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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero,
+Volume 4, by Cicero
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Volume 4
+
+Author: Cicero
+
+Release Date: February 14, 2004 [EBook #11080]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ORATIONS OF CICERO, V4 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ted Garvin and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+ORATIONS
+
+OF
+
+MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO
+
+LITERALLY TRANSLATED BY
+
+C.D. YONGE, M.A.
+
+FELLOW OF THE ROYAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND, ETC.
+
+VOL. IV.
+
+CONTAINING
+
+THE FOURTEEN ORATIONS AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS; TO WHICH ARE APPENDED
+THE TREATISE ON RHETORICAL INVENTION; THE ORATOR; TOPICS; ON
+RHETORICAL PARTITIONS, ETC.
+
+
+
+1903
+
+
+[_Reprinted from Stereotype plates_.]
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+The Fourteen Orations against M. Antonius, called Philippics:--
+
+The First Philippic
+
+The Second Philippic
+
+The Third Philippic
+
+The Fourth Philippic
+
+The Fifth Philippic
+
+The Sixth Philippic
+
+The Seventh Philippic
+
+The Eighth Philippic
+
+The Ninth Philippic
+
+The Tenth Philippic
+
+The Eleventh Philippic
+
+The Twelfth Philippic
+
+The Thirteenth Philippic
+
+The Fourteenth Philippic
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TREATISE ON RHETORICAL INVENTION:--
+
+Book I.
+
+Book II.
+
+THE ORATOR
+
+TREATISE on TOPICS
+
+A DIALOGUE CONCERNING ORATORICAL PARTITIONS
+
+TREATISE ON THE BEST STYLE OF ORATORS
+
+THE FOURTEEN ORATIONS OF M.T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS, CALLED
+PHILIPPICS.
+
+
+THE FIRST PHILIPPIC.
+
+
+THE ARGUMENT
+
+
+When Julius, or, as he is usually called by Cicero Caius Caesar was
+slain on the 15th of March, A.U.C. 710, B.C. 44 Marcus Antonius
+was his colleague in the consulship, and he, being afraid that the
+conspirators might murder him too, (and it is said that they had
+debated among themselves whether they would or no) concealed himself
+on that day and fortified his house, till perceiving that nothing
+was intended against him, he ventured to appear in public the day
+following. Lepidus was in the suburbs of Rome with a regular army,
+ready to depart for the government of Spain, which had been assigned
+to him with a part of Gaul. In the night, after Caesar's death he
+occupied the forum with his troops and thought of making himself
+master of the city, but Antonius dissuaded him from that idea and won
+him over to his views by giving his daughter in marriage to Lepidus's
+son, and by assisting him to seize on the office of Pontifex Maximus,
+which was vacant by Caesar's death.
+
+To the conspirators he professed friendship, sent his son among them
+as a hostage of his sincerity, and so deluded them, that Brutus supped
+with Lepidus, and Cassius with Antonius. By these means he got them to
+consent to his passing a decree for the confirmation of all Caesar's
+acts, without describing or naming them more precisely. At last, on
+the occasion of Caesar's public funeral, he contrived so to inflame the
+populace against the conspirators, that Brutus and Cassius had some
+difficulty in defending their houses and their lives and he gradually
+alarmed them so much, and worked so cunningly on their fears that they
+all quitted Rome. Cicero also left Rome, disapproving greatly of the
+vacillation and want of purpose in the conspirators. On the first of
+June Antonius assembled the senate to deliberate on the affairs of
+the republic, and in the interval visited all parts of Italy. In the
+meantime young Octavius appeared on the stage; he had been left by
+Caesar, who was his uncle, the heir to his name and estate. He returned
+from Apollonia, in Macedonia, to Italy as soon as he heard of his
+uncle's death, and arrived at Naples on the eighteenth of April, where
+he was introduced by Hirtius and Pansa to Cicero, whom he promised
+to be guided in all respects by his directions. He was now between
+eighteen and nineteen years of age.
+
+He began by the representation of public spectacles and games in
+honour of Caesar's victories. In the meantime Antonius, in his progress
+through Italy, was making great use of the decree confirming all
+Caesar's acts, which he interpolated and forged in the most shameless
+manner. Among other things he restored Deiotarus to all his dominions,
+having been bribed to do so by a hundred millions of sesterces by the
+king's agents, but Deiotarus himself, as soon as he heard of Caesar's
+death, seized all his dominions by force. He also seized the public
+treasure which Caesar had deposited in the temple of Ops, amounting to
+above four millions and a half of our money, and with this he won over
+Dolabella,[1] who had seized the consulship on the death of Caesar, and
+the greater part of the army.
+
+At the end of May Cicero began to return towards Rome, in order to
+arrive there in time for the meeting of the senate on the first of
+June, but many of his friends dissuaded him from entering the city,
+and at last he determined not to appear in the senate on that day, but
+to make a tour in Greece, to assist him in which, Dolabella named
+him one of his lieutenants. Antonius also gave Brutus and Cassius
+commissions to buy corn in Asia and Sicily for the use of the
+republic, in order to keep them out of the city.
+
+Meantime Sextus Pompeius, who was at the head of a considerable
+army in Spain, addressed letters to the consuls proposing terms
+of accommodation, which after some debate, and some important
+modifications, were agreed to, and he quitted Spain, and came as far
+as Marseilles on his road towards Rome.
+
+Cicero having started for Greece was forced to put back by contrary
+winds, and returned to Velia on the seventeenth of August, where he
+had a long conference with Brutus, who soon after left Italy for his
+province of Macedonia, which Caesar had assigned him before his death,
+though Antonius now wished to compel him to exchange it for Crete.
+After this conference Cicero returned to Rome, where he was received
+with unexampled joy, immense multitudes thronging out to meet him, and
+to escort him into the city. He arrived in Rome on the last day of
+August. The next day the senate met, to which he was particularly
+summoned by Antonius, but he excused himself as not having recovered
+from the fatigue of his journey.
+
+Antonius was greatly offended, and in his speech in the senate
+threatened openly to order his house to be pulled down, the real
+reason of Cicero's absenting himself from the senate being, that the
+business of the day was to decree some new and extraordinary honours
+to Caesar, and to order supplications to him as a divinity, which
+Cicero was determined not to concur in, though he knew it would be
+useless to oppose them.
+
+The next day also the senate met, and Antonius absented himself, but
+Cicero came down and delivered the following speech, which is
+the first of that celebrated series of fourteen speeches made in
+opposition to Antonius and his measures, and called Philippics from
+the orations of Demosthenes against Philip, to which the Romans were
+in the habit of comparing them.[2]
+
+I. Before, O conscript fathers, I say those things concerning the
+republic which I think myself bound to say at the present time, I
+will explain to you briefly the cause of my departure from, and of
+my return to the city. When I hoped that the republic was at last
+recalled to a proper respect for your wisdom and for your authority, I
+thought that it became me to remain in a sort of sentinelship, which
+was imposed upon me by my position as a senator and a man of consular
+rank. Nor did I depart anywhere, nor did I ever take my eyes off from
+the republic, from the day on which we were summoned to meet in the
+temple of Tellus,[3] in which temple, I, as far as was in my power,
+laid the foundations of peace, and renewed the ancient precedent set
+by the Athenians, I even used the Greek word,[4] which that city
+employed in those times in allaying discords, and gave my vote that
+all recollection of the existing dissensions ought to be effaced by
+everlasting oblivion.
+
+The oration then made by Marcus Antonius was an admirable one, his
+disposition, too, appeared excellent, and lastly, by his means and
+by his sons', peace was ratified with the most illustrious of the
+citizens, and everything else was consistent with this beginning. He
+invited the chief men of the state to those deliberations which
+he held at his own house concerning the state of the republic, he
+referred all the most important matters to this order. Nothing was
+at that time found among the papers of Caius Caesar except what was
+already well known to everybody, and he gave answers to every question
+that was asked of him with the greatest consistency. Were any exiles
+restored? He said that one was, and only one. Were any immunities
+granted? He answered, None. He wished us even to adopt the proposition
+of Servius Sulpicius, that most illustrious man, that no tablet
+purporting to contain any decree or grant of Caesar's should be
+published after the Ides of March were expired. I pass over many
+other things, all excellent--for I am hastening to come to a very
+extraordinary act of virtue of Marcus Antonius. He utterly abolished
+from the constitution of the republic the Dictatorship, which had by
+this time attained to the authority of regal power. And that measure
+was not even offered to us for discussion. He brought with him a
+decree of the senate, ready drawn up, ordering what he chose to have
+done: and when it had been read, we all submitted to his authority in
+the matter with the greatest eagerness; and, by another resolution
+of the senate, we returned him thanks in the most honourable and
+complimentary language.
+
+II. A new light, as it were, seemed to be brought over us, now that
+not only the kingly power which we had endured, but all fear of such
+power for the future, was taken away from us; and a great pledge
+appeared to have been given by him to the republic that he did wish
+the city to be free, when he utterly abolished out of the republic the
+name of dictator, which had often been a legitimate title, on account
+of our late recollection of a perpetual dictatorship. A few days
+afterwards the senate was delivered from the danger of bloodshed, and
+a hook[5] was fixed into that runaway slave who had usurped the name
+of Caius Marius. And all these things he did in concert with his
+colleague. Some other things that were done were the acts of Dolabella
+alone; but, if his colleague had not been absent, would, I believe,
+have been done by both of them in concert.
+
+For when enormous evil was insinuating itself into the republic, and
+was gaining more strength day by day; and when the same men were
+erecting a tomb[6] in the forum, who had performed that irregular
+funeral; and when abandoned men, with slaves like themselves, were
+every day threatening with more and more vehemence all the houses and
+temples of the city; so severe was the rigour of Dolabella, not
+only towards the audacious and wicked slaves, but also towards the
+profligate and unprincipled freemen, and so prompt was his overthrow
+of that accursed pillar, that it seems marvellous to me that the
+subsequent time has been so different from that one day.
+
+For behold, on the first of June, on which day they had given notice
+that we were all to attend the senate, everything was changed.
+Nothing was done by the senate, but many and important measures were
+transacted by the agency of the people, though that people was both
+absent and disapproving. The consuls elect said, that they did not
+dare to come into the senate. The liberators of their country were
+absent from that city from the neck of which they had removed the yoke
+of slavery; though the very consuls themselves professed to praise
+them in their public harangues and in all their conversation. Those
+who were called Veterans, men of whose safety this order had been most
+particularly careful, were instigated not to the preservation of those
+things which they had, but to cherish hopes of new booty. And as I
+preferred hearing of those things to seeing them, and as I had an
+honorary commission as lieutenant, I went away, intending to be
+present on the first of January, which appeared likely to be the first
+day of assembling the senate.
+
+III. I have now explained to you, O conscript fathers, my design
+in leaving the city. Now I will briefly set before you, also, my
+intention in returning, which may perhaps appear more unaccountable.
+As I had avoided Brundusium, and the ordinary route into Greece, not
+without good reason, on the first of August I arrived at Syracuse,
+because the passage from that city into Greece was said to be a good
+one. And that city, with which I had so intimate a connexion, could
+not, though it was very eager to do so, detain me more than one night.
+I was afraid that my sudden arrival among my friends might cause some
+suspicion if I remained there at all. But after the winds had driven
+me, on my departure from Sicily, to Leucopetra, which is a promontory
+of the Rhegian district, I went up the gulf from that point, with the
+view of crossing over. And I had not advanced far before I was driven
+back by a foul wind to the very place which I had just quitted. And as
+the night was stormy, and as I had lodged that night in the villa of
+Publius Valerius, my companion and intimate friend, and as I remained
+all the nest day at his house waiting for a fair wind, many of the
+citizens of the municipality of Rhegium came to me. And of them there
+were some who had lately arrived from Rome; from them I first heard
+of the harangue of Marcus Antonius, with which I was so much pleased
+that, after I had read it, I began for the first time to think of
+returning. And not long afterwards the edict of Brutus and Cassius is
+brought to me; which (perhaps because I love those men, even more for
+the sake of the republic than of my own friendship for them) appeared
+to me, indeed, to be full of equity. They added besides, (for it is a
+very common thing for those who are desirous of bringing good news to
+invent something to make the news which they bring seem more joyful,)
+that parties were coming to an agreement; that the senate was to
+meet on the first of August; that Antonius having discarded all evil
+counsellors, and having given up the provinces of Gaul, was about to
+return to submission to the authority of the senate.
+
+IV. But on this I was inflamed with such eagerness to return, that no
+oars or winds could be fast enough for me; not that I thought that I
+should not arrive in time, but lest I should be later than I wished in
+congratulating the republic; and I quickly arrived at Velia, where I
+saw Brutus; how grieved I was, I cannot express. For it seemed to be
+a discreditable thing for me myself, that I should venture to return
+into that city from which Brutus was departing, and that I should be
+willing to live safely in a place where he could not. But he himself
+was not agitated in the same manner that I was; for, being elevated
+with the consciousness of his great and glorious exploit, he had no
+complaints to make of what had befallen him, though he lamented your
+fate exceedingly. And it was from him that I first heard what had been
+the language of Lucius Piso, in the senate of August; who, although
+he was but little assisted (for that I heard from Brutus himself) by
+those who ought to have seconded him, still according to the testimony
+of Brutus, (and what evidence can be more trustworthy?) and to the
+avowal of every one whom I saw afterwards, appeared to me to have
+gained great credit. I hastened hither, therefore, in order that as
+those who were present had not seconded him, I might do so; not with
+the hope of doing any good, for I neither hoped for that, nor did I
+well see how it was possible; but in order that if anything happened
+to me, (and many things appeared to be threatening me out of the
+regular course of nature, and even of destiny,) I might still leave
+my speech on this day as a witness to the republic of my everlasting
+attachment to its interests.
+
+Since, then, O conscript fathers, I trust that the reason of my
+adopting each determination appears praiseworthy to you, before I
+begin to speak of the republic, I will make a brief complaint of the
+injury which Marcus Antonius did me yesterday, to whom I am friendly,
+and I have at all times admitted having received some services from
+him which make it my duty to be so.
+
+V. What reason had he then for endeavouring, with such bitter
+hostility, to force me into the senate yesterday? Was I the only
+person who was absent? Have you not repeatedly had thinner houses than
+yesterday? Or was a matter of such importance under discussion, that
+it was desirable for even sick men to be brought down? Hannibal, I
+suppose, was at the gates, or there was to be a debate about peace
+with Pyrrhus, on which occasion it is related that even the great
+Appius, old and blind as he was, was brought down to the senate-house.
+There was a motion being made about some supplications, a kind of
+measure when senators are not usually wanting, for they are under the
+compulsion, not of pledges, but of the influence of those men whose
+honour is being complimented, and the case is the same when the motion
+has reference to a triumph. The consuls are so free from anxiety at
+these times, that it is almost entirely free for a senator to absent
+himself if he pleases. And as the general custom of our body was well
+known to me, and as I was hardly recovered from the fatigue of my
+journey, and was vexed with myself, I sent a man to him, out of regard
+for my friendship to him, to tell him that I should not be there. But
+he, in the hearing of you all, declared that he would come with
+masons to my house; this was said with too much passion and very
+intemperately. For, for what crime is there such a heavy punishment
+appointed as that, that any one should venture to say in this assembly
+that he, with the assistance of a lot of common operatives, would pull
+down a house which had been built at the public expense in accordance
+with a vote of the senate? And who ever employed such compulsion
+as the threat of such an injury as to a senator? or what severer
+punishment has ever been he himself was unable to perform? As, in
+fact, he has failed to perform many promises made to many people. And
+a great many more of those promises have been found since his death,
+than the number of all the services which he conferred on and did to
+people during all the years that he was alive would amount to.
+
+But all those things I do not change, I do not meddle with. Nay, I
+defend all his good acts with the greatest earnestness. Would that the
+money remained in the temple of Opis! Bloodstained, indeed, it may be,
+but still needful at these times, since it is not restored to those to
+whom it really belongs.[7] Let that, however, be squandered too, if
+it is so written in his acts. Is there anything whatever that can be
+called so peculiarly the act of that man who, while clad in the robe
+of peace, was yet invested with both civil and military command in
+the republic, as a law of his? Ask for the acts of Gracchus, the
+Sempronian laws will be brought forward; ask for those of Sylla, you
+will have the Cornelian laws. What more? In what acts did the third
+consulship of Cnaeus Pompeius consist? Why, in his laws. And if you
+could ask Caesar himself what he had done in the city and in the garb
+of peace, he would reply that he had passed many excellent laws; but
+his memoranda he would either alter or not produce at all; or, if
+he did produce them, he would not class them among his acts. But,
+however, I allow even these things to pass for acts; at some things I
+am content to wink; but I think it intolerable that the acts of Caesar
+in the most important instances, that is to say, in his laws, are to
+be annulled for their sake.
+
+VIII. What law was ever better, more advantageous, more frequently
+demanded in the best ages of the republic, than the one which forbade
+the praetorian provinces to be retained more than a year, and the
+consular provinces more than two? If this law be abrogated, do you
+think that the acts of Caesar are maintained? What? are not all the
+laws of Caesar respecting judicial proceedings abrogated by the law
+which has been proposed concerning the third decury? And are you the
+defenders of the acts of Caesar who overturn his laws? Unless, indeed,
+anything which, for the purpose of recollecting it, he entered in a
+note-book, is to be counted among his acts, and defended, however
+unjust or useless it may be; and that which he proposed to the people
+in the comitia centuriata and carried, is not to be accounted one
+of the acts of Caesar. But what is that third decury? The decury of
+centurions, says he. What? was not the judicature open to that order
+by the Julian law, and even before that by the Pompeian and Aurelian
+laws? The income of the men, says he, was exactly defined. Certainly,
+not only in the case of a centurion, but in the case, too, of a Roman
+knight. Therefore, men of the highest honour and of the greatest
+bravery, who have acted as centurions, are and have been judges. I am
+not asking about those men, says he. Whoever has acted as centurion,
+let him be a judge. But if you were to propose a law, that whoever had
+served in the cavalry, which is a higher post, should be a judge, you
+would not be able to induce any one to approve of that; for a man's
+fortune and worth ought to be regarded in a judge. I am not asking
+about those points, says he; I am going to add as judges, common
+soldiers of the legion of Alaudae;[8] for our friends say, that that
+is the only measure by which they can be saved. Oh what an insulting
+compliment it is to those men whom you summon to act as judges though
+they never expected it! For the effect of the law is, to make those
+men judges in the third decury who do not dare to judge with freedom.
+And in that how great, O ye immortal gods! is the error of those men
+who have desired that law. For the meaner the condition of each judge
+is, the greater will be the severity of judgment with which he will
+seek to efface the idea of his meanness; and he will strive rather to
+appear worthy of being classed in the honourable decuries, than to
+have deservedly ranked in a disreputable one.
+
+IX. Another law was proposed, that men who had been condemned of
+violence and treason may appeal to the public if they please. Is this
+now a law, or rather an abrogation of all laws? For who is there at
+this day to whom it is an object that that law should stand? No one is
+accused under those laws; there is no one whom we think likely to be
+so accused. For measures which have been carried by force of arms will
+certainly never be impeached in a court of justice. But the measure is
+a popular one. I wish, indeed, that you were willing to promote any
+popular measure; for, at present, all the citizens agree with one
+mind and one voice in their view of its bearing on the safety of the
+republic.
+
+What is the meaning, then, of the eagerness to pass the law which
+brings with it the greatest possible infamy, and no popularity at all?
+For what can be more discreditable than for a man who has committed
+treason against the Roman people by acts of violence, after he has
+been condemned by a legal decision, to be able to return to that very
+course of violence, on account of which he has been condemned? But why
+do I argue any more about this law? as if the object aimed at were to
+enable any one to appeal? The object is, the inevitable consequence
+must be, that no one can ever be prosecuted under those laws. For
+what prosecutor will be found insane enough to be willing, after the
+defendant has been condemned, to expose himself to the fury of a
+hired mob? or what judge will be bold enough to venture to condemn a
+criminal, knowing that he will immediately be dragged before a gang of
+hireling operatives? It is not, therefore, a right of appeal that is
+given by that law, but two most salutary laws and modes of judicial
+investigation that are abolished. And what is this but exhorting young
+men to be turbulent, seditious, mischievous citizens?
+
+To what extent of mischief will it not be possible to instigate the
+frenzy of the tribunes now that these two rights of impeachment for
+violence and for treason are annulled? What more? Is not this a
+substitution of a new law for the laws of Caesar, which enact that
+every man who has been convicted of violence, and also every man who
+has been convicted of treason, shall be interdicted from fire and
+water? And, when those men have a right of appeal given them, are not
+the acts of Caesar rescinded? And those acts, O conscript fathers,
+I, who never approved of them, have still thought it advisable to
+maintain for the sake of concord, so that I not only did not think
+that the laws which Caesar had passed in his lifetime ought to be
+repealed, but I did not approve of meddling with those even which
+since the death of Caesar you have seen produced and published.
+
+X. Men have been recalled from banishment by a dead man; the freedom
+of the city has been conferred, not only on individuals, but on entire
+nations and provinces by a dead man; our revenues have been diminished
+by the granting of countless exemptions by a dead man. Therefore, do
+we defend these measures which have been brought from his house on the
+authority of a single, but, I admit, a very excellent individual, and
+as for the laws which he, in your presence, read, and declared, and
+passed,--in the passing of which he gloried, and on which he believed
+that the safety of the republic depended, especially those concerning
+provinces and concerning judicial proceedings,--can we, I say, we who
+defend the acts of Caesar, think that those laws deserve to be upset?
+
+And yet, concerning those laws which were proposed, we have, at all
+events, the power of complaining, but concerning those which are
+actually passed we have not even had that privilege. For they, without
+any proposal of them to the people, were passed before they were
+framed. Men ask, what is the reason why I, or why any one of you, O
+conscript fathers, should be afraid of bad laws while we have virtuous
+tribunes of the people? We have men ready to interpose their veto,
+ready to defend the republic with the sanctions of religion. We ought
+to be strangers to fear. What do you mean by interposing the veto?
+says he, what are all these sanctions of religion which you are
+talking about? Those, forsooth, on which the safety of the republic
+depends. We are neglecting those things, and thinking them too
+old-fashioned and foolish. The forum will be surrounded, every
+entrance of it will be blocked up, armed men will be placed in
+garrison, as it were, at many points. What then?--whatever is
+accomplished by those means will be law. And you will order, I
+suppose, all those regularly passed decrees to be engraved on brazen
+tablets "The consuls consulted the people in regular form," (Is this
+the way of consulting the people that we have received from our
+ancestors?) "and the people voted it with due regularity" What people?
+that which was excluded from the forum? Under what law did they do so?
+under that which has been wholly abrogated by violence and arms? But
+I am saying all this with reference to the future, because it is the
+part of a friend to point out evils which may be avoided and if they
+never ensue, that will be the best refutation of my speech. I am
+speaking of laws which have been proposed, concerning which you have
+still full power to decide either way. I am pointing out the defects,
+away with them! I am denouncing violence and arms, away with them too!
+
+XI. You and your colleague, O Dolabella, ought not, indeed, to be
+angry with me for speaking in defence of the republic. Although I do
+not think that you yourself will be; I know your willingness to listen
+to reason. They say that your colleague, in this fortune of his, which
+he himself thinks so good, but which would seem to me more favourable
+if (not to use any harsh language) he were to imitate the example set
+him by the consulship of his grandfathers and of his uncle,--they say
+that he has been exceedingly offended. And I see what a formidable
+thing it is to have the same man angry with me and also armed;
+especially at a time when men can use their swords with such impunity.
+But I will propose a condition which I myself think reasonable, and
+which I do not imagine Marcus Antonius will reject. If I have said
+anything insulting against his way of life or against his morals,
+I will not object to his being my bitterest enemy. But if I have
+maintained the same habits that I have already adopted in the
+republic,--that is, if I have spoken my opinions concerning the
+affairs of the republic with freedom,--in the first place, I beg that
+he will not be angry with me for that; but, in the next place, if I
+cannot obtain my first request, I beg at least that he will show his
+anger only as he legitimately may show it to a fellow-citizen.
+
+Let him employ arms, if it is necessary, as he says it is, for his own
+defence: only let not those arms injure those men who have declared
+their honest sentiments in the affairs of the republic. Now, what can
+be more reasonable than this demand? But if, as has been said to me by
+some of his intimate friends, every speech which is at all contrary
+to his inclination is violently offensive to him, even if there be no
+insult in it whatever; then we will bear with the natural disposition
+of our friend. But those men, at the same time, say to me, "You will
+not have the same licence granted to you who are the adversary of
+Caesar as might be claimed by Piso his father-in-law." And then they
+warn me of something which I must guard against; and certainly, the
+excuse which sickness supplies me with, for not coming to the senate,
+will not be a more valid one than that which is furnished by death.
+
+XII. But, in the name of the immortal gods! for while I look upon you,
+O Dolabella, who are most dear to me, it is impossible for me to keep
+silence respecting the error into which you are both falling; for I
+believe that you, being both men of high birth, entertaining lofty
+views, have been eager to acquire, not money, as some too credulous
+people suspect, a thing which has at all times been scorned by every
+honourable and illustrious man, nor power procured by violence and
+authority such as never ought to be endured by the Roman people, but
+the affection of your fellow-citizens, and glory. But glory is praise
+for deeds which have been done, and the fame earned by great services
+to the republic; which is approved of by the testimony borne in its
+favour, not only by every virtuous man, but also by the multitude. I
+would tell you, O Dolabella, what the fruit of good actions is, if I
+did not see that you have already learnt it by experience beyond all
+other men.
+
+What day can you recollect in your whole life, as ever having beamed
+on you with a more joyful light than the one on which, having purified
+the forum, having routed the throng of wicked men, having inflicted
+due punishment on the ringleaders in wickedness, and having delivered
+the city from conflagration and from fear of massacre, you returned to
+your house? What order of society, what class of people, what rank of
+nobles even was there who did not then show their zeal in praising and
+congratulating you? Even I, too, because men thought that you had been
+acting by my advice in those transactions, received the thanks and
+congratulations of good men in your name. Remember, I pray you, O
+Dolabella, the unanimity displayed on that day in the theatre, when
+every one, forgetful of the causes on account of which they had been
+previously offended with you, showed that in consequence of your
+recent service they had banished all recollection of their former
+indignation. Could you, O Dolabella, (it is with great concern that I
+speak,)--could you, I say, forfeit this dignity with equanimity?
+
+XIII. And you, O Marcus Antonius, (I address myself to you, though
+in your absence,) do you not prefer that day on which the senate was
+assembled in the temple of Tellus, to all those months during which
+some who differ greatly in opinion from me think that you have been
+happy? What a noble speech was that of yours about unanimity! From
+what apprehensions were the veterans, and from what anxiety was the
+whole state relieved by you on that occasion! when, having laid aside
+your enmity against him, you on that day first consented that your
+present colleague should be your colleague, forgetting that the
+auspices had been announced by yourself as augur of the Roman people;
+and when your little son was sent by you to the Capitol to be a
+hostage for peace. On what day was the senate ever more joyful than on
+that day? or when was the Roman people more delighted? which had never
+met in greater numbers in any assembly whatever. Then, at last, we did
+appear to have been really delivered by brave men, because, as they
+had willed it to be, peace was following liberty On the next day, on
+the day after that, on the third day, and on all the following days,
+you went on without intermission giving every day, as it were, some
+fresh present to the republic, but the greatest of all presents was
+that, when you abolished the name of the dictatorship. This was in
+effect branding the name of the dead Caesar with everlasting ignominy,
+and it was your doing,--yours, I say. For as, on account of the
+wickedness of one Marcus Manlius, by a resolution of the Manlian
+family it is unlawful that any patrician should be called Manlius, so
+you, on account of the hatred excited by one dictator, have utterly
+abolished the name of dictator.
+
+When you had done these mighty exploits for the safety of the
+republic, did you repent of your fortune, or of the dignity and renown
+and glory which you had acquired? Whence then is this sudden change? I
+cannot be induced to suspect that you have been caught by the desire
+of acquiring money; every one may say what he pleases, but we are not
+bound to believe such a thing; for I never saw anything sordid or
+anything mean in you. Although a man's intimate friends do sometimes
+corrupt his natural disposition, still I know your firmness; and I
+only wish that, as you avoid that fault, you had been able also to
+escape all suspicion of it.
+
+XIV. What I am more afraid of is lest, being ignorant of the true path
+to glory, you should think it glorious for you to have more power by
+yourself than all the rest of the people put together, and lest you
+should prefer being feared by your fellow-citizens to being loved by
+them. And if you do think so, you are ignorant of the road to glory.
+For a citizen to be dear to his fellow-citizens, to deserve well
+of the republic, to be praised, to be respected, to be loved, is
+glorious; but to be feared, and to be an object of hatred, is odious,
+detestable; and moreover, pregnant with weakness and decay. And we see
+that, even in the play, the very man who said,
+
+ "What care I though all men should hate my name,
+ So long as fear accompanies their hate?"
+
+found that it was a mischievous principle to act upon.
+
+I wish, O Antonius, that you could recollect your grand father of
+whom, however, you have repeatedly heard me speak. Do you think that
+he would have been willing to deserve even immortality, at the price
+of being feared in consequence of his licentious use of arms? What he
+considered life, what he considered prosperity, was the being equal to
+the rest of the citizens in freedom, and chief of them all in worth.
+Therefore, to say no more of the prosperity of your grandfather, I
+should prefer that most bitter day of his death to the domination of
+Lucius Cinna, by whom he was most barbarously slain.
+
+But why should I seek to make an impression on you by my speech? For,
+if the end of Caius Caesar cannot influence you to prefer being loved
+to being feared, no speech of any one will do any good or have any
+influence with you; and those who think him happy are themselves
+miserable. No one is happy who lives on such terms that he may be put
+to death not merely with impunity, but even to the great glory of his
+slayer. Wherefore, change your mind, I entreat you, and look back
+upon your ancestors, and govern the republic in such a way that your
+fellow-citizens may rejoice that you were born; without which no one
+can be happy nor illustrious.
+
+XV. And, indeed, you have both of you had many judgments delivered
+respecting you by the Roman people, by which I am greatly concerned
+that you are not sufficiently influenced. For what was the meaning
+of the shouts of the innumerable crowd of citizens collected at the
+gladiatorial games? or of the verses made by the people? or of the
+extraordinary applause at the sight of the statue of Pompeius? and at
+that sight of the two tribunes of the people who are opposed to you?
+Are these things a feeble indication of the incredible unanimity of
+the entire Roman people? What more? Did the applause at the games of
+Apollo, or, I should rather say, testimony and judgment there given
+by the Roman people, appear to you of small importance? Oh! happy are
+those men who, though they themselves were unable to be present on
+account of the violence of arms, still were present in spirit, and
+had a place in the breasts and hearts of the Roman people. Unless,
+perhaps, you think that it was Accius who was applauded on that
+occasion, and who bore off the palm sixty years after his first
+appearance, and not Brutus, who was absent from the games which he
+himself was exhibiting, while at that most splendid spectacle the
+Roman people showed their zeal in his favour though he was absent, and
+soothed their own regret for their deliverer by uninterrupted applause
+and clamour.
+
+I myself, indeed, am a man who have at all times despised that
+applause which is bestowed by the vulgar crowd, but at the same time,
+when it is bestowed by those of the highest, and of the middle, and of
+the lowest rank, and, in short, by all ranks together, and when those
+men who were previously accustomed to aim at nothing but the favour
+of the people keep aloof, I then think that, not mere applause, but a
+deliberate verdict. If this appears to you unimportant, which is in
+reality most significant, do you also despise the fact of which you
+have had experience,--namely, that the life of Aulus Hirtius is so
+dear to the Roman people? For it was sufficient for him to be esteemed
+by the Roman people as he is; to be popular among his friends, in
+which respect he surpasses everybody; to be beloved by his own
+kinsmen, who do love him beyond measure; but in whose case before
+do we ever recollect such anxiety and such fear being manifested?
+Certainly in no one's.
+
+What, then, are we to do? In the name of the immortal gods, can you
+interpret these facts, and see what is their purport? What do you
+think that those men think of your lives, to whom the lives of those
+men who they hope will consult the welfare of the republic are so
+dear? I have reaped, O conscript fathers, the reward of my return,
+since I have said enough to bear testimony of my consistency whatever
+event may befall me, and since I have been kindly and attentively
+listened to by you. And if I have such opportunities frequently
+without exposing both myself and you to danger, I shall avail myself
+of them. If not, as far as I can I shall reserve myself not for
+myself, but rather for the republic. I have lived long enough for the
+course of human life, or for my own glory. If any additional life is
+granted to me, it shall be bestowed not so much on myself as on you
+and on the republic.
+
+
+
+
+THE SECOND SPEECH OF M.T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS.
+
+CALLED ALSO THE SECOND PHILIPPIC.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ARGUMENT.
+
+
+This second speech was not actually spoken at all. Antonius was
+greatly enraged at the first speech, and summoned another meeting of
+the senate for the nineteenth day of the month, giving Cicero especial
+notice to be present, and he employed the interval in preparing an
+invective against Cicero, and a reply to the first Philippic. The
+senate met in the temple of Concord, but Cicero himself was persuaded
+not to attend by his friends, who were afraid of Antonius proceeding
+to actual violence against him, (and indeed he brought a strong guard
+of armed men with him to the senate) He spoke with the greatest fury
+against Cicero, charging him with having been the principal author and
+contriver of Caesar's murder, hoping by this to inflame the soldiers,
+whom he had posted within hearing of his harangue.
+
+Soon after this, Cicero removed to a villa near Naples for greater
+safety, and here he composed this second Philippic, which he did not
+publish immediately, but contented himself at first with sending a
+copy to Brutus and Cassius, who were much pleased with it.
+
+I. To what destiny of mine, O conscript fathers, shall I say that it
+is owing, that none for the last twenty years has been an enemy to the
+republic without at the same time declaring war against me? Nor is
+there any necessity for naming any particular person; you yourselves
+recollect instances in proof of my statement. They have all hitherto
+suffered severer punishments than I could have wished for them; but I
+marvel that you, O Antonius, do not fear the end of those men whose
+conduct you are imitating. And in others I was less surprised at this.
+None of those men of former times was a voluntary enemy to me; all of
+them were attacked by me for the sake of the republic. But you, who
+have never been injured by me, not even by a word, in order to appear
+more audacious than Catiline, more frantic than Clodius, have of your
+own accord attacked me with abuse, and have considered that your
+alienation from me would be a recommendation of you to impious
+citizens.
+
+What am I to think? that I have been despised? I see nothing either in
+my life, or in my influence in the city, or in my exploits, or even
+in the moderate abilities with which I am endowed, which Antonius
+can despise. Did he think that it was easiest to disparage me in the
+senate? a body which has borne its testimony in favour of many most
+illustrious citizens that they governed the republic well, but in
+favour of me alone, of all men, that I preserved it. Or did he wish to
+contend with me in a rivalry of eloquence? This, indeed, is an act of
+generosity; for what could be a more fertile or richer subject for
+me, than to have to speak in defence of myself, and against Antonius?
+This, in fact, is the truth. He thought it impossible to prove to the
+satisfaction of those men who resembled himself, that he was an enemy
+to his country, if he was not also an enemy to me. And before I make
+him any reply on the other topics of his speech, I will say a few
+words; respecting the friendship formerly subsisting between us, which
+he has accused me of violating,--for that I consider a most serious
+charge.
+
+II. He has complained that I pleaded once against his interest. Was
+I not to plead against one with whom I was quite I unconnected, in
+behalf of an intimate acquaintance, of a dear friend? Was I not to
+plead against interest acquired not by hopes of virtue, but by the
+disgrace of youth? Was I not to plead against an injustice which that
+man procured to be done by the obsequiousness of a most iniquitous
+interposer of his veto, not by any law regulating the privileges of
+the praetor? But I imagine that this was mentioned by you, in order
+that you might recommend yourself to the citizens, if they all
+recollected that you were the son-in-law of a freedman, and that your
+children were the grandsons of Quintus Fadius a freedman.
+
+But you had entirely devoted yourself to my principles; (for this is
+what you said;) you had been in the habit of coming to my house. In
+truth, if you had done so, you would more have consulted your own
+character and your reputation for chastity. But you did not do so,
+nor, if you had wished it, would Caius Curio have ever suffered you to
+do so. You have said, that you retired in my favour from the contest
+for the augurship. Oh the incredible audacity! oh the monstrous
+impudence of such an assertion! For, at the time when Cnaeus Pompeius
+and Quintus Hortensius named me as augur, after I had been wished for
+as such by the whole college, (for it was not lawful for me to be
+put in nomination by more than two members of the college,) you were
+notoriously insolvent, nor did you think it possible for your safety
+to be secured by any other means than by the destruction of the
+republic. But was it possible for you to stand for the augurship at a
+time when Curio was not in Italy? or even at the time when you were
+elected, could you have got the votes of one single tribe without the
+aid of Curio? whose intimate friends even were convicted of violence
+for having been too zealous in your favour.
+
+III. But I availed myself of your friendly assistance. Of what
+assistance? Although the instance which you cite I have myself at
+all times openly admitted. I preferred confessing that I was under
+obligations to you, to letting myself appear to any foolish person not
+sufficiently grateful. However, what was the kindness that you did me?
+not killing me at Brundusium? Would you then have slain the man whom
+the conqueror himself, who conferred on you, as you used to boast,
+the chief rank among all his robbers, had desired to be safe, and had
+enjoined to go to Italy? Grant that you could have slain him, is not
+this, O conscript fathers, such a kindness as is done by banditti, who
+are contented with being able to boast that they have granted their
+lives to all those men whose lives they have not taken? and if that
+were really a kindness, then these who slew that man by whom they
+themselves had been saved, and whom you yourself are in the habit of
+styling most illustrious men, would never have acquired such immortal
+glory. But what sort of kindness is it, to have abstained from
+committing nefarious wickedness? It is a case in which it ought not
+to appear so delightful to me not to have been killed by you, as
+miserable, that it should have been in your power to do such a thing
+with impunity. However, grant that it was a kindness, since no greater
+kindness could be received from a robber, still in what point can
+you call me ungrateful? Ought I not to complain of the ruin of the
+republic, lest I should appear ungrateful towards you? But in that
+complaint, mournful indeed and miserable, but still unavoidable for a
+man of that rank in which the senate and people of Rome have placed
+me, what did I say that was insulting? that was otherwise than
+moderate? that was otherwise than friendly? and what instance was it
+not of moderation to complain of the conduct of Marcus Antonius, and
+yet to abstain from any abusive expressions? especially when you had
+scattered abroad all relics of the republic; when everything was on
+sale at your house by the most infamous traffic; when you confessed
+that those laws which had never been promulgated, had been passed with
+reference to you, and by you; when you, being augur, had abolished the
+auspices; being consul, had taken away the power of interposing the
+veto; when you were escorted in the most shameful manner by armed
+guards; when, worn out with drunkenness and debauchery, you were every
+day performing all sorts of obscenities in that chaste house of yours.
+But I, as if I had to contend against Marcus Crassus, with whom I have
+had many severe struggles, and not with a most worthless gladiator,
+while complaining in dignified language of the state of the republic,
+did not say one word which could be called personal. Therefore, to-day
+I will make him understand with what great kindness he was then
+treated by me.
+
+IV. But he also read letters which he said that I had sent to him,
+like a man devoid of humanity and ignorant of the common usages of
+life. For who ever, who was even but slightly acquainted with the
+habits of polite men, produced in an assembly and openly read letters
+which had been sent to him by a friend, just because some quarrel had
+arisen between them? Is not this destroying all companionship in life,
+destroying the means by which absent friends converse together? How
+many jests are frequently put in letters, which, if they were produced
+in public, would appear stupid! How many serious opinions, which, for
+all that, ought not to be published! Let this be a proof of your utter
+ignorance of courtesy. Now mark, also, his incredible folly. What
+have you to oppose to me, O you eloquent man, as you seem at least
+to Mustela Tamisius, and to Tiro Numisius? And while these men are
+standing at this very time in the sight of the senate with drawn
+swords, I too will think you an eloquent man if you will show how you
+would defend them if they were charged with being assassins. However
+what answer would you make if I were to deny that I ever sent
+those letters to you? By what evidence could you convict me? by my
+handwriting? Of handwriting indeed you have a lucrative knowledge.[9]
+How can you prove it in that manner? for the letters are written by
+an amanuensis. By this time I envy your teacher, who for all that
+payment, which I shall mention presently, has taught you to know
+nothing.
+
+For what can be less like, I do not say an orator, but a man, than to
+reproach an adversary with a thing which if he denies by one single
+word, he who has reproached him cannot advance one step further? But
+I do not deny it; and in this very point I convict you not only of
+inhumanity but also of madness. For what expression is there in those
+letters which is not full of humanity and service and benevolence? and
+the whole of your charge amounts to this, that I do not express a bad
+opinion of you in those letters; that in them I wrote as to a citizen,
+and as to a virtuous man, not as to a wicked man and a robber. But
+your letters I will not produce, although I fairly might, now that I
+am thus challenged by you; letters in which you beg of me that you may
+be enabled by my consent to procure the recall of some one from exile;
+and you will not attempt it if I have any objection, and you prevail
+on me by your entreaties. For why should I put myself in the way
+of your audacity? when neither the authority of this body, nor the
+opinion of the Roman people, nor any laws are able to restrain you.
+However, what was the object of your addressing these entreaties to
+me, if the man for whom you were entreating was already restored by a
+law of Caesar's? I suppose the truth was, that he wished it to be done
+by me as a favour; in which matter there could not be any favour done
+even by himself, if a law was already passed for the purpose.
+
+V. But as, O conscript fathers, I have many things which I must say
+both in my own defence and against Marcus Antonius, one thing I ask
+you, that you will listen to me with kindness while I am speaking for
+myself; the other I will ensure myself, namely, that you shall listen
+to me with attention while speaking against him. At the same time
+also, I beg this of you; that if you have been acquainted with my
+moderation and modesty throughout my whole life, and especially as a
+speaker, you will not, when to-day I answer this man in the spirit
+in which he has attacked me, think that I have forgotten my usual
+character. I will not treat him as a consul, for he did not treat me
+as a man of consular rank; and although he in no respect deserves to
+be considered a consul, whether we regard his way of life, or his
+principle of governing the republic, or the manner in which he was
+elected, I am beyond all dispute a man of consular rank.
+
+That, therefore, you might understand what sort of a consul he
+professed to be himself, he reproached me with my consulship;--a
+consulship which, O conscript fathers, was in name, indeed, mine, but
+in reality yours. For what did I determine, what did I contrive, what
+did I do, that was not determined, contrived, or done, by the counsel
+and authority and in accordance with the sentiments of this order? And
+have you, O wise man, O man not merely eloquent, dared to find fault
+with these actions before the very men by whose counsel and wisdom
+they were performed? But who was ever found before, except Publius
+Clodius, to find fault with my consulship? And his fate indeed awaits
+you, as it also awaited Caius Curio; since that is now in your house
+which was fatal to each of them.[10]
+
+Marcus Antonius disapproves of my consulship; but it was approved of
+by Publius Servilius--to name that man first of the men of consular
+rank who had died most recently. It was approved of by Quintus
+Catulus, whose authority will always carry weight in this republic;
+it was approved of by the two Luculli, by Marcus Crassus, by Quintus
+Hortensius, by Caius Curio, by Caius Piso, by Marcus Glabrio, by
+Marcus Lepidus, by Lucius Volcatius, by Caius Figulus, by Decimus
+Silanus and Lucius Murena, who at that time were the consuls elect;
+the same consulship also which was approved of by those men of
+consular rank, was approved of by Marcus Cato; who escaped many evils
+by departing from this life, and especially the evil of seeing you
+consul. But, above all, my consulship was approved of by Cnaeus
+Pompeius, who, when he first saw me, as he was leaving Syria,
+embracing me and congratulating me, said, that it was owing to my
+services that he was about to see his country again. But why should I
+mention individuals? It was approved of by the senate, in a very full
+house, so completely, that there was no one who did not thank me as if
+I had been his parent, who did not attribute to me the salvation of
+his life, of his fortunes, of his children, and of the republic.
+
+VI. But, since the republic has been now deprived of those men whom
+I have named, many and illustrious as they were, let us come to the
+living, since two of the men of consular rank are still left to us:
+Lucius Cotta, a man of the greatest genius and the most consummate
+prudence, proposed a supplication in my honour for those very actions
+with which you find fault, in the most complimentary language, and
+those very men of consular rank whom I have named, and the whole
+senate, adopted his proposal; an honour which has never been paid to
+any one else in the garb of peace from the foundation of the city
+to my time. With what eloquence, with what firm wisdom, with what
+a weight of authority did Lucius Caesar your uncle, pronounce his
+opinion against the husband of his own sister, your stepfather. But
+you, when you ought to have taken him as your adviser and tutor in all
+your designs, and in the whole conduct of your life, preferred being
+like your stepfather to resembling your uncle. I, who had no connexion
+with him, acted by his counsels while I was consul. Did you, who
+were his sister's son, ever once consult him on the affairs of the
+republic?
+
+But who are they whom Antonius does consult? O ye immortal gods, they
+are men whose birthdays we have still to learn. To-day Antonius is not
+coming down. Why? He is celebrating the birthday feast at his villa.
+In whose honour? I will name no one. Suppose it is in honour of some
+Phormio, or Gnatho, or even Ballio.[11] Oh the abominable profligacy
+of the man! Oh how intolerable is his impudence, his debauchery, and
+his lust! Can you, when you have one of the chiefs of the senate, a
+citizen of singular virtue, so nearly related to you, abstain from
+ever consulting him on the affairs of the republic, and consult men
+who have no property whatever of their own, and are draining yours?
+
+VII. Yes, your consulship, forsooth, is a salutary one for the state,
+mine a mischievous one. Have you so entirely lost all shame as well
+as all chastity, that you could venture to say this in that temple
+in which I was consulting that senate which formerly in the full
+enjoyment of its honours presided over the world? And did you place
+around it abandoned men armed with swords? But you have dared besides
+(what is there which you would not dare?) to say that the Capitoline
+Hill, when I was consul, was full of armed slaves. I was offering
+violence to the senate, I suppose, in order to compel the adoption of
+those infamous decrees of the senate. O wretched man, whether those
+things are not known to you, (for you know nothing that is good,) or
+whether they are, when you dare to speak so shamelessly before such
+men! For what Roman knight was there, what youth of noble birth except
+you, what man of any rank or class who recollected that he was a
+citizen, who was not on the Capitoline Hill while the senate was
+assembled in this temple? who was there, who did not give in his name?
+Although there could not be provided checks enough, nor were the books
+able to contain their names.
+
+In truth, when wicked men, being compelled by the revelations of the
+accomplices, by their own handwriting, and by what I may almost call
+the voices of their letters, were confessing that they had planned the
+parricidal destruction of their country, and that they had agreed
+to burn the city, to massacre the citizens, to devastate Italy, to
+destroy the republic; who could have existed without being roused to
+defend the common safety? especially when the senate and people of
+Rome had a leader then; and if they had one now like he was then, the
+same fate would befall you which did overtake them.
+
+He asserts that the body of his stepfather was not allowed burial by
+me. But this is an assertion that was never made by Publius Clodius,
+a man whom, as I was deservedly an enemy of his, I grieve now to see
+surpassed by you in every sort of vice. But how could it occur to you
+to recal to our recollection that you had been educated in the house
+of Publius Lentulus? Were you afraid that we might think that you
+could have turned out as infamous as you are by the mere force of
+nature, if your natural qualities had not been strengthened by
+education?
+
+VIII. But you are so senseless that throughout the whole of your
+speech you were at variance with yourself; so that you said things
+which had not only no coherence with each other but which were most
+inconsistent with and contradictory to one another; so that there was
+not so much opposition between you and me as there was between you and
+yourself. You confessed that your stepfather had been duplicated
+in that enormous wickedness, yet you complained that he had had
+punishment inflicted on him. And by doing so you praised what was
+peculiarly my achievement, and blamed that which was wholly the act of
+the senate. For the detection and arrest of the guilty parties was my
+work, their punishment was the work of the senate. But that eloquent
+man does not perceive that the man against whom he is speaking is
+being praised by him, and that those before whom he is speaking
+are being attacked by him. But now what an act, I will not say of
+audacity, (for he is anxious to be audacious,) but (and that is what
+he is not desirous of) what an act of folly, in which he surpasses
+all men, is it to make mention of the Capitoline Hill, at a time when
+armed men are actually between our benches--when men, armed with
+swords, are now stationed in this same temple of Concord, O ye
+immortal gods, in which, while I was consul, opinions most salutary to
+the state were delivered, owing to which it is that we are all alive
+at this day.
+
+Accuse the senate; accuse the equestrian body, which at that time was
+united with the senate; accuse every order of society, and all the
+citizens, as long as you confess that this assembly at this very
+moment is besieged by Ityrean[12] soldiers. It is not so much a proof
+of audacity to advance these statements so impudently, as of utter
+want of sense to be unable to see their contradictory nature. For
+what is more insane than, after you yourself have taken up arms to do
+mischief to the republic, to reproach another with having taken them
+up to secure its safety? On one occasion you attempted even to be
+witty. O ye good gods, how little did that attempt suit you! And yet
+you are a little to be blamed for your failure in that instance, too.
+For you might have got some wit from your wife, who was an actress.
+"Arms to the gown must yield." Well, have they not yielded? But
+afterwards the gown yielded to your arms. Let us inquire then whether
+it was better for the arms of wicked men to yield to the freedom of
+the Roman people, or that our liberty should yield to your arms. Nor
+will I make any further reply to you about the verses. I will only
+say briefly that you do not understand them, nor any other literature
+whatever. That I have never at any time been wanting to the claims
+that either the republic or my friends had upon me; but nevertheless
+that in all the different sorts of composition on which I have
+employed myself, during my leisure hours, I have always endeavoured to
+make my labours and my writings such as to be some advantage to our
+youth, and some credit to the Roman name. But, however, all this
+has nothing to do with the present occasion. Let us consider more
+important matters.
+
+IX. You have said that Publius Clodius was slain by my contrivance.
+What would men have thought if he had been slain at the time when you
+pursued him in the forum with a drawn sword, in the sight of all the
+Roman people; and when you would have settled his business if he had
+not thrown himself up the stairs of a bookseller's shop, and, shutting
+them against you, checked your attack by that means? And I confess
+that at that time I favoured you, but even you yourself do not say
+that I had advised your attempt. But as for Milo, it was not possible
+even for me to favour his action. For he had finished the business
+before any one could suspect that he was going to do it. Oh, but I
+advised it. I suppose Milo was a man of such a disposition that he was
+not able to do a service to the republic if he had not some one to
+advise him to do it. But I rejoiced at it. Well, suppose I did; was I
+to be the only sorrowful person in the city, when every one else was
+in such delight? Although that inquiry into the death of Publius
+Clodius was not instituted with any great wisdom. For what was the
+reason for having a new law to inquire into the conduct of the man who
+had slain him, when there was a form of inquiry already established by
+the laws? However, an inquiry was instituted. And have you now been
+found, so many years afterwards, to say a thing which, at the time
+that the affair was under discussion, no one ventured to say against
+me? But as to the assertion that you have dared to make, and that at
+great length too, that it was by my means that Pompeius was alienated
+from his friendship with Caesar, and that on that account it was my
+fault that the civil war was originated; in that you have not erred so
+much in the main facts, as (and that is of the greatest importance) in
+the times.
+
+X. When Marcus Bibulus, a most illustrious citizen, was consul, I
+omitted nothing which I could possibly do or attempt to draw off
+Pompeius from his union with Caesar. In which, however, Caesar was
+more fortunate than I, for he himself drew off Pompeius from his
+intimacy with me. But afterwards, when Pompeius joined Caesar with all
+his heart, what could have been my object in attempting to separate
+them then? It would have been the part of a fool to hope to do so, and
+of an impudent man to advise it. However, two occasions did arise, on
+which I gave Pompeius advice against Caesar. You are at liberty to
+find fault with my conduct on those occasions if you can. One was when
+I advised him not to continue Caesar's government for five years more.
+The other, when I advised him not to permit him to be considered as
+a candidate for the consulship when he was absent. And if I had been
+able to prevail on him in either of these particulars, we should never
+have fallen into our present miseries.
+
+Moreover, I also, when Pompeius had now devoted to the service of
+Caesar all his own power, and all the power of the Roman people, and
+had begun when it was too late to perceive all those things which I
+had foreseen long before, and when I saw that a nefarious war was
+about to be waged against our country, I never ceased to be the
+adviser of peace, and concord, and some arrangement. And that language
+of mine was well known to many people,--"I wish, O Cnaeus Pompeius,
+that you had either never joined in a confederacy with Caius Caesar,
+or else that you had never broken it off. The one conduct would have
+become your dignity, and the other would have been suited to your
+prudence." This, O Marcus Antonius, was at all times my advice both
+respecting Pompeius and concerning the republic. And if it had
+prevailed, the republic would still be standing, and you would have
+perished through your own crimes, and indigence, and infamy.
+
+XI. But these are all old stories now. This charge, however, is quite
+a modern one, that Caesar was slain by my contrivance. I am afraid, O
+conscript fathers, lest I should appear to you to have brought up a
+sham accuser against myself (which is a most disgraceful thing to do);
+a man not only to distinguish me by the praises which are my due, but
+to load me also with those which do not belong to me. For who ever
+heard my name mentioned as an accomplice in that most glorious action?
+and whose name has been concealed who was in the number of that
+gallant band? Concealed, do I say? Whose name was there which was not
+at once made public? I should sooner say that some men had boasted in
+order to appear to have been concerned in that conspiracy, though they
+had in reality known nothing of it, than that any one who had been
+an accomplice in it could have wished to be concealed. Moreover, how
+likely it is, that among such a number of men, some obscure, some
+young men who had not the wit to conceal any one, my name could
+possibly have escaped notice! Indeed, if leaders were wanted for
+the purpose of delivering the country, what need was there of my
+instigating the Bruti, one of whom saw every day in his house the
+image of Lucius Brutus, and the other saw also the image of Ahala?
+Were these the men to seek counsel from the ancestors of others rather
+than from their own? and out of doors rather than at home? What? Caius
+Cassius, a man of that family which could not endure, I will not say
+the domination, but even the power of any individual,--he, I suppose,
+was in need of me to instigate him? a man who, even without
+the assistance of these other most illustrious men, would have
+accomplished this same deed in Cilicia, at the mouth of the river
+Cydnus, if Caesar had brought his ships to that bank of the river
+which he had intended, and not to the opposite one. Was Cnaeus
+Domitius spurred on to seek to recover his dignity, not by the death
+of his father, a most illustrious man, nor by the death of his uncle,
+nor by the deprivation of his own dignity, but by my advice and
+authority? Did I persuade Caius Trebonius? a man whom I should not
+have ventured even to advise. On which account the republic owes him
+even a larger debt of gratitude, because he preferred the liberty
+of the Roman people to the friendship of one man, and because he
+preferred overthrowing arbitrary power to sharing it. Was I the
+instigator whom Lucius Tillius Cimber followed? a man whom I admired
+for having performed that action, rather than ever expected that he
+would perform it; and I admired him on this account, that he was
+unmindful of the personal kindnesses which he had received, but
+mindful of his country. What shall I say of the two Servilii? Shall
+I call them Cascas, or Ahalas? and do you think that those men were
+instigated by my authority rather than by their affection for the
+republic? It would take a long time to go through all the rest; and it
+is a glorious thing for the republic that they were so numerous, and a
+most honourable thing also for themselves.
+
+XII. But recollect, I pray you, how that clever man convicted me of
+being an accomplice in the business. When Caesar was slain, says he,
+Marcus Brutus immediately lifted up on high his bloody dagger, and
+called on Cicero by name; and congratulated him on liberty being
+recovered. Why on me above all men? Because I knew of it beforehand?
+Consider rather whether this was not his reason for calling on me,
+that, when he had performed an action very like those which I myself
+had done, he called me above all men to witness that he had been an
+imitator of my exploits. But you, O stupidest of all men, do not you
+perceive, that if it is a crime to have wished that Caesar should be
+slain--which you accuse me of having wished--it is a crime also to
+have rejoiced at his death? For what is the difference between a man
+who has advised an action, and one who has approved of it? or what
+does it signify whether I wished it to be done, or rejoice that it has
+been done? Is there any one then, except you yourself and those men
+who wished him to become a king, who was unwilling that that deed
+should be done, or who disapproved of it after it was done? All men,
+therefore, are guilty as far as this goes. In truth, all good men, as
+far as it depended on them, bore a part in the slaying of Caesar. Some
+did not know how to contrive it, some had not courage for it, some had
+no opportunity,--every one had the inclination.
+
+However, remark the stupidity of this fellow,--I should rather say, of
+this brute beast. For thus he spoke:--"Marcus Brutus, whom I name to
+do him honour, holding aloft his bloody dagger, called upon Cicero,
+from which it must be understood that he was privy to the action."
+Am I then called wicked by you because you suspect that I suspected
+something; and is he who openly displayed his reeking dagger, named by
+you that you may do him honour? Be it so. Let this stupidity exist in
+your language: how much greater is it in your actions and opinions!
+Arrange matters in this way at last, O consul; pronounce the cause of
+the Bruti, of Caius Cassius, of Cnaeus Domitius, of Caius Trebonius
+and the rest to be whatever you please to call it: sleep off that
+intoxication of yours, sleep it off and take breath. Must one apply
+a torch to you to waken you while you are sleeping over such an
+important affair? Will you never understand that you have to decide
+whether those men who performed that action are homicides or assertors
+of freedom?
+
+XIII. For just consider a little; and for a moment think of the
+business like a sober man. I who, as I myself confess, am an intimate
+friend of those men, and, as you accuse me, an accomplice of theirs,
+deny that there is any medium between these alternatives. I confess
+that they, if they be not deliverers of the Roman people and saviours
+of the republic, are worse than assassins, worse than homicides, worse
+even than parricides: since it is a more atrocious thing to murder
+the father of one's country, than one's own father. You wise and
+considerate man, what do you say to this? If they are parricides, why
+are they always named by you, both in this assembly and before the
+Roman people, with a view to do them honour? Why has Marcus Brutus[13]
+been, on your motion, excused from obedience to the laws, and allowed
+to be absent. Why were the games of Apollo celebrated with incredible
+honour to Marcus Brutus? why were provinces given to Brutus and
+Cassius? why were quaestors assigned to them? why was the number of
+their lieutenants augmented? And all these measures were owing to you.
+They are not homicides then. It follows that in your opinion they are
+deliverers of their country, since there can be no other alternative.
+What is the matter? Am I embarrassing you? For perhaps you do not
+quite understand propositions which are stated disjunctively. Still
+this is the sum total of my conclusion; that since they are acquitted
+by you of wickedness, they are at the same time pronounced most worthy
+of the very most honourable rewards.
+
+Therefore, I will now proceed again with my oration. I will write to
+them, if any one by chance should ask whether what you have imputed to
+me be true, not to deny it to any one. In truth, I am afraid that it
+must be considered either a not very creditable thing to them, that
+they should have concealed the fact of my being an accomplice; or else
+a most discreditable one to me that I was invited to be one, and that
+I shirked it. For what greater exploit (I call you to witness, O
+august Jupiter!) was ever achieved not only in this city, but in all
+the earth? What more glorious action was ever done? What deed was ever
+more deservedly recommended to the everlasting recollection of men?
+Do you, then, shut me up with the other leaders in the partnership in
+this design, as in the Trojan horse? I have no objection; I even thank
+you for doing so, with whatever intent you do it. For the deed is so
+great an one, that I cannot compare the unpopularity which you wish to
+excite against me on account of it, with its real glory.
+
+For who can be happier than those men whom you boast of having now
+expelled and driven from the city? What place is there either so
+deserted or so uncivilized, as not to seem to greet and to covet the
+presence of those men wherever they have arrived? What men are so
+clownish as not, when they have once beheld them, to think that they
+have reaped the greatest enjoyment that life can give? And what
+posterity will be ever so forgetful, what literature will ever be
+found so ungrateful, as not to cherish their glory with undying
+recollection? Enrol me then, I beg, in the number of those men.
+
+XIV. But one thing I am afraid you may not approve of. For if I had
+really been one of their number, I should have not only got rid of the
+king, but of the kingly power also out of the republic; and if I had
+been the author of the piece, as it is said, believe me, I should not
+have been contented with one act, but should have finished the whole
+play. Although, if it be a crime to have wished that Caesar might be
+put to death, beware, I pray you, O Antonius, of what must be your own
+case, as it is notorious that you, when at Narbo, formed a plan of
+the same sort with Caius Trebonius; and it was on account of your
+participation in that design that, when Caesar was being killed, we
+saw you called aside by Trebonius. But I (see how far I am from any
+horrible inclination towards,) praise you for having once in your life
+had a righteous intention; I return you thanks for not having revealed
+the matter; and I excuse you for not having accomplished your purpose.
+That exploit required a man.
+
+And if any one should institute a prosecution against you, and employ
+that test of old Cassius, "who reaped any advantage from it?" take
+care, I advise you, lest you suit that description. Although, in
+truth, that action was, as you used to say, an advantage to every one
+who was not willing to be a slave, still it was so to you above all
+men, who are not merely not a slave, but are actually a king; who
+delivered yourself from an enormous burden of debt at the temple of
+Ops; who, by your dealings with the account books, there squandered a
+countless sum of money; who have had such vast treasures brought to
+you from Caesar's house; at whose own house there is set up a most
+lucrative manufactory of false memoranda and autographs, and a most
+iniquitous market of lands, and towns, and exemptions, and revenues.
+In truth, what measure except the death of Caesar could possibly have
+been any relief to your indigent and insolvent condition? You appear
+to be somewhat agitated. Have you any secret fear that you yourself
+may appear to have had some connexion with that crime? I will release
+you from all apprehension; no one will ever believe it; it is not like
+you to deserve well of the republic; the most illustrious men in the
+republic are the authors of that exploit; I only say that you are glad
+it was done; I do not accuse you of having done it. I have replied to
+your heaviest accusations, I must now also reply to the rest of them.
+
+XV. You have thrown in my teeth the camp of Pompeius and all my
+conduct at that time. At which time, indeed, if, as I have said
+before, my counsels and my authority had prevailed, you would this day
+be in indigence, we should be free, and the republic would not have
+lost so many generals and so many armies. For I confess that, when I
+saw that these things certainly would happen, which now have happened,
+I was as greatly grieved as all the other virtuous citizens would have
+been if they had foreseen the same things. I did grieve, I did grieve,
+O conscript fathers, that the republic which had once been saved by
+your counsels and mine, was fated to perish in a short time. Nor was
+I so inexperienced in and ignorant of this nature of things, as to be
+disheartened on account of a fondness for life, which while it endured
+would wear me out with anguish, and when brought to an end would
+release me from all trouble. But I was desirous that those most
+illustrious men, the lights of the republic, should live: so many
+men of consular rank, so many men of praetorian rank, so many most
+honourable senators; and besides them all the flower of our nobility
+and of our youth; and the armies of excellent citizens. And if they
+were still alive, under ever such hard conditions of peace, (for any
+sort of peace with our fellow-citizens appeared to me more desirable
+than civil war,) we should be still this day enjoying the republic.
+
+And if my opinion had prevailed, and if those men, the preservation of
+whose lives was my main object, elated with the hope of victory, had
+not been my chief opposers, to say nothing of other results, at all
+events you would never have continued in this order, or rather in this
+city. But say you, my speech alienated from me the regard of Pompeius?
+Was there any one to whom he was more attached? any one with whom he
+conversed or shared his counsels more frequently? It was, indeed,
+a great thing that we, differing as we did respecting the general
+interests of the republic, should continue in uninterrupted
+friendship. But I saw clearly what his opinions and views were, and he
+saw mine equally. I was for providing for the safety of the citizens
+in the first place, in order that we might be able to consult their
+dignity afterwards. He thought more of consulting their existing
+dignity. But because each of us had a definite object to pursue, our
+disagreement was the more endurable. But what that extraordinary and
+almost godlike man thought of me is known to those men who pursued him
+to Paphos from the battle of Pharsalia. No mention of me was ever made
+by him that was not the most honourable that could be, that was not
+full of the most friendly regret for me; while he confessed that I had
+had the most foresight, but that he had had more sanguine hopes. And
+do you dare taunt me with the name of that man whose friend you admit
+that I was, and whose assassin you confess yourself?
+
+XVI. However, let us say no more of that war, in which you were too
+fortunate. I will not reply even with those jests to which you have
+said that I gave utterance in the camp. That camp was in truth full of
+anxiety, but although men are in great difficulties, still, provided
+they are men, they sometimes relax their minds. But the fact that the
+same man finds fault with my melancholy, and also with my jokes, is a
+great proof that I was very moderate in each particular.
+
+You have said that no inheritances come to me. Would that this
+accusation of yours were a true one; I should have more of my friends
+and connexions alive. But how could such a charge ever come into your
+head? For I have received more than twenty millions of sesterces in
+inheritances. Although in this particular I admit that you have been
+more fortunate than I. No one has ever made me his heir except he was
+a friend of mine, in order that my grief of mind for his loss might be
+accompanied also with some gain, if it was to be considered as such.
+But a man whom you never even saw, Lucius Rubrius, of Casinum, made
+you his heir. And see now how much he loved you, who, though he did
+not know whether you were white or black, passed over the son of his
+brother, Quintus Fufius, a most honourable Roman knight, and most
+attached to him, whom he had on all occasions openly declared his
+heir, (he never even names him in his will,) and he makes you his heir
+whom he had never seen, or at all events had never spoken to.
+
+I wish you would tell me, if it is not too much trouble, what sort of
+countenance Lucius Turselius was of; what sort of height; from what
+municipal town he came; and of what tribe he was a member. "I know
+nothing," you will say, "about him, except what farms he had."
+Therefore, he, disinheriting his brother, made you his heir. And
+besides these instances, this man has seized on much other property
+belonging to men wholly unconnected with him, to the exclusion of the
+legitimate heirs, as if he himself were the heir. Although the thing
+that struck me with most astonishment of all was, that you should
+venture to make mention of inheritances, when you yourself had not
+received the inheritance of your own father.
+
+XVII. And was it in order to collect all these arguments, O you
+most senseless of men, that you spent so many days in practising
+declamation in another man's villa? Although, indeed, (as your most
+intimate friends usually say,) you are in the habit of declaiming,
+not for the purpose of whetting your genius, but of working off the
+effects of wine. And, indeed, you employ a master to teach you jokes,
+a man appointed by your own vote and that of your boon companions; a
+rhetorician, whom you have allowed to say what ever he pleased against
+you, a thoroughly facetious gentleman; but there are plenty of
+materials for speaking against you and against your friends. But just
+see now what a difference there is between you and your grandfather.
+He used with great deliberation to bring forth arguments advantageous
+to the cause he was advocating; you pour forth in a hurry the
+sentiments which you have been taught by another. And what wages have
+you paid this rhetorician? Listen, listen, O conscript fathers,
+and learn the blows which are inflicted on the republic. You have
+assigned, O Antonius, two thousand acres[14] which is often translated
+acre also, of land, in the Leontine district, to Sextus Clodius, the
+rhetorician, and those, too, exempt from every kind of tax, for the
+sake of putting the Roman people to such a vast expense that you might
+learn to be a fool. Was this gift, too, O you most audacious of men,
+found among Caesar's papers? But I will take another opportunity to
+speak about the Leontine and the Campanian district; where he has
+stolen lands from the republic to pollute them with most infamous
+owners. For now, since I have sufficiently replied to all his charges,
+I must say a little about our corrector and censor himself. And yet I
+will not say all I could, in order that if I have often to battle
+with him I may always come to the contest with fresh arms; and the
+multitude of his vices and atrocities will easily enable me to do so.
+
+XVIII. Shall we then examine your conduct from the time when you were
+a boy? I think so. Let us begin at the beginning. Do you recollect
+that, while you were still clad in the praetexta, you became a
+bankrupt? That was the fault of your father, you will say. I admit
+that. In truth, such a defence is full of filial affection. But it
+is peculiarly suited to your own audacity, that you sat among the
+fourteen rows of the knights, though by the Roscian law there was a
+place appointed for bankrupts, even if any one had become so.
+
+XIX. But let us say no more of your profligacy and debauchery. There
+are things which it is not possible for me to mention with honour; but
+you are all the more free for that, inasmuch as you have not scrupled
+to be an actor in scenes which a modest enemy cannot bring himself to
+mention.
+
+Mark now, O conscript fathers, the rest of his life, which I will
+touch upon rapidly. For my inclination hastens to arrive at those
+things which he did in the time of the civil war, amid the greatest
+miseries of the republic, and at those things which he does every day.
+And I beg of you, though they are far better known to you than they
+are to me, still to listen attentively, as you are doing, to my
+relation of them. For in such cases as this, it is not the mere
+knowledge of such actions that ought to excite the mind, but the
+recollection of them also. Although we must at once go into the middle
+of them, lest otherwise we should be too long in coming to the end.
+
+He was very intimate with Clodius at the time of his tribuneship;
+he, who now enumerates the kindnesses which he did me. He was the
+firebrand to handle all conflagrations; and even in his house he
+attempted something. He himself well knows what I allude to. From
+thence he made a journey to Alexandria, in defiance of the authority
+of the senate, and against the interests of the republic, and in spite
+of religious obstacles; but he had Gabinius for his leader, with whom
+whatever he did was sure to be right. What were the circumstances of
+his return from thence? what sort of return was it? He went from Egypt
+to the furthest extremity of Gaul before he returned home. And what
+was his home? For at that time every man had possession of his own
+house; and you had no house anywhere, O Antonius. House, do you say?
+what place was there in the whole world where you could set your foot
+on anything that belonged to you, except Mienum, which you farmed with
+your partners, as if it had been Sisapo?[15]
+
+XX. You came from Gaul to stand for the quaestorship. Dare to say that
+you went to your own father before you came to me. I had already
+received Caesar's letters, begging me to allow myself to accept of your
+excuses; and therefore, I did not allow you even to mention thanks.
+After that, I was treated with respect by you, and you received
+attentions from me in your canvass for the quaestorship. And it was at
+that time, indeed, that you endeavoured to slay Publius Clodius in the
+forum, with the approbation of the Roman people; and though you made
+the attempt of your own accord, and not at my instigation, still you
+clearly alleged that you did not think, unless you slew him, that you
+could possibly make amends to me for all the injuries which you had
+done me. And this makes me wonder why you should say that Milo did
+that deed at my instigation; when I never once exhorted you to do it,
+who of your own accord attempted to do me the same service. Although,
+if you had persisted in it, I should have preferred allowing the
+action to be set down entirely to your own love of glory rather than
+to my influence.
+
+You were elected quaestor. On this, immediately, without any resolution
+of the senate authorizing such a step, without drawing lots, without
+procuring any law to be passed, you hastened to Caesar. For you thought
+the camp the only refuge on earth for indigence, and debt, and
+profligacy,--for all men, in short, who were in a state of utter ruin.
+Then, when you had recruited your resources again by his largesses and
+your own robberies, (if, indeed, a person can be said to recruit,
+who only acquires something which he may immediately squander,) you
+hastened, being again a beggar, to the tribuneship, in order that in
+that magistracy you might, if possible, behave like your friend.
+
+XXI. Listen now, I beseech you, O conscript fathers, not to those
+things which he did indecently and profligately to his own injury and
+to his own disgrace as a private individual; but to the actions which
+he did impiously and wickedly against us and our fortunes,--that is to
+say, against the whole republic. For it is from his wickedness that
+you will find that the beginning of all these evils has arisen.
+
+For when, in the consulship of Lucius Lentulus and Marcus Marcellus,
+you, on the first of January, were anxious to prop up the republic,
+which was tottering and almost falling, and were willing to consult
+the interests of Caius Caesar himself, if he would have acted like
+a man in his senses, then this fellow opposed to your counsels his
+tribuneship, which he had sold and handed over to the purchaser, and
+exposed his own neck to that axe under which many have suffered for
+smaller crimes. It was against you, O Marcus Antonius, that the
+senate, while still in the possession of its rights, before so many
+of its luminaries were extinguished, passed that decree which, in
+accordance with the usage of our ancestors, is at times passed against
+an enemy who is a citizen. And have you dared, before these conscript
+fathers, to say anything against me, when I have been pronounced by
+this order to be the saviour of my country, and when you have been
+declared by it to be an enemy of the republic? The mention of that
+wickedness of yours has been interrupted, but the recollection of it
+has not been effaced. As long as the race of men, as long as the name
+of the Roman people shall exist, (and that, unless it is prevented
+from being so by your means, will be everlasting,) so long will that
+most mischievous interposition of your veto be spoken of. What was
+there that was being done by the senate either ambitiously or rashly,
+when you, one single young man, forbade the whole order to pass
+decrees concerning the safety of the republic? and when you did so,
+not once only, but repeatedly? nor would you allow any one to plead
+with you in behalf of the authority of the senate; and yet, what did
+any one entreat of you, except that you would not desire the republic
+to be entirely overthrown and destroyed; when neither the chief men of
+the state by their entreaties, nor the elders by their warnings, nor
+the senate in a full house by pleading with you, could move you from
+the determination which you had already sold and as it were delivered
+to the purchaser? Then it was, after having tried many other
+expedients previously, that a blow was of necessity struck at you
+which had been struck at only few men before you, and which none of
+them had ever survived. Then it was that this order armed the consuls,
+and the rest of the magistrates who were invested with either military
+or civil command, against you, and you never would have escaped them,
+if you had not taken refuge in the camp of Caesar.
+
+XXII. It was you, you, I say, O Marcus Antonius, who gave Caius Caesar,
+desirous as he already was to throw everything into confusion, the
+principal pretext for waging war against his country. For what other
+pretence did he allege? what cause did he give for his own most
+frantic resolution and action, except that the power of interposition
+by the veto had been disregarded, the privileges of the tribunes taken
+away, and Antonius's rights abridged by the senate? I say nothing of
+how false, how trivial these pretences were; especially when there
+could not possibly be any reasonable cause whatever to justify any one
+in taking up arms against his country. But I have nothing to do with
+Caesar. You must unquestionably allow, that the cause of that ruinous
+war existed in your person.
+
+O miserable man if you are aware, more miserable still if you are not
+aware, that this is recorded in writings, is handed down to men's
+recollection, that our very latest posterity in the most distant ages
+will never forget this fact, that the consuls were expelled from
+Italy, and with them Cnaeus Pompeius, who was the glory and light of
+the empire of the Roman people; that all the men of consular rank,
+whose health would allow them to share in that disaster and that
+flight, and the praetors, and men of praetorian rank, and the tribunes
+of the people, and a great part of the senate, and all the flower of
+the youth of the city, and, in a word, the republic itself was driven
+out and expelled from its abode. As, then, there is in seeds the cause
+which produces trees and plants, so of this most lamentable war you
+were the seed. Do you, O conscript fathers, grieve that these armies
+of the Roman people have been slain? It is Antonius who slew them. Do
+you regret your most illustrious citizens? It is Antonius, again, who
+has deprived you of them. The authority of this order is overthrown;
+it is Antonius who has overthrown it. Everything, in short, which we
+have seen since that time, (and what misfortune is there that we
+have not seen?) we shall, if we argue rightly, attribute wholly to
+Antonius. As Helen was to the Trojans, so has that man been to this
+republic,--the cause of war, the cause of mischief, the cause of ruin.
