can support so high an
                    honor. Will you favor an enemy? Will you let him send you letters about his
                    hopes of success? Will you be glad to produce them? to read them? Will you even
                    give them to wicked citizens to take copies of? Will you thus raise their
                    courage? Will you thus damp the hopes and valor of the good? And then will you
                    think yourself a consular, or a senator, or even a citizen! Caius Pansa, a most
                    fearless and virtuous consul, will take what I say in good part. For I will
                    speak with a disposition most friendly to him; but I should not consider him
                    himself a consul, though a man with whom I am most intimate, unless he was such
                    a consul as to devote all his vigilance, and cares, and thoughts to the safety
                    of the republic. <milestone n="6" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>Although long acquaintance, and habit, and a fellowship and resemblance in the
                    most honorable pursuits, has bound us together from his first entrance into
                    life; and his incredible diligence, proved at the time of the most formidable
                    dangers of the civil war, showed that he was a favorer not only of my safety,
                    but also of my dignity; still as I said before if he were not such a consul as I
                    have described, I should venture to deny that he was a consul at all. But now I
                    call him not only a consul but the most excellent and virtuous consul within my
                    recollection; not but that there have been others of equal virtue and equal
                    inclination, but still they have not had an equal opportunity of displaying the
                    virtue and inclination. <milestone n="7" unit="section"/> But the opportunity of
                    a time of most formidable change has been afforded to his magnanimity and
                    dignity and wisdom. And that is the time when the consulship is displayed to the
                    greatest advantage when it governs the republic during a time which if not
                    desirable is at all events critical and momentous. And a more critical time than
                    the present, O conscript father, never was. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="3"><p>
               </p><p>Therefore I who have been at all times an adviser of peace, and who, though all
                    good men was considered peace and especially internal peace, desirable, have
                    considered it more than all of them;—for the whole of career of my
                    industry has been passed in the forum and in the senate-house and in warding off
                    dangers from my friends. It is by this course that I have arrived at the highest
                    honors, at moderate wealth, and at any dignity which we may be thought to have:
                        <milestone n="8" unit="section"/> I therefore, a nursling of peace, as I may
                    call myself, I who, whatever I am (for I arrogate nothing to myself), should
                    undoubtedly not have been such without internal peace: I am speaking in peril: I
                    shudder to think how you will receive it, O conscript fathers; but still, out of
                    regard for my unceasing desire to support and increase your dignity, I beg and
                    entreat you, O conscript fathers, although it may be a bitter thing to hear, or
                    an incredible thing that it should be said by Marcus Cicero, still to receive at
                    first, without offense, what I am going to say, and not to reject it before I
                    have fully explained what it is. I, who, I will say so over and over again, have
                    always been a panegyrist, have always been an adviser of peace, do not wish to
                    have peace with Marcus Antonius. I approach the rest of my speech with great
                    hope, O conscript fathers, since I have now passed by that perilous point amid
                    your silence. </p><p><milestone n="9" unit="section"/> Why then do I not wish for peace? Because it
                    would be shameful; because it would be dangerous; because it can not possibly be
                    real. And while I explain these three points to you, I beg of you, O conscript
                    fathers, to listen to my words with the same kindness which you usually show to
                    me. </p><p>What is more shameful than inconsistency, fickleness, and levity, both to
                    individuals, and also to the entire senate? Moreover, what can be more
                    inconsistent than on a sudden to be willing to be united in peace with a man
                    whom you have lately adjudged to be an enemy, not by words, but by actions and
                    by many formal decrees? <milestone n="10" unit="section"/> Unless, indeed, when
                    you were decreeing honors to Caius Caesar, well deserved indeed by and fairly
                    due to him, but still unprecedented and never to be forgotten, for one single
                    reason,—because he had levied an army against Marcus
                    Antonius,—you were not judging Marcus Antonius to be an enemy; and
                    unless. Antonius was not pronounced an enemy by you, when the veteran soldiers
                    were praised by your authority, for having followed Caesar; and unless you did
                    not declare Antonius an enemy when you promised exemptions and money and lands
                    to those brave legions, because they had deserted him who was consul while he
                    was an enemy. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="4"><p><milestone n="11" unit="section"/></p><p>What? when you distinguished with the highest praises Brutus, a man born under
                    some omen, as it were, of his race and name, for the deliverance of the
                    republic, and his army which was waging war against Antonius on behalf of the
                    liberty of the Roman people, and the most loyal and admirable province of
                        <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, did you not then pronounce
                    Antonius an enemy? What? when you decreed that the consuls, one or both of them,
                    should go to the war, what war was there if Antonius was not an enemy?
