登陆注册
15428800000026

第26章 To P.LENTTJLUS SPINTHER (IN CILICIA)(3)

And these same persons,in the case of the monument,which was not mine,indeed--for it was not erected from the proceeds of spoils won by me,and I had nothing to do with it beyond giving out the contract for its construction--well,they allowed this monument of the senate's to have branded upon it the name of a public enemy,and an inscription written in blood.That those men wished my safety rouses my liveliest gratitude,but I could have wished that they had not chosen to take my bare safety into consideration,like doctors,but,like trainers,my strength and complexion also!As it is,just as Apelles perfected the head and bust of his Venus with the most elaborate art,but left the rest of her body in the rough,so certain persons only took pains with my head,and left the rest of my body unfinished and unworked.Yet in this matter I have falsified the expectation,not only of the jealous,but also of the downright hostile,who formerly conceived a wrong opinion from the case of Quintus Metellus,son of Lucius--the most energetic and gallant man in the world,and in my opinion of surpassing courage and firmness--who,people say,was much cast down and dispirited after his return from exile.Now,in the first place,we are asked to believe that a man who accepted exile with entire willingness and remarkable cheerfulness,and never took any pains at all to get recalled,was crushed in spirit about an affair in which he had shewn more firmness and constancy than anyone else,even than the preeminent M.Scaurus himself!

But,again,the account they had received,or rather the conjectures they were indulging in about him,they now transferred to me,imagining that I should be more than usually broken in spirit:whereas,in fact,the Republic was inspiring me with even greater courage than I had ever had before,by making it plain that I was the one citizen it could not do without;and by the fact that while a bill proposed by only one tribune had recalled Metellus,the whole state had joined as one man in recalling me--the senate leading the way,the whole of Italy following after,eight of the tribunes publishing the bill,a consul putting the question at the centuriate assembly,all orders and individuals pressing it on,in fact,with all the forces at its command.Nor is it the case that I afterwards made any pretension,or am making any at this day,which can justly offend anyone,even the most malevolent:my only effort is that I may not fail either my friends or those more remotely connected with me in either active service,or counsel,or personal exertion.This course of life perhaps offends those who fix their eyes on the glitter and show of my professional position,but are unable to appreciate its anxieties and laboriousness.

Again,they make no concealment of their dissatisfaction on the ground that in the speeches which I make in the senate in praise of Caesar I am departing from my old policy.But while giving explanations on the points which I put before you a short time ago,I will not keep till the last the following,which I have already touched upon.You will not find,my dear Lentulus,the sentiments of the loyalists the same as you left them--strengthened by my consulship,suffering relapse at intervals afterwards,crushed down before your consulship,revived by you:they have now been abandoned by those whose duty it was to have maintained them:and this fact they,who in the old state of things as it existed in our day used to be called Optiinates,not only declare by look and expression of countenance,by which a false pretence is easiest supported,but have proved again and again by their actual sympathies and votes.Accordingly,the entire view and aim of wise citizens,such as I wish both to be and to be reckoned,must needs have undergone a change.For that is the maxim of that same great Plato,whom I emphatically regard as my master:"Maintain a political controversy only so far as you can convince your fellow citizens of its justice:never offer violence to parent or fatherland."He,it is true,alleges this as his motive for having abstained from politics,because,having found the Athenian people all but in its dotage,and seeing that it could not be ruled by persuasion,or by anything short of compulsion,while he doubted the possibility of persuasion,he looked upon compulsion as criminal.My position was different in this:as the people was not in its dotage,nor the question of engaging in politics still an open one for me,I was bound hand and foot.Yet I rejoiced that I was permitted in one and the same cause to support a policy at once advantageous to myself and acceptable to every loyalist.An additional motive was Caesar's memorable and almost superhuman kindness to myself and my brother,who thus would have deserved my support whatever he undertook;while as it is,considering his great success and his brilliant victories,he would seem,even if he had not behaved to me as he has,to claim a panegyric from me.For I would have you believe that,putting you aside,who were the authors of my recall,there is no one by whose good offices I would not only confess,but would even rejoice,to have been so much bound.