+The rest of his tribuneship was like the beginning. He did everything
+which the senate had laboured to prevent, as being impossible to be
+done consistently with the safety of the republic. And see, now, how
+gratuitously wicked he was even in accomplishing his wickedness.
+
+XXIII. He restored many men who had fallen under misfortune. Among
+them no mention was made of his uncle. If he was severe, why was he
+not so to every one? If he was merciful, why was he not merciful to
+his own relations? But I say nothing of the rest. He restored Licinius
+Lenticula, a man who had been condemned for gambling, and who was a
+fellow-gamester of his own. As if he could not play with a condemned
+man; but in reality, in order to pay by a straining of the law in his
+favour, what he had lost by the dice. What reason did you allege to
+the Roman people why it was desirable that he should be restored?
+I suppose you said that he was absent when the prosecution was
+instituted against him; that the cause was decided without his having
+been heard in his defence; that there was not by a law any judicial
+proceeding established with reference to gambling; that he had been
+put down by violence or by arms; or lastly, as was said in the case of
+your uncle, that the tribunal had been bribed with money. Nothing of
+this sort was said. Then he was a good man, and one worthy of the
+republic. That, indeed, would have been nothing to the purpose, but
+still, since being condemned does not go for much, I would forgive you
+if that were the truth. Does not he restore to the full possession of
+his former privileges the most worthless man possible,--one who would
+not hesitate to play at dice even in the forum, and who had been
+convicted under the law which exists respecting gambling,--does not he
+declare in the most open manner his own propensities?
+
+Then in this same tribuneship, when Caesar while on his way into Spain
+had given him Italy to trample on, what journeys did he make in every
+direction! how did he visit the municipal towns! I know that I am
+only speaking of matters which have been discussed in every one's
+conversation, and that the things which I am saying and am going to
+say are better known to every one who was in Italy at that time, than
+to me, who was not. Still I mention the particulars of his conduct,
+although my speech cannot possibly come up to your own personal
+knowledge. When was such wickedness ever heard of as existing upon
+earth? or such shamelessness? or such open infamy?
+
+XXIV. The tribune of the people was borne along in a chariot, lictors
+crowned with laurel preceded him; among whom, on an open litter, was
+carried an actress; whom honourable men, citizens of the different
+municipalities, coming out from their towns under compulsion to meet
+him, saluted not by the name by which she was well known on the stage,
+but by that of Volumnia.[16] A car followed full of pimps; then a
+lot of debauched companions; and then his mother, utterly neglected,
+followed the mistress of her profligate son, as if she had been her
+daughter-in-law. O the disastrous fecundity of that miserable woman!
+With the marks of such wickedness as this did that fellow stamp every
+municipality, and prefecture, and colony, and, in short, the whole of
+Italy.
+
+To find fault with the rest of his actions, O conscript fathers, is
+difficult, and somewhat unsafe. He was occupied in war; he glutted
+himself with the slaughter of citizens who bore no resemblance to
+himself. He was fortunate--if at least there can be any good fortune
+in wickedness. But since we wish to show a regard for the veterans,
+although the cause of the soldiers is very different from yours; they
+followed their chief; you went to seek for a leader; still, (that I
+may not give you any pretence for stirring up odium against me among
+them,) I will say nothing of the nature of the war.
+
+When victorious, you returned with the legions from Thessaly to
+Brundusium. There you did not put me to death. It was a great
+kindness! For I confess that you could have done it. Although there
+was no one of those men who were with you at that time, who did not
+think that I ought to be spared. For so great is men's affection for
+their country, that I was sacred even in the eyes of your legions,
+because they recollected that the country had been saved by me.
+However, grant that you did give me what you did not take away from
+me; and that I have my life as a present from you, since it was not
+taken from me by you; was it possible for me, after all your insults,
+to regard that kindness of yours as I regarded it at first, especially
+after you saw that you must hear this reply from me?
+
+XXV. You came to Brundusium, to the bosom and embraces of your
+actress. What is the matter? Am I speaking falsely? How miserable is
+it not to be able to deny a fact which it is disgraceful to confess!
+If you had no shame before the municipal towns, had you none even
+before your veteran army? For what soldier was there who did not see
+her at Brundusium? who was there who did not know that she had come
+so many days' journey to congratulate you? who was there who did not
+grieve that he was so late in finding out how worthless a man he had
+been following?
+
+Again you made a tour through Italy, with that same actress for your
+companion. Cruel and miserable was the way in which you led your
+soldiers into the towns; shameful was the pillage in every city, of
+gold and silver, and above all, of wine. And besides all this, while
+Caesar knew nothing about it, as he was at Alexandria, Antonius, by the
+kindness of Caesar's friends, was appointed his master of the horse.
+Then he thought that he could live with Hippia[17] by virtue of his
+office, and that he might give horses which were the property of the
+state to Sergius the buffoon. At that time he had selected for himself
+to live in, not the house which he now dishonours, but that of Marcus
+Piso. Why need I mention his decrees, his robberies, the possessions
+of inheritances which were given him, and those too which were seized
+by him? Want compelled him; he did not know where to turn. That great
+inheritance from Lucius Rubrius, and that other from Lucius Turselius,
+had not yet come to him. He had not yet succeeded as an unexpected
+heir to the place of Cnaeus Pompeius, and of many others who were
+absent. He was forced to live like a robber, having nothing beyond
+what he could plunder from others.
+
+However, we will say nothing of these things, which are acts of a more
+hardy sort of villany. Let us speak rather of his meaner descriptions
+of worthlessness. You, with those jaws of yours, and those sides of
+yours, and that strength of body suited to a gladiator, drank such
+quantities of wine at the marriage of Hippia, that you were forced
+to vomit the next day in the sight of the Roman people. O action
+disgraceful not merely to see, but even to hear of! If this had
+happened to you at supper amid those vast drinking cups of yours, who
+would not have thought it scandalous? But in an assembly of the Roman
+people, a man holding a public office, a master of the horse, to whom
+it would have been disgraceful even to belch, vomiting filled his own
+bosom and the whole tribunal with fragments of what he had been eating
+reeking with wine. But he himself confesses this among his other
+disgraceful acts. Let us proceed to his more splendid offences.
+
+XXVI. Caesar came back from Alexandria, fortunate, as he seemed at
+least to himself; but in my opinion no one can be fortunate who is
+unfortunate for the republic. The spear was set up in front of
+the temple of Jupiter Stator, and the property of Cnaeus Pompeius
+Magnus--(miserable that I am, for even now that my tears have ceased
+to flow, my grief remains deeply implanted in my heart,)--the
+property, I say, of Cnaeus Pompeius the Great was submitted to the
+pitiless, voice of the auctioneer. On that one occasion the state
+forgot its slavery, and groaned aloud, and though men's minds were
+enslaved, as everything was kept under by fear, still the groans of
+the Roman people were free. While all men were waiting to see who
+would be so impious, who would be so mad, who would be so declared an
+enemy to gods and to men as to dare to mix himself up with that wicked
+auction, no one was found except Antonius, even though there were
+plenty of men collected round that spear[18] who would have dared
+anything else. One man alone was found to dare to do that which the
+audacity of every one else had shrunk from and shuddered at. Were you,
+then, seized with such stupidity,--or, I should rather say, with such
+insanity,--as not to see that if you, being of the rank in which you
+were born, acted as a broker at all, and above all as a broker in the
+case of Pompeius's property, you would be execrated and hated by the
+Roman people, and that all gods and all men must at once become and
+for ever continue hostile to you? But with what violence did that
+glutton immediately proceed to take possession of the property of that
+man, to whose valour it had been owing that the Roman people had been
+more terrible to foreign nations, while his justice had made it dearer
+to them.
+
+XXVII. When, therefore, this fellow had begun to wallow in the
+treasures of that great man, he began to exult like a buffoon in a
+play, who has lately been a beggar, and has become suddenly rich. But,
+as some poet or other says,--
+
+
+ "Ill gotten gain comes quickly to an end."
+
+
+It is an incredible thing, and almost a miracle, how he in a few,
+not months, but days, squandered all that vast wealth. There was an
+immense quantity of wine, an excessive abundance of very valuable
+plate, much precious apparel, great quantities of splendid furniture,
+and other magnificent things in many places, such as one was
+likely to see belonging to a man who was not indeed luxurious,
+but who was very wealthy. Of all this in a few days there was
+nothing left. What Charybdis was ever so voracious? Charybdis,
+do I say? Charybdis, if she existed at all, was only one animal.
+The ocean, I swear most solemnly, appears scarcely capable of
+having swallowed up such numbers of things so widely scattered, and
+distributed in such different places, with such rapidity. Nothing
+was shut up, nothing sealed up, no list was made of anything. Whole
+storehouses were abandoned to the most worthless of men. Actors seized
+on this, actresses on that, the house was crowded with gamblers, and
+full of drunken men, people were drinking all day, and that too in
+many places, there were added to all this expense (for this fellow was
+not invariably fortunate) heavy gambling losses. You might see in
+the cellars of the slaves, couches covered with the most richly
+embroidered counterpanes of Cnaeus Pompeius. Wonder not, then, that all
+these things were so soon consumed. Such profligacy as that could have
+devoured not only the patrimony of one individual, however ample it
+might have been, (as indeed his was) but whole cities and kingdoms.
+
+And then his houses and gardens! Oh the cruel audacity! Did you dare
+to enter into that house? Did you dare to cross that most sacred
+threshold? and to show your most profligate countenance to the
+household gods who protect that abode? A house which for a long time
+no one could behold, no one could pass by without tears! Are you not
+ashamed to dwell so long in that house? one in which, stupid and
+ignorant as you are, still you can see nothing which is not painful to
+you.
+
+XXVIII. When you behold those beaks of ships in the vestibule, and
+those warlike trophies, do you fancy that you are entering into a
+house which belongs to you? It is impossible. Although you are devoid
+of all sense and all feeling,--as in truth you are,--still you are
+acquainted with yourself, and with your trophies, and with your
+friends. Nor do I believe that you either waking or sleeping, can ever
+act with quiet sense. It is impossible but that, were you ever so
+drunk and frantic,--as in truth you are,--when the recollection of the
+appearance of that illustrious man comes across you, you should be
+roused from sleep by your fears, and often stirred up to madness if
+awake. I pity even the walls and the roof. For what had that house
+ever beheld except what was modest, except what proceeded from the
+purest principles and from the most virtuous practice? For that man
+was, O conscript fathers, as you yourselves know, not only illustrious
+abroad, but also admirable at home; and not more praiseworthy for his
+exploits in foreign countries, than for his domestic arrangements. Now
+in his house every bedchamber is a brothel, and every dining-room a
+cookshop. Although he denies this:--Do not, do not make inquiries.
+He is become economical. He desired that mistress of his to take
+possession of whatever belonged to her, according to the laws of the
+Twelve Tables. He has taken his keys from her, and turned her out of
+doors. What a well-tried citizen! of what proved virtue is he! the
+most honourable passage in whose life is the one when he divorced
+himself from this actress.
+
+But how constantly does he harp on the expression "the consul
+Antonius!" This amounts to say "that most debauched consul," "that
+most worthless of men, the consul." For what else is Antonius? For
+if any dignity were implied in the name, then, I imagine, your
+grandfather would sometimes have called himself "the consul Antonius."
+But he never did. My colleague too, your own uncle, would have called
+himself so. Unless you are the only Antonius. But I pass over those
+offences which have no peculiar connexion with the part you took
+in harassing the republic; I return to that in which you bore so
+principal a share,--that is, to the civil war; and it is mainly owing
+to you that that was originated, and brought to a head, and carried
+on.
+
+XXIX. Though you yourself took no personal share in it, partly through
+timidity, partly through profligacy, you had tasted, or rather had
+sucked in, the blood of fellow-citizens: you had been in the battle
+of Pharsalia as a leader; you had slain Lucius Domitius, a most
+illustrious and high-born man; you had pursued and put to death in the
+most barbarous manner many men who had escaped from the battle, and
+whom Caesar would perhaps have saved, as he did some others.
+
+And after having performed these exploits, what was the reason why you
+did not follow Caesar into Africa; especially when so large a portion
+of the war was still remaining? And accordingly, what place did you
+obtain about Caesar's person after his return from Africa? What was
+your rank? He whose quaestor you had been when general, whose master of
+the horse when he was dictator, to whom you had been the chief cause
+of war, the chief instigator of cruelty, the sharer of his plunder,
+his son, as you yourself said, by inheritance, proceeded against you
+for the money which you owed for the house and gardens, and for
+the other property which you had bought at that sale. At first you
+answered fiercely enough, and that I may not appear prejudiced against
+you in every particular, you used a tolerably just and reasonable
+argument. "What, does Caius Caesar demand money of me? why should he do
+so, any more than I should claim it of him? Was he victorious without
+my assistance? No, and he never could have been. It was I who supplied
+him with a pretext for civil war, it was I who proposed mischievous
+laws, it was I who took up arms against the consuls and generals of
+the Roman people, against the senate and people of Rome, against the
+gods of the country, against its altars and healths, against the
+country itself. Has he conquered for himself alone? Why should not
+those men whose common work the achievement is, have the booty also in
+common?" You were only claiming your right, but what had that to do
+with it? He was the more powerful of the two.
+
+Therefore, stopping all your expostulations, he sent his soldiers to
+you, and to your sureties, when all on a sudden out came that splendid
+catalogue of yours. How men did laugh! That there should be so vast a
+catalogue, that their should be such a numerous and various list of
+possessions, of all of which, with the exception of a portion of
+Misenum, there was nothing which the man who was putting them up to
+sale could call his own. And what a miserable sight was the auction. A
+little apparel of Pompeius's, and that stained, a few silver vessels
+belonging to the same man, all battered, some slaves in wretched
+condition, so that we grieved that there was anything remaining to be
+seen of these miserable relics. This auction, however, the heirs of
+Lucius Rubrius prevented from proceeding, being armed with a decree of
+Caesar to that effect. The spendthrift was embarrassed. He did not know
+which way to turn. It was at this very time that an assassin sent
+by him was said to have been detected with a dagger in the house of
+Caesar. And of this Caesar himself complained in the senate, inveighing
+openly against you. Caesar departs to Spain, having granted you a few
+days delay for making the payment, on account of your poverty. Even
+then you do not follow him. Had so good a gladiator as you retired
+from business so early? Can any one then fear a man who was as timid
+as this man in upholding his party, that is, in upholding his own
+fortunes?
+
+XXX. After some time he at last went into Spain; but, as he says, he
+could not arrive there in safety. How then did Dolabella manage to
+arrive there? Either, O Antonius, that cause ought never to have
+been undertaken, or when you had undertaken it, it should have
+been maintained to the end. Thrice did Caesar fight against his
+fellow-citizens; in Thessaly, in Africa, and in Spain. Dolabella was
+present at all these battles. In the battle in Spain he even received
+a wound. If you ask my opinion, I wish he had not been there. But
+still, if his design at first was blameable, his consistency and
+firmness were praiseworthy. But what shall we say of you? In the first
+place, the children of Cnaeus Pompeius sought to be restored to their
+country. Well, this concerned the common interests of the whole party.
+Besides that, they sought to recover their household gods, the gods of
+their country, their altars, their hearths, the tutelar gods of their
+family; all of which you had seized upon. And when they sought to
+recover those things by force of arms which belonged to them by the
+laws, who was it most natural--(although in unjust and unnatural
+proceedings what can there be that is natural?)--still, who was it
+most natural to expect would fight against the children of Cnaeus
+Pompeius? Who? Why, you who had bought their property. Were you at
+Narbo to be sick over the tables of your entertainers, while Dolabella
+was fighting your battles in Spain?
+
+And what a return was that of yours from Narbo? He even asked why
+I had returned so suddenly from my expedition. I have just briefly
+explained to you, O conscript fathers, the reason of my return. I was
+desirous, if I could, to be of service to the republic even before the
+first of January. For, as to your question, how I had returned; in the
+first place, I returned by daylight, not in the dark; in the second
+place, I returned in shoes, and in my Roman gown, not in any Gallic
+slippers, or barbarian mantle. And even now you keep looking at me;
+and, as it seems, with great anger. Surely you would be reconciled
+to me if you knew how ashamed I am of your worthlessness, which you
+yourself are not ashamed of. Of all the profligate conduct of all the
+world, I never saw, I never heard of any more shameful than yours. You
+who fancied yourself a master of the horse, when you were standing
+for, or I should rather say begging for the consulship for the
+ensuing year, ran in Gallic slippers and a barbarian mantle about the
+municipal towns and colonies of Gaul from which we used to demand the
+consulship when the consulship was stood for and not begged for.
+
+XXXI. But mark now the trifling character of the fellow. When about
+the tenth hour of the day he had arrived at Red Rocks, he skulked into
+a little petty wine-shop, and, hiding there, kept on drinking till
+evening. And from thence getting into a gig and being driven rapidly
+to the city, he came to his own house with his head veiled. "Who are
+you?" says the porter. "An express from Marcus." He is at once taken
+to the woman for whose sake he had come; and he delivered the letter
+to her. And when she had read it with tears, (for it was written in
+a very amorous style, but the main subject of the letter was that he
+would have nothing to do with that actress for the future; that he
+had discarded all his love for her, and transferred it to his
+correspondent,) when she, I say, wept plentifully, this soft-hearted
+man could bear it no longer; he uncovered his head and threw himself
+on her neck. Oh the worthless man! (for what else can I call him?
+there is no more suitable expression for me to use,) was it for this
+that you disturbed the city by nocturnal alarms, and Italy with
+fears of many days' duration, in order that you might show yourself
+unexpectedly, and that a woman might see you before she hoped to do
+so? And he had at home a pretence of love; but out of doors a cause
+more discreditable still, namely, lest Lucius Plancus should sell up
+his sureties. But after you had been produced in the assembly by one
+of the tribunes of the people, and had replied that you had come on
+your own private business, you made even the people full of jokes
+against you. But, however, we have said too much about trifles. Let us
+come to more important subjects.
+
+XXXII. You went a great distance to meet Caesar on his return from
+Spain. You went rapidly, you returned rapidly in order that we might
+see that, if you were not brave, you were at least active. You again
+became intimate with him; I am sure I do not know how. Caesar had this
+peculiar characteristic; whoever he knew to be utterly ruined by debt,
+and needy, even if he knew him also to be an audacious and worthless
+man, he willingly admitted him to his intimacy. You then, being
+admirably recommended to him by these circumstances, were ordered to
+be appointed consul, and that too as his own colleague. I do not make
+any complaint against Dolabella, who was at that time acting under
+compulsion, and was cajoled and deceived. But who is there who does
+not know with what great perfidy both of you treated Dolabella in that
+business? Caesar induced him to stand for the consulship. After having
+promised it to him, and pledged himself to aid him, he prevented
+his getting it, and transferred it to himself. And you endorsed his
+treachery with your own eagerness.
+
+The first of January arrives. We are convened in the senate. Dolabella
+inveighed against him with much more fluency and premeditation than I
+am doing now. And what things were they which he said in his anger, O
+ye good gods! First of all, after Caesar had declared that before he
+departed he would order Dolabella to be made consul, (and they deny
+that he was a king who was always doing and saying something of this
+sort,)--but after Caesar had said this, then this virtuous augur said
+that he was invested with a pontificate of that sort that he was able,
+by means of the auspices, either to hinder or to vitiate the comitia,
+just as he pleased; and he declared that he would do so. And here, in
+the first place, remark the incredible stupidity of the man. For what
+do you mean? Could you not just as well have done what you said you
+had now the power to do by the privileges with which that pontificate
+had invested you, even if you were not an augur, if you were consul?
+Perhaps you could even do it more easily. For we augurs have only the
+power of announcing that the auspices are being observed, but the
+consuls and other magistrates have the right also of observing them
+whenever they choose. Be it so. You said this out of ignorance. For
+one must not demand prudence from a man who is never sober. But still
+remark his impudence. Many months before, he said in the senate that
+he would either prevent the comitia from assembling for the election
+of Dolabella by means of the auspices, or that he would do what he
+actually did do. Can any one divine beforehand what defect there will
+be in the auspices, except the man who has already determined to
+observe the heavens? which in the first place it is forbidden by law
+to do at the time of the comitia. And if any one has been observing
+the heavens, he is bound to give notice of it, not after the comitia
+are assembled, but before they are held. But this man's ignorance is
+joined to impudence, nor does he know what an augur ought to know, nor
+do what a modest man ought to do. And just recollect the whole of his
+conduct during his consulship from that day up to the ides of March.
+What lictor was ever so humble, so abject? He himself had no power at
+all; he begged everything of others; and thrusting his head into the
+hind part of his litter, he begged favours of his colleagues, to sell
+them himself afterwards.
+
+XXXIII. Behold, the day of the comitia for the election of Dolabella
+arrives. The prerogative century draws its lot. He is quiet. The vote
+is declared; he is still silent. The first class is called.[19]
+Its vote is declared. Then, as is the usual course, the votes are
+announced. Then the second class. And all this is done faster than I
+have told it. When the business is over, that excellent augur (you
+would say he must be Caius Laelius,) says,--"We adjourn it to another
+day." Oh the monstrous impudence of such a proceeding! What had you
+seen? what had you perceived? what had you heard? For you did not say
+that you had been observing the heavens, and indeed you do not say
+so this day. That defect then has arisen, which you on the first of
+January had already foreseen would arise, and which you had predicted
+so long before. Therefore, in truth, you have made a false declaration
+respecting the auspices, to your own great misfortune, I hope, rather
+than to that of the republic. You laid the Roman people under the
+obligations of religion; you as augur interrupted an augur; you as
+consul interrupted a consul by a false declaration concerning the
+auspices.
+
+I will say no more, lest I should seem to be pulling to pieces the
+acts of Dolabella; which must inevitably sometime or other be
+brought before our college. But take notice of the arrogance
+and insolence of the fellow. As long as you please, Dolabella
+is a consul irregularly elected; again, while you please,
+he is a consul elected with all proper regard to the auspices. If it
+means nothing when an augur gives this notice in those words in which
+you gave notice, then confess that you, when you said,--"We adjourn
+this to another day," were not sober. But if those words have any
+meaning, then I, an augur, demand of my colleague to know what that
+meaning is.
+
+But lest by any chance, while enumerating his numerous exploits, our
+speech should pass over the finest action of Marcus Antonius, let us
+come to the Lupercalia.
+
+XXXIV. He does not dissemble, O conscript fathers; it is plain that he
+is agitated; he perspires; he turns pale. Let him do what he pleases,
+provided he is not sick, and does not behave as he did in the Minucian
+colonnade. What defence can be made for such beastly behaviour? I
+wish to hear, that I may see the fruit of those high wages of that
+rhetorician, of that land given in Leontini. Your colleague was
+sitting in the rostra, clothed in purple robe, on a golden chair,
+wearing a crown. You mount the steps; you approach his chair; (if you
+were a priest of Pan, you ought to have recollected that you were
+consul too;) you display a diadem. There is a groan over the whole
+forum. Where did the diadem come from? For you had not picked it up
+when lying on the ground, but you had brought it from home with you,
+a premeditated and deliberately planned wickedness. You placed the
+diadem on his head amid the groans of the people; he rejected it amid
+great applause. You then alone, O wicked man, were found, both to
+advise the assumption of kingly power, and to wish to have him for
+your master who was your colleague; and also to try what the Roman
+people might be able to bear and to endure. Moreover, you even sought
+to move his pity; you threw yourself at his feet as a suppliant;
+begging for what? to be a slave? You might beg it for yourself, when
+you had lived in such a way from the time that you were a boy that you
+could bear everything, and would find no difficulty in being a slave;
+but certainly you had no commission from the Roman people to try for
+such a thing for them.
+
+Oh how splendid was that eloquence of yours, when you harangued the
+people stark naked! What could be more foul than this? more shameful
+than this? more deserving of every sort of punishment? Are you waiting
+for me to prick you more? This that I am saying must tear you and
+bring blood enough if you have any feeling at all. I am afraid that I
+may be detracting from the glory of some most eminent men. Still my
+indignation shall find a voice. What can be more scandalous than for
+that man to live who placed a diadem on a man's head, when every one
+confesses that that man was deservedly slain who rejected it? And,
+moreover, he caused it to be recorded in the annals, under the head
+of Lupercalia, "That Marcus Antonius, the consul, by command of the
+people, had offered the kingdom to Caius Caesar, perpetual dictator;
+and that Caesar had refused to accept it." I now am not much surprised
+at your seeking to disturb the general tranquillity; at your hating
+not only the city but the light of day; and at your living with a pack
+of abandoned robbers, disregarding the day, and yet regarding nothing
+beyond the day.[20] For where can you be safe in peace? What place can
+there be for you where laws and courts of justice have sway, both of
+which you, as far as in you lay, destroyed by the substitution of
+kingly power? Was it for this that Lucius Tarquinius was driven out;
+that Spurius Cassius, and Spurius Maelius, and Marcus Manlius were
+slain; that many years afterwards a king might be established at Rome
+by Marcus Antonius, though the bare idea was impiety? However, let us
+return to the auspices.
+
+XXXV. With respect to all the things which Caesar was intending to
+do in the senate on the ides of March, I ask whether you have done
+anything? I heard, indeed, that you had come down prepared, because
+you thought that I intended to speak about your having made a false
+statement respecting the auspices, though it was still necessary for
+us to respect them. The fortune of the Roman people saved us from that
+day. Did the death of Caesar also put an end to your opinion respecting
+the auspices? But I have come to mention that occasion which must
+be allowed to precede those matters which I had begun to discuss.
+What a flight was that of yours! What alarm was yours on that
+memorable day! How, from the consciousness of your wickedness,
+did you despair of your life! How, while flying, were you enabled
+secretly to get home by the kindness of those men who wished
+to save you, thinking you would show more sense than you do! O
+how vain have at all times been my too true predictions of the future!
+I told those deliverers of ours in the Capitol, when they wished me to
+go to you to exhort you to defend the republic, that as long as you
+were in fear you would promise everything, but that as soon as you
+had emancipated yourself from alarm you would be yourself again.
+Therefore, while the rest of the men of consular rank were going
+backwards and forwards to you, I adhered to my opinion, nor did I see
+you at all that day, or the next; nor did I think it possible for an
+alliance between virtuous citizens and a most unprincipled enemy to be
+made, so as to last, by any treaty or engagement whatever. The third
+day I came into the temple of Tellus, even then very much against my
+will, as armed men were blockading all the approaches. What a day was
+that for you, O Marcus Antonius! Although you showed yourself all on a
+sudden an enemy to me; still I pity you for having envied yourself.
+
+XXXVI. What a man, O ye immortal gods! and how great a man might
+you have been, if you had been able to preserve the inclination you
+displayed that day;--we should still have peace which was made then by
+the pledge of a hostage, a boy of noble birth, the grandson of Marcus
+Bambalio. Although it was fear that was then making you a good
+citizen, which is never a lasting teacher of duty; your own audacity,
+which never departs from you as long as you are free from fear, has
+made you a worthless one. Although even at that time, when they
+thought you an excellent man, though I indeed differed from that
+opinion, you behaved with the greatest wickedness while presiding at
+the funeral of the tyrant, if that ought to be called a funeral. All
+that fine panegyric was yours, that commiseration was yours, that
+exhortation was yours. It was you--you, I say--who hurled those
+firebrands, both those with which your friend himself was nearly
+burnt, and those by which the house of Lucius Bellienus was set
+on fire and destroyed. It was you who let loose those attacks of
+abandoned men, slaves for the most part, which we repelled by violence
+and our own personal exertions; it was you who set them on to attack
+our houses. And yet you, as if you had wiped off all the soot and
+smoke in the ensuing days, carried those excellent resolutions in the
+Capitol, that no document conferring any exemption, or granting any
+favour, should be published after the ides of March. You recollect
+yourself, what you said about the exiles; you know what you said
+about the exemption; but the best thing of all was, that you for ever
+abolished the name of the dictatorship in the republic. Which act
+appeared to show that you had conceived such a hatred of kingly power
+that you took away all fear of it for the future, on account of him
+who had been the last dictator.
+
+To other men the republic now seemed established, but it did not
+appear so at all to me, as I was afraid of every sort of shipwreck,
+as long as you were at the helm. Have I been deceived? or, was it
+possible for that man long to continue unlike himself? While you were
+all looking on, documents were fixed up over the whole Capitol, and
+exemptions were being sold, not merely to individuals, but to entire
+states. The freedom of the city was also being given now not to single
+persons only, but to whole provinces. Therefore, if these acts are to
+stand,--and stand they cannot if the republic stands too,--then, O
+conscript fathers, you have lost whole provinces; and not the revenues
+only, but the actual empire of the Roman people has been diminished by
+a market this man held in his own house.
+
+XXXVII. Where are the seven hundred millions of sesterces which were
+entered in the account-books which are in the temple of Ops? a sum
+lamentable indeed, as to the means by which it was procured, but still
+one which, if it were not restored to those to whom it belonged, might
+save us from taxes. And how was it, that when you owed forty millions
+of sesterces on the fifteenth of March, you had ceased to owe them
+by the first of April? Those things are quite countless which were
+purchased of different people, not without your knowledge; but there
+was one excellent decree posted up in the Capitol affecting king
+Deiotarus, a most devoted friend to the Roman people. And when that
+decree was posted up, there was no one who, amid all his indignation,
+could restrain his laughter. For who ever was a more bitter enemy to
+another than Caesar was to Deiotarus? He was as hostile to him as he
+was to this order, to the equestrian order, to the people of Massilia,
+and to all men whom he knew to look on the republic of the Roman
+people with attachment. But this man, who neither present nor absent
+could ever obtain from him any favour or justice while he was alive,
+became quite an influential man with him when he was dead. When
+present with him in his house he had called for him though he was his
+host, he had made him give in his accounts of his revenue, he had
+exacted money from him; he had established one of his Greek retainers
+in his tetrarchy, and he had taken Armenia from him, which had been
+given to him by the senate. While he was alive he deprived him of all
+these things; now that he is dead, he gives them back again. And in
+what words? At one time he says, "that it appears to him to be just,
+..." at another, "that it appears not to be unjust...." What a strange
+combination of words! But while alive, (I know this, for I always
+supported Deiotarus, who was at a distance,) he never said that
+anything which we were asking for, for him, appeared just to him. A
+bond for ten millions of sesterces was entered into in the women's
+apartment, (where many things have been sold, and are still
+being sold,) by his ambassadors, well-meaning men, but timid and
+inexperienced in business, without my advice or that of the rest of
+the hereditary friends of the monarch. And I advise you to consider
+carefully what you intend to do with reference to this bond. For the
+king himself, of his own accord, without waiting for any of Caesar's
+memoranda, the moment that he heard of his death, recovered his own
+rights by his own courage and energy. He, like a wise man, knew that
+this was always the law, that those men from whom the things which
+tyrants had taken away had been taken, might recover them when the
+tyrants were slain. No lawyer, therefore, not even he who is your
+lawyer and yours alone, and by whose advice you do all these things,
+will say that anything is due to you by virtue of that bond for those
+things which had been recovered before that bond was executed. For he
+did not purchase them of you; but, before you undertook to sell him
+his own property, he had taken possession of it. He was a man--we,
+indeed, deserve to be despised, who hate the author of the actions,
+but uphold the actions themselves.
+
+XXXVIII. Why need I mention the countless mass of papers, the
+innumerable autographs which have been brought forward? writings of
+which there are imitators who sell their forgeries as openly as if
+they were gladiators' playbills. Therefore, there are now such heaps
+of money piled up in that man's house, that it is weighed out instead
+of being counted.[21] But how blind is avarice! Lately, too, a
+document has been posted up by which the most wealthy cities of the
+Cretans are released from tribute; and by which it is ordained that
+after the expiration of the consulship of Marcus Brutus, Crete shall
+cease to be a province. Are you in your senses? Ought you not to be
+put in confinement? Was it possible for there really to be a decree
+of Caesar's exempting Crete after the departure of Marcus Brutus, when
+Brutus had no connexion whatever with Crete while Caesar was alive? But
+by the sale of this decree (that you may not, O conscript fathers,
+think it wholly ineffectual) you have lost the province of Crete.
+There was nothing in the whole world which any one wanted to buy that
+this fellow was not ready to sell.
+
+Caesar too, I suppose, made the law about the exiles which you have
+posted up. I do not wish to press upon any one in misfortune; I only
+complain, in the first place, that the return of those men has had
+discredit thrown upon it, whose cause Caesar judged to be different
+from that of the rest; and in the second place, I do not know why you
+do not mete out the same measure to all. For there can not be more
+than three or four left. Why do not they who are in similar misfortune
+enjoy a similar degree of your mercy? Why do you treat them as you
+treated your uncle? about whom you refused to pass a law when you
+were passing one about all the rest; and whom at the same time you
+encouraged to stand for the censorship, and instigated him to a
+canvass, which excited the ridicule and the complaint of every one.
+
+But why did you not hold that comitia? Was it because a tribune of the
+people announced that there had been an ill-omened flash of lightning
+seen? When you have any interest of your own to serve, then auspices
+are all nothing; but when it is only your friends who are concerned,
+then you become scrupulous. What more? Did you not also desert him
+in the matter of the septemvirate?[22] "Yes, for he interfered
+with me." What were you afraid of? I suppose you were afraid that
+you would be able to refuse him nothing if he were restored to the
+full possession of his rights. You loaded him with every species
+of insult, a man whom you ought to have considered in the place
+of a father to you, if you had had any piety or natural affection
+at all. You put away his daughter, your own cousin, having already
+looked out and provided yourself beforehand with another. That
+was not enough. You accused a most chaste woman of misconduct.
+What can go beyond this? Yet you were not content with this.
+In a very full senate held on the first of January, while your
+uncle was present, you dared to say that this was your reason for
+hatred of Dolabella, that you had ascertained that he had committed
+adultery with your cousin and your wife. Who can decide whether it
+was more shameless of you to make such profligate and such impious
+statements against that unhappy woman in the senate, or more wicked to
+make them against Dolabella, or more scandalous to make them in the
+presence of her father, or more cruel to make them at all?
+
+XXXIX. However, let us return to the subject of Caesar's written
+papers. How were they verified by you? For the acts of Caesar were for
+peace's sake confirmed by the senate; that is to say, the acts which
+Caesar had really done, not those which Antonius said that Caesar had
+done. Where do all these come from? By whom are they produced and
+vouched for? If they are false, why are they ratified? If they are
+true, why are they sold? But the vote which was come to enjoined you,
+after the first of June, to make an examination of Caesar's acts with
+the assistance of a council. What council did you consult? Whom did
+you ever invite to help you? What was the first of June that you
+waited for? Was it that day on which you, having travelled all
+through the colonies where the veterans were settled, returned
+escorted by a band of armed men?
+
+Oh what a splendid progress of yours was that in the months of April
+and May, when you attempted even to lead a colony to Capua! How you
+made your escape from thence, or rather how you barely made your
+escape, we all know. And now you are still threatening that city. I
+wish you would try, and we should not then be forced to say "barely."
+However, what a splendid progress of yours that was! Why need
+I mention your preparations for banquets, why your frantic
+hard-drinking? Those things are only an injury to yourself; these are
+injuries to us. We thought that a great blow was inflicted on the
+republic when the Campanian district was released from the payment of
+taxes, in order to be given to the soldiery; but you have divided
+it among your partners in drunkenness and gambling. I tell you, O
+conscript fathers, that a lot of buffoons and actresses have been
+settled in the district of Campania. Why should I now complain of what
+has been done in the district of Leontini? Although formerly these
+lands of Campania and Leontini were considered part of the patrimony
+of the Roman people, and were productive of great revenue, and very
+fertile. You gave your physician three thousand acres; what would you
+have done if he had cured you? and two thousand to your master of
+oratory; what would you have done if he had been able to make you
+eloquent? However, let us return to your progress, and to Italy.
+
+XL. You led a colony to Casilinum, a place to which Caesar had
+previously led one. You did indeed consult me by letter about the
+colony of Capua, (but I should have given you the same answer about
+Casilinum,) whether you could legally lead a new colony to a place
+where there was a colony already. I said that a new colony could not
+be legally conducted to an existing colony, which had been established
+with a due observance of the auspices, as long as it remained in a
+flourishing state; but I wrote you word that new colonists might
+be enrolled among the old ones. But you, elated and insolent,
+disregarding all the respect due to the auspices, led a colony to
+Casilinum, whither one had been previously led a few years before; in
+order to erect your standard there, and to mark out the line of the
+new colony with a plough. And by that plough you almost grazed the
+gate of Capua, so as to diminish the territory of that flourishing
+colony. After this violation of all religious observances, you hasten
+off to the estate of Marcus Varro, a most conscientious and upright
+man, at Casinum. By what right? with what face do you do this? By just
+the same, you will say, as that by which you entered on the estates of
+the heirs of Lucius Rubrius, or of the heirs of Lucius Turselius,
+or on other innumerable possessions. If you got the right from any
+auction, let the auction have all the force to which it is entitled;
+let writings be of force, provided they are the writings of Caesar,
+and not your own; writings by which you are bound, not those by which
+you have released yourself from obligation.
+
+But who says that the estate of Varro at Casinum was ever sold at all?
+who ever saw any notice of that auction? Who ever heard the voice of
+the auctioneer? You say that you sent a man to Alexandria to buy it
+of Caesar. It was too long to wait for Caesar himself to come! But
+whoever heard (and there was no man about whose safety more people
+were anxious) that any part whatever of Varro's property had been
+confiscated? What? what shall we say if Caesar even wrote you that you
+were to give it up? What can be said strong enough for such enormous
+impudence? Remove for a while those swords which we see around us. You
+shall now see that the cause of Caesar's auctions is one thing, and
+that of your confidence and rashness is another. For not only shall
+the owner drive you from that estate, but any one of his friends, or
+neighbours, or hereditary connexions, and any agent, will have the
+right to do so.
+
+XLI. But how many days did he spend revelling in the most scandalous
+manner in that villa! From the third hour there was one scene of
+drinking, gambling, and vomiting. Alas for the unhappy house itself!
+how different a master from its former one has it fallen to the share
+of! Although, how is he the master at all? but still by how different
+a person has it been occupied! For Marcus Varro used it as a place of
+retirement for his studies, not as a theatre for his lusts. What
+noble discussions used to take place in that villa! what ideas were
+originated there! what writings were composed there! The laws of the
+Roman people, the memorials of our ancestors, the consideration of all
+wisdom, and all learning, were the topics that used to be dwelt on
+then;--but now, while you were the intruder there, (for I will not
+call you the master,) every place was resounding with the voices of
+drunken men; the pavements were floating with wine; the walls were
+dripping; nobly-born boys were mixing with the basest hirelings;
+prostitutes with mothers of families. Men came from Casinum, from
+Aquinum, from Interamna to salute him. No one was admitted. That,
+indeed, was proper. For the ordinary marks of respect were unsuited
+to the most profligate of men. When going from thence to Rome he
+approached Aquinum, a pretty numerous company (for it is a populous
+municipality) came out to meet him. But he was carried through the
+town in a covered litter, as if he had been dead. The people of
+Aquinum acted foolishly, no doubt; but still they were in his road.
+What did the people of Anagnia do? who, although they were out of
+his line of road, came down to meet him, in order to pay him their
+respects, as if he were consul. It is an incredible thing to say, but
+still it was only too notorious at the time, that he returned nobody's
+salutation; especially as he had two men of Anagnia with him, Mustela
+and Laco; one of whom had the care of his swords, and the other of his
+drinking cups.
+
+Why should I mention the threats and insults with which he inveighed
+against the people of Teanum Sidicinum, with which he harassed the men
+of Puteoli, because they had adopted Caius Cassius and the Bruti as
+their patrons? a choice dictated, in truth, by great wisdom, and great
+zeal, benevolence, and affection for them; not by violence and force
+of arms, by which men have been compelled to choose you, and Basilus,
+and others like you both,--men whom no one would choose to have for
+his own clients, much less to be their client himself.
+
+XLII. In the mean time, while you yourself were absent, what a day was
+that for your colleague when he overturned that tomb in the forum,
+which you were accustomed to regard with veneration! And when that
+action was announced to you, you--as is agreed upon by all who were
+with you at the time--fainted away. What happened afterwards I know
+not. I imagine that terror and arms got the mastery. At all events,
+you dragged your colleague down from his heaven; and you rendered him,
+not even now like yourself, but at all events very unlike his own
+former self.
+
+After that what a return was that of yours to Rome! How great was the
+agitation of the whole city! We recollected Cinna being too powerful;
+after him we had seen Sylla with absolute authority, and we had lately
+beheld Caesar acting as king. There were perhaps swords, but they were
+sheathed, and they were not very numerous. But how great and how
+barbaric a procession is yours! Men follow you in battle array with
+drawn swords; we see whole litters full of shields borne along. And
+yet by custom, O conscript fathers, we have become inured and callous
+to these things. When on the first of June we wished to come to the
+senate, as it had been ordained, we were suddenly frightened and
+forced to flee. But he, as having no need of a senate, did not miss
+any of us, and rather rejoiced at our departure, and immediately
+proceeded to those marvellous exploits of his. He who had defended the
+memoranda of Caesar for the sake of his own profit, overturned the laws
+of Caesar--and good laws too--for the sake of being able to agitate the
+republic. He increased the number of years that magistrates were
+to enjoy their provinces; moreover, though he was bound to be the
+defender of the acts of Caesar, he rescinded them both with reference
+to public and private transactions.
+
+In public transactions nothing is more authoritative than law; in
+private affairs the most valid of all deeds is a will. Of the laws,
+some he abolished without giving the least notice; others he gave
+notice of bills to abolish. Wills he annulled; though they have been
+at all times held sacred even in the case of the very meanest of the
+citizens. As for the statues and pictures which Caesar bequeathed to
+the people, together with his gardens, those he carried away, some to
+the house which belonged to Pompeius, and some to Scipio's villa.
+
+XLIII. And are you then diligent in doing honour to Caesar's memory?
+Do you love him even now that he is dead? What greater honour had he
+obtained than that of having a holy cushion, an image, a temple, and
+a priest? As then Jupiter, and Mars, and Quirinus have priests, so
+Marcus Antonius is the priest of the god Julius. Why then do you
+delay? why are not you inaugurated? Choose a day; select some one to
+inaugurate you; we are colleagues; no one will refuse O you detestable
+man, whether you are the priest of a tyrant, or of a dead man! I ask
+you then, whether you are ignorant what day this is? Are you ignorant
+that yesterday was the fourth day of the Roman games in the Circus?
+and that you yourself submitted a motion to the people, that a fifth
+day should be added besides, in honour of Caesar? Why are we not all
+clad in the praetexta? Why are we permitting the honour which by your
+law was appointed for Caesar to be deserted? Had you no objection to so
+holy a day being polluted by the addition of supplications, while you
+did not choose it to be so by the addition of ceremonies connected
+with a sacred cushion? Either take away religion in every case, or
+preserve it in every case.
+
+You will ask whether I approve of his having a sacred cushion, a
+temple and a priest? I approve of none of those things. But you,
+who are defending the acts of Caesar, what reason can you give for
+defending some, and disregarding others? unless, indeed, you choose
+to admit that you measure everything by your own gain, and not by
+his dignity. What will you now reply to these arguments?--(for I am
+waiting to witness your eloquence; I knew your grandfather, who was
+a most eloquent man, but I know you to be a more undisguised speaker
+than he was; he never harangued the people naked; but we have seen
+your breast, man, without disguise as you are.) Will you make any
+reply to these statements? will you dare to open your mouth at all?
+Can you find one single article in this long speech of mine, to which
+you trust that you can make any answer? However, we will say no more
+of what is past.
+
+XLIV. But this single day, this very day that now is, this very moment
+while I am speaking, defend your conduct during this very moment, if
+you can. Why has the senate been surrounded with a belt of armed men?
+Why are your satellites listening to me sword in hand? Why are not the
+folding-doors of the temple of Concord open? Why do you bring men of
+all nations the most barbarous, Ityreans, armed with arrows, into the
+forum? He says, that he does so as a guard. Is it not then better to
+perish a thousand times than to be unable to live in one's own city
+without a guard of armed men? But believe me, there is no protection
+in that;--a man must be defended by the affection and good-will of his
+fellow citizens, not by arms. The Roman people will take them from
+you, will wrest them from your hands, I wish that they may do so while
+we are still safe. But however you treat us, as long as you adopt
+those counsels, it is impossible for you, believe me, to last long. In
+truth, that wife of yours, who is so far removed from covetousness,
+and whom I mention without intending any slight to her, has been too
+long owing[23] her third payment to the state. The Roman people has
+men to whom it can entrust the helm of the state, and wherever they
+are, there is all the defence of the republic, or rather, there is
+the republic itself, which as yet has only avenged, but has not
+reestablished itself. Truly and surely has the republic most high born
+youths ready to defend it,--though they may for a time keep in the
+background from a desire for tranquillity, still they can be recalled
+by the republic at any time.
+
+The name of peace is sweet, the thing itself is most salutary. But
+between peace and slavery there is a wide difference. Peace is liberty
+in tranquillity, slavery is the worst of all evils,--to be repelled,
+if need be, not only by war, but even by death. But if those
+deliverers of ours have taken themselves away out of our sight, still
+they have left behind the example of their conduct. They have done
+what no one else had done. Brutus pursued Tarquinius with war, who
+was a king when it was lawful for a king to exist in Rome. Spurius
+Cassius, Spurius Maelius, and Marcus Manlius were all slain because
+they were suspected of aiming at regal power. These are the first men
+who have ever ventured to attack, sword in hand, a man who was not
+aiming at regal power, but actually reigning. And their action is not
+only of itself a glorious and godlike exploit, but it is also one put
+forth for our imitation, especially since by it they have acquired
+such glory as appears hardly to be bounded by heaven itself. For
+although in the very consciousness of a glorious action there is a
+certain reward, still I do not consider immortality of glory a thing
+to be despised by one who is himself mortal.
+
+XLV. Recollect then, O Marcus Antonius, that day on which you
+abolished the dictatorship. Set before you the joy of the senate and
+people of Rome, compare it with this infamous market held by you
+and by your friends, and then you will understand how great is the
+difference between praise and profit. But in truth, just as some
+people, through some disease which has blunted the senses, have
+no conception of the niceness of food, so men who are lustful,
+avaricious, and criminal, have no taste for true glory. But if praise
+cannot allure you to act rightly, still cannot even fear turn you away
+from the most shameful actions? You are not afraid of the courts of
+justice. If it is because you are innocent I praise you, if because
+you trust in your power of overbearing them by violence, are you
+ignorant of what that man has to fear, who on such an account as that
+does not fear the courts of justice?
+
+But if you are not afraid of brave men and illustrious citizens,
+because they are prevented from attacking you by your armed retinue,
+still, believe me, your own fellows will not long endure you. And
+what a life is it, day and night to be fearing danger from one's own
+people! Unless, indeed, you have men who are bound to you by greater
+kindnesses than some of those men by whom he was slain were bound to
+Caesar, or unless there are points in which you can be compared with
+him.
+
+In that man were combined genius, method, memory, literature,
+prudence, deliberation, and industry. He had performed exploits in war
+which, though calamitous for the republic, were nevertheless mighty
+deeds. Having for many years aimed at being a king, he had with great
+labour, and much personal danger, accomplished what he intended. He
+had conciliated the ignorant multitude by presents, by monuments, by
+largesses of food, and by banquets, he had bound his own party to him
+by rewards, his adversaries by the appearances of clemency. Why need I
+say much on such a subject? He had already brought a free city, partly
+by fear, partly by patience, into a habit of slavery.
+
+XLVI. With him I can, indeed, compare you as to your desire to reign,
+but in all other respects you are in no degree to be compared to
+him. But from the many evils which by him have been burnt into the
+republic, there is still this good, that the Roman people has now
+learnt how much to believe every one, to whom to trust itself, and
+against whom to guard. Do you never think on these things? And do you
+not understand that it is enough for brave men to have learnt how
+noble a thing it is as to the act, how grateful it is as to the
+benefit done, how glorious as to the fame acquired, to slay a tyrant?
+When men could not bear him, do you think they will bear you? Believe
+me, the time will come when men will race with one another to do
+this deed, and when no one will wait for the tardy arrival of an
+opportunity.
+
+Consider, I beg you, Marcus Antonius, do some time or other consider
+the republic: think of the family of which you are born, not of the
+men with whom you are living. Be reconciled to the republic. However,
+do you decide on your conduct. As to mine, I myself will declare what
+that shall be. I defended the republic as a young man, I will not
+abandon it now that I am old. I scorned the sword of Catiline, I will
+not quail before yours. No, I will rather cheerfully expose my own
+person, if the liberty of the city can be restored by my death.
+
+May the indignation of the Roman people at last bring forth what it
+has been so long labouring with. In truth, if twenty years ago in this
+very temple I asserted that death could not come prematurely upon a
+man of consular rank, with how much more truth must I now say the same
+of an old man? To me, indeed, O conscript fathers, death is now even
+desirable, after all the honours which I have gained, and the deeds
+which I have done. I only pray for these two things: one, that dying
+I may leave the Roman people free. No greater boon than this can be
+granted me by the immortal gods. The other, that every one may meet
+with a fate suitable to his deserts and conduct towards the republic.
+
+
+
+
+THE THIRD PHILIPPIC, OR THIRD SPEECH OF M. T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS
+ANTONIUS.
+
+
+THE ARGUMENT.
+
+
+After the composition of the last speech, Octavius, considering that
+he had reason to be offended with Antonius, formed a plot for his
+assassination by means of some slaves, which however was discovered.
+In the mean time Antonius began to declare more and more openly
+against the conspirators. He erected a statue in the forum to Caesar,
+with the inscription, "To the most worthy Defender of his Country."
+Octavius at the same time was trying to win over the soldiers of his
+uncle Julius, and out-bidding Antonius in all his promises to them, so
+that he soon collected a formidable army of veterans. But as he had no
+public office to give him any colour for this conduct, he paid great
+court to the republican party, in hopes to get his proceedings
+authorized by the senate; and he kept continually pressing Cicero to
+return to Rome and support him. Cicero, however, for some time kept
+aloof, suspecting partly his abilities, on account of his exceeding
+youth, and partly his sincerity in reconciling himself to his uncle's
+murderers; however, at last he returned, after expressly stipulating
+that Octavius should employ all his forces in defence of Brutus and
+his accomplices.
+
+Antonius left Rome about the end of September, in order to engage in
+his service four legions of Caesar's, which were on their return from
+Macedonia. But when they arrived at Brundusium three of them refused
+to follow him, on which he murdered all their centurions, to the
+number of three hundred, who were all put to death in his lodgings, in
+the sight of himself and Fulvia his wife, and then returned to Rome
+with the one legion which he had prevailed on; while the other three
+legions declared as yet for neither party. On his arrival in Rome he
+published many very violent edicts, and summoned the senate to meet
+on the twenty-fourth of October; then he adjourned it to the
+twenty-eighth; and a day or two before it met, he heard that two out
+of the three legions had declared for Octavius, and encamped at Alba.
+And this news alarmed him so much, that he abandoned his intention of
+proposing to the senate a decree to declare Octavius a public enemy,
+and after distributing some provinces among his friends, he put on
+his military robes, and left the city to take possession of Cisalpine
+Gaul, which had been assigned to him by a pretended law of the people,
+against the will of the senate.
+
+On the news of his departure Cicero returned to Rome, where he arrived
+on the ninth of December. He immediately conferred with Pansa, one of
+the consuls elect, (Hirtius his colleague was ill,) as to the measures
+to be taken. He was again addressed with earnest solicitations by
+the friends of Octavius, who, to confirm his belief in his good
+intentions, allowed Casca, who had been one of the slayers of Caesar,
+and had himself given him the first blow, to enter on his office as
+tribune of the people on the tenth of December.
+
+The new tribunes convoked the senate for the nineteenth, on which
+occasion Cicero had intended to be absent, but receiving the day
+before the edict of Decimus Brutus, by which he forbade Antonius to
+enter his province (immediately after the death of Caesar he had taken
+possession of Cisalpine Gaul, which had been conferred on him by
+Caesar), and declared that he would defend it against him by force and
+preserve it in its duty to the senate, he thought it necessary to
+procure for Brutus a resolution of the senate in his favour. He went
+down therefore very early, and, in a very full house, delivered the
+following speech.
+
+I. We have been assembled at length, O conscript fathers, altogether
+later than the necessities of the republic required; but still we are
+assembled, a measure which I, indeed, have been every day demanding,
+inasmuch as I saw that a nefarious war against our altars and our
+hearths, against our lives and our fortunes was, I will not say being
+prepared, but being actually waged by a profligate and desperate man.
+People are waiting for the first of January. But Antonius is not
+waiting for that day, who is now attempting with an army to invade the
+province of Decimus Brutus, a most illustrious and excellent man. And
+when he has procured reinforcements and equipments there, he threatens
+that he will come to this city. What is the use then of waiting, or
+of even a delay for the very shortest time? For although the first of
+January is at hand, still a short time is a long one for people who
+are not prepared. For a day, or I should rather say an hour, often
+brings great disasters, if no precautions are taken. And it is not
+usual to wait for a fixed day for holding a council, as it is for
+celebrating a festival. But if the first of January had fallen on
+the day when Antonius first fled from the city, or if people had not
+waited for it, we should by this time have no war at all. For we
+should easily have crushed the audacity of that frantic man by the
+authority of the senate and the unanimity of the Roman people. And
+now, indeed, I feel confident that the consuls elect will do so,
+as soon as they enter on their magistracy. For they are men of the
+highest courage, of the most consummate wisdom, and they will act in
+perfect harmony with each other. But my exhortations to rapid and
+instant action are prompted by a desire not merely for victory, but
+for speedy victory.
+
+For how long are we to trust to the prudence of an individual to repel
+so important, so cruel, and so nefarious a war? Why is not the public
+authority thrown into the scale as quickly as possible?
+
+II. Caius Caesar, a young man, or, I should rather say, almost a boy,
+endued with an incredible and godlike degree of wisdom and valour, at
+the time when the frenzy of Antonius was at its height, and when
+his cruel and mischievous return from Brundusium was an object of
+apprehension to all, while we neither desired him to do so, nor
+thought of such a measure, nor ventured even to wish it, (because it
+did not seem practicable,) collected a most trustworthy army from the
+invincible body of veteran soldiers, and has spent his own patrimony
+in doing so. Although I have not used the expression which I
+ought,--for he has not spent it,--he has invested it in the safety of
+the republic.
+
+And although it is not possible to requite him with all the thanks to
+which he is entitled, still we ought to feel all the gratitude towards
+him which our minds are capable of conceiving. For who is so ignorant
+of public affairs, so entirely indifferent to all thoughts of the
+republic, as not to see that, if Marcus Antonius could have come with
+those forces which he made sure that he should have, from Brundusium
+to Rome, as he threatened, there would have been no description of
+cruelty which he would not have practised? A man who in the house of
+his entertainer at Brundusium ordered so many most gallant men
+and virtuous citizens to be murdered, and whose wife's face was
+notoriously besprinkled with the blood of men dying at his and her
+feet. Who is there of us, or what good man is there at all, whom a man
+stained with this barbarity would ever have spared; especially as he
+was coming hither much more angry with all virtuous men than he had
+been with those whom he had massacred there? And from this calamity
+Caesar has delivered the republic by his own individual prudence, (and,
+indeed, there were no other means by which it could have been done.)
+And if he had not been born in this republic we should, owing to the
+wickedness of Antonius, now have no republic at all.
+
+For this is what I believe, this is my deliberate opinion, that if
+that one young man had not checked the violence and inhuman projects
+of that frantic man, the republic would have been utterly destroyed.
+And to him we must, O conscript fathers, (for this is the first time,
+met in such a condition, that, owing to his good service, we are at
+liberty to say freely what we think and feel,) we must, I say, this
+day give authority, so that he may be able to defend the republic, not
+because that defence has been voluntarily undertaken by him but also
+because it has been entrusted to him by us.
+
+III. Nor (since now after a long interval we are allowed to speak
+concerning the republic) is it possible for us to be silent about the
+Martial legion. For what single man has ever been braver, what single
+man has ever been more devoted to the republic than the whole of the
+Martial legion? which, as soon as it had decided that Marcus Antonius
+was an enemy of the Roman people, refused to be a companion of his
+insanity; deserted him though consul; which, in truth, it would not
+have done if it had considered him as consul, who, as it saw, was
+aiming at nothing and preparing nothing but the slaughter of the
+citizens, and the destruction of the state. And that legion has
+encamped at Alba. What city could it have selected either more
+suitable for enabling it to act, or more faithful, or full of more
+gallant men, or of citizens more devoted to the republic?
+
+The fourth legion, imitating the virtue of this legion, under the
+leadership of Lucius Egnatuleius, the quaestor, a most virtuous and
+intrepid citizen, has also acknowledged the authority and joined the
+army of Caius Caesar.
+
+We, therefore, O conscript fathers, must take care that those things
+which this most illustrious young man, this most excellent of all men
+has of his own accord done, and still is doing, be sanctioned by our
+authority; and the admirable unanimity of the veterans, those most
+brave men, and of the Martial and of the fourth legion, in their zeal
+for the reestablishment of the republic, be encouraged by our praise
+and commendation. And let us pledge ourselves this day that their
+advantage, and honours, and rewards shall be cared for by us as soon
+as the consuls elect have entered on their magistracy.
+
+IV. And the things which I have said about Caesar and about his army,
+are, indeed, already well known to you. For by the admirable valour
+of Caesar, and by the firmness of the veteran soldiers, and by the
+admirable discernment of those legions which have followed our
+authority, and the liberty of the Roman people, and the valour of
+Caesar, Antonius has been repelled from his attempts upon our lives.
+But these things, as I have said, happened before; but this recent
+edict of Decimus Brutus, which has just been issued, can certainly not
+be passed over in silence. For he promises to preserve the province of
+Gaul in obedience to the senate and people of Rome. O citizen, born
+for the republic; mindful of the name he bears; imitator of his
+ancestors! Nor, indeed, was the acquisition of liberty so much an
+object of desire to our ancestors when Tarquinius was expelled, as,
+now that Antonius is driven away, the preservation of it is to us.
+Those men had learnt to obey kings ever since the foundation of
+the city, but we from the time when the kings were driven out have
+forgotten how to be slaves. And that Tarquinius, whom our ancestors
+expelled, was not either considered or called cruel or impious,
+but only The Proud. That vice which we have often borne in private
+individuals, our ancestors could not endure even in a king.
+
+Lucius Brutus could not endure a proud king. Shall Decimus Brutus
+submit to the kingly power of a man who is wicked and impious? What
+atrocity did Tarquinius ever commit equal to the innumerable acts of
+the sort which Antonius has done and is still doing? Again, the kings
+were used to consult the senate; nor, as is the case when Antonius
+holds a senate, were armed barbarians ever introduced into the council
+of the king. The kings paid due regard to the auspices, which this
+man, though consul and augur, has neglected, not only by passing laws
+in opposition to the auspices, but also by making his colleague (whom
+he himself had appointed irregularly, and had falsified the auspices
+in order to do so) join in passing them. Again, what king was ever
+so preposterously impudent as to have all the profits, and
+kindnesses, and privileges of his kingdom on sale? But what immunity
+is there, what rights of citizenship, what rewards that this man has
+not sold to individuals, and to cities, and to entire provinces?
+We have never heard of anything base or sordid being imputed to
+Tarquinius. But at the house of this man gold was constantly being
+weighed out in the spinning room, and money was being paid, and in
+one single house every soul who had any interest in the business was
+selling the whole empire of the Roman people. We have never heard of
+any executions of Roman citizens by the orders of Tarquinius, but this
+man both at Suessa murdered the man whom he had thrown into prison,
+and at Brundusium massacred about three hundred most gallant men and
+most virtuous citizens. Lastly, Tarquinius was conducting a war in
+defence of the Roman people at the very time when he was expelled.
+Antonius was leading an army against the Roman people at the time
+when, being abandoned by the legions, he cowered at the name of Caesar
+and at his army, and neglecting the regular sacrifices, he offered up
+before daylight vows which he could never mean to perform, and at
+this very moment he is endeavouring to invade a province of the Roman
+people. The Roman people, therefore, has already received and is still
+looking for greater services at the hand of Decimus Brutus than our
+ancestors received from Lucius Brutus, the founder of this race and
+name which we ought to be so anxious to preserve.
+
+V. But, while all slavery is miserable, to be slave to a man who is
+profligate, unchaste, effeminate, never, not even while in fear,
+sober, is surely intolerable. He, then, who keeps this man out of
+Gaul, especially by his own private authority, judges, and judges most
+truly, that he is not consul at all. We must take care, therefore, O
+conscript fathers, to sanction the private decision of Decimus Brutus
+by public authority. Nor, indeed, ought you to have thought Marcus
+Antonius consul at any time since the Lupercalia. For on the day
+when he, in the sight of the Roman people, harangued the mob, naked,
+perfumed, and drunk, and laboured moreover to put a crown on the head
+of his colleague, on that day he abdicated not only the consulship,
+but also his own freedom. At all events he himself must at once have
+become a slave, if Caesar had been willing to accept from him that
+ensign of royalty. Can I then think him a consul, can I think him a
+Roman citizen, can I think him a freeman, can I even think him a man,
+who on that shameful and wicked day showed what he was willing to
+endure while Caesar lived, and what he was anxious to obtain himself
+after he was dead?
+
+Nor is it possible to pass over in silence the virtue and the firmness
+and the dignity of the province of Gaul. For that is the flower of
+Italy, that is the bulwark of the empire of the Roman people, that is
+the chief ornament of our dignity. But so perfect is the unanimity of
+the municipal towns and colonies of the province of Gaul, that all
+men in that district appear to have united together to defend the
+authority of this order, and the majesty of the Roman people.
+Wherefore, O tribunes of the people, although you have not actually
+brought any other business before us beyond the question of
+protection, in order that the consuls may be able to hold the senate
+with safety on the first of January, still you appear to me to have
+acted with great wisdom and great prudence in giving an opportunity
+of debating the general circumstances of the republic. For when you
+decided that the senate could not be held with safety without some
+protection or other, you at the same time asserted by that decision
+that the wickedness and audacity of Antonius was still continuing its
+practices within our walls.
+
+VI. Wherefore, I will embrace every consideration in my opinion which
+I am now going to deliver, a course to which you, I feel sure, have no
+objection, in order that authority may be conferred by us on admirable
+generals, and that hope of reward may be held out by us to gallant
+soldiers, and that a formal decision may be come to, not by words
+only, but also by actions, that Antonius is not only not a consul, but
+is even an enemy. For if he be consul, then the legions which have
+deserted the consul deserve beating[24] to death. Caesar is wicked,
+Brutus is impious, since they of their own heads have levied an army
+against the consul. But if new honours are to be sought out for the
+soldiers on account of their divine and immortal merits, and if it
+is quite impossible to show gratitude enough to the generals, who is
+there who must not think that man a public enemy, whose conduct
+is such that those who are in arms against him are considered the
+saviours of the republic?
+
+Again, how insulting is he in his edicts! how ignorant! How like a
+barbarian! In the first place, how has he heaped abuse on Caesar,
+in terms drawn from his recollection of his own debauchery and
+profligacy. For where can we find any one who is chaster than this
+young man? who is more modest? where have we among our youth a more
+illustrious example of the old-fashioned strictness? Who, on the other
+hand, is more profligate than the man who abuses him? He reproaches
+the son of Caius Caesar with his want of noble blood, when even his
+natural[25] father, if he had been alive, would have been made consul.
+His mother is a woman of Aricia. You might suppose he was saying a
+woman of Tralles, or of Ephesus. Just see how we all who come from the
+municipal towns--that is to say, absolutely all of us--are looked down
+upon; for how few of us are there who do not come from those towns?
+and what municipal town is there which he does not despise who looks
+with such contempt on Aricia; a town most ancient as to its antiquity;
+if we regard its rights, united with us by treaty; if we regard its
+vicinity, almost close to us; if we regard the high character of its
+inhabitants, most honourable? It is from Aricia that we have received
+the Voconian and Atinian laws; from Aricia have come many of those
+magistrates who have filled our curule chairs, both in our fathers'
+recollection and in our own; from Aricia have sprung many of the best
+and bravest of the Roman knights. But if you disapprove of a wife from
+Aricia, why do you approve of one from Tusculum? Although the father
+of this most virtuous and excellent woman, Marcus Atius Balbus, a man
+of the highest character, was a man of praetorian rank; but the father
+of your wife,--a good woman, at all events a rich one,--a fellow of
+the name of Bambalio, was a man of no account at all. Nothing could be
+lower than he was, a fellow who got his surname as a sort of insult,
+derived[26] from the hesitation of his speech and the stolidity of his
+understanding. Oh, but your grandfather was nobly born. Yes, he was
+that Tuditanus who used to put on a cloak and buskins, and then go
+and scatter money from the rostra among the people. I wish he had
+bequeathed his contempt of money to his descendants! You have, indeed,
+a most glorious nobility of family! But how does it happen that the
+son of a woman of Aricia appears to you to be ignoble, when you
+are accustomed to boast of a descent on the mother's side which is
+precisely the same?[27] Besides, what insanity is it for that man to
+say anything about the want of noble birth in men's wives, when his
+father married Numitoria of Fregellae, the daughter of a traitor, and
+when he himself has begotten children of the daughter of a freedman.
+However, those illustrious men Lucius Philippus, who has a wife who
+came from Aricia, and Caius Marcellus, whose wife is the daughter of
+an Arician, may look to this; and I am quite sure that they have no
+regrets on the score of the dignity of those admirable women.
+
+VII. Moreover, Antonius proceeds to name Quintus Cicero, my brother's
+son, in his edict; and is so mad as not to perceive that the way in
+which he names him is a panegyric on him. For what could happen more
+desirable for this young man, than to be known by every one to be the
+partner of Caesar's counsels, and the enemy of the frenzy of Antonius?
+But this gladiator has dared to put in writing that he had designed
+the murder of his father and of his uncle. Oh the marvellous
+impudence, and audacity, and temerity of such an assertion! to dare to
+put this in writing against that young man, whom I and my brother,
+on account of his amiable manners, and pure character, and splendid
+abilities, vie with one another in loving, and to whom we incessantly
+devote our eyes, and ears, and affections! And as to me, he does not
+know whether he is injuring or praising me in those same edicts. When
+he threatens the most virtuous citizens with the same punishment which
+I inflicted on the most wicked and infamous of men, he seems to praise
+me as if he were desirous of copying me; but when he brings up again
+the memory of that most illustrious exploit, then he thinks that he is
+exciting some odium against me in the breasts of men like himself.
+
+VIII. But what is it that he has done himself? When he had published
+all these edicts, he issued another, that the senate was to meet in a
+full house on the twenty-fourth of November. On that day he himself
+was not present. But what were the terms of his edict? These, I
+believe, are the exact words of the end of it: "If any one fails to
+attend, all men will be at liberty to think him the adviser of my
+destruction and of most ruinous counsels". What are ruinous counsels?
+those which relate to the recovery of the liberty of the Roman people?
+Of those counsels I confess that I have been and still am an adviser
+and prompter to Caesar. Although he did not stand in need of any one's
+advice, but still I spurned on the willing horse, as it is said. For
+what good man would not have advised putting you to death, when on
+your death depended the safety and life of every good man, and the
+liberty and dignity of the Roman people?
+
+But when he had summoned us all by so severe an edict, why did he not
+attend himself? Do you suppose that he was detained by any melancholy
+or important occasion? He was detained drinking and feasting. If,
+indeed, it deserves to be called a feast, and not rather gluttony.
+He neglected to attend on the day mentioned in his edict, and he
+adjourned the meeting to the twenty-eighth. He then summoned us to
+attend in the Capitol, and at that temple he did arrive himself,
+coming up through some mine left by the Gauls. Men came, having been
+summoned, some of them indeed men of high distinction, but forgetful
+of what was due to their dignity. For the day was such, the report of
+the object of the meeting such, such too the man who had convened the
+senate, that it was discreditable for a senate to feel no fear for the
+result. And yet to those men who had assembled he did not dare to
+say a single word about Caesar, though he had made up his mind[28]
+to submit a motion respecting him to the senate. There was a man of
+consular rank who had brought a resolution ready drawn up. Is it not
+now admitting that he is himself an enemy, when he does not dare to
+make a motion respecting a man who is leading an army against him
+while he is consul? For it is perfectly plain that one of the two
+must be an enemy, nor is it possible to come to a different decision
+respecting adverse generals. If then Caius Caesar be an enemy, why does
+the consul submit no motion to the senate? If he does not deserve to
+be branded by the senate, then what can the consul say, who, by his
+silence respecting him, has confessed that he himself is an enemy? In
+his edicts he styles him Spartacus, while in the senate he does not
+venture to call him even a bad citizen.
+
+IX. But in the most melancholy circumstances what mirth does he not
+provoke? I have committed to memory some short phrases of one edict,
+which he appears to think particularly clever, but I have not as yet
+found any one who has understood what he intended by them. "That is no
+insult which a worthy man does." Now, in the first place, what is the
+meaning of "worthy?" For there are many men worthy of punishment, as
+he himself is. Does he mean what a man does who is invested with any
+dignity?[29] if so, what insult can be greater? Moreover, what is the
+meaning of "doing an insult?" Who ever uses such an expression? Then
+comes, "Nor any fear which an enemy threatens" What then? is fear
+usually threatened by a friend? Then came many similar sentences. Is
+it not better to be dumb, than to say what no one can understand? Now
+see why his tutor, exchanging pleas for ploughs, has had given to him
+in the public domain of the Roman people two thousand acres of land in
+the Leontine district, exempt from all taxes, for making a stupid man
+still stupider at the public expense.
+
+However, these perhaps are trifling matters. I ask now, why all on a
+sudden he became so gentle in the senate, after having been so fierce
+in his edicts? For what was the object of threatening Lucius Cassius,
+a most fearless tribune of the people, and a most virtuous and loyal
+citizen, with death if he came to the Senate? of expelling Decimus
+Caifulenus, a man thoroughly attached to the republic, from the senate
+by violence and threats of death? of interdicting Titus Canutius, by
+whom he had been repeatedly and deservedly harassed by most legitimate
+attacks, not only from the temple itself but from all approach to it?
+What was the resolution of the senate which he was afraid that they
+would stop by the interposition of their veto? That, I suppose,
+respecting the supplication in honour of Marcus Lepidus, a most
+illustrious man! Certainly there was a great danger of our hindering
+an ordinary compliment to a man on whom we were every day thinking
+of conferring some extraordinary honour. However, that he might not
+appear to have had no reason at all for ordering the senate to
+meet, he was on the point of bringing forward some motion about the
+republic, when the news about the fourth legion came; which entirely
+bewildered him, and hastening to flee away, he took a division on the
+resolution for decreeing this supplication, though such a proceeding
+had never been heard of before.[30]
+
+X. But what a setting out was his after this! what a journey when he
+was in his robe as a general! How did he shun all eyes, and the light
+of day, and the city, and the forum! How miserable was his flight! how
+shameful! how infamous! Splendid, too, were the decrees of the senate
+passed on the evening of that very day; very religiously solemn
+was the allotment of the provinces; and heavenly indeed was the
+opportunity, when everyone got exactly what he thought most desirable.
+You are acting admirably, therefore, O tribunes of the people, in
+bringing forward a motion about the protection of the senate and
+consuls, and most deservedly are we all bound to feel and to prove to
+you the greatest gratitude for your conduct. For how can we be free
+from fear and danger while menaced by such covetousness and audacity?
+And as for that ruined and desperate man, what more hostile decision
+can be passed upon him than has already been passed by his own
+friends? His most intimate friend, a man connected with me too, Lucius
+Lentulus, and also Publius Naso, a man destitute of covetousness, have
+shown that they think that they have no provinces assigned them, and
+that the allotments of Antonius are invalid. Lucius Philippus, a man
+thoroughly worthy of his father and grandfather and ancestors, has
+done the same. The same is the opinion of Marcus Turanius, a man of
+the greatest integrity and purity of life. The same is the conduct
+of Publius Oppius; and those very men,--who, influenced by their
+friendship for Marcus Antonius, have attributed to him more power than
+they would perhaps really approve of,--Marcus Piso, my own connexion,
+a most admirable man and virtuous citizen, and Marcus Vehilius, a man
+of equal respectability, have both declared that they would obey the
+authority of the senate. Why should I speak of Lucius Cinna? whose
+extraordinary integrity, proved under many trying circumstances, makes
+the glory of his present admirable conduct less remarkable; he has
+altogether disregarded the province assigned to him; and so has Caius
+Cestius, a man of great and firm mind.
+
+Who are there left then to be delighted with this heavensent
+allotment? Lucius Antonius and Marcus Antonius! O happy pair! for
+there is nothing that they wished for more. Caius Antonius has
+Macedonia. Happy, too, is he! For he was constantly talking about this
+province. Caius Calvisius has Africa. Nothing could be more fortunate,
+for he had only just departed from Africa, and, as if he had divined
+that he should return, he left two lieutenants at Utica. Then Marcus
+Iccius has Sicily, and Quintus Cassius Spain. I do not know what to
+suspect. I fancy the lots which assigned these two provinces, were not
+quite so carefully attended to by the gods.
+
+XI. O Caius Caesar, (I am speaking of the young man,) what safety have
+you brought to the republic! How unforeseen has it been! how sudden!
+for if he did these things when flying, what would he have done when
+he was pursuing? In truth, he had said in a harangue that he would be
+the guardian of the city; and that he would keep his army at the
+gates of the city till the first of May. What a fine guardian (as the
+proverb goes) is the wolf of the sheep! Would Antonius have been a
+guardian of the city, or its plunderer and destroyer? And he said too
+that he would come into the city and go out as he pleased. What more
+need I say? Did he not say, in the hearing of all the people, while
+sitting in front of the temple of Castor, that no one should remain
+alive but the conqueror?
+
+On this day, O conscript fathers, for the first time after a long
+interval do we plant our foot and take possession of liberty. Liberty,
+of which, as long as I could be, I was not only the defender, but even
+the saviour. But when I could not be so, I rested; and I bore the
+misfortunes and misery of that period without abjectness, and not
+without some dignity. But as for this most foul monster, who could
+endure him, or how could any one endure him? What is there in Antonius
+except lust, and cruelty, and wantonness, and audacity? Of these
+materials he is wholly made up. There is in him nothing ingenuous,
+nothing moderate, nothing modest, nothing virtuous. Wherefore, since
+the matter has come to such a crisis that the question is whether he
+is to make atonement to the republic for his crimes, or we are to
+become slaves, let us at last, I beseech you, by the immortal gods,
+O conscript fathers, adopt our fathers' courage, and our fathers'
+virtue, so as either to recover the liberty belonging to the Roman
+name and race, or else to prefer death to slavery. We have borne and
+endured many things which ought not to be endured in a free city, some
+of us out of a hope of recovering our freedom, some from too great a
+fondness for life. But if we have submitted to these things, which
+necessity and a sort of force which may seem almost to have been put
+on us by destiny have compelled us to endure, though, in point of
+fact, we have not endured them, are we also to bear with the most
+shameful and inhuman tyranny of this profligate robber?
