The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 784 pages of information about The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 4.

The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 4 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 784 pages of information about The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 4.

Have not I also at all times pronounced Ventidius an enemy, when others wished to call him a tribune of the people?  If the consuls had chosen to divide the senate on my opinion, their arms would long since have been wrested from the hands of all those robbers by the positive authority of the senate.

VIII.  But what could not be done then, O conscript fathers, at present not only can be, but even must be done.  I mean, those men who are in reality enemies must be branded in plain language, must be declared enemies by our formal resolution.  Formerly, when I used the words War or Enemy, men more than once objected to record my proposition among the other propositions.  But that cannot be done on the present occasion.  For in consequence of the letters of Caius Pansa and Aulus Hirtius, the consuls, and of Caius Caesar, propraetor, we have all voted that honours be paid to the immortal gods.  The very man who lately proposed and carried a vote for a supplication, without intending it pronounced those men enemies; for a supplication has never been decreed for success in civil war.  Decreed, do I say?  It has never even been asked for in the letters of the conqueror.  Sylla as consul carried on a civil war; he led his legions into the city and expelled whomsoever he chose; he slew those whom he had in his power:  there was no mention made of any supplication.  The violent war with Octavius followed.  Cinna the conqueror had no supplication voted to him.  Sylla as imperator revenged the victory of Cinna, still no supplication was decreed by the senate.  I ask you yourself, O Publius Servilius, did your colleague send you any letters concerning that most lamentable battle of Pharsalia?  Did he wish you to make any motion about a supplication?  Certainly not.  But he did afterwards when he took Alexandria; when he defeated Pharnaces; but for the battle of Pharsalia he did not even celebrate a triumph.  For that battle had destroyed those citizens whose, I will not say lives, but even whose victory might have been quite compatible with the safety and prosperity of the state.  And the same thing had happened in the previous civil wars.  For though a supplication was decreed in my honour when I was consul, though no arms had been had recourse to at all, still that was voted by a new and wholly unprecedented kind of decree, not for the slaughter of enemies, but for the preservation of the citizens.  Wherefore, a supplication on account of the affairs of the republic having been successfully conducted must, O conscript fathers, be refused by you even though your generals demand it; a stigma which has never been affixed on any one except Gabinius; or else, by the mere fact of decreeing a supplication, it is quite inevitable that you must pronounce those men, for whose defeat you do decree it, enemies of the state.

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The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 4 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.