the ambassadors to come to him again.”
When the result of this embassy was made known, such
general lamentation suddenly arose, and such melancholy
took possession of them, that had they been told that
all were to die on the spot, they could not have felt
deeper affliction. After silence continued a
long time, and the consuls were not able to utter a
word, either in favour of a treaty so disgraceful,
or against a treaty so necessary; at length, Lucius
Lentulus, who was the first among the lieutenants-general,
both in respect of bravery, and of the public honours
which he had attained, addressed them thus: “Consuls,
I have often heard my father say, that he was the
only person in the Capitol who did not advise the
senate to ransom the state from the Gauls with gold;
and these he would not concur in, because they had
not been enclosed with a trench and rampart by the
enemy, (who were remarkably slothful with respect
to works and raising fortifications,) and because
they might sally forth, if not without great danger,
yet without certain destruction. Now if, in like
manner as they had it in their power to run down from
the Capitol in arms against their foe, as men besieged
have often sallied out on the besiegers, it were possible
for us to come to blows with the enemy, either on equal
or unequal ground, I would not be wanting in the high
quality of my father’s spirit in stating my
advice. I acknowledge, indeed, that death, in
defence of our country, is highly glorious; and I am
ready, either to devote myself for the Roman people
and the legions, or to plunge into the midst of the
enemy. But in this spot I behold my country:
in this spot, the whole of the Roman legions, and
unless these choose to rush on death in defence of
their own individual characters, what have they which
can be preserved by their death? The houses of
the city, some may say, and the walls of it, and the
crowd who dwell in it, by which the city is inhabited.
But in fact, in case of the destruction of this army,
all these are betrayed, not preserved. For who
will protect them? An unwarlike and unarmed multitude,
shall I suppose? Yes, just as they defended them
against the attack of the Gauls. Will they call
to their succour an army from Veii, with Camillus at
its head? Here on the spot, I repeat, are all
our hopes and strength; by preserving which, we preserve
our country; by delivering them up to death, we abandon
and betray our country. But a surrender is shameful
and ignominious. True: but such ought to
be our affection for our country, that we should save
it by our own disgrace, if necessity required, as
freely as by our death. Let therefore that indignity
be undergone, how great soever, and let us submit
to that necessity which even the gods themselves do
not overcome. Go, consuls, ransom the state for
arms, which your ancestors ransomed with gold.”