+
+XII. What will he do in his passion, if ever he has the power, who,
+when he is not able to show his anger against any one, has been the
+enemy of all good men? What will he not dare to do when victorious,
+who, without having gained any victory, has committed such crimes as
+these since the death of Caesar? has emptied his well filled house? has
+pillaged his gardens? has transferred to his own mansion all their
+ornaments? has sought to make his death a pretext for slaughter and
+conflagration? who, while he has carried two or three resolutions of
+the senate which have been advantageous to the republic, has made
+everything else subservient to his own acquisition of gain and
+plunder? who has put up exemptions and annuities to sale? who has
+released cities from obligations? who has removed whole provinces
+from subjection to the Roman empire? who has restored exiles? who has
+passed forged laws in the name of Caesar, and has continued to have
+forged decrees engraved on brass and fixed up in the Capitol, and has
+set up in his own house a domestic market for all things of that sort?
+who has imposed laws on the Roman people? and who, with armed troops
+and guards, has excluded both the people and the magistrates from the
+forum? who has filled the senate with armed men? and has introduced
+armed men into the temple of Concord when he was holding a senate
+there? who ran down to Brundusium to meet the legions, and then
+murdered all the centurions in them who were well affected to the
+republic? who endeavoured to come to Rome with his army to accomplish
+our massacre and the utter destruction of the city?
+
+And he, now that he has been prevented from succeeding in this attempt
+by the wisdom and forces of Caesar, and the unanimity of the veterans,
+and the valour of the legions, even now that his fortunes are
+desperate, does not diminish his audacity, nor, mad that he is, does
+he cease proceeding in his headlong career of fury. He is leading his
+mutilated army into Gaul, with one legion, and that too wavering in
+its fidelity to him, he is waiting for his brother Lucius, as he
+cannot find any one more nearly like himself than him. But now what
+slaughter is this man, who has thus become a captain instead of a
+matador, a general instead of a gladiator, making, wherever he sets
+his foot! He destroys stores, he slays the flocks and herds, and all
+the cattle, wherever he finds them, his soldiers revel in their spoil,
+and he himself, in order to imitate his brother, drowns himself in
+wine. Fields are laid waste, villas are plundered, matrons, virgins,
+well born boys are carried off and given up to the soldiery, and
+Marcus Antonius has done exactly the same wherever he has led his
+army.
+
+XIII. Will you open your gates to these most infamous brothers? will
+you ever admit them into the city? will you not rather, now that the
+opportunity is offered to you, now that you have generals ready, and
+the minds of the soldiers eager for the service, and all the Roman
+people unanimous, and all Italy excited with the desire to recover its
+liberty,--will you not, I say, avail yourself of the kindness of the
+immortal gods? You will never have an opportunity if you neglect this
+one. He will be hemmed in in the rear, in the front, and in flank, if
+he once enters Gaul. Nor must he be attacked by arms alone, but by
+our decrees also. Mighty is the authority, mighty is the name of
+the senate when all its members are inspired by one and the same
+resolution. Do you not see how the forum is crowded? how the Roman
+people is on tiptoe with the hope of recovering its liberty? which
+now, beholding us, after a long interval, meeting here in numbers,
+hopes too that we are also met in freedom. It was in expectation of
+this day that I avoided the wicked army of Marcus Antonius, at a
+time when he, while inveighing against me, was not aware for what an
+occasion I was reserving myself and my strength. If at that time I had
+chosen to reply to him, while he was seeking to begin the massacre
+with me, I should not now be able to consult the welfare of the
+republic. But now that I have this opportunity, I will never, O
+conscript fathers, neither by day nor by night, cease considering what
+ought to be thought concerning the liberty of the Roman people, and
+concerning your dignity. And whatever ought to be planned or done, I
+not only will never shrink from, but I will offer myself for, and beg
+to have entrusted to me. This is what I did before while it was in my
+power; when it was no longer in my power to do so, I did nothing. But
+now it is not only in my power, but it is absolutely necessary for me,
+unless we prefer being slaves to fighting with all our strength and
+courage to avoid being slaves. The immortal gods have given us these
+protectors, Caesar for the city, Brutus for Gaul. For if he had been
+able to oppress the city we must have become slaves at once; if he had
+been able to get possession of Gaul, then it would not have been long
+before every good man must have perished and all the rest have been
+enslaved.
+
+XIV. Now then that this opportunity is afforded to you, O conscript
+fathers, I entreat you in the name of the immortal gods, seize upon
+it; and recollect at last that you are the chief men of the most
+honourable council on the whole face of the earth. Give a token to the
+Roman people that your wisdom shall not fail the republic, since that
+too professes that its valour shall never desert it either. There
+is no need for my warning you: there is no one so foolish as not to
+perceive that if we go to sleep over this opportunity we shall have to
+endure a tyranny which will be not only cruel and haughty, but also
+ignominious and flagitious. You know the insolence of Antonius; you
+know his friends; you know his whole household. To be slaves to
+lustful, wanton, debauched, profligate, drunken gamblers, is the
+extremity of misery combined with the extremity of infamy. And if now
+(but may the immortal gods avert the omen!) that worst of fates shall
+befall the republic, then, as brave gladiators take care to perish
+with honour, let us too, who are the chief men of all countries and
+nations, take care to fall with dignity rather than to live as slaves
+with ignominy.
+
+There is nothing more detestable than disgrace; nothing more shameful
+than slavery. We have been born to glory and to liberty; let us either
+preserve them or die with dignity. Too long have we concealed what we
+have felt: now at length it is revealed: every one has plainly shown
+what are his feelings to both sides, and what are his inclinations.
+There are impious citizens, measured by the love I bear my country,
+too many; but in proportion to the multitude of well-affected ones,
+very few; and the immortal gods have given the republic an incredible
+opportunity and chance for destroying them. For, in addition to the
+defences which we already have, there will soon be added consuls
+of consummate prudence, and virtue, and concord, who have already
+deliberated and pondered for many months on the freedom of the Roman
+people. With these men for our advisers and leaders, with the gods
+assisting us, with ourselves using all vigilance and taking great
+precautions for the future, and with the Roman people acting
+with unanimity, we shall indeed be free in a short time, and the
+recollection of our present slavery will make liberty sweeter.
+
+XV. Moved by these considerations, since the tribunes of the people
+have brought forward a motion to ensure that the senate shall be able
+to meet in safety on the first of January, and that we may be able
+to deliver our sentiments on the general welfare of the state with
+freedom, I give my vote that Caius Pansa and Aulus Hirtius, the
+consuls elect, do take care that the senate be enabled to meet in
+safety on the first of January; and, as an edict has been published
+by Decimus Brutus, imperator and consul elect, I vote that the senate
+thinks that Decimus Brutus, imperator and consul, deserves excellently
+well of the republic, inasmuch as he is upholding the authority of the
+senate, and the freedom and empire of the Roman people; and as he is
+also retaining the province of Gallia Citerior, a province full of
+most virtuous and brave men, and of citizens most devoted to the
+republic, and his army, in obedience to the senate, I vote that the
+senate judges that he, and his army, and the municipalities and
+colonies of the province of Gaul, have acted and are acting properly,
+and regularly, and in a manner advantageous to the republic. And
+the senate thinks that it will be for the general interests of the
+republic that the provinces which are at present occupied by Decimus
+Brutus and by Lucius Plancus, both imperators, and consuls elect, and
+also by the officers who are in command of provinces, shall continue
+to be held by them in accordance with the provisions of the Julian
+law, until each of these officers has a successor appointed by a
+resolution of the senate; and that they shall take care to maintain
+those provinces and armies in obedience to the senate and people of
+Rome, and as a defence to the republic. And since, by the exertions
+and valour and wisdom of Caius Caesar, and by the admirable unanimity
+of the veteran soldiers, who, obeying his authority, have been and are
+a protection to the republic, the Roman people has been defended, and
+is at this present time being defended, from the most serious dangers.
+And as the Martial legion has encamped at Alba, in a municipal town
+of the greatest loyalty and courage, and has devoted itself to the
+support of the authority of the senate, and of the freedom of the
+Roman people; and as the fourth legion, behaving with equal wisdom
+and with the same virtue, under the command of Lucius Egnatuleius the
+quaestor, an illustrious citizen, has defended and is still defending
+the authority of the senate and the freedom of the Roman people; I
+give my vote, That it is and shall be an object of anxious care to the
+senate to pay due honour and to show due gratitude to them for their
+exceeding services to the republic: and that the senate hereby orders
+that when Caius Pausa and Aulus Hirtius, the consuls elect, have
+entered on their office, they take the earliest opportunity of
+consulting this body on these matters, as shall seem to them expedient
+for the republic, and worthy of their own integrity and loyalty.
+
+
+
+
+THE FOURTH ORATION OF M.T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS.
+
+CALLED ALSO THE FOURTH PHILIPPIC.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ARGUMENT.
+
+
+After delivering the preceding speech in the senate, Cicero proceeded
+to the forum, where he delivered the following speech to the people,
+to give them information of what had been done.
+
+I. The great numbers in which you are here met this day, O Romans, and
+this assembly, greater than, it seems to me, I ever remember, inspires
+me with both an exceeding eagerness to defend the republic, and with a
+great hope of reestablishing it. Although my courage indeed has never
+failed; what has been unfavourable is the time; and the moment that
+that has appeared to show any dawn of light, I at once have been the
+leader in the defence of your liberty. And if I had attempted to have
+done so before, I should not be able to do so now. For this day, O
+Romans, (that you may not think it is but a trifling business in which
+we have been engaged,) the foundations have been laid for future
+actions. For the senate has no longer been content with styling
+Antonius an enemy in words, but it has shown by actions that it thinks
+him one. And now I am much more elated still, because you too with
+such great unanimity and with such a clamour have sanctioned our
+declaration that he is an enemy.
+
+And indeed, O Romans, it is impossible but that either the men must
+be impious who have levied armies against the consul, or else that he
+must be an enemy against whom they have rightly taken arms. And this
+doubt the senate has this day removed--not indeed that there really
+was any; but it has prevented the possibility of there being any.
+Caius Caesar, who has upheld and who is still upholding the republic
+and your freedom by his seal and wisdom, and at the expense of his
+patrimonial estate, has been complimented with the highest praises of
+the senate. I praise you,--yes, I praise you greatly, O Romans,
+when you follow with the most grateful minds the name of that
+most illustrious youth, or rather boy; for his actions belong to
+immortality, the name of youth only to his age. I can recollect many
+things; I have heard of many things; I have read of many things; but
+in the whole history of the whole world I have never known anything
+like this. For, when we were weighed down with slavery, when the evil
+was daily increasing, when we had no defence, while we were in dread
+of the pernicious and fatal return of Marcus Antonius from Brundusium,
+this young man adopted the design which none of us had ventured to
+hope for, which beyond all question none of us were acquainted with,
+of raising an invincible army of his father's soldiers, and so
+hindering the frenzy of Antonius, spurred on as it was by the most
+inhuman counsels, from the power of doing mischief to the republic.
+
+II. For who is there who does not see clearly that, if Caesar had not
+prepared an army, the return of Antonius must have been accompanied by
+our destruction? For, in truth, he returned in such a state of mind,
+burning with hatred of you all, stained with the blood of the Roman
+citizens, whom he had murdered at Suessa and at Brundusium, that he
+thought of nothing but the utter destruction of the republic. And what
+protection could have been found for your safety and for your liberty
+if the army of Caius Caesar had not been composed of the bravest of his
+father's soldiers? And with respect to his praises and honours,--and
+he is entitled to divine and everlasting honours for his godlike and
+undying services,--the senate has just consented to my proposals, and
+has decreed that a motion be submitted to it at the very earliest
+opportunity.
+
+Now who is there who does not see that by this decree Antonius has
+been adjudged to be an enemy? For what else can we call him, when the
+senate decides that extraordinary honours are to be devised for those
+men who are leading armies against him? What? did not the Martial
+legion (which appears to me by some divine permission to have derived
+its name from that god from whom we have heard that the Roman people
+descended) decide by its resolutions that Antonius was an enemy before
+the senate had come to any resolution? For if he be not an enemy, we
+must inevitably decide that those men who have deserted the consul are
+enemies. Admirably and seasonably, O Romans, have you by your cries
+sanctioned the noble conduct of the men of the Martial legion, who
+have come over to the authority of the senate, to your liberty, and
+to the whole republic; and have abandoned that enemy and robber and
+parricide of his country. Nor did they display only their spirit
+and courage in doing this, but their caution and wisdom also. They
+encamped at Alba, in a city convenient, fortified, near, full of brave
+men and loyal and virtuous citizens. The fourth legion imitating
+the virtue of this Martial legion, under the leadership of Lucius
+Egnatuleius, whom the senate deservedly praised a little while ago,
+has also joined the army of Caius Caesar.
+
+III. What more adverse decisions, O Marcus Antonius, can you want?
+Caesar, who has levied an army against you, is extolled to the skies.
+The legions are praised in the most complimentary language, which have
+abandoned you, which were sent for into Italy by you; and which,
+if you had chosen to be a consul rather than an enemy, were wholly
+devoted to you. And the fearless and honest decision of those legions
+is confirmed by the senate, is approved of by the whole Roman
+people,--unless, indeed, you to-day, O Romans, decide that Antonius is
+a consul and not an enemy. I thought, O Romans, that you did think as
+you show you do. What? do you suppose that the municipal towns, and
+the colonies, and the prefectures have any other opinion? All men are
+agreed with one mind; so that every one who wishes the state to be
+saved must take up every sort of arms against that pestilence. What?
+does, I should like to know, does the opinion of Decimus Brutus,
+O Romans, which you can gather from his edict, which has this day
+reached us, appear to any one deserving of being lightly esteemed?
+Rightly and truly do you say No, O Romans. For the family and name
+of Brutus has been by some especial kindness and liberality of the
+immortal gods given to the republic, for the purpose of at one time
+establishing, and at another of recovering, the liberty of the Roman
+people. What then has been the opinion which Decimus Brutus has formed
+of Marcus Antonius? He excludes him from his province. He opposes him
+with his army. He rouses all Gaul to war, which is already used of its
+own accord, and in consequence of the judgment which it has itself
+formed. If Antonius be consul, Brutus is an enemy. Can we then doubt
+which of these alternatives is the fact?
+
+IV. And just as you now with one mind and one voice affirm that you
+entertain no doubt, so did the senate just now decree that Decimus
+Brutus deserved excellently well of the republic, inasmuch as he was
+defending the authority of the senate and the liberty and empire of
+the Roman people. Defending it against whom? Why, against an enemy.
+For what other sort of defence deserves praise? In the next place the
+province of Gaul is praised, and is deservedly complimented in most
+honourable language by the senate for resisting Antonius. But if that
+province considered him the consul, and still refused to receive him,
+it would be guilty of great wickedness. For all the provinces belong
+to the consul of right, and are bound to obey him. Decimus Brutus,
+imperator and consul elect, a citizen born for the republic, denies
+that he is consul; Gaul denies it; all Italy denies it; the senate
+denies it; you deny it. Who then think that he is consul except a few
+robbers? Although even they themselves do not believe what they say;
+nor is it possible that they should differ from the judgment of all
+men, impious and desperate men though they be. But the hope of plunder
+and booty blinds their minds; men whom no gifts of money, no allotment
+of land, nor even that interminable auction has satisfied; who have
+proposed to themselves the city, the properties and fortunes of all
+the citizens as their booty; and who, as long as there is something
+for them to seize and carry off, think that nothing will be wanting to
+them; among whom Marcus Antonius (O ye immortal gods, avert, I pray
+you, and efface this omen,) has promised to divide this city. May
+things rather happen, O Romans, as you pray that they should, and may
+the chastisement of this frenzy fall on him and on his friend. And,
+indeed, I feel sure that it will be so. For I think that at present
+not only men but the immortal gods have all united together to
+preserve this republic. For if the immortal gods foreshow us the
+future, by means of portents and prodigies, then it has been openly
+revealed to us that punishment is near at hand to him, and liberty to
+us. Or if it was impossible for such unanimity on the part of all men
+to exist without the inspiration of the gods, in either case how can
+we doubt as to the inclinations of the heavenly deities? It only
+remains, O Romans, for you to persevere in the sentiments which you at
+present display.
+
+V. I will act, therefore, as commanders are in the habit of doing when
+their army is ready for battle, who, although they see their soldiers
+ready to engage, still address an exhortation to them; and in like
+manner I will exhort you who are already eager and burning to recover
+your liberty. You have not--you have not, indeed, O Romans, to war
+against an enemy with whom it is possible to make peace on any terms
+whatever. For he does not now desire your slavery, as he did before,
+but he is angry now and thirsts for your blood. No sport appears more
+delightful to him than bloodshed, and slaughter, and the massacre
+of citizens before his eyes. You have not, O Romans, to deal with a
+wicked and profligate man, but with an unnatural and savage beast.
+And, since he has fallen into a well, let him be buried in it. For if
+he escapes out of it, there will be no inhumanity of torture which it
+will be possible to avoid. But he is at present hemmed in, pressed,
+and besieged by those troops which we already have, and will soon be
+still more so by those which in a few days the new consuls will levy.
+Apply yourselves then to this business, as you are doing. Never have
+you shown greater unanimity in any cause; never have you been so
+cordially united with the senate. And no wonder. For the question now
+is not in what condition we are to live, but whether we are to live at
+all, or to perish with torture and ignominy.
+
+Although nature, indeed, has appointed death for all men: but valour
+is accustomed to ward off any cruelty or disgrace in death. And that
+is an inalienable possession of the Roman race and name. Preserve, I
+beseech you, O Romans, this attribute which your ancestors have left
+you as a sort of inheritance. Although all other things are uncertain,
+fleeting, transitory; virtue alone is planted firm with very deep
+roots; it cannot be undermined by any violence; it can never be moved
+from its position. By it your ancestors first subdued the whole of
+Italy; then destroyed Carthage, overthrew Numantia, and reduced the
+most mighty kings and most warlike nations under the dominion of this
+empire.
+
+VI. And your ancestors, O Romans, had to deal with an enemy who had
+also a republic, a senate-house, a treasury, harmonious and united
+citizens, and with whom, if fortune had so willed it, there might have
+been peace and treaties on settled principles. But this enemy of yours
+is attacking your republic, but has none himself; is eager to destroy
+the senate, that is to say, the council of the whole world, but has no
+public council himself; he has exhausted your treasury, and has none
+of his own. For how can a man be supported by the unanimity of his
+citizens, who has no city at all? And what principles of peace
+can there be with that man who is full of incredible cruelty, and
+destitute of faith?
+
+The whole then of the contest, O Romans, which is now before the Roman
+people, the conqueror of all nations, is with an assassin, a robber, a
+Spartacus.[31] For as to his habitual boast of being like Catilina, he
+is equal to him in wickedness, but inferior in energy. He, though he
+had no army, rapidly levied one. This man has lost that very army
+which he had. As, therefore, by my diligence, and the authority of the
+senate, and your own zeal and valour, you crushed Catilina, so you
+will very soon hear that this infamous piratical enterprise of
+Antonius has been put down by your own perfect and unexampled harmony
+with the senate, and by the good fortune and valour of your armies and
+generals. I, for my part, as far as I am able to labour, and to effect
+anything by my care, and exertions, and vigilance, and authority,
+and counsel, will omit nothing which I may think serviceable to your
+liberty. Nor could I omit it without wickedness after all your most
+ample and honourable kindness to me. However, on this day, encouraged
+by the motion of a most gallant man, and one most firmly attached to
+you, Marcus Servilius, whom you see before you, and his colleagues
+also, most distinguished men, and most virtuous citizens; and partly,
+too, by my advice and my example, we have, for the first time after a
+long interval, fired up again with a hope of liberty.
+
+
+
+
+THE FIFTH ORATION OF M.T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS.
+
+OTHERWISE CALLED THE FIFTH PHILIPPIC.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ARGUMENT.
+
+
+The new consuls Hirtius and Pansa were much attached to Cicero, had
+consulted him a great deal, and professed great respect for his
+opinion; but they were also under great obligations to Julius Caesar
+and, consequently, connected to some extent with his party and with
+Antonius, on which account they wished, if possible, to employ
+moderate measures only against him.
+
+As soon as they had entered on their office, they convoked the senate
+to meet for the purpose of deliberating on the general welfare of the
+republic. They both spoke themselves with great firmness, promising to
+be the leaders in defending the liberties of Rome, and exhorting the
+senate to act with courage. And then they called on Quintus Fufius
+Calenus, who had been consul A.U.C. 707, and who was Pansa's
+father-in-law, to deliver his opinion first. He was known to be a firm
+friend of Antonius. Cicero wished to declare Antonius a public enemy
+at once, but Calenus proposed that before they proceeded to acts of
+open hostility against him, they should send an embassy to him to
+admonish him to desist from his attempts upon Gaul, and to submit to
+the authority of the senate. Piso and others supported this motion,
+on the ground that it was cruel and unjust to condemn a man without
+giving him a fair chance of submitting, and without hearing what he
+had to say. It was in opposition to Calenus's motion that Cicero made
+the following speech, substituting for his proposition one to declare
+Antonius an enemy, and to offer pardon to those of his army who
+returned to their duty by the first of February, to thank Decimus
+Brutus for his conduct in Gaul, to decree a statue to Marcus
+Lepidus[32] for his services to the republic and his loyalty, to
+thank Caius Caesar (Octavius) and to grant him a special commission
+as general, to make him a senator and propraetor and to enable him to
+stand for any subsequent magistracy as if he had been quaestor, to
+thank Lucius Egnatuleius, and to vote thanks and promise rewards to
+the Martial and the fourth legion.
+
+I. Nothing, O conscript fathers, has ever seemed to me longer than
+these calends of January, and I think that for the last few days you
+have all been feeling the same thing. For those who are waging war
+against the republic have not waited for this day. But we, while it
+would have been most especially proper for us to come to the aid of
+the general safety with our counsel, were not summoned to the senate.
+However, the speech just addressed to us by the consuls has removed
+our complaints as to what is past, for they have spoken in such a
+manner that the calends of January seem to have been long wished for
+rather than really to have arrived late.
+
+And while the speeches of the consuls have encouraged my mind, and
+have given me a hope, not only of preserving our safety, but even of
+recovering our former dignity, on the other hand, the opinion of the
+man who has been asked for his opinion first would have disturbed me,
+if I had not confidence in your virtue and firmness. For this day, O
+conscript fathers, has dawned upon you, and this opportunity has been
+afforded you of proving to the Roman people how much virtue, how much
+firmness and how much dignity exists in the counsels of this order.
+Recollect what a day it was thirteen days ago, how great was then your
+unanimity, and virtue, and firmness, and what great praise, what great
+glory, and what great gratitude you gained from the Roman people.
+And on that day, O conscript fathers, you resolved that no other
+alternative was in your power, except either an honourable peace, or a
+necessary war.
+
+Is Marcus Antonius desirous of peace? Let him lay down his arms, let
+him implore our pardon, let him deprecate our vengeance; he will find
+no one more reasonable than me, though, while seeking to recommend
+himself to impious citizens, he has chosen to be an enemy instead of
+a friend to me. There is, in truth, nothing which can be given to him
+while waging war, there will perhaps be something which may be granted
+to him if he comes before us as a suppliant.
+
+II. But to send ambassadors to a man respecting whom you passed a most
+dignified and severe decision only thirteen days ago, is not an act of
+lenity, but, if I am to speak my real opinion, of downright madness.
+In the first place, you praised those generals who, of their own head,
+had undertaken war against him, in the next place, you praised the
+veterans who, though they had been settled in those colonies by
+Antonius, preferred the liberty of the Roman people to the obligations
+which they were under to him. Is it not so? Why was the Martial
+legion? why was the fourth legion praised? For if they have deserted
+the consul, they ought to be blamed; if they have abandoned an enemy
+to the republic, then they are deservedly praised.
+
+But as at that time you had not yet got any consuls, you passed a
+decree that a motion concerning the rewards for the soldiers and the
+honours to be conferred on the generals should be submitted to you at
+the earliest opportunity. Are you then going now to arrange rewards
+for those men who have taken arms against Antonius, and to send
+ambassadors to Antonius? so as to deserve to be ashamed that the
+legions should have come to more honourable resolutions than the
+senate if, indeed, the legions have resolved to defend the senate
+against Antonius, but the senate decrees to send ambassadors to
+Antonius. Is this encouraging the spirit of the soldiers, or damping
+their virtue?
+
+This is what we have gained in the last twelve days, that the man
+whom no single person except Cotyla was then found to defend, has now
+advocates even of consular rank. Would that they had all been asked
+their opinion before me, (although I have my suspicions as to what
+some of those men who will be asked after me, are intending to say) I
+should find it easier to speak against them if any argument appeared
+to have been advanced.
+
+For there is an opinion in some quarters that some one intends to
+propose to decree Antonius that further Gaul, which Plancus is at
+present in possession of. What else is that but supplying an enemy
+with all the arms necessary for civil war; first of all with the
+sinews of war, money in abundance, of which he is at present
+destitute, and secondly, with as much cavalry as he pleases? Cavalry
+do I say? He is a likely man to hesitate, I suppose, to bring with him
+the barbarian nations,--a man who does not see this is senseless, he
+who does see it, and still advocates such a measure, is impious. Will
+you furnish a wicked and desperate citizen with an army of Gauls and
+Germans, with money, and infantry, and cavalry, and all sorts of
+resources? All these excuses are no excuse at all.--"He is a friend of
+mine." Let him first be a friend of his country.--"He is a relation of
+mine." Can any relationship be nearer than that of one's country, in
+which even one's parents are comprised? "He has given me money:"--I
+should like to see the man who will dare to say that. But when I have
+explained what is the real object aimed at, it will be easy for you to
+decide which opinion you ought to agree with and adopt.
+
+III. The matter at issue is, whether power is to be given to Marcus
+Antonius of oppressing the republic, of massacring the virtuous
+citizens, of plundering the city, of distributing the lands among his
+robbers, of overwhelming the Roman people in slavery; or, whether he
+is not to be allowed to do all this. Do you doubt what you are to do?
+"Oh, but all this does not apply to Antonius." Even Cotyla would not
+venture to say that. For what does not apply to him? A man who, while
+he says that he is defending the acts of another, perverts all those
+laws of his which we might most properly praise. Caesar wished to drain
+the marshes: this man has given all Italy to that moderate man Lucius
+Antonius to distribute.--What? has the Roman people adopted this
+law?--What? could it be passed with a proper regard for the auspices?
+But this conscientious augur acts in reference to the auspices
+without his colleagues. Although those auspices do not require any
+interpretation;--for who is there who is ignorant that it is impious
+to submit any motion to the people while it is thundering? The
+tribunes of the people carried laws respecting the provinces in
+opposition to the acts of Caesar; Caesar had extended the provisions of
+his law over two years; Antonius over six years. Has then the Roman
+people adopted this law? What? was it ever regularly promulgated?
+What? was it not passed before it was even drawn up? Did we not see
+the deed done before we even suspected that it was going to be done?
+Where is the Caecilian and Didian law? What is become of the law that
+such bills should be published on three market days? What is become of
+the penalty appointed by the recent Junian and Licinian law? Can these
+laws be ratified without the destruction of all other laws? Has any
+one had a right of entering the forum? Moreover, what thunder, and
+what a storm that was! so that even if the consideration of the
+auspices had no weight with Marcus Antonius, it would seem strange
+that he could endure and bear such exceeding violence of tempest, and
+rain, and whirlwind. When therefore he, as augur, says that he carried
+a law while Jupiter was not only thundering, but almost uttering an
+express prohibition of it by his clamour from heaven, will he hesitate
+to confess that it was carried in violation of the auspices? What?
+does the virtuous augur think that it has nothing to do with the
+auspices, that he carried the law with the aid of that colleague whose
+election he himself vitiated by giving notice of the auspices?
+
+IV. But perhaps we, who are his colleagues, may be the interpreters
+of the auspices? Do we also want interpreters of arms? In the first
+place, all the approaches to the forum were so fenced round, that even
+if no armed men were standing in the way, still it would have been
+impossible to enter the forum except by tearing down the barricades.
+But the guards were arranged in such a manner, that, as the access of
+an enemy to a city is prevented, so you might in this instance see the
+burgesses and the tribunes of the people cut off by forts and works
+from all entrance to the forum. On which account I give my vote that
+those laws which Marcus Antonius is said to have carried were all
+carried by violence, and in violation of the auspices; and that the
+people is not bound by them. If Marcus Antonius is said to have
+carried any law about confirming the acts of Caesar and abolishing the
+dictatorship for ever, and of leading colonies into any lands, then I
+vote that those laws be passed over again, with a due regard to the
+auspices, so that they may bind the people. For although they may be
+good measures which he passed irregularly and by violence, still they
+are not to be accounted laws, and the whole audacity of this frantic
+gladiator must be repudiated by our authority. But that squandering
+of the public money cannot possibly be endured by which he got rid of
+seven hundred millions of sesterces by forged entries and deeds of
+gifts, so that it seems an absolute miracle that so vast a sum of
+money belonging to the Roman people can have disappeared in so short
+a time. What? are those enormous profits to be endured which the
+household of Marcus Antonius has swallowed up? He was continually
+selling forged decrees; ordering the names of kingdoms and states, and
+grants of exemptions to be engraved on brass, having received bribes
+for such orders. And his statement always was, that he was doing these
+things in obedience to the memoranda of Caesar, of which he himself was
+the author. In the interior of his house there was going on a brisk
+market of the whole republic. His wife, more fortunate for herself
+than for her husband, was holding an auction of kingdoms and
+provinces: exiles were restored without any law, as if by law: and
+unless all these acts are rescinded by the authority of the senate,
+now that we have again arrived at a hope of recovering the republic,
+there will be no likeness of a free city left to us.
+
+Nor is it only by the sale of forged memoranda and autographs that a
+countless sum of money was collected together in that house, while
+Antonius, whatever he sold, said that he was acting in obedience to
+the papers of Caesar; but he even took bribes to make false entries
+of the resolutions of the senate; to seal forged contracts; and
+resolutions of the senate that had never been passed were entered
+on the records of that treasury. Of all this baseness even foreign
+nations were witnesses. In the meantime treaties were made; kingdoms
+given away; nations and provinces released from the burdens of the
+state; and false memorials of all these transactions were fixed up
+all over the Capitol, amid the groans of the Roman people. And by all
+these proceedings so vast a sum of money was collected in one house,
+that if it were all made available, the Roman people would never want
+money again.
+
+V. Moreover, he passed a law to regulate judicial proceedings, this
+chaste and upright man, this upholder of the tribunals and the law.
+And in this he deceived us. He used to say that he appointed men from
+the front ranks of the army, common soldiers, men of the Alauda,[33]
+as judges. But he has in reality selected gamesters; he has selected
+exiles; he has selected Greeks. Oh the fine bench of judges! Oh the
+admirable dignity of that council! I do long to plead in behalf of
+some defendant before that tribunal--Cyda of Crete; a prodigy even in
+that island; the most audacious and abandoned of men. But even suppose
+he were not so. Does he understand Latin? Is he qualified by birth and
+station to be a judge? Does he--which is most important--does he know
+anything about our laws and manners? Is he even acquainted with any of
+the citizens? Why, Crete is better known to you than Rome is to Cyda.
+In fact, the selection and appointment of the judges has usually been
+confined to our own citizens. But who ever knew, or could possibly
+have known this Gortynian judge? For Lysiades, the Athenian, we most
+of us do know. For he is the son of Phaedrus, an eminent philosopher.
+And, besides, he is a witty man, so that he will be able to get on
+very well with Marcus Curius, who will be one of his colleagues, and
+with whom he is in the habit of playing. I ask if Lysiades, when
+summoned as a judge, should not answer to his name, and should have an
+excuse alleged for him that he is an Areopagite, and that he is not
+bound to act as a judge at both Rome and Athens at the same time, will
+the man who presides over the investigation admit the excuse of this
+Greekling judge, at one time a Greek, and at another a Roman? Or will
+he disregard the most ancient laws of the Athenians?
+
+And what a bench will it be, O ye good gods! A Cretan judge, and he
+the most worthless of men. Whom can a defendant employ to propitiate
+him? How is he to get at him? He comes of a hard nation. But the
+Athenians are merciful. I dare say that Curius, too, is not cruel,
+inasmuch as he is a man who is himself at the mercy of fortune every
+day. There are besides other chosen judges who will perhaps be
+excused. For they have a legitimate excuse, that they have left their
+country in banishment, and that they have not been restored since.
+And would that madman have chosen these men as judges, would he have
+entered their names as such in the treasury, would he have trusted a
+great portion of the republic to them, if he had intended to leave the
+least semblance of a republic?
+
+VI. And I have been speaking of those judges who are known. Those whom
+you are less acquainted with I have been unwilling to name. Know then
+that dancers, harp-players, the whole troop, in fact, of Antonius's
+revellers, have all been pitchforked into the third decury of judges.
+Now you see the object of passing so splendid and admirable a law,
+amid excessive rain, storm, wind, tempest, and whirlwind, amid thunder
+and lightning; it was that we might have those men for our judges
+whom no one would like to have for guests. It is the enormity of his
+wickedness, the consciousness of his crimes, the plunder of that money
+of which the account was kept in the temple of Ops, which have been
+the real inventors of this third decury. And infamous judges were not
+sought for, till all hope of safety for the guilty was despaired of,
+if they came before respectable ones. But what must have been the
+impudence, what must have been the iniquity of a man who dared to
+select those men as judges, by the selection of whom a double disgrace
+was stamped on the republic: one, because the judges were so infamous;
+the other, because by this step it was revealed and published to the
+world how many infamous citizens we had in the republic? These then,
+and all other similar laws, I should vote ought to be annulled, even
+if they had been passed without violence, and with all proper respect
+for the auspices. But now why need I vote that they ought to be
+annulled, when I do not consider that they were ever legally passed?
+
+Is not this, too, to be marked with the deepest ignominy, and with the
+severest animadversion of this order, so as to be recollected by all
+posterity, that Marcus Antonius (the first man who has ever done so
+since the foundation of the city) has openly taken armed men about
+with him in this city? A thing which the kings never did, nor those
+men who, since the kings have been banished, have endeavoured to seize
+on kingly power. I can recollect Cinna; I have seen Sylla; and lately
+Caesar. For these three men are the only ones since the city was
+delivered by Lucius Brutus, who have had more power than the entire
+republic. I cannot assert that no man in their trains had weapons.
+This I do say, that they had not many, and that they concealed them.
+But this pest was attended by an army of armed men. Classitius,
+Mustela, and Tiro, openly displaying their swords, led troops of
+fellows like themselves through the forum. Barbarian archers occupied
+their regular place in the army. And when they arrived at the temple
+of Concord, the steps were crowded, the litters full of shields were
+arranged; not because he wished the shields to be concealed, but that
+his friends might not be fatigued by carrying the shields themselves.
+
+VII. And what was most infamous not only to see, but even to hear of,
+armed men, robbers, assassins were stationed in the temple of Concord;
+the temple was turned into a prison; the doors of the temple were
+closed, and the conscript fathers delivered their opinions while
+robbers were standing among the benches of the senators. And if I
+did not come to a senate-house in this state, he, on the first of
+September, said that he would send carpenters and pull down my house.
+It was an important affair, I suppose, that was to be discussed. He
+made some motion about a supplication. I attended the day after. He
+himself did not come. I delivered my opinion about the republic, not
+indeed with quite so much freedom as usual, but still with more than
+the threats of personal danger to myself made perhaps advisable. But
+that violent and furious man (for Lucius Piso had done the same thing
+with great credit thirty days before) threatened me with his enmity,
+and ordered me to attend the senate on the nineteenth of September. In
+the meantime he spent the whole of the intervening seventeen days in
+the villa of Scipio, at Tibur, declaiming against me to make himself
+thirsty. For this is his usual object in declaiming. When the day
+arrived on which he had ordered me to attend, then he came with a
+regular army in battle array to the temple of Concord, and out of his
+impure mouth vomited forth an oration against me in my absence. On
+which day, if my friends had not prevented me from attending the
+senate as I was anxious to do, he would have begun a massacre by the
+slaughter of me. For that was what he had resolved to do. And when
+once he had dyed his sword in blood, nothing would have made him
+leave off but pure fatigue and satiety. In truth, his brother, Lucius
+Antonius, was present, an Asiatic gladiator, who had fought as a
+Mirmillo,[34] at Mylasa; he was thirsting for my blood, and had shed
+much of his own in that gladiatorial combat. He was now valuing our
+property in his mind, taking notice of our possessions in the city
+and in the country; his indigence united with his covetousness was
+threatening all our fortunes; he was distributing our lands to
+whomsoever and in whatever shares he pleased; no private individual
+could get access to him, or find any means to propitiate him, and
+induce him to act with justice. Every former proprietor had just so
+much property as Antonius left him after the division of his estate.
+And although all these proceedings cannot be ratified, if you annul
+his laws, still I think that they ought all to be separately taken
+note of, article by article; and that we ought formally to decide that
+the appointment of septemvirs was null and void; and that nothing is
+ratified which is said to have been done by them.
+
+VIII. But who is there who can consider Marcus Antonius a citizen,
+rather than a most foul and barbarous enemy, who, while sitting in
+front of the temple of Castor, in the hearing of the Roman people,
+said that no one should survive except those who were victorious? Do
+you suppose, O conscript fathers, that he spoke with more violence
+than he would act? And what are we to think of his having ventured to
+say that, after he had given up his magistracy, he should still be at
+the city with his army? that he should enter the city as often as he
+pleased? What else was this but threatening the Roman people with
+slavery? And what was the object of his journey to Brundusium? and of
+that great haste? What was his hope, except to lead that vast army
+to the city, or rather into the city? What a proceeding was that
+selection of the centurions! What unbridled fury of an intemperate
+mind! For when those gallant legions had raised an outcry against his
+promises, he ordered those centurions to come to him to his house,
+whom he perceived to be loyally attached to the republic, and then he
+had them all murdered before his own eyes and those of his wife, whom
+this noble commander had taken with him to the army. What disposition
+do you suppose that this man will display towards us whom he hates,
+when he was so cruel to those men whom he had never seen? And how
+covetous will he be with respect to the money of rich men, when he
+thirsted for even the blood of poor men? whose property, such as it
+was, he immediately divided among his satellites and boon companions.
+
+And he in a fury was now moving his hostile standards against his
+country from Brundusium, when Caius Caesar, by the kind inspiration of
+the immortal gods, by the greatness of his own heavenly courage, and
+wisdom, and genius, of his own accord, indeed, and prompted by his own
+admirable virtue, but still with the approbation of my authority, went
+down to the colonies which had been founded by his father; convoked
+the veteran soldiery; in a few days raised an army; and checked the
+furious advance of this bandit. But after the Martial legion saw this
+admirable leader, it had no other thoughts but those of securing our
+liberty. And the fourth legion followed its example.
+
+IX. And Antonius, on hearing of this news, after he had summoned the
+senate, and provided a man of consular rank to declare his opinion
+that Caius Caesar was an enemy of his country, immediately fainted
+away. And afterwards, without either performing the usual sacrifices,
+or offering the customary vows, he, I will not say went forth, but
+took to flight in his robe as a general. But which way did he flee? To
+the province of our most resolute and bravest citizens; men who could
+never have endured him if he had not come bringing war in his train,
+an intemperate, passionate, insolent, proud man, always making
+demands, always plundering, always drunk. But he, whose worthlessness
+even when quiet was more than any one could endure, has declared war
+upon the province of Gaul; he is besieging Mutina, a valiant and
+splendid colony of the Roman people; he is blockading Decimus Brutus,
+the general, the consul elect, a citizen born not for himself, but for
+us and the republic. Was then Hannibal an enemy, and is Antonius a
+citizen? What did the one do like an enemy, that the other has not
+done, or is not doing, or planning, and thinking of? What was there
+in the whole of the journey of the Antonii; except depopulation,
+devastation, slaughter, and rapine? Actions which Hannibal never did,
+because he was reserving many things for his own use, these men do,
+as men who live merely for the present hour; they never have given a
+thought not only to the fortunes and welfare of the citizens, but not
+even to their own advantage.
+
+Are we then, O ye good gods, to resolve to send ambassadors to this
+man? Are those men who propose this acquainted with the constitution
+of the republic, with the laws of war, with the precedents of our
+ancestors? Do they give a thought to what the majesty of the Roman
+people and the severity of the senate requires? Do you resolve to send
+ambassadors? If to beg his mercy, he will despise you; if to declare
+your commands he will not listen to them; and last of all, however
+severe the message may be which we give the ambassadors, the very name
+of ambassadors will extinguish this ardour of the Roman people which
+we see at present, and break the spirit of the municipal towns and of
+Italy. To say nothing of these arguments, though they are weighty, at
+all events that sending of an embassy will cause delay and slowness to
+the war. Although those who propose it should say, as I hear that some
+intend to say,--"Let the ambassadors go, but let war be prepared for
+all the same." Still the very name of ambassadors will damp men's
+courage, and delay the rapidity of the war.
+
+X. The most important events, O conscript fathers, are often
+determined by very trivial moving influences in every circumstance
+that can happen in the republic, and also in war, and especially in
+civil war, which is usually governed a great deal by men's opinions
+and by reports. No one will ask what is the commission with which we
+have sent the ambassadors; the mere name of an embassy, and that sent
+by us of our own accord, will appear an indication of fear. Let him
+depart from Mutina; let him cease to attack Brutus; let him retire
+from Gaul. He must not be begged in words to do so; he must be
+compelled by arms. For we are not sending to Hannibal to desire him to
+retire from before Saguntum; to whom the senate formerly sent Publius
+Valerius Flaccus and Quintus Baebius Tampilus; who, if Hannibal did not
+comply, were ordered to proceed to Carthage. Whither do we order our
+ambassadors to proceed, if Antonius does not comply? Are we sending an
+embassy to our own citizen, to beg him not to attack a general and a
+colony of the Roman people? Is it so? Is it becoming to us to beg this
+by means of ambassadors? What is the difference, in the name of the
+immortal gods, whether he attacks this city itself, or whether he
+attacks an outpost of this city, a colony of the Roman people,
+established for the sake of its being a bulwark and protection to us?
+The siege of Saguntum was the cause of the second Punic war, which
+Hannibal carried on against our ancestors. It was quite right to send
+ambassadors to him. They were sent to a Carthaginian, they were sent
+on behalf of those who were the enemies of Hannibal, and our allies.
+What is there resembling that case here? We are sending to one of our
+own citizens to beg him not to blockade a general of the Roman army,
+not to attack our army and our colony,--in short, not to be an enemy
+of ours. Come; suppose he obeys, shall we either be inclined, or shall
+we be able by any possibility, to treat him as one of our citizens?
+
+XI. On the nineteenth of December, you overwhelmed him with your
+decrees; you ordained that this motion should be submitted to you on
+the first of January, which you see is submitted now, respecting the
+honours and rewards to be conferred on those who have deserved or do
+deserve well of the republic. And the chief of those men you have
+adjudged to be the man who really has done so, Caius Caesar, who had
+diverted the nefarious attacks of Marcus Antonius against this city,
+and compelled him to direct them against Gaul; and next to him you
+consider the veteran soldiers who first followed Caesar; then those
+excellent and heavenly-minded legions the Martial and the fourth,
+to whom you have promised honours and rewards, for having not only
+abandoned their consul, but for having even declared war against him.
+And on the same day, having a decree brought before you and published
+on purpose, you praised the conduct of Decimus Brutus, a most
+excellent citizen, and sanctioned with your public authority this war
+which he had undertaken of his own head.
+
+What else, then, did you do on that day except pronounce Antonius a
+public enemy? After these decrees of yours, will it be possible for
+him to look upon you with equanimity, or for you to behold him without
+the most excessive indignation? He has been excluded and cut off and
+wholly separated from the republic, not merely by his own wickedness,
+as it seems to me, but by some especial good fortune of the republic.
+And if he should comply with the demands of the ambassadors and return
+to Rome, do you suppose that abandoned citizens will ever be in need
+of a standard around which to rally? But this is not what I am so much
+afraid of. There are other things which I am more apprehensive of
+and more alarmed at. He never will comply with the demands of the
+ambassadors. I know the man's insanity and arrogance; I know the
+desperate counsels of his friends, to which he is wholly given up.
+Lucius his brother, as being a man who has fought abroad, leads on
+his household. Even suppose him to be in his senses himself, which he
+never will be; still he will not be allowed by these men to act as if
+he were so. In the mean time, time will be wasted. The preparations
+for war will cool. How is it that the war has been protracted as long
+as this, if it be not by procrastination and delay?
+
+From the very first moment after the departure, or rather after the
+hopeless flight of that bandit, that the senate could have met in
+freedom, I have always been demanding that we should be called
+together. The first day that we were called together, when the consuls
+elect were not present, I laid, in my opinion, amid the greatest
+unanimity on your part, the foundations of the republic, later,
+indeed, than they should have been laid, for I could not do so before,
+but still if no time had been lost after that day, we should have no
+war at all now. Every evil is easily crushed at its birth, when it has
+become of long standing, it usually gets stronger. But then everybody
+was waiting for the first of January, perhaps not very wisely.
+
+XII However, let us say no more of what is past. Are we still to allow
+any further delay while the ambassadors are on their road to him? and
+while they are coming back again? and the time spent in waiting for
+them will make men doubt about the war. And while the fact of the war
+is in doubt, how can men possibly be zealous about the levies for the
+army?
+
+Wherefore, O conscript fathers, I give my vote that there should be no
+mention made of ambassadors I think that the business that is to be
+done must be done without any delay, and instantly. I say that it is
+necessary that we should decree that there is sedition abroad, that we
+should suspend the regular courts of justice, order all men to wear
+the garb of war, and enlist men in all quarters, suspending all
+exemptions from military service in the city and in all Italy, except
+in Gaul. And if this be done, the general opinion and report of your
+severity will overwhelm the insanity of that wicked gladiator. He
+will feel that he has undertaken a war against the republic, he will
+experience the sinews and vigour of a unanimous senate For at present
+he is constantly saying that it is a mere struggle between parties.
+Between what parties? One party is defeated, the other is the heart
+of Caius Caesar's party. Unless, indeed, we believe that the party
+of Caesar is attacked by Pansa and Hirtius the consuls, and by Caius
+Caesar's son. But this war has been kindled, not by a struggle between
+parties, but by the nefarious hopes of the most abandoned citizens, by
+whom all our estates and properties have been marked down, and already
+distributed according as every one has thought them desirable.
+
+I have read the letter of Antonius which he sent to one of the
+septemviri, a thoroughpaced scoundrel, a colleague of his own, "Look
+out, and see what you take a fancy to, what you do fancy you shall
+certainly have". See to what a man we are sending ambassadors, against
+what a man we are delaying to make war, a man who does not even let us
+draw lots for our fortunes, but hands us over to each man's caprice in
+such a way, that he has not left even himself anything untouched, or
+which has not been promised to somebody. With this man, O conscript
+fathers, we must wage war,--war, I say, and that instantly. We must
+reject the slow proceedings of ambassadors.
+
+Therefore, that we may not have a number of decrees to pass every day,
+I give my vote that the whole republic should be committed to the
+consuls, and that they should have a charge given them to defend the
+republic, and to take care "that the republic suffer no injury." And
+I give my vote that those men who are in the army of Antonius be not
+visited with blame, if they leave him before the first of February.
+
+If you adopt these proposals of mine, O conscript fathers, you will
+in a short time recover the liberty of the Roman people and our own
+authority. But if you act with more mildness, still you will pass
+those resolutions, but perhaps you will pass them too late. As to
+the general welfare of the republic, on which you, O consuls, have
+consulted us, I think that I have proposed what is sufficient.
+
+XIII. The next question is about honours. And to this point I perceive
+that I must speak next. But I will preserve the same order in paying
+respect to brave men, that is usually preserved in asking their
+opinions.
+
+Let us, therefore, according to the usages of our ancestors, begin
+with Brutus, the consul elect, and, to say nothing of his former
+conduct,--which has indeed been most admirable, but still such as has
+been praised by the individual judgments of men, rather than by public
+authority,--what words can we find adequate to his praise at this very
+time? For such great virtue requires no reward except this one of
+praise and glory; and even if it were not to receive that, still it
+would be content with itself, and would rejoice at being laid up in
+the recollection of grateful citizens, as if it were placed in the
+full light. The praise then of our deliberate opinion, and of our
+testimony in his favour, must be given to Brutus. Therefore, O
+conscript fathers, I give my vote that a resolution of the senate be
+passed in these words:
+
+"As Decimus Brutus, imperator, consul elect is maintaining the
+province of Gaul in obedience to the senate and people of Rome, and as
+he has enlisted and collected in so short a time a very numerous army,
+being aided by the admirable zeal of the municipal towns and colonies
+of the province of Gaul, which has deserved and still does deserve
+admirably well of the republic, he has acted rightly and virtuously,
+and greatly for the advantage of the republic. And that most excellent
+service done by Decimus Brutus to the republic, is and always will be
+grateful to the senate and people of Rome. Therefore, the senate and
+the Roman people is of opinion that the exertions, and prudence,
+and virtue of Decimus Brutus, imperator and consul elect, and the
+incredible zeal and unanimity of the province of Gaul, have been a
+great assistance to the republic, at a most critical time."
+
+What honour, O conscript fathers, can be too great to be due to such a
+mighty service as this of Brutus, and to such important aid as he
+has afforded the republic? For if Gaul had been open to Marcus
+Antonius--if after having overwhelmed the municipal towns and colonies
+unprepared to resist him, he had been able to penetrate into that
+further Gaul--what great danger would have hung over the republic!
+That most insane of men, that man so headlong and furious in all his
+courses, would have been likely, I suppose, to hesitate at waging war
+against us, not only with his own army, but with all the savage troops
+of barbarism, so that even the wall of the Alps would not have enabled
+us to check his frenzy. These thanks then will be deservedly paid
+to Decimus Brutus, who, before any authority of yours had been
+interposed, acting on his own judgment and responsibility, refused to
+receive him as consul, but repelled him from Gaul as an enemy, and
+preferred to be besieged himself rather than to allow this city to be
+so. Let him therefore have, by your decree, an everlasting testimony
+to this most important and glorious action, and let Gaul,[35] which
+always is and has been a protection to this empire and to the general
+liberty, be deservedly and truly praised for not having surrendered
+herself and her power to Antonius, but for having opposed him with
+them.
+
+XIV. And, furthermore, I give my vote that the most ample honours be
+decreed to Marcus Lepidus, as a reward for his eminent services to the
+republic. He has at all times wished the Roman people to be free, and
+he gave the greatest proof of his inclination and opinion on that day,
+when, while Antonius was placing the diadem on Caesar's head, he turned
+his face away, and by his groans and sorrow showed plainly what a
+hatred of slavery he had, how desirous he was for the Roman people to
+be free, and how he had endured those things which he had endured more
+because of the necessity of the times, than because they harmonised
+with his sentiments. And who of us can forget with what great
+moderation he behaved during that crisis of the city which ensued
+after the death of Caesar? These are great merits, but I hasten to
+speak of greater still. For, (O ye immortal gods!) what could happen
+more to be admired by foreign nations or more to be desired by the
+Roman people, than, at a time when there was a most important civil
+war, the result of which we were all dreading, that it should be
+extinguished by prudence rather than that arms and violence should be
+able to put everything to the hazard of a battle? And if Caesar had
+been guided by the same principles in that odious and miserable war,
+we should have--to say nothing of their father--the two sons of Cnaeus
+Pompeius, that most illustrious and virtuous man, safe among us, men
+whose piety and filial affection certainly ought not to have been
+their ruin. Would that Marcus Lepidus had been able to save them all!
+He showed that he would have done so, by his conduct in cases where he
+had the power, when he restored Sextus Pompeius to the state, a great
+ornament to the republic, and a most illustrious monument of his
+clemency. Sad was that picture, melancholy was the destiny then of the
+Roman people. For after Pompeius the father was dead, he who was
+the light of the Roman people, the son too, who was wholly like his
+father, was also slain. But all these calamities appear to me to have
+been effaced by the kindness of the immortal gods, Sextus Pompeius
+being preserved to the republic.
+
+XV. For which cause, reasonable and important as it is and because
+Marcus Lepidus, by his humanity and wisdom, has changed a most
+dangerous and extensive civil war into peace and concord, I give my
+vote, that a resolution of the senate be drawn up in these words:
+
+"Since the affairs of the republic have repeatedly been well and
+prosperously conducted by Marcus Lepidus, imperator, and Pontifex
+Maximus, and since the Roman people is fully aware that kingly power
+is very displeasing to him; and since by his exertions, and virtue,
+and prudence, and singular clemency and humanity, a most bitter civil
+war has been extinguished; and Sextus Pompeius Magnus, the son of
+Cnaeus, having submitted to the authority of this order and laid down
+his arms, and, in accordance with the perfect good-will of the senate
+and people of Rome, has been restored to the state by Marcus Lepidus,
+imperator, and Pontifex Maximus; the senate and people of Rome, in
+return for the important and numerous services of Marcus Lepidus
+to the republic, declares that it places great hopes of future
+tranquillity and peace and concord, in his virtue, authority, and good
+fortune; and the senate and people of Rome will ever remember his
+services to the republic; and it is decreed by the vote of this order,
+That a gilt equestrian statue be erected to him in the Rostra, or in
+whatever other place in the forum he pleases."
+
+And this honour, O conscript fathers, appears to me a very great one,
+in the first place, because it is just;--for it is not merely given
+on account of our hopes of the future, but it is paid, as it were,
+in requital of his ample services already done. Nor are we able to
+mention any instance of this honour having been conferred on any one
+by the senate by their own free and voluntary judgment before.
+
+XVI. I come now to Caius Caesar, O conscript fathers; if he had not
+existed, which of us could have been alive now? That most intemperate
+of men, Antonius, was flying from Brundusium to the city, burning with
+hatred, with a disposition hostile to all good men, with an army. What
+was there to oppose to his audacity and wickedness? We had not as yet
+any generals, or any forces. There was no public council, no liberty;
+our necks were at the mercy of his nefarious cruelty; we were all
+preparing to have recourse to flight, though flight itself had no
+escape for us. Who was it--what god was it, who at that time gave to
+the Roman people this godlike young man, who, while every means
+for completing our destruction seemed open to that most pernicious
+citizen, rising up on a sudden, beyond every one's hope, completed
+an army fit to oppose to the fury of Marcus Antonius before any one
+suspected that he was thinking of any such step? Great honours were
+paid to Cnaeus Pompeius when he was a young man, and deservedly; for he
+came to the assistance of the republic; but he was of a more vigorous
+age, and more calculated to meet the eager requirements of soldiers
+seeking a general. He had also been already trained in other kinds
+of war. For the cause of Sylla was not agreeable to all men. The
+multitude of the proscribed, and the enormous calamities that fell on
+so many municipal towns, show this plainly. But Caesar, though many
+years younger, armed veterans who were now eager to rest; he has
+embraced that cause which was most agreeable to the senate, to the
+people, to all Italy,--in short, to gods and men. And Pompeius came as
+a reinforcement to the extensive command and victorious army of Lucius
+Sylla; Caesar had no one to join himself to. He, of his own accord, was
+the author and executor of his plan of levying an army, and arraying
+a defence for us. Pompeius found the whole Picene district hostile to
+the party of his adversaries; but Caesar has levied an army against
+Antonius from men who were Antonius's own friends, but still greater
+friends to liberty. It was owing to the influence of Pompeius that
+Sylla was enabled to act like a king. It is by the protection afforded
+us by Caesar that the tyranny of Antonius has been put down.
+
+Let us then confer on Caesar a regular military command, without which
+the military affairs cannot be directed, the army cannot be held
+together, war cannot be waged. Let him be made proprietor with all the
+privileges which have ever been attached to that appointment. That
+honour, although it is a great one for a man of his age, still is
+not merely of influence as giving dignity, but it confers powers
+calculated to meet the present emergency. Therefore, let us seek for
+honours for him which we shall not easily find at the present day.
+
+XVII. But I hope that we and the Roman people shall often have an
+opportunity of complimenting and honouring this young man. But at the
+present moment I give my vote that we should pass a decree in this
+form:
+
+"As Caius Caesar, the son of Caius, Pontiff and Propraetor, has at a
+most critical period of the republic exhorted the veteran soldiers to
+defend the liberty of the Roman people, and has enlisted them in his
+army, and as the Martial legion and the fourth legion, with great zeal
+for the republic, and with admirable unanimity, under the guidance and
+authority of Caius Caesar, have defended and are defending the republic
+and the liberty of the Roman people, and as Caius Caesar, propraetor,
+has gone with his army as a reinforcement to the province of Gaul, has
+made cavalry, and archers, and elephants, obedient to himself and to
+the Roman people, and has, at a most critical time for the republic,
+come to the aid of the safety and dignity of the Roman people,--on
+these accounts, it seems good to the senate that Caius Caesar, the son
+of Caius, pontiff and propraetor, shall be a senator, and shall deliver
+his opinions from the bench occupied by men of praetorian rank, and
+that, on occasion of his offering himself for any magistracy, he shall
+be considered of the same legal standing and qualification as if he
+had been quaestor the preceding year."
+
+For what reason can there be, O conscript fathers, why we should
+not wish him to arrive at the highest honours at as early an age as
+possible? For when, by the laws fixing the age at which men might be
+appointed to the different magistracies our ancestors fixed a more
+mature age for the consulship, they were influenced by fears of the
+precipitation of youth, Caius Caesar, at his first entrance into life,
+has shown us that, in the case of his eminent and unparalleled virtue,
+we have no need to wait for the progress of age. Therefore our
+ancestors, those old men, in the most ancient times, had no laws
+regulating the age for the different offices, it was ambition which
+caused them to be passed many years afterwards, in order that there
+might be among men of the same age different steps for arriving at
+honours. And it has often happened that a disposition of great natural
+virtue has been lost before it had any opportunity of benefiting the
+republic.
+
+But among the ancients, the Rulii, the Decii, the Corvim, and many
+others, and in more modern times the elder Africanus and Titus
+Flaminius were made consuls very young, and performed such exploits as
+greatly to extend the empire of the Roman people, and to embellish its
+name. What more? Did not the Macedonian Alexander, having begun to
+perform mighty deeds from his earliest youth, die when he was only in
+his thirty-third year? And that age is ten years less than that fixed
+by our laws for a man to be eligible for the consulship. From which it
+may be plainly seen that the progress of virtue is often swifter than
+that of age.
+
+XVIII. For as to the fear which those men, who are enemies of Caesar,
+pretend to entertain, there is not the slightest reason to apprehend
+that he will be unable to restrain and govern himself, or that he will
+be so elated by the honours which he receives from us as to use his
+power with out moderation. It is only natural, O conscript fathers,
+that the man who has learnt to appreciate real glory, and who feels
+that he is considered by the senate and by the Roman knights and the
+whole Roman people a citizen who is dear to, and a blessing to the
+republic, should think nothing whatever deserving of being compared to
+this glory. Would that it had happened to Caius Caesar--the father,
+I mean--when he was a young man, to be beloved by the senate and by
+every virtuous citizen, but, having neglected to aim at that, he
+wasted all the power of genius which he had in a most brilliant
+degree, in a capricious pursuit of popular favour. Therefore, as he
+had not sufficient respect for the senate and the virtuous part of the
+citizens, he opened for himself that path for the extension of his
+power, which the virtue of a free people was unable to bear.
+
+But the principles of his son are widely different; who is not only
+beloved by every one, but in the greatest degree by the most virtuous
+men. In him is placed all our hope of liberty, from him already has
+our safety been received, for him the highest honours are sought out
+and prepared. While therefore we are admiring his singular prudence,
+can we at the same time fear his folly? For what can be more foolish
+than to prefer useless power, such influence as brings envy in
+its train, and a rash and slippery ambition of reigning, to real,
+dignified, solid glory? Has he seen this truth as a boy, and when he
+has advanced in age will he cease to see it? "But he is an enemy to
+some most illustrious and excellent citizens." That circumstance ought
+not to cause any fear Caesar has sacrificed all those enmities to the
+republic; he had made the republic his judge; he has made her the
+directress of all his counsels and actions. For he is come to the
+service of the republic in order to strengthen her, not to overturn
+her. I am well acquainted with all the feelings of the young man:
+there is nothing dearer to him than the republic, nothing which he
+considers of more weight than your authority; nothing which he desires
+more than the approbation of virtuous men; nothing which he accounts
+sweeter than genuine glory.
+
+Wherefore you not only ought not to fear anything from him, but you
+ought to expect greater and better things still. Nor ought you to
+apprehend with respect to a man who has already gone forward to
+release Decimus Brutus from a siege, that the recollection of his
+domestic injury will dwell in his bosom, and have more weight with
+him than the safety of the city. I will venture even to pledge my own
+faith, O conscript fathers, to you, and to the Roman people, and to
+the republic, which in truth, if no necessity compelled me to do so,
+I would not venture to do, and in doing which on slight grounds, I
+should be afraid of giving rise to a dangerous opinion of my rashness
+in a most important business; but I do promise, and pledge myself, and
+undertake, O conscript fathers, that Caius Caesar will always be such
+a citizen as he is this day, and as we ought above all things to wish
+and desire that he may turn out.
+
+XIX. And as this is the case, I shall consider that I have said enough
+at present about Caesar.
+
+Nor do I think that we ought to pass over Lucius Egnatuleius, a most
+gallant and wise and firm citizen, and one thoroughly attached to the
+republic, in silence; but that we ought to give him our testimony to
+his admirable virtue, because it was he who led the fourth legion to
+Caesar, to be a protection to the consuls, and senate, and people of
+Rome, and the republic. And for these acts I give my vote:
+
+"That it be made lawful for Lucius Egnatuleius to stand for, and be
+elected to, and discharge the duties of any magistracy, three years
+before the legitimate time."
+
+And by this motion, O conscript fathers, Lucius Egnatuleius does not
+get so much actual advantage as honour. For in a case like this it is
+quite sufficient to be honourably mentioned.
+
+But concerning the army of Caius Caesar, I give my vote for the passing
+of a decree in this form:
+
+"The senate decrees that the veteran soldiers who have defended and
+are defending [lacuna] of Caesar, pontiff [lacuna] and the authority of
+this order, should, and their children after them, have an exemption
+from military service. And that Caius Pansa and Aulus Hirtius the
+consuls, one or both of them, as they think fit, shall inquire what
+land there is in those colonies in which the veteran soldiers have
+been settled, which is occupied in defiance of the provisions of the
+Julian law, in order that that may be divided among these veterans.
+That they shall institute a separate inquiry about the Campanian
+district, and devise a plan for increasing the advantages enjoyed by
+these veteran soldiers; and with respect to the Martial legion, and
+to the fourth legion, and to those soldiers of the second and
+thirty-fifth legions who have come over to Caius Pansa and Aulus
+Hirtius the consuls, and have given in their names, because the
+authority of the senate and the liberty of the Roman people is and
+always has been most dear to them, the senate decrees that they and
+their children shall have exemption from military service, except in
+the case of any Gallic and Italian sedition; and decrees further, that
+those legions shall have their discharge when this war is terminated;
+and that whatever sum of money Caius Caesar, pontiff and propraetor, has
+promised to the soldiers of those legions individually, shall be paid
+to them. And that Caius Pansa and Aulus Hirtius the consuls, one or
+both of them, as it seems good to them, shall make an estimate of the
+land which can be distributed without injury to private individuals;
+and that land shall be given and assigned to the soldiers of the
+Martial legion and of the fourth legion, in the largest shares in
+which land has ever been given and assigned to soldiers."
+
+I have now spoken, O consuls, on every point concerning which you have
+submitted a motion to us; and if the resolutions which I have proposed
+be decreed without delay, and seasonably, you will the more easily
+prepare those measures which the present time and emergency demand.
+But instant action is necessary. And if we had adopted that earlier,
+we should, as I have often said, now have no war at all.
+
+
+
+
+THE SIXTH ORATION OF M. T CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS CALLED ALSO
+THE SIXTH PHILIPPIC. ADDRESSED TO THE PEOPLE.
+
+THE ARGUMENT
+
+
+In respect of the honours proposed by Cicero in the last speech the
+senate agreed with him, voting to Octavius honours beyond any that
+Cicero had proposed. But they were much divided about the question
+of sending an embassy to Antonius, and the consuls, seeing that a
+majority agreed with Cicero, adjourned the debate till the next day.
+The discussion lasted three days, and the senate would at last have
+adopted all Cicero's measures if one of the tribunes, Salvius, had not
+put his veto on them. So that at last the embassy was ordered to
+be sent, and Servius Sulpicius, Lucius Piso, and Lucius Philippus,
+appointed as the ambassadors, but they were charged merely to
+order Antonius to abandon the siege of Mutina, and to desist from
+hostilities against the province of Gaul, and further, to proceed to
+Decimus Brutus in Mutina, and to give him and his army the thanks of
+the senate and people.
+
+The length of the debates roused the curiosity of the people, who,
+being assembled in the forum to learn the result, called on Cicero to
+come forth and give them an account of what had been done--on which he
+went to the rostra, accompanied by Publius Appuleius the tribune, and
+related to them all that had passed in the following speech:
+
+I. I imagine that you have heard, O Romans, what has been done in the
+senate, and what has been the opinion delivered by each individual.
+For the matter which has been in discussion ever since the first of
+January, has been just brought to a conclusion, with less severity
+indeed than it ought to have been, but still in a manner not
+altogether unbecoming. The war has been subjected to a delay, but
+the cause has not been removed. Wherefore, as to the question which
+Publius Appuleius--a man united to me by many kind offices and by the
+closest intimacy, and firmly attached to your interests--has asked me,
+I will answer in such a manner that you may be acquainted with the
+transactions at which you were not present.
+
+The cause which prompted our most fearless and excellent consuls to
+submit a motion on the first of January, concerning the general state
+of the republic, arose from the decree which the senate passed by my
+advice on the nineteenth of December. On that day, O Romans, were
+the foundations of the republic first laid. For then, after a long
+interval, the senate was free in such a manner that you too might
+become free. On which day, indeed,--even if it had been to bring to me
+the end of my life,--I received a sufficient reward for my exertions,
+when you all with one heart and one voice cried out together, that
+the republic had been a second time saved by me. Stimulated by so
+important and so splendid a decision of yours in my favour, I came
+into the senate on the first of January, with the feeling that I was
+bound to show my recollection of the character which you had imposed
+upon me, and which I had to sustain.
+
+Therefore, when I saw that a nefarious war was waged against the
+republic, I thought that no delay ought to be interposed to our
+pursuit of Marcus Antonius; and I gave my vote that we ought to pursue
+with war that most audacious man, who, having committed many atrocious
+crimes before, was at this moment attacking a general of the Roman
+people, and besieging your most faithful and gallant colony; and that
+a state of civil war ought to be proclaimed; and I said further, that
+my opinion was that a suspension of the ordinary forms of justice
+should be declared, and that the garb of war should be assumed by
+the citizens, in order that all men might apply themselves with more
+activity and energy to avenging the injuries of the republic, if they
+saw that all the emblems of a regular war had been adopted by the
+senate. Therefore, this opinion of mine, O Romans, prevailed so much
+for three days, that although no division was come to, still all,
+except a very few, appeared inclined to agree with me. But to-day--I
+know not owing to what circumstance--the senate was more indulgent.
+For the majority decided on our making experiment, by means of
+ambassadors, how much influence the authority of the senate and your
+unanimity will have upon Antonius.
+
+II. I am well aware, O Romans, that this decision is disapproved of by
+you; and reasonably too. For to whom are we sending ambassadors? Is
+it not to him who, after having dissipated and squandered the public
+money, and imposed laws on the Roman people by violence and in
+violation of the auspices,--after having put the assembly of the
+people to flight and besieged the senate, sent for the legions from
+Brundusium to oppress the republic? who, when deserted by them, has
+invaded Gaul with a troop of banditti? who is attacking Brutus? who is
+besieging Mutina? How can you offer conditions to, or expect equity
+from, or send an embassy to, or, in short, have anything in common
+with, this gladiator? although, O Romans, it is not an embassy, but a
+denunciation of war if he does not obey. For the decree has been drawn
+up as if ambassadors were being sent to Hannibal. For men are sent to
+order him not to attack the consul elect, not to besiege Mutina, not
+to lay waste the province, not to enlist troops, but to submit himself
+to the power of the senate and people of Rome. No doubt he is a
+likely man to obey this injunction, and to submit to the power of the
+conscript fathers and to yours, who has never even had any mastery
+over himself. For what has he ever done that showed any discretion,
+being always led away wherever his lust, or his levity, or his frenzy,
+or his drunkenness has hurried him? He has always been under the
+dominion of two very dissimilar classes of men, pimps and robbers; he
+is so fond of domestic adulteries and forensic murders, that he would
+rather obey a most covetous woman than the senate and people of Rome.
+
+III. Therefore, I will do now before you what I have just done in the
+senate. I call you to witness, I give notice, I predict beforehand,
+that Marcus Antonius will do nothing whatever of those things which
+the ambassadors are commissioned to command him to do; but that he
+will lay waste the lands, and besiege Mutina and enlist soldiers,
+wherever he can. For he is a man who has at all times despised the
+judgment and authority of the senate, and your inclinations and power.
+Will he do what it has been just now decreed that he shall do,--lead
+his army back across the Rubicon, which is the frontier of Gaul, and
+yet at the same time not come nearer Rome than two hundred miles? will
+he obey this notice? will he allow himself to be confined by the river
+Rubicon and by the limit of two hundred miles? Antonius is not that
+sort of man. For if he had been, he would never have allowed matters
+to come to such a pass, as for the senate to give him notice, as
+it did to Hannibal at the beginning of the Punic war not to attack
+Saguntum. But what ignominy it is to be called away from Mutina, and
+at the same time to be forbidden to approach the city as if he were
+some fatal conflagration! what an opinion is this for the senate
+to have of a man! What? As to the commission which is given to the
+ambassadors to visit Decimus Brutus and his soldiers, and to inform
+them that their excellent zeal in behalf of, and services done to the
+republic, are acceptable to the senate and people of Rome, and that
+that conduct shall tend to their great glory and to their great
+honour; do you think that Antonius will permit the ambassadors to
+enter Mutina? and to depart from thence in safety? He never will allow
+it, believe me. I know the violence of the man, I know his impudence,
+I know his audacity.
+
+Nor, indeed, ought we to think of him as of a human being, but as of a
+most ill-omened beast. And as this is the case, the decree which
+the senate has passed is not wholly improper. The embassy has some
+severity in it; I only wish it had no delay. For as in the conduct of
+almost every affair slowness and procrastination are hateful, so above
+all things does this war require promptness of action. We must assist
+Decimus Brutus; we must collect all our forces from all quarters;
+we cannot lose a single hour in effecting the deliverance of such
+a citizen without wickedness. Was it not in his power, if he had
+considered Antonius a consul, and Gaul the province of Antonius, to
+have given over the legions and the province to Antonius? and to
+return home himself? and to celebrate a triumph? and to be the first
+man in this body to deliver his opinion, until he entered on his
+magistracy? What was the difficulty of doing that? But as he
+remembered that he was Brutus, and that he was born for your freedom,
+not for his own tranquillity, what else did he do but--as I may almost
+say--put his own body in the way to prevent Antonius from entering
+Gaul? Ought we then to send ambassadors to this man, or legions?
+However, we will say nothing of what is past. Let the ambassadors
+hasten, as I see that they are about to do. Do you prepare your
+robes of war. For it has been decreed, that, if he does not obey
+the authority of the senate, we are all to betake our selves to our
+military dress. And we shall have to do so. He will never obey. And we
+shall lament that we have lost so many days, when we might have been
+doing something.
+
+IV I have no fear, O Romans, that when Antonius hears that I have
+asserted, both in the senate and in the assembly of the people, that
+he never will submit himself to the power of the senate, he will, for
+the sake of disproving my words, and making me to appeal to have had
+no foresight, alter his behaviour and obey the senate. He will never
+do so. He will not grudge me this part of my reputation, he will
+prefer letting me be thought wise by you to being thought modest
+himself. Need I say more? Even if he were willing to do so himself,
+do you think that his brother Lucius would permit him? It has been
+reported that lately at Tibur, when Marcus Antonius appeared to him to
+be wavering, he, Lucius, threatened his brother with death. And do
+we suppose that the orders of the senate, and the words of the
+ambassadors, will be listened to by this Asiatic gladiator? It will be
+impossible for him to be separated from a brother, especially from one
+of so much authority. For he is another Africanus among them. He is
+considered of more influence than Lucius Trebellius, of more than
+Titus Plancus [lacuna] a noble young man. As for Plancus, who, having
+been condemned by the unanimous vote of every one, amid the
+overpowering applause of you yourselves, somehow or other got mixed up
+in this crowd, and returned with a countenance so sorrowful, that he
+appeared to have been dragged back rather than to have returned, he
+despises him to such degree, as if he were interdicted from fire and
+water. At times he says that that man who set the senate house on fire
+has no right to a place in the senate house. For at this moment he is
+exceedingly in love with Trebellius. He hated him some time ago, when
+he was opposing an abolition of debts, but now he delights in him,
+ever since he has seen that Trebellius himself cannot continue in
+safety without an abolition of debts. For I think that you have heard,
+O Romans, what indeed you may possibly have seen, that the sureties
+and creditors of Lucius Trebellius meet every day. Oh confidence! for
+I imagine that Trebellius has taken this surname, what can be greater
+confidence than defrauding one's creditors? than flying from one's
+house? than, because of one's debts, being forced to go to war? What
+has become of the applauses which he received on the occasion of
+Caesar's triumph, and often at the games? Where is the aedileship that
+was conferred on him by the zealous efforts of all good men? who is
+there who does not now think that he acted virtuously by accident?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+V However, I return to your love and especial delight, Lucius
+Antonius, who has admitted you all to swear allegiance to him. Do
+you deny it? is there any one of you who does not belong to a tribe?
+Certainly not. But thirty five tribes have adopted him for their
+patron. Do you again cry out against my statement? Look at that gilt
+statue of him on the left what is the inscription upon it? "The thirty
+five tribes to their patron." Is then Lucius Antonius the patron of
+the Roman people? Plague take him! For I fully assent to your outcry.
+I won't speak of this bandit whom no one would choose to have for
+a client, but was there ever a man possessed of such influence, or
+illustrious for mighty deeds, as to dare to call himself the patron of
+the whole Roman people, the conqueror and master of all nations? We
+see in the forum a statue of Lucius Antonius, just as we see one of
+Quintus Tremulus, who conquered the Hernici, before the temple of
+Castor. Oh the incredible impudence of the man! Has he assumed all
+this credit to himself, because as a mumillo at Mylasa he slew the
+Thracian, his friend? How should we be able to endure him, if he had
+fought in this forum before the eyes of you all? But, however, this
+is but one statue. He has another erected by the Roman knights who
+received horses from the state,[36] and they too inscribe on that,
+"To their patron". Who was ever before adopted by that order as its
+patron? If it ever adopted any one as such, it ought to have adopted
+me. What censor was ever so honoured? what imperator? "But he
+distributed land among them". Shame on their sordid natures for
+accepting it! shame on his dishonesty for giving it!