                        <milestone n="12" unit="section"/> Why then was it that most gallant man, my
                    own colleague and intimate friend, Aulus Hirtius the consul, has set out? And in
                    what delicate health he is; how wasted away! But the weak state of his body
                    could not repress the vigor of his mind. He thought it fair, I suppose, to
                    expose to danger in defense of the Roman people that life which had been
                    preserved to him by their prayers. <milestone n="13" unit="section"/> What? when
                    you ordered levies of troops to be made throughout all <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>, when you suspended all exemptions from
                    service, was he not by those steps declared to be an enemy? You see
                    manufactories of arms in the city; soldiers, sword in hand, are following the
                    consul; they are in appearance a guard to the consul, but in fact and reality to
                    us; all men are giving in their names, not only without any shirking, but with
                    the greatest eagerness; they are acting in obedience to your authority. Has not
                    Antonius been declared an enemy by such acts? <milestone n="14" unit="section"/>
               </p><p>“Oh, but we have sent ambassadors to him.” Alas, wretched
                    that I am! why am I compelled to find fault with the senate whom I have always
                    praised? Why? Do you think, O conscript fathers that you have induced the Roman
                    people to approve of the sending ambassadors? Do you not perceive, do you not
                    hear that the adoption of my opinion is demanded by them? that opinion which
                    you, in a full house, agreed to the day before, though the day after you allowed
                    yourselves to be brought down to a groundless hope of peace. Moreover, how
                    shameful it is for the legions to send out ambassadors to the senate, and the
                    senate to Antonius! Although that is not an embassy; it is a denunciation that
                    destruction is prepared for him if he does not submit to this order. What is the
                    difference? At all events, men's opinions are unfavorable to the measure; for
                    all men see that ambassadors have been sent, but it is not all who are
                    acquainted with the terms of your decree. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="5"><p>
               </p><p>You must, therefore, preserve your consistency, your wisdom, your firmness, your
                    perseverance. You must go back to the old-fashioned severity, if at least the
                    authority of the senate is anxious to establish its credit, its honor, its
                    renown, and its dignity, things which this order has been too long deprived of.
                    But there was some time ago some excuse for it, as being oppressed; a miserable
                    excuse indeed, but still a fair one; now there is none. We appeared to have been
                    delivered from kingly tyranny; and afterward we were oppressed much more
                    severely by domestic enemies. We did indeed turn their arms aside; we must now
                    wrest them from their hands. And if we can not do so (I will say what it becomes
                    one who is both a senator and a Roman to say), let us die. <milestone n="15" unit="section"/> For how just will be the shame, how great will be the
                    disgrace, how great the infamy to the republic, if Marcus Antonius can deliver
                    his opinion in this assembly from the consular bench. For, to say nothing of the
                    countless acts of wickedness committed by him while consul in the city, during
                    which time he has squandered a vast amount of public money, restored exiles
                    without any law, sold our revenues to all sorts of people, removed provinces
                    from the empire of the Roman people, given men kingdoms for bribes, imposed laws
                    on the city by violence, besieged the senate, and, at other times, excluded it
                    from the senate-house by force of arms;—to say nothing, I say, of all
                    this, do you not consider this, that he who has attacked <placeName key="perseus,Mutina">Mutina</placeName>, a most powerful colony of the Roman
                    people—who has besieged a general of the Roman people, who is consul
                    elect—who has laid waste the lands,—do you not consider, I
                    say, how shameful and iniquitous a thing it would be for that man to be received
                    into this order, by which he has been so repeatedly pronounced an enemy for
                    these very reasons? <milestone n="16" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>I have said enough of the shamefulness of such a proceeding; I will now speak
                    next, as I proposed, of the danger of it; which, although it is not so important
                    to avoid as shame, still offends the minds of the greater part of mankind even
                    more. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="6"><p>
