he had as a Senate, and these were Romans, and were
carrying on business in Libya as merchants and money-lenders,
should assemble at the temple of Jupiter, and also
all the Roman senators who were present and their
sons. While they were still assembling, Cato
advanced, without hurry and with a tranquil countenance,
as if nothing new had happened, holding a book in
his hand, which he was reading; and this was a register
of the military engines, arms, corn, bows, and legionary
soldiers. When they had come together, beginning
with the three hundred, and commending at some length
the zeal and fidelity which they had displayed in
aiding with their means and persons and advice, he
exhorted them not to let their hopes be destroyed,
and not severally to provide for their flight or escape.
For, he said, that if they would keep together, Caesar
would despise them less if they made resistance, and
would spare them more if they asked his mercy.
And he urged them to deliberate about themselves,
and that he would not find fault with their deciding
either way, and if they should be disposed to turn
to the fortunate side, he should attribute the change
to necessity; but if they preferred to oppose the
danger and to undertake the hazard in defence of liberty,
he should not only commend them, but admire their
virtue, and make himself their commander and fellow-combatant,
till they had tried the last fortune of their country,
which was not Utica or Adrumetum only, but Rome, that
had often by her might recovered from greater falls.
And they had many grounds for safety and security;
and chief of all, that they were warring against a
man who was pulled in many directions by the circumstances
of the times, for Iberia had gone over to Pompeius
the young, and Rome herself had not yet altogether
received the bit for want of being used to it, but
was impatient of suffering and ready to rise up collected
upon every change, and danger was not a thing to fly
from, but they should take as a pattern the enemy,
who was not sparing of his life for accomplishing
the greatest wrongs, and for whom the uncertainty
of the war had not the same result as for them, to
whom it would bring the happiest life, if they were
successful, and the most glorious death if they failed.
However, he said they ought to deliberate by themselves,
and he joined them in praying that in consideration
of their former virtue and zeal what they resolved
might be for the best.
LX. When Cato had spoken to this effect, some of them indeed were brought to confidence by his words; but the greater part seeing his fearlessness and noble and generous temper, nearly forgot present circumstances, and considering him alone as an invincible leader and superior to all fortune, prayed him to use their persons and property and arms as he judged best, for they said it was better to die in obedience to him than to save their lives by betraying such virtue. On a certain person observing that they should declare