+
+Moreover, the military tribunes who were in the army of Caesar have
+erected him a statue. What order is that? There have been plenty of
+tribunes in our numerous legions in so many years. Among them he has
+distributed the lands of Semurium. The Campus Martius was all that was
+left, if he had not first fled with his brother. But this allotment
+of lands was put an end to a little while ago, O Romans, by the
+declaration of his opinion by Lucius Caesar a most illustrious man and
+a most admirable senator. For we all agreed with him and annulled the
+acts of the septemvirs. So all the kindness of Nucula[37] goes for
+nothing, and the patron Antonius is at a discount. For those who had
+taken possession will depart with more equanimity. They had not been
+at any expense, they had not yet furnished or stocked their domains,
+partly because they did not feel sure of their title, and partly
+because they had no money.
+
+But as for that splendid statue, concerning which, if the times were
+better, I could not speak without laughing, "To Lucius Antonius,
+patron of the middle of Janus"[38] Is it so? Is the middle of Janus a
+client of Lucius Antonius? Who ever was found in that Janus who would
+have lent Lucius Antonius a thousand sesterces?
+
+VI. However, we have been spending too much time in trifles. Let us
+return to our subject and to the war. Although it was not wholly
+foreign to the subject for some characters to be thoroughly
+appreciated by you, in order that you might in silence think over who
+they were against whom you were to wage war.
+
+But I exhort you, O Romans, though perhaps other measures might have
+been wiser, still now to wait with calmness for the return of the
+ambassadors. Promptness of action has been taken from our side, but
+still some good has accrued to it. For when the ambassadors have
+reported what they certainly will report, that Antonius will not
+submit to you nor to the senate, who then will be so worthless a
+citizen as to think him deserving of being accounted a citizen? For at
+present there are men, few indeed, but still more than there ought to
+be, or than the republic deserves that there should be, who speak in
+this way,--"Shall we not even wait for the return of the ambassadors?"
+Certainly the republic itself will force them to abandon that
+expression and that pretence of clemency. On which account, to confess
+the truth to you, O Romans, I have less striven to day, and laboured
+all the less to day, to induce the senate to agree with me in
+decreeing the existence of a seditious war, and ordering the apparel
+of war to be assumed. I preferred having my sentiments applauded by
+every one in twenty days' time, to having it blamed to day by a few.
+Wherefore, O Romans, wait now for the return of the ambassadors, and
+devour your annoyance for a few days. And when they do return, if
+they bring back peace, believe me that I have been desirous that they
+should, if they bring back war, then allow me the praise of foresight.
+Ought I not to be provident for the welfare of my fellow-citizens?
+Ought I not day and night to think of your freedom and of the safety
+of the republic? For what do I not owe to you, O Romans, since you
+have preferred for all the honours of the state a man who is his own
+father to the most nobly born men in the republic? Am I ungrateful?
+Who is less so? I, who, after I had obtained those honours, have
+constantly laboured in the forum with the same exertions as I used
+while striving for them. Am I inexperienced in state affairs? Who has
+had more practice than I, who have now for twenty years been waging
+war against impious citizens?
+
+VII Wherefore, O Romans, with all the prudence of which I am master,
+and with almost more exertion than I am capable of, will I put forth
+my vigilance and watchfulness in your behalf In truth, what citizen
+is there, especially in this rank in which you have placed me, so
+forgetful of your kindness, so unmindful of his country, so hostile to
+his own dignity, as not to be roused and stimulated by your wonderful
+unanimity? I, as consul, have held many assemblies of the people,
+I have been present at many others, I have never once seen one so
+numerous as this one of yours now is. You have all one feeling, you
+have all one desire, that of averting the attempts of Marcus Antonius
+from the republic, of extinguishing his frenzy and crushing his
+audacity. All orders have the same wish. The municipal towns, the
+colonies, and all Italy are labouring for the same end. Therefore you
+have made the senate, which was already pretty firm of its own accord,
+firmer still by your authority. The time has come, O Romans, later
+altogether than for the honour of the Roman people it should have
+been, but still so that the things are now so ripe that they do not
+admit of a moment's delay. There has been a sort of fatality, if I
+may say so, which we have borne as it was necessary to bear it. But
+hereafter if any disaster happens to us it will be of our own seeking.
+It is impossible for the Roman people to be slaves, that people whom
+the immortal gods have ordained should rule over all nations. Matters
+are now come to a crisis. We are fighting for our freedom. Either you
+must conquer, O Romans, which indeed you will do if you continue to
+act with such piety and such unanimity, or you must do anything rather
+than become slaves. Other nations can endure slavery. Liberty is the
+inalienable possession of the Roman people.
+
+
+
+
+THE SEVENTH ORATION OF M. T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS CALLED
+ALSO THE SEVENTH PHILIPPIC.
+
+
+THE ARGUMENT
+
+
+After the senate had decided on sending them, the ambassadors
+immediately set out, though Servius Sulpicius was in a very bad state
+of health. In the meantime the partisans of Antonius in the city, with
+Calenus at their head were endeavouring to gain over the rest of the
+citizens, by representing him as eager for an accommodation and they
+kept up a correspondence with him, and published such of his letters
+as they thought favourable for their views. Matters being in this
+state, Cicero, at an ordinary meeting of the senate, made the
+following speech to counteract the machinations of this party, and to
+warn the citizens generally of the danger of being deluded by them.
+
+I. We are consulted to-day about matters of small importance, but
+still perhaps necessary, O conscript fathers. The consul submits a
+motion to us about the Appian road, and about the coinage, the tribune
+of the people one about the Luperci. And although it seems easy to
+settle such matters as those, still my mind cannot fix itself on such
+subjects, being anxious about more important matters. For our affairs,
+O conscript fathers, are come to a crisis, and are in a state of
+almost extreme danger. It is not without reason that I have always
+feared and never approved of that sending of ambassadors. And what
+their return is to bring us I know not, but who is there who does not
+see with how much languor the expectation of it infects our minds? For
+those men put no restraint on themselves who grieve that the senate
+has revived so as to entertain hopes of its former authority, and
+that the Roman people is united to this our order, that all Italy is
+animated by one common feeling, that armies are prepared, and generals
+ready for the armies, even already they are inventing replies for
+Antonius, and defending them. Some pretend that his demand is that all
+the armies be disbanded. I suppose then we sent ambassadors to him,
+not that he should submit and obey this our body, but that he should
+offer us conditions, impose laws upon us, order us to open Italy to
+foreign nations, especially while we were to leave him in safety from
+whom there is more danger to be feared than from any nation whatever.
+Others say that he is willing to give up the nearer Gaul to us, and
+that he will be satisfied with the further Gaul. Very kind of him! in
+order that from thence he may endeavour to bring not merely legions,
+but even nations against this city. Others say that he makes no
+demands now but such as are quite moderate. Macedonia he calls
+absolutely his own, since it was from thence that his brother Caius
+was recalled. But what province is there in which that firebrand may
+not kindle a conflagration? Therefore those same men, like provident
+citizens and diligent senators, say that I have sounded the charge,
+and they undertake the advocacy of peace. Is not this the way in
+which they argue? "Antonius ought not to have been irritated, he is
+a reckless and a bold man, there are many bad men besides him." (No
+doubt, and they may begin and count themselves first). And they warn
+us to be on our guard against them. Which conduct then is it which
+shows the more prudent caution chastising wicked citizens when one is
+able to do so, or fearing them?
+
+II. And these men speak in this way, who on account of their trifling
+disposition used to be considered friends of the people. From which
+it may be understood that they in their hearts have at all times been
+disinclined to a good constitution of the state, and they were not
+friends of the people from inclination. For how comes it to pass that
+those men who were anxious to gratify the people in evil things, now,
+on an occasion which above all others concerns the people's interests,
+because the same thing would be also salutary for the republic, now
+prefer being wicked to being friends of the people? This noble cause
+of which I am the advocate has made me popular, a man who (as you
+know) have always opposed the rashness of the people. And those men
+are called, or rather they call themselves, consulars; though no man
+is worthy of that name except those who can support so high an honour.
+Will you favour an enemy? Will you let him send you letters about his
+hopes of success? Will you be glad to produce them? to read them? Will
+you even give them to wicked citizens to take copies of? Will you thus
+raise their courage? Will you thus damp the hopes and valour of the
+good? And then will you think yourself a consular, or a senator, or
+even a citizen? Caius Pansa, a most fearless and virtuous consul, will
+take what I say in good part. For I will speak with a disposition
+most friendly to him; but I should not consider him himself a consul,
+though a man with whom I am most intimate, unless he was such a consul
+as to devote all his vigilance, and cares, and thoughts to the safety
+of the republic.
+
+Although long acquaintance, and habit, and a fellowship and
+resemblance in the most honourable pursuits, has bound us together
+from his first entrance into life; and his incredible diligence,
+proved at the time of the most formidable dangers of the civil war,
+showed that he was a favourer not only of my safety, but also of my
+dignity; still, as I said before, if he were not such a consul as I
+have described, I should venture to deny that he was a consul at all.
+But now I call him not only a consul, but the most excellent and
+virtuous consul within my recollection; not but that there have been
+others of equal virtue and equal inclination, but still they have not
+had an equal opportunity of displaying that virtue and inclination.
+But the opportunity of a time of most formidable change has been
+afforded to his magnanimity, and dignity, and wisdom. And that is the
+time when the consulship is displayed to the greatest advantage, when
+it governs the republic during a time which, if not desirable, is at
+all events critical and momentous. And a more critical time than the
+present, O conscript fathers, never was.
+
+III. Therefore I, who have been at all times an adviser of peace,
+and who, though all good men always considered peace, and especially
+internal peace, desirable, have desired it more than all of them;--for
+the whole of the career of my industry has been passed in the forum
+and in the senate-house, and in warding off dangers from my friends;
+it is by this course that I have arrived at the highest honours, at
+moderate wealth, and at any dignity which we may be thought to have: I
+therefore, a nursling of peace, as I may call myself, I who, whatever
+I am, (for I arrogate nothing to myself,) should undoubtedly not have
+been such without internal peace: I am speaking in peril: I shudder to
+think how you will receive it, O conscript fathers: but still, out of
+regard for my unceasing desire to support and increase your dignity, I
+beg and entreat you, O conscript fathers, although it may be a bitter
+thing to hear, or an incredible thing that it should be said by Marcus
+Cicero, still to receive at first, without offence, what I am going
+to say, and not to reject it before I have fully explained what it
+is;--I, who, I will say so over and over again, have always been a
+panegyrist, have always been an adviser of peace, do not wish to have
+peace with Marcus Antonius. I approach the rest of my speech with
+great hope, O conscript fathers, since I have now passed by that
+perilous point amid your silence.
+
+Why then do I not wish for peace? Because it would be shameful;
+because it would be dangerous; because it cannot possibly be real. And
+while I explain these three points to you, I beg of you, O conscript
+fathers, to listen to my words with the same kindness which you
+usually show to me.
+
+What is more shameful than inconsistency, fickleness, and levity, both
+to individuals, and also to the entire senate? Moreover, what can be
+more inconsistent than on a sudden to be willing to be united in peace
+with a man whom you have lately adjudged to be an enemy, not by words,
+but by actions and by many formal decrees? Unless, indeed, when you
+were decreeing honours to Caius Caesar, well-deserved indeed by and
+fairly due to him, but still unprecedented and never to be forgotten,
+for one single reason,--because he had levied an army against Marcus
+Antonius,--you were not judging Marcus Antonius to be an enemy; and
+unless Antonius was not pronounced an enemy by you, when the veteran
+soldiers were praised by your authority, for having followed Caesar;
+and unless you did not declare Antonius an enemy when you promised
+exemptions and money and lands to those brave legions, because they
+had deserted him who was consul while he was an enemy.
+
+IV. What? when you distinguished with the highest praises Brutus, a
+man born under some omen, as it were, of his race and name, for the
+deliverance of the republic, and his army, which was waging war
+against Antonius on behalf of the liberty of the Roman people, and the
+most loyal and admirable province of Gaul, did you not then pronounce
+Antonius an enemy? What? when you decreed that the consuls, one or
+both of them, should go to the war, what war was there if Antonius was
+not an enemy? Why then was it that most gallant man, my own colleague
+and intimate friend, Aulus Hirtius the consul, has set out? And in
+what delicate health he is; how wasted away! But the weak state of his
+body could not repress the vigour of his mind. He thought it fair, I
+suppose, to expose to danger in defence of the Roman people that life
+which had been preserved to him by their prayers. What? when you
+ordered levies of troops to be made throughout all Italy, when you
+suspended all exemptions 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?
+
+I have said enough of the shamefulness of such a proceeding; I will
+now speak next, as I proposed, of the danger of it; which, although it
+is not so important to avoid as shame, still offends the minds of the
+greater part of mankind even more.
+
+VI. Will it then be possible for you to rely on the certainty of any
+peace, when you see Antonius, or rather the Antonii, in the city?
+Unless, indeed, you despise Lucius: I do not despise even Caius. But,
+as I think, Lucius will be the dominant spirit,--for he is the patron
+of the five-and-thirty tribes, whose votes he took away by his law, by
+which he divided the magistracies in conjunction with Caius Caesar.
+He is the patron of the centuries of the Roman knights, which also he
+thought fit to deprive of the suffrages: he is the patron of the men
+who have been military tribunes; he is the patron of the middle of
+Janus. O ye gods! who will be able to support this man's power?
+especially when he has brought all his dependants into the lands. Who
+ever was the patron of all the tribes? and of the Roman knights? and
+of the military tribunes? Do you think that the power of even the
+Gracchi was greater than that of this gladiator will be? whom I have
+called gladiator, not in the sense in which sometimes Marcus Antonius
+too is called gladiator, but as men call him who are speaking plain
+Latin. He has fought in Asia as a mirmillo. After having equipped his
+own companion and intimate friend in the armour of a Thracian, he slew
+the miserable man as he was flying; but he himself received a palpable
+wound, as the scar proves.
+
+What will the man who murdered his friend in this way, when he has an
+opportunity, do to an enemy? and if he did such a thing as this for
+the fun of the thing, what do you think he will do when tempted by the
+hope of plunder? Will he not again meet wicked men in the decuries?
+will he not again tamper with those men who have received lands? will
+he not again seek those who have been banished? will he not, in short,
+be Marcus Antonius; to whom, on the occasion of every commotion, there
+will be a rush of all profligate citizens? Even if there be no one
+else except those who are with him now, and these who in this body
+now openly speak in his favour, will they be too small in number?
+especially when all the protection which we might have had from good
+men is lost, and when those men are prepared to obey his nod? But I
+am afraid, if at this time we fail to adopt wise counsels, that that
+party will in a short time appear too numerous for us. Nor have I any
+dislike to peace; only I do dread war disguised under the name of
+peace. Wherefore, if we wish to enjoy peace we must first wage war. If
+we shrink from war, peace we shall never have.
+
+VII. But it becomes your prudence, O conscript fathers, to provide as
+far forward as possible for posterity. That is the object for which we
+were placed in this garrison, and as it were on this watch-tower; that
+by our vigilance and foresight we might keep the Roman people free
+from fear. It would be a shameful thing, especially in so clear a case
+as this, for it to be notorious that wisdom was wanting to the chief
+council of the whole world. We have such consuls, there is such
+eagerness on the part of the Roman people, we have such an unanimous
+feeling of all Italy in our favour, such generals, and such armies,
+that the republic cannot possibly suffer any disaster without the
+senate being in fault. I, for my part, will not be wanting. I will
+warn you, I will forewarn you, I will give you notice, I will call
+gods and men to witness what I do really believe. Nor will I display
+my good faith alone, which perhaps may seem to be enough, but which in
+a chief citizen is not enough; I will exert all my care, and prudence,
+and vigilance.
+
+I have spoken about the danger. I will now proceed to prove to you
+that it is not possible for peace to be firmly cemented; for of the
+propositions which I promised to establish this is the last.
+
+VIII. What peace can there be between Marcus Antonius and (in the
+first place) the senate? with what face will he be able to look upon
+you, and with what eyes will you, in turn, look upon him? Which of you
+does not hate him? which of you does not he hate? Come, are you the
+only people who hate him; and whom he hates? What? what do you think
+of those men who are besieging Mutina, who are levying troops in Gaul,
+who are threatening your fortunes? will they ever be friends to you,
+or you to them? Will he embrace the Roman knights? For, suppose their
+inclinations respecting, and their opinions of Antonius were very much
+concealed, when they stood in crowds on the steps of the temple
+of Concord, when they stimulated you to endeavour to recover your
+liberty, when they demanded arms, the robe of war, and war, and who,
+with the Roman people, invited me to meet in the assembly of the
+people, will these men ever become friends to Antonius? will Antonius
+ever maintain peace with them? For why should I speak of the whole
+Roman people? which, in a full and crowded forum, twice, with one
+heart and one voice, summoned me into the assembly, and plainly showed
+their excessive eagerness for the recovery of their liberty. So,
+desirable as it was before to have the Roman people for our comrade,
+we now have it for our leader.
+
+What hope then is there that there ever can be peace between the Roman
+people and the men who are besieging Mutina and attacking a general
+and army of the Roman people? Will there be peace with the municipal
+towns, whose great zeal is shown by the decrees which they pass, by
+the soldiers whom they furnish, by the sums which they promise, so
+that in each town there is such a spirit as leaves no one room to wish
+for a senate of the Roman people? The men of Firmium deserve to be
+praised by a resolution of our order, who set the first example of
+promising money; we ought to return a complimentary answer to the
+Marrucini, who have passed a vote that all who evade military service
+are to be branded with infamy. These measures are adopted all over
+Italy. There is great peace between Antonius and these men, and
+between them and him! What greater discord can there possibly be? And
+in discord civil peace cannot by any possibility exist. To say nothing
+of the mob, look at Lucius Nasidius, a Roman knight, a man of the very
+highest accomplishments and honour, a citizen always eminent, whose
+watchfulness and exertions for the protection of my life I felt in my
+consulship; who not only exhorted his neighbours to become soldiers,
+but also assisted them from his own resources; will it be possible
+ever to reconcile Antonius to such a man as this, a man whom we ought
+to praise by a formal resolution of the senate? What? will it be
+possible to reconcile him to Caius Caesar, who prevented him from
+entering the city, or to Decimus Brutus, who has refused him entrance
+into Gaul? Moreover, will he reconcile himself to, or look mercifully
+on the province of Gaul, by which he has been excluded and rejected?
+You will see everything, O conscript fathers, if you do not take care,
+full of hatred and full of discord, from which civil wars arise. Do
+not then desire that which is impossible: and beware, I entreat you by
+the immortal gods, O conscript fathers, that out of hope of present
+peace you do not lose perpetual peace.
+
+What now is the object of this oration? For we do not yet know what
+the ambassadors have done. But still we ought to be awake, erect,
+prepared, armed in our minds, so as not to be deceived by any civil
+or supplicatory language, or by any pretence of justice. He must have
+complied with all the prohibitions and all the commands which we have
+sent him, before he can demand anything. He must have desisted from
+attacking Brutus and his army, and from plundering the cities and
+lands of the province of Gaul; he must have permitted the ambassadors
+to go to Brutus, and led his army back on this side of the Rubicon,
+and yet not come within two hundred miles of this city. He must have
+submitted himself to the power of the senate and of the Roman people.
+If he does this, then we shall have an opportunity of deliberating
+without any decision being forced upon us either way. If he does not
+obey the senate, then it will not be the senate that declares war
+against him, but he who will have declared it against the senate.
+
+But I warn you, O conscript fathers, the liberty of the Roman people,
+which is entrusted to you, is at stake. The life and fortune of
+every virtuous man is at stake, against which Antonius has long been
+directing his insatiable covetousness, united to his savage cruelty.
+Your authority is at stake, which you will wholly lose if you do not
+maintain it now. Beware how you let that foul and deadly beast escape
+now that you have got him confined and chained. You too, Pansa, I
+warn, (although you do not need counsel, for you have plenty of wisdom
+yourself: but still, even the most skilful pilots receive often
+warnings from the passengers in terrible storms,) not to allow this
+vast and noble preparation which you have made to fall away to
+nothing. You have such an opportunity as no one ever had. It is in
+your power so to avail yourself of this wise firmness of the senate,
+of this zeal of the equestrian order, of this ardour of the Roman
+people, as to release the Roman people from fear and danger for ever.
+As to the matters to which your motion before the senate refers, I
+agree with Publius Servilius.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE EIGHTH ORATION OF M T CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS CALLED ALSO
+THE EIGHTH PHILIPPIC
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ARGUMENT
+
+
+After the embassy to Antonius had left Rome the consuls zealously
+exerted themselves in preparing for war, in case he should reject the
+demands of the ambassador. Hirtius, though in bad health, left Rome
+first, at the head of an army containing, among others, the Martial
+and the fourth legions, intending to join Octavius and hoping with his
+assistance to prevent his gaining any advantage over Brutus till Pansa
+could join them. And he gained some advantages over Antonius at once.
+
+About the beginning of February the two remaining ambassadors (for
+Servius Sulpicius had died just as they arrived at Antonius's camp)
+returned, bringing word that Antonius would comply with none of the
+commands of the senate, nor allow them to proceed to Decimus Brutus,
+and bringing also (contrary to their duty) demands from him, of which
+the principal were, that his troops were to be rewarded, all the acts
+of himself and Dolabella to be ratified as also all that he had done
+respecting Caesar's papers, that no account was to be required of him
+of the money; in the temple of Ops and that he should have the further
+Gaul with an army of six legions.
+
+Pansa summoned the senate to receive the report of the ambassador,
+when Cicero made a severe speech, proposing very vigorous measures
+against Antonius, which, however, Galenus and his party were still
+numerous enough to mitigate very greatly; and even Pansa voted against
+him and in favour of the milder measures though they could not prevail
+against Cicero to have a second embassy sent to Antonius, and though
+Cicero carried his point of ordering the citizens to assume the
+_sagum_, or robe of war which he also (waving his privilege as a
+man of consular rank) wore himself. The next day the senate met again,
+to draw upon form the decrees on which they had resolved the
+day before, when Cicero addressed the following speech to them,
+expostulating with them for their wavering the day before.
+
+I. Matters were carried on yesterday, O Caius Pansa, in a more
+irregular manner than the beginning of your consulship required. You
+did not appear to me to make sufficient resistance to those men, to
+whom you are not in the habit of yielding. For while the virtue of the
+senate was such as it usually is, and while all men saw that there was
+war in reality, and some thought that the name ought to be kept back,
+on the division, your inclination inclined to lenity. The course which
+we proposed therefore was defeated, at your instigation, on account
+of the harshness of the word war. That urged by Lucius Caesar, a
+most honourable man, prevailed, which, taking away that one harsh
+expression, was gentler in its language than in its real intention.
+Although he, indeed, before he delivered his opinion at all, pleaded
+his relationship to Antonius in excuse for it. He had done the same in
+my consulship, in respect of his sister's husband, as he did now in
+respect of his sister's son, so that he was moved by the grief of his
+sister, and at the same time he wished to provide for the safety of
+the republic.
+
+And yet Caesar himself in some degree recommended you, O conscript
+fathers, not to agree with him, when he said that he should have
+expressed quite different sentiments, worthy both of himself and of
+the republic, if he had not been hampered by his relationship to
+Antonius. He, then, is his uncle, are you his uncles too, you who
+voted with him?
+
+But on what did the dispute turn? Some men, in delivering their
+opinion, did not choose to insert the word "war". They preferred
+calling it "tumult," being ignorant not only of the state of affairs,
+but also of the meaning of words. For there can be a "war" without a
+"tumult," but there cannot be a "tumult" without a "war." For what is
+a "tumult," but such a violent disturbance that an unusual alarm is
+engendered by it? from which indeed the name "tumult"[39] is derived.
+Therefore, our ancestors spoke of the Italian "tumult," which was a
+domestic one, of the Gallic "tumult," which was on the frontier of
+Italy, but they never spoke of any other. And that a "tumult" is a
+more serious thing than a "war" may be seen from this, that during a
+war exemptions from military service are valid, but in a tumult they
+are not. So that it is the fact, as I have said, that war can exist
+without a tumult, but a tumult cannot exist without a war. In truth,
+as there is no medium between war and peace, it is quite plain that a
+tumult, if it be not a sort of war, must be a sort of peace; and what
+more absurd can be said or imagined? However, we have said too much
+about a word; let us rather look to the facts, O conscript fathers,
+the appreciation of which, I know, is at times injured by too much
+attention being paid to words.
+
+II. We are unwilling that this should appear to be a war. What is
+the object, then, of our giving authority to the municipal towns
+and colonies to exclude Antonius? of our authorizing soldiers to be
+enlisted without any force, without the terror of any fine, of their
+own inclination and eagerness? of permitting them to promise money for
+the assistance of the republic? For if the name of war be taken away,
+the zeal of the municipal towns will be taken away too. And the
+unanimous feeling of the Roman people which at present pours itself
+into our cause, if we cool upon it, must inevitably be damped.
+
+But why need I say more? Decimus Brutus is attacked. Is not that war?
+Mutina is besieged. Is not even that war? Gaul is laid waste. What
+peace can be more assured than this? Who can think of calling that
+war? We have sent forth a consul, a most gallant man, with an army,
+who, though he was in a weak state from a long and serious illness,
+still thought he ought not to make any excuse when he was summoned to
+the protection of the republic. Caius Caesar, indeed, did not wait for
+our decrees; especially as that conduct of his was not unsuited to his
+age. He undertook war against Antonius of his own accord; for there
+was not yet time to pass a decree; and he saw that, if he let slip the
+opportunity of waging war, when the republic was crushed it would be
+impossible to pass any decrees at all. They and their arms, then, are
+now at peace. He is not an enemy whose garrison Hirtius has driven
+from Claterna; he is not an enemy who is in arms resisting a consul,
+and attacking a consul elect; and those are not the words of an enemy,
+nor is that warlike language, which Pansa read just now out of his
+colleague's letters: "I drove out the garrison." "I got possession of
+Claterna." "The cavalry were routed." "A battle was fought." "A good
+many men were slain." What peace can be greater than this? Levies of
+troops are ordered throughout all Italy; all exemptions from service
+are suspended; the robe of war is to be assumed to-morrow, the consul
+has said that he shall come down to the senate house with an armed
+guard.
+
+Is not this war? Ay, it is such a war as has never been. For in all
+other wars, and most especially in civil wars, it was a difference as
+to the political state of the republic which gave rise to the contest.
+Sylla contended against Sulpicius about the force of laws which Sylla
+said had been passed by violence. Cinna warred against Octavius
+because of the votes of the new citizens. Again, Sylla was at variance
+with Cinna and Marius, in order to prevent unworthy men from attaining
+power, and to avenge the cruel death of most illustrious men. The
+causes of all these wars arose from the zeal of different parties, for
+what they considered the interest of the republic. Of the last civil
+war I cannot bear to speak. I do not understand the cause of it, I
+detest the result.
+
+III. This is the fifth civil war, (and all of them have fallen upon
+our times,) the first which has not only not brought dissensions
+and discord among the citizens, but which has been signalised by
+extraordinary unanimity and incredible concord. All of them have the
+same wish, all defend the same objects, all are inspired with the same
+sentiments. When I say all, I except those whom no one thinks worthy
+of being citizens at all. What, then, is the cause of war, and what
+is the object aimed at? We are defending the temples of the immortal
+gods, we are defending the walls of the city, we are defending the
+homes and habitations of the Roman people, the household gods, the
+altars, the hearths and the sepulchres of our forefathers, we are
+defending our laws, our courts of justice, our freedom, our wives, our
+children, and our country. On the other hand, Marcus Antonius labours
+and fights in order to throw into confusion and overturn all these
+things, and hopes to have reason to think the plunder of the republic
+sufficient cause for the war, while he squanders part of our fortunes,
+and distributes the rest among his parricidal followers.
+
+While, then, the motives for war are so different, a most miserable
+circumstance is what that fellow promises to his band of robbers. In
+the first place our houses, for he declares that he will divide the
+city among them, and after that he will lead them out at whatever gate
+and settle them on whatever lands they please. All the Caphons,[40]
+all the Saxas, and the other plagues which attend Antonius, are
+marking out for themselves in their own minds most beautiful houses,
+and gardens, and villas, at Tusculum and Alba; and those clownish
+men--if indeed they are men, and not rather brute beasts--are borne on
+in their empty hopes as far as the waters and Puteoli. So Antonius
+has something to promise to his followers. What can we do? Have we
+anything of the sort? May the gods grant us a better fate! for our
+express object is to prevent any one at all from hereafter making
+similar promises. I say this against my will, still I must say
+it;--the auction sanctioned by Caesar, O conscript fathers, gives
+many wicked men both hope and audacity. For they saw some men become
+suddenly rich from having been beggars. Therefore, those men who are
+hanging over our property, and to whom Antonius promises everything,
+are always longing to see an auction. What can we do? What do we
+promise our soldiers? Things much better and more honourable. For
+promises to be earned by wicked actions are pernicious both to those
+who expect them, and to those who promise them. We promise to our
+soldiers freedom, rights, laws, justice, the empire of the world,
+dignity, peace, tranquillity. The promises then of Antonius are
+bloody, polluted, wicked, odious to gods and men, neither lasting nor
+salutary; ours, on the other hand, are honourable, upright, glorious,
+full of happiness, and full of piety.
+
+IV. Here also Quintus Fufius, a brave and energetic man, and a friend
+of mine, reminds me of the advantages of peace. As if, if it were
+necessary to praise peace, I could not do it myself quite as well as
+he. For is it once only that I have defended peace? Have I not at all
+times laboured for tranquillity? which is desirable for all good
+men, but especially for me. For what course could my industry pursue
+without forensic causes, without laws, without courts of justice? and
+these things can have no existence when civil peace is taken away. But
+I want to know what you mean, O Calenus? Do you call slavery peace?
+Our ancestors used to take up arms not merely to secure their freedom,
+but also to acquire empire; you think that we ought to throw away our
+arms, in order to become slaves. What juster cause is there for waging
+war than the wish to repel slavery? in which, even if one's master be
+not tyrannical, yet it is a most miserable thing that he should be
+able to be so if he chooses. In truth, other causes are just, this is
+a necessary one. Unless, perhaps, you think that this does not apply
+to you, because you expect that you will be a partner in the dominion
+of Antonius. And there you make a two-fold mistake: first of all, in
+preferring your own to the general interest; and in the next place, in
+thinking that there is anything either stable or pleasant in kingly
+power. Even if it has before now been advantageous to you, it will not
+always be so. Moreover, you used to complain of that former master,
+who was a man; what do you think you will do when your master is a
+beast? And you say that you are a man who have always been desirous
+of peace, and have always wished for the preservation of all the
+citizens. Very honest language; that is, if you mean all citizens who
+are virtuous, and useful, and serviceable to the republic; but if you
+wish those who are by nature citizens, but by inclination enemies, to
+be saved, what difference is there between you and them? Your father,
+indeed, with whom I as a youth was acquainted, when he was an old man,
+--a man of rigid virtue and wisdom,--used to give the greatest praise
+of all citizens who had ever lived to Publius Nasica, who slew
+Tiberius Gracchus. By his valour, and wisdom, and magnanimity he
+thought that the republic had been saved. What am I to say? Have
+we received any other doctrine from our fathers? Therefore, that
+citizen--if you had lived in those times--would not have been approved
+of by you, because he did not wish all the citizens to be safe.
+"Because Lucius Opimius the consul has made a speech concerning the
+republic, the senators have thus decided on that matter, that Opimius
+the consul shall defend the republic." The senate adopted these
+measures in words, Opimius followed them up by his arms. Should you
+then, if you had lived in those times, have thought him a hasty or a
+cruel citizen? or should you have thought Quintus Metellus one, whose
+four sons were all men of consular rank? or Publius Lentulus the chief
+of the senate, and many other admirable men, who, with Lucius Opimius
+the consul, took arms, and pursued Gracchus to the Aventine? and in
+the battle which ensued, Lentulus received a severe wound, Gracchus
+was plain, and so was Marcus Fulvius, a man of consular rank, and his
+two youthful sons. Those men, therefore, are to be blamed; for they
+did not wish all the citizens to be safe.
+
+V. Let us come to instances nearer our own time. The senate entrusted
+the defence of the republic to Caius Marius and Lucius Valerius, the
+consuls; Lucius Saturninus, a tribune of the people, and Caius Glaucia
+the praetor, were slain. On that day, all the Scauri, and Metelli, and
+Claudii, and Catuli, and Scaevolae, and Crassi took arms. Do you think
+either those consuls or those other most illustrious men deserving of
+blame? I myself wished Catiline to perish. Did you who wish every one
+to be safe, wish Catiline to be safe? There is this difference, O
+Calenus, between my opinion and yours. I wish no citizen to commit
+such crimes as deserve to be punished with death. You think that, even
+if he has committed them, still he ought to be saved. If there is
+anything in our own body which is injurious to the rest of the body,
+we allow that to be burnt and cut out, in order that a limb may be
+lost in preference to the whole body. And so in the body of the
+republic, whatever is rotten must be cut off in order that the whole
+may be saved. Harsh language! This is much more harsh, "Let the
+worthless, and wicked and impious be saved, let the innocent, the
+honourable, the virtuous, the whole republic be destroyed." In the
+case of one individual, O Quintus Fufius, I confess that you saw more
+than I did. I thought Publius Clodius a mischievous, wicked, lustful,
+impious, audacious, criminal citizen. You, on the other hand, called
+him religious, temperate, innocent, modest; a citizen to be preserved
+and desired. In this one particular I admit that you had great
+discernment, and that I made a great mistake. For as for your saying
+that I am in the habit of arguing against you with ill-temper, that
+is not the case. I confess that I argue with vehemence, but not with
+ill-temper. I am not in the habit of getting angry with my friends
+every now and then, not even if they deserve it. Therefore, I can
+differ from you without using any insulting language, though not
+without feeling the greatest grief of mind. For is the dissension
+between you and me a trifling one, or on a trifling subject? Is it
+merely a case of my favouring this man, and you that man? Yes; I
+indeed favour Decimus Brutus, you favour Marcus Antonius; I wish a
+colony of the Roman people to be preserved, you are anxious that it
+should be stormed and destroyed.
+
+VI. Can you deny this, when you interpose every sort of delay
+calculated to weaken Brutus, and to improve the position of Antonius?
+For how long will you keep on saying that you are desirous of peace?
+Matters are progressing rapidly; the works have been carried on;
+severe battles are taking place. We sent three chief men of the city
+to interpose. Antonius has despised, rejected, and repudiated them.
+And still you continue a persevering defender of Antonius. And
+Calenus, indeed, in order that he may appear a more conscientious
+senator, says that he ought not to be a friend to him; since, though
+Antonius was under great obligations to him, he still had acted
+against him. See how great is his affection for his country. Though he
+is angry with the individual, still he defends Antonius for the sake
+of his country.
+
+When you are so bitter, O Quintus Fufius, against the people of
+Marseilles, I cannot listen to you with calmness. For how long are you
+going to attack Marseilles? Does not even a triumph put an end to
+the war? in which was carried an image of that city, without whose
+assistance our forefathers never triumphed over the Transalpine
+nations. Then, indeed, did the Roman people groan. Although they had
+their own private griefs because of their own affairs, still there
+was no citizen who thought the miseries of this most loyal city
+unconnected with himself. Caesar himself, who had been the most
+angry of all men with them, still, on account of the unusually high
+character and loyalty of that city, was every day relaxing something
+of his displeasure. And is there no extent of calamity by which so
+faithful a city can satiate you? Again, perhaps, you will say that I
+am losing my temper. But I am speaking without passion, as I always
+do, though not without great indignation. I think that no man can be
+an enemy to that city, who is a friend to this one. What your object
+is, O Calenus, I cannot imagine. Formerly we were unable to deter you
+from devoting yourself to the gratification of the people; now we are
+unable to prevail on you to show any regard for their interests. I
+have argued long enough with Fufius, saying everything without hatred,
+but nothing without indignation. But I suppose that a man who can bear
+the complaint of his son in law with indifference, will bear that of
+his friend with great equanimity.
+
+VII. I come now to the rest of the men of consular rank of whom there
+is no one, (I say this on my own responsibility,) who is not connected
+with me in some way or other by kindnesses conferred or received, some
+in a great, some in a moderate degree, but everyone to some extent or
+other. What a disgraceful day was yesterday to us! to us consulars, I
+mean. Are we to send ambassadors again? What? would he make a truce?
+Before the very face and eyes of the ambassadors he battered Mutina
+with his engines. He displayed his works and his defences to the
+ambassadors. The siege was not allowed one moment's breathing time,
+not even while the ambassadors should be present. Send ambassadors to
+this man! What for? in order to have great fears for their return?
+In truth, though on the previous occasion I had voted against
+the ambassadors being decreed, still I consoled myself with this
+reflection, that, when they had returned from Antonius despised and
+rejected, and had reported to the senate not merely that he had not
+withdrawn from Gaul, as we had voted that he should, but that he had
+not even retired from before Mutma, and that they had not been allowed
+to proceed on to Decimus Brutus, all men would be inflamed with hatred
+and stimulated by indignation, so that we should reinforce Decimus
+Brutus with arms, and horses, and men. But we have become even more
+languid since we have become acquainted with, not only the audacity
+and wickedness of Antonius, but also with his indolence and pride.
+Would that Lucius Caesar were in health, that Servius Sulpicius were
+alive. This cause would be pleaded much better by these men, than it
+is now by me single handed. What I am going to say I say with grief,
+rather than by way of insult. We have been deserted--we have, I say,
+been deserted, O conscript fathers, by our chiefs. But, as I have
+often said before, all those who in a time of such danger have
+proper and courageous sentiments shall be men of consular rank. The
+ambassadors ought to have brought us back courage, they have brought
+us back fear. Not, indeed, that they have caused me any fear--let them
+have as high an opinion as they please of the man to whom they were
+sent; from whom they have even brought back commands to us.
+
+VIII. O ye immortal gods! where are the habits and virtues of our
+forefathers? Caius Popillius, in the time of our ancestors, when he
+had been sent as ambassador to Antiochus the king, and had given him
+notice, in the words of the senate, to depart from Alexandria, which
+he was besieging, on the kings seeking to delay giving his answer,
+drew a line round him where he was standing with his rod, and stated
+that he should report him to the senate if he did not answer him as
+to what he intended to do before he moved out of that line which
+surrounded him. He did well for he had brought with him the
+countenance of the senate and the authority of the Roman people, and
+if a man does not obey that, we are not to receive commands from him
+in return, but he is to be utterly rejected. Am I to receive commands
+from a man who despises the commands of the senate? Or am I to think
+that he has anything in common with the senate, who besieges a general
+of the Roman people in spite of the prohibition of the senate? But
+what commands they are! With what arrogance, with what stupidity,
+with what insolence are they conceived! But what made him charge our
+ambassadors with them when he was sending Cotyla to us, the ornament
+and bulwark of his friends, a man of aedilitian rank? if, indeed, he
+really was an aedile at the time when the public slaves flogged him
+with thongs at a banquet by command of Antonius.
+
+But what modest commands they are! We must be non-hearted men,
+O conscript fathers, to deny anything to this man! "I give up both
+provinces," says he, "I disband my army, I am willing to become a
+private individual." For these are his very words. He seems to
+be coming to himself. "I am willing to forget everything, to be
+reconciled to everybody." But what does he add? "If you give booty and
+land to my six legions, to my cavalry, and to my praetorian cohort."
+He even demands rewards for those men for whom, if he were to demand
+pardon, he would be thought the most impudent of men. He adds further,
+"Those men to whom the lands have been given which he himself and
+Dolabella distributed, are to retain them." This is the Campanian
+and Leontine district, both which our ancestors considered a certain
+resource in times of scarcity.
+
+IX. He is protecting the interests of his buffoons and gamesters and
+pimps. He is protecting Capho's and Sasu's interests too, pugnacious
+and muscular centurions, whom he placed among his troops of male and
+female buffoons. Besides all this, he demands "that the decrees of
+himself and his colleague concerning Caesar's writings and memoranda
+are to stand." Why is he so anxious that every one should have what he
+has bought, if he who sold it all has the price which he received for
+it? "And that his accounts of the money in the temple of Ops are not
+to be meddled with." That is to say, that those seven hundred millions
+of sesterces are not to be recovered from him. "That the septemviri
+are to be exempt from blame or from prosecution for what they have
+done." It was Nucula, I imagine, who put him in mind of that, he was
+afraid, perhaps, of losing so many clients. He also wishes to make
+stipulations in favour of "those men who are with him who may have
+done anything against the laws." He is here taking care of Mustela and
+Tiro, he is not anxious about himself. For what has he done? has he
+ever touched the public money, or murdered a man, or had armed men
+about him? But what reason has he for taking so much trouble about
+them? For he demands, "that his own judiciary law be not abrogated."
+And if he obtains that, what is there that he can fear? can he be
+afraid that any one of his friends may be convicted by Cydas, or
+Lysiades, or Curius? However, he does not press us with many more
+demands. "I give up," says he, "Gallia Togata; I demand Gallia
+Comata"[41]--he evidently wishes to be quite at his ease--'with six
+legions, and those made up to their full complement out of the army
+of Decimus Brutus,--not only out of the troops whom he has enlisted
+himself; "and he is to keep possession of it as long as Marcus Brutus
+and Carus Cassius, as consuls, or as proconsuls, keep possession of
+their provinces." In the comitia held by him, his brother Carus (for
+it is his year) has already been repulsed. "And I myself," says he,
+"am to retain possession of my province five years." But that is
+expressly forbidden by the law of Caesar, and you defend the acts of
+Caesar.
+
+X. Were you, O Lucius Piso, and you, O Lucius Philippus, you chiefs
+of the city, able, I will not say to endure in your minds but even to
+listen with your ears to these commands of his? But, I suspect there
+was some alarm at work, nor, while in his power, could you feel as
+ambassadors, or as men of consular rank, nor could you maintain our
+own dignity, or that of the republic. And nevertheless, somehow or
+other, owing to some philosophy, I suppose, you did what I could not
+have done,--you returned without any very angry feelings. Marcus
+Antonius paid you no respect, though you were most illustrious men,
+ambassadors of the Roman people. As for us, what concessions did not
+we make to Cotyla the ambassador of Marcus Antonius? though it was
+against the law for even the gates of the city to be opened to him,
+yet even this temple was opened to him. He was allowed to enter the
+senate, here yesterday he was taking down our opinions and every word
+we said in his note books, and men who had been preferred to the
+highest honours sold themselves to him in utter disregard of their own
+dignity.
+
+O ye immortal gods! how great an enterprise is it to uphold the
+character of a leader in the republic, for it requires one to be
+influenced not merely by the thoughts but also by the eyes of the
+citizens. To take to one's house the ambassador of an enemy, to admit
+him to one's chamber, even to confer apart with him, is the act of a
+man who thinks nothing of his dignity, and too much of his danger. But
+what is danger? For if one is engaged in a contest where everything is
+at stake, either liberty is assured to one if victorious, or death
+if defeated, the former of which alternatives is desirable, and the
+latter some time or other inevitable. But a base flight from death
+is worse than any imaginable death. For I will never be induced to
+believe that there are men who envy the consistency or diligence of
+others, and who are indignant at the unceasing desire to assist the
+republic being approved by the senate and people of Rome. That is what
+we were all bound to do, and that was not only in the time of our
+ancestors, but even lately, the highest praise of men of consular
+rank, to be vigilant, to be anxious, to be always either thinking, or
+doing, or saying something to promote the interests of the republic.
+
+I, O conscript fathers, recollect that Quintus Scaevola the augur, in
+the Marsic war, when he was a man of extreme old age, and quite broken
+down in constitution, every day, as soon as it was daylight, used to
+give every one an opportunity of consulting him, nor, throughout all
+that war, did any one ever see him in bed, and, though old and weak,
+he was the first man to come into the senate house. I wish, above all
+things, that those who ought to do so would imitate his industry,
+and, next to that, I wish that they would not envy the exertions of
+another.
+
+XI. In truth, O conscript fathers, now we have begun to entertain
+hopes of liberty again, after a period of six years, during which we
+have been deprived of it, having endured slavery longer than prudent
+and industrious prisoners usually do, what watchfulness, what anxiety,
+what exertions ought we to shrink from, for the sake of delivering the
+Roman people? In truth, O conscript fathers, though men who have had
+the honours conferred on them that we have, usually wear their gowns,
+while the rest of the city is in the robe of war, still I decided that
+at such a momentous crisis, and when the whole republic was in so
+disturbed a state, we would not differ in our dress from you and the
+rest of the citizens. For we men of consular rank are not in this war
+conducting ourselves in such a manner that the Roman people will be
+likely to look with equanimity on the ensigns of our honour, when some
+of us are so cowardly as to have cast away all recollection of the
+kindnesses which they have received from the Roman people, some are so
+disaffected to the republic that they openly allege that they favour
+this enemy, and easily bear having our ambassadors despised and
+insulted by Antonius, while they wish to support the ambassador sent
+by Antonius. For they said that he ought not to be prevented
+from returning to Antonius, and they proposed an amendment to my
+proposition of not receiving him. Well, I will submit to them. Let
+Varius return to his general, but on condition that he never returns
+to Rome. And as to the others, if they abandon their errors and return
+to their duty to the republic, I think they may be pardoned and left
+unpunished.
+
+Therefore, I give my vote, "That of those men who are with Marcus
+Antonius, those who abandon his army, and come over either to Caius
+Pansa or Aulus Hirtius the consuls; or to Decimus Brutus, imperator
+and consul elect, or to Caius Caesar, propraetor, before the first of
+March next, shall not be liable to prosecution for having been with
+Antonius. That, if any one of those men who are now with Antonius
+shall do anything which appears entitled to honour or to reward, Caius
+Pansa and Aulus Hirtius the consuls, one or both of them, shall, if
+they think fit, make a motion to the senate respecting that man's
+honour or reward, at the earliest opportunity. That, if, after this
+resolution of the senate, any one shall go to Antonius except Lucius
+Varius, the senate will consider that that man has acted as an enemy
+to the republic."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE NINTH ORATION OF M.T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS. CALLED ALSO
+THE NINTH PHILIPPIO.
+
+
+THE ARGUMENT.
+
+
+Servius Sulpicius, as has been already said, had died on his embassy
+to Marcus Antonius, before Mutina; and the day after the delivery
+of the preceding speech, Pansa again called the senate together
+to deliberate on the honours to be paid to his memory. He himself
+proposed a public funeral, a sepulchre, and a statue. Servilius
+opposed the statue, as due only to those who had been slain by
+violence while in discharge of their duties as ambassadors. Cicero
+delivered the following oration in support of Pansa's proposition,
+which was carried.[42]
+
+I. I wish, O conscript fathers, that the immortal gods had granted to
+us to return thanks to Servius Sulpicius while alive, rather than thus
+to devise honours for him now that he is dead. Nor have I any doubt,
+but that if that man had been able himself to give us his report of
+the proceedings of his embassy, his return would have been acceptable
+to you and salutary to the republic. Not that either Lucius Piso or
+Lucius Philippus have been deficient in either zeal or care in the
+performance of so important a duty and so grave a commission; but, as
+Servius Sulpicius was superior in age to them, and in wisdom to every
+one, he, being suddenly taken from the business, left the whole
+embassy crippled and enfeebled.
+
+But if deserved honours have been paid to any ambassador after death,
+there is no one by whom they can be found to have been ever more fully
+deserved than by Servius Sulpicius. The rest of those men who have
+died while engaged on an embassy, have gone forth, subject indeed to
+the usual uncertainties of life, but without any especial danger or
+fear of death. Servius Sulpicius set out with some hope indeed of
+reaching Antonius, but with none of returning. But though he was so
+very ill that if any exertion were added to his bad state of health,
+he would have no hope of himself, still he did not refuse to try,
+even while at his last gasp, to be of some service to the republic.
+Therefore neither the severity of the winter, nor the snow, nor the
+length of the journey, nor the badness of the roads, nor his daily
+increasing illness, delayed him. And when he had arrived where he
+might meet and confer with the man to whom he had been sent, he
+departed this life in the midst of his care and consideration as to
+how he might best discharge the duty which he had undertaken.
+
+As therefore, O Caius Pansa, you have done well in other respects, so
+you have acted admirably in exhorting us this day to pay honour to
+Servius Sulpicius, and in yourself making an eloquent oration in his
+praise. And after the speech which we have heard from you, I should
+have been content to say nothing beyond barely giving my vote, if I
+did not think it necessary to reply to Publius Servilius, who has
+declared his opinion that this honour of a statue ought to be
+granted to no one who has not been actually slain with a sword while
+performing the duties of his embassy. But I, O conscript fathers,
+consider that this was the feeling of our ancestors, that they
+considered that it was the cause of death, and not the manner of it,
+which was a proper subject for inquiry. In fact, they thought fit that
+a monument should be erected to any man whose death was caused by an
+embassy, in order to tempt men in perilous wars to be the more bold
+in undertaking the office of an ambassador. What we ought to do,
+therefore, is, not to scrutinise the precedents afforded by our
+ancestors, but to explain their intentions from which the precedents
+themselves arose.
+
+II. Lar Tolumnius, the king of Veii, slew four ambassadors of the
+Roman people, at Fidenae, whose statues were standing in the rostra
+till within my recollection. The honour was well deserved. For our
+ancestors gave those men who had encountered death in the cause of the
+republic an imperishable memory in exchange for this transitory life.
+We see in the rostra the statue of Cnaeus Octavius, an illustrious and
+great man, the first man who brought the consulship into that family,
+which afterwards abounded in illustrious men. There was no one then
+who envied him, because he was a new man; there was no one who did not
+honour his virtue. But yet the embassy of Octavius was one in which
+there was no suspicion of danger. For having been sent by the senate
+to investigate the dispositions of kings and of free nations, and
+especially to forbid the grandson of king Antiochus, the one who had
+carried on war against our forefathers, to maintain fleets and to keep
+elephants, he was slain at Laodicea, in the gymnasium, by a man of the
+name of Leptines. On this a statue was given to him by our ancestors
+as a recompense for his life, which might ennoble his progeny for many
+years, and which is now the only memorial left of so illustrious a
+family. But in his case, and in that of Tullus Cluvius,[43] and Lucius
+Roseius, and Spurius Antius, and Caius Fulcinius, who were slain by
+the king of Veii, it was not the blood that was shed at their death,
+but the death itself which was encountered in the service of the
+republic, which was the cause of their being thus honoured.
+
+III. Therefore, O conscript fathers, if it had been chance which had
+caused the death of Servius Sulpicius, I should sorrow indeed over
+such a loss to the republic, but I should consider him deserving of
+the honour, not of a monument, but of a public mourning. But, as it
+is, who is there who doubts that it was the embassy itself which
+caused his death? For he took death away with him; though, if he
+had remained among us, his own care, and the attention of his most
+excellent son and his most faithful wife, might have warded it off.
+But he, as he saw that, if he did not obey your authority, he should
+not be acting like himself; but that if he did obey, then that duty,
+undertaken, for the welfare of the republic, would be the end of his
+life; preferred dying at a most critical period of the republic, to
+appearing to have done less service to the republic than he might have
+done.
+
+He had an opportunity of recruiting his strength and taking care of
+himself in many cities through which his journey lay. He was met by
+the liberal invitation of many entertainers as his dignity deserved,
+and the men too who were sent with him exhorted him to take rest, and
+to think of his own health. But he, refusing all delay, hastening
+on eager to perform your commands, persevered in this his constant
+purpose, in spite of the hindrances of his illness And as Antonius was
+above all things disturbed by his arrival, because the commands which
+were laid upon him by your orders had been drawn up by the authority
+and wisdom of Servius Sulpicius, he showed plainly how he hated the
+senate by the evident joy which he displaced at the death of the
+adviser of the senate.
+
+Leptines then did not kill Octavius, nor did the king of Veii slay
+those whom I have just named, more clearly than Antonius killed
+Servius Sulpicius. Surely he brought the man death, who was the cause
+of his death. Wherefore, I think it of consequence, in order that
+posterity may recollect it, that there should be a record of what the
+judgment of the senate was concerning this war. For the statue itself
+will be a witness that the war was so serious an one, that the death
+of an ambassador in it gained the honour of an imperishable memorial.
+
+IV. But if, O conscript fathers, you would only recollect the excuses
+alleged by Servius Sulpicius why he should not be appointed to this
+embassy, then no doubt will be left on your minds that we ought to
+repair by the honour paid to the dead the injury which we did to him
+while living. For it is you, O conscript fathers (it is a grave charge
+to make, but it must be uttered,) it is you, I say, who have deprived
+Servius Sulpicius of life. For when you saw him pleading his illness
+as an excuse more by the truth of the fact than by any laboured plea
+of words, you were not indeed cruel, (for what can be more impossible
+for this order to be guilty of than that,) but as you hoped that
+there was nothing that could not be accomplished by his authority and
+wisdom, you opposed his excuse with great earnestness, and compelled
+the man, who had always thought your decisions of the greatest weight,
+to abandon his own opinion. But when there was added the exhortation
+of Pansa, the consul, delivered with more weight than the ears of
+Servius Sulpicius had learnt to resist, then at last he led me and his
+own son aside, and said that he was bound to prefer your authority to
+his own life. And we, admiring his virtue, did not dare to oppose
+his determination. His son was moved with extraordinary piety and
+affection, and my own grief did not fall far short of his agitation,
+but each of us was compelled to yield to his greatness of mind, and to
+the dignity of his language, when he, indeed, amid the loud praises
+and congratulations of you all, promised to do whatever you wished,
+and not to avoid the danger which might be inclined by the adoption of
+the opinion of which he himself had been the author. And we the next
+day escorted him early in the morning as he hastened forth to execute
+your commands. And he, in truth, when departing, spoke with me in such
+a manner that his language seemed like an omen of his fate.
+
+V. Restore then, O conscript fathers, life to him from whom you have
+taken it. For the life of the dead consists in the recollection
+cherished of them by the living. Take ye care that he, whom you
+without intending it sent to his death, shall from you receive
+immortality. And if you by your decree erect a statue to him in the
+rostia, no forgetfulness of posterity will ever obscure the memory of
+his embassy. For the remainder of the life of Servius Sulpicius will
+be recommended to the eternal recollection of all men by many and
+splendid memorials. The praise of all mortals will for ever celebrate
+his wisdom, his firmness, his loyalty, his admirable vigilance and
+prudence in upholding the interests of the public. Nor will that
+admirable, and incredible, and almost godlike skill of his in
+interpreting the laws and explaining the principles of equity be
+buried in silence. If all the men of all ages, who have ever had any
+acquaintance with the law in this city, were got together into one
+place, they would not deserve to be compared to Servius Sulpicius.
+Nor was he more skilful in explaining the law than in laying down the
+principles of justice. Those maxims which were derived from laws and
+from the common law, he constantly referred to the original principles
+of kindness and equity. Nor was he more fond of arranging the conduct
+of law-suits than of preventing disputes altogether. Therefore he is
+not in want of this memorial which a statue will provide; he has
+other and better ones. For this statue will be only a witness of his
+honourable death; those actions will be the memorial of his glorious
+life. So that this will be rather a monument of the gratitude of the
+senate, than of the glory of the man.
+
+The affection of the son, too, will appear to have great influence in
+moving us to honour the father; for although, being overwhelmed with
+grief, he is not present, still you ought to be animated with the same
+feelings as if he were present. But he is in such distress, that no
+father ever sorrowed more over the loss of an only son than he grieves
+for the death of his father. Indeed, I think that it concerns also the
+fame of Servius Sulpicius the son, that he should appear to have paid
+all due respect to his father. Although Servius Sulpicius could leave
+no nobler monument behind him than his son, the image of his own
+manners, and virtues, and wisdom, and piety, and genius; whose grief
+can either be alleviated by this honour paid to his father by you, or
+by no consolation at all.
+
+VI. But when I recollect the many conversations which in the days of
+our intimacy on earth I have had with Servius Sulpicius, it appears
+to me, that if there be any feeling in the dead, a brazen statue, and
+that too a pedestrian one, will be more acceptable to him than a gilt
+equestrian one, such as was first erected to Lucius Sylla. For Servius
+was wonderfully attached to the moderation of our forefathers, and was
+accustomed to reprove the insolence of this age. As if, therefore, I
+were able to consult himself as to what he would wish, so I give my
+vote for a pedestrian statue of brass, as if I were speaking by his
+authority and inclination; which by the honour of the memorial
+will diminish and mitigate the great grief and regret of his
+fellow-citizens. And it is certain that this my opinion, O conscript
+fathers, will be approved of by the opinion of Publius Servilius, who
+has given his vote that a sepulchre be publicly decreed to Servius
+Sulpicius, but has voted against the statue. For if the death of
+an ambassador happening without bloodshed and violence requires no
+honour, why does he vote for the honour of a public funeral, which is
+the greatest honour that can be paid to a dead man! If he grants that
+to Servius Sulpicius which was not given to Cnaeus Octavius, why does
+he think that we ought not to give to the former what was given to the
+latter? Our ancestors, indeed, decreed statues to many men; public
+sepulchres to few. But statues perish by weather, by violence, by
+lapse of time; but the sanctity of the sepulchres is in the soil
+itself, which can neither be moved nor destroyed by any violence; and
+while other things are extinguished, so sepulchres become holier by
+age.
+
+Let, then, that man be distinguished by that honour also, a man to
+whom no honour can be given which is not deserved. Let us be grateful
+in paying respect in death to him to whom we can now show no other
+gratitude. And by that same step let the audacity of Marcus Antonius,
+waging a nefarious war, be branded with infamy. For when these honours
+have been paid to Servius Sulpicius, the evidence of his embassy
+having been insulted and rejected by Antonius will remain for
+everlasting.
+
+VII. On which account I give my vote for a decree in this form: 'As
+Servius Sulpicius Rufus, the son of Quintus, of the Lemonian tribe,
+at a most critical period of the republic, and being ill with a very
+serious and dangerous disease, preferred the authority of the senate
+and the safety of the republic to his own life, and struggled against
+the violence and severity of his illness, in order to arrive at the
+camp of Antonius, to which the senate had sent him; and as he when he
+had almost arrived at the camp, being overwhelmed by the violence of
+the disease, has lost his life in discharging a most important office
+of the republic; and as his death has been in strict correspondence to
+a life passed with the greatest integrity and honour, during which he,
+Servius Sulpicius, has often been of great service to the republic,
+both as a private individual and in the discharge of various
+magistracies; and as he, being such a man, has encountered death on
+behalf of the republic while employed on an embassy;--the senate
+decrees that a brazen pedestrian statue of Servius Sulpicius be
+erected in the rostra in compliance with the resolution of this order,
+and that his children and posterity shall have a place round this
+statue of five feet in every direction, from which to behold the
+games and gladiatorial combats, because he died in the cause of the
+republic; and that this reason be inscribed on the pedestal of the
+statue; and that Carus Pansa and Aulus Hirtius the consuls, one or
+both of them, if it seem good to them, shall command the quaestors
+of the city to let out a contract for making that pedestal and that
+statue, and erecting them in the rostra; and that whatever price they
+contract for, they shall take care the amount is given and paid to the
+contractor, and as in old times the senate has exerted its authority
+with respect to the obsequies of, and honours paid to brave men, it
+now decrees that he shall be carried to the tomb on the day of his
+funeral with the greatest possible solemnity. And as Servius Sulpicius
+Rufus, the son of Quintus of the Lemonian tribe, has deserved so well
+of the republic as to be entitled to be complimented with all those
+distinctions, the senate is of opinion, and thinks it for the
+advantage of the republic, that the consule aedile should suspend the
+edict which usually prevails with respect to funerals in the case of
+the funeral of Servius Sulpicius Rufus, the son of Quintus of the
+Lemonian tribe, and that Carus Pansa, the consul, shall assign him a
+place for a tomb in the Esquiline plain, or in whatever place shall
+seem good to him extending thirty feet in every direction, where
+Servius Sulpicius may be buried, and that that shall be his tomb,
+and that of his children and posterity, as having been a tomb most
+deservedly given to them by the public authority.
+
+
+
+
+THE TENTH ORATION OF M.T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS. CALLED ALSO
+THE TENTH PHILIPPIC.
+
+
+THE ARGUMENT
+
+
+Soon after the delivery of the last speech, despatches were received
+from Brutus by the consuls, giving an account of his success against
+Carus Antonius in Macedonia, stating that he had secured Macedonia,
+Illyricum, and Greece with the armies in those countries, that Carus
+Antonius had retired to Apollonia with seven cohorts, that a legion
+under Lucius Piso had surrendered to young Cicero, who was commanding
+his cavalry, that Dolabella's cavalry had deserted to him, and that
+Vatinius had surrendered Dyrrachium and its garrison to him. He
+likewise praised Quintus Hortensius, the proconsul of Macedonia, as
+having assisted him in gaining over the Grecian provinces and the
+armies in those districts.
+
+As soon as Pansa received the despatches, he summoned the senate to
+have them read, and in a set speech greatly extolled Brutus, and moved
+a vote of thanks to him but Calenus, who followed him, declared his
+opinion, that as Brutus had acted without any public commission or
+authority he should be required to give up his army to the proper
+governors of the provinces, or to whoever the senate should appoint
+to receive it. After he had sat down, Cicero rose, and delivered the
+following speech.
+
+I. We all, O Pansa, ought both to feel and to show the greatest
+gratitude to you, who--though we did not expect that you would hold
+any senate to day,--the moment that you received the letters of Marcus
+Brutus, that most excellent citizen, did not interpose even the
+slightest delay to our enjoying the most excessive delight and mutual
+congratulation at the earliest opportunity. And not only ought this
+action of yours to be grateful to us all, but also the speech which
+you addressed to us after the letters had been read. For you showed
+plainly, that that was true which I have always felt to be so, that
+no one envied the virtue of another who was confident of his own.
+Therefore I, who have been connected with Brutus by many mutual good
+offices and by the greatest intimacy, need not say so much concerning
+him for the part that I had marked out for myself your speech has
+anticipated me in. But, O conscript fathers, the opinion delivered by
+the man who was asked for his vote before me, has imposed upon me the
+necessity of saying rather more than I otherwise should have said, and
+I differ from him so repeatedly at present, that I am afraid (what
+certainly ought not to be the case) that our continual disagreement
+may appear to diminish our friendship.
+
+What can be the meaning of this argument of yours, O Calenus? what can
+be your intention? How is it that you have never once since the first
+of January been of the same opinion with him who asks you your opinion
+first? How is it that the senate has never yet been so full as to
+enable you to find one single person to agree with your sentiments?
+Why are you always defending men who in no point resemble you? why,
+when both your life and your fortune invite you to tranquillity and
+dignity, do you approve of those measures, and defend those measures,
+and declare those sentiments, which are adverse both to the general
+tranquillity and to your own individual dignity?
+
+II. For to say nothing of former speeches of yours, at all events
+I cannot pass over in silence this which excites my most especial
+wonder. What war is there between you and the Bruti? Why do you alone
+attack those men whom we are all bound almost to worship? Why are you
+not indignant at one of them being besieged, and why do you--as far
+as your vote goes--strip the other of those troops which by his own
+exertions and by his own danger he has got together by himself,
+without any one to assist him, for the protection of the republic, not
+for himself? What is your meaning in this? What are your intentions?
+Is it possible that you should not approve of the Bruti, and should
+approve of Antonius? that you should hate those men whom every one
+else considers most dear? and that you should love with the greatest
+constancy those whom every one else hates most bitterly? You have a
+most ample fortune, you are in the highest rank of honour, your son,
+as I both hear and hope is born to glory,--a youth whom I favour not
+only for the sake of the republic, but for your sake also. I ask,
+therefore, would you rather have him like Brutus or like Antonius? and
+I will let you choose whichever of the three Antonii you please. God
+forbid! you will say. Why, then, do you not favour those men and
+praise those men whom you wish your own son to resemble? For by so
+doing you will be both consulting the interests of the republic, and
+proposing him an example for his imitation.
+
+But in this instance, I hope, O Quintus Fufius, to be allowed to
+expostulate with you, as a senator who greatly differs from you,
+without any prejudice to our friendship. For you spoke in this matter,
+and that too from a written paper, for I should think you had made
+a slip from want of some appropriate expression, if I were not
+acquainted with your ability in speaking. You said "that the letters
+of Brutus appeared properly and regularly expressed." What else is
+this than praising Brutus's secretary, not Brutus? You both ought to
+have great experience in the affairs of the republic, and you have.
+When did you ever see a decree framed in this manner? or in what
+resolution of the senate passed on such occasions, (and they are
+innumerable,) did you ever hear of its being decreed that the letters
+had been well drawn up? And that expression did not--as is often the
+case with other men--fall from you by chance, but you brought it with
+you written down, deliberated on, and carefully meditated on.
+
+III. If any one could take from you this habit of disparaging good men
+on almost every occasion, then what qualities would not be left to
+you which every one would desire for himself? Do, then, recollect
+yourself, do at last soften and quiet that disposition of yours, do
+take the advice of good men, with many of whom you are intimate, do
+converse with that wisest of men, your own son in-law, oftener than
+with yourself, and then you will obtain the name of a man of the very
+highest character. Do you think it a matter of no consequence, (it
+is a matter in which I, out of the friendship which I feel you,
+constantly grieve in your stead,) that this should be commonly said
+out of doors, and should be a common topic of conversation among the
+Roman people, that the man who delivered his opinion first did not
+find a single person to agree with him? And that I think will be the
+case to day.
+
+You propose to take the legions away from Brutus--which legions? Why,
+those which he has gained over from the wickedness of Caius Antonius,
+and has by his own authority gained over to the republic. Do you wish
+then that he should again appear to be the only person stripped of his
+authority, and as it were banished by the senate? And you, O conscript
+fathers, if you abandon and betray Marcus Brutus, what citizen in the
+world will you ever distinguish? Whom will you ever favour? Unless,
+indeed, you think that those men who put a diadem on a man's head
+deserve to be preserved, and those who have abolished the very name of
+kingly power deserve to be abandoned. And of this divine and immortal
+glory of Marcus Brutus I will say no more, it is already embalmed in
+the grateful recollection of all the citizens, but it has not yet been
+sanctioned by any formal act of public authority. Such patience! O ye
+good gods! such moderation! such tranquillity and submission under
+injury! A man who, while he was praetor of the city, was driven from
+the city, was prevented from sitting as judge in legal proceedings,
+when it was he who had restored all law to the republic, and, though
+he might have been hedged round by the daily concourse of all virtuous
+men, who were constantly flocking round him in marvellous numbers, he
+preferred to be defended in his absence by the judgment of the good,
+to being present and protected by their force,--who was not even
+present to celebrate the games to Apollo, which had been prepared in
+a manner suitable to his own dignity and to that of the Roman people,
+lest he should open any road to the audacity of most wicked men.
+
+IV. Although, what games or what days were ever more joyful than those
+on which at every verse that the actor uttered, the Roman people did
+honour to the memory of Brutus, with loud shouts of applause? The
+person of their liberator was absent, the recollection of their
+liberty was present, in which the appearance of Brutus himself seemed
+to be visible. But the man himself I beheld on those very days of the
+games, in the country-house of a most illustrious young man, Lucullus,
+his relation, thinking of nothing but the peace and concord of the
+citizens. I saw him again afterwards at Veha, departing from Italy, in
+order that there might be no pretext for civil war on his account. Oh
+what a sight was that! grievous, not only to men but to the very waves
+and shores. That its saviour should be departing from his country,
+that its destroyers should be remaining in their country! The fleet
+of Cassius followed a few days afterwards, so that I was ashamed O
+conscript fathers, to return into the city from which those men were
+departing. But the design with which I returned you heard at the
+beginning, and since that you have known by experience. Brutus,
+therefore, bided his time. For, as long as he saw you endure
+everything, he himself behaved with incredible patience, after that
+he saw you roused to a desire of liberty, he prepared the means to
+protect you in your liberty.
+
+But what a pest, and how great a pest was it which he resisted? For
+if Caius Antonius had been able to accomplish what he intended in his
+mind, (and he would have been able to do so if the virtue of Marcus
+Brutus had not opposed his wickedness,) we should have lost Macedonia,
+Illyricum, and Greece. Greece would have been a refuge for Antonius if
+defeated, or a support to him in attacking Italy, which at present,
+being not only arrayed in arms, but embellished by the military
+command and authority and troops of Marcus Brutus stretches out her
+right hand to Italy, and promises it her protection. And the man who
+proposes to deprive him of his army, is taking away a most illustrious
+honour, and a most trustworthy guard from the republic. I wish,
+indeed, that Antonius may hear this news as speedily as possible,
+so that he may understand that it is not Decimus Brutus whom he is
+surrounding with his ramparts, but he himself who is really hemmed in.
+
+V. He possesses three towns only on the whole face of the earth. He
+has Gaul most bitterly hostile to him, he has even those men the
+people beyond the Po, in whom he placed the greatest reliance,
+entirely alienated from him, all Italy is his enemy. Foreign nations,
+from the nearest coast of Greece to Egypt, are occupied by the
+military command and armies of most virtuous and intrepid citizens.
+His only hope was in Caius Antonius; who being in age the middle one
+between his two brothers, rivalled both of them in vices. He hastened
+away as if he were being driven away by the senate into Macedonia, not
+as if he were prohibited from proceeding thither. What a storm, O
+ye immortal gods! what a conflagration! what a devastation! what a
+pestilence to Greece would that man have been, if incredible and
+godlike virtue had not checked the enterprise and audacity of that
+frantic man. What promptness was there in Brutus's conduct! what
+prudence! what valour! Although the rapidity of the movement of Caius
+Antonius also is not despicable; for if some vacant inheritance had
+not delayed him on his march, you might have said that he had flown
+rather than travelled. When we desire other men to go forth to
+undertake any public business, we are scarcely able to get them out
+of the city; but we have driven this man out by the mere fact of our
+desiring to retain him. But what business had he with Apollonia? what
+business had he with Dyrrachium? or with Illyricum? What had he to
+do with the army of Publius Vatinius, our general? He, as he said
+himself, was the successor of Hortensius. The boundaries of Macedonia
+are well defined; the condition of the proconsul is well known; the
+amount of his army, if he has any at all, is fixed. But what had
+Antonius to do at all with Illyricum and with the legions of Vatinius?
+
+But Brutus had nothing to do with them either. For that, perhaps, is
+what some worthless man may say. All the legions, all the forces which
+exist anywhere, belong to the Roman people. Nor shall those legions
+which have quitted Marcus Antonius be called the legions of Antonius
+rather than of the republic; for he loses all power over his army, and
+all the privileges of military command, who uses that military command
+and that army to attack the republic.
+
+VI. But if the republic itself could give a decision, or if all rights
+were established by its decrees, would it adjudge the legions of
+the Roman people to Antonius or to Brutus? The one had flown with
+precipitation to the plunder and destruction of the allies, in order,
+wherever he went, to lay waste, and pillage, and plunder everything,
+and to employ the army of the Roman people against the Roman people
+itself. The other had laid down this law for himself, that wherever he
+came he should appear to come as a sort of light and hope of safety.
+Lastly, the one was seeking aids to overturn the republic; the other
+to preserve it. Nor, indeed, did we see this more clearly than the
+soldiers themselves; from whom so much discernment in judging was not
+to have been expected.
+
+He writes, that Antonius is at Apollonia with seven cohorts, and he is
+either by this time taken prisoner, (may the gods grant it!) or, at
+all events, like a modest man, he does not come near Macedonia, lest
+he should seem to act in opposition to the resolution of the senate.
+A levy of troops has been held in Macedonia, by the great zeal and
+diligence of Quintus Hortensius; whose admirable courage, worthy both
+of himself and of his ancestors, you may clearly perceive from the
+letters of Brutus. The legion which Lucius Piso, the lieutenant of
+Antonius, commanded, has surrendered itself to Cicero, my own son.
+Of the cavalry, which was being led into Syria in two divisions, one
+division has left the quaestor who was commanding it, in Thessaly, and
+has joined Brutus; and Cnaeus Domitius, a young man of the greatest
+virtue and wisdom and firmness, has carried off the other from the
+Syrian lieutenant in Macedonia. But Publius Vatinius, who has before
+this been deservedly praised by us, and who is justly entitled to
+further praise at the present time, has opened the gates of Dyrrachium
+to Brutus, and has given him up his army.
+
+The Roman people then is now in possession of Macedonia, and
+Illyricum, and Greece. The legions there are all devoted to us, the
+light-armed troops are ours, the cavalry is ours, and, above all,
+Brutus is ours, and always will be ours--a man born for the republic,
+both by his own most excellent virtues, and also by some especial
+destiny of name and family, both on his father's and on his mother's
+side.
+
+VII. Does any one then fear war from this man, who, until we commenced
+the war, being compelled to do so, preferred lying unknown in peace to
+flourishing in war? Although he, in truth, never did lie unknown, nor
+can this expression possibly be applied to such great eminence in
+virtue. For he was the object of regret to the state; he was in every
+one's mouth, the subject of every one's conversation. But he was so
+far removed from an inclination to war, that, though he was burning
+with a desire to see Italy free, he preferred being wanting to the
+zeal of the citizens, to leading them to put everything to the issue
+of war. Therefore, those very men, if there be any such, who find
+fault with the slowness of Brutus's movements, nevertheless at the
+same time admire his moderation and his patience.
+
+But I see now what it is they mean: nor, in truth, do they use much
+disguise. They say that they are afraid how the veterans may endure
+the idea of Brutus having an army. As if there were any difference
+between the troops of Aulus Hirtius, of Caius Pansa, of Decimus
+Brutus, of Caius Caesar, and this army of Marcus Brutus. For if these
+four armies which I have mentioned are praised because they have taken
+up arms for the sake of the liberty of the Roman people, what reason
+is there why this army of Marcus Brutus should not be classed under
+the same head? Oh, but the very name of Marcus Brutus is unpopular
+among the veterans.--More than that of Decimus Brutus?--I think not;
+for although the action is common to both the Bruti, and although
+their share in the glory is equal, still those men who were indignant
+at that deed were more angry with Decimus Brutus, because they said,
+that it was more improper for it to be executed by him. What now are
+all those armies labouring at, except to effect the release of Decimus
+Brutus from a siege? And who are the commanders of those armies? Those
+men, I suppose, who wish the acts of Caius Caesar to be overturned,
+and the cause of the veterans to be betrayed.
+
+VIII. If Caesar himself were alive, could he, do you imagine, defend
+his own acts more vigorously than that most gallant man Hirtius
+defends them? or, is it possible that any one should be found more
+friendly to the cause than his son? But the one of these, though not
+long recovered from a very long attack of a most severe disease, has
+applied all the energy and influence which he had to defending the
+liberty of those men by whose prayers he considered that he himself
+had been recalled from death; the other, stronger in the strength
+of his virtue than in that of his age, has set out with those very
+veterans to deliver Decimus Brutus. Therefore, those men who are both
+the most certain and at the same time the most energetic defenders of
+the acts of Caesar, are waging war for the safety of Decimus Brutus;
+and they are followed by the veterans. For they see that they must
+fight to the uttermost for the freedom of the Roman people, not for
+their own advantages. What reason, then, is there why the army of
+Marcus Brutus should be an object of suspicion to those men who with
+the whole of their energies desire the preservation of Decimus Brutus?
+
+But, moreover, if there were anything which were to be feared from
+Marcus Brutus, would not Pansa perceive it? Or if he did perceive it,
+would not he, too, be anxious about it? Who is either more acute in
+his conjectures of the future, or more diligent in warding off danger?