Having explained this matter to you,the questions you ask about Vatinius and Crassus are easy to answer.For,since you remark about Appius,as about Caesar,"that you have no fault to find,"Ican only say that I am glad you approve my policy.But as to Vatinius,in the first place there had been in the interval a reconciliation effected through Pompey,immediately after his election to the praetorship,though I had,it is true,impugned his candidature in some very strong speeches in the senate,and yet not so much for the sake of attacking him as of defending and complimenting Cato.Again,later on,there followed a very pressing request from Caesar that I should undertake his defence.

同类推荐
  • 纪古滇说集

    纪古滇说集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 奋迅王问经

    奋迅王问经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • THE CONFESSIONS

    THE CONFESSIONS

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 俨山集

    俨山集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 古学考

    古学考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 弑帝的腹黑王妃

    弑帝的腹黑王妃

    君玥希,在21世纪被称为索命妖姬的她,杀人无数,冷酷无情,无意间得到了一块紫色的玉佩。就被这块玉佩带到了一个架空的时空。君家有女君玥希,长得倾国倾城,可惜是个傻子。一朝被人推下池塘,含怨而死,之后,21世纪的君玥希便在她身上重生,从此,女主扮猪吃虎,整庶母,虐婊子,混的是风生水起。但也引来了不少桃花。狂傲邪魅如他,在玥希身边折断一只只桃花。“你有完没完”“没完”“娘子,上次你看了我身子,要对我负责”“我才不要负责,那都是你自愿的”
  • 我怀念的那片天

    我怀念的那片天

    我怀念的那片天,是否还有你这世界有许许多多的人,每两个人相遇的几率是十二万分之一能在一起又是渺茫的几率想来,这世界也是公平的就让我用文字来化解心中的烦闷来记录人生中所遇到的故事,所无法诉说的心情吧
  • 一品俊王妃

    一品俊王妃

    宋锦书的神棍哥哥把宋锦书当做试验品,然后穿越了!穿就穿吧!可是天不公啊!嫁人了?嫁给王爷了?王爷还是个傻子?尼玛~“宋锦尧!你个王八蛋!我要回去!”某只仰天大吼。他,痴傻王爷,俊俏脸庞,无害眼睛,任性好玩,唯爱她!她,爱玩爱闹,精灵古怪,单纯善良,节操木有,她爱他!他们的日子明里过得快乐安详,实则暗潮汹涌,为了皇位,你争我抢,傻王爷为保宋锦书不再装傻,而傻王爷酝酿的计划也只能及早实施。【简介无能,不喜绕道】
  • 美女同学惹不起续

    美女同学惹不起续

    本书为美女同学惹不起续集,自创。如有雷同,纯属巧合
  • 冥梦译

    冥梦译

    一个新的边界,一个阵法的修炼,掀起一场善与善之间的战争!一个为高三拼搏的男生,是如何一步一步把阵法修炼强大的!
  • 第二次世界大战元帅:超级战神

    第二次世界大战元帅:超级战神

    1939年9月前,中国的抗日战争、埃塞俄比亚的抗意战争等世界反法西斯抵抗运动就拉开了序幕;1939年9月1日,德国入侵波兰,宣告世界反法西斯战争正式开始;1945年9月24日,日本向盟国投降,昭示世界反法西斯伟大战争取得全面胜利。
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 蜀山修神

    蜀山修神

    在大千世界,光怪陆离,有神奇的道法,绚丽的魔法,强大的仙兽,霸道的魔兽;从开天辟地,鸿蒙之初,正邪之争,从未停止,且看赵昊,一个携妹之孤,如何杀强敌,夺重宝,勾圣女,御师姐,战天斗地,步步成神!众多精彩,就在《蜀山修神》!
  • 无敌神级系统

    无敌神级系统

    陈凯获得了一个系统,名叫冰。从此他无敌了,想干嘛干嘛。任何人在他眼里,一个原子弹的事。他可以在任何游戏里穿梭,只要有积分,他就可以把世界握在手中!
  • 给田小麦的信

    给田小麦的信

    这是一个讲不完的故事,没有开篇,没有结尾;故事里面只有我和田小麦。