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.
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?

“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 do not submit to this order.  What is the difference?  At all events, men’s opinions are unfavourable 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.

V. 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 honour, 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 afterwards 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 cannot do so, (I will say what it becomes one who is both a senator and a Roman to say,) let us die.  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 Mutina, 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?

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