+But you have already seen his zeal for, and inclination towards Marcus
+Brutus. He has already told us in his speech what we ought to decree,
+and how we ought to feel with respect to Marcus Brutus. And he was so
+far from thinking the army of Marcus Brutus dangerous to the republic,
+that he considered it the most important and the most trusty bulwark
+of the republic. Either, then, Pansa does not perceive this (no doubt
+he is a man of dull intellect), or he disregards it. For he is
+clearly not anxious that the acts which Caesar executed should be
+ratified,--he, who in compliance with our recommendation is going to
+bring forward a bill at the comitia centuriata for sanctioning and
+confirming them.
+
+IX. Let those, then, who have no fear, cease to pretend to be alarmed,
+and to be exercising their foresight in the cause of the republic.
+And let those who really are afraid of everything, cease to be too
+fearful, lest the pretence of the one party and the inactivity of the
+other be injurious to us. What, in the name of mischief! is the object
+of always opposing the name of the veterans to every good cause? For
+even if I were attached to their virtue, as indeed I am, still, if
+they were arrogant I should not be able to tolerate their airs. While
+we are endeavouring to break the bonds of slavery, shall any one
+hinder us by saying that the veterans do not approve of it? For they
+are not, I suppose, beyond all counting, who are ready to take up arms
+in defence of the common freedom! There is no man, except the veteran
+soldiers, who is stimulated by the indignation of a freeman to repel
+slavery! Can the republic then stand, relying wholly on veterans,
+without a great reinforcement of the youth of the state? Whom, indeed,
+you ought to be attached to, if they be assistants to you in the
+assertion of your freedom, but whom you ought not to follow if they be
+the advisers of slavery.
+
+Lastly, (let me at last say one true word, one word worthy of
+myself!)--if the inclinations of this order are governed by the nod of
+the veterans, and if all our words and actions are to be referred to
+their will, death is what we should wish for, which has always, in the
+minds of Roman citizens, been preferable to slavery. All slavery is
+miserable; but some may have been unavoidable. Do you think, then,
+that there is never to be a beginning of our endeavours to recover
+our freedom? Or, when we would not bear that fortune which was
+unavoidable, and which seemed almost as if appointed by destiny, shalt
+we tolerate the voluntary bondage? All Italy is burning with a desire
+for freedom. The city cannot endure slavery any longer. We have given
+this warlike attire and these arms to the Roman people much later than
+they have been demanded of us by them.
+
+X. We have, indeed, undertaken our present course of action with a
+great and almost certain hope of liberty. But even if I allow that the
+events of war are uncertain, and that the chances of Mars are common
+to both sides, still it is worth while to fight for freedom at the
+peril of one's life. For life does not consist wholly in breathing,
+there is literally no life at all for one who is a slave. All nations
+can endure slavery. Our state cannot. Nor is there any other reason
+for this, except that those nations shrink from toil and pain, and
+are willing to endure anything so long as they may be free from those
+evils, but we have been trained and bred up by our forefathers in such
+a manner, as to measure all our designs and all our actions by the
+standard of dignity and virtue. The recovery of freedom is so splendid
+a thing that we must not shun even death when seeking to recover it.
+But if immortality were to be the result of our avoidance of present
+danger, still slavery would appear still more worthy of being avoided,
+in proportion as it is of longer duration. But as all sorts of deaths
+surround us on all sides night and day, it does not become a man,
+and least of all a Roman, to hesitate to give up to his country that
+breath which he owes to nature.
+
+Men flock together from all quarters to extinguish a general
+conflagration. The veterans were the first to follow the authority of
+Caesar and to repel the attempts of Antonius, afterwards the Martial
+legion checked his frenzy, the fourth legion crushed it. Being thus
+condemned by his own legions, he burst into Gaul, which he knew to be
+adverse and hostile to him both in word and deed. The armies of Aulus
+Hirtius and Caius Caesar pursued him, and afterwards the levies of
+Pansa roused the city and all Italy. He is the one enemy of all men.
+Although he has with him Lucius his brother, a citizen very much
+beloved by the Roman people, the regret for whose absence the city is
+unable to endure any longer! What can be more foul than that beast?
+what more savage? who appears born for the express purpose of
+preventing Marcus Antonius from being the basest of all mortals. They
+have with them Trebellius, who, now that all debts are cancelled, is
+become reconciled to them, and Titus Plancus, and other like them,
+who are striving with all their hearts, and whose sole object is, to
+appear to have been restored against the will of the republic. Saxa
+and Capho, themselves rustic and clownish men, men who never have
+seen and who never wish to see this republic firmly established, are
+tampering with the ignorant classes; men who are not upholding the
+acts of Caesar but those of Antonius, who are led away by the unlimited
+occupation of the Campanian district, and who I marvel are not
+somewhat ashamed when they see that they have actors and actresses for
+their neighbours.
+
+XI. Why then should we be displeased that the army of Marcus Brutus is
+thrown into the scale to assist us in overwhelming these pests of
+the commonwealth? It is the army, I suppose, of an intemperate and
+turbulent man. I am more afraid of his being too patient, although in
+all the counsels and actions of that man there never has been anything
+either too much or too little. The whole inclinations of Marcus
+Brutus, O conscript fathers, the whole of his thoughts, the whole of
+his ideas, are directed towards the authority of the senate and the
+freedom of the Roman people. These are the objects which he proposes
+to himself, these are what he desires to uphold. He has tried what he
+could do by patience, as he did nothing he has thought it necessary to
+encounter force by force. And, O conscript fathers, you ought at this
+time to grant him the same honours which on the nineteenth of December
+you conferred by my advice on Decimus Brutus and Caius Caesar, whose
+designs and conduct in regard to the republic, while they also
+were but private individuals, was approved of and praised by your
+authority. And you ought to do the same now with respect to Marcus
+Brutus, by whom an unhoped for and sudden reinforcement of legions and
+cavalry, and numerous and trusty bands of allies, have been provided
+for the republic.
+
+Quintus Hortensius also ought to have a share of your praise, who,
+being governor of Macedonia, joined Brutus as a most faithful and
+untiring assistant in collecting that army. For I think that a
+separate motion ought to be made respecting Marcus Appuleius, to whom
+Brutus bears witness in his letters that he has been a prime assistant
+to him in his endeavours to get together and equip his army. And since
+this is the case,
+
+"As Caius Pansa the consul has addressed to us a speech concerning
+the letters which have been received from Quintus Caepio Brutus,[44]
+proconsul, and have been read in this assembly, I give my vote in this
+matter thus.
+
+"Since, by the exertions and wisdom and industry and valour of Quintus
+Caepio Brutus, proconsul, at a most critical period of the republic,
+the province of Macedonia, and Illyircum, and all Greece, and the
+legions and armies and cavalry, have been preserved in obedience to
+the consuls and senate and people of Rome, Quintus Caepio Brutus,
+proconsul, has acted well, and in a manner advantageous to the
+republic and suitable to his own dignity and to that of his ancestors,
+and to the principles according to which alone the affairs of the
+republic can be properly managed, and that conduct is and will be
+grateful to the senate and people of Rome.
+
+"And moreover, as Quintus Caepio Brutus, proconsul, is occupying and
+defending and protecting the province of Macedonia, and Illyricum, and
+all Greece, and is preserving them in safety, and as he is in command
+of an army which he himself has levied and collected, he is at
+liberty, if he has need of any, to exact money for the use of the
+military service, which belongs to the public, and can lawfully be
+exacted, and to use it, and to borrow money for the exigencies of the
+war from whomsoever he thinks fit, and to exact coin, and to endeavour
+to approach Italy as near as he can with his forces. And as it has
+been understood from the letters of Quintus Caepio Brutus, proconsul,
+that the republic has been greatly benefited by the energy and valour
+of Quintus Hortensius, proconsul, and that all his counsels have been
+in harmony with those of Quintus Caepio Brutus, proconsul, and that
+that harmony has been of the greatest service to the republic, Quintus
+Hortensius has acted well and becomingly, and in a manner advantageous
+to the republic. And the senate decrees that Quintus Hortensius,
+proconsul, shall occupy the province of Macedonia with his quaestors,
+or proquaestors and lieutenants, until he shall have a successor
+regularly appointed by resolution of the senate."
+
+
+
+
+THE ELEVENTH ORATION OF M T CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS. CALLED
+ALSO THE ELEVENTH PHILIPPIC
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ARGUMENT
+
+
+A short time after the delivery of the preceding speech, news came
+to Rome of Dolabella (the colleague of Antonius) having been very
+successful in Asia. He had left Rome before the expiration of his
+consulship to take possession of Syria, which Antonius had contrived
+to have allotted him, and he hoped to prevail on the inhabitants of
+the province of Asia also to abandon Trebonius, (who had been one of
+the slayers of Caesar, and was governor of Asia) and submit to him.
+Trebonius was residing at Smyrna, and Dolabella arrived before the
+walls of that town with very few troops, requesting a free passage
+through Trebonius's province. Trebonius refused to admit him into
+the town, but promised that he would permit him to enter Ephesus.
+Dolabella, however, effected an entry into Smyrna by a nocturnal
+surprise, and seized Trebonius, whom he murdered with great cruelty.
+
+As soon as the news of this event reached Rome, the consul summoned
+the senate, which at once declared Dolabella a public enemy, and
+confiscated his estate. Calenus was the mover of this decree. But
+besides this motion there was another question to be settled namely,
+who was to be appointed to conduct the war against Dolabella. Some
+proposed to send Publius Servilus; others, that the two consuls should
+be sent, and should have the two provinces of Asia and Syria allotted
+to them, and this last proposition Pansa himself was favourable
+to, and it was supported not only by his friends, but also by the
+partisans of Antonius, who thought it would draw off the consuls from
+their present business of relieving Decimus Brutus. But Cicero thought
+that it would be an insult to Cassius, who was already in those
+countries, to supersede him as it were, by sending any one else to
+command there, and so he exerted all his influence to procure a decree
+entrusting the command to him, though Servilia, the mother-in-law of
+Cassius, and other of Cassius's friends, begged him not to disoblige
+Pansa. He persevered, however and made the following speech in support
+of his opinion.
+
+It appears that Cicero failed in his proposition through the influence
+of Pansa, but before any orders came from Rome, Cassius had defeated
+Dolabella near Laodicea, and he killed himself to avoid falling into
+the hands of his conqueror.
+
+I. AMID the great grief, O conscript fathers, or rather misery which
+we have suffered at the cruel and melancholy death of Caius Trebonius,
+a most virtuous citizen and a most moderate man, there is still a
+circumstance or two in the case which I think will turn out beneficial
+to the republic. For we have now thoroughly seen what great barbarity
+these men are capable of who have taken up wicked arms against their
+country. For these two, Dolabella and Antonius, are the very blackest
+and foulest monsters that have ever lived since the birth of man; one
+of whom has now done what he wished; and as to the other, it has been
+plainly shown what he intended. Lucius Cinna was cruel; Caius Marius
+was unrelenting in his anger; Lucius Sylla was fierce; but still the
+inhumanity of none of these men ever went beyond death; and that
+punishment indeed was thought too cruel to be inflicted on citizens.
+
+Here now you have a pair equal in wickedness; unprecedented, unheard
+of, savage, barbarous. Therefore those men whose vehement mutual
+hatred and quarrel you recollect a short time ago, have now been
+united in singular unanimity and mutual attachment by the singularity
+of their wicked natures and most infamous lives. Therefore, that which
+Dolabella has now done in a case in which he had the power, Antonius
+threatens many with. But the former, as he was a long way from our
+counsels and armies, and as he was not yet aware that the senate had
+united with the Roman people, relying on the forces of Antonius, has
+committed those wicked actions which he thought were already put in
+practice at Rome by his accomplice in wickedness. What else then do
+you think that this man is contriving or wishing, or what other object
+do you think he has in the war? All of us who have either entertained
+the thoughts of freemen concerning the republic, or have given
+utterance to opinions worthy of ourselves, he decides to be not merely
+opposed to him, but actual enemies. And he plans inflicting bitterer
+punishments on us than on the enemy; he thinks death a punishment
+imposed by nature, but torments and tortures the proper inflictions of
+anger. What sort of enemy then must we consider that man who, if he be
+victorious, requires one to think death a kindness if he spares one
+the tortures with which it is in his power to accompany it?
+
+II. Wherefore, O conscript fathers, although you do not need any one
+to exhort you, (for you yourself have of your own accord warmed up
+with the desire of recovering your freedom,) still defend, I warn you,
+your freedom with so much the more zeal and courage, in proportion
+as the punishments of slavery with which you see the conquered are
+threatened are more terrible. Antonius has invaded Gaul; Dolabella,
+Asia; each a province with which he had no business whatever. Brutus
+has opposed himself to the one, and at the peril of his own life has
+checked the onset of that frantic man wishing to harass and plunder
+everything, has prevented his further progress, and has cut him off
+from his return. By allowing himself to be besieged he has hemmed in
+Antonius on each side.
+
+The other has forced his way into Asia. With what object? If it was
+merely to proceed into Syria, he had a road open to him which was
+sure, and was not long. What was the need of sending forward some
+Marsian, they call him Octavius, with a legion; a wicked and
+necessitous robber; a man to lay waste the lands, to harass the
+cities, not from any hope of acquiring any permanent property, which
+they who know him say that he is unable to keep (for I have not the
+honour of being acquainted with this senator myself,) but just as
+present food to satisfy his indigence? Dolabella followed him, without
+any one having any suspicion of war. For how could any one think
+of such a thing? Very friendly conferences with Trebonius ensued;
+embraces, false tokens of the greatest good-will, were there full of
+simulated affection; the pledge of the right hand, which used to be a
+witness of good faith, was violated by treachery and wickedness;
+then came the nocturnal entry into Smyrna, as if into an enemy's
+city--Smyrna, which is a city of our most faithful and most ancient
+allies; then the surprise of Trebonius, who, if he were surprised by
+one who was an open enemy, was very careless; if by one who up to that
+moment maintained the appearance of a citizen, was miserable. And by
+his example fortune wished us to take a lesson of what the conquered
+party had to fear. He handed over a man of consular rank, governing
+the province of Asia with consular authority, to an exiled
+armourer;[45] he would not slay him the moment that he had taken him,
+fearing, I suppose, that his victory might appear too merciful; but
+after having attacked that most excellent man with insulting words
+from his impious mouth, then he examined him with scourges and
+tortures concerning the public money, and that for two days together.
+Afterwards he cut off his head, and ordered it to be fixed on a
+javelin and carried about, and the rest of his body, having been
+dragged through the street and town, he threw into the sea.
+
+We, then, have to war against this enemy by whose most foul cruelty
+all the savageness of barbarous nations is surpassed. Why need I speak
+of the massacre of Roman citizens? of the plunder of temples? Who is
+there who can possibly deplore such circumstances as their atrocity
+deserves? And now he is ranging all over Asia, he is triumphing about
+as a king, he thinks that we are occupied in another quarter by
+another war, as if it were not one and the same war against this
+outrageous pair of impious men.
+
+III. You see now an image of the cruelty of Marcus Antonius in
+Dolabella, this conduct of his is formed on the model of the other.
+It is by him that the lessons of wickedness have been taught to
+Dolabella. Do you think that Antonius, if he had the power, would be
+more merciful in Italy than Dolabella has proved in Asia? To me,
+indeed, this latter appears to have gone as far as the insanity of a
+savage man could go; nor do I believe that Antonius either would omit
+any description of punishment, if he had only the power to inflict it.
+
+Place then before your eyes, O conscript fathers, that spectacle,
+miserable indeed, and tearful, but still indispensable to rouse your
+minds properly: the nocturnal attack upon the most beautiful city in
+Asia; the irruption of armed men into Trebonius's house, when that
+unhappy man saw the swords of the robbers before he heard what was the
+matter, the entrance of Dolabella, raging,--his ill omened voice,
+and infamous countenance,--the chains, the scourges, the rack, the
+armourer who was both torturer and executioner, all which they say
+that the unhappy Trebonius endured with great fortitude. A great
+praise, and in my opinion indeed the greatest of all, for it is the
+part of a wise man to resolve beforehand that whatever can happen to
+a brave man is to be endured with patience if it should happen. It is
+indeed a proof of altogether greater wisdom to act with such foresight
+as to prevent any such thing from happening, but it is a token of no
+less courage to bear it bravely if it should befall one.
+
+And Dolabella was indeed so wholly forgetful of the claims of
+humanity, (although, indeed, he never had any particular recollection
+of it,) as to vent his insatiable cruelty, not only on the living man,
+but also on the dead carcass, and, as he could not sufficiently glut
+his hatred, to feed his eyes also on the lacerations inflicted, and
+the insults offered to his corpse.
+
+IV. O Dolabella, much more wretched than he whom you intended to be
+the most wretched of all men! Trebonius endured great agonies, many
+men have endured greater still, from severe disease, whom, however,
+we are in the habit of calling not miserable, but afflicted. His
+sufferings, which lasted two days, were long, but many men have had
+sufferings lasting many years, nor are the tortures inflicted by
+executioners more terrible than those caused by disease are sometimes.
+There are other tortures,--others, I tell you, O you most abandoned
+and insane man, which are far more miserable. For in proportion as
+the vigour of the mind exceeds that of the body, so also are the
+sufferings which rack the mind more terrible than those which are
+endured by the body. He, therefore, who commits a wicked action is
+more wretched than he who is compelled to endure the wickedness of
+another. Trebonius was tortured by Dolabella, and so, indeed, was
+Regulus by the Carthaginians. If on that account the Carthaginians
+were considered very cruel for such behaviour to an enemy, what must
+we think of Dolabella, who treated a citizen in such a manner? Is
+there any comparison? or can we doubt which of the two is most
+miserable? he whose death the senate and Roman people wish to avenge,
+or he who has been adjudged an enemy by the unanimous vote of the
+senate? For in every other particular of their lives, who could
+possibly, without the greatest insult to Trebonius, compare the life
+of Trebonius to that of Dolabella? Who is ignorant of the wisdom, and
+genius, and humanity, and innocence of the one, and of his greatness
+of mind as displayed in his exertions for the freedom of his country?
+The other, from his very childhood, has taken delight in cruelty; and,
+moreover, such has been the shameful nature of his lusts, that he has
+always delighted in the very fact of doing those things which he could
+not even be reproached with by a modest enemy.
+
+And this man, O ye immortal gods, was once my relation! For his vices
+were unknown to one who did not inquire into such things nor perhaps
+should I now be alienated from him if he had not been discovered to
+be an enemy to you, to the walls of his country, to this city, to our
+household gods, to the altars and hearths of all of us,--in short, to
+human nature and to common humanity. But now, having received this
+lesson from him, let us be the more diligent and vigilant in being on
+our guard against Antonius.
+
+V. Indeed, Dolabella had not with him any great number of notorious
+and conspicuous robbers. But you see there are with Antonius, and in
+what numbers. In the first place, there is his brother Lucius--what
+a firebrand, O ye immortal gods! what an incarnation of crime and
+wickedness! what a gulf, what a whirlpool of a man! What do you think
+that man incapable of swallowing up in his mind, or gulping down
+in his thoughts! Who do you imagine there is whose blood he is not
+thirsting for? who, on whose possessions and fortunes he is not fixing
+his most impudent eyes, his hopes, and his whole heart? What shall we
+say of Censorinus? who, as far as words go, said indeed that he wished
+to be the city praetor, but who, in fact, was unwilling to be so? What
+of Bestia, who professes that he is a candidate for the consulship in
+the place of Brutus? May Jupiter avert from us this most detestable
+omen! But how absurd is it for a man to stand for the consulship who
+cannot be elected praetor! unless, indeed, he thinks his conviction may
+be taken as an equivalent to the praetorship. Let this second Caesar,
+this great Vopiscus[46], a man of consummate genius, of the highest
+influence, who seeks the consulship immediately after having been
+aedile, be excused from obedience to the laws. Although, indeed, the
+laws do not bind him, on account, I suppose, of his exceeding dignity.
+But this man has been acquitted five times when I have defended him.
+To win a sixth city victory is difficult, even in the case of a
+gladiator. However, this is the fault of the judges, not mine. I
+defended him with perfect good faith, they were bound to retain a most
+illustrious and excellent citizen in the republic, who now, however,
+appears to have no other object except to make us understand that
+those men whose judicial decisions we annulled, decided rightly and in
+a manner advantageous to the republic.
+
+Nor is this the case with respect to this man alone; there are other
+men in the same camp honestly condemned and shamefully restored; what
+counsel do you imagine can be adopted by those men who are enemies to
+all good men, that is not utterly cruel? There is besides a fellow
+called Saxa; I don't know who he is, some man whom Caesar imported
+from the extremity of Celtiberia and gave us for a tribune of the
+people. Before that, he was a measurer of ground for camps; now he
+hopes to measure out and value the city. May the evils which this
+foreigner predicts to us fall on his own head, and may we escape in
+safety! With him is the veteran Capho; nor is there any man whom the
+veteran troops hate more cordially; to these men, as if in addition to
+the dowry which they had received during our civil disasters, Antonius
+had given the Campanian district, that they might have it as a sort
+of nurse for their other estates. I only wish they would be contented
+with them! We would bear it then, though it would not be what ought to
+be borne, but still it would be worth our while to bear anything, as
+long as we could escape this most shameful war.
+
+VI. What more? Have you not before your eyes those ornaments of the
+camp of Marcus Antonius? In the first place, these two colleagues of
+the Antonii and Dolabella, Nucula and Lento the dividers of all Italy
+according to that law which the senate pronounced to have been earned
+by violence, one of whom has been a writer of farces, and the other an
+actor of tragedies. Why should I speak of Domitius the Apulian? whose
+property we have lately seen advertised, so great is the carelessness
+of his agents. But this man lately was not content with giving poison
+to his sister's son, he actually drenched him with it. But it is
+impossible for these men to live in any other than a prodigal manner,
+who hope for our property while they are squandering their own. I have
+seen also an auction of the property of Publius Decius, an illustrious
+man, who, following the example of his ancestors, devoted himself for
+the debts of another. But at that auction no one was found to be a
+purchaser. Ridiculous man to think it possible to escape from debt by
+selling other people's property! For why should I speak of Trebellius?
+on whom the furies of debts seem to have wrecked their vengeance, for
+we have seen one table[47] avenging another. Why should I speak of
+Plancus? whom that most illustrious citizen Aquila has driven from
+Pollentia,--and that too with a broken leg, and I wish he had met with
+that accident earlier, so as not to be liable to return hither.
+
+I had almost passed over the light and glory of that army, Caius
+Annius Cimber, the son of Lysidicus, a Lysidicus himself in the Greek
+meaning of the word, since he has broken all laws, unless perhaps it
+is natural for a Cimbrian to slay a German[48]? When Antonius has such
+numbers with him, and those too men of that sort, what crime will he
+shrink from, when Dolabella has polluted himself with such atrocious
+murders without at all an equal troop of robbers to support him?
+Wherefore, as I have often at other times differed against my will
+from Quintus Fufius, so on this occasion I gladly agree with his
+proposition. And from this you may see that my difference is not with
+the man, but with the cause which he sometimes advocates.
+
+Therefore, at present I not only agree with Quintus Fufius, but I even
+return thanks to him, for he has given utterance to opinions which are
+upright, and dignified, and worthy of the republic. He has pronounced
+Dolabella a public enemy, he has declared his opinion that his
+property ought to be confiscated by public authority. And though
+nothing could be added to this, (for, indeed, what could he propose
+more severe or more pitiless?) nevertheless, he said that if any of
+those men who were asked their opinion after him proposed any more
+severe sentence, he would vote for it. Who can avoid praising such
+severity as this?
+
+VII. Now, since Dolabella has been pronounced a public enemy, he must
+be pursued by war. For he himself will not remain quiet. He has a
+legion with him, he has troops of runaway slaves, he has a wicked band
+of impious men, he himself is confident, intemperate, and bent on
+falling by the death of a gladiator. Wherefore, since, as Dolabella
+was voted an enemy by the decree which was passed yesterday, war must
+be waged, we must necessarily appoint a general.
+
+Two opinions have been advanced, neither of which do I approve. The
+one, because I always think it dangerous unless it be absolutely
+necessary, the other, because I think it wholly unsuited to the
+emergency. For an extraordinary commission is a measure suited rather
+to the fickle character of the mob, one which does not at all become
+our dignity or this assembly. In the war against Antiochus, a great
+and important war, when Asia had fallen by lot to Lucius Scipio as his
+province, and when he was thought to have hardly spirit and hardly
+vigour enough for it, and when the senate was inclined to entrust the
+business to his colleague Caius Laelius, the father of this Laelius,
+who was surnamed the Wise; Publius Africanus, the elder brother of
+Lucius Scipio, rose up, and entreated them not to cast such a slur on
+his family, and said that in his brother there was united the greatest
+possible valour, with the most consummate prudence, and that he too,
+notwithstanding his age, and all the exploits which he had performed,
+would attend his brother as his lieutenant. And after he had said
+this, nothing was changed in respect to Scipio's province, nor was any
+extraordinary command sought for any more in that war than in those
+two terrible Punic wars which had preceded it, which were carried
+on and conducted to their termination either by the consuls or by
+dictators, or than in the war with Pyrrhus, or in that with Philippus,
+or afterwards in the Achaean war, or in the third Punic war, for which
+last the Roman people took great care to select a suitable general,
+Publius Scipio, but at the same time it appointed him to the
+consulship in order to conduct it.
+
+VIII. War was to be waged against Aristonicus in the consulship of
+Publius Licunius and Lucius Valerius. The people was consulted as to
+whom it wished to have the management of that war. Crassus, the consul
+and Pontifex Maximus, threatened to impose a fine upon Flaccus his
+colleague the priest of Mars, if he deserted the sacrifices. And
+though the people remitted the fine, still they ordered the priest to
+submit to the commands of the pontiff. But even then the Roman people
+did not commit the management of the war to a private individual,
+although there was Africanus, who the year before had celebrated a
+triumph over the people of Numantia, and who was far superior to all
+men in martial renown and military skill; yet he only gained the
+votes of two tribunes. And accordingly the Roman people entrusted the
+management of the war to Crassus the consul rather than to the private
+individual Africanus. As to the commands given to Cnaeus Pompeius, that
+most illustrious man, that first of men, they were carried by some
+turbulent tribunes of the people. For the war against Sertorius was
+only given by the senate to a private individual because the consuls
+refused it, when Lucius Philippus said that he sent the general in the
+place of the two consuls, not as proconsul.
+
+What then is the object of these comitia? Or what is the meaning of
+this canvassing which that most wise and dignified citizen, Lucius
+Caesar, has introduced into the senate? He has proposed to vote a
+military command to one who is certainly a most illustrious and
+unimpeachable man, but still only a private individual. And by doing
+so he has imposed a heavy burden upon us. Suppose I agree, shall I by
+so doing countenance the introduction of the practice of canvassing
+into the senate house? Suppose I vote against it, shall I appear as if
+I were in the comitia to have refused an honour to a man who is one of
+my greatest friends? But if we are to have the comitia in the senate,
+let us ask for votes, let us canvass, let a voting tablet be given us,
+just as one is given to the people. Why do you, O Caesar, allow it to
+be so managed that either a most illustrious man, if your proposition
+be not agreed too, shall appear to have received a repulse, or else
+that one of us shall appear to have been passed over, if, while we are
+men of equal dignity, we are not considered worthy of equal honour?
+
+But (for this is what I hear is said,) I myself gave by my own vote an
+extraordinary commission to Caius Caesar. Ay, indeed, for he had given
+me extraordinary protection, when I say me, I mean he had given it
+to the senate and to the Roman people. Was I to refuse giving an
+extraordinary military command to that man from whom the republic had
+received protection which had never even been thought of, but that
+still was of so much consequence that without it she could not have
+been safe? There were only the alternatives of taking his army from
+him, or giving him such a command. For on what principle or by what
+means can an army be retained by a man who has not been invested with
+any military command? We must not, therefore, think that a thing has
+been given to a man which has, in fact, not been taken away from him.
+You would, O conscript fathers, have taken a command away from Caius
+Caesar, if you had not given him one. The veteran soldiers, who,
+following his authority and command and name, had taken up arms in the
+cause of the republic, desired to be commanded by him. The Martial
+legion and the fourth legion had submitted to the authority of the
+senate, and had devoted themselves to uphold the dignity of the
+republic, in such a way as to feel that they had a right to demand
+Caius Caesar for their commander. It was the necessity of the war that
+invested Caius Caesar with military command, the senate only gave him
+the ensigns of it. But I beg you to tell me, O Lucius Caesar,--I am
+aware that I am arguing with a man of the greatest experience,--when
+did the senate ever confer a military command on a private individual
+who was in a state of inactivity, and doing nothing?
+
+IX. However, I have been speaking hitherto to avoid the appearance of
+gratuitously opposing a man who is a great friend of mine, and who has
+showed me great kindness. Although, can one deny a thing to a person
+who not only does not ask for it, but who even refuses it? But, O
+conscript fathers, that proposition is unsuited to the dignity of the
+consuls, unsuited to the critical character of the times, namely, the
+proposition that the consuls, for the sake of pursuing Dolabella,
+shall have the provinces of Asia and Syria allotted to them. I will
+explain why it is inexpedient for the republic, but first of all,
+consider what ignominy it fixes on the consuls. When a consul elect
+is being besieged, when the safety of the republic depends upon his
+liberation, when mischievous and parricidal citizens have revolted
+from the republic, and when we are carrying on a war in which we are
+fighting for our dignity, for our freedom, and for our lives, and
+when, if any one falls into the power of Antonius, tortures and
+torments are prepared for him, and when the struggle for all these
+objects has been committed and entrusted to our most admirable and
+gallant consuls,--shall any mention be made of Asia and Syria so
+that we may appear to have given any injurious cause for others to
+entertain suspicion of us, or to bring us into unpopularity? They do
+indeed propose it, "after having liberated Brutus,"--for those were
+the last words of the proposal, say rather, after having deserted,
+abandoned, and betrayed him.
+
+But I say that any mention whatever of any provinces has been made at
+a most unseasonable time. For although your mind, O Caius Pausa, be
+ever so intent, as indeed it is, on effecting the liberation of the
+most true and illustrious of all men, still the nature of things would
+compel you inevitably sometimes to turn your thoughts to the idea
+of pursuing Antonius, and to divert some portion of your care and
+attention to Asia and Syria. But if it were possible, I could wish you
+to have more minds than one, and yet to direct them all upon Mutina.
+But since that is impossible, I do wish you, with that most virtuous
+and all accomplished mind which you have got, to think of nothing but
+Brutus. And that indeed, is what you are doing; that is what you are
+especially striving at, but still no man can I will not say do two
+things, especially two most important things, at one time but he
+cannot even do entire justice to them both in his thoughts. It is our
+duty rather to spur on and inflame that excellent eagerness of yours,
+and not to transfer any portion of it to another object of care in a
+different direction.
+
+X. Add to these considerations the way men talk, the way in which they
+nourish suspicion, the way in which they take dislikes. Imitate
+me whom you have always praised; for I rejected a province fully
+appointed and provided by the senate, for the purpose of discarding
+all other thoughts, and devoting all my efforts to extinguishing the
+conflagration that threatened to consume my country. There was no one
+except me alone, to whom, indeed, you would, in consideration of our
+intimacy, have been sure to communicate anything which concerned your
+interests, who would believe that the province had been decreed to you
+against your will. I entreat you, check, as is due to your eminent
+wisdom, this report, and do not seem to be desirous of that which you
+do not in reality care about. And you should take the more care of
+this point, because your colleague, a most illustrious man, cannot
+fall under the same suspicion. He knows nothing of all that is going
+on here, he suspects nothing, he is conducting the war, he is standing
+in battle array, he is fighting for his blood and for his life, he
+will hear of the province being decreed to him before he could imagine
+that there had been time for such a proceeding. I am afraid that our
+armies too, which have devoted themselves to the republic, not from
+any compulsory levy, but of their own voluntary zeal, will be checked
+in their ardour, if they suppose that we are thinking of anything but
+instant war.
+
+But if provinces appear to the consuls as things to be desired, as
+they often have been desired by many illustrious men, first restore us
+Brutus, the light and glory of the state, whom we ought to preserve
+like that statue which fell from heaven, and is guarded by the
+protection of Vesta, which, as long as it is safe, ensures our safety
+also. Then we will raise you, if it be possible, even to heaven on
+our shoulders, unquestionably we will select for you the most worthy
+provinces. But at present let us apply ourselves to the business
+before us. And the question is, whether we will live as freemen, or
+die, for death is certainly to be preferred to slavery. What more
+need I say? Suppose that proposition causes delay in the pursuit of
+Dolabella? For when will the consul arrive? Are we waiting till there
+is not even a vestige of the towns and cities of Asia left? "But they
+will send some one of their officers"--That will certainly be a step
+that I shall quite approve of, I who just now objected to giving any
+extraordinary military command to even so illustrious a man if he were
+only a private individual. "But they will send a man worthy of such a
+charge." Will they send one more worthy than Publius Servilius? But
+the city has not such a man. What then he himself thinks ought to be
+given to no one, not even by the senate, can I approve of that being
+conferred by the decision of one man? We have need, O conscript
+fathers, of a man ready and prepared, and of one who has a military
+command legally conferred on him, and of one who, besides this, has
+authority, and a name, and an army, and a courage which has been
+already tried in his exertions for the deliverance of the republic.
+
+XI Who then is that man? Either Marcus Brutus, or Caius Cassius,
+or both of them. I would vote in plain words, as there are many
+precedents for, one consul or both, if we had not already hampered
+Brutus sufficiently in Greece, and if we had not preferred having his
+reinforcement approach nearer to Italy rather than move further off
+towards Asia, not so much in order to receive succour ourselves from
+that army, as to enable that army to receive aid across the water.
+Besides, O conscript fathers, even now Caius Antonius is detaining
+Marcus Brutus, for he occupies Apollonia, a large and important
+city, he occupies, as I believe, Byllis, he occupies Amantia, he is
+threatening Epirus, he is pressing on Illyricum, he has with him
+several cohorts, and he has cavalry. If Brutus be transferred from
+this district to any other war, we shall at all events lose Greece. We
+must also provide for the safety of Brundusium and all that coast
+of Italy. Although I marvel that Antonius delays so long, for he is
+accustomed usually to put on his marching dress and not to endure the
+fear of a siege for any length of time. But if Brutus has finished
+that business, and perceives that he can better serve the republic by
+pursuing Dolabella than by remaining in Greece, he will act of his own
+head, as he has hitherto done, nor amid such a general conflagration
+will he wait for the orders of the senate when instant help is
+required. For both Brutus and Cassius have in many instances been
+a senate to themselves. For it is quite inevitable that in such a
+confusion and disturbance of all things men should be guided by the
+present emergency rather than by precedent. Nor will this be the first
+time that either Brutus or Cassius has considered the safety and
+deliverance of his country his most holy law and his most excellent
+precedent. Therefore, if there were no motion submitted to us about
+the pursuit of Dolabella, still I should consider it equivalent to a
+decree, when there were men of such a character for virtue, authority,
+and the greatest nobleness, possessing armies, one of which is already
+known to us, and the other has been abundantly heard of.
+
+XII Brutus then, you may be sure, has not waited for our decrees, as
+he was sure of our desires. For he is not gone to his own province of
+Crete, he has flown to Macedonia, which belonged to another, he has
+accounted everything his own which you have wished to be yours, he has
+enlisted new legions, he has received old ones, he has gained over to
+his own standard the cavalry of Dolabella, and even before that man
+was polluted with such enormous parricide, he, of his own head,
+pronounced him his enemy. For if he were not one, by what right could
+he himself have tempted the cavalry to abandon the consul? What more
+need I say? Did not Caius Cassius, a man endowed with equal greatness
+of mind and with equal wisdom, depart from Italy with the deliberate
+object of preventing Dolabella from obtaining possession of Syria? By
+what law? By what right? By that which Jupiter himself has sanctioned,
+that everything which was advantageous to the republic should be
+considered legal and just.
+
+For law is nothing but a correct principle drawn from the inspiration
+of the gods, commanding what is honest, and forbidding the contrary.
+Cassius, therefore, obeyed this law when he went into Syria, a
+province which belonged to another, if men were to abide by the
+written laws, but which, when these were trampled under foot, was his
+by the law of nature. But in order that they may be sanctioned by your
+authority also, I now give my vote, that,
+
+"As Publius Dolabella, and those who have been the ministers of and
+accomplices and assistants in his cruel and infamous crime, have been
+pronounced enemies of the Roman people by the senate, and as the
+senate has voted that Publius Dolabella shall be pursued with war, in
+order that he who has violated all laws of men and gods by a new
+and unheard of and inexpiable wickedness and has committed the most
+infamous treason against his country, may suffer the punishment which
+is his due, and which he has well deserved at the hands of gods and
+men, the senate decrees that Caius Cassius, proconsul, shall have the
+government of Syria as one appointed to that province with all due
+form, and that he shall receive their armies from Quintus Marcus
+Crispus, proconsul, from Lucius Statius Murcus, proconsul, from Aulus
+Allienus, lieutenant, and that they shall deliver them up to him, and
+that he, with these troops and with any more which he may have got
+from other quarters, shall pursue Dolabella with war both by sea and
+land; that, for the sake of carrying on war, he shall have authority
+and power to buy ships, and sailors, and money, and whatever else may
+be necessary or useful for the carrying on of the war, in whatever
+places it seems fitting to him to do so, throughout Syria, Asia,
+Bithynia, and Pontus; and that, in whatever province he shall arrive
+for the purpose of carrying on that war, in that province as soon
+as Caius Cassius, proconsul, shall arrive in it, the power of Caius
+Cassius, proconsul, shall be superior to that of him who may be the
+regular governor of the province at the time. That king Deiotarus the
+father, and also king Deiotarus the son, if they assist Caius Cassius,
+proconsul, with their armies and treasures, as they have heretofore
+often assisted the generals of the Roman people, will do a thing which
+will be grateful to the senate and people of Rome; and that also, if
+the rest of the kings and tetrarchs and governors in those districts
+do the same, the senate and people of Rome will not be forgetful of
+their loyalty and kindness; and that Caius Pansa and Aulus Hirtius the
+consuls, one or both of them, as it seems good to them, as soon
+as they have re-established the republic, shall at the earliest
+opportunity submit a motion to this order about the consular and
+praetorian provinces; and that, in the meantime, the provinces should
+continue to be governed by those officers by whom they are governed at
+present, until a successor be appointed to each by a resolution of the
+senate."
+
+XIII. By this resolution of the senate you will inflame the existing
+ardour of Cassius, and you will give him additional arms; for you
+cannot be ignorant of his disposition, or of the resources which he
+has at present. His disposition is such as you see; his resources,
+which you have heard stated to you, are those of a gallant and
+resolute man, who, even while Trebonius was alive, would not permit
+the piratical crew of Dolabella to penetrate into Syria. Allienus, my
+intimate friend and connexion, who went thither after the death of
+Trebonius, will not permit himself to be called the lieutenant of
+Dolabella. The army of Quintus Caecilius Bassus, a man indeed without
+any regular appointment, but a brave and eminent man, is vigorous and
+victorious. The army of Deiotarus the king, both father and son, is
+very numerous, and equipped in our fashion. Moreover, in the son
+there is the greatest hope, the greatest vigour of genius and a good
+disposition, and the most eminent valour. Why need I speak of the
+father, whose good-will towards the Roman people is coeval with his
+life; who has not only been the ally of our commanders in their wars,
+but has also served himself as the general of his own troops. What
+great things have Sylla, and Murena, and Servilius, and Lucullus said
+of that man; what complimentary, what honourable and dignified mention
+have they often made of him in the senate! Why should I speak of
+Cnaeus Pompeius, who considered Deiotarus the only friend and real
+well-wisher from his heart, the only really loyal man to the Roman
+people in the whole world? We were generals, Marcus Bibulus and I, in
+neighbouring provinces bordering on his kingdom; and we were assisted
+by that same monarch both with cavalry and infantry. Then followed
+this most miserable and disastrous civil war; in which I need not say
+what Deiotarus ought to have done, or what would have been the most
+proper course which he could have adopted, especially as victory
+decided for the party opposed to the wishes of Deiotarus. And if in
+that war he committed any error, he did so in common with the senate.
+If his judgment was the right one, then even though defeated it does
+not deserve to be blamed. To these resources other kings and other
+levies of troops will be added. Nor will fleets be wanting to us; so
+greatly do the Tyrians esteem Cassius, so mighty is his name in Syria
+and Phoenicia.
+
+XIV. The republic, O conscript fathers, has a general ready against
+Dolabella, in Caius Cassius, and not ready only, but also skilful and
+brave. He performed great exploits before the arrival of Bibulus, a
+most illustrious man, when he defeated the most eminent generals of
+the Parthians and their innumerable armies, and delivered Syria from
+their most formidable invasion. I pass over his greatest and most
+extraordinary glory; for as the mention of it is not yet acceptable
+to every one, we had better preserve it in our recollection than by
+bearing testimony to it with our voice.
+
+I have noticed, O conscript fathers, that some people have said before
+now, that even Brutus is too much extolled by me, that Cassius is too
+much extolled; and that by this proposition of mine absolute power and
+quite a principality is conferred upon Cassius. Whom do I extol? Those
+who are themselves the glory of the republic. What? have I not at all
+times extolled Decimus Brutus whenever I have delivered my opinion at
+all? Do you then find fault with me? or should I rather praise the
+Antonii, the disgrace and infamy not only of their own families, but of
+the Roman name? or should I speak in favour of Censorenus, an enemy in
+time of war, an assassin in time of peace? or should I collect all
+the other ruined men of that band of robbers? But I am so far from
+extolling those enemies of tranquility, of concord, of the laws, of
+the courts of justice, and of liberty, that I cannot avoid hating them
+as much as I love the republic. "Beware," says one, "how you offend
+the veterans." For this is what I am most constantly told. But I
+certainly ought to protect the rights of the veterans; of those at
+least who are well disposed; but surely I ought not to fear them. And
+those veterans who have taken up arms in the cause of the republic,
+and have followed Caius Caesar, remembering the kindnesses which they
+received from his father, and who at this day are defending the
+republic to their own great personal danger,--those I ought not only
+to defend, but to seek to procure additional advantages for them. But
+those also who remain quiet, such as the sixth and eighth legion, I
+consider worthy of great glory and praise. But as for those companions
+of Antonius, who after they have devoured the benefits of Caesar,
+besiege the consul elect, threaten this city with fire and sword, and
+have given themselves up to Saxa and Capho, men born for crime and
+plunder, who is there who thinks that those men ought to be defended?
+Therefore the veterans are either good men, whom we ought to load with
+distinctions, or quiet men, whom we ought to preserve, or impious
+ones, against whose frenzy we have declared war and taken up
+legitimate arms.
+
+XV. Who then are the veterans whom we are to be fearful of offending?
+Those who are desirous to deliver Decimus Brutus from siege? for how
+can those men, to whom the safety of Brutus is dear, hate the name of
+Cassius? Or those men who abstain from taking arms on either side? I
+have no fear of any of those men who delight in tranquility becoming
+a mischievous citizen. But as for the third class, whom I call not
+veteran soldiers, but infamous enemies, I wish to inflict on them the
+most bitter pain. Although, O conscript fathers, how long are we to
+deliver our opinions as it may please the veterans? why are we to
+yield so much to their haughtiness? why are we to make their arrogance
+of such importance as to choose our generals with reference to their
+pleasure? But I (for I must speak, O conscript fathers, what I feel,)
+think that we ought not so much to regard the veterans, as to look at
+what the young soldiers, the flower of Italy--at what the new legions,
+most eager to effect the deliverance of their country--at what all
+Italy will think of your wisdom. For there is nothing which flourishes
+for ever. Age succeeds age. The legions of Caesar have flourished for a
+long time; but now those who are flourishing are the legions of Pansa,
+and the Legions of Hirtius, and the legions of the son of Caesar, and
+the legions of Plancus. They surpass the veterans in number, they have
+the advantage of youth, moreover, they surpass them also in authority.
+For they are engaged in waging that war which is approved of by all
+nations. Therefore, rewards have been promised to these latter. To
+the former they have been already paid,--let them enjoy them. But let
+these others have those rewards given to them which we have promised
+them. For that is what I hope that the immortal gods will consider
+just.
+
+And as this is the case, I give my vote for the proposition which I
+have made to you, O conscript fathers, being adopted by you.
+
+
+
+
+THE TWELFTH ORATION OF M T CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS. CALLED ALSO
+THE TWELFTH PHILIPPIC.
+
+
+THE ARGUMENT.
+
+
+Decimus Brutus was in such distress in Mutina, that his friends began
+to be alarmed, fearing that, if he fell into the hands of Antonius,
+he would be treated as Trebonius had been. And, as the friends of
+Antonius gave out that he was now more inclined to come to terms with
+the senate, a proposition was made and supported by Pansa to send a
+second embassy to him. And even Cicero at first consented to it,
+and allowed himself to be nominated with Servilius and three other
+senators, all of consular rank, but on more mature reflection he was
+convinced that he had been guilty of a blunder, and that the object of
+Antonius and his friends was only to gain time for Ventidius to join
+him with his three legions. Accordingly, at the next meeting of the
+senate, he delivered the following speech, retracting his former
+sanction of the proposed embassy. And he spoke so strongly against it,
+that the measure was abandoned and Pansa soon afterwards marched with
+his army to join Hirtius and Octavius, with the intention of forcing
+Antonius to a battle.
+
+I. Although, O conscript fathers it seems very unbecoming for that
+man whose counsels you have so often adopted in the most important
+affairs, to be deceived and deluded, and to commit mistakes, yet I
+console myself, since I made the mistake in company with you, and in
+company also with a consul of the greatest wisdom. For when two men of
+consular rank had brought us hope of an honorable peace, they appeared
+as being friends and extremely intimate with Marcus Antonius, to be
+aware of some weak point about him with which we were unacquainted.
+His wife and children are in the house of one, the other is known
+every day to send letters to, to receive letters from, and openly to
+favour Antonius.
+
+These men, then, appeared likely to have some reason for exhorting us
+to peace, which they had done for some time. The consul, too, added
+the weight of his exhortation, and what a consul! If we look for
+prudence, one who was not easily to be deceived; if for virtue and
+courage, one who would never admit of peace unless Antonius submitted
+and confessed himself to be vanquished, if for greatness of mind, one
+who would prefer death to slavery. You, too, O conscript fathers,
+appeared to be induced to think not of accepting but of imposing
+conditions, not so much because you were forgetful of your most
+important and dignified resolutions, as because you had hopes
+suggested you of a surrender on the part of Antonius, which his
+friends preferred to call peace. My own hopes, and I imagine yours
+also, were increased by the circumstance of my hearing that the family
+of Antonius was overwhelmed with distress, and that his wife was
+incessantly lamenting. And in this assembly, too, I saw that the
+partisans, on whose countenance my eyes are always dwelling, looked
+more sorrowful than usual. And if that is not so, why on a sudden has
+mention been made of peace by Piso and Calenus of all people in the
+world, why at this particular moment, why so unexpectedly? Piso
+declares that he knows nothing, that he has not heard anything.
+Calenus declares that no news has been brought. And they make that
+statement now, after they think that we are involved in a pacific
+embassy. What need have we, then, of any new determination, if no new
+circumstances have arisen to call for one?
+
+II. We have been deceived,--we have, I say, been deceived, O conscript
+fathers. It is the cause of Antonius that has been pleaded by his
+friends, and not the cause of the public. And I did indeed see that,
+though through a sort of mist, the safety of Decimus Brutus had
+dazzled my eyesight. But if in war, substitutes were in the habit of
+being given, I would gladly allow myself to be hemmed in, so long
+as Decimus Brutus might be released. But we were caught by this
+expression of Quintus Fufius; "Shall we not listen to Antonius, even
+if he retires from Mutina? Shall we not, even if he declares that he
+will submit himself to the authority of the senate?" It seemed harsh
+to say that. Thus it was that we were broken, we yielded. Does he then
+retire from Mutina? "I don't know." Is he obeying the senate? "I think
+so" says Calenus, "but so as to preserve his own dignity at the same
+time." You then, O conscript fathers, are to make great exertions for
+the express purpose of losing your own dignity, which is very great,
+and of preserving that of Antonius, which neither has nor can have any
+existence, and of enabling him to recover that by your conduct, which
+he has lost by his own. "But, however, that matter is not open for
+consideration now, an embassy has been appointed." But what is there
+which is not open for consideration to a wise man, as long as it
+can be remodelled? Any man is liable to a mistake; but no one but a
+downright fool will persist in error. For second thoughts, as people
+say, are best. The mist which I spoke of just now is dispelled, light
+has arisen, the case is plain--we see everything, and that not by our
+own acuteness, but we are warned by our friends.
+
+You heard just now what was the statement made by a most admirable
+man. I found, said he, his house, his wife, his children, all in great
+distress. Good men marvelled at me, my friends blamed me for having
+been led by the hope of peace to undertake an embassy. And no wonder,
+O Publius Servilius. For by your own most true and most weighty
+arguments Antonius was stripped, I do not say of all dignity, but of
+even every hope of safety. Who would not wonder if you were to go
+as an ambassador to him? I judge by my own case, for with regard to
+myself I see how the same design as you conceived is found fault with.
+And are we the only people blamed? What? did that most gallant man
+speak so long and so precisely a little while ago without any reason?
+What was he labouring for, except to remove from himself a groundless
+suspicion of treachery? And whence did that suspicion arise? From his
+unexpected advocacy of peace, which he adopted all on a sudden, being
+taken in by the same error that we were.
+
+But if an error has been committed, O conscript fathers, owing to a
+groundless and fallacious hope, let us return into the right road. The
+best harbour for a penitent is a change of intention.
+
+III. For what, in the name of the immortal gods! what good can our
+embassy do to the republic? What good, do I say? What will you say if
+it will even do us harm? _Will_ do us harm? What if it already _has_
+done us harm? Do you suppose that that most energetic and fearless
+desire shown by the Roman people for recovery of their liberty has
+been damped and weakened by hearing of this embassy for peace? What
+do you think the municipal towns feel? and the colonies? What do you
+think will be the feelings of all Italy? Do you suppose that it will
+continue to glow with the same zeal with which it burnt before to
+extinguish this common conflagration? Do we not suppose that those
+men will repent of having professed and displayed so much hatred to
+Antonius, who promised us money and arms, who devoted themselves
+wholly, body, heart, and soul, to the safety of the republic? How will
+Capua, which at the present time feels like a second Rome, approve of
+this design of yours? That city pronounced them impious citizens, cast
+them out, and kept them out. Antonius was barely saved from the hands
+of that city, which made a most gallant attempt to crush him. Need I
+say more? Are we not by these proceedings cutting the sinews of our
+own legions, for what man can engage with ardour in a war, when the
+hope of peace is suggested to him? Even that godlike and divine
+Martial legion will grow languid at and be cowed by the receipt of
+this news, and will lose that most noble title of Martial, their
+swords will fall to the ground, their weapons will drop from their
+hands. For, following the senate, it will not consider itself bound to
+feel more bitter hatred against Antonius than the senate.
+
+I am ashamed for this legion, I am ashamed for the fourth legion,
+which, approving of our authority with equal virtue, abandoned
+Antonius, not looking upon him as their consul and general, but as an
+enemy and attacker of their country. I am ashamed for that admirable
+army which is made up of two armies, which has now been reviewed, and
+which has started for Mutina, and which, if it hears a word of peace,
+that is to say, of our fear, even if it does not return, will at all
+events halt. For who, when the senate recals him and sounds a retreat,
+will be eager to engage in battle?[49]
+
+IV. For what can be more unreasonable than for us to pass resolutions
+about peace without the knowledge of those men who wage the war? And
+not only without their knowledge, but even against their will? Do you
+think that Aulus Hirtius, that most illustrious consul, and that
+Carus Caesar, a man born by the especial kindness of the gods for this
+especial crisis, whose letters, announcing their hope of victory, I
+hold in my hand, are desirous of peace? leader; and still we cannot
+bear the countenances or support the language of those men who are
+left behind in the city out of their number. What do you think will
+be the result when such numbers force their way into the city at one
+time? when we have laid aside our arms and they have not laid aside
+theirs? Must we not be defeated for everlasting, in consequence of our
+own counsels?
+
+Place before your eyes Marcus Antonius, as a man of consular rank, add
+to him Lucius, hoping to obtain the consulship, join to them all the
+rest, and those too not confined to our order, who are fixing then
+thoughts on honours and commands. Do not despise the Tiros, and the
+Numisii, or the Mustellae, or the Seii. A peace made with those men
+will not be peace, but a covenant of slavery. That was in admirable
+expression of Lucius Piso, a most honourable man, and one which has
+been deservedly praised by you O Pansa, not only in this order, but
+also in the assembly of the people. He said, that he would depart from
+Italy, and leave his household gods and his native home, if (but might
+the gods avert such a disaster!) Antonius overwhelmed the republic.
+
+VII. I ask, therefore, of you, O Lucius Piso, whether you would not
+think the republic overwhelmed if so many men of such impiety, of such
+audacity, and such guilt, were admitted into it? Can you think that
+men whom we could hardly bear when they were not yet polluted with
+such parricidal treasons; will be able to be borne by the city now
+that they are immersed in every sort of wickedness? Believe me, we
+must either adopt your plan, and retire, depart, embrace a life of
+indigence and wandering, or else we must offer our throats to those
+robbers, and perish in our country. What has become, O Carus Pansa, of
+those noble exhortations of yours, by which the senate was roused, and
+the Roman people stimulated, not only hearing but also learning from
+you that there is nothing more disgraceful to a Roman than slavery?
+Was it for this that we assumed the garb of war, and took arms and
+roused up all the youth all over Italy, in order that while we had a
+most flourishing and numerous army, we might send ambassadors to treat
+for peace? If that peace is to be received by others, why do we not
+wait to be entreated for it? If our ambassadors are to beg it, what is
+it that we are afraid of? Shall I make one of this embassy, or shall I
+be mixed up with this design, in which, even if I should dissent from
+the rest of my colleagues, the Roman people will not know it? The
+result will be that if anything be granted or conceded, it will be my
+danger if Antonius commits any offences, since the power to commit
+them will seem to have been put in his hands by me.
+
+But even if it had been proper to entertain any idea of peace with the
+piratical crew of Marcus Antonius, still I was the last person who
+ought to have been selected to negotiate such a peace. I never voted
+for sending ambassadors. Before the return of the last ambassadors I
+ventured to say, that peace itself, even if they did bring it, ought
+to be repudiated, since war would be concealed under the name of
+peace; I was the chief adviser of the adoption of the garb of war, I
+have invariably called that man a public enemy, when others have been
+calling him only an adversary, I have always pronounced this to be a
+war, while others have styled it only a tumult Nor have I done this
+in the senate alone; I have always acted in the same way before the
+people. Nor have I spoken against himself only, but also against the
+accomplices in and agents of his crimes, whether present here, or
+there with him. In short, I have at all times inveighed against the
+whole family and party of Antonius. Therefore, as those impious
+citizens began to congratulate one another the moment the hope of
+peace was presented to them, as if they had gained the victory, so
+also they abused me as unjust, they made complaints against me, they
+distrusted Servilius also, they recollected that Antonius had been
+damaged by his avowed opinions and propositions, they recollected that
+Lucius Caesar, though a brave and consistent senator, is still his
+uncle, that Calenus is his agent, that Piso is his intimate friend,
+they think that you yourself, O Pansa, though a most vigorous and
+fearless consul, are now become more mercifully inclined. Not that it
+really is so, or that it possibly can be so. But the fact of a mention
+of peace having been made by you, has given rise to a suspicion in the
+hearts of many, that you have changed your mind a little. The friends
+of Antonius are annoyed at my being included among these persons,
+and we must no doubt yield to them, since we have once begun to be
+liberal.
+
+VIII. Let the ambassadors go, with all our good wishes, but let those
+men go at whom Antonius may take no offence. But if you are not
+anxious about what he may think, at all events. O conscript fathers,
+you ought to have some regard for me. At least spare my eyes, and make
+some allowance for a just indignation. For with what countenance shall
+I be able to behold, (I do not say, the enemy of my country, for my
+hatred of him on that score I feel in common with you all,) but how
+shall I bear to look upon that man who is my own most bitter personal
+enemy, as his most furious harangues against me plainly declare him?
+Do you think that I am so completely made of iron as to be able
+unmoved to meet him, or look at him? who lately, when in an assembly
+of the people he was making presents to those men who appeared to him
+the most audacious of his band of parricidal traitors, said that
+he gave my property to Petissius of Urbinum, a man who, after the
+shipwreck of a very splendid patrimony, was dashed against these rocks
+of Antonius. Shall I be able to bear the sight of Lucius Antonius? a
+man from whose cruelty I could not have escaped if I had not defended
+myself behind the walls and gates and by the zeal of my own municipal
+town. And this same Asiatic gladiator, this plunderer of Italy, this
+colleague of Lenti and Nucula, when he was giving some pieces of
+gold to Aquila the centurion, said that he was giving him some of my
+property. For, if he had said he was giving him some of his own, he
+thought that the eagle itself would not have believed it. My eyes
+cannot--my eyes, I say, will not bear the sight of Saxa, or Capho, or
+the two praetors, or the tribune of the people, or the two tribunes
+elect, or Bestia, or Trebellius, or Titus Plancus. I cannot look with
+equanimity on so many, and those such foul, such wicked enemies;
+nor is that feeling caused by any fastidiousness of mine, but by my
+affection for the republic. But I will subdue my feelings, and keep my
+own inclinations under restraint. If I cannot eradicate my most just
+indignation, I will conceal it. What? Do you not think, O Conscript
+fathers, that I should have some regard for my own life? But that
+indeed has never been an object of much concern to me, especially
+since Dolabella has acted in such a way that death is a desirable
+thing, provided it come without torments and tortures. But in your
+eyes and in those of the Roman people my life ought not to appear of
+no consequence. For I am a man,--unless indeed I am deceived in my
+estimate of myself,--who by my vigilance, and anxiety, by the opinions
+which I have delivered, and by the dangers too of which I have
+encountered great numbers, by reason of the most bitter hatred which
+all impious men bear me, have at least, (not to seem to say anything
+too boastful,) conducted myself so as to be no injury to the republic.
+And as this is the case, do you think that I ought to have no
+consideration for my own danger?
+
+IX. Even here, when I was in the city and at home, nevertheless many
+attempts were made against me, in a place where I have not only the
+fidelity of my friends but the eyes also of the entire city to guard
+me. What do you think will be the case when I have gone on a journey,
+and that too a long one? Do you think that I shall have no occasion
+to fear plots then? There are three roads to Mutina, a place which my
+mind longs to see, in order that I may behold as speedily as possible
+that pledge of freedom of the Roman people Decimus Brutus, in whose
+embrace I would willingly yield up my parting breath, when all my
+actions for the last many months, and all my opinions and propositions
+have resulted in the end which I proposed to myself. There are, as I
+have said, three roads, the Flaminian road, along the Adriatic, the
+Aurelian road, along the Mediterranean coast, the Midland road, which
+is called the Cassian.
+
+Now, take notice, I beg of you, whether my suspicion of danger to
+myself is at variance with a reasonable conjecture. The Cassian road
+goes through Etruria. Do we not know then, O Pansa, over what places
+the authority of Lenti Caesennius, as a septemvir, prevails at
+present? He certainly is not on our side either in mind or body. But
+if he is at home, or not far from home, he is certainly in Etruria,
+that is, in my road. Who, then, will undertake to me that Lenti will
+be content with exacting one life alone? Tell me besides, O Pansa,
+where Ventidius is,--a man to whom I have always been friendly before
+he became so openly an enemy to the republic and to all good men. I
+may avoid the Cassian road, and take the Flaminian. What if, as it is
+said, Ventidius has arrived at Ancona? Shall I be able in that case
+to reach Ariminum in safety? The Aurelian road remains and here too
+I shall find a, protector, for on that road are the possessions of
+Publius Clodius. His whole household will come out to meet me, and
+will invite me to partake of their hospitality, on account of my
+notorious intimacy with their master?
+
+X. Shall I then trust myself to those roads--I who lately, on the day
+of the feast of Terminus, did not dare even to go into the suburbs and
+return by the same road on the same day? I can scarcely defend myself
+within the walls of my own house without the protection of my friends;
+therefore I remain in the city; and if I am allowed to do so I will
+remain. This is my proper place, this is my beat, this is my post as
+a sentinel, this is my station as a defender of the city. Let others
+occupy camps and kingdoms, and engage in the conduct of the war; let
+them show the active hatred of the enemy; we, as we say, and as we
+have always hitherto done, will, in common with you, defend the
+city and the affairs of the city. Nor do I shrink from this office;
+although I see the Roman people shrink from it for me. No one is less
+timid than I am; no one more cautious. The facts speak for themselves.
+This is the twentieth year that I have been a mark for the attempts of
+all wicked men; therefore, they have paid to the republic (not to
+say to me) the penalty of their wickedness. As yet the republic has
+preserved me in safety for itself. I am almost afraid to say what I am
+going to say; for I know that any accident may happen to a man; but
+still, when I was once hemmed in by the united force of many most
+influential men, I yielded voluntarily, and fell in such a manner as
+to be able to rise again in the most honourable manner.
+
+Can I, then, appear as cautious and as prudent as I ought to be if I
+commit myself to a journey so full of enemies and dangers to me? Those
+men who are concerned in the government of the republic ought at their
+death to leave behind them glory, and not reproaches for their fault,
+or grounds for blaming their folly. What good man is there who does
+not mourn for the death of Trebonius? Who is there who does not grieve
+for the loss of such a citizen and such a man? But there are men who
+say, (hastily indeed, but still they do say so,) that he deserves to
+be grieved for less because he did not take precautions against a
+desperately wicked man. In truth, a man who professes to be himself a
+defender of many men, wise men say, ought in the first place to show
+himself able to protect his own life. I say, that when one is fenced
+round by the laws and by the fear of justice, a man is not bound to be
+afraid of everything, or to take precautions against all imaginable
+designs; for who would dare to attack a man in daylight, on a military
+road, or a man who was well attended, or an illustrious man? But these
+considerations have no bearing on the present time, nor in my case;
+for not only would a man who offered violence to me have no fear of
+punishment, but he would even hope to obtain glory and rewards from
+those bands of robbers.
+
+XI. These dangers I can guard against in the city; it is easy for me
+to look around and see where I am going out from, whither I am going,
+what there is on my right hand, and on my left. Shall I be able to do
+the same on the roads of the Apennines? in which, even if there should
+be no ambush, as there easily may be, still my mind will be kept in
+such a state of anxiety as not to be able to attend to the duties of
+an embassy. But suppose I have escaped all plots against me, and have
+passed over the Apennines; still I have to encounter a meeting and
+conference with Antonius. What place am I to select? If it is outside
+the camp, the rest may look to themselves,--I think that death would
+come upon me instantly. I know the frenzy of the man; I know his
+unbridled violence. The ferocity of his manners and the savageness of
+his nature is not usually softened even by wine. Then, inflamed by
+anger and insanity, with his brother Lucius, that foulest of beasts,
+at his side, he will never keep his sacrilegious and impious hands
+from me. I can recollect conferences with most bitter enemies, and
+with citizens in a state of the most bitter disagreement.
+
+Cnaeus Pompeius, the son of Sextus, being consul, in my presence, when
+I was serving my first campaign in his army, had a conference with
+Publius Vettius Scato, the general of the Marsians, between the camps.
+And I recollect that Sextus Pompeius, the brother of the consul, a
+very learned and wise man, came thither from Rome to the conference.
+And when Scato had saluted him, "What," said he, "am I to call
+you?"--"Call me," said he, "one who is by inclination a friend, by
+necessity an enemy." That conference was conducted with fairness;
+there was no fear, no suspicion; even their mutual hatred was not
+great; for the allies were not seeking to take our city from us, but
+to be themselves admitted to share the privileges of it. Sylla and
+Scipio, one attended by the flower of the nobility, the other by the
+allies, had a conference between Cales and Teanum, respecting the
+authority of the senate, the suffrages of the people, and the
+privileges of citizenship; and agreed upon conditions and
+stipulations. Good faith was not strictly observed at that conference;
+but still there was no violence used, and no danger incurred.
+
+XII. But can we be equally safe among Antonius's piratical crew? We
+cannot; or, even if the rest can, I do not believe that I can. What
+will be the case if we are not to confer out of the camp? What camp
+is to be chosen for the conference? He will never come into our
+camp:--much less will we go to his. It follows then, that all demands
+must be received and sent to and fro by means of letters. We then
+shall be in our respective camps. On all his demands I shall have but
+one opinion; and when I have stated it here, in your hearing, you may
+think that I have gone, and that I have come back again.--I shall have
+finished my embassy. As far as my sentiments can prevail I shall refer
+every demand which Antonius makes to the senate. For, indeed, we have
+no power to do otherwise; nor have we received any commission from
+this assembly, such as, when a war is terminated, is usually, in
+accordance with the precedents of your ancestors, entrusted to the
+ambassadors. Nor, in fact, have we received any particular commission
+from the senate at all.
+
+And, as I shall pursue this line of conduct in the council, where
+some, as I imagine, will oppose it, have I not reason to fear that the
+ignorant mob may think that peace is delayed by my means? Suppose now
+that the new legions do not disapprove of my resolution. For I am
+quite sure that the Martial legion and the fourth legion will not
+approve of anything which is contrary to dignity and honour. What
+then? have we no regard for the opinion of the veterans? For even
+they themselves do not wish to be feared by us.--Still, how will
+they receive my severity? For they have heard many false statements
+concerning me; wicked men have circulated among them many calumnies
+against me. Their advantage indeed, as you all are most perfect
+witnesses of, I have always promoted by my opinion, by my authority,
+and by my language. But they believe wicked men, they believe
+seditious men, they believe their own party. They are, indeed, brave
+men; but by reason of their exploits which they have performed in the
+cause of the freedom of the Roman people and of the safety of the
+republic they are too ferocious and too much inclined to bring all
+our counsels under the sway of their own violence. Their deliberate
+reflection I am not afraid of, but I confess I dread their
+impetuosity.
+
+If I escape all these great dangers too, do you think my return will
+be completely safe? For when I have, according to my usual custom,
+defended your authority, and have proved my good faith towards the
+republic, and my firmness; then I shall have to fear, not those men
+alone who hate me, but those also who envy me. Let my life then be
+preserved for the republic, let it be kept for the service of my
+country as long as my dignity or nature will permit; and let death
+either be the necessity of fate, or, if it must be encountered
+earlier, let it be encountered with glory.
+
+This being the case, although the republic has no need (to say the
+least of it) of this embassy, still if it be possible for me to go on
+it in safety, I am willing to go. Altogether, O conscript fathers,
+I shall regulate the whole of my conduct in this affair, not by any
+consideration of my own danger, but by the advantage of the republic.
+And, as I have plenty of time, I think that it behoves me to
+deliberate upon that over and over again, and to adopt that line of
+conduct which I shall judge to be most beneficial to the republic.
+
+
+
+
+THE THIRTEENTH ORATION OF M.T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS ANTONIUS. CALLED
+ALSO THE THIRTEENTH PHILIPPIC.
+
+
+THE ARGUMENT.
+
+
+Antonius wrote a long letter to Hirtius and to Octavius, to persuade
+them that they were acting against their true interests and dignity
+in combining with the slayers of Julius Caesar against him. But they,
+instead of answering this letter, sent it to Cicero at Rome. At the
+same time Lepidus wrote a public letter to the senate to exhort them
+to measures of peace; and to a reconciliation with Antonius; and took
+no notice of the public honours which had been decreed to him in
+compliance with Cicero's motion. The senate was much displeased at
+this. They agreed, however, to a proposal of Servilius--to thank
+Lepidus for his love of peace, but to desire him to leave that to
+them; as there could be no peace till Antonius had laid down his arms.
+But Antonius's friends were encouraged by Lepidus's letter to renew
+their suggestions of a treaty; which caused Cicero to deliver the
+following speech to the senate for the purpose of counteracting the
+influence of their arguments.
+
+I. From the first beginning, O conscript fathers, of this war which we
+have undertaken against those impious and wicked citizens, I have been
+afraid lest the insidious proposals of peace might damp our zeal for
+the recovery of our liberty. But the name of peace is sweet; and the
+thing itself not only pleasant but salutary. For a man seems to have
+no affection either for the private hearths of the citizens, nor for
+the public laws, nor for the rights of freedom, who is delighted with
+discord and the slaughter of his fellow-citizens, and with civil war;
+and such a man I think ought to be erased from the catalogue of men,
+and exterminated from all human society. Therefore, if Sylla, or
+Marius, or both of them, or Octavius, or Cinna, or Sylla for the
+second time, or the other Marius and Carbo, or if any one else has
+ever wished for civil war, I think that man a citizen born for the
+detestation of the republic. For why should I speak of the last man
+who stirred up such a war; a man whose acts, indeed, we defend, while
+we admit that the author of them was deservedly slain? Nothing, then,
+is more infamous than such a citizen or such a man; if indeed he
+deserves to be considered either a citizen or a man, who is desirous
+of civil war.
+
+But the first thing that we have to consider, O conscript fathers,
+is whether peace can exist with all men, or whether there be any war
+incapable of reconciliation, in which any agreement of peace is only
+a covenant of slavery. Whether Sylla was making peace with Scipio,
+or whether he was only pretending to do so, there was no reason to
+despair, if an agreement had been come to, that the city might have
+been in a tolerable state. If Cinna had been willing to agree with
+Octavius, the safety of the citizens might still have had an existence
+in the republic. In the last war, if Pompeius had relaxed somewhat
+of his dignified firmness, and Caesar a good deal of his ambition, we
+might have had both a lasting peace, and some considerable remainder
+of the republic.
+
+II. But what is the state of things now? Is it possible for there
+to be peace with Antonius? with Censorinus, and Ventidius, and
+Trebellius, and Bestia, and Nucula, and Munatius, and Lento, and Saxa?
+I have just mentioned a few names as a specimen; you yourselves see
+the countless numbers and savage nature of the rest of the host. Add,
+besides the wrecks of Caesar's party, the Barbae Cassii, the Barbatii,
+the Pollios; add the companions and fellow-gamblers of Antonius,
+Eutrapelus, and Mela, and Coelius, and Pontius, and Crassicius, and
+Tiro, and Mustela, and Petissius; I say nothing of the main body, I
+am only naming the leaders. To these are added the legionaries of the
+Alauda and the rest of the veterans, the seminary of the judges of the
+third decury; who, having exhausted their own estates, and squandered
+all the fruits of Caesar's kindness, have now set their hearts on our
+fortunes. Oh that trustworthy right hand of Antonius, with which he
+has murdered many citizens! Oh that regularly ratified and solemn
+treaty which we made with the Antonii! Surely if Marcus shall attempt
+to violate it, the conscientious piety of Lucius will call him back
+from such wickedness. If there is any room allowed these men in this
+city, there will be no room for the city itself. Place before your
+eyes, O conscript fathers, the countenances of those men, and
+especially the countenances of the Antonii. Mark their gait, their
+look, their face, their arrogance; mark those friends of theirs who
+walk by their side, who follow them, who precede them. What breath
+reeking of wine, what insolence, what threatening language do you not
+think there will be there? Unless, indeed, the mere fact of peace is
+to soften them, and unless you expect that, especially when they come
+into this assembly, they will salute every one of us kindly, and
+address us courteously.
+
+III. Do you not recollect, in the name of the immortal gods! what
+resolutions you have given utterance to against those men? You have
+repealed the acts of Marcus Antonius; you have taken down his laws;
+you have voted that they were carried by violence, and with a
+disregard of the auspices; you have called out the levies throughout
+all Italy; you have pronounced that colleague and ally of all
+wickedness a public enemy. What peace can there be with this man? Even
+if he were a foreign enemy, still, after such actions as have taken
+place, it would be scarcely possible, by any means whatever, to have
+peace. Though seas and mountains, and vast regions lay between you,
+still you would hate such a man without seeing him. But these men will
+stick to your eyes, and when they can, to your very throats; for what
+fences will be strong enough for us to restrain savage beasts?--Oh,
+but the result of war is uncertain. It is at all events in the power
+of brave men, such as you ought to be, to display your valour, (for
+certainly brave men can do that,) and not to fear the caprice of
+fortune.
+
+But since it is not only courage but wisdom also which is expected
+from this order, (although these qualities appear scarcely possible to
+be separated, still let us separate them here,) courage bids us fight,
+inflames our just hatred, urges us to the conflict, summons us to
+danger. What says wisdom? She uses more cautious counsels, she
+is provident for the future, she is in every respect more on the
+defensive. What then does she think? for we must obey her, and we are
+bound to consider that the best thing which is arranged in the most
+prudent manner. If she enjoins me to think nothing of more consequence
+than my life, not to fight at the risk of my life, but to avoid all
+danger, I will then ask her whether I am also to become a slave when
+I have obeyed all these injunctions? If she says, yes, I for one will
+not listen to that Wisdom, however learned she may be, but if the
+answer is, Preserve your life and your safety, Preserve your fortune,
+"Preserve your estate, still, however, considering all these things of
+less value than liberty, therefore enjoy these things if you can do
+so consistently with the freedom of the republic, and do not abandon
+liberty for them, but sacrifice them for liberty, as proofs of the
+injury you have sustained,"--then I shall think that I really am
+listening to the voice of Wisdom, and I will obey her as a god.
+Therefore, if when we have received those men we can still be free,
+let us subdue our hatred to them, and endure peace, but if there can
+be no tranquillity while those men are in safety, then let us rejoice
+that an opportunity of fighting them is put in our power. For so,
+either (these men being conquered) we shall enjoy the republic
+victorious, or, if we be defeated (but may Jupiter avert that
+disaster), we shall live, if not with an actual breath, at all events
+in the renown of our valour.
+
+IV. But Marcus Lepidus, having been a second time styled Imperator,
+Pontifex Maximus, a man who deserved excellently well of the republic
+in the last civil war, exhorts us to peace. No one, O conscript
+fathers, has greater weight with me than Marcus Lepidus, both on
+account of his personal virtues and by reason of the dignity of his
+family. There are also private reasons which influence me, such as
+great services he has done me, and some kindnesses which I have done
+him. But the greatest of his services I consider to be his being of
+such a disposition as he is towards the republic, which has at all
+times been dearer to me than my life. For when by his influence he
+inclined Magnus Pompeius, a most admirable young man, the son of
+one of the greatest of men, to peace, and without arms released the
+republic from imminent danger of civil war, by so doing he laid me
+under as great obligations as it was in the power of any man to do.
+Therefore I proposed to decree to him the most ample honours that were
+in my power, in which you agreed with me, nor have I ceased both to
+think and speak in the highest terms of him. The republic has Marcus
+Lepidus bound to it by many pledges. He is a man of the highest rank,
+of the greatest honours, he has the most honourable priesthood, and
+has received numberless distinctions in the city. There are monuments
+of himself, and of his brother, and of his ancestors; he has a most
+excellent wife, children such as any man might desire, an ample family
+estate, untainted with the blood of his fellow-citizens. No citizen
+has been injured by him; many have been delivered from misery by his
+kindness and pity. Such a man and such a citizen may indeed err in
+his opinion, but it is quite impossible for him in inclination to be
+unfriendly to the republic.