               </p><p>Will it then be possible for you to rely on the certainty of any peace, when you
                    see Antonius, or rather the Antonii, in the city? Unless, indeed, you despise
                    Lucius: I do not despise even Caius. But, as I think, Lucius will be the
                    dominant spirit,—for he is the patron of the five-and-thirty tribes,
                    whose votes he took away by his law, by which he divided the magistracies in
                    conjunction with Caius Caesar. He is the patron of the centuries of the Roman
                    knights, which also he thought fit to deprive of the suffrages: he is the patron
                    of the men who have been military tribunes; he is the patron of the middle of
                    Janus. <milestone n="17" unit="section"/> O ye gods! who will he able to support
                    this man's power? especially when he has brought all his dependents into the
                    lands. Who ever was the patron of all the tribes? and of the Roman knights? and
                    of the military tribunes? Do you think that the power of even the Gracchi was
                    greater than that of this gladiator will be? whom I have called gladiator, not
                    in the sense in which sometimes Marcus. Antonius too is called gladiator, but as
                    men call him who are speaking plain Latin. He has fought in <placeName key="tgn,1000004">Asia</placeName> as a mirmillo. After having equipped his
                    own companion and intimate friend in the armor of a Thracian, he slew the
                    miserable man as he was flying; but he himself received a palpable wound, as the
                    scar proves. </p><p><milestone n="18" unit="section"/> What will the man who murdered his friend in
                    this way, when he has an opportunity, do to an enemy? and if he did such a thing
                    as this for the fun of the thing, what do you think he will do when tempted by
                    the hope of plunder? Will he not again meet wicked men in the decuries? will he
                    not again tamper with those men who have received lands? will he not again seek
                    those who have been banished? will he not, in short, be Marcus Antonius; to
                    whom, on the occasion of every commotion, there will be a rush of all profligate
                    citizens? Even if there be no one else except those who are with him now, and
                    these who in this body now openly speak in his favor, will they be too small in
                    number? especially when all the protection which we might have had from good men
                    is lost, and when those men are prepared to obey his nod? But I am afraid, if at
                    this time we fail to adopt wise counsels, that that party will in a short time
                    appear too numerous for us. <milestone n="19" unit="section"/> Nor have I any
                    dislike to peace; only I do dread war disguised under the name of peace.
                    Wherefore, if we wish to enjoy peace we must first wage war. If we shrink from
                    war, peace we shall never have. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="7"><p>
               </p><p>But it becomes your prudence, O conscript fathers, to provide as far forward as
                    possible for posterity. That is the object for which we were placed in this
                    garrison, and as it were on this watch-tower; that by our vigilance and
                    foresight we might keep the Roman people free from fear. It would be a shameful
                    thing, especially in so clear a case as this, for it to be notorious that wisdom
                    was wanting to the chief council of the whole world. <milestone n="20" unit="section"/> We have such consuls, there is such eagerness on the part
                    of the Roman people, we have such a unanimous feeling of all <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName> in our favor, such generals, and such
                    armies, that the republic cannot possibly suffer any disaster without the senate
                    being in fault. I, for my part, will not be wanting. I will warn you, I will
                    forewarn you, I will give you notice, I will call gods and men to witness what I
                    do really believe. Nor will I display my good faith alone, which perhaps may
                    seem to be enough, but which in a chief citizen is not enough; I will exert all
                    my care, and prudence, and vigilance. </p><p>I have spoken about danger. I will now proceed to prove to you that it is not
                    possible for peace to be firmly cemented; for of the propositions which I
                    promised to establish this is the last. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="8"><p><milestone n="21" unit="section"/></p><p>What peace can there be between Marcus Antonius and (in the first, place) the
                    senate? with what face will he be able to look upon you, and with what eyes will
                    you, in turn, look upon him? Which of you does not hate him? which of you does
                    not he hate? Come, are you the only people who hate him, and whom he hates?