+
+Marcus Lepidus is desirous of peace. He does well especially if he can
+make such a peace as he made lately, owing to which the republic will
+behold the son of Cnaeus Pompeius, and will receive him in her bosom
+and embrace; and will think, that not he alone, but that she also is
+restored to herself with him. This was the reason why you decreed to
+him a statue in the rostra with an honourable inscription, and why
+you voted him a triumph in his absence. For although he had performed
+great exploits in war, and such as well deserved a triumph, still for
+that he might not have had that given to him which was not given to
+Lucius aemilius, nor to aemilianus Scipio, nor to the former Africanus,
+nor to Marius, nor to Pompeius, who had the conduct of greater wars
+than he had, but because he had put an end to a civil war in perfect
+silence, the first moment that it was in his power, on that account
+you conferred on him the greatest honours.
+
+V. Do you think, then, O Marcus Lepidus, that the Antonii will be to
+the republic such citizens as she will find Pompeius? In the one there
+is modesty, gravity, moderation, integrity; in them (and when I speak
+of them, I do not mean to omit one of that band of pirates), there is
+lust, and wickedness, and savage audacity capable of every crime. I
+entreat of you, O conscript fathers, which of you fails to see this
+which Fortune herself, who is called blind, sees? For, saving the acts
+of Caesar, which we maintain for the sake of harmony, his own house
+will be open to Pompeius, and he will redeem it for the same sum for
+which Antonius bought it. Yes, I say the son of Cnaeus Pompeius will
+buy back his house. O melancholy circumstance! But these things have
+been already lamented long and bitterly enough. You have voted a sum
+of money to Cnaeus Pompeius, equal to that which his conquering
+enemy had appropriated to himself of his father's property in the
+distribution of his booty. But I claim permission to manage this
+distribution myself, as due to my connexion and intimacy with his
+father. He will buy back the villas, the houses, and some of the
+estates in the city which Antonius is in possession of. For as for the
+silver plate, the garments, the furniture, and the wine which that
+glutton has made away with, those things he will lose without
+forfeiting his equanimity. The Alban and Firmian villas he will
+recover from Dolabella; the Tusculan villa he will also recover from
+Antonius. And these Ansers who are joining in the attack on Mutina and
+in the blockade of Decimus Brutus will be driven from his Falernian
+villa. There are many others, perhaps, who will be made to disgorge
+their plunder, but their names escape my memory. I say, too, that
+those men who are not in the number of our enemies, will be made to
+restore the possessions of Pompeius to his son for the price at which
+they bought them. It was the act of a sufficiently rash man, not to
+say an audacious one, to touch a single particle of that property;
+but who will have the face to endeavour to retain it, when its most
+illustrious owner is restored to his country? Will not that man
+restore his plunder, who enfolding the patrimony of his master in
+his embrace, clinging to the treasure like a dragon, the slave of
+Pompeius, the freedman of Caesar, has seized upon his estates in
+the Lucanian district? And as for those seven hundred millions of
+sesterces which you, O conscript fathers, promised to the young man,
+they will be recovered in such a manner that the son of Cnaeus Pompeius
+will appear to have been established by you in his patrimony. This
+is what the senate must do; the Roman people will do the rest
+with respect to that family which was at one time one of the most
+honourable it ever saw. In the first place, it will invest him with
+his father's honour as an augur, for which rank I will nominate him
+and promote his election, in order that I may restore to the son what
+I received from the father. Which of these men will the Roman people
+most willingly sanction as the augur of the all-powerful and
+all-great Jupiter, whose interpreters and messengers we have been
+appointed,--Pompeius or Antonius? It seems indeed, to me, that Fortune
+has managed this by the divine aid of the immortal gods, that, leaving
+the acts of Caesar firmly ratified, the son of Cnaeus Pompeius might
+still be able to recover the dignities and fortunes of his father.
+
+VI. And I think, O conscript fathers, that we ought not to pass over
+that fact either in silence,--that those illustrious men who are
+acting as ambassadors, Lucius Paullus, Quintus Thermus, and Caius
+Fannius, whose inclinations towards the republic you are thoroughly
+acquainted with, and also with the constancy and firmness of that
+favourable inclination, report that they turned aside to Marseilles
+for the purpose of conferring with Pompeius, and that they found him
+in a disposition very much inclined to go with his troops to Mutina,
+if he had not been afraid of offending the minds of the veterans. But
+he is a true son of that father who did quite as many things wisely
+as he did bravely. Therefore you perceive that his courage was quite
+ready, and that prudence was not wanting to him.
+
+And this, too, is what Marcus Lepidus ought to take care of,--not
+to appear to act in any respect with more arrogance than suits his
+character. For if he alarms us with his army, he is forgetting that
+that army belongs to the senate, and to the Roman people, and to the
+whole republic, not to himself. "But he has the power to use it as
+if it were his own." What then? Does it become virtuous men to do
+everything which it is in their power to do? Suppose it be a base
+thing? Suppose it be a mischievous thing? Suppose it be absolutely
+unlawful to do it?
+
+But what can be more base, or more shameful, or more utterly
+unbecoming, than to lead an army against the senate, against one's
+fellow-citizens, against one's country? Or what can deserve greater
+blame than doing that which is unlawful? But it is not lawful for any
+one to lead an army against his country? if indeed we say that that is
+lawful which is permitted by the laws or by the usages and established
+principles of our ancestors. For it does not follow that whatever
+a man has power to do is lawful for him to do; nor, if he be not
+hindered, is he on that account permitted to do so. For to you, O
+Lepidus, as to your ancestors, your country has given an army to be
+employed in her cause. With this army you are to repel the enemy, you
+are to extend the boundaries of the empire, you are to obey the senate
+and people of Rome, if by any chance they direct you to some other
+object.
+
+VII. If these are your thoughts, then are you really Marcus Lepidus
+the Pontifex Maximus, the great-grandson of Marcus Lepidus, Pontifex
+Maximus. If you judge that everything is lawful for men to do that
+they have the power to do, then beware lest you seem to prefer acting
+on precedents set by those who have no connexion with you, and these,
+too, modern precedents, to being guided by the ancient examples in
+your own family. But if you interpose your authority without having
+recourse to arms, in that case indeed I praise you more; but beware
+lest this thing itself be quite unnecessary. For although there is all
+the authority in you that there ought to be in a man of the highest
+rank, still the senate itself does not despise itself; nor was it ever
+more wise, more firm, more courageous. We are all hurried on with the
+most eager zeal to recover our freedom. Such a general ardour on the
+part of the senate and people of Rome cannot be extinguished by the
+authority of any one: we hate a man who would extinguish it; we are
+angry with him, and resist him; our arms cannot be wrested from our
+hands; we are deaf to all signals for retreat, to all recal from the
+combat. We hope for the happiest success; we will prefer enduring the
+bitterest disaster to being slaves. Caesar has collected an invincible
+army. Two perfectly brave consuls are present with their forces. The
+various and considerable reinforcements of Lucius Plancus, consul
+elect, are not wanting. The contest is for the safety of Decimus
+Brutus. One furious gladiator, with a band of most infamous robbers,
+is waging war against his country, against our household gods, against
+our altars and our hearths, against four consuls. Shall we yield to
+him? Shall we listen to the conditions which he proposes? Shall we
+believe it possible for peace to be made with him?
+
+VIII. But there is danger of our being overwhelmed. I have no fear
+that the man who cannot enjoy his own most abundant fortunes, unless
+all the good men are saved, will betray his own safety. It is nature
+which first makes good citizens, and then fortune assists them. For it
+is for the advantage of all good men that the republic should be safe;
+but that advantage appears more clearly in the case of those who are
+fortunate. Who is more fortunate than Lentulus, as I said before, and
+who is more sensible? The Roman people saw his sorrow and his tears at
+the Lupercal festival. They saw how miserable, how overwhelmed he was
+when Antonius placed a diadem on Caesar's head and preferred being his
+slave to being his colleague. And even if he had been able to abstain
+from his other crimes and wickednesses, still on account of that one
+single action I should think him worthy of all punishment. For even if
+he himself was calculated to be a slave, why should he impose a master
+on us? And if his childhood had borne the lusts of those men who were
+tyrants over him, was he on that account to prepare a master and a
+tyrant to lord it over our children? Therefore since that man was
+slain, he himself has behaved to all others in the same manner as he
+wished him to behave to us.
+
+For in what country of barbarians was there ever so foul and cruel a
+tyrant as Antonius, escorted by the arms of barbarians, has proved in
+this city? When Caesar was exercising the supreme power, we used to
+come into the senate, if not with freedom, at all events with safety.
+But under this arch-pirate, (for why should I say tyrant?) these
+benches were occupied by Itureans. On a sudden he hastened to
+Brundusium, in order to come against this city from thence with
+a regular army. He deluged Suessa, a most beautiful town, now of
+municipal citizens, formerly of most honourable colonists, with the
+blood of the bravest soldiers. At Brundusium he massacred the chosen
+centurions of the Martial legion in the lap of his wife, who was not
+only most avaricious but also most cruel. After that with what fury,
+with what eagerness did he hurry on to the city, that is to say, to
+the slaughter of every virtuous man! But at that time the immortal
+gods brought to us a protector whom we had never seen nor expected.
+
+IX. For the incredible and godlike virtue of Caesar checked the cruel
+and frantic onslaught of that robber, whom then that madman believed
+that he was injuring with his edicts, ignorant that all the charges
+which he was falsely alleging against that most righteous young man,
+were all very appropriate to the recollections of his own childhood.
+He entered the city, with what an escort, or rather with what a troop!
+when on the right hand and on the left, amid the groans of the Roman
+people, he was threatening the owners of property, taking notes of the
+houses, and openly promising to divide the city among his followers.
+He returned to his soldiers; then came that mischievous assembly at
+Tibur. From thence he hurried to the city; the senate was convened at
+the Capitol. A decree with the authority of the consuls was prepared
+for proscribing the young man; when all on a sudden (for he was aware
+that the Martial legion had encamped at Alba) news is brought him of
+the proceedings of the fourth legion.
+
+Alarmed at that, he abandoned his intention of submitting a motion to
+the senate respecting Caesar. He departed not by the regular roads, but
+by the by-lanes, in the robe of a general; and on that very self-same
+day he trumped up a countless number of resolutions of the senate; all
+of which he published even before they were drawn up. From thence it
+was not a journey, but a race and flight into Gaul. He thought that
+Caesar was pursuing him with the fourth legion, with the martial
+legion, with the veterans, whose very name he could not endure for
+fright. Then, as he was making his way into Gaul, Decimus Brutus
+opposed him; who preferred being himself surrounded by the waves of
+the whole war, to allowing him either to retreat or advance; and who
+put Mutina on him as a sort of bridle to his exultation. And when he
+had blockaded that city with his works and fortifications, and when
+the dignity of a most flourishing colony, and the majesty of a consul
+elect, were both insufficient to deter him from his parricidal
+treason, then, (I call you, and the Roman people, and all the gods who
+preside over this city, to witness,) against my will, and in spite of
+my resistance and remonstrance, three ambassadors of consular rank
+were sent to that robber, to that leader of gladiators, Marcus
+Antonius.
+
+Who ever was such a barbarian? Who was ever so savage? so brutal? He
+would not listen to them; he gave them no answer; and he not only
+despised and showed that he considered of no importance those men who
+were with him, but still more us, by whom these men had been sent. And
+afterwards what wickedness, or what crime was there which that traitor
+abstained from? He blockaded your colonists, and the army of the Roman
+people, and your general, and your consul elect. He lays waste the
+lands of a nation of most excellent citizens. Like a most inhuman
+enemy he threatens all virtuous men with crosses and tortures.
+
+X. Now what peace, O Marcus Lepidus, can exist with this man? when it
+does not seem that there is even any punishment which the Roman people
+can think adequate to his crimes?
+
+But if any one has hitherto been able to doubt the fact, that there
+can be nothing whatever in common between this order and the Roman
+people and that most detestable beast, let him at least cease to
+entertain such a doubt, when he becomes acquainted with this letter
+which I have just received, it having been sent to me by Hirtius the
+consul. While I read it, and while I briefly discuss each paragraph, I
+beg, O conscript fathers, that you will listen to me most attentively,
+as you have hitherto done.
+
+"Antonius to Hirtius and Caesar."
+
+He does not call himself imperator, nor Hirtius consul, nor Caesar
+pro-praetor. This is cunningly done enough. He preferred laying aside
+a title to which he had no right himself, to giving them their proper
+style.
+
+"When I heard of the death of Caius Trebonius, I was not more rejoiced
+than grieved."
+
+Take notice why he says he rejoiced, why he says that he was grieved;
+and then you will be more easily able to decide the question of peace.
+
+"It was a matter of proper rejoicing that a wicked man had paid the
+penalty due to the bones and ashes of a most illustrious man, and that
+the divine power of the gods had shown itself before the end of the
+current year, by showing the chastisement of that parricide already
+inflicted in some cases, and impending in others."
+
+O you Spartacus! for what name is more fit for you? you whose
+abominable wickedness is such as to make even Catiline seem tolerable.
+Have you dared to write that it is a matter of rejoicing that
+Trebonius has suffered punishment? that Trebonius was wicked? What was
+his crime, except that on the ides of March he withdrew you from the
+destruction which you had deserved? Come; you rejoice at this; let us
+see what it is that excites your indignation.
+
+"That Dolabella should at this time have been pronounced a public
+enemy because he has slain an assassin; and that the son of a buffoon
+should appear dearer to the Roman people than Caius Caesar, the father
+of his country, are circumstances to be lamented."
+
+Why should you be sad because Dolabella has been pronounced a public
+enemy? Why? Are you not aware that you yourself--by the fact of an
+enlistment having taken place all over Italy, and of the consuls being
+sent forth to war, and of Caesar having received great honours, and
+of the garb of war having been assumed--have also been pronounced an
+enemy? And what reason is there, O you wicked man, for lamenting that
+Dolabella has been declared an enemy by the senate? a body which you
+indeed think of no consequence at all; but you make it your main
+object in waging war utterly to destroy the senate, and to make all
+the rest of those who are either virtuous or wealthy follow the fate
+of the highest order of all. But he calls him the son of a buffoon. As
+if that noble Roman knight the father of Trebonius were unknown to us.
+And does he venture to look down on any one because of the meanness of
+his birth, when he has himself children by Fadia?
+
+XL "But it is the bitterest thing of all that you, O Aulus Hirtius,
+who have been distinguished by Caesar's kindness, and who have been
+left by him in a condition which you yourself marvel at. [lacuna]"
+
+I cannot indeed deny that Aulus Hirtius was distinguished by Caesar,
+but such distinctions are only of value when conferred on virtue and
+industry. But you, who cannot deny that you also were distinguished
+by Caesar, what would you have been if he had not showered so many
+kindnesses on you? Where would your own good qualities have borne you?
+Where would your birth have conducted you? You would have spent the
+whole period of your manhood in brothels, and cookshops, and in
+gambling and drinking, as you used to do when you were always burying
+your brains and your beard in the laps of actresses.
+
+"And you too, O boy--"
+
+He calls him a boy whom he has not only experienced and shall again
+experience to be a man, but one of the bravest of men. It is indeed
+the name appropriate to his age; but he is the last man in the world
+who ought to use it, when it is his own madness that has opened to
+this boy the path to glory.
+
+"You who owe everything to his name--"
+
+He does indeed owe everything, and nobly is he paying it. For if he
+was the father of his country, as you call him, (I will see hereafter
+what my opinion of that matter is,) why is not this youth still more
+truly our father, to whom it certainly is owing that we are now
+enjoying life, saved out of your most guilty hands!
+
+"Are taking pains to have Dolabella legally condemned."
+
+A base action, truly! by which the authority of this most honourable
+order is defended against the insanity of a most inhuman gladiator.
+
+"And to effect the release of this poisoner from blockade."
+
+Do you dare to call that man a poisoner who has found a remedy against
+your own poisoning tricks? and whom you are besieging in such a
+manner, O you new Hannibal, (or if there was ever any abler general
+than he,) as to blockade yourself, and to be unable to extricate
+yourself from your present position, should you be ever so desirous to
+do so? Suppose you retreat; they will all pursue you from all sides.
+Suppose you stay where you are; you will be caught. You are very
+right, certainly, to call him a poisoner, by whom you see that your
+present disastrous condition has been brought about.
+
+"In order that Cassius and Brutus may become as powerful as possible."
+
+Would you suppose that he is speaking of Censorinus, or of Ventidius,
+or of the Antonii themselves. But why should they be unwilling that
+those men should become powerful, who are not only most excellent and
+nobly born men, but who are also united with them in the defence of
+the republic?
+
+"In fact, you look upon the existing circumstances as you did on the
+former ones."
+
+What can he mean?
+
+"You used to call the camp of Pompeius the senate."
+
+XII. Should we rather call your camp the senate? In which you are the
+only man of consular rank, you whose whole consulship is effaced from
+every monument and register; and two praetors, who are afraid that
+they will lose something by us,--a groundless fear. For we are
+maintaining all the grants made by Caesar; and men of praetorian rank,
+Philadelphus Annius, and that innocent Gallius; and men of aedilitian
+rank, he on whom I have spent so much of my lungs and voice,
+Bestia, and that patron of good faith and cheater of his creditors,
+Trebellius, and that bankrupt and ruined man Quintus Caelius, and that
+support of the friends of Antonius Cotyla Varius, whom Antonius for
+his amusement caused at a banquet to be flogged with thongs by the
+public slaves. Men of septemviral rank, Lento and Nucula, and then
+that delight and darling of the Roman people, Lucius Antonius. And for
+tribunes, first of all two tribunes elect, Tullus Hostilius, who was
+so full of his privileges as to write up his name on the gate of Rome;
+and who, when he found himself unable to betray his general, deserted
+him. The other tribune elect is a man of the name of Viseius; I know
+nothing about him; but I hear that he is (as they say) a bold robber;
+who, however, they say was once a bathing man at Pisaurum, and a
+very good hand at mixing the water. Then there are others too, of
+tribunitian rank: in the first place, Titus Plancus; a man who, if
+he had had any affection for the senate, would never have burnt the
+senate-house. Having been condemned for which wickedness, he returned
+to that city by force of arms from which he was driven by the power of
+the law. But, however, this is a case common to him and to many others
+who are very unlike him. But this is quite true which men are in the
+habit of saying of this Plancus in a proverbial way, that it is quite
+impossible for him to die unless his legs are broken.[50] They are
+broken, and still he lives. But this, like many others, is a service
+that has been done us by Aquila.
+
+XIII. There is also in that camp Decius, descended, as I believe, from
+the great Decius Mus; accordingly he gained[51] the gifts of Caesar.
+And so after a long interval the recollection of the Decii is renewed
+by this illustrious man. And how can I pass over Saxa Decidius, a
+fellow imported from the most distant nations, in order that we might
+see that man tribune of the people whom we had never beheld as a
+citizen? There is also one of the Sasernae; but all of them have such
+a resemblance to one another, that I may make a mistake as to their
+first names. Nor must I omit Exitius, the brother of Philadelphus the
+quaestor; lest, if I were to be silent about that most illustrious
+young man, I should seem to be envying Antonius. There is also a
+gentleman of the name of Asinius, a voluntary senator, having been
+elected by himself. He saw the senate-house open after the death of
+Caesar, he changed his shoes, and in a moment became a conscript
+father. Sextus Albedius I do not know, but still I have not fallen in
+with any one so fond of evil-speaking, as to deny that he is worthy of
+a place in the senate of Antonius.
+
+I dare say that I have passed over some names; but still I could not
+refrain from mentioning those who did occur to me. Relying then on
+this senate, he looks down on the senate which supported Pompeius, in
+which ten of us were men of consular rank; and if they were all alive
+now this war would never have arisen at all. Audacity would have
+succumbed to authority. But what great protection there would have
+been in the rest may be understood from this, that I, when left alone
+of all that band, with your assistance crushed and broke the audacity
+of that triumphant robber.
+
+XIV. But if Fortune had not taken from us not only Servius Sulpicius,
+and before him, his colleague Marcus Marcellus,--what citizens! What
+men! If the republic had been able to retain the two consuls, men most
+devoted to their country, who were driven together out of Italy; and
+Lucius Afranius, that consummate general; and Publius Lentulus, a
+citizen who displayed his extraordinary virtue on other occasions, and
+especially in the securing my safe return; and Bibulus, whose constant
+and firm attachment to the republic has at all times been deservedly
+praised; and Lucius Domitius, that most excellent citizen; and Appius
+Claudius, a man equally distinguished for nobleness of birth and for
+attachment to the state; and Publius Scipio, a most illustrious man,
+closely resembling his ancestors. Certainly with these men of consular
+rank,[52] the senate which supported Pompeius was not to be despised.
+
+Which, then, was more just, which was more advantageous for the
+republic, that Cnaeus Pompeius, or that Antonius the brother who
+bought all Pompeius's property, should live? And then what men of
+praetorian rank were there with us! the chief of whom was Marcus Cato,
+being indeed the chief man of any nation in the world for virtue. Why
+need I speak of the other most illustrious men? you know them all. I
+am more afraid lest you should think me tedious for enumerating so
+many, than ungrateful for passing over any one. And what men of
+aedilitian rank! and of tribunitian rank! and of quaestorian rank!
+Why need I make a long story of it, so great was the dignity of the
+senators of our party, so great too were their numbers, that those men
+have need of some very valid excuse who did not join that camp. Now
+listen to the rest of the letter.
+
+XV. "You have the defeated Cicero for your general."
+
+I am the more glad to hear that word "general," because he certainly
+uses it against his will, for as for his saying "defeated," I do not
+mind that, for it is my fate that I can neither be victorious nor
+defeated without the republic being so at the same time.
+
+"You are fortifying Macedonia with armies".
+
+Yes, indeed, and we have wrested one from your brother, who does not
+in the least degenerate from you.
+
+"You have entrusted Africa to Varus, who has been twice taken
+prisoner".
+
+Here he thinks that he is making out a case against his own brother
+Lucius.
+
+"You have sent Capius into Syria".
+
+Do you not see then, O Antonius, that the whole world is open to our
+party, but that you have no spot out of your own fortifications, where
+you can set your foot?
+
+"You have allowed Casca to discharge the office of tribune".
+
+What then? Were we to remove a man, as if he had been Marullus,[53]
+or Caesetius, to whom we own it, that this and many other things like
+this can never happen for the future?
+
+"You have taken away from the Luperci the revenues which Julius Caesar
+assigned to them."
+
+Does he dare to make mention of the Luperci? Does he not shudder at
+the recollection of that day on which, smelling of wine, reeking with
+perfumes, and naked, he dared to exhort the indignant Roman people to
+embrace slavery?
+
+"You, by a resolution of the senate, have removed the colonies of the
+veterans which had been legally settled".
+
+Have we removed them, or have we rather ratified a law which was
+passed in the comitia centunata? See, rather, whether it is not you
+who have ruined these veterans (those at least who are ruined,) and
+settled them in a place from which they themselves now feel that they
+shall never be able to make their escape.
+
+"You are promising to restore to the people of Marseilles what has
+been taken from them by the laws of war."
+
+I am not going to discuss the laws of war. It is a discussion far more
+easy to begin than necessary. But take notice of this, O conscript
+fathers, what a born enemy to the republic Antonius is, who is so
+violent in his hatred of that city which he knows to have been at all
+times most firmly attached to this republic.
+
+XVI. "[Do you not know] that no one of the party of Pompeius, who is
+still alive, can, by the Hirtian law, possess any rank?"
+
+What, I should like to know, is the object of now making mention of
+the Hirtian law?--a law of which I believe the framer himself repents
+no less than those against whom it was passed. According to my
+opinion, it is utterly wrong to call it a law at all; and, even if it
+be a law, we ought not to think it a law of Hirtius.
+
+"You have furnished Brutus with money belonging to Apuleius."
+
+Well? Suppose the republic had furnished that excellent man with all
+its treasures and resources, what good man would have disapproved of
+it? For without money he could not have supported an army, nor without
+an army could he have taken your brother prisoner.
+
+"You have praised the execution of Paetus and Menedemus, men who had
+been presented with the freedom of the city, and who were united by
+ties of hospitality to Caesar."
+
+We do not praise what we have never even heard of; we were very
+likely, in such a state of confusion, and such a critical period of
+the republic, to busy our minds about two worthless Greeklings!
+
+"You took no notice of Theopompus having been stripped, and driven out
+by Trebonius, and compelled to flee to Alexandria."
+
+The senate has indeed been very guilty! We have taken no notice of
+that great man Theopompus! Why, who on earth knows or cares where he
+is, or what he is doing; or, indeed, whether he is alive or dead? "You
+endure the sight of Sergius Galba in your camp, armed with the same
+dagger with which he slew Caesar."
+
+I shall make you no reply at all about Galba; a most gallant and
+courageous citizen. He will meet you face to face; and he being
+present, and that dagger which you reproach him with, shall give you
+your answer.
+
+"You have enlisted my soldiers, and many veterans, under the pretence
+of intending the destruction of those men who slew Caesar; and then,
+when they expected no such step, you have led them on to attack their
+quaestor, their general, and their former comrades!"
+
+No doubt we deceived them; we humbugged them completely! no doubt the
+Martial legion, the fourth legion, and the veterans had no idea what
+was going on! They were not following the authority of the senate,
+or the liberty of the Roman people.--They were anxious to avenge the
+death of Caesar, which they all regarded as an act of destiny! No
+doubt you were the person whom they were anxious to see safe, and
+happy, and flourishing!
+
+XVII. Oh miserable man, not only in fact, but also in the circumstance
+of not perceiving yourself how miserable you are! But listen to the
+most serious charge of all.
+
+"In fact, what have you not sanctioned,--what have you not done? what
+would be done if he were to come to life again, by?--"
+
+By whom? For I suppose he means to bring forward some instance of a
+very wicked man.
+
+"Cnaeus Pompeius himself?"
+
+Oh how base must we be, if indeed we have been imitating Cnaeus
+Pompeius!
+
+"Or his son, if he could be at home?"
+
+He soon will be at home, believe me; for in a very few days he will
+enter on his home, and on his father's villas.
+
+"Lastly, you declare that peace cannot be made unless I either allow
+Brutus to quit Mutina, or supply him with corn."
+
+It is others who say that: I say, that even if you were to do so,
+there never could be peace between this city and you.
+
+"What? is this the opinion of those veteran soldiers, to whom as yet
+either course is open?"
+
+I do not see that there is any course so open to them, as now to begin
+and attack that general whom they previously were so zealous and
+unanimous in defending.[54]
+
+"Since you yourselves have sold yourselves for flatteries and poisoned
+gifts".
+
+Are those men depraved and corrupted, who have been persuaded to
+pursue a most detestable enemy with most righteous war?
+
+"But you say, you are bringing assistance to troops who are hemmed in.
+I have no objection to their being saved, and departing wherever you
+wish, if they only allow that man to be put to death who has deserved
+it."
+
+How very kind of him! The soldiers availing themselves of the
+liberality of Antonius have deserted their general, and have fled in
+alarm to his enemy, and if it had not been for them, Dolabella, in
+offering the sacrifice which he did to the shade of his general, would
+not have been beforehand with Antonius in propitiating the spirit of
+his colleague by a similar offering.
+
+"You write me word that there has been mention of peace made in
+the senate, and that five ambassadors of consular rank have been
+appointed. It is hard to believe that those men, who drove me in haste
+from the city, when I offered the fairest conditions, and when I was
+even thinking of relaxing somewhat of them, should now think of acting
+with moderation or humanity. And it is hardly probable, that those
+men who have pronounced Dolabella a public enemy for a most righteous
+action, should bring themselves to spare us who are influenced by the
+same sentiments as he".
+
+Does it appear a trifling matter, that he confesses himself a partner
+with Dolabella in all his atrocities? Do you not see that all these
+crimes flow from one source? He himself confesses, shrewdly and
+correctly enough, that those who have pronounced Dolabella a public
+enemy for a most righteous action (for so it appears to Antonius),
+cannot possibly spare him who agrees with Dolabella in opinion.
+
+XVIII. What can you do with a man who puts on paper and records the
+fact, that his agreement with Dolabella is so complete, that he would
+kill Trebonius, and, if he could, Brutus and Cassius too, with every
+circumstance of torture; and inflict the same punishment on us also?
+Certainly, a man who makes so pious and fair a treaty is a citizen to
+be taken care of! He, also, complains that the conditions which he
+offered, those reasonable and modest conditions, were rejected;
+namely, that he was to have the further Gaul,--the province the
+most suitable of all for renewing and carrying on the war; that the
+legionaries of the Alauda should be judges in the third decury; that
+is to say, that there shall be an asylum for all crimes, to the
+indelible disgrace of the republic; that his own acts should be
+ratified, his,--when not one trace of his consulship has been allowed
+to remain! He showed his regard also for the interests of Lucius
+Antonius, who had been a most equitable surveyor of private and public
+domains, with Nucula and Lento for his colleagues.
+
+"Consider then, both of you, whether it is more becoming and more
+advantageous for your party, for you to seek to avenge the death of
+Trebonius, or that of Caesar; and whether it is more reasonable
+for you and me to meet in battle, in order that the cause of the
+Pompeians, which has so frequently had its throat cut, may the more
+easily revive; or to agree together, so as not to be a laughing-stock
+to our enemies."
+
+If its throat had been cut, it never could revive. "Which," says he,
+"is more becoming." In this war he talks of what is becoming! "And
+more advantageous for your party."--"Parties," you senseless man, is
+a suitable expression for the forum, or the senate house. You have
+declared a wicked war against your country; you are attacking Mutina;
+you are besieging the consul elect; two consuls are carrying on war
+against you; and with them, Caesar, the propraetor; all Italy is armed
+against you; and then do you call yours "a party," instead of a revolt
+from the republic? "To seek to avenge the death of Trebonius, or that
+of Caesar." We have avenged Trebonius sufficiently by pronouncing
+Dolabella a public enemy. The death of Caesar is best defended by
+oblivion and silence. But take notice what his object is.--When
+he thinks that the death of Caesar ought to be revenged, he is
+threatening with death, not those only who perpetrated that action,
+but those also who were not indignant at it.
+
+XIX. "Men who will count the destruction of either you or me gain
+to them. A spectacle which as yet Fortune herself has taken care to
+avoid, unwilling to see two armies which belong to one body fighting,
+with Cicero acting as master of the show; a fellow who is so far happy
+that he has cajoled you both with the same compliments as those with
+which he boasted that he had deceived Caesar."
+
+He proceeds in his abuse of me, as if he had been very fortunate in
+all his former reproaches of me; but I will brand him with the
+most thoroughly deserved marks of infamy, and pillory him for the
+everlasting recollection of posterity. I a "master of the show of
+gladiators!" indeed he is not wholly wrong, for I do wish to see the
+worst party slain, and the best victorious. He writes that "whichever
+of them are destroyed we shall count as so much gain." Admirable gain,
+when, if you, O Antonius, are victorious, (may the gods avert such a
+disaster!) the death of those men who depart from life untortured will
+be accounted happy! He says that Hirtius and Caesar "have been cajoled
+by me by the same compliments." I should like to know what compliment
+has been as yet paid to Hirtius by me; for still more and greater
+ones than have been paid him already are due to Caesar. But do you,
+O Antonius, dare to say that Caesar, the father, was deceived by me?
+You, it was you, I say, who really slew him at the Lupercal games.
+Why, O most ungrateful of men, have you abandoned your office of
+priest to him? But remark now the admirable wisdom and consistency of
+this great and illustrious man.
+
+"I am quite resolved to brook no insult either to myself or to my
+friends; nor to desert that party which Pompeius hated, nor to allow
+the veterans to be removed from their abodes; nor to allow individuals
+to be dragged out to torture, nor to violate the faith which I pledged
+to Dolabella."
+
+I say nothing of the rest of this sentence, "the faith pledged to
+Dolabella," to that most holy man, this pious gentleman will by no
+means violate. What faith? Was it a pledge to murder every virtuous
+citizen, to partition the city and Italy, to distribute the provinces
+among, and to hand them over to be plundered by, their followers?
+For what else was there which could have been ratified by treaty
+and mutual pledges between Antonius and Dolabella, those foul and
+parricidal traitors?
+
+"Nor to violate my treaty of alliance with Lepidus, the most
+conscientious of men."
+
+You have any alliance with Lepidus or with any (I will not say
+virtuous citizen, as he is, but with any) man in his senses! Your
+object is to make Lepidus appear either an impious man, or a madman.
+But you are doing no good, (although it is a hard matter to speak
+positively of another,) especially with a man like Lepidus, whom I
+will never fear, but I shall hope good things of him unless I am
+prevented from doing so. Lepidus wished to recal you from your frenzy,
+not to be the assistant of your insanity. But you seek your friends
+not only among conscientious men, but among _most_ conscientious men.
+And you actually, so godlike is your piety, invent a new word to
+express it which has no existence in the Latin language.
+
+"Nor to betray Plancus, the partner of my counsels."
+
+Plancus, the partner of your counsels? He, whose ever memorable and
+divine virtue brings a light to the republic: (unless, mayhap, you
+think that it is as a reinforcement to you that he has come with those
+most gallant legions, and with a numerous Gallic force of both cavalry
+and infantry); and who, if before his arrival you have not by your
+punishment made atonement to the republic for your wickedness, will be
+chief leader in this war. For although the first succours that arrive
+are more useful to the republic, yet the last are the more acceptable.
+
+XX. However, at last he recollects himself and begins to philosophize.
+
+"If the immortal gods assist me, as I trust that they will, going on
+my way with proper feelings, I shall live happily; but if another fate
+awaits me, I have already a foretaste of joy in the certainty of your
+punishment. For if the Pompeians when defeated are so insolent, you
+will be sure to experience what they will be when victorious."
+
+You are very welcome to your foretaste of joy. For you are at war not
+only with the Pompeians, but with the entire republic. Every one, gods
+and men, the highest rank, the middle class, the lowest dregs of the
+people, citizens and foreigners, men and women, free men and slaves,
+all hate you. We saw this the other day on some false news that came;
+but we shall soon see it from the way in which true news is received.
+And if you ponder these things with yourself a little, you will die
+with more equanimity, and greater comfort.
+
+"Lastly, this is the sum of my opinion and determination; I will bear
+with the insults offered me by my friends, if they themselves are
+willing to forget that they have offered them; or if they are prepared
+to unite with me in avenging Caesar's death."
+
+Now that they know this resolution of Antonius, do you think that
+Aulus Hirtius and Caius Pansa, the consuls, can hesitate to pass over
+to Antonius? to besiege Brutus? to be eager to attack Mutina? Why do I
+say Hirtius and Pansa? Will Caesar, that young man of singular piety,
+be able to restrain himself from seeking to avenge the injuries of his
+father in the blood of Decimus Brutus? Therefore, as soon as they had
+read this letter, the course which they adopted was to approach nearer
+to the fortifications. And on this account we ought to consider Caesar
+a still more admirable young man; and that a still greater kindness of
+the immortal gods which gave him to the republic, as he has never been
+misled by the specious use of his father's name; nor by any false
+idea of piety and affection. He sees clearly that the greatest piety
+consists in the salvation of one's country. But if it were a contest
+between parties, the name of which is utterly extinct, then would
+Antonius and Ventidius be the proper persons to uphold the party of
+Caesar, rather than in the first place, Caesar, a young man full of
+the greatest piety and the most affectionate recollection of his
+parent? and next to him Pansa and Hirtius, who held, (if I may use
+such an expression,) the two horns of Caesar, at the time when that
+deserved to be called a party. But what parties are these, when the
+one proposes to itself to uphold the authority of the senate, the
+liberty of the Roman people, and the safety of the republic, while
+the other fixes its eyes on the slaughter of all good men, and on the
+partition of the city and of Italy.
+
+XXI. Let us come at last to the end.
+
+"I do not believe that ambassadors are coming--".
+
+He knows me well.
+
+"To a place where war exists."
+
+Especially with the example of Dolabella before our eyes. Ambassadors,
+I should think, will have privileges more respected than two consuls
+against whom he is bearing arms; or than Caesar, whose father's priest
+he is; or than the consul elect, whom he is attacking; or than Mutina,
+which he is besieging; or than his country, which he is threatening
+with fire and sword.
+
+"When they do come I shall see what they demand."
+
+Plagues and tortures seize you! Will any one come to you, unless he
+be a man like Ventidius? We sent men of the very highest character to
+extinguish the rising conflagration; you rejected them. Shall we now
+send men when the fire has become so large and has risen to such a
+height, and when you have left yourself no possible room, not only for
+peace, but not even for a surrender?
+
+I have read you this letter, O conscript fathers, not because I
+thought it worth reading, but in order to let you see all his
+parricidal treasons revealed by his own confessions. Would Marcus
+Lepidus, that man so richly endowed with all the gifts of virtue and
+fortune, if he saw this letter, either wish for peace with this man,
+or even think it possible that peace should be made? "Sooner shall
+fire and water mingle" as some poet or other says; sooner shall
+anything in the world happen than either the republic become
+reconciled to the Antonii, or the Antonii to the republic. Those men
+are monsters, prodigies, portentous pests of the republic. It would
+be better for this city to be uplifted from its foundations and
+transported, if such a thing were possible, into other regions, where
+it should never hear of the actions or the name of the Antonii, than
+for it to see those men, driven out by the valour of Caesar, and
+hemmed in by the courage of Brutus, inside these walls. The most
+desirable thing is victory; the next best thing is to think no
+disaster too great to bear in defence of the dignity and freedom of
+one's country. The remaining alternative, I will not call it the
+third, but the lowest of all, is to undergo the greatest disgrace from
+a desire of life.
+
+Since, then, this is the case, as to the letters and messages of
+Marcus Lepidus, that most illustrious man, I agree with Servilius. And
+I further give my vote, that Magnus Pompeius, the Son of Cnaeus, has
+acted as might have been expected from the affection and zeal of his
+father and forefathers towards the republic, and from his own previous
+virtue and industry and loyal principles in promising to the senate
+and people of Rome his own assistance, and that of those men whom he
+had with him; and that that conduct of his is grateful and acceptable
+to the senate and people of Rome, and that it shall tend to his own
+honour and dignity. This may either be added to the resolution of the
+senate which is before us, or it may be separated from it and drawn up
+by itself, so as to let Pompeius be seen to be extolled in a distinct
+resolution of the senate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE FOURTEENTH (AND LAST) ORATION OF M.T. CICERO AGAINST MARCUS
+ANTONIUS. CALLED ALSO THE FOURTEENTH PHILIPPIC.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ARGUMENT.
+
+
+After the last speech was delivered, Brutus gained great advantages in
+Macedonia over Caius Antonius, and took him prisoner. He treated him
+with great lenity, so much so as to displease Cicero, who remonstrated
+with him strongly on his design of setting him at liberty. He was also
+under some apprehension as to the steadiness of Plancus's loyalty to
+the senate; but on his writing to that body to assure them of his
+obedience, Cicero procured a vote of some extraordinary honours to
+him.
+
+Cassius also about the same time was very successful in Syria, of
+which he wrote Cicero a full account. Meantime reports were being
+spread in the city by the partizans of Antonius, of his success before
+Mutina; and even of his having gained over the consuls. Cicero too was
+personally much annoyed at a report which they spread of his having
+formed the design of making himself master of the city and assuming
+the title of Dictator; but when Apuleius, one of his friends, and a
+tribune of the people, proceeded to make a speech to the people in
+Cicero's justification, the people all cried out that he had never
+done anything which was not for the advantage of the republic. About
+the same time news arrived of a victory gained over Antonius at
+Mutina.
+
+Pansa was now on the point of joining Hirtius with four new legions,
+and Antonius endeavoured to surprise him on the road before he could
+effect that junction. A severe battle ensued, in which Hirtius came to
+Pansa's aid, and Antonius was defeated with great loss. On the receipt
+of the news the populace assembled about Cicero's house, and carried
+him in triumph to the Capitol. The next day Marcus Cornutus, the
+praetor, summoned the senate to deliberate on the letters received
+from the consuls and Octavius, giving an account of the victory.
+Servilius declared his opinion that the citizens should relinquish the
+_sagum_, or robe of war; and that a supplication should be decreed in
+honour of the consuls and Octavius. Cicero rose next and delivered the
+following speech, objecting to the relinquishment of the robe of war,
+and blaming Servilius for not calling Antonius an enemy.
+
+The measures which he himself proposed were carried.
+
+
+I. IF, O conscript fathers, while I learnt from the letters which have
+been read that the army of our most wicked enemies had been defeated
+and routed, I had also learnt what we all wish for above all things,
+and which we do suppose has resulted from that victory which has
+been achieved,--namely, that Decimus Brutus had already quitted
+Mutina,--then I should without any hesitation give my vote for our
+returning to our usual dress out of joy at the safety of that citizen
+on account of whose danger it was that we adopted the robe of war.
+But before any news of that event which the city looks for with the
+greatest eagerness arrives, we have sufficient reason indeed for joy
+at this most important and most illustrious battle; but reserve, I beg
+you, your return to your usual dress for the time of complete victory.
+But the completion of this war is the safety of Decimus Brutus.
+
+But what is the meaning of this proposal that our dress shall be
+changed just for to-day, and that to-morrow we should again come forth
+in the garb of war? Rather when we have once returned to that dress
+which we wish and desire to assume, let us strive to retain it for
+ever; for this is not only discreditable, but it is displeasing also
+to the immortal gods, to leave their altars, which we have approached
+in the attire of peace, for the purpose of assuming the garb of war.
+And I notice, O conscript fathers, that there are some who favour this
+proposal: whose intention and design is, as they see that that will be
+a most glorious day for Decimus Brutus on which we return to our usual
+dress out of joy for his safety, to deprive him of this great reward,
+so that it may not be handed down to the recollection of posterity
+that the Roman people had recourse to the garb of war on account of
+the danger of one single citizen, and then returned to then gowns of
+peace on account of his safety. Take away this reason, and you will
+find no other for so absurd a proposal. But do you, O conscript
+fathers, preserve your authority, adhere to your own opinions,
+preserve in your recollection, what you have often declared, that the
+whole result of this entire war depends on the life of one most brave
+and excellent man.
+
+II. For the purpose of effecting the liberation of Decimus Brutus, the
+chief men of the state were sent as ambassadors, to give notice to
+that enemy and parricidal traitor to retire from Mutina; for the sake
+of preserving that same Decimus Brutus, Aulus Hirtius, the consul,
+went by lot to conduct the war, a man the weakness of whose bodily
+health was made up for by the strength of his courage, and encouraged
+by the hope of victory. Caesar, too, after he, with an army levied by
+his own resources and on his own authority, had delivered the republic
+from the first dangers that assailed it, in order to prevent any
+subsequent wicked attempts from being originated, departed to assist
+in the deliverance of the same Brutus, and subdued some family
+vexation which he may have felt by his attachment to his country. What
+other object had Caius Pansa in holding the levies which he did, and
+in collecting money, and in carrying the most severe resolutions of
+the senate against Antonius, and in exhorting us, and in inviting the
+Roman people to embrace the cause of liberty, except to ensure the
+deliverance of Decimus Brutus? For the Roman people in crowds demanded
+at his hands the safety of Decimus Brutus with such unanimous
+outcries, that he was compelled to prefer it not only to any
+consideration of his own personal advantage, but even to his own
+necessities. And that end we now, O conscript fathers, are entitled to
+hope is either at the point of being achieved, or is actually gained,
+but it is right for the reward of our hopes to be reserved for the
+issue and event of the business, lest we should appear either to have
+anticipated the kindness of the gods by our over precipitation, or to
+have despised the bounty of fortune through our own folly.
+
+But since the manner of your behaviour shows plainly enough what you
+think of this matter, I will come to the letters which have arrived
+from the consuls and the propraetor, after I have said a few words
+relating to the letters themselves.
+
+III. The swords, O conscript fathers, of our legions and armies have
+been stained with, or rather, I should say, dipped deep in blood in
+two battles which have taken place under the consuls, and a third,
+which has been fought under the command of Caesar. If it was the
+blood of enemies, then great is the piety of the soldiers; but it is
+nefarious wickedness if it was the blood of citizens. How long, then,
+is that man, who has surpassed all enemies in wickedness, to be spared
+the name of enemy? unless you wish to see the very swords of our
+soldiers trembling in their hands while they doubt whether they are
+piercing a citizen or an enemy. You vote a supplication; you do not
+call Antonius an enemy. Very pleasing indeed to the immortal gods will
+our thanksgivings be, very pleasing too the victims, after a multitude
+of our citizens has been slain! "For the victory," says the proposer
+of the supplication, "over wicked and audacious men." For that is what
+this most illustrious man calls them; expressions of blame suited to
+lawsuits carried on in the city, not denunciations of searing infamy
+such as deserved by internecine war. I suppose they are forging wills,
+or trespassing on their neighbours, or cheating some young men; for it
+is men implicated in these and similar practices that we are in the
+habit of terming wicked and audacious. One man, the foulest of all
+banditti, is waging an irreconcileable war against four consuls. He
+is at the same time carrying on war against the senate and people of
+Rome. He is (although he is himself hastening to destruction, through
+the disasters which he has met with) threatening all of us with
+destruction, and devastation, and torments, and tortures. He declares
+that that inhuman and savage act of Dolabella's, which no nation of
+barbarians would have owned, was done by his advice; and what he
+himself would do in this city, if this very Jupiter, who now looks
+down upon us assembled in his temple, had not repelled him from this
+temple and from these walls, he showed, in the miseries of those
+inhabitants of Parma, whom, virtuous and honourable men as they were,
+and most intimately connected with the authority of this order, and
+with the dignity of the Roman people, that villain and monster, Lucius
+Antonius, that object of the extraordinary detestation of all men,
+and (if the gods hate those whom they ought) of all the gods also,
+murdered with every circumstance of cruelty. My mind shudders at the
+recollection, O conscript fathers, and shrinks from relating the
+cruelties which Lucius Antonius perpetrated on the children and
+wives of the citizens of Parma. For whatever infamy the Antonii have
+willingly undergone in their own persons to their own infamy, they
+triumph in the fact of having inflicted on others by violence. But it
+is a miserable violence which they offered to them; most unholy lust,
+such as the whole life of the Antonii is polluted with.
+
+IV. Is there then any one who is afraid to call those men enemies,
+whose wickedness he admits to have surpassed even the inhumanity of
+the Carthaginians? For in what city, when taken by storm, did Hannibal
+even behave with such ferocity as Antonius did in Parma, which he
+filched by surprise? Unless, mayhap, Antonius is not to be considered
+the enemy of this colony, and of the others towards which he is
+animated with the same feelings. But if he is beyond all question the
+enemy of the colonies and municipal towns, then what do you consider
+him with respect to this city which he is so eager for, to satiate the
+indigence of his band of robbers? which that skilful and experienced
+surveyor of his, Saxa, has already marked out with his rule.
+Recollect, I entreat you, in the name of the immortal gods, O
+conscript fathers, what we have been fearing for the last two days,
+in consequence of infamous rumours carefully disseminated by enemies
+within the walls. Who has been able to look upon his children or upon
+his wife without weeping? who has been able to bear the sight of his
+home, of his house, and his household gods? Already all of us were
+expecting a most ignominious death, or meditating a miserable flight.
+And shall we hesitate to call the men at whose hands we feared
+all these things enemies? If any one should propose a more severe
+designation I will willingly agree to it; I am hardly content with
+this ordinary one, and will certainly not employ a more moderate one.
+
+Therefore, as we are bound to vote, and as Servilius has already
+proposed a most just supplication for those letters which have been
+read to you; I will propose altogether to increase the number of the
+days which it is to last, especially as it is to be decreed in honour
+of three generals conjointly. But first of all I will insist on
+styling those men imperator by whose valour, and wisdom, and good
+fortune we have been released from the most imminent danger of slavery
+and death. Indeed, who is there within the last twenty years who
+has had a supplication decreed to him without being himself styled
+imperator, though he may have performed the most insignificant
+exploits, or even almost none at all. Wherefore, the senator who spoke
+before me ought either not to have moved for a supplication at all, or
+he ought to have paid the usual and established compliment to those
+men to whom even new and extraordinary honours are justly due.
+
+V. Shall the senate, according to this custom which has now obtained,
+style a man imperator if he has slain a thousand or two of Spaniards,
+or Gauls, or Thracians; and now that so many legions have been routed,
+now that such a multitude of enemies has been slain,--aye, enemies,
+I say, although our enemies within the city do not fancy this
+expression,--shall we pay to our most illustrious generals the honour
+of a supplication, and refuse them the name of imperator? For with
+what great honour, and joy, and exultation ought the deliverers of
+this city themselves to enter into this temple, when yesterday, on
+account of the exploits which they have performed, the Roman people
+carried me in an ovation, almost in a triumph from my house to the
+Capitol, and back again from the Capitol to my own house? That is
+indeed in my opinion a just and genuine triumph, when men who have
+deserved well of the republic receive public testimony to their merits
+from the unanimous consent of the senate. For if, at a time of general
+rejoicing on the part of the Roman people, they addressed their
+congratulations to one individual, that is a great proof of their
+opinion of him; if they gave him thanks, that is a greater still; if
+they did both, then nothing more honourable to him can be possibly
+imagined.
+
+Are you saying all this of yourself? some one will ask. It is indeed
+against my will that I do so; but my indignation at injustice makes me
+boastful, contrary to my usual habit. Is it not sufficient that thanks
+should not be given to men who have well earned them, by men who are
+ignorant of the very nature of virtue? And shall accusations and odium
+be attempted to be excited against those men who devote all their
+thoughts to ensuring the safety of the republic? For you well know
+that there has been a common report for the last few days, that the
+day before the wine feast,[55] that is to say, on this very day, I was
+intending to come forth with the fasces as dictator. One would think
+that this story was invented against some gladiator, or robber, or
+Catiline, and not against a man who had prevented any such step from
+ever being taken in the republic. Was I, who defeated and overthrew
+and crushed Catiline, when he was attempting such wickedness, a likely
+man myself all on a sudden to turn out Catiline? Under what auspices
+could I, an augur, take those fasces? How long should I have been
+likely to keep them? to whom was I to deliver them as my successor?
+The idea of any one having been so wicked as to invent such a tale!
+or so mad as to believe it! In what could such a suspicion, or rather
+such gossip, have originated?
+
+VI. When, as you know, during the last three or four days a report of
+bad news from Mutina has been creeping abroad, the disloyal part of
+the citizens, inflated with exultation and insolence, began to collect
+in one place, at that senate-house which has been more fatal to their
+party than to the republic. There, while they were forming a plan to
+massacre us, and were distributing the different duties among one
+another, and settling who was to seize on the Capitol, who on the
+rostra, who on the gates of the city, they thought that all
+the citizens would flock to me. And in order to bring me into
+unpopularity, and even into danger of my life, they spread abroad this
+report about the fasces. They themselves had some idea of bringing the
+fasces to my house; and then, on pretence of that having been done by
+my wish, they had prepared a band of hired ruffians to make an attack
+on me as on a tyrant, and a massacre of all of you was intended to
+follow. The fact is already notorious, O conscript fathers, but the
+origin of all this wickedness will be revealed in its fitting time.
+
+Therefore Publius Apuleius, a tribune of the people, who ever since my
+consulship has been the witness and partaker of, and my assistant
+in all my designs and all my dangers could not endure the grief of
+witnessing my indignation. He convened a numerous assembly, as the
+whole Roman people were animated with one feeling on the subject. And
+when in the harangue which he then made, he, as was natural from our
+great intimacy and friendship, was going to exculpate me from all
+suspicion in the matter of the fasces, the whole assembly cried out
+with one voice, that I had never had any intentions with regard to
+the republic which were not excellent. After this assembly was over,
+within two or three hours, these most welcome messengers and letters
+arrived; so that the same day not only delivered me from a most unjust
+odium, but increased my credit by that most extraordinary act with
+which the Roman people distinguished me.
+
+I have made this digression, O conscript fathers, not so much for the
+sake of speaking of myself, (for I should be in a sorry plight if I
+were not sufficiently acquitted in your eyes without the necessity of
+making a formal defence,) as with the view of warning some men of too
+grovelling and narrow minds, to adopt the line of conduct which I
+myself have always pursued, and to think the virtue of excellent
+citizens worthy of imitation, not of envy. There is a great field in
+the republic, as Crassus used very wisely to say; the road to glory is
+open to many.
+
+VII. Would that those great men were still alive, who, after my
+consulship, when I myself was willing to yield to them, were
+themselves desirous to see me in the post of leader. But at the
+present moment, when there is such a dearth of wise and fearless men
+of consular rank, how great do you not suppose must be my grief
+and indignation, when I see some men absolutely disaffected to the
+republic, others wholly indifferent to everything, others incapable of
+persevering with any firmness in the cause which they have espoused;
+and regulating their opinions not always by the advantage of the
+republic, but sometimes by hope, and sometimes by fear. But if any
+one is anxious and inclined to struggle for the leadership--though
+struggle there ought to be none--he acts very foolishly, if he
+proposes to combat virtue with vices. For as speed is only outstripped
+by speed, so among brave men virtue is only surpassed by virtue.
+Will you, if I am full of excellent sentiments with respect to the
+republic, adopt the worst possible sentiments yourself for the purpose
+of excelling me? Or if you see a race taking place for the acquisition
+of honours, will you summon all the wicked men you can find to your
+banner? I should be sorry for you to do so; first of all, for the sake
+of the republic, and secondly, for that of your own dignity. But if
+the leadership of the state were at stake, which I have never coveted,
+what could be more desirable for me than such conduct on your part?
+For it is impossible that I should be defeated by wicked sentiments
+and measures,--by good ones perhaps I might be, and I willingly would
+be.
+
+Some people are vexed that the Roman people should see, and take
+notice of, and form their opinion on these matters. Was it possible
+for men not to form their opinion of each individual as he deserved?
+For as the Roman people forms a most correct judgment of the entire
+senate, thinking that at no period in the history of the republic was
+this order ever more firm or more courageous; so also they all inquire
+diligently concerning every individual among us; and especially in the
+case of those among us who deliver our sentiments at length in this
+place, they are anxious to know what those sentiments are; and in that
+way they judge of each one of us, as they think that he deserves. They
+recollect that on the nineteenth of December I was the main cause of
+recovering our freedom; that from the first of January to this hour I
+have never ceased watching over the republic; that day and night my
+house and my ears have been open to the instruction and admonition of
+every one; that it has been by my letters, and my messengers, and
+my exhortations, that all men in every part of the empire have been
+roused to the protection of our country; that it is owing to the open
+declaration of my opinion ever since the first of January, that no
+ambassadors have been ever sent to Antonius; that I have always called
+him a public enemy, and this a war; so that I, who on every occasion
+have been the adviser of genuine peace have been a determined enemy to
+this pretence of fatal peace.
+
+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.
+
+IX. What then Servilius did in effect, I do in express terms, when I
+style those men imperators. By using this name, I pronounce those who
+have been already defeated, and those who still remain, enemies
+in calling their conquerors imperators. For what title can I more
+suitably bestow on Pansa? Though he has, indeed, the title of the
+highest honour in the republic. What, too, shall I call Hirtius? He,
+indeed, is consul; but this latter title is indicative of the kindness
+of the Roman people; the other of valour and victory. What? Shall I
+hesitate to call Caesar imperator, a man born for the republic by the
+express kindness of the gods? He who was the first man who turned
+aside the savage and disgraceful cruelty of Antonius, not only from
+our throats, but from our limbs and bowels? What numerous and what
+important virtues, O ye immortal gods, were displayed on that single
+day. For Pansa was the leader of all in engaging in battle and in
+combating with Antonius; O general worthy of the martial legion,
+legion worthy of its general! Indeed, if he had been able to restrain
+its irresistible impetuosity, the whole war would have been terminated
+by that one battle. But as the legion, eager for liberty, had rushed
+with too much precipitation against the enemy's line of battle, and
+as Pansa himself was fighting in the front ranks, he received two
+dangerous wounds, and was borne out of the battle, to preserve his
+life for the republic. But I pronounce him not only imperator, but
+a most illustrious imperator; who, as he had pledged himself to
+discharge his duty to the republic either by death or by victory, has
+fulfilled one half of his promise; may the immortal gods prevent the
+fulfilment of the other half!
+
+X. Why need I speak of Hirtius? who, the moment he heard of what was
+going on, with incredible promptness and courage led forth two legions
+out of the camp; that noble fourth legion, which, having deserted
+Antonius, formerly united itself to the martial legion; and the
+seventh, which, consisting wholly of veterans, gave proof in that
+battle that the name of the senate and people of Rome was dear to
+those soldiers who preserved the recollection of the kindness of
+Caesar. With these twenty cohorts, with no cavalry, while Hirtius
+himself was bearing the eagle of the fourth legion,--and we never
+heard of a more noble office being assumed by any general,--he
+fought with the three legions of Antonius and with his cavalry, and
+overthrew, and routed, and put to the sword those impious men who
+were the real enemies to this temple of the all-good and all-powerful
+Jupiter, and to the rest of the temples of the immortal gods, and the
+houses of the city, and the freedom of the Roman people, and our lives
+and actual existence; so that that chief and leader of robbers fled
+away with a very few followers, concealed by the darkness of night,
+and frightened out of all his senses.
+
+Oh what a most blessed day was that, which, while the carcases of
+those parricidal traitors were strewed about everywhere, beheld
+Antonius flying with a few followers, before he reached his place of
+concealment.
+
+But will any one hesitate to call Caesar imperator? Most certainly his
+age will not deter any one from agreeing to this proposition, since he
+has gone beyond his age in virtue. And to me, indeed, the services of
+Caius Caesar have always appeared the more thankworthy, in proportion
+as they were less to have been expected from a man of his age. For
+when we conferred military command on him, we were in fact encouraging
+the hope with which his name inspired us; and now that he has
+fulfilled those hopes, he has sanctioned the authority of our decree
+by his exploits. This young man of great mind, as Hirtius most truly
+calls him in his letters, with a few cohorts defended the camp of
+many legions, and fought a successful battle. And in this manner the
+republic has on one day been preserved in many places by the valour,
+and wisdom, and good fortune of three imperators of the Roman people.
+
+XI. I therefore propose supplications of fifty days in the joint
+names of the three. The reasons I will embrace in the words of the
+resolution, using the most honourable language that I can devise.
+
+But it becomes our good faith and our piety to show plainly to our
+most gallant soldiers how mindful of their services and how grateful
+for them we are; and accordingly I give my vote that our promises, and
+those pledges too which we promised to bestow on the legions when the
+war was finished, be repeated in the resolution which we are going to
+pass this day. For it is quite fair that the honour of the soldiers,
+especially of such soldiers as those, should be united with that of
+their commanders. And I wish, O conscript fathers, that it was lawful
+for us to dispense rewards to all the citizens; although we will give
+those which we have promised with the most careful usury. But that
+remains, as I well hope, to the conquerors, to whom the faith of the
+senate is pledged; and, as they have adhered to it at a most critical
+period of the republic, we are bound to take care that they never have
+cause to repent of their conduct. But it is easy for us to deal fairly
+by those men whose very services, though mute, appear to demand our
+liberality. This is a much more praiseworthy and more important duty,
+to pay a proper tribute of grateful recollection to the valour of
+those men who have shed their blood in the cause of their country. And
+I wish more suggestions could occur to me in the way of doing honour
+to those men. The two ideas which principally do occur to me, I will
+at all events not pass over; the one of which has reference to the
+everlasting glory of those bravest of men; the other may tend to
+mitigate the sorrow and mourning of their relations.
+
+XII. I therefore give my vote, O conscript fathers, that the most
+honourable monument possible be erected to the soldiers of the martial
+legion, and to those soldiers also who died fighting by their side.
+Great and incredible are the services done by this legion to the
+republic. This was the first legion to tear itself from the piratical
+band of Antonius; this was the legion which encamped at Alba; this was
+the legion that went over to Caesar; and it was in imitation of the
+conduct of this legion that the fourth legion has earned almost equal
+glory for its virtue. The fourth is victorious without having lost a
+man; some of the martial legion fell in the very moment of victory. Oh
+happy death, which, due to nature, has been paid in the cause of one's
+country! But I consider you men born for your country; you whose very
+name is derived from Mars, so that the same god who begot this city
+for the advantage of the nations, appears to have begotten you for
+the advantage of this city. Death in flight is infamous; in victory
+glorious. In truth, Mars himself seems to select all the bravest men
+from the battle array. Those impious men whom you slew, shall even in
+the shades below pay the penalty of their parricidal treason. But you,
+who have poured forth your latest breath in victory, have earned an
+abode and place among the pious. A brief life has been allotted to us
+by nature; but the memory of a well-spent life is imperishable. And if
+that memory were no longer than this life, who would be so senseless
+as to strive to attain even the highest praise and glory by the most
+enormous labours and dangers?
+
+You then have fared most admirably, being the bravest of soldiers
+while you lived, and now the most holy of warriors, because it will
+be impossible for your virtue to be buried, either through the
+forgetfulness of the men of the present age, or the silence of
+posterity, since the senate and Roman people will have raised to you
+an imperishable monument, I may almost say with their own hands. Many
+armies at various times have been great and illustrious in the Punic,
+and Gallic, and Italian wars; but to none of them have honours been
+paid of the description which are now conferred on you. And I wish
+that we could pay you even greater honours, since we have received
+from you the greatest possible services. You it was who turned aside
+the furious Antonius from this city; you it was who repelled him when
+endeavouring to return. There shall therefore be a vast monument
+erected with the most sumptuous work, and an inscription engraved upon
+it, as the everlasting witness of your god-like virtue. And never
+shall the most grateful language of all who either see or hear of your
+monument cease to be heard. And in this manner you, in exchange for
+your mortal condition of life, have attained immortality.
+
+XIII. But since, O conscript fathers, the gift of glory is conferred
+on these most excellent and gallant citizens by the honour of a
+monument, let us comfort their relations, to whom this indeed is
+the best consolation. The greatest comfort for their parents is the
+reflection that they have produced sons who have been such bulwarks of
+the republic; for their children, that they will have such examples of
+virtue in their family; for their wives, that the husbands whom they
+have lost are men whom it is a credit to praise, and to have a right
+to mourn for; and for their brothers, that they may trust that, as
+they resemble them in their persons, so they do also in their virtues.
+
+Would that we were able by the expression of our sentiments and by our
+votes to wipe away the tears of all these persons; or that any such
+oration as this could be publicly addressed to them, to cause them to
+lay aside their grief and mourning, and to rejoice rather, that, while
+many various kinds of death impend over men, the most honourable kind
+of all has fallen to the lot of their friends; and that they are not
+unburied, nor deserted; though even that fate, when incurred for one's
+country, is not accounted miserable; nor burnt with equable obsequies
+in scattered graves, but entombed in honourable sepulchres, and
+honoured with public offerings; and with a building which will be an
+altar of their valour to ensure the recollection of eternal ages.
+
+Wherefore it will be the greatest possible comfort to their relations,
+that by the same monument are clearly displayed the valour of their
+kinsmen, and also their piety, and the good faith of the senate, and
+the memory of this most inhuman war, in which, if the valour of the
+soldiers had been less conspicuous, the very name of the Roman people
+would have perished by the parricidal treason of Marcus Antonius.
+And I think also, O conscript fathers, that those rewards which we
+promised to bestow on the soldiers when we had recovered the republic,
+we should give with abundant usury to those who are alive and
+victorious when the time comes; and that in the case of the men to
+whom those rewards were promised, but who have died in the defence of
+their country, I think those same rewards should be given to their
+parents or children, or wives or brothers.
+
+XIV. But that I may reduce my sentiments into a formal motion, I give
+my vote that:
+
+"As Caius Pansa, consul, imperator, set the example of fighting with
+the enemy in a battle in which the martial legion defended the freedom
+of the Roman people with admirable and incredible valour, and the
+legions of the recruits behaved equally well; and as Caius Pansa,
+consul, imperator, while engaged in the middle of the ranks of the
+enemy received wounds; and as Aulus Hirtius, consul, imperator, the
+moment that he heard of the battle, and knew what was going on, with a
+most gallant and loyal soul, led his army out of his camp and attacked
+Marcus Antonius and his army, and put his troops to the sword, with so
+little injury to his own army that he did not lose one single man; and
+as Caius Caesar, propraetor, imperator, with great prudence and energy
+defended the camp successfully, and routed and put to the sword the
+forces of the enemy which had come near the camp:
+
+"On these accounts the senate thinks and declares that the Roman
+people has been released from the most disgraceful and cruel slavery
+by the valour, and military skill, and prudence, and firmness, and
+perseverance, and greatness of mind and good fortune of these their
+generals. And decrees that, as they have preserved the republic, the
+city, the temples of the immortal gods, the property and fortunes and
+families of all the citizens, by their own exertions in battle, and at
+the risk of their own lives; on account of these virtuous and gallant
+and successful achievements, Caius Pansa and Aulus Hirtius, the
+consuls, imperators, one or both of them, or, in their absence, Marcus
+Cornutus, the city praetor, shall appoint a supplication at all the
+altars for fifty days. And as the valour of the legions has shown
+itself worthy of their most illustrious generals, the senate will with
+great eagerness, now that the republic is recovered, bestow on our
+legions and armies all the rewards which it formerly promised them.
+And as the martial legion was the first to engage with the enemy, and
+fought in such a manner against superior numbers as to slay many and
+take some prisoners; and as they shed their blood for their country
+without any shrinking; and as the soldiers of the other legions
+encountered death with similar valour in defence of the safety and
+freedom of the Roman people;--the senate does decree that Caius Pansa
+and Aulus Hirtius, the consuls, imperators, one or both of them if it
+seems good to them, shall see to the issuing of a contract for, and to
+the erecting, the most honourable possible monument to those men who
+shed their blood for the lives and liberties and fortunes of the Roman
+people, and for the city and temples of the immortal gods; that for
+that purpose they shall order the city quaestors to furnish and
+pay money, in order that it may be a witness for the everlasting
+recollection of posterity of the wickedness of our most cruel enemies,
+and the god-like valour of our soldiers. And that the rewards which
+the senate previously appointed for the soldiers, be paid to the
+parents or children, or wives or brothers of those men who in this
+war have fallen in defence of their country; and that all honours
+be bestowed on them which should have been bestowed on the soldiers
+themselves if those men had lived who gained the victory by their
+death."
+
+
+
+
+THE TWO BOOKS WHICH REMAIN OF THE TREATISE BY M.T. CICERO ON
+RHETORICAL INVENTION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BOOK I.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+These essays on rhetoric were composed by Cicero when he was about one
+and twenty years of age, and he mentions them afterwards in his more
+elaborate treatise _De Oratore_, (Lib. i. c. 2,) as unworthy of his
+more mature age, and more extended experiences. Quintilian also (III.
+c. 63,) mentions them as works which Cicero condemned by subsequent
+writings. This treatise originally consisted of four books, of which
+only two have come down to us.
+
+I. I HAVE often and deeply resolved this question in my mind, whether
+fluency of language has been beneficial or injurious to men and to
+cities, with reference to the cultivation of the highest order of
+eloquence. For when I consider the disasters of our own republic, and
+when I call to mind also the ancient calamities of the most important
+states, I see that it is by no means the most insignificant portion
+of their distresses which has originated from the conduct of the most
+eloquent men. But, at the same time, when I set myself to trace back,
+by the aid of written memorials and documents, affairs which, by
+reason of their antiquity, are removed back out of the reach of any
+personal recollection, I perceive also that many cities have been
+established, many wars extinguished, many most enduring alliances and
+most holy friendships have been cemented by deliberate wisdom much
+assisted and facilitated by eloquence. And as I have been, as I say,
+considering all this for some time, reason itself especially induces
+me to think that wisdom without eloquence is but of little advantage
+to states, but that eloquence without wisdom is often most
+mischievous, and is never advantageous to them.
+
+If then any one, neglecting all the most virtuous and honourable
+considerations of wisdom and duty, devotes his whole attention to the
+practice of speaking, that man is training himself to become useless
+to himself, and a citizen mischievous to his country; but a man who
+arms himself with eloquence in such a manner as not to oppose the
+advantage of his country, but to be able to contend in behalf of them,
+he appears to me to be one who both as a man and a citizen will be of
+the greatest service to his own and the general interests, and most
+devoted to his country.
+
+And if we are inclined to consider the origin of this thing which is
+called eloquence, whether it be a study, or an art, or some peculiar
+sort of training or some faculty given us by nature, we shall find
+that it has arisen from most honourable causes, and that it proceeds
+on the most excellent principles.
+
+II. For there was a time when men wandered at random over the fields,
+after the fashion of beasts, and supported life on the food of beasts;
+nor did they do anything by means of the reasoning powers of the mind;
+but almost everything by bodily strength. No attention was as yet paid
+to any considerations of the religious reverence due to the gods, or
+of the duties which are owed to mankind: no one had ever seen any
+legitimate marriages, no one had beheld any children whose parentage
+was indubitable; nor had any one any idea what great advantage
+there might be in a system of equal law. And so, owing to error and
+ignorance, cupidity, that blind and rash sovereign of the mind, abused
+its bodily strength, that most pernicious of servants, for the purpose
+of gratifying itself. At this time then a man,[56] a great and a wise
+man truly was he, perceived what materials there were, and what great
+fitness there was in the minds of men for the most important affairs,
+if any one could only draw it out, and improve it by education. He,
+laying down a regular system, collected men, who were previously
+dispersed over the fields and hidden in habitations in the woods into
+one place, and united them, and leading them on to every useful and
+honourable pursuit, though, at first, from not being used to it they
+raised an outcry against it; he gradually, as they became more eager
+to listen to him on account of his wisdom and eloquence, made them
+gentle and civilized from having been savage and brutal. And it
+certainly seems to me that no wisdom which was silent and destitute of
+skill in speaking could have had such power as to turn men on a sudden
+from their previous customs, and to lead them to the adoption of
+a different system of life. And, moreover, after cities had been
+established how could men possibly have been induced to learn to
+cultivate integrity, and to maintain justice, and to be accustomed
+willingly to obey others, and to think it right not only to encounter
+toil for the sake of the general advantage, but even to run the risk
+of losing their lives, if men had not been able to persuade them by
+eloquence of the truth of those principles which they had discovered
+by philosophy? Undoubtedly no one, if it had not been that he was
+influenced by dignified and sweet eloquence, would ever have chosen
+to condescend to appeal to law without violence, when he was the most
+powerful party of the two as far as strength went; so as to allow
+himself now to be put on a level with those men among whom he might
+have been preeminent, and of his own free will to abandon a custom
+most pleasant to him, and one which by reason of its antiquity had
+almost the force of nature.
+
+And this is how eloquence appears to have originated at first, and to
+have advanced to greater perfection; and also, afterwards, to have
+become concerned in the most important transactions of peace and war,
+to the greatest advantage of mankind? But after that a certain sort of
+complaisance, a false copyist of virtue, without any consideration
+for real duty, arrived at some fluency of language, then wickedness,
+relying on ability, began to overturn cities, and to undermine the
+principles of human life.
+
+III. And, since we have mentioned the origin, of the good done by
+eloquence, let us explain also the beginning of this evil.
+
+It appears exceedingly probable to me that was a time when men who
+were destitute of eloquence and wisdom, were not accustomed to meddle
+with affairs of state, and when also great and eloquent men were not
+used to concern themselves about private causes; but, while the most
+important transactions were managed by the most eminent and able men,
+I think that there were others also, and those not very incompetent,
+who attended to the trifling disputes of private individuals; and as
+in these disputes it often happened that men had recourse to lies, and
+tried by such means to oppose the truth, constant practice in speaking
+encouraged audacity, so that it became unavoidable that those other
+more eminent men should, on account of the injuries sustained by the
+citizens, resist the audacious and come to the assistance of their own
+individual friends.
+
+Therefore, as that man had often appeared equal in speaking, and
+sometimes even superior, who having neglected the study of wisdom, had
+laboured to acquire nothing except eloquence, it happened that in the
+judgment of the multitude he appeared a man worthy to conduct even the
+affairs of the state. And hence it arose, and it is no wonder that
+it did, when rash and audacious men had seized on the helm of the
+republic, that great and terrible disasters occurred. Owing to which
+circumstances, eloquence fell under so much odium and unpopularity
+that the ablest men, (like men who seek a harbour to escape from some
+violent tempest) devoted themselves to any quiet pursuit, as a refuge
+from a life of sedition and tumult. So that other virtuous and
+honourable pursuits appear to me to have become popular subsequently,
+from having been cultivated in tranquillity by excellent men; but
+that this pursuit having been abandoned by most of them, grew out of
+fashion and obsolete at the very time when it should have been more
+eagerly retained and more anxiously encouraged and strengthened.
+
+For the more scandalously the temerity and audacity of foolish and
+worthless men was violating a most honourable and virtuous system,
+to the excessive injury of the republic, the more studiously did
+it become others to resist them, and to consult the welfare of the
+republic.
+
+IV. And this principle which I have just laid down did not escape the
+notice of Cato, nor of Laelus, nor of their pupil, as I may fairly
+call him, Africanus, nor of the Gracchi the grandson of Africanus; men
+in whom there was consummate virtue and authority increased by their
+consummate virtue and eloquence, which might serve as an ornament to
+these qualities, and as a protection to the republic. Wherefore, in
+my opinion at least, men ought not the less to devote themselves to
+eloquence, although some men both in private and public affairs misuse
+it in a perverse manner; but I think rather that they should apply
+themselves to it with the more eagerness, in order to prevent wicked
+men from getting the greatest power to the exceeding injury of the
+good, and the common calamity of all men; especially as this is the
+only thing which is of the greatest influence on all affairs both
+public and private; and as it is by this same quality that life is
+rendered safe, and honourable, and illustrious, and pleasant. For it
+is from this source that the most numerous advantages accrue to the
+republic, if only it be accompanied by wisdom, that governor of all
+human affairs. From this source it is that praise and honour and
+dignity flow towards all those who have acquired it; from this source
+it is that the most certain and the safest defence is provided for
+their friends. And, indeed, it appears to me, that it is on this
+particular that men, who in many points are weaker and lower than the
+beasts, are especially superior to them, namely, in being able to
+speak.
+
+Wherefore, that man appears to me to have acquired an excellent
+endowment, who is superior to other men in that very thing in which
+men are superior to beasts. And if this art is acquired not by nature
+only, not by mere practice, but also by a sort of regular system of
+education, it appears to me not foreign to our purpose to consider
+what those men say who have left us some precepts on the subject of
+the attainment of it.
+
+But, before we begin to speak of oratorical precepts, I think we must
+say something of the nature of the art itself; of its duty, of
+its end, of its materials, and of its divisions. For when we have
+ascertained those points, then each man's mind will, with the more
+ease and readiness, be able to comprehend the system itself, and the
+path which leads to excellence in it.
+
+V. There is a certain political science which is made up of many and
+important particulars. A very great and extensive portion of it is
+artificial eloquence, which men call rhetoric. For we do not agree
+with those men who think that the knowledge of political science is
+in no need of and has no connexion with eloquence; and we most widely
+disagree with those, on the other hand, who think that all political
+ability Is comprehended under the skill and power of a rhetorician. On
+which account we will place this oratorical ability in such a class as
+to assert that it is a part of political science. But the duty of this
+faculty appears to be to speak in a manner suitable to persuading men;
+the end of it is to persuade by language. And there is difference
+between the duty of this faculty and its end; that with respect to the
+duty we consider what ought to be done; with respect to the end we
+consider what is suitable to the duty. Just as we say, that it is the
+duty of a physician to prescribe for a patient in a way calculated to
+cure him; and that his end is to cure him by his prescriptions. And
+so we shall understand what we are to call the duty of an orator, and
+also what we are to call his end; since we shall call that his duty
+which he ought to do, and we shall term that his end for the sake of
+which he is bound to do his duty.
+
+We shall call that the material of the art, on which the whole art,
+and all that ability which is derived from art, turns. Just as if we
+were to call diseases and wounds the material of medicine, because
+it is about them that all medical science is concerned. And in like
+manner, we call those subjects with which oratorical science and
+ability is conversant the materials of the art of rhetoric. And these
+subjects some have considered more numerous, and others less so. For
+Gorgias the Leontine, who is almost the oldest of all rhetoricians,
+considered that an orator was able to speak in the most excellent
+manner of all men on every subject. And when he says this he seems to
+be supplying an infinite and boundless stock of materials to this art.
+But Aristotle, who of all men has supplied the greatest number of aids
+and ornaments to this art, thought that the duty of the rhetorician
+was conversant with three kinds of subjects; with the demonstrative,
+and the deliberative, and the judicial.
+
+The demonstrative is that which concerns itself with the praise or
+blame of some particular individual; the deliberative is that which,
+having its place in discussion and in political debate, comprises a
+deliberate statement of one's opinion; the judicial is that which,
+having its place in judicial proceedings, comprehends the topics of
+accusation and defence; or of demand and refusal. And, as our own
+opinion at least inclines, the art and ability of the orator must be
+understood to be conversant with these tripartite materials. VI For
+Hermagoras, indeed, appears neither to attend to what he is saying,
+nor to understand what he is promising, for he divides the materials
+of an orator into the cause, and the examination. The cause he defines
+to be a thing which has in itself a controversy of language united
+with the interposition of certain characters. And that part, we too
+say, is assigned to the orator, for we give him those three parts
+which we have already mentioned,--the judicial, the deliberative, and
+the demonstrative. But the examination he defines to be that
+thing which has in itself a controversy of language, without the
+interposition of any particular characters, in this way--"Whether
+there is anything good besides honesty?"--"Whether the senses may be
+trusted?"--"What is the shape of the world?"--"What is the size of
+the sun?" But I imagine that all men can easily see that all such
+questions are far removed from the business of an orator, for it
+appears the excess of insanity to attribute those subjects, in
+which we know that the most sublime genius of philosophers has been
+exhausted with infinite labour, as if they were inconsiderable
+matters, to a rhetorician or an orator.
+
+But if Hermagoras himself had had any great acquaintance with these
+subjects, acquired with long study and training, then it would be
+supposed that he, from relying on his own knowledge, had laid down
+some false principles respecting the duty of an orator, and had
+explained not what his art could effect, but what he himself could do.
+But as it is, the character of the man is such, that any one would
+be much more inclined to deny him any knowledge of rhetoric, than to
+grant him any acquaintance with philosophy. Nor do I say this because
+the book on the art which he published appears to me to have been
+written with any particular incorrectness, (for, indeed, he appears to
+me to have shown very tolerable ingenuity and diligence in arranging
+topics which he had collected from ancient writings on the subject,
+and also to have advanced some new theories himself,) but it is the
+least part of the business of an orator to speak concerning his art,
+which is what he has done: his business is rather to speak from his
+art, which is what we all see that this Hermagoras was very little
+able to do. And so that, indeed, appears to us to be the proper
+materials of rhetoric, which we have said appeared to be such to
+Aristotle. VII. And these are the divisions of it, as numerous writers
+have laid them down: Invention; Arrangement; Elocution; Memory;
+Delivery. Invention, is the conceiving of topics either true or
+probable, which may make one's cause appear probable; Arrangement, is
+the distribution of the topics which have been thus conceived with
+regular order; Elocution, is the adaptation of suitable words and
+sentences to the topics so conceived; Memory, is the lasting sense in
+the mind of the matters and words corresponding to the reception of
+these topics. Delivery, is a regulating of the voice and body in a
+manner suitable to the dignity of the subjects spoken of and of the
+language employed.
+
+Now, that these matters have been briefly defined, we may postpone to
+another time those considerations by which we may be able to elucidate
+the character and the duty and the object of this art; for they would
+require a very long argument, and they have no very intimate connexion
+with the definition of the art and the delivery of precepts relating
+to it. But we consider that the man who writes a treatise on the art
+of rhetoric ought to write about two other subjects also; namely,
+about the materials of the art, and about its divisions. And it seems,
+indeed, that we ought to treat of the materials and divisions of this
+art at the same time. Wherefore, let us first consider what sort of
+quality invention ought to be, which is the most important of all the
+divisions, and which applies to every description of cause in which an
+orator can be engaged.
+
+VIII. Every subject which contains in itself any controversy existing
+either in language or in disputation, contains a question either
+about a fact, or about a name, or about a class, or about an action.
+Therefore, that investigation out of which a cause arises we call a
+stating of a case. A stating of a case is the first conflict of causes
+arising from a repulse of an accusation; in this way. "You did so and
+so;"--"I did not do so;"--or, "it was lawful for me to do so." When
+there is a dispute as to the fact, since the cause is confirmed by
+conjectures, it is called a conjectural statement. But when it is a
+dispute as to a name, because the force of a name is to be defined by
+words, it is then styled a definitive statement. But when the thing
+which is sought to be ascertained is what is the character of the
+matter under consideration, because it is a dispute about violence,
+and about the character of the affair, it is called a general
+statement. But when the cause depends on this circumstance, either
+that that man does not seem to plead who ought to plead, or that he
+does not plead with that man with whom he ought to plead, or that
+he does not plead before the proper people, at the proper time,
+in accordance with the proper law, urging the proper charge, and
+demanding the infliction of the proper penalty, then it is called a
+statement by way of demurrer; because the arguing of the case appears
+to stand in need of a demurrer and also of some alteration. And
+some one or other of these sorts of statement must of necessity be
+incidental to every cause. For if there be any one to which it is not
+incidental, in that there can be no dispute at all; on which account
+it has no right even to be considered a cause at all.
+
+And a dispute as to fact may be distributed over every sort of time.
+For as to what has been done, an inquiry can be instituted in this
+way--"whether Ulysses slew Ajax;" and as to what is being done, in
+this way--"whether the people of Tregellae are well affected towards
+the Roman people;" and as to what is going to happen, in this way--"if
+we leave Carthage uninjured, whether any inconvenience will accrue to
+the republic."
+
+It is a dispute about a name, when parties are agreed as to the fact,
+and when the question is by what name that which has been done is to
+be designated. In which class of dispute it is inevitable on that
+account that there should be a dispute as to the name; not because the
+parties are not agreed about the fact, not because the fact is not
+notorious, but because that which has been done appears in a different
+light to different people, and on that account one calls it by one
+name and another by another. Wherefore, in disputes of this kind
+the matter must be defined by words, and described briefly; as, for
+instance, if any one has stolen any sacred vessel from a private
+place, whether he is to be considered a sacrilegious person, or a
+simple thief. For when that is inquired into, it is necessary to
+define both points--what is a thief, and what is a sacrilegious
+person,--and to show by one's own description that the matter which
+is under discussion ought to be called by a different name from that
+which the opposite party apply to it. IX. The dispute about kind
+is, when it is agreed both what has been done, and when there is
+no question as to the name by which it ought to be designated; and
+nevertheless there is a question of what importance the matter is, and
+of what sort it is, and altogether of what character it is; in this
+way,--whether it be just or unjust; whether it be useful or useless;
+and as to all other circumstances with reference to which there is any
+question what is the character of that which has been done, without
+there being any dispute as to its name. Humagoras assigned
+four divisions to this sort of dispute: the deliberative, the
+demonstrative, the judicial, and the one relating to facts. And, as it
+seems to us, this was no ordinary blunder of his, and one which it is
+incumbent on us to reprove; though we may do so briefly, lest, if we
+were to pass it over in silence, we might be thought to have had no
+good reason for abandoning his guidance; or if we were to dwell too
+long on this point, we might appear to have interposed a delay and an
+obstacle to the other precepts which we wish to lay down.
+
+If deliberation and demonstration are kinds of causes, then the
+divisions of any one kind cannot rightly be considered causes; for the
+same matter may appear to be a class to one person, and a division to
+another; but it cannot appear both a class and a division to the same
+person. But deliberation and demonstration are kinds of argument; for
+either there is no kind of argument at all, or there is the judicial
+kind alone, or there are all three kinds, the judicial and the
+demonstrative and the deliberative. Now, to say there is no kind of
+argument at the same time that he says that there are many arguments,
+and is giving precepts for them, is foolishness. How, too, is it
+possible that there should be one kind only, namely the judicial, when
+deliberation and demonstration in the first place do not resemble one
+another, and are exceedingly different from the judicial kind, and
+have each their separate object to which they ought to be referred. It
+follows, then, that there are three kinds of arguments. Deliberation
+and demonstration cannot properly be considered divisions of any kind
+of argument. He was wrong, therefore, when he said that they were
+divisions of a general statement of the case.
+
+X. But if they cannot properly be considered divisions of a kind of
+argument, much less can they properly be considered divisions of a
+division of an argument. But all statement of the case is a division
+of an argument. For the argument is not adapted to the statement of
+the case, but the statement of the case is adapted to the argument.
+But demonstration and deliberation cannot be properly considered
+divisions of a kind of argument, because they are separate kinds
+of arguments themselves. Much less can they properly be considered
+divisions of that division, as he calls them. In the next place,
+if the statement of the case, both itself as a whole; and also any
+portion of that statement, is a repelling of an accusation, then that
+which is not a repelling of an accusation is neither a statement of a
+case, nor a portion of a statement of a case; but if that which is not
+a repelling of an attack is not a statement of a case, nor a portion
+of a statement of a case, then deliberation and demonstration are
+neither a statement of a case, nor a portion of a statement of a
+case. If, therefore, a statement of a case, whether it be the whole
+statement or some portion of it, be a repelling of an accusation, then
+deliberation and demonstration are neither a statement of a case, nor
+any portion of such statement. But he himself asserts that it is
+a repelling of an accusation. He must therefore assert also that
+demonstration and deliberation are neither a statement of a case, nor
+a portion of such a statement. And he will be pressed by the same
+argument whether he calls the statement of a case the original
+assertion of his cause by the accuser, or the first speech in answer
+to such accusation by the advocate of the defence. For all the same
+difficulties will attend him in either case.
+
+In the next place a conjectural argument cannot, as to the same
+portion of it, be at the same time both a conjectural one and a
+definitive one. Again, a definitive argument cannot, as to the same
+portion of it, be at the same time both a definitive argument and one
+in the form and character of a demurrer. And altogether, no statement
+of a case, and no portion of such a statement, can at one and the same
+time both have its own proper force and also contain the force of
+another kind of argument. Because each kind of argument is considered
+simply by its own merits, and according to its own nature; and if any
+other kind be united with it, then it is the number of statements of
+a case that is doubled, and not the power of the statement that is
+increased.
+
+But a deliberative argument, both as to the same portion of it and
+also at the same time, very frequently has a statement of its case
+both conjectural, and general, and definitive, and in the nature of a
+demurrer; and at times it contains only one statement, and at times
+it contains many such. Therefore it is not itself a statement of the
+case, nor a division of such statement: and the same thing must be
+the case with respect to demonstration. These, then, as I have said
+before, must be considered kinds of argument, and not divisions of any
+statement of the subject.
+
+XI. This statement of the case then, which we call the general one,
+appears to us to have two divisions,--one judicial and one relating to
+matters of fact. The judicial one is that in which the nature of right
+and wrong, or the principles of reward and punishment, are inquired
+into. The one relating to matters of fact is that in which the thing
+taken into consideration is what is the law according to civil
+precedent, and according to equity; and that is the department in
+which lawyers are considered by us to be especially concerned.
+
+And the judicial kind is itself also distributed under two
+divisions,--one absolute, and one which takes in something besides as
+an addition, and which may be called assumptive. The absolute division
+is that which of itself contains in itself an inquiry into right and
+wrong. The assumptive one is that which of itself supplies no firm
+ground for objection, but which takes to itself some topics for
+defence derived from extraneous circumstances. And its divisions are
+four,--concession, removal of the accusation from oneself, a retorting
+of the accusation, and comparison. Concession when the person on his
+trial does not defend the deed that has been done, but entreats to be
+pardoned for it: and this again is divided into two parts,--purgation
+and deprecation. Purgation is when the fact is admitted, but when the
+guilt of the fact is sought to be done away. And this may be on three
+grounds,--of ignorance, of accident, or of necessity. Deprecation is
+when the person on his trial confesses that he has done wrong, and
+that he has done wrong on purpose, and nevertheless entreats to be
+pardoned. But this kind of address can be used but very rarely.
+Removal of the accusation from oneself is when the person on his trial
+endeavours by force of argument and by influence to remove the charge
+which is brought against him from himself to another, so that it may
+not fix him himself with any guilt at all. And that can be done in
+two ways,--if either the cause of the deed, or the deed itself, is
+attributed to another. The cause is attributed to another when it is
+said that the deed was done in consequence of the power and influence
+of another; but the deed itself is attributed to another when it is
+said that another either might have done it, or ought to have done it.
+The retorting of an accusation takes place when what is done is said
+to have been lawfully done because another had previously provoked
+the doer wrongfully. Comparison is, when it is argued that some
+other action has been a right or an advantageous one, and then it is
+contended that this deed which is now impeached was committed in order
+to facilitate the accomplishment of that useful action.
+
+In the fourth kind of statement of a case, which we call the one which
+assumes the character of a demurrer, that sort of statement contains a
+dispute, in which an inquiry is opened who ought to be the accuser or
+pleader, or against whom, or in what manner, or before whom, or under
+what law, or at what time the accusation ought to be brought forward;
+or when something is urged generally tending to alter the nature of,
+or to invalidate the whole accusation. Of this kind of statement of
+a case Hermagoras is considered the inventor: not that many of the
+ancient orators have not frequently employed it, but because former
+writers on the subject have not taken any notice of it, and have not
+entered it among the number of statements of cases. But since it has
+been thus invented by Hermagoras, many people have found fault with
+it, whom we considered not so much to be deceived by ignorance (for
+indeed the matter is plain enough) as to be hindered from admitting
+the truth by some envy or fondness for detraction.
+
+XII. We have now then mentioned the different kinds of statements of
+cases, and their several divisions. But we think that we shall be
+able more conveniently to give instances of each kind, when we are
+furnishing a store of arguments for each kind. For so the system of
+arguing will be more clear, when it can be at once applied both to the
+general classification and to the particular instance.
+
+When the statement of the case is once ascertained, then it is proper
+at once to consider whether the argument be a simple or a complex one,
+and if it be a complex one, whether it is made up of many subjects
+of inquiry, or of some comparison. That is a simple statement which
+contains in itself one plain question, in this way--"Shall we declare
+war against the Corinthians, or not?" That is a complex statement
+consisting of several questions in which many inquiries are made, in
+this way.--"Whether Carthage shall be destroyed, or whether it shall
+be restored to the Carthaginians, or whether a colony shall be led
+thither." Comparison is a statement in which inquiry is raised in the
+way of contest, which course is more preferable, or which is the most
+preferable course of all, in this way.--"Whether we had better send an
+army into Macedonia against Philip, to serve as an assistance to our
+allies, or whether we had better retain it in Italy, in order that we
+may have as numerous forces as possible to oppose to Hannibal." In
+the next place, we must consider whether the dispute turns on general
+reasoning, or on written documents, for a controversy with respect
+to written documents, is one which arises out of the nature of the
+writing.
+
+XIII And of that there are five kinds which have been separated from
+statements of cases. For when the language of the writing appears to
+be at variance with the intention of the writer, then two laws or more
+seem to differ from one another, and then, too, that which has been
+written appears to signify two things or more. Then also, from that
+which is written, something else appears to be discovered also,
+which is not written, and also the effect of the expressions used is
+inquired into, as if it were in the definitive statement of the
+case, in which it has been placed. Wherefore, the first kind is that
+concerning the written document and the intention of it; the second
+arises from the laws which are contrary to one another, the third is
+ambiguous, the fourth is argumentative, the fifth we call definitive.
+
+But reason applies when the whole of the inquiry does not turn on the
+writing, but on some arguing concerning the writing. But, then, when
+the kind of argument has been duly considered, and when the statement
+of the case has been fully understood; when you have become aware
+whether it is simple or complex, and when you have ascertained
+whether the question turns on the letter of the writing or on general
+reasoning; then it is necessary to see what is the question, what
+is the reasoning, what is the system of examining into the excuses
+alleged, what means there are of establishing one's own allegations;
+and all these topics must be derived from the original statement of
+the case. What I call "the question" is the dispute which arises from
+the conflict of the two statements in this way. "You have not done
+this lawfully;" "I have done it lawfully." And this is the conflict of
+arguments, and on this the statement of the case hinges. It arises,
+therefore, from that kind of dispute which we call "the question," in
+this way:--"Whether he did so and so lawfully." The reasoning is that
+which embraces the whole cause; and if that be taken away, then there
+is no dispute remaining behind in the cause. In this way, in order
+that for the sake of explaining myself more clearly, I may content
+myself with an easy and often quoted instance. If Orestes be accused
+of matricide, unless he says this, "I did it rightfully, for she had
+murdered my father," he has no defence at all. And if his defence be
+taken away, then all dispute is taken away also. The principle of his
+argument then is that she murdered Agamemnon. The examination of
+this defence is then a dispute which arises out of the attempts to
+invalidate or to establish this argument. For the argument itself may
+be considered sufficiently explained, since we dwelt upon it a little
+while ago. "For she," says he, "had murdered my father." "But," says
+the adversary, "for all that it was not right for your mother to be
+put to death by you who were her son; for her act might have been
+punished without your being guilty of wickedness."
+
+XIV. From this mode of bringing forward evidence, arises that last
+kind of dispute which we call the judication, or examination of the
+excuses alleged. And that is of this kind: whether it was right that
+his mother should be put to death by Orestes, because she had put to
+death Orestes's father?
+
+Now proof by testimony is the firmest sort of reasoning that can be
+used by an advocate in defence, and it is also the best adapted for
+the examination of any excuse which may be alleged. For instance, if
+Orestes were inclined to say that the disposition of his mother had
+been such towards his father, towards himself and his sisters, towards
+the kingdom, and towards the reputation of his race and family, that
+her children were of all people in the world the most bound to
+inflict punishment upon her. And in all other statements or cases,
+examinations of excuses alleged are found to be carried on in this
+manner. But in a conjectural statement of a case, because there is no
+express evidence, for the fact is not admitted at all, the examination
+of the defence put forward cannot arise from the bringing forward of
+evidence. Wherefore, it is inevitable that in this case the question
+and the judication must be the same thing. As "it was done," "it was
+not done." The question is whether it was done.
+
+But it must invariably happen that there will be the same number of
+questions, and arguments, and examinations, and evidences employed
+in a cause, as there are statements of the case or divisions of such
+statements. When all these things are found in a cause, then at length
+each separate division of the whole cause must be considered. For it
+does not seem that those points are necessarily to be first noticed,
+which have been the first stated; because you must often deduce those
+arguments which are stated first, at least if you wish them to be
+exceedingly coherent with one another and to be consistent with the
+cause, from those arguments which are to be stated subsequently.
+Wherefore, when the examination of the excuses alleged, and all those
+arguments which require to be found out for the purpose of such
+examination have been diligently found out by the rules of art, and
+handled with due care and deliberation, then at length we may proceed
+to arrange the remaining portions of our speech. And these portions
+appear to us to be in all six; the exordium, the relation of the fact,
+the division of the different circumstances and topics, the bringing
+forward of evidence, the finding fault with the action which has been
+done, and the peroration.
+
+At present, since the exordium ought to be the main thing of all,
+we too will first of all give some precepts to lead to a system of
+opening a case properly.
+
+XV. An exordium is an address bringing the mind of the hearer into a
+suitable state to receive the rest of the speech, and that will be
+effected if it has rendered him well disposed towards the speaker,
+attentive, and willing to receive information. Wherefore, a man who
+is desirous to open a cause well, must of necessity be beforehand
+thoroughly acquainted with the nature and kind of cause which he has
+to conduct. Now the kinds of causes are five; one honourable, one
+astonishing, one low, one doubtful, one obscure. The kind of cause
+which is called honourable, is such an one as the disposition of the
+hearer favours at once, without waiting to hear our speech. The kind
+that is astonishing, is that from which the mind of those who are
+about to hear us has been alienated. The kind which is low, is one
+which is disregarded by the hearer, or which does not seem likely to
+be carefully attended to. The kind which is doubtful, is that in which
+either the examination into the excuses alleged is doubtful, or the
+cause itself, being partly honourable and partly discreditable; so as
+to produce partly good-will and partly disinclination. The kind which
+is obscure, is that in which either the hearers are slow, or in which
+the cause itself is entangled in a multitude of circumstances hard
+to be thoroughly acquainted with. Wherefore, since there are so
+many kinds of causes, it is necessary to open one's case on a very
+different system in each separate kind. Therefore, the exordium is
+divided into two portions, first of all a beginning, and secondly
+language calculated to enable the orator to work his way into the good
+graces of his hearers. The beginning is an address, in plain words,
+immediately rendering the hearer well disposed towards one, or
+inclined to receive information, or attentive. The language calculated
+to enable the orator to work his way into the good graces of his
+hearers, is an address which employs a certain dissimulation, and
+which by a circuitous route as it were obscurely creeps into the
+affections of the hearer.
+
+In the kind of cause which we have called astonishing, if the hearers
+be not positively hostile, it will be allowable by the beginning of
+the speech to endeavour to secure their good-will. But if they be
+excessively alienated from one, then it will be necessary to have
+recourse to endeavours to insinuate oneself into their good graces.
+For if peace and good-will be openly sought for from those who are
+enemies to one, they not only are not obtained, but the hatred which
+they bear one is even inflamed and increased. But in the kind of cause
+which I have called low, for the sake of removing his contempt it will
+be indispensable to render the hearer attentive. The kind of cause
+which has been styled doubtful, if it embraces an examination into the
+excuses alleged, which is also doubtful, must derive its exordium
+from that very examination; but if it have some things in it of a
+creditable nature, and some of a discreditable character, then it will
+be expedient to try and secure the good-will of the hearer, so that
+the cause may change its appearance, and seem to be an honourable one.
+But when the kind of cause is the honourable kind, then the exordium
+may either be passed over altogether, or if it be convenient, we may
+begin either with a relation of the business in question, or with a
+statement of the law, or with any other argument which must be brought
+forward in the course of our speech, and on which we most greatly
+rely; or if we choose to employ an exordium, then we must avail
+ourselves of the good-will already existing towards us, in order that
+that which does exist may be strengthened.
+
+XVI. In the kind of cause which I have called obscure, it will be
+advisable to render the hearers inclined to receive instruction by a
+carefully prepared exordium. Now, since it has been already explained
+what effect is to be sought to be produced by the exordium, it remains
+for us to show by what arguments all such effects may be produced.
+
+Good-will is produced by dwelling on four topics:--on one derived from
+our own character, from that of our adversaries, from that of the
+judges, and from the cause itself. From our own character, if we
+manage so as to speak of our own actions and services without
+arrogance; if we refute the charges which have been brought against
+us, and any other suspicions in the least, discreditable which it may
+be endeavoured to attach to us; if we dilate upon the inconveniences
+which have already befallen us, or the difficulties which are still
+impending over us; if we have recourse to prayers and to humble and
+suppliant entreaty. From the character of our adversaries, if we are
+able to bring them either into hatred, or into unpopularity, or into
+contempt. They will be brought into hatred, if any action of theirs
+can be adduced which has been lascivious, or arrogant, or cruel, or
+malignant. They will be made unpopular, if we can dilate upon their
+violent behaviour, their power, their riches, their numerous kinsmen,
+their wealth, and their arrogant and intolerable use of all these
+sources of influence; so that they may appear rather to trust to these
+circumstances than to the merits of their cause. They will be brought
+into contempt, if sloth, or negligence, or idleness, or indolent
+pursuits, or luxurious tranquillity can be alleged against them.
+Good-will will be procured, derived from the character of the hearers
+themselves, if exploits are mentioned which have been performed by
+them with bravery, or wisdom, or humanity; so that no excessive
+flattery shall appear to be addressed to them; and if it is plainly
+shown how high and honourable their reputation is, and how anxious is
+the expectation with which men look for their decision and authority.
+Or from the circumstances themselves, if we extol our own cause with
+praises, and disparage that of the opposite party by contemptuous
+allusions.
+
+But we shall make our hearers attentive, if we show that the things
+which we are going to say and to speak of are important, and unusual,
+and incredible; and that they concern either all men, or those who are
+our present hearers, or some illustrious men, or the immortal gods, or
+the general interests of the republic. And if we promise that we will
+in a very short time prove our own cause; and if we explain the
+whole of the examination into the excuses alleged, or the different
+examinations, if there be more than one.
+
+We shall render our hearers willing to receive information, if we
+explain the sum total of the cause with plainness and brevity, that is
+to say, the point on which the dispute hinges. For when you wish to
+make a hearer inclined to receive information you must also render him
+attentive. For he is above all men willing to receive information who
+is prepared to listen with the greatest attention.
+
+XVII. The next thing which it seems requisite to speak of, is, how
+topics intended to enable the orator to work his way into the good
+graces of his hearers ought to be handled. We must then use such a
+sort of address as that when the kind of cause which we are conducting
+is that which I have called astonishing; that is to say, as I have
+stated before, when the disposition of the hearer is adverse to one.
+And that generally arises from one of three causes: either if there
+be anything discreditable in the cause itself, or if any such belief
+appears to have been already instilled into the hearer by those who
+have spoken previously; or if one is appointed to speak at a time when
+those who have got to listen to one are wearied with hearing others.
+For sometimes when one is speaking, the mind of the hearer is
+alienated from one no less by this circumstance than by the two
+former.
+
+If the discreditable nature of one's cause excites the ill-will of
+one's hearers, or if it be desirable to substitute for the man on whom
+they look unfavourably another man to whom they are attached; or, for
+the matter they regard with dislike, another matter of which they
+approve; or if it be desirable to substitute a person for a thing, or
+a thing for a person, in order that the mind of the hearer may be led
+away from that which he hates to that which he loves; and if your
+object is to conceal from view the fact that you are about to defend
+that person or action which you are supposed to be going to defend;
+and then, when the hearer has been rendered more propitious, to enter
+gradually on the defence, and to say that those things at which the
+opposite party is indignant appear scandalous to you also; and then,
+when you have propitiated him who is to listen to you, to show that
+none of all those things at all concern you, and to deny that you are
+going to say anything whatever respecting the opposite party whether
+it be good or bad; so as not openly to attack those men who are loved
+by your hearers, and yet doing it secretly as far as you can to
+alienate from them the favourable disposition of your hearers; and
+at the same time to mention the judgment of some other judges in a
+similar case, or to quote the authority of some others as worthy of
+imitation; and then to show that it is the very same point, or one
+very like it, or one of greater or less importance, (as the case may
+make it expedient,) which is in question at present.
+
+If the speech of your adversaries appears to have made an impression
+on your hearers, which is a thing which will be very easily
+ascertained by a man who understands what are the topics by which an
+impression is made; then it is requisite to promise that you will
+speak first of all on that point which the opposite party consider
+their especial stronghold, or else to begin with a reference to what
+has been said by the adversary, and especially to what he said
+last; or else to appear to doubt, and to feel some perplexity and
+astonishment as to what you had best say first, or what argument it is
+desirable to reply to first--for when a hearer sees the man whom the
+opposite party believe to be thrown into perplexity by their speech
+prepared with unshaken firmness to reply to it, he is generally apt to
+think that he has assented to what has been said without sufficient
+consideration, rather than that the present speaker is confident
+without due grounds. But if fatigue has alienated the mind of the
+hearer from your cause, then it is advantageous to promise to speak
+more briefly than you had been prepared to speak; and that you will
+not imitate your adversary.
+
+If the case admit of it, it is not disadvantageous to begin with some
+new topic, or with some one which may excite laughter; or with some
+argument which has arisen from the present moment; of which kind are
+any sudden noise or exclamation; or with something which you have
+already prepared, which may embrace some apologue, or fable, or other
+laughable circumstance. Or, if the dignity of the subject shall seem
+inconsistent with jesting, in that case it is not disadvantageous to
+throw in something sad, or novel, or terrible. For as satiety of food
+and disgust is either relieved by some rather bitter taste, or is at
+times appeased by a sweet taste; so a mind weary with listening
+is either reinstated in its strength by astonishment, or else is
+refreshed by laughter.
+
+XVIII. And these are pretty nearly the main things which it appeared
+desirable to say separately concerning the exordium of a speech, and
+the topics which an orator should use for the purpose of insinuating
+himself into the good grace of his hearers. And now it seems desirable
+to lay down some brief rules which may apply to both in common.
+
+An exordium ought to have a great deal of sententiousness and gravity
+in it, and altogether to embrace all things which have a reference
+to dignity; because that is the most desirable effect to be produced
+which in the greatest degree recommends the speaker to his hearer.
+It should contain very little brilliancy, or wit, or elegance of
+expression, because from these qualities there always arises a
+suspicion of preparation and artificial diligence: and that is an idea
+which, above all others takes away credit from a speech, and authority
+from a speaker. But the following are the most ordinary faults to be
+found in an exordium, and those it is above all things desirable
+to avoid. It must not be vulgar, common, easily changed, long,
+unconnected, borrowed, nor must it violate received rules. What I mean
+by vulgar, is one which may be so adapted to numerous causes as to
+appear to suit them all. That is common, which appears to be able to
+be adapted no less to one side of the argument than to the other. That
+is easily changed, which with a slight alteration may be advanced by
+the adversary on the other side of the question. That is long, which
+is spun out by a superfluity of words or sentences far beyond what is
+necessary. That is unconnected, which is not derived from the cause
+itself, and is not joined to the whole speech as a limb is to the
+body. That is borrowed, which effects some other end than that which
+the kind of cause under discussion requires; as if a man were
+to occupy himself in rendering his hearer inclined to receive
+information, when the cause requires him only to be well disposed
+towards the speaker: or, if a man uses a formal beginning of a speech,
+when what the subject requires is an address by which the speaker may
+insinuate himself into the good graces of his hearer. That is contrary
+to received rules, which effects no one of those objects for the sake
+of which the rules concerning exordiums have been handed down. This
+is the sort of blunder which renders him who hears it neither well
+disposed to one, nor inclined to receive information, nor attentive;
+or (and that indeed is the most disastrous effect of all) renders him
+of a totally contrary disposition. And now we have said enough about
+the exordium.
+
+XIX. Narration is an explanation of acts that have been done, or of
+acts as if they have been done. There are three kinds of narration.
+One kind is that in which the cause itself and the whole principle of
+the dispute is contained. Another is that in which some digression,
+unconnected with the immediate argument, is interposed, either for the
+sake of criminating another, or of instituting a comparison, or of
+provoking some mirth not altogether unsuitable to the business under
+discussion, or else for the sake of amplification. The third kind is
+altogether foreign to civil causes, and is uttered or written for the
+sake of entertainment, combined with its giving practice, which is not
+altogether useless. Of this last there are two divisions, the one of
+which is chiefly conversant about things, and the other about persons.
+That which is concerned in the discussion and explanation of things
+has three parts, fable, history, and argument. Fable is that in which
+statements are expressed which are neither true nor probable, as is
+this--
+
+
+ "Huge winged snakes, join'd by one common yoke."
+
+
+History is an account of exploits which have been performed, removed
+from the recollection of our own age; of which sort is the statement,
+"Appius declared war against the Carthaginians." Argument is an
+imaginary case, which still might have happened. Such is this in
+Terence--
+
+
+ "For after Sosia became a man."
+
+
+But that sort of narration which is conversant about persons, is of
+such a sort that in it not only the facts themselves, but also the
+conversations of the persons concerned and their very minds can be
+thoroughly seen, in this way--
+
+
+ "And oft he came to me with mournful voice,
+ What is your aim, your conduct what? Oh why
+ Do you this youth with these sad arts destroy?
+ Why does he fall in love? Why seeks he wine,
+ And why do you from time to time supply
+ The means for such excess? You study dress
+ And folly of all kinds; while he, if left
+ To his own natural bent, is stern and strict,
+ Almost beyond the claims of virtue."
+
+
+In this kind of narration there ought to be a great deal of
+cheerfulness wrought up out of the variety of circumstances; out of
+the dissimilarity of dispositions; out of gravity, lenity, hope, fear,
+suspicion, regret, dissimulation, error, pity, the changes of fortune,
+unexpected disaster, sudden joy, and happy results. But these
+embellishments may be derived from the precepts which will hereafter
+be laid down about elocution.
+
+At present it seems best to speak of that kind of narration which
+contains an explanation of the cause under discussion.
+
+XX. It is desirable then that it should have three qualities; that
+it should be brief, open, and probable. It will be brief, if the
+beginning of it is derived from the quarter from which it ought to be;
+and if it is not endeavoured to be extracted from what has been last
+said, and if the speaker forbears to enumerate all the parts of
+a subject of which it is quite sufficient to state the total
+result;--for it is often sufficient to say what has been done, and
+there is no necessity for his relating how it was done;--and if the
+speaker does not in his narration go on at a greater length than there
+is any occasion for, as far as the mere imparting of knowledge is
+concerned; and if he does not make a digression to any other topic;
+and if he states his case in such a way, that sometimes that which has
+not been said may be understood from that which has been said; and if
+he passes over not only such topics as may be injurious, but those too
+which are neither injurious nor profitable; and if he repeats nothing
+more than once; and if he does not at once begin with that topic
+which was last mentioned;--and the imitation of brevity takes in many
+people, so that, when they think that they are being brief, they are
+exceedingly prolix, while they are taking pains to say many things
+with brevity, not absolutely to say but few things and no more than
+are necessary. For to many men a man appears to speak with brevity who
+says, "I went to the house; I called out the servant; he answered
+me; I asked for his master; he said that he was not at home." Here,
+although he could not have enumerated so many particulars more
+concisely, yet, because it would have been enough to say, "He said
+that he was not at home," he is prolix on account of the multitude of
+circumstances which he mentions. Wherefore, in this kind of narration
+also it is necessary to avoid the imitation of brevity, and we must
+no less carefully avoid a heap of unnecessary circumstances than a
+multitude of words.
+
+But a narration will be able to be open, if those actions are
+explained first which have been done first, and if the order of
+transactions and times is preserved, so that the things are related as
+they have been done, or as it shall seem that they may have been done.
+And in framing this narration it will be proper to take care that
+nothing be said in a confused or distorted manner; that no digression
+be made to any other subject; that the affair may not be traced too
+far back, nor carried too far forward; that nothing be passed over
+which is connected with the business in hand; and altogether the
+precepts which have been laid down about brevity, must be attended to
+in this particular also. For it often happens that the truth is but
+little understood, more by reason of the prolixity of the speaker,
+than of the obscurity of the statement. And it is desirable to use
+clear language, which is a point to be dwelt upon when we come to
+precepts for elocution.
+
+XXI. A narration will be probable, if in it those characteristics are
+visible which are usually apparent in truth; if the dignity of the
+persons mentioned is preserved; if the causes of the actions performed
+are made plain; if it shall appear that there were facilities for
+performing them; if the time was suitable; if there was plenty of
+room; if the place is shown to have been suitable for the transaction
+which is the subject of the narration; if the whole business, in
+short, be adapted to the nature of those who plead, and to the reports
+bruited about among the common people, and to the preconceived
+opinions of those who hear. And if these principles be observed, the
+narration will appear like the truth.
+
+But besides all this, it will be necessary to take care that such a
+narration be not introduced when it will be a hindrance, or when it
+will be of no advantage; and that it be not related in an unseasonable
+place, or in a manner which the cause does not require. It is a
+hindrance, when the very narration of what has been done comes at a
+time that the hearer has conceived great displeasure at something,
+which it will be expedient to mitigate by argument, and by pleading
+the whole cause carefully. And when this is the case, it will be
+desirable rather to scatter the different portions of the transactions
+limb by limb as it were over the cause, and, as promptly as may be,
+to adapt them to each separate argument, in order that there may be
+a remedy at hand for the wound, and that the defence advanced may at
+once mitigate the hatred which has arisen.
+
+Again, a narration is of no advantage when, after our case has once
+been set forth by the opposite party, it is of no importance to relate
+it a second time or in another manner; or when the whole affair is so
+clearly comprehended by the hearers, as they believe at least that it
+can do us no good to give them information respecting it in another
+fashion. And when this is the case, it is best to abstain from any
+narration altogether. It is uttered in an unseasonable place, when it
+is not arranged in that part of the speech in which the case requires
+it, and concerning this kind of blunder we will speak when we come
+to mention the arrangement of the speech. For it is the general
+arrangement of the whole that this affects. It is not related in the
+manner which the cause requires, when either that point which is
+advantageous to the opposite party is explained in a clear and elegant
+manner, or when that which may be of benefit to the speaker is stated
+in an obscure or careless way. Wherefore, in order that this fault may
+be avoided, everything ought to be converted by the speaker to the
+advantage of his own cause by passing over all things which make
+against it which can be passed over, by touching lightly on those
+points which are beneficial to the adversary, and by relating those
+which are advantageous to himself carefully and clearly. And now
+we seem to have said enough about narration. Let us now pass on in
+regular order to the arrangement of the different topics.
+
+XXII An arrangement of the subjects to be mentioned in an argument,
+when properly made, renders the whole oration clear and intelligible.
+There are two parts in such a division, each of which is especially
+connected with the opening of the cause, and with the arrangement of
+the whole discussion. One part is that which points out what are the
+particulars as to which one is in agreement with the opposite party,
+and also what remains in dispute; and from this there is a certain
+definite thing pointed out to the hearer, as that to which he should
+direct his attention. The other part is that in which the explanation
+of those matters on which we are about to speak, is briefly arranged
+and pointed out. And this causes the hearer to retain certain things
+in his mind, so as to understand that when they have been discussed
+the speech will be ended. At present it seems desirable to mention
+briefly how it is proper to use each kind of arrangement. And this
+arrangement points out what is suitable and what is not suitable; its
+duty is to turn that which is suitable to the advantage of its own
+side, in this way--"I agree with the opposite party as to the fact,
+that a mother has been put to death by her son." Again, on the other
+side.--"We are both agreed that Agamemnon was slain by Clytaemnestra"
+For in saying this each speaker has laid down that proposition which
+was suitable, and nevertheless has consulted the advantage of his own
+side.
+
+In the next place, what the matter in dispute is must be explained,
+when we come to mention the examination into the excuses which are
+alleged. And how that is managed has been already stated.
+
+But the arrangement which embraces the properly distributed explanation
+of the facts, ought to have brevity, completeness, conciseness.
+Brevity is when no word is introduced which is not necessary. This is
+useful in this sort of speaking, because it is desirable to arrest the
+attention of the hearer by the facts themselves and the real divisions
+of the case, and not by words or extraneous embellishments of diction.
+Completeness is that quality by which we embrace every sort of
+argument which can have any connexion with the case concerning which
+we have got to speak, and in this division we must take care not to
+omit any useful topic, not to introduce any such too late, out of its
+natural place, for that is the most pernicious and discreditable error
+of all. Conciseness in arrangement is preserved if the general classes
+of facts are clearly laid down, and are not entangled in a promiscuous
+manner with the subordinate divisions. For a class is that which
+embraces many subordinate divisions as, "an animal." A subordinate
+division is that which is contained in the class as "a horse."
+But very often the same thing may be a class to one person, and a
+subordinate division to another. For "man" is a subordinate division
+of "animal," but a class as to "Theban," or "Trojan."
+
+XXIII And I have been more careful in laying down this definition, in
+order that after it has been clearly comprehended with reference to
+the general arrangement, a conciseness as to classes or genera may be
+preserved throughout the arrangement. For he who arranges his oration
+in this manner--"I will prove that by means of the covetousness and
+audacity and avarice of our adversaries, all sorts of evils have
+fallen on the republic," fails to perceive that in this arrangement of
+his, when he intended to mention only classes, he has joined also a
+mention of a subordinate division. For covetousness is the general
+class under which all desires are comprehended, and beyond all
+question avarice is a subordinate division of that class.
+
+We must therefore avoid, after having mentioned a universal class,
+then, in the same arrangement, to mention along with it any one of
+its subordinate divisions, as if it were something different and
+dissimilar. And if there are many subordinate divisions to any
+particular class, after that has been simply explained in the first
+arrangement of the oration, it will be more easily and conveniently
+arranged when we come to the subsequent explanation in the general
+statement of the case after the division. And this, too, concerns the
+subject of conciseness, that we should not undertake to prove more
+things than there is any occasion for, in this way--"I will prove that
+the opposite party were able to do what we accuse them of, and had the
+inclination to do it, and did it." It is quite enough to prove that
+they did it. Or when there is no natural division at all in a cause,
+and when it is a simple question that is under discussion, though that
+is a thing which cannot be of frequent occurrence, still we must use
+careful arrangement. And these other precepts also, with respect to
+the division of subjects which have no such great connexion with the
+practice of orators, precepts which come into use in treatises in
+philosophy, from which we have transferred, hither those which
+appeared to be suitable to our purpose, of which we found nothing in
+the other arts. And in all these precepts about the division of our
+subjects, it will throughout our whole speech be found that every
+portion of them must be discussed in the same order as that in which
+it has been originally stated, and then, when everything has been
+properly explained, let the whole be summed up, and summed up so that
+nothing be introduced subsequently besides the conclusion. The old
+man in the Andria of Terence arranges briefly and conveniently the
+subjects with which he wishes his freedman to become acquainted--
+
+
+ "And thus the life and habits of my son
+ And my designs respecting his career,
+ And what I wish your course towards both to be,
+ Will be quite plain to you."
+
+
+And accordingly, as he has proposed in his original arrangement, he
+proceeds to relate, first the life of his son--
+
+
+ "For when, O Sosia, he became a man,
+ He was allow'd more liberty"
+
+
+Then comes his own design--
+
+
+ "And now I take great care"
+
+
+After that, what he wishes Sosia to do; that he put last in his
+original arrangement he now mentions last--
+
+
+ "And now the part is yours" ...
+
+
+As, therefore, in this instance, he came first to the portion which he
+had mentioned first, and so, when he had discussed them all, made an
+end of speaking, we too ought to advance to each separate portion of
+our subject, and when we had finished every part, to sum up. Now
+it appears desirable to proceed in regular order to lay down some
+precepts concerning the confirmation of our arguments, as the regular
+order of the subject requires.
+
+XXIV Confirmation is that by means of which our speech proceeding in
+argument adds belief, and authority, and corroboration to our cause.
+As to this part there are certain fixed rules which will be divided
+among each separate class of causes. But it appeals to be not an
+inconvenient course to disentangle what is not unlike a wood, or a
+vast promiscuous miss of materials all jumbled together, and after
+that to point out how it may be suitable to corroborate each separate
+kind of cause, after we have drawn all our principles of argumentation
+from this source. All statements are confirmed by some argument or
+other, either by that which is derived from persons, or by that which
+is deduced from circumstances. Now we consider that these different
+things belong to persons, a name, nature, a way of life, fortune,
+custom, affection, pursuits, intentions, actions, accidents, orations.
+A name is that which is given to each separate person, so that each
+is called by his own proper and fixed appellation. To define nature
+itself is difficult, but to enumerate those parts of it which we
+require for the laying down of these precepts is more easy.
+
+And these refer partly to that portion of things which is divine, and
+partly to that which is mortal. Now of things which are mortal one
+part is classed among the race of men, and one among the race of
+brutes: and the race of men is distinguished by sex, whether they be
+male or female and with respect to their nation, and country, and
+kindred, and age, with respect to their nation, whether a man be a
+Greek or a barbarian; with respect to their country, whether a man be
+an Athenian or a Lacedaemonian; with respect to their kindred, from
+what ancestors a man is descended, and who are his relations; with
+respect to his age, whether he is a boy, or a youth, or a full
+grown man, or an old man. Besides these things, those advantages or
+disadvantages which come to a man by nature, whether in respect of
+his mind or his body, are taken into consideration, in this
+manner:--whether he be strong or weak; whether he be tall or short;
+whether he be handsome or ugly; whether he be quick in his motions or
+slow; whether he be clever or stupid; whether he have a good memory,
+or whether he be forgetful; whether he be courteous, fond of doing
+kindnesses, modest, patient, or the contrary. And altogether all these
+things which are considered to be qualities conferred by nature on
+men's minds or bodies, must be taken into consideration when defining
+nature. For those qualities which are acquired by industry relate to a
+man's condition, concerning which we must speak hereafter.
+
+XXV. With reference to a man's way of life it is proper to consider
+among what men, and in what manner, and according to whose direction
+he has been brought up; what teachers of the liberal sciences he has
+had; what admonitors to encourage him to a proper course of life;
+with what friends he is intimate; in what business, or employment, or
+gainful pursuit he is occupied; in what manner he manages his estate,
+and what are his domestic habits. With reference to his fortune we
+inquire whether he is a slave or a free man; whether he is wealthy or
+poor; whether he is a private individual or a man in office; if he be
+in office, whether he has become so properly or improperly; whether he
+is prosperous, illustrious, or the contrary; what sort of children he
+has. And if we are inquiring about one who is no longer alive, then we
+must consider also by what death he died.
+
+But when we speak of a man's habitual condition, we mean his constant
+and absolute completeness of mind or body, in some particular
+point--as for instance, his perception of virtue, or of some art,
+or else some science or other. And we include also some personal
+advantages not given to him by nature, but procured by study and
+industry. By affection, we mean a sudden alteration of mind or body,
+arising from some particular cause, as joy, desire, fear, annoyance,
+illness, weakness and other things which are found under the same
+class. But study is the assiduous and earnest application of the
+mind, applied to some particular object with great good-will, as to
+philosophy, poetry, geometry, or literature. By counsel, we mean a
+carefully considered resolution to do or not to do something. But
+actions, and accidents, and speeches will be considered with reference
+to three different times; what a man has done, what has happened to
+him, or what he has said; or what he is doing, or what is happening to
+him, or what he is saying; or what he is going to do, what is about to
+happen to him, or what speech he is about to deliver. And all these
+things appear to be attributable to persons.
+
+XXVI. But of the considerations which belong to things, some are
+connected with the thing itself which is the subject of discussion;
+some are considered in the performance of the thing; some are united
+with the thing itself; some follow in the accomplishment of the thing.
+Those things are connected with the thing itself which appear always
+to be attached to the thing and which cannot be separated from it.
+The first of such things is a brief exposition of the whole business,
+which contains the sum of the entire matter, in this way--"The slaying
+of a parent;" "the betrayal of a country." Then comes the cause of
+this general fact; and we inquire by what means, and in what manner,
+and with what view such and such a thing has been done. After that we
+inquire what was done before this action under consideration was done,
+and all the steps which preceded this action. After that, what was
+done in the very execution of this action. And last of all, what has
+been done since.
+
+But with reference to the performance of an action, which was the
+second topic of those which were attributed to things, the place, and
+the time, and the manner, and the opportunity, and the facilities will
+be inquired into. The place is taken into consideration in which the
+thing was done; with reference to the opportunity which the doer
+seems to have had of executing the business; and that opportunity is
+measured by the importance of the action, by the interval which has
+elapsed, by the distance, by the nearness, by the solitude of the
+place, or by the frequented character of it, by the nature of the
+spot itself and by the neighbourhood of the whole region. And it is
+estimated also with reference to these characteristics, whether the
+place be sacred or not, public or private, whether it belongs or
+has belonged to some one else, or to the man whose conduct is under
+consideration.
+
+But the time is, that, I mean, which we are speaking of at the present
+moment, (for it is difficult to define it in a general view of it
+with any exactness,) a certain portion of eternity with some fixed
+limitation of annual or monthly, or daily or nightly space. In
+reference to this we take into consideration the things which are
+passed, and those things which, by reason of the time which has
+elapsed since, have become so obsolete as to be considered incredible,
+and to be already classed among the number of fables, and those things
+also which, having been performed a long time ago and at a time remote
+from our recollection, still affect us with a belief that they have
+been handed down truly, because certain memorials of those facts are
+extant in written documents, and those things which have been done
+lately, so that most people are able to be acquainted with them. And
+also those things which exist at the present moment, and which are
+actually taking place now, and which are the consequences of former
+actions. And with reference to those things it is open to us to
+consider which will happen sooner, and which later. And also generally
+in considering questions of time, the distance or proximity of the
+time is to be taken into account: for it is often proper to measure
+the business done with the time occupied in doing it, and to consider
+whether a business of such and such magnitude, or whether such and
+such a multitude of things, can be performed in that time. And we
+should take into consideration the time of year, and of the month, and
+of the day, and of the night, and the watches, and the hours, and each
+separate portion of any one of these times.
+
+XXVII. An occasion is a portion of time having in it a suitable
+opportunity for doing or avoiding to do some particular thing.
+Wherefore there is this difference between it and time. For, as to
+genus, indeed, they are both understood to be identical; but in time
+some space is expressed in some manner or other, which is regarded
+with reference to years, or to a year, or to some portion of a year,
+but in an occasion, besides the space of time implied in the word,
+there is indicated an especial opportunity of doing something. As
+therefore the two are identical in genus it is some portion and
+species as it were, in which the one differs, as we have said, from
+the other.
+
+Now occasion is distributed into three classes, public, common and
+singular. That is a public occasion, which the whole city avails
+itself of for some particular cause, as games, a day of festival, or
+war. That is a common occasion which happens to all men at nearly the
+same time, as the harvest, the vintage, summer, or winter. That is a
+singular occasion, which, on account of some special cause, happens
+at times to some private individuals, as for instance, a wedding, a
+sacrifice, a funeral, a feast, sleep.
+
+But the manner, also, is inquired into, in what manner, how, and with
+what design the action was done? Its parts are, the doer knowing what
+he was about, and not knowing. But the degree of his knowledge is
+measured by these circumstances whether the doer did his action
+secretly, openly, under compulsion or through persuasion. The fact
+of the absence of knowledge is brought forward as an excuse, and its
+parts are actual ignorance, accident, necessity. It is also attributed
+to agitation of mind, that is, to annoyance, to passion to love,
+and to other feelings of a similar class. Facilities, are those
+circumstances owing to which a thing is done more easily, or without
+which a thing cannot be done at all.
+
+XXVIII. And it is understood that there is added to the general
+consideration of the whole matter, the consideration what is greater
+than and what is less than, and what is like the affair which is
+under discussion, and what is equally important with it, and what is
+contrary to it, and what is negatively opposed to it, and the whole
+classification of the affair, and the divisions of it, and the
+ultimate result. The cases of greater, and less and equally important,
+are considered with reference to the power, and number and form of the
+business, as if we were regarding the stature of a human body.
+
+Now what is similar arises out of a species admitting of comparisons.
+Now what admits of comparisons is estimated by a nature which may be
+compared with it, and likened to it. What is contrary, is what is
+placed in a different class and is as distant as possible from that
+thing to which it is called contrary, as cold is from heat and
+death from life. But that is negatively opposed to a thing which is
+separated from the thing by an opposition which is limited to a denial
+of the quality; in this way, "to be wise," and "not to be wise." That
+is a genus which embraces several species, as "Cupidity." That is a
+species which is subordinate to a genus, as "Love," "Avarice." The
+Result is the ultimate termination of any business; in which it is a
+common inquiry, what has resulted from each separate fact; what is
+resulting from it; what is likely to result from it. Wherefore, in
+order that that which is likely to happen may be more conveniently
+comprehended in the mind with respect to this genus, we ought first
+to consider what is accustomed to result from every separate
+circumstance; in this manner:--From arrogance, hatred usually results;
+and from insolence, arrogance.
+
+The fourth division is a natural consequence from those qualities,
+which we said were usually attributed to things in distinction from
+persons. And with respect to this, those circumstances are sought for
+which ensue from a thing being done. In the first place, by what name
+it is proper that that which has been done should be called. In the
+next place, who have been the chief agents in, or originators of that
+action; and last of all, who have been the approvers and the imitators
+of that precedent and of that discovery. In the next place, whether
+there is any regular usage established with regard to that case, or
+whether there is any regular rule bearing on that case, or any regular
+course of proceeding, any formal decision, any science reduced to
+rules, any artificial system. In the next place, whether its nature is
+in the habit of being ordinarily displayed, or whether it is so very
+rarely, and whether it is quite unaccustomed to be so. After that,
+whether men are accustomed to approve of such a case with their
+authority, or to be offended at such actions; and with what eyes they
+look upon the other circumstances which are in the habit of following
+any similar conduct, either immediately or after an interval. And
+in the very last place, we must take notice whether any of those
+circumstances which are rightly classed under honesty or utility
+ensue. But as to these matters it will be necessary to speak more
+clearly when we come to mention the deliberative kind of argument.
+And the circumstances which we have now mentioned are those which are
+usually attributed to things as opposed to persons.
+
+XXIX. But all argumentation, which can be derived from those topics
+which we have mentioned, ought to be either probable or unavoidable.
+Indeed, to define it in a few words, argumentation appears to be an
+invention of some sort, which either shows something or other in a
+probable manner, or demonstrates it in an irrefutable one. Those
+things are demonstrated irrefutably which can neither be done nor
+proved in any other manner whatever than that in which they are
+stated; in this manner:--"If she has had a child, she has lain with
+a man." This sort of arguing, which is conversant with irrefutable
+demonstration, is especially used in speaking in the way of dilemma,
+or enumeration, or simple inference.
+
+Dilemma is a case in which, whichever admission you make, you are
+found fault with. For example:--"If he is a worthless fellow, why are
+you intimate with him? If he is an excellent man, why do you accuse
+him?" Enumeration is a statement in which, when many matters have been
+stated and all other arguments invalidated, the one which remains is
+inevitably proved; in this manner:--"It is quite plain that he was
+slain by this man, either because of his enmity to him, or some fear,
+or hope, which he had conceived, or in order to gratify some friend of
+his; or, if none of these alternatives are true, then that he was not
+slain by him at all; for a great crime cannot be undertaken without a
+motive. But he had no quarrel with him, nor fear of him, nor hope of
+any advantage to be gained by his death, nor did his death in the
+least concern any friend of his. It remains, therefore, that he was
+not slain by him at all." But a simple inference is declared from a
+necessary consequence, in this way:--"If you say that I did that at
+that time, at that time I was beyond the sea; it follows, that I not
+only did not do what you say I did, but that it was not even possible
+for me to have done it." And it will be desirable to look to this very
+carefully, in order that this sort of inference may not be refuted in
+any manner, so that the proof may not only have some sort of argument
+in it, and some resemblance to an unavoidable conclusion, but that the
+very argument itself may proceed on irrefutable reasons.
+
+But that is probable which is accustomed generally to take place,
+or which depends upon the opinion of men, or which contains some
+resemblance to these properties, whether it be false or true. In that
+description of subject the most usual probable argument is something
+of this sort:--"If she is his mother, she loves her son." "If he is an
+avaricious man, he neglects his oath." But in the case which depends
+mainly on opinion, probable arguments are such as this: "That there
+are punishments prepared in the shades below for impious men."--"That
+those men who give their attention to philosophy do not think that
+there are gods."
+
+XXX. But resemblance is chiefly seen in things which are contrary to
+one another, or equal to one another, and in those things which fall
+under the same principle. In things contrary to one another, in this
+manner:--"For if it is right that those men should be pardoned who
+have injured me unintentionally, it is also fitting that one should
+feel no gratitude towards those who have benefited me because they
+could not help it."
+
+In things equal to one another, in this way:--"For as a place without
+a harbour cannot be safe for ships, so a mind without integrity cannot
+be trustworthy for a man's friends." In those things which fall
+under the same principle a probable argument is considered in this
+way:--"For if it be not discreditable to the Rhodians to let out their
+port dues, then it is not discreditable even to Hermacreon to rent
+them." Then these arguments are true, in this manner:--"Since there is
+a scar, there has been a wound." Then they are probable, in in this
+way:--"If there was a great deal of dust on his shoes, he must have
+come off a journey." But (in order that we may arrange this matter in
+certain definite divisions) every probable argument which is assumed
+for the purpose of discussion, is either a proof, or something
+credible, or something already determined; or something which may be
+compared with something else.
+
+That is a proof which falls under some particular sense, and which
+indicates something which appears to have proceeded from it, which
+either existed previously, or was in the thing itself, or has ensued
+since, and, nevertheless, requires the evidence of testimony, and a
+more authoritative confirmation,--as blood, flight, dust, paleness,
+and other tokens like these. That is a credible statement which,
+without any witness being heard, is confirmed in the opinion of the
+hearer; in this way:--There is no one who does not wish his children
+to be free from injury, and happy. A case decided beforehand, is a
+matter approved of by the assent, or authority, or judgment of some
+person or persons. It is seen in three kinds of decision;--the
+religious one, the common one, the one depending on sanction. That is
+a religious one, which men on their oaths have decided in accordance
+with the laws. That is a common one, which all men have almost in a
+body approved of and adopted; in this manner:--"That all men should
+rise up on the appearance of their elders; That all men should pity
+suppliants." That depends on sanction, which, as it was a doubtful
+point what ought to be considered its character, men have established
+of their own authority; as, for instance, the conduct of the father
+of Gracchus, whom the Roman people made consul after his censorship,
+because he had done nothing in his censorship without the knowledge of
+his colleague.
+
+But that is a decision admitting of comparisons, which in a multitude
+of different circumstances contains some principle which is alike
+in all. Its parts are three,--representation, collation, example. A
+Representation is a statement demonstrating some resemblance of bodies
+or natures; Collation is a statement comparing one thing with another,
+because of their likeness to one another; Example is that which
+confirms or invalidates a case by some authority, or by what has
+happened to some man, or under some especial circumstances. Instances
+of these things, and descriptions of them, will be given amid the
+precepts for oratory. And the source of all confirmations has been
+already explained as occasion offered, and has been demonstrated
+no less clearly than the nature of the case required. But how each
+separate statement, and each part of a statement, and every dispute
+ought to be handled,--whether we refer to verbal discussion or
+to writings,--and what arguments are suitable for each kind of
+discussion, we will mention, speaking separately of each kind, in the
+second book. At present we have only dropped hints about the numbers,
+and moods, and parts of arguing in an irregular and promiscuous
+manner; hereafter we will digest (making careful distinctions between
+and selections from each kind of cause) what is suitable for each kind
+of discussion, culling it out of this abundance which we have already
+displayed.
+
+And indeed every sort of argument can be discovered from among these
+topics; and that, when discovered, it should be embellished, and
+separated in certain divisions, is very agreeable, and highly
+necessary, and is also a thing which has been greatly neglected by
+writers on this art. Wherefore at this present time it is desirable
+for us to speak of that sort of instruction, in order that perfection
+of arguing may be added to the discovery of proper arguments. And all
+this topic requires to be considered with great care and diligence,
+because there is not only great usefulness in this matter, but there
+is also extreme difficulty in giving precepts.
+
+XXXI. All argumentation, therefore, is to be carried on either by
+induction, or by ratiocination. Induction is a manner of speaking
+which, by means of facts which are not doubtful, forces the assent of
+the person to whom it is addressed. By which assent it causes him even
+to approve of some points which are doubtful, on account of their
+resemblance to those things to which he has assented; as in the
+Aeschines of Socrates, Socrates shows that Aspasia used to argue with
+Xenophon's wife, and with Xenophon himself. "Tell me, I beg of you, O
+you wife of Xenophon, if your neighbour has better gold than you have,
+whether you prefer her gold or your own?" "Hers," says she. "Suppose
+she has dresses and other ornaments suited to women, of more value
+than those which you have, should you prefer your own or hers?" "Hers,
+to be sure," answered she. "Come, then," says Aspasia, "suppose she
+has a better husband than you have, should you then prefer your own
+husband or hers?" On this the woman blushed.
+
+But Aspasia began a discourse with Xenophon himself. "I ask you, O
+Xenophon," says she, "if your neighbour has a better horse than yours
+is, whether you would prefer your own horse or his?" "His," says he.
+"Suppose he has a better farm than you have, which farm, I should like
+to know, would you prefer to possess?" "Beyond all doubt," says he,
+"that which is the best." "Suppose he has a better wife than you have,
+would you prefer his wife?" And on this Xenophon himself was silent.
+Then spake Aspasia,--"Since each of you avoids answering me that
+question alone which was the only one which I wished to have answered,
+I will tell you what each of you are thinking of; for both you, O
+woman, wish to have the best husband, and you, O Xenophon, most
+exceedingly desire to have the most excellent wife. Wherefore, unless
+you both so contrive matters that there shall not be on the whole
+earth a more excellent man or a more admirable woman, then in truth
+you will at all times desire above all things that which you think to
+be the best thing in the world, namely, that you, O Xenophon, may be
+the husband of the best possible wife; and you, O woman, that you may
+be married to the most excellent husband possible." After they had
+declared their assent to these far from doubtful propositions, it
+followed, on account of the resemblance of the cases, that if any one
+had separately asked them about some doubtful point, that also would
+have been admitted as certain, on account of the method employed in
+putting the question.
+
+This was a method of instruction which Socrates used to a great
+extent, because he himself preferred bringing forward no arguments for
+the purpose of persuasion, but wished rather that the person with whom
+he was disputing should form his own conclusions from arguments with
+which he had furnished himself, and which he was unavoidably compelled
+to approve of from the grounds which he had already assented to.
+
+XXXII. And with reference to this kind of persuasion, it appears to me
+desirable to lay down a rule, in the first place, that the argument
+which we bring forward by way of simile, should be such that it is
+impossible to avoid admitting it. For the premiss on account of
+which we intend to demand that that point which is doubtful shall be
+conceded to us, ought not to be doubtful itself. In the next place, we
+must take care that that point, for the sake of establishing which the
+induction is made, shall be really like those things which we have
+adduced before as matters admitting of no question. For it will be of
+no service to us that something has been already admitted, if that for
+the sake of which we were desirous to get that statement admitted be
+unlike it; so that the hearer may not understand what is the use of
+those original inductions, or to what result they tend.
+
+For the man who sees that, if he is correct in giving his assent to
+the thing about which he is first asked, that thing also to which he
+does not agree must unavoidably be admitted by him, very often will
+not allow the examination to proceed any further, either by not
+answering at all, or by answering wrongly. Wherefore it is necessary
+that he should, by the method in which the inquiry is conducted, be
+led on without perceiving it, from the admissions which he has already
+made, to admit that which he is not inclined to admit, and at last
+he must either decline to give an answer, or he must admit what is
+wanted, or he must deny it. If the proposition be denied, then we must
+either show its resemblance to those things which have been already
+admitted or we must employ some other induction. If it be granted,
+then the argumentation may be brought to a close. If he keeps silence,
+then an answer must be extracted, or, since silence is very like a
+confession, it may be as well to bring the discussion to a close,
+taking the silence to be equivalent to an admission.
+
+And so this kind of argumentation is threefold. The first part
+consists of one simile, or of several, the second, of that which we
+desire to have admitted, for the sake of which the similes have
+been employed, the third proceeds from the conclusion which either
+establishes the admissions which have been made or points out what may
+be established from it.
+
+XXXIII But because it will not appear to some people to have been
+explained with sufficient clearness, unless we submit some instance
+taken from the civil class of causes, it seems desirable to employ
+some example of this sort, not because the rules to be laid down
+differ, or because it is expedient to employ such differently in this
+sort of discussion from what we should in ordinary discourse, but in
+order to satisfy the desire of those men, who, though they may have
+seen something in one place, are unable to recognise it in another
+unless it be proved. Therefore in this cause which is very notorious
+among the Greeks, that of Epaminondas, the general of the Thebans, who
+did not give up his army to the magistrate who succeeded him in due
+course of law, and when he himself had retained his army a few days
+contrary to law, he utterly defeated the Lacedaemonians, the accuser
+might employ an argumentation by means of induction, while defending
+the letter of the law in opposition to its spirit, in this way:--
+
+"If, O judges, the framer of the law had added to his law what
+Epaminondas says that he intended, and had subjoined the exception
+'except where any one has omitted to deliver up his army for the
+advantage of the republic,' would you have endured it? I think not.
+And if you yourselves, (though, such a proceeding is very far from
+your religious habits and from your wisdom,) for the sake of doing
+honour to this man, were to order the same exception to be subjoined
+to the law, would the Theban people endure that such a thing should be
+done? Beyond all question it would not endure it. Can it possibly then
+appear to you that that which would be scandalous if it were added to
+a law, should be proper to be done just as if it had been added to the
+law? I know your acuteness well; it cannot seem so to you, O judges.
+But if the intention of the framer of the law cannot be altered as to
+its expressions either by him or by you, then beware lest it should be
+a much more scandalous thing that that should be altered in fact, and
+by your decision, which cannot be altered in one single word."
+
+And we seem now to have said enough for the present respecting
+induction. Next, let us consider the power and nature of
+ratiocination.
+
+XXXIV. Ratiocination is a sort of speaking, eliciting something
+probable from the fact under consideration itself, which being
+explained and known of itself, confirms itself by its own power and
+principles.
+
+Those who have thought it profitable to pay diligent attention to this
+kind of reasoning, have differed a little in the manner in which they
+have laid down rules, though they were aiming at the same end as far
+as the practice of speaking went. For some of them have said that
+there are five divisions of it, and some have thought that it had no
+more parts than could be arranged under three divisions. And it would
+seem not useless to explain the dispute which exists between these
+parties, with the reasons which each allege for it; for it is a short
+one, and not such that either party appears to be talking nonsense.
+And this topic also appears to us to be one that it is not at all
+right to omit in speaking.
+
+Those who think that it ought to be arranged in five divisions,
+say that first of all it is desirable to explain the sum of the
+discussion, in this way:--Those things are better managed which are
+done on some deliberate plan, than those which are conducted without
+any steady design. This they call the first division. And then they
+think it right that it should be further proved by various arguments,
+and by as copious statements as possible; in this way:--"That house
+which is governed by reason is better appointed in all things, and
+more completely furnished, than that which is conducted at random,
+and on no settled plan;--that army which is commanded by a wise and
+skilful general, is governed more suitably in all particulars than
+that which is managed by the folly and rashness of any one. The same
+principle prevails with respect to sailing; for that ship performs its
+voyage best which has the most experienced pilot."
+
+When the proposition has been proved in this manner, and when two
+parts of the ratiocination have proceeded, they say in the third part,
+that it is desirable to assume, from the mere intrinsic force of the
+proposition, what you wish to prove; in this way:--"But none of all
+those things is managed better than the entire world." In the fourth
+division they adduce besides another argument in proof of this
+assumption, in this manner:--"For both the rising and setting of the
+stars preserve some definite order, and their annual commutations
+do not only always take place in the same manner by some express
+necessity, but they are also adapted to the service of everything, and
+their daily and nightly changes have never injured anything in any
+particular from being altered capriciously." And all these things are
+a token that the nature of the world has been arranged by no ordinary
+wisdom. In the fifth division they bring forward that sort of
+statement, which either adduces that sort of fact alone which is
+compelled in every possible manner, in this way:--"The world,
+therefore, is governed on some settled plan;" or else, when it has
+briefly united both the proposition and the assumption, it adds this
+which is derived from both of them together, in this way:--"But if
+those things are managed better which are conducted on a settled plan,
+than those which are conducted without such settled plan; and if
+nothing whatever is managed better than the entire world; therefore it
+follows that the world is managed on a settled plan." And in this way
+they think that such argumentation has five divisions.
+
+XXXV. But those who affirm that it has only three divisions, do not
+think that the argumentation ought to be conducted in any other way,
+but they find fault with this arrangement of the divisions. For they
+say that neither the proposition nor the assumption ought to be
+separated from their proofs; and that a proposition does not appear to
+be complete, nor an assumption perfect, which is not corroborated by
+proof. Therefore, they say that what those other men divide into two
+parts, proposition and proof, appears to them one part only, namely
+proposition. For if it be not proved, the proposition has no business
+to make part of the argumentation. In the same way they say that
+that which those other men call the assumption, and the proof of the
+assumption, appears to them to be assumption only. And the result is,
+that the whole argumentation being treated in the same way, appears to
+some susceptible of five divisions, and to others of only three; so
+that the difference does not so much affect the practice of speaking,
+as the principles on which the rules are to be laid down.
+
+But to us that arrangement appears to be more convenient which divides
+it under five heads; and that is the one which all those who come from
+the school of Aristotle, or of Theophrastus, have chiefly followed.
+For as it is chiefly Socrates and the disciples of Socrates who have
+employed that former sort of argumentation which goes on induction,
+so this which is wrought up by ratiocination has been exceedingly
+practised by Aristotle, and the Peripatetics, and Theophrastus; and
+after them by those rhetoricians who are accounted the most elegant
+and the most skilful. And it seems desirable to explain why that
+arrangement is more approved of by us, that we may not appear to have
+adopted it capriciously; at the same time we must be brief in the
+explanation, that we may not appear to dwell on such subjects longer
+than the general manner of laying down rules requires.
+
+XXXVI. If in any sort of argumentation it is sufficient to use a
+proposition by itself, and if it is not requisite to add proof to the
+proposition; but if in any sort of argumentation a proposition is of
+no power unless proof be added to it; then proof is something distinct
+from the proposition. For that which can be joined to a thing or
+separated from it, cannot possibly be the same thing with that to
+which it is joined or from which it is separated. But there is a
+certain kind of argumentation in which the proposition does not
+require confirmatory proof, and also another kind in which it is of
+no use at all without such proof, as we shall show. Proof, then, is a
+thing different from a proposition. And we will demonstrate that point
+which we have promised to show in this way:--The proposition which
+contains in itself something manifest, because it is unavoidable that
+that should be admitted by all men, has no necessity for our desiring
+to prove and corroborate it.
+
+It is a sort of statement like this:--"If on the day on which that
+murder was committed at Rome, I was at Athens, I could not have been
+present at that murder." Because this is manifestly true, there is no
+need to adduce proof of it; wherefore, it is proper at once to assume
+the fact, in this way:--"But I was at Athens on that day." If this is
+not notorious, it requires proof; and when the proof is furnished the
+conclusion must follow:--"Therefore I could not have been present at
+the murder." There is, therefore, a certain kind of proposition which
+does not require proof. For why need one waste time in proving that
+there is a kind which does require proof; for that is easily visible
+to all men. And if this be the case, from this fact, and from that
+statement which we have established, it follows that proof is
+something distinct from a proposition. And if it is so, it is
+evidently false that argumentation is susceptible of only three
+divisions.
+
+In the same manner it is plain that there is another sort of proof
+also which is distinct from assumption. For if in some sort of
+argumentation it is sufficient to use assumption, and if it is not
+requisite to add proof to the assumption; and if, again, in some sort
+of argumentation assumption is invalid unless proof be added to it;
+then proof is something separate and distinct from assumption. But
+there is a kind of argumentation in which assumption does not require
+proof; and a certain other kind in which it is of no use without
+proof; as we shall show. Proof, then, is a thing distinct from
+assumption. And we will demonstrate that which we have promised to in
+this manner.
+
+That assumption which contains a truth evident to all men has no need
+of proof. That is an assumption of this sort:--"If it be desirable
+to be wise, it is proper to pay attention to philosophy." This
+proposition requires proof. For it is not self-evident. Nor is it
+notorious to all men, because many think that philosophy is of no
+service at all, and some think that it is even a disservice. A
+self-evident assumption is such as this:--"But it is desirable to be
+wise." And because this is of itself evident from the simple fact, and
+is at once perceived to be true, there is no need that it be proved.
+Wherefore, the argumentation may be at once terminated:--"Therefore
+it is proper to pay attention to philosophy." There is, therefore, a
+certain kind of assumption which does not stand in need of proof; for
+it is evident that is a kind which does. Therefore, it is false that
+argumentation is susceptible of only a threefold division.
+
+XXXVII. And from these considerations that also is evident, that there
+is a certain kind of argumentation in which neither proposition nor
+assumption stands in need of proof, of this sort, that we may adduce
+something undoubted and concise, for the sake of example. "If wisdom
+is above all things to be desired, then folly is above all things to
+be avoided; but wisdom is to be desired above all things, therefore
+folly is above all things to be avoided." Here both the assumption and
+the proposition are self-evident, on which account neither of them
+stands in need of proof. And from all these facts it is manifest that
+proof is at times added, and at times is not added. From which it
+is palpable that proof is not contained in a proposition, nor in an
+assumption, but that each being placed in its proper place, has its
+own peculiar force fixed and belonging to itself. And if that is the
+case, then those men have made a convenient arrangement who have
+divided argumentation into five parts.
+
+Are there five parts of that argumentation which is carried on by
+ratiocination? First of all, proposition, by which that topic is
+briefly explained from which all the force of the ratiocination ought
+to proceed. Then the proof of the proposition, by which that which has
+been briefly set forth being corroborated by reasons, is made more
+probable and evident. Then assumption, by which that is assumed which,
+proceeding from the proposition, has its effect on proving the case.
+Then the proof of the assumption, by which that which has been assumed
+is confirmed by reasons. Lastly, the summing up, in which that which
+results from the entire argumentation is briefly explained. So the
+argumentation which has the greatest number of divisions consists of
+these five parts.
+
+The second sort of argumentation has four divisions; the third has
+three. Then there is one which has two; which, however, is a disputed
+point. And about each separate division it is possible that some
+people may think that there is room for a discussion.
+
+XXXVIII. Let us then bring forward some examples of those matters
+which are agreed upon. And in favour of those which are doubtful, let
+us bring forward some reasons. Now the argumentation which is divided
+into five divisions is of this sort:--It is desirable, O judges, to
+refer all laws to the advantage of the republic, and to interpret them
+with reference to the general advantage, and according to the strict
+wording according to which they are drawn up. For our ancestors were
+men of such virtue and such wisdom, that when they were drawing up
+laws, they proposed to themselves no other object than the safety and
+advantage of the republic; for they were neither willing themselves to
+draw up any law which could be injurious; and if they had drawn up one
+of such a character, they were sure that it would be rejected when its
+tendency was perceived. For no one wishes to preserve the laws for the
+sake of the laws, but for the sake of the republic; because all men
+believe that the republic is best managed by means of laws. It is
+desirable, therefore, to interpret all written laws with reference to
+that cause for the sake of which it is desirable that the laws should
+be preserved. That is to say, since we are servants of the republic,
+let us interpret the laws with reference to the advantage and benefit
+of the republic. For as it is not right to think that anything results
+from medicine except what has reference to the advantage of the body,
+since it is for the sake of the body that the science of medicine has
+been established; so it is desirable to think that nothing proceeds
+from the laws except what is for the advantage of the republic, since
+it is for the sake of the republic that laws were instituted.
+
+Therefore, while deciding on this point, cease to inquire about the
+strict letter of the law, and consider the law (as it is reasonable to
+do) with reference to the advantage of the republic. For what was more
+advantageous for the Thebans than for the Lacedaemonians to be put
+down? What object was Epaminondas, the Theban general, more bound
+to aim at than the victory of the Thebans? What had he any right to
+consider more precious or more dear to him, than the great glory then
+acquired by the Thebans, than such an illustrious and magnificent
+trophy? Surely, disregarding the letter of the law, it became him to
+consider the intention of the framer of the law. And this now has been
+sufficiently insisted on, namely, that no law has ever been drawn
+up by any one, that had not for its object the benefit of the
+commonwealth. He then thought that it was the very extremity of
+madness, not to interpret with reference to the advantage of the
+republic, that which had been framed for the sake of the safety of the
+republic. And it is right to interpret all laws with reference to the
+safety of the republic; and if he was a great instrument of the safety
+of the republic, certainly it is quite impossible that he by one and
+the same action should have consulted the general welfare, and yet
+should have violated the laws.