                    What? what do you think of those men who are besieging Mutina, who are levying
                    troops in <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, who are threatening
                    your fortunes? will they ever be friends to you, or you to them? will he embrace
                    the Roman knights? For, suppose their inclinations respecting, and their
                    opinions of Antonius were very much concealed, when they stood in crowds on the
                    steps of the temple of Concord, when they stimulated you to endeavor to recover
                    your liberty, when they demanded arms, the robe of war, and war, and who, with
                    the Roman people, invited me to meet in the assembly of the people, will these
                    men ever become friends to Antonius? will Antonius ever maintain peace with
                    them? <milestone n="22" unit="section"/> For why should I speak of the whole
                    Roman people? which, in a full and crowded forum, twice, with one heart and one
                    voice, summoned me into the assembly, and plainly showed their excessive
                    eagerness for the recovery of their liberty. So, desirable as it was before to
                    have the Roman people for our comrade, we now have it for our leader. </p><p>What hope then is there that there ever can be peace between the Roman people and
                    the men who are besieging <placeName key="perseus,Mutina">Mutina</placeName> and
                    attacking a general and army of the Roman people? <milestone n="23" unit="section"/> Will there be peace with the municipal towns, whose great
                    zeal is shown by the decrees which they pass, by the soldiers whom they furnish,
                    by the sums which they promise, so that in each town there is such a spirit as
                    leaves no one room to wish for a senate of the Roman people? The men of Firmium
                    deserve to be praised by a resolution of our order, who set the first example of
                    promising money; we ought to return a complimentary answer to the Marrucini, who
                    have passed a vote that all who evade military service are to be branded with
                    infamy. These measures are adopted all over <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>. There is great peace between Antonius and these men, and
                    between them and him! What greater discord can there possibly be? And in discord
                    civil peace can not by any possibility exist. <milestone n="24" unit="section"/>
                    To say nothing of the mob, look at Lucius Visidius, a Roman knight, a man of the
                    very highest accomplishments and honor, a citizen always eminent, whose
                    watchfulness and exertions for the protection of my life I felt in my
                    consulship; who not only exhorted his neighbors to become soldiers, but also
                    assisted them from his own resources; will it be possible ever to reconcile
                    Antonius to such a man as this, a man whom we ought to praise by a formal
                    resolution of the senate? What? will it be possible to reconcile him to Caius
                    Caesar, who prevented him from entering the city, or to Decimus Brutus, who has
                    refused him entrance into <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>?
                        <milestone n="25" unit="section"/> Moreover, will he reconcile himself to,
                    or look mercifully on the province of <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>, by which he has been excluded and rejected? You will see
                    every thing, O conscript fathers, if you do not take care, full of hatred and
                    full of discord, from which civil wars arise. Do not then desire that which is
                    impossible; and beware, I entreat you by the immortal gods, O conscript fathers,
                    that out of hope of present peace you do not lose perpetual peace. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="chapter" n="9"><p><milestone n="26" unit="section"/></p><p>What now is the object of this oration? For we do not yet know what the
                    ambassadors have done. But still we ought to be awake, erect, prepared, armed in
                    our minds, so as not to be deceived by any civil or supplicatory language, or by
                    any pretense of justice. He must have complied with all the prohibitions and all
                    the commands which we have sent him, before he can demand any thing. He must
                    have desisted from attacking Brutus and his army, and from plundering the cities
                    and lands of the province of <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>; he
                    must have permitted the ambassadors to go to Brutus, and led his army back on
                    this side of the Rubicon, and yet not come within two hundred miles of this
                    city. He must have submitted himself to the power of the senate and of the Roman
                    people. If he does this, then we shall have an opportunity of deliberating
                    without any decision being forced upon us either way. If he does not obey the
                    senate, then it will not be the senate that declares war against him, but he who
                    will have declared it against the senate. <milestone n="27" unit="section"/>
                </p><p>But I warn you, O conscript fathers, the liberty of the Roman people, which is
                    entrusted to you, is at stake. The life and fortune of every virtuous man is at
                    stake, against which Antonius has long been directing his insatiable
                    covetousness, united to his savage cruelty. Your authority is at stake, which
                    you will wholly lose if you do not maintain it now. Beware how you let that foul
                    and deadly beast escape now that you have got him confined and chained. You too,
                    Pansa, I warn (although you do not need counsel, for you have plenty of wisdom
                    yourself: but still, even the most skillful pilots receive often warnings from
                    the passengers in terrible storms.), not to allow this vast and noble
                    preparation which you have made to fall away to nothing. You have such an
                    opportunity as no one ever had. It is in your power so to avail yourself of this
                    wise firmness of the senate, of this zeal of the equestrian order, of this ardor
                    of the Roman people, as to release the Roman people from fear and danger
                    forever. As to the matters to which your motion before the senate refers, I
                    agree with Publius Servilius.</p></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
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