+
+XXXIX. But argumentation consists of four parts, when we either
+advance a proposition, or claim an assumption without proof. That it
+is proper to do when either the proposition is understood by its own
+merits, or when the assumption is self-evident and is in need of no
+proof. If we pass over the proof of the proposition, the argumentation
+then consists of four parts, and is conducted in this manner:--"O
+judges, you who are deciding on your oaths, in accordance with the
+law, ought to obey the laws; but you cannot obey the laws unless
+you follow that which is written in the law. For what more certain
+evidence of his intention could the framer of a law leave behind him,
+than that which he himself wrote with great care and diligence? But if
+there were no written documents, then we should be very anxious for
+them, in order that the intention of the framer of the law might be
+ascertained; nor should we permit Epaminondas, not even if he were
+beyond the power of this tribunal, to interpret to us the meaning of
+the law; much less will we now permit him, when, the law is at hand,
+to interpret the intention of the lawgiver, not from that which is
+most clearly written, but from that which is convenient for his own
+cause. But if you, O judges, are bound to obey the laws, and if you
+are unable to do so unless you follow what is written in the law; what
+can hinder your deciding that he has acted contrary to the laws?"
+
+But if we pass over the proof of the assumption, again the
+argumentation will be arranged under four heads, in this
+manner:--"When men have repeatedly deceived us, having pledged their
+faith to us, we ought not to give credit to anything that they say for
+if we receive any injury; in consequence of their perfidy, there will
+be no one except ourselves whom we shall have any right to accuse. And
+in the first place, it is inconvenient to be deceived, in the
+next place, it is foolish, thirdly, it is disgraceful. But the
+Carthaginians have before this deceived us over and over again. It is
+therefore the greatest insanity to rest any hopes on their good faith,
+when you have been so often deceived by their treachery."
+
+When the proof both of the proposition and of the assumption is passed
+over, the argumentation becomes threefold only, in this way--"We must
+either live in fear of the Carthaginians if we leave them with their
+power undiminished, or we must destroy their city. And certainly it is
+not desirable to live in fear of them. The only remaining alternative
+then is to destroy their city."
+
+XL But some people think that it is both possible and advisable at
+times to pass over the summing up altogether, when it is quite evident
+what is effected by ratiocination. And then if that be done they
+consider that the argumentation is limited to two divisions, in this
+way--"If she has had a child she is not a virgin. But she has had a
+child." In this case they say it is quite sufficient to state the
+proposition and assumption, since it is quite plain that the matter
+which is here stated is such as does not stand in need of summing up.
+But to us it seems that all ratiocination ought to be terminated in
+proper form and that that defect which offends them is above all
+things to be avoided namely, that of introducing what is self evident
+into the summing up.
+
+But this will be possible to be effected if we come to a right
+understanding of the different kinds of summing up. For we shall
+either sum up in such a way as to unite together the proposition and
+the assumption, in this way--"But if it is right for all laws to be
+referred to the general advantage of the republic, and if this man
+ensured the safety of the republic, undoubtedly he cannot by one
+and the same action have consulted the general safety and yet have
+violated the laws,"--or thus, in order that the opinion we advocate
+may be established by arguments drawn from contraries, in this
+manner--"It is then the very greatest madness to build hopes on the
+good faith of those men by whose treachery you have been so repeatedly
+deceived,"--or so that that inference alone be drawn which is already
+announced, in this manner--"Let us then destroy their city,"--or so
+that the conclusion which is desired must necessarily follow from the
+assertion which has been established, in this way--"If she has had a
+child, she has laid with a man. But she has had a child." This then is
+established. "Therefore she has lain with a man." If you are unwilling
+to draw this inference, and prefer inferring what follows, "Therefore
+she has committed incest," you will have terminated your argumentation
+but you will have missed an evident and natural summing up.
+
+Wherefore in long argumentations it is often desirable to draw
+influences from combinations of circumstances, or from contraries. And
+briefly to explain that point alone which is established, and in
+those in which the result is evident, to employ arguments drawn from
+consequences. But if there are any people who think that argumentation
+ever consists of one part alone they will be able to say that it is
+often sufficient to carry-on an argumentation in this way.--"Since
+she has had a child, she has lain with a man." For they say that
+this assertion requires no proof, nor assumption, nor proof of an
+assumption, nor summing up. But it seems to us that they are misled
+by the ambiguity of the name. For argumentation signifies two things
+under one name, because any discussion respecting anything which is
+either probable or necessary is called argumentation, and so also is
+the systematic polishing of such a discussion.
+
+When then they bring forward any statement of this kind,--"Since she
+has had a child, she has lain, with a man," they bring forward a plain
+assertion, not a highly worked up argument, but we are speaking of the
+parts of a highly worked up argument.
+
+XLI. That principle then has nothing to do with this matter. And with
+the help of this distinction we will remove other obstacles which seem
+to be in the way of this classification, if any people think that it
+is possible that at times the assumption may be omitted, and at other
+times the proposition, and if this idea has in it anything probable
+or necessary, it is quite inevitable that it must affect the hearer in
+some great degree. And if it were the only object in view, and if
+it made no difference in what manner that argument which had been
+projected was handled, it would be a great mistake to suppose that
+there is such a vast difference between the greatest orators and
+ordinary ones.
+
+But it will be exceedingly desirable to infuse variety into our
+speech, for in all cases sameness is the mother of satiety. That will
+be able to be managed if we not always enter upon our argumentation
+in a similar manner. For in the first place it is desirable to
+distinguish our orations as to their kinds, that is to say, at one
+time to employ induction, and at another ratiocination. In the next
+place, in the argumentation itself, it is best not always to begin
+with the proposition, nor in every case to employ all the five
+divisions, nor always to work up the different parts in the same
+manner, but it is permissible sometimes to begin with the assumption,
+sometimes with one or other of the proofs, sometimes with both,
+sometimes to employ one kind of summing up, and sometimes another. And
+in order that this variety may be seen, let us either write, or in any
+example whatever let us exercise this same principle with respect to
+those things which we endeavour to prove, that our task may be as easy
+as possible.
+
+And concerning the parts of the argumentation it seems to us that
+enough has been said. But we wish to have it understood that we hold
+the doctrine that argumentations are handled in philosophy in many
+other manners, and those too at times obscure ones, concerning which,
+however, there is still some definite system laid down. But still
+those methods appear to us to be inconsistent with the practice of an
+orator. But as to those things which we think belong to orators, we
+do not indeed undertake to say that we have attended to them more
+carefully than others have, but we do assert that we have written on
+them with more accuracy and diligence. At present let us go on in
+regular order to the other points, as we originally proposed.
+
+XLII. Reprehension is that by means of which the proof adduced by the
+opposite party is invalidated by arguing, or is disparaged, or is
+reduced to nothing. And this sort of argument proceeds from the same
+source of invention which confirmation employs, because whatever the
+topics may be by means of which any statement can be confirmed, the
+very same may be used in order to invalidate it. For nothing is to
+be considered in all these inventions, except that which has been
+attributed to persons or to things. Wherefore it will be necessary
+that the invention and the high polish which ought to be given to
+argumentation must be transferred to this part of our oration also
+from those rules which have been already laid down. But in order that
+we may give some precepts with reference to this part also, we will
+explain the different methods of reprehension, and those who observe
+them will more easily be able to do away with or invalidate those
+statements which are made on the opposite side.
+
+All argumentation is reprehended when anything, whether it be one
+thing only, or more than one of those positions which are assumed, is
+not granted, or if, though they are granted, it is denied that the
+conclusion legitimately follows from them, or if it is shown that the
+very kind of argumentation is faulty, or if in opposition to one
+form and reliable sort of argumentation another is employed which is
+equally firm and convincing. Something of those positions which have
+been assumed is not granted when either that thing which the opposite
+party says is credible is denied to be such, or when what they think
+admits of a comparison with the present case is shown to be unlike
+it, or when what has been already decided is either turned aside
+as referring to something else, or is impeached as having been
+erroneously decided, or when that which the opposite party have called
+a proof is denied to be such, or if the summing up is denied in
+some one point or in every particular, or if it is shown that the
+enumeration of matters stated and proved is incorrect, or if the
+simple conclusion is proved to contain something false. For everything
+which is assumed for the purpose of arguing on, whether as necessary
+or as only probable, must inevitably be assumed from these topics, as
+we have already pointed out.
+
+XLIII. What is assumed as something credible is invalidated, if it is
+either manifestly false, in this way:--"There is the one who would not
+prefer riches to wisdom." Or on the opposite side something credible
+may be brought against it, in this manner--"Who is there who is not
+more desirous of doing his duty than of acquiring money?" Or it may be
+utterly and absolutely incredible, as if some one, who it is notorious
+is a miser, were to say that he had neglected the acquisition of some
+large sum of money for the sake of performing some inconsiderable
+duty. Or if that which happens in some circumstances, and to some
+persons, were asserted to happen habitually in all cases and to
+everybody, in this way.--'Those men who are poor have a greater regard
+for money than for duty.' 'It is very natural that a murder should
+have been committed in that which is a desert place.' How could a man
+be murdered in a much frequented place? Or if a thing which is done
+seldom is asserted never to be done at all, as Curius asserts in his
+speech in behalf of Fulvius, where he says, "No one can fall in love
+at a single glance, or as he is passing by."
+
+But that which is assumed as a proof may be invalidated by a
+recurrence to the same topics as those by which it is sought to be
+established. For in a proof the first thing to be shown is that it is
+true, and in the next place, that it is one especially affecting the
+matter which is under discussion, as blood is a proof of murder in the
+next place, that that has been done which ought not to have been, or
+that has not been done which ought to have been and last of all, that
+the person accused was acquainted with the law and usages affecting
+the matter which is the subject of inquiry. For all these circumstance
+are matters requiring proof, and we will explain them more carefully,
+when we come to speak about conjectural statements separately.
+Therefore, each of these points in a reprehension of the statement of
+the adversary must be laboured, and it must be shown either that such
+and such a thing is no proof, or that it is an unimportant proof, or
+that it is favourable to oneself rather than to the adversary, or that
+it is altogether erroneously alleged, or that it may be diverted so as
+to give grounds to an entirely different suspicion.
+
+XLIV. But when anything is alleged as a proper object of comparison,
+since that is a class of argument which turns principally on
+resemblance, in reprehending the adversity it will be advisable to
+deny that there is any resemblance at all to the case with which it is
+attempted to institute the comparison. And that may be done if it
+be proved to be different in genus or in nature, or in power, or
+in magnitude, or in time or place, or with reference to the person
+affected, or to the opinions generally entertained of it. And if it
+be shown also in what classification that which is brought forward on
+account of the alleged resemblance and in what place too the whole
+genus with reference to which it is brought forward, ought to be
+placed. After that it will be pointed out how the one thing differs
+from the other, from which we shall proceed to show that a different
+opinion ought to be entertained of that which is brought forward by
+way of comparison, and of that to which it is sought to be compared.
+And this sort of argument we especially require when that particular
+argumentation which is carried on by means of induction is to be
+reprehended. If any previous decision be alleged, since these are the
+topics by which it is principally established, the praise of those who
+have delivered such decision, the resemblance of the matter which is
+at present under discussion to that which has already been the subject
+of the decision referred to, that not only the decision is not found
+fault with because it is mentioned, but that it is approved of by
+every one, and by showing too, that the case which has been already
+decided is a more difficult and a more important one than that which
+is under consideration now. It will be desirable also to invalidate
+it by arguments drawn from the contrary topics, if either truth or
+probability will allow us to do so. And it will be necessary to take
+care and notice whether the matter which has been decided has any real
+connexion with that which is the present subject of discussion, and
+we must also take care that no case is adduced in which any error has
+been committed, so that it should seem that we are passing judgment on
+the man himself who has delivered the decision referred to.
+
+It is desirable further to take care that they do not bring forward
+some solitary or unusual decision when there have been many decisions
+given the other way. For by such means as this the authority of the
+decision alleged can be best invalidated. And it is desirable that
+those arguments which are assumed as probable should be handled in
+this way.
+
+XLV. But those which are brought forward as necessary, if they are
+only imitations of a necessary kind of argumentation and are not so in
+reality, may be reprehended in this manner. In the first place, the
+summing up, which ought to take away the force of the admissions you
+have made if it be a correct one, will never be reprehended, if it
+be an incorrect one it may be attacked by two methods, either by
+conversion or by the invalidating one portion of it. By conversion, in
+this way.
+
+
+ "For if the man be modest, why should you
+ Attack so good a man? And if his heart
+ And face be seats of shameless impudence,
+ Then what avails your accusation
+ Of one who views all fame with careless eye?"
+
+
+In this case, whether you say that he is a modest man or that he is
+not, he thinks that the unavoidable inference is that you should not
+accuse him. But that may be reprehended by conversion thus--"But
+indeed, he ought to be accused, for if he be modest, accuse him, for
+he will not treat your imputations against him lightly, but if he has
+a shameless disposition of mind, still accuse him, for in that case he
+is not a respectable man."
+
+And again, the argument may be reprehended by an invalidating of
+the other part of it--"But if he is a modest man, when he has
+been corrected by your accusation he will abandon his error." An
+enumeration of particulars is understood to be faulty if we either say
+that something has been passed over which we are willing to admit, or
+if some weak point has been included in it which can be contradicted,
+or if there is no reason why we may not honestly admit it. Something
+is passed over in such an enumeration as this.--"Since you have
+that horse, you must either have bought it, or have acquired it by
+inheritance, or have received it as a gift, or he must have been born
+on your estate, or, if none of these alternatives of the case, you
+must have stolen it. But you did not buy it, nor did it come to you by
+inheritance, nor was it foaled on your estate, nor was it given to you
+as a present, therefore you must certainly have stolen it."
+
+This enumeration is fairly reprehended, if it can be alleged that the
+horse was taken from the enemy, as that description of booty is not
+sold. And if that be alleged, the enumeration is disproved, since that
+matter has been stated which was passed over in such enumeration.
+
+XLVI. But it will also be reprehended in another manner, if any
+contradictory statement is advanced; that is to say, just by way of
+example, if, to continue arguing from the previous case, it can be
+shown that the horse did come to one by inheritance, or if it should
+not be discreditable to admit the last alternative, as if a person,
+when his adversaries said,--"You were either laying an ambush against
+the owner, or you were influenced by a friend, or you were carried
+away by covetousness," were to confess that he was complying with the
+entreaties of his friend.
+
+But a simple conclusion is reprehended if that which follows does not
+appear of necessity to cohere with that which has gone before. For
+this very proposition, "If he breathes, he is alive," "If it is day,
+it is light," is a proposition of such a nature that the latter
+statement appears of necessity to cohere with the preceding one. But
+this inference, "If she is his mother, she loves him," "If he has ever
+done wrong, he will never be chastised," ought to be reprehended in
+such a manner as to show that the latter proposition does not of
+necessity cohere with the former.
+
+Inferences of this kind, and all other unavoidable conclusions, and
+indeed all argumentation whatever, and its reprehension too, contains
+some greater power and has a more extensive operation than is here
+explained. But the knowledge of this system is such that it cannot
+be added to any portion of this art, not that it does of itself
+separately stand in need of a long time, and of deep and arduous
+consideration. Wherefore those things shall be explained by us at
+another time, and when we are dealing with another subject, if
+opportunity be afforded us. At present we ought to be contented with
+these precepts of the rhetoricians given for the use of orators. When,
+therefore, any one of these points which are assumed is not granted,
+the whole statement is invalidated by these means.
+
+XLVII. But when, though these things are admitted, a conclusion is
+not derived from them, we must consider these points too, whether any
+other conclusion is obtained, or whether anything else is meant, in
+this way,--If, when any one says that he is gone to the army, and any
+one chooses to use this mode of arguing against him, "If you had come
+to the army you would have been seen by the military tribunes, but you
+were not seen by them, therefore you did not go to the army." On this
+case, when you have admitted the proposition, and the assumption, you
+have got to invalidate the conclusion, for some other inference has
+been drawn, and not the one which was inevitable.
+
+And at present, indeed, in order that the case might be more easily
+understood, we have brought forward an example pregnant with a
+manifest and an enormous error; but it often happens that an error
+when stated obscurely is taken for a truth; when either you do not
+recollect exactly what admissions you have made, or perhaps you have
+granted something as certain which is extremely doubtful. If you have
+granted something which is doubtful on that side of the question which
+you yourself understand, then if the adversary should wish to adapt
+that part to the other part by means of inference, it will be
+desirable to show, not from the admission which you have made, but
+from what he has assumed, that an inference is really established; in
+this manner:--"If you are in need of money, you have not got money. If
+you have not got money, you are poor. But you are in need of money,
+for if it were not so you would not pay attention to commerce;
+therefore you are poor." This is refuted in this way:--"When you said,
+if you are in need of money you have not got money, I understood you
+to mean, 'If you are in need of money from poverty, then you have
+not got money;' and therefore I admitted the argument. But when you
+assumed, 'But you are in need of money,' I understood you to mean,
+'But you wish to have more money.' But from these admissions this
+result, 'Therefore you are poor,' does not follow. But it would follow
+if I had made this admission to you in the first instance, that any
+one who wished to have more money, had no money at all."
+
+XLVIII. But many often think that you have forgotten what admissions
+you made, and therefore an inference which does not follow
+legitimately is introduced into the summing up as if it did follow; in
+this way:--"If the inheritance came to him, it is probable that he
+was murdered by him." Then they prove this at considerable length.
+Afterwards they assume, But the inheritance did come to him. Then the
+inference is deduced; Therefore he did murder him. But that does
+not necessarily follow from what they had assumed. Wherefore it is
+necessary to take great care to notice both what is assumed, and what
+necessarily follows from those assumptions. But the whole description
+of argumentation will be proved to be faulty on these accounts; if
+either there is any defect in the argumentation itself, or if it is
+not adapted to the original intention. And there will be a defect in
+the argumentation itself, if the whole of it is entirely false, or
+common, or ordinary, or trifling, or made up of remote suppositions;
+if the definition contained in it be faulty, if it be controverted,
+if it be too evident, if it be one which is not admitted, or
+discreditable, or objected to, or contrary, or inconstant, or adverse
+to one's object.
+
+That is false in which there is evidently a lie; in this
+manner:--"That man cannot be wise who neglects money. But Socrates
+neglected money; therefore he was not wise." That is common which does
+not make more in favour of our adversaries than of ourselves; in
+this manner:--"Therefore, O judges, I have summed up in a few words,
+because I had truth on my side." That is ordinary which, if the
+admission be now made, can be transferred also to some other case
+which is not easily proved; in this manner:--"If he had not truth on
+his side, O judges, he would never have risked committing himself to
+your decision." That is trifling which is either uttered after the
+proposition, in this way:--"If it had occurred to him, he would not
+have done so;" or if a man wishes to conceal a matter manifestly
+disgraceful under a trifling defence, in this manner:--
+
+
+ "Then when all sought your favour, when your hand
+ Wielded a mighty sceptre, I forsook you;
+ But now when all fly from you, I prepare
+ Alone, despising danger, to restore you."
+
+
+XLIX. That is remote which is sought to a superfluous extent, in this
+manner:--"But if Publius Scipio had not given his daughter Cornelia in
+marriage to Tiberius Gracchus, and if he had not had the two Gracchi
+by her, such terrible seditions would never have arisen. So that all
+this distress appears attributable to Scipio." And like this is that
+celebrated complaint--
+
+
+ "Oh that the woodman's axe had spared the pine
+ That long on Pelion's lofty summit grew."[57]
+
+
+For the cause is sought further back than is at all necessary. That
+is a bad definition, when it either describes common things in this
+manner:--"He is seditious who is a bad and useless citizen;" for this
+does not describe the character of a seditious man more than of an
+ambitious one,--of a calumniator, than of any wicked man whatever,
+in short. Or when it says anything which is false; in this
+manner:--"Wisdom is a knowledge how to acquire money." Or when it
+contains something which is neither dignified nor important; in this
+way:--"Folly is a desire of inordinate glory." That, indeed, is one
+folly; but this is defining folly by a species, not by its whole
+genus. It is controvertible when a doubtful cause is alleged, for the
+sake of proving a doubtful point; in this manner:--
+
+
+ "See how the gods who rule the realms above
+ And shades below, and all their motions sway,
+ Themselves are all in tranquil concord found."
+
+
+That is self-evident, about which there is no dispute at all. As if
+any one while accusing Orestes were to make it quite plain that his
+mother had been put to death by him. That is a disputable definition,
+when the very thing which we are amplifying is a matter in dispute.
+As if any one, while accusing Ulysses, were to dwell on this point
+particularly, that it is a scandalous thing that the bravest of
+men, Ajax, should have been slain by a most inactive man. That is
+discreditable which either with respect to the place in which it is
+spoken, or to the man who utters it, or to the time at which it is
+uttered, or to those who hear it, or to the matter which is the
+subject of discussion, appears scandalous on account of the subject
+being a discreditable one. That is an offensive one, which offends the
+inclinations of those who hear it; as if any one were to praise the
+judiciary law of Caepio before the Roman knights, who are themselves
+desirous of acting as judges.
+
+L. That is a contrary definition, which is laid down in opposition to
+the actions which those who are the hearers of the speech have done;
+as if any one were to be speaking before Alexander the Great against
+some stormer of a city, and were to say that nothing was more inhuman
+than to destroy cities, when Alexander himself had destroyed Thebes.
+That is an inconsistent one, which is asserted by the same man in
+different senses concerning the same case; as if any one, after he has
+said that the man who has virtue is in need of nothing whatever for
+the purpose of living well, were afterwards to deny that any one could
+live well without good health; or that he would stand by a friend in
+difficulty out of good-will towards him, for that then he would hope
+that some good would accrue to himself by so doing.
+
+That is an adverse definition, which in some particular is an actual
+injury to one's own cause; as if any one were to extol the power, and
+resources, and prosperity of the enemy, while encouraging his own
+soldiers to fight. If some part of the argumentation is not adapted to
+the object which is or ought to be proposed to one, it will be found
+to be owing to some one of these defects. If a man has promised a
+great many points and proved only a few; or if, when he is bound to
+prove the whole, he speaks only of some portion; in this way:--The
+race of women is avaricious; for Eriphyle sold the life of her husband
+for gold. Or if he does not speak in defence of that particular point
+which is urged in accusation; as if any one when accused of corruption
+were to defend himself by the statement that he was brave; as Amphion
+does in Euripides, and so too in Pacuvius, who, when his musical
+knowledge is found fault with, praises his knowledge of philosophy.
+Or if a part of conduct be found fault with on account of the bad
+character of the man; as if any one were to blame learning on account
+of the vices of some learned men. Or if any one while wishing to
+praise somebody were to speak of his good fortune, and not of his
+virtue; or if any one were to compare one thing with another in such
+a manner as to think that he was not praising the one unless he was
+blaming the other; or if he were to praise the one in such a manner as
+to omit all mention of the other.
+
+Or if, when an inquiry is being carried on respecting one particular
+point, the speech is addressed to common topics; as if any one, while
+men are deliberating whether war shall be waged or not, were to devote
+himself wholly to the praises of peace, and not to proving that that
+particular war is inexpedient. Or if a false reason for anything be
+alleged, in this way:--Money is good because it is the thing which,
+above all others, makes life happy. Or if one is alleged which is
+invalid, as Plautus says:--
+
+
+ "Sure to reprove a friend for evident faults
+ Is but a thankless office; still 'tis useful,
+ And wholesome for a youth of such an age,
+ And so this day I will reprove my friend,
+ Whose fault is palpable."--_Plautus, Frinummus_, Act i. sc. 2,
+ l.1.
+
+
+Or in this manner, if a man were to say, "Avarice is the greatest
+evil; for the desire of money causes great distress to numbers of
+people." Or it is unsuitable, in this manner:--"Friendship is the
+greatest good for there are many pleasures in friendship."
+
+LI. The fourth manner of reprehension was stated to be that by which,
+in opposition to a solid argumentation, one equally, or still more
+solid, has been advanced. And this kind of argumentation is especially
+employed in deliberations when we admit that something which is said
+in opposition to us is reasonable, but still prove that that conduct
+which we are defending is necessary; or when we confess that the line
+of conduct which they are advocating is useful, and prove that what
+we ourselves are contending for is honourable. And we have thought it
+necessary to say thus much about reprehension; now we will lay down
+some rules respecting the conclusion.
+
+Hermagoras places digression next in order, and then the ultimate
+conclusion. But in this digression he considers it proper to introduce
+some inferential topics, unconnected with the cause and with the
+decision itself, which contain some praise of the speaker himself, or
+some vituperation of the adversary, or else may lead to some other
+topic from which he may derive some confirmation or reprehension, not
+by arguing, but by expanding the subject by some amplification or
+other. If any one thinks that this is a proper part of an oration, he
+may follow Hermagoras. For precepts for embellishing, and praising,
+and blaming, have partly been already given by us, and partly will be
+given hereafter in their proper place. But we do not think it right
+that this part should be classed among the regular divisions of a
+speech, because it appears improper that there should be digressions,
+except to some common topics, concerning which subject we must speak
+subsequently. But it does not seem desirable to handle praise and
+vituperation separately, but it seems better that they should be
+considered as forming part of the argumentation itself. At present we
+will treat of the conclusion of an oration.
+
+LII. The conclusion is the end and terminating of the whole oration.
+It has three parts,--enumeration, indignation, and complaint.
+Enumeration is that by which matters which have been related in a
+scattered and diffuse manner are collected together, and, for the sake
+of recollecting them, are brought under our view. If this is always
+treated in the same manner, it will be completely evident to every one
+that it is being handled according to some artificial system; but if
+it be done in many various ways, the orator will be able to escape
+this suspicion, and will not cause such weariness. Wherefore it will
+be desirable to act in the way which most people adopt, on account of
+its easiness; that is, to touch on each topic separately, and in that
+manner briefly to run over all sorts of argumentation; and also (which
+is, however, more difficult) to recount what portions of the subject
+you previously mentioned in the arrangement of the subject, as those
+which you promised to explain; and also to bring to the recollection
+of your hearers the reasonings by which you established each separate
+point, and then to ask of those who are hearing you what it is which
+they ought to wish to be proved to them; in this way:--"We proved
+this; we made that plain;" and by this means the hearer will recover
+his recollection of it, and will think that there is nothing besides
+which he ought to require.
+
+And in these kinds of conclusions, as has been said before, it will
+be serviceable both to run over the arguments which you yourself have
+employed separately, and also (which is a matter requiring still
+greater art) to unite the opposite arguments with your own; and to
+show how completely you have done away with the arguments which were
+brought against you. And so, by a brief comparison, the recollection
+of the hearer will be refreshed both as to the confirmation which you
+adduced, and as to the reprehension which you employed. And it will be
+useful to vary these proceedings by other methods of pleading also.
+But you may carry on the enumeration in your own person, so as to
+remind your hearers of what you said, and in what part of your speech
+you said each thing; and also you may bring on the stage some other
+character, or some different circumstance, and then make your whole
+enumeration with reference to that. If it is a person, in this
+way:--"For if the framer of the law were to appear, and were to
+inquire of you why you doubted, what could you say after this, and
+this, and this has been proved to you?" And in this case, as also in
+our own character, it will be in our power to run over all kinds of
+argumentation separately: and at one time to refer all separate genera
+to different classes of the division, and at another to ask of the
+hearer what he requires, and at another to adopt a similar course by a
+comparison of one's own arguments and those of the opposite party.
+
+But a different class of circumstance will be introduced if an
+enumerative oration be connected with any subject of this sort,--law,
+place, city, or monument, in this manner.--"What if the laws
+themselves could speak? Would not they also address this complaint to
+you? What more do you require, O judges when this, and this, and this
+has been already made plain to you?" And in this kind of argument it
+is allowable to use all these same methods. But this is given as a
+common precept to guide one in framing an enumeration, that out of
+every part of the argument, since the whole cannot be repeated over
+again, that is to be selected which is of the greatest weight, and
+that each point is to be run over as briefly as possible, so that
+it shall appear to be only a refreshing of the recollection of the
+hearers, not a repetition of the speech.
+
+LIII. Indignation is a kind of speech by which the effect produced is,
+that great hatred is excited against a man, or great dislike of some
+proceeding is originated. In an address of this kind we wish to have
+this understood first, that it is possible to give vent to indignation
+from all those topics which we have suggested in laying down precepts
+for the confirmation of a speech. For any amplifications whatever,
+and every sort of indignation may be expressed, derived from those
+circumstances which are attributed to persons and to things, but
+still we had better consider those precepts which can be laid down
+separately with respect to indignation.
+
+The first topic is derived from authority, when we relate what a great
+subject of anxiety that affair has been to the immortal gods, or to
+those whose authority ought to carry the greatest weight with it.
+And that topic will be derived from prophecies, from oracles, from
+prophets, from tokens, from prodigies, from answers, and from other
+things like these. Also from our ancestors, from kings, from states,
+from nations from the wisest men, from the senate, the people, the
+framers of laws. The second topic is that by which it is shown
+with amplification, by means of indignation, whom that affair
+concerns,--whether it concerns all men or the greater part of men,
+(which is a most serious business,) or whether it concerns the higher
+classes, such as those men are on whose authority the indignation
+which we are professing is grounded, (which is most scandalous,) or
+whether it affects those men who are one's equals in courage, and
+fortune, and personal advantages, (which is most iniquitous,) or
+whether it affects our inferiors, (which is most arrogant).
+
+The third topic is that which we employ when we are inquiring what is
+likely to happen, if every one else acts in the same manner. And at
+the same time we point out if this man is permitted to act thus, that
+there will be many imitators of the same audacity, and then from that
+we shall be able to point out how much evil will follow.
+
+The fourth topic is one by the use of which we show that many men are
+eagerly looking out to see what is decided, in order that they may be
+able to see by the precedent of what is allowed to one, what will be
+allowed to themselves also in similar circumstances.
+
+The fifth topic is one by the use of which we show that everything
+else which has been badly managed, as soon as the truth concerning
+them is ascertained, may be all set right, that this thing, however,
+is one which, if it be once decided wrongly, cannot be altered by any
+decision, nor set right by any power.
+
+The sixth topic is one by which the action spoken of is proved to have
+been done designedly and on purpose, and then we add this argument,
+that pardon ought not to be granted to an intentional crime.
+
+The seventh topic is one which we employ when we say that any deed
+is foul, and cruel, and nefarious, and tyrannical; that it has been
+effected by violence or by the influence of riches--a thing which
+is as remote as possible from the laws and from all ideas of equal
+justice.
+
+LIV. An eighth topic is one of which we avail ourselves to demonstrate
+that the crime which is the present subject of discussion is not
+a common one,--not one such as is often perpetrated. And, that is
+foreign to the nature of even men in a savage state, of the most
+barbarous nations, or even of brute beasts. Actions of this nature are
+such as are wrought with cruelty towards one's parents, or wife, or
+husband, or children, or relations, or suppliants; next to them,
+if anything has been done with inhumanity towards a man's
+elders,--towards those connected with one by ties of hospitality,
+--towards one's neighbours or one's friends,--to those with
+whom one has been in the habit of passing one's life,--to those
+by whom one has been brought up,--to those by whom one has been
+taught,--to the dead,--to those who are miserable and deserving of
+pity,--to men who are illustrious, noble, and who have been invested
+with honours and offices,--to those who have neither had power to
+injure another nor to defend themselves, such as boys, old men, women:
+by all which circumstances indignation is violently excited, and will
+be able to awaken the greatest hatred against a man who has injured
+any of these persons.
+
+The ninth topic is one by which the action which is the subject of the
+present discussion is compared with others which are admitted on all
+hands to be offences. And in that way it is shown by comparison how
+much more atrocious and scandalous is the action which is the present
+subject of discussion.
+
+The tenth topic is one by which we collect all the circumstances which
+have taken place in the performance of this action, and which have
+followed since that action, with great indignation at and reproach of
+each separate item, and by our description we bring the case as far as
+possible before the eyes of the judge before whom we are speaking, so
+that that which is scandalous may appear quite as scandalous to him as
+if he himself had been present to see what was done.
+
+The eleventh topic is one which we avail ourselves of when we are
+desirous to show that the action has been done by him whom of all men
+in the world it least became to do it, and by whom indeed it ought to
+have been prevented if any one else had endeavoured to do it.
+
+The twelfth topic is one by means of which we express our indignation
+that we should be the first people to whom this has happened, and that
+it has never occurred in any other instance.
+
+The thirteenth topic is when insult is shown to have been added
+to injury, and by this topic we awaken hatred against pride and
+arrogance.
+
+The fourteenth topic is one which we avail ourselves of to entreat
+those who hear us to consider our injuries as if they affected
+themselves; if they concern our children, to think of their own, if
+our wives have been injured, to recollect their own wives, if it is
+our aged relations who have suffered, to remember their own fathers or
+ancestors.
+
+The fifteenth topic is one by which we say that those things which
+have happened to us appear scandalous even to foes and enemies, and
+as a general rule, indignation is derived from one or other of these
+topics.
+
+LV. But complaint will usually take its origin from things of this
+kind. Complaint is a speech seeking to move the pity of the hearers.
+In this it is necessary in the first place to render the disposition
+of the hearer gentle and merciful, in order that it may the more
+easily be influenced by pity. And it will be desirable to produce that
+effect by common topics, such as those by which the power of fortune
+over all men is shown, and the weakness of men too is displayed,
+and if such an argument is argued with dignity and with impressive
+language, then the minds of men are greatly softened, and prepared to
+feel pity, while they consider their own weakness in the contemplation
+of the misfortunes of another.
+
+Then the first topic to raise pity is that by which we show how great
+the prosperity of our clients was, and how great their present misery
+is.
+
+The second is one which is divided according to different periods,
+according to which it is shown in what miseries they have been, and
+still are, and are likely to be hereafter.
+
+The third topic is that by which each separate inconvenience is
+deplored, as, for instance, in speaking of the death of a man's son,
+the delight which the father took in his childhood, his love for him,
+his hope of him, the comfort he derived from him, the pains he took
+in his bringing up, and all other instances of the same sort, may be
+mentioned so as to exaggerate the complaint.
+
+The fourth topic is one in which all circumstances which are
+discreditable or low or mean are brought forward, all circumstances
+which are unworthy of a man's age, or both, or fortune, or former
+honours or services, all the disasters which they have suffered or are
+liable to suffer.
+
+The fifth topic is that by using which all disadvantages we brought
+separately before the eyes of the hearer, so that he who hears of them
+may seem to see them, and by the very facts themselves, and not only
+by the description of them, may be moved to pity as if he had been
+actually present.
+
+The sixth topic is one by which the person spoken of is shown to be
+miserable, when he had no reason to expect any such fate; and that
+when he was expecting something else, he not only failed to obtain it,
+but fell into the most terrible misfortunes.
+
+The seventh is one by which we suppose the fact of a similar mischance
+befalling the men who are listening to us, and require of them when
+they behold us to call to mind their own children, or their parents,
+or some one for whom they are bound to entertain affections.
+
+The eighth is one by which something is said to have been done which
+ought not to have been done; or not to have been done which ought to
+have been. In this manner:--"I was not present, I did not see him,
+I did not hear his last words, I did not receive his last breath.
+Moreover, he died amid his enemies, he lay shamefully unburied in an
+enemy's country, being torn to pieces by wild beasts, and was deprived
+in death of even that honour which is the due of all men."
+
+The ninth is one by which our speech is made to refer to things which
+are void both of language and sense; as if you were to adapt your
+discourse to a horse, a house, or a garment; by which topics the minds
+of those who are hearing, and who have been attached to any one, are
+greatly moved.
+
+The tenth is one by which want, or weakness, or the desolate condition
+of any one is pointed out.
+
+The eleventh is one in which is contained a recommendation to bury
+one's children, or one's parents, or one's own body, or to do any
+other such thing.
+
+The twelfth is one in which a separation is lamented when you are
+separated from any one with whom you have lived most pleasantly,--as
+from a parent, a son, a brother, an intimate friend.
+
+The thirteenth is one used when we complain with great indignation
+that we are ill-treated by those by whom above all others we least
+ought to be so,--as by our relations, or by friends whom we have
+served, and whom we have expected to be assistants to us; or by whom
+it is a shameful thing to be ill-treated,--as by slaves, or freedmen,
+or clients, or suppliants.
+
+The fourteenth is one which is taken as an entreaty, in which those
+who hear us are entreated, in a humble and suppliant oration, to have
+pity on us.
+
+The fifteenth is one in which we show that we are complaining not only
+of our own fortunes, but of those who ought to be dear to us.
+
+The sixteenth is one by using which we show that our hearts are full
+of pity for others; and yet give tokens at the same time that it will
+be a great and lofty mind, and one able to endure disaster if any such
+should befall us. For often virtue and splendour, in which there is
+naturally great influence and authority, have more effect in exciting
+pity than humility and entreaties. And when men's minds are moved it
+will not be right to dwell longer on complaints; for, as Apollonius
+the rhetorician said, "Nothing dries quicker than a tear."
+
+But since we have already, as it seems, said enough of all the
+different parts of a speech, and since this volume has swelled to a
+great size, what follows next shall be stated in the second book.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE SECOND BOOK OF THE RHETORIC, OR OF THE TREATISE ON RHETORICAL
+INVENTION, OF M.T. CICERO.
+
+I. Some men of Crotona, when they were rich in all kinds of resources,
+and when they were considered among the most prosperous people in
+Italy, were desirous to enrich the temple of Juno, which they regarded
+with the most religious veneration, with splendid pictures. Therefore
+they hired Zeuxis of Heraclea at a vast price, who was at that time
+considered to be far superior to all other painters, and employed
+him in that business. He painted many other pictures, of which some
+portion, on account of the great respect in which the temple is held,
+has remained to within our recollection; and in order that one of his
+mute representations might contain the preeminent beauty of the female
+form, he said that he wished to paint a likeness of Helen. And the men
+of Crotona, who had frequently heard that he excelled all other men in
+painting women, were very glad to hear this; for they thought that if
+he took the greatest pains in that class of work in which he had the
+greatest skill, he would leave them a most noble work in that temple.
+
+Nor were they deceived in that expectation: for Zeuxis immediately
+asked of them what beautiful virgins they had; and they immediately
+led him into the palaestra, and there showed him numbers of boys of
+the highest birth and of the greatest beauty. For indeed, there was a
+time when the people of Crotona were far superior to all other cities
+in the strength and beauty of their persons; and they brought home
+the most honourable victories from the gymnastic contests, with the
+greatest credit. While, therefore, he was admiring the figures of the
+boys and their personal perfection very greatly; "The sisters," say
+they, "of these boys are virgins in our city, so that how great their
+beauty is you may infer from these boys." "Give me, then," said he,
+"I beg you, the most beautiful of these virgins, while I paint the
+picture which I promised you, so that the reality may be transferred
+from the breathing model to the mute likeness." Then the citizens of
+Crotona, in accordance with a public vote, collected the virgins into
+one place, and gave the painter the opportunity of selecting whom he
+chose. But he selected five, whose names many poets have handed down
+to tradition, because they had been approved by the judgment of the
+man who was bound to have the most accurate judgment respecting
+beauty. For he did not think that he could find all the component
+parts of perfect beauty in one person, because nature has made nothing
+of any class absolutely perfect in every part. Therefore, as if nature
+would not have enough to give to everybody if it had given everything
+to one, it balances one advantage bestowed upon a person by another
+disadvantage.
+
+II. But since the inclination has arisen in my mind to write a
+treatise on the art of speaking, we have not put forth any single
+model of which every portion was necessarily to be copied by us, of
+whatever sort they might be; but, having collected together all the
+writers on the subject into one place, we have selected what each
+appears to have recommended which may be most serviceable, and we have
+thus culled the flower from various geniuses. For of those who are
+worthy of fame or recollection, there is no one who appears either to
+have said nothing well, or everything admirably. So that it seemed
+folly either to forsake the sensible maxims brought forward by any
+one, merely because we are offended at some other blunder of his, or,
+on the other hand, to embrace his faults because we have been tempted
+by some sensible precept which he has also delivered.
+
+But if in other pursuits also men would select all that was found most
+sensible from many sources, instead of devoting themselves to one
+fixed leader, they would err less on the side of arrogance; they
+would not persist so much in error, and they would make less enormous
+mistakes through ignorance. And if we had as deep an acquaintance with
+this art as he had with that of painting, perhaps this work of ours
+might appear as admirable in its kind as his picture did. For we have
+had an opportunity of selecting from a much more copious store of
+models than he had. He was able to make his selection from one city,
+and from that number of virgins only which existed at that time and
+place; but we have had opportunity of making our selection from all
+the men who have ever lived from the very first beginning of this
+science, being reduced to a system up to the present day, and taking
+whatever we thought worth while from all the stores which lay open
+before us.
+
+And Aristotle, indeed, has collected together all the ancient writers
+on this art, from the first writer on the subject and inventor of it,
+Tisias, and has compiled with great perspicuity the precepts of each
+of them, mentioning them by name, after having sought them out with
+exceeding care; and he has disentangled them with great diligence
+and explained their difficulties; and he has so greatly excelled the
+original writers themselves in suavity and brevity of diction, that no
+one is acquainted with their precepts from their own writings, but all
+who wish to know what maxims they have laid down, come back to him as
+to a far more agreeable expounder of their meaning.
+
+And he himself has set before us himself and those too who had lived
+before his time, in order that we might be acquainted with the method
+of others, and with his own. And those who have followed him, although
+they have expended a great deal of labour on the most profound and
+important portions of philosophy, as he himself also, whose example
+they were following, had done, have still left us many precepts on the
+subject of speaking. And other masters of this science have also come
+forward, taking their rise, as it were in other springs, who have also
+been of great assistance in eloquence, as far at least as artificial
+rules can do any good. For there lived at the same time as Aristotle,
+a great and illustrious rhetorician, named Isocrates, though we have
+not entirely discovered what his system was.
+
+But we have found many lessons respecting their art from his pupils
+and from those who proceeded immediately afterwards from this school.
+
+III. From these two different families, as it were, the one of which,
+while it was chiefly occupied with philosophy, still devoted some
+portion of its attention to the rhetorical science, and the other was
+wholly absorbed in the study and teaching of eloquence, but both kinds
+of study were united by their successors, who brought to the aid of
+their own pursuits those things which appeared to have been profitably
+said by either of them, and those and the others their predecessors
+are the men whom we and all our countrymen have proposed to ourselves
+as models, as far as we were able to make them so, and we have also
+contributed something from our own stores to the common stock.
+
+But if the things which are set forth in these books deserved to
+be selected with such great eagerness and care as they were, then
+certainly, neither we ourselves nor others will repent of our
+industry. But if we appear either rashly to have passed over some
+doctrine of some one worth noticing, or to have adopted it without
+sufficient elegance, in that case when we are taught better by some
+one, we will easily and cheerfully change our opinion. For what is
+discreditable is, not the knowing little, but the persisting foolishly
+and long in what one does not understand, because the one thing is
+attributed to the common infirmity of man, but the other to the
+especial fault of the individual.
+
+Wherefore we, without affirming anything positively, but making
+inquiry at the same time, will advance each position with some doubt,
+lest while we gain this trifling point of being supposed to have
+written this treatise with tolerable neatness, we should lose that
+which is of the greater importance, the credit, namely, of not
+adopting any idea rashly and arrogantly. But this we shall endeavour
+to gain both at present and during the whole course of our life with
+great care, as far as our abilities will enable us to do so. But at
+present, lest we should appear to be too prolix, we will speak of the
+other points which it seems desirable to insist on.
+
+Therefore, while we were explaining the proper classification of this
+art, and its duties, and its object, and its subject matter, and its
+divisions, the first book contained an account of the different kinds
+of disputes, and inventions, and statements of cases, and decisions.
+After that, the parts of a speech were described, and all necessary
+precepts for all of them were laid down. So that we not only discussed
+other topics in that book with tolerable distinctness, we spoke
+at that same time in a more scattered manner of the topics of
+confirmation and reprehension; and at present we think it best to give
+certain topics for confirming and reprehending, suited to every class
+of causes. And because it has been explained with some diligence in
+the former book, in what manner argumentations ought to be handled, in
+this book it will be sufficient to set forth the arguments which have
+been discovered for each kind of subject simply, and without any
+embellishment, so that, in this book, the arguments themselves may be
+found, and in the former, the proper method of polishing them. So that
+the reader must refer the precepts which are now laid down, to the
+topics of confirmation and reprehension.
+
+IV. Every discussion, whether demonstrative, or deliberative, or
+judicial, must be conversant with some kind or other of statement of
+the case which has been explained in the former book; sometimes with
+one, sometimes with several. And though this is the case, still as
+some things can be laid down in a general way respecting everything,
+there are also other rules and different methods separately laid down
+for each particular kind of discussion. For praise, or blame, or the
+statement of an opinion, or accusation, or denial, ought all to effect
+different ends. In judicial investigations the object of inquiry is,
+what is just, in demonstrative discussion the question is what is
+honourable, in deliberations, in our opinion, what we inquire is, what
+is honourable and at the same time expedient. For the other writers
+on this subject have thought it right to limit the consideration of
+expediency to speeches directed to persuasion or dissuasion.
+
+Those kinds of discussions then whose objects and results are
+different, cannot be governed by the same precepts. Not that we are
+saying now that the same statement of the case is not admissible in
+all of them, but some kinds of speech arise from the object and kind
+of the discussion, if it refers to the demonstration of some kind of
+life, or to the delivery of some opinion. Wherefore now, in explaining
+controversies, we shall have to deal with causes and precepts of a
+judicial kind, from which many precepts also which concern similar
+disputes will be transferred to other kinds of causes without much
+difficulty. But hereafter we will speak separately of each kind.
+
+At present we will begin with the conjectural statement of a case
+of which this example may be sufficient to be given--A man overtook
+another on his journey as he was going on some commercial expedition,
+and carrying a sum of money with him, he, as men often do entered into
+conversation with him on the way, the result of which was, that they
+both proceeded together with some degree of friendship, so that when
+they had arrived at the same inn, they proposed to sup together and to
+sleep in the same apartment. Having supped, they retired to rest in
+the same place. But when the innkeeper (for that is what is said to
+have been discovered since, after the man had been detected in another
+crime) had taken notice of one of them, that is to say, of him who had
+the money, he came by night, after he had ascertained that they were
+both sound asleep, as men usually are when tired, and took from its
+sheath the sword of the one who had not the money, and which sword he
+had lying by his side and slew the other man with it and took away
+his money, and replaced the bloody sword in the sheath, and returned
+himself to his bed.
+
+But the man with whose sword the murder had been committed, rose
+long before dawn and called over and over again on his companion; he
+thought that he did not answer because he was overcome with sleep; and
+so he took his sword and the rest of the things which he had with him,
+and departed on his journey alone. The innkeeper not long afterwards
+raised an outcry that the man was murdered, and in company with some
+of his lodgers pursued the man who had gone away. They arrest him on
+his journey, draw his sword out of its sheath, and find it bloody, the
+man is brought back to the city by them, and put on his trial. On this
+comes the allegation of the crime, "You murdered him," and the denial,
+"I did not murder him," and from this is collected the statement of
+the case. The question in the conjectural examination is the same as
+that submitted to the judges, "Did he murder him, or not?"
+
+V. Now we will set forth the topics one portion of which applies to
+all conjectural discussion. But it will be desirable to take notice of
+this in the exposition of these topics and of all the others, and to
+observe that they do not all apply to every discussion. For as every
+man's name is made up of some letters, and not of every letter, so it
+is not every store of arguments which applies to every argumentation,
+but some portion which is necessary applies to each. All conjecture,
+then, must be derived either from the cause of an action, or from the
+person, or from the case itself.
+
+The cause of an action is divided into impulsion and ratiocination.
+Impulsion is that which without thought encourages a man to act in
+such and such a manner, by means of producing some affection of
+the mind, as love, anger, melancholy, fondness for wine, or indeed
+anything by which the mind appears to be so affected as to be unable
+to examine anything with deliberation and care, and to do what it does
+owing to some impulse of the mind, rather than in consequence of any
+deliberate purpose.
+
+But ratiocination is a diligent and careful consideration of whether
+we shall do anything or not do it. And it is said to have been in
+operation, when the mind appears for some particular definite reason
+to have avoided something which ought not to have been done, or to
+have adopted something which ought to have been done, so that if
+anything is said to have been done for the sake of friendship, or of
+chastising an enemy, or under the influence of fear, or of a desire
+for glory or for money, or in short, to comprise everything under
+one brief general head, for the sake of retaining, or increasing, or
+obtaining any advantage; or, on the other hand, for the purpose of
+repelling, or diminishing, or avoiding any disadvantage;--for those
+former things must fall under one or other of those heads, if either
+any inconvenience is submitted to for the purpose of avoiding any
+greater inconvenience, or of obtaining any more important advantage;
+or if any advantage is passed by for the sake of obtaining some
+other still greater advantage, or of avoiding some more important
+disadvantage.
+
+This topic is as it were a sort of foundation of this statement of the
+case; for nothing that is done is approved of by any one unless some
+reason be shown why it has been done. Therefore the accuser, when he
+says that anything has been done in compliance with some impulse,
+ought to exaggerate that impulse, and any other agitation or affection
+of the mind, with all the power of language and variety of sentiments
+of which he is master, and to show how great the power of love is, how
+great the agitation of mind which arises from anger, or from any one
+of those causes which he says was that which impelled any one to do
+anything. And here we must take care, by an enumeration of examples of
+men who have done anything under the influence of similar impulse, and
+by a collation of similar cases, and by an explanation of the way in
+which the mind itself is affected, to hinder its appearing marvellous
+if the mind of a man has been instigated by such influence to some
+pernicious or criminal action.
+
+VI. But when the orator says that any one has done such and such
+an action, not through impulse, but in consequence of deliberate
+reasoning, he will then point out what advantage he has aimed at,
+or what inconvenience he has avoided, and he will exaggerate the
+influence of those motives as much as he can, so that as far as
+possible the cause which led the person spoken of to do wrong, may
+appear to have been an adequate one. If it was for the sake of glory
+that he did so and so, then he will point out what glory he thought
+would result from it; again, if he was influenced by desire of power,
+or riches, or by friendship, or by enmity; and altogether whatever the
+motive was, which he says was his inducement to the action, he will
+exaggerate as much as possible.
+
+And he is bound to give great attention to this point, not only what
+the effect would have been in reality, but still more what it would
+have been in the opinion of the man whom he is accusing. For it makes
+no difference that there really was or was not any advantage or
+disadvantage, if the man who is accused believed that there would or
+would not be such. For opinion deceives men in two ways, when either
+the matter itself is of a different kind from that which it is
+believed to be, or when the result is not such as they thought it
+would be. The matter itself is of a different sort when they think
+that which is good bad, or, on the other hand, when they think that
+good which is bad. Or when they think that good or bad which is
+neither good nor bad, or when they think that which is good or bad
+neither bad nor good.
+
+Now that this is understood, if any one denies that there is any money
+more precious or sweeter to a man than his brother's or his friend's
+life, or even than his own duty, the accuser is not to deny that; for
+then the blame and the chief part of the hatred will be transferred to
+him who denies that which is said so truly and so piously. But what
+he ought to say is, that the man did not think so; and that assertion
+must be derived from those topics which relate to the person,
+concerning whom we must speak hereafter.
+
+VII. But the result deceives a person, when a thing has a different
+result from that which the persons who are accused are said to have
+thought it would have. As when a man is said to have slain a different
+person from him whom he intended to slay, either because he was
+deceived by the likeness or by some suspicion, or by some false
+indication; or that he slew a man who had not left him his heir in his
+will, because he believed that he had left him his heir. For it is not
+right to judge of a man's belief by the result, but rather to consider
+with what expectation, and intention, and hope he proceeded to such
+a crime; and to recollect that the matter of real importance is to
+consider with what intention a man does a thing, and not what the
+consequence of his action turns out to be.
+
+And in this topic this will be the great point for the accuser, if he
+is able to show that no one else had any reason for doing so at all.
+And the thing next in importance will be to show that no one else had
+such great or sufficient reason for doing so. But if others appear
+also to have had a motive for doing so, then we must show that they
+had either no power, or no opportunity, or no inclination to do it.
+They had no power if it can be said that they did not know it, or were
+not in the place, or were unable to have accomplished it; they had no
+opportunity, if it can be proved that any plan, any assistants, any
+instruments, and all other things which relate to such an action, were
+wanting to them. They had no inclination, if their disposition can be
+said to be entirely alien to such conduct, and unimpeachable. Lastly,
+whatever arguments we allow a man on his trial to use in his defence,
+the very same the prosecutor will employ in delivering others from
+blame. But that must be done with brevity, and many arguments must be
+compressed into one, in order that he may not appear to be accusing
+the man on his trial for the sake of defending some one else, but to
+be defending some one else with a view to strengthen his accusation
+against him.
+
+VIII. And these are for the most part the things which must be done
+and considered by an accuser. But the advocate for the defence will
+say, on the other hand, either that there was no motive at all, or, if
+he admits that there was, he will make light of it, and show that it
+was a very slight one, or that such conduct does not often proceed
+from such a motive. And with reference to this topic it will be
+necessary to point out what is the power and character of that motive,
+by which the person on his trial is said to have been induced to
+commit any action; and in doing this it is requisite to adduce
+instances and examples of similar cases, and the actual nature of
+such a motive is to be explained as gently as possible, so that the
+circumstance which is the subject of the discussion may be explained
+away, and instead of being considered as a cruel and disorderly act,
+may be represented as something more mild and considerate, and still
+the speech itself may be adapted to the mind of the hearer, and to a
+sort of inner feeling, as it were, in his mind.
+
+But the orator will weaken the suspicions arising from the
+ratiocination, if he shall say either that the advantage intimated had
+no existence, or a very slight one, or that it was a greater one to
+others, or that it was no greater advantage to himself than to others,
+or that it was a greater disadvantage than advantage to himself.
+So that the magnitude of the advantage which is said to have been
+desired, was not to be compared with the disadvantage which was really
+sustained, or with the danger which was incurred. And all those topics
+will be handled in the same manner in speaking of the avoiding of
+disadvantage.
+
+But if the prosecutor has said that the man on his trial was pursuing
+what appeared to him to be an advantage, or was avoiding that which
+appeared to him to be a disadvantage, even though he was mistaken in
+that opinion, then the advocate for the defence must show that no one
+can be so foolish as to be ignorant of the truth in such an affair.
+And if that be granted, then the other position cannot be granted,
+that the man ever doubted at all what the case was, but that he,
+without the least hesitation, considered what was false as false,
+and what was true as true. But if he doubted, then it was a proof of
+absolute insanity for a man under the influence of a doubtful hope to
+incur a certain danger.
+
+But as the accuser when he is seeking to remove the guilt from others
+must use the topics proper to an advocate for the defence; so the man
+on his trial must use those topics which have been allotted to an
+accuser, when he wishes to transfer an accusation from his own
+shoulders to those of others.
+
+IX. But conjectures will be derived from the person, if those things
+which have been attributed to persons are diligently considered, all
+of which we have mentioned in the first book; for sometimes some
+suspicion arises from the name. But when we say the name, we mean also
+the surname. For the question is about the particular and peculiar
+name of a man, as if we were to say that a man is called Caldus
+because he is a man of a hasty and sudden disposition; or that
+ignorant Greeks have been deceived by men being called Clodius, or
+Caecilius, or Marcus.
+
+And we may also derive some suspicious circumstances from nature; for
+all these questions, whether it is a man or a woman, whether he is of
+this state or that one, of what ancestors a man is descended, who are
+his relations, what is his age, what is his disposition, what bodily
+strength, or figure, or constitution he has, which are all portions
+of a man's nature, have much influence in leading men to form
+conjectures.
+
+Many suspicions also are engendered by men's way of life, when the
+inquiry is how, and by whom, and among whom a man was brought up and
+educated, and with whom he associates, and what system and habits of
+domestic life he is devoted to.
+
+Moreover, argumentation often arises from fortune; when we consider
+whether a man is a slave or a free man, rich or poor, noble or
+ignoble, prosperous or unfortunate; whether he now is, or has been,
+or is likely to be a private individual or a magistrate; or, in fact,
+when any one of those circumstances is sought to be ascertained which
+are attributable to fortune. But as habit consists in some perfect
+and consistent formation of mind or body, of which kind are virtue,
+knowledge, and their contraries; the fact itself, when the whole
+circumstances are stated, will show whether this topic affords any
+ground for suspicion. For the consideration of the state of a
+man's mind is apt to give good grounds for conjecture, as of his
+affectionate or passionate disposition, or of any annoyance to which
+he has been exposed; because the power of all such feelings and
+circumstances is well understood, and what results ensue after any one
+of them is very easy to be known.
+
+But since study is an assiduous and earnest application of the mind
+to any particular object with intense desire, that argument which the
+case itself requires will easily be deduced from it. And again,
+some suspicion will be able to be inferred from the intention;
+for intention is a deliberate determination of doing or not doing
+something. And after this it will be easy to see with respect to
+facts, and events, and speeches, which are divided into three separate
+times, whether they contribute anything to confirming the conjectures
+already formed in the way of suspicion.
+
+X. And those things indeed are attributed to persons, which when they
+are all collected together in one place, it will be the business of
+the accuser to use them as inducing a disapprobation of the person;
+for the fact itself has but little force unless the disposition of the
+man who is accused can be brought under such suspicion as to appear
+not to be inconsistent with such a fault. For although there is no
+great advantage in expressing disapprobation of any one's disposition,
+when there is no cause why he should have done wrong, still it is but
+a trifling thing that there should be a motive for an offence, if the
+man's disposition is proved to be inclined to no line of conduct which
+is at all discreditable. Therefore the accuser ought to bring into
+discredit the life of the man whom he is accusing, by reference to
+his previous actions, and to show whether he has ever been previously
+convicted of a similar offence. And if he cannot show that, he must
+show whether he has ever incurred the suspicion of any similar guilt;
+and especially, if possible, that he has committed some offence or
+other of some kind under the influence of some similar motive to this
+which is in existence here, in some similar case, or in an equally
+important case, or in one more important, or in one less important.
+As, if with respect to a man who he says has been induced by money to
+act in such and such a manner, he were able to show that any other
+action of his in any case had been prompted by avarice.
+
+And again it will be desirable in every cause to mention the nature,
+or the manner of life, or the pursuits, or the fortune, or some one of
+those circumstances which are attributed to persons, in connexion with
+that cause which the speaker says was the motive which induced the man
+on his trial to do wrong; and also, if one cannot impute anything to
+him in respect of an exactly corresponding class of faults, to bring
+the disposition of one's adversary into discredit by reference to some
+very dissimilar class. As, if you were to accuse him of having done
+so and so, because he was instigated by avarice; and yet, if you are
+unable to show that the man whom you accuse is avaricious, you must
+show that other vices are not wholly foreign to his nature, and that
+on that account it is no great wonder if a man who in any affair has
+behaved basely, or covetously, or petulantly, should have erred in
+this business also. For in proportion as you can detract from
+the honesty and authority of the man who is accused, in the same
+proportion has the force of the whole defence been weakened.
+
+If it cannot be shown that the person on his trial has been ever
+before implicated in any previous guilt, then that topic will come
+into play which we are to use for the purpose of encouraging the
+judges to think that the former character of the man has no bearing
+on the present question; for that he has formerly concealed his
+wickedness, but that he is now manifestly convicted; so that it is not
+proper that this case should be looked at with reference to his former
+life, but that his former life should now be reproved by this conduct
+of his, and that formerly he had either no opportunity of doing wrong,
+or no motive to do so. Or if this cannot be said, then we must have
+recourse to this last assertion,--that it is no wonder if he now does
+wrong for the first time, for that it is necessary that a man who
+wishes to commit sin, must some time or other commit it for the first
+time. If nothing whatever is known of his previous life, then it is
+best to pass over this topic, and to state the reason why it is passed
+over, and then to proceed at once to corroborate the accusation by
+arguments.
+
+XI. But the advocate for the defence ought in the first place to show,
+if he can, that the life of the person who is accused has always been
+as honourable as possible. And he will do this best by recounting any
+well known services which he has rendered to the state in general,
+or any that he has done to his parents, or relations, or friends, or
+kinsmen, or associates, or even any which are more remarkable or more
+unusual, especially if they have been done with any extraordinary
+labour, or danger, or both, or when there was no absolute necessity,
+purely because it was his duty, or if he has done any great benefit to
+the republic, or to his parents, or to any other of the people whom I
+have just mentioned, and if, too, he can show that he has never been
+so influenced by any covetousness as to abandon his duty, or to commit
+any error of any description. And this statement will be the more
+confirmed, if when it is said that he had an opportunity of doing
+something which was not quite creditable with impunity, it can be
+shown at the same time that he had no inclination to do it.
+
+But this very kind of argument will be all the stronger if the person
+on his trial can be shown to have been unimpeachable previously in
+that particular sort of conduct of which he is now accused, as, for
+instance, if he be accused of having done so and so for the sake
+of avarice, and can be proved to have been all his life utterly
+indifferent to the acquisition of money. On this indignation may be
+expressed with great weight, united with a complaint that it is a most
+miserable thing, and it may be argued that it is a most scandalous
+thing, to think that that was the man's motive, when his disposition
+during the whole of his life has been as unlike it as possible. Such a
+motive often harries audacious men into guilt, but it has no power to
+impel an upright man to sin. It is unjust, moreover, and injurious to
+every virtuous man, that a previously well-spent life should not be of
+the greatest possible advantage to a man at such a time, but that a
+decision should be come to with reference only to a sudden accusation
+which can be got up in a hurry, and with no reference to a man's
+previous course of life, which cannot be extemporised to suit an
+occasion, and which cannot be altered by any means.
+
+But if there have been any acts of baseness in his previous life, or
+if they be said to have undeservedly acquired such a reputation, or if
+his actions are to be attributed by the envy, or love of detraction,
+or mistaken opinion of some people, either to ignorance, or necessity,
+or to the persuasion of young men, or to any other affection of mind
+in which there is no vice, or if he has been tainted with errors of
+a different kind, so that his disposition appears not entirely
+faultless, but still far remote from such a fault, and if his
+disgraceful or infamous course of life cannot possibly be mitigated by
+any speech,--then it will be proper to say that the inquiry does not
+concern his life and habits, but is about that crime for which he is
+now prosecuted, so that, omitting all former actions, it is proper
+that the matter which is in hand should be attended to.
+
+XII. But suspicions may be derived from the fact itself, if the
+administration of the whole matter is examined into in all its parts;
+and these suspicions will arise partly from the affair itself when
+viewed separately, and partly from the persons and the affairs taken
+together. They will be able to be derived from the affair, if we
+diligently consider those circumstances which have been attributed
+to such affairs. And from them all the different genera, and most
+subordinate species, will appear to be collected together in this
+statement of the case.
+
+It will therefore be desirable to consider in the first place what
+circumstances there are which are united to the affair itself,--that
+is to say, which cannot be separated from it, and with reference to
+this topic it will be sufficient to consider what was done before the
+affair in question took place from which a hope arose of accomplishing
+it, and an opportunity was sought of doing it, what happened with
+respect to the affair itself, and what ensued afterwards. In the next
+place, the execution of the whole affair must be dealt with for this
+class of circumstances which have been attributed to the affair has
+been discussed in the second topic.
+
+So with reference to this class of circumstances we must have a
+regard to time, place, occasion, and opportunity, the force of each
+particular of which has been already carefully explained when we were
+laying down precepts for the confirmation of an argument. Wherefore,
+that we may not appear to have given no rules respecting these things,
+and that we may not, on the other hand, appear to have repeated the
+same things twice over, we will briefly point out what it is proper
+should be considered in each part. In reference to place, then,
+opportunity is to be considered; and in reference to time, remoteness;
+and in reference to occasion, the convenience suitable for doing
+anything; and with reference to facility, the store and abundance
+of those things by means of which anything is done more easily, or
+without which it cannot be done at all.
+
+In the next place we must consider what is added to the affair, that
+is to say, what is greater, what is less, what is equally great, what
+is similar. And from these topics some conjecture is derived, if
+proper consideration is given to the question how affairs of greater
+importance, or of less, or of equal magnitude, or of similar
+character, are usually transacted. And in this class of subjects the
+result also ought to be examined into; that is to say, what usually
+ensues as the consequence of every action must be carefully
+considered; as, for instance, fear, joy, trepidation.
+
+But the fourth part was a necessary consequence from those
+circumstances which we said were attendant on affairs. In it those
+things are examined which follow the accomplishment of an affair,
+either immediately or after an interval. And in this examination we
+shall see whether there is any custom, any action, any system, or
+practice, or habit, any general approval or disapproval on the part of
+mankind in general, from which circumstance some suspicion at times
+arises.
+
+XIII. But there are some suspicions which are derived from the
+circumstances which are attributed to persons and things taken
+together. For many circumstances arising from fortune, and from
+nature, and from the way of a man's life, and from his pursuits
+and actions, and from chance, or from speeches, or from a person's
+designs, or from his usual habit of mind or body, have reference to
+the same things which render a statement credible or incredible, and
+which are combined with a suspicion of the fact.
+
+For it is above all things desirable that inquiry should be made in
+this way, of stating the case first of all, whether anything could be
+done; in the next place, whether it could have been done by any one
+else; then we consider the opportunity, on which we have spoken
+before; then whether what has been done is a crime which one is
+bound to repent of; we must inquire too whether he had any hope of
+concealing it; then whether there was any necessity for his doing so;
+and as to this we must inquire both whether it was necessary that the
+thing should be done at all, or that it should be done in that manner.
+And some portion of these considerations refer to the design, which
+has been already spoken of as what is attributed to persons; as in the
+instance of that cause which we have mentioned. These circumstances
+will be spoken of as before the affair,--the facts, I mean, of his
+having joined himself to him so intimately on the march, of his having
+sought occasion to speak with him, of his having lodged with him,
+and supped with him. These circumstances were a part of the
+affair,--night, and sleep. These came after the affair,--the fact
+of his having departed by himself; of his having left his intimate
+companion with such indifference; of his having a bloody sword.
+
+Part of these things refer to the design. For the question is asked,
+whether the plan of executing this deed appears to have been one
+carefully devised and considered, or whether it was adopted so hastily
+that it is not likely that any one should have gone on to crime so
+rashly. And in this inquiry we ask also whether the deed could have
+been done with equal ease in any other manner; or whether it could
+have happened by chance. For very often if there has been a want of
+money, or means, or assistants, there would not appear to have been
+any opportunity of doing such a deed. If we take careful notice
+in this way, we shall see that all these circumstances which are
+attributed to things, and those too which are attributed to persons,
+fit one another. In this case it is neither easy nor necessary, as it
+is in the former divisions, to draw distinctions as to how the accuser
+and how the advocate for the defence ought to handle each topic. It
+is not necessary, because, when the case is once stated, the
+circumstances themselves will teach those men, who do not expect to
+find everything imaginable in this treatise, what is suitable for each
+case; and they will apply a reasonable degree of understanding to the
+rules which are here laid down, in the way of comparing them with the
+systems of others. And it is not easy, because it would be an endless
+business to enter into a separate explanation with respect to every
+portion of every case; and besides, these circumstances are adapted to
+each part of the case in different manners on different occasions.
+
+XIV. Wherefore it will be desirable to consider what we have now set
+forth. And our mind will approach invention with more ease, if it
+often and carefully goes over both its own relation and that of
+the opposite party, of what has been done; and if, eliciting what
+suspicions each part gives rise to, it considers why, and with what
+intention, and with what hopes and plans, each thing was done. Why it
+was done in this manner rather than in that; why by this man rather
+than by that; why it was done without any assistant, or why with this
+one; why no one was privy to it, or why somebody was, or why this
+particular person was; why this was done before; why this was not done
+before; why it was done in this particular instance; why it was done
+afterwards; what was done designedly, or what came as a consequence of
+the original action; whether the speech is consistent with the facts
+or with itself; whether this is a token of this thing, or of that
+thing, or of both this and that, and which it is a token of most; what
+has been done which ought not to have been done, or what has not been
+done which ought to have been done.
+
+When the mind considers every portion of the whole business with this
+intention, then the topics which have been reserved, will come into
+use, which we have already spoken of; and certain arguments will
+be derived from them both separately and unitedly. Part of which
+arguments will depend on what is probable, part on what is necessary;
+there will be added also to conjecture questions, testimony, reports.
+All of which things each party ought to endeavour by a similar use of
+these rules to turn to the advantage of his own cause. For it will be
+desirable to suggest suspicions from questions, from evidence, and
+from some report or other, in the same manner as they have been
+derived from the cause, or the person, or the action.
+
+Wherefore those men appear to us to be mistaken who think that this
+kind of suspicion does not need any regular system, and so do those
+who think that it is better to give rules in a different manner about
+the whole method of conjectural argument. For all conjecture must be
+derived from the same topics; for both the cause of every rumour and
+the truth of it will be found to arise from the things attributed to
+him who in his inquiry has made any particular statement, and to him
+who has done so in his evidence. But in every cause a part of the
+arguments is joined to that cause alone which is expressed, and it is
+derived from it in such a manner that it cannot be very conveniently
+transferred from it to all other causes of the same kind; but part
+of it is more rambling, and adapted either to all causes of the same
+kind, or at all events to most of them.
+
+XV. These arguments then which can be transferred to many causes,
+we call common topics. For a common topic either contains some
+amplification of a well understood thing,--as if any one were desirous
+to show that a man who has murdered his father is worthy of the very
+extremity of punishment; and this topic is not to be used except when
+the cause has been proved and is being summed up;--or of a doubtful
+matter which has some probable arguments which can be produced on the
+other side of the question also; as a man may say that it is right to
+put confidence in suspicions, and, on the contrary, that it is not
+right to put confidence in suspicions. And a portion of the common
+topics is employed in indignation or in complaint, concerning which we
+have spoken already. A part is used in urging any probable reason on
+either side.
+
+But an oration is chiefly distinguished and made plain by a sparing
+introduction of common topics, and by giving the hearers actual
+information by some topics, and by confirming previously used
+arguments in the same way. For it is allowable to say something common
+when any topic peculiar to the cause is introduced with care; and when
+the mind of the hearer is refreshed so as to be inclined to attend to
+what follows, or is reawakened by everything which has been already
+said. For all the embellishments of elocution, in which there is a
+great deal both of sweetness and gravity, and all things, too, which
+have any dignity in the invention of words or sentences, are bestowed
+upon common topics.
+
+Wherefore there are not as many common topics for orators as there are
+for lawyers. For they cannot be handled with elegance and weight, as
+their nature requires, except by those who have acquired a great flow
+of words and ideas by constant practice. And this is enough for us to
+say in a general way concerning the entire class of common topics.
+
+XVI. Now we will proceed to explain what common topics are usually
+available in a conjectural statement of a case. As for instance--that
+it is proper to place confidence in suspicions, or that it is not
+proper, that it is proper to believe witnesses, or that it is not
+proper, that it is proper to believe examinations, or that it is not
+proper, that it is proper to pay attention to the previous course of a
+man's life, or that it is not proper, that it is quite natural that a
+man who has done so and so should have committed this crime also, or
+that it is not natural, that it is especially necessary to consider
+the motive, or that it is not necessary. And all these common topics,
+and any others which arise out of any argument peculiar to the cause
+in hand, may be turned either way.
+
+But there is one certain topic for an accuser by which he exaggerates
+the atrocity of an action, and there is another by which he says that
+it is not necessary to pity the miserable. That, too, is a topic for
+an advocate for the defence by which the false accusations of the
+accusers are shown up with indignation, and that by which pity is
+endeavoured to be excited by complaints. These and all other common
+topics are derived from the same rules from which the other systems
+of arguments proceed, but those are handled in a more delicate, and
+acute, and subtle manner, and these with more gravity, and more
+embellishment, and with carefully selected words and ideas. For in
+them the object is, that that which is stated may appear to be true.
+In these, although it is desirable to preserve the appearance of
+truth, still the main object is to give importance to the statement.
+Now let us pass on to another statement of the case.
+
+XVII. When there is a dispute as to the name of a thing because the
+meaning of a name is to be defined by words, it is called a definitive
+statement. By way of giving an example of this, the following case may
+be adduced. Caius Flaminius, who as consul met with great disasters in
+the second Punic war, when he was tribune of the people, proposed, in
+a very seditious manner, an agrarian law to the people, against the
+consent of the senate, and altogether against the will of all the
+nobles. While he was holding an assembly of the people, his own father
+dragged him from the temple. He is impeached of treason. The charge
+is--"You attacked the majesty of the people in dragging down a tribune
+of the people from the temple." The denial is--"I did not attack the
+majesty of the people." The question is--"Whether he attacked the
+majesty of the people or not?" The argument is--"I only used the power
+which I legitimately had over my own son." The denial of this argument
+is--"But a man who, by the power belonging to him as a father, that is
+to say, as a private individual, attacks the power of a tribune of the
+people, that is to say, the power of the people itself, attacks the
+majesty of the people." The question for the judges is--"Whether a man
+attacks the majesty of the people who uses his power as a father in
+opposition to the power of a tribune?" And all the arguments must be
+brought to bear on this question.
+
+And, that no one may suppose by any chance that we are not aware that
+some other statement of the case may perhaps be applicable to this
+cause, we are taking that portion only for which we are going to give
+rules. But when all parts have been explained in this book, any one,
+if he will only attend diligently, will see every sort of statement
+in every sort of cause, and all their parts, and all the discussions
+which are incidental to them. For we shall mention them all.
+
+The first topic then for an accuser is a short and plain definition,
+and one in accordance with the general opinion of men, of that name,
+the meaning of which is the subject of inquiry. In this manner--"To
+attack the majesty of the people is to detract from the dignity, or
+the rank, or the power of the people, or of those men to whom the
+people has given power." This definition being thus briefly set forth
+in words, must be confirmed by many assertions and reasons and must
+be shown to be such as you have described it. Afterwards it will be
+desirable to add to the definition which you have given, the action
+of the man who is accused, and to add it too with reference to the
+character which you have proved it to have. Take for instance--"to
+attack the majesty of the people." You must show that the adversary
+does attack the majesty of the people, and you must confirm this whole
+topic by a common topic, by which the atrocity or indignity of the
+fact, and the whole guilt of it, and also our indignation at it, may
+be increased.
+
+After that it will be desirable to invalidate the definition of the
+adversaries, but that will be invalidated if it be proved to be false.
+This proof must be deduced from the belief of men concerning it,
+when we consider in what manner and under what circumstances men
+are accustomed to use that expression in their ordinary writing or
+talking. It will also be invalidated if the proof of that description
+be shown to be discreditable or useless, and if it be shown what
+disadvantages will ensue if that position be once admitted. And
+it will be derived from the divisions of honour and usefulness,
+concerning which we will give rules when we lay down a system
+of deliberations. And if we compare the definition given by our
+adversaries with our own definition, and prove our own to be true, and
+honourable, and useful, and theirs to be entirely different. But we
+shall seek out things like them in an affair of either greater, or
+less, or equal importance, from which our description will be proved.
+
+XVIII Now, if there be more matters to be defined,--as for instance,
+if we inquire whether he is a thief or a sacrilegious person who has
+stolen sacred vessels from a private house,--we shall have to employ
+many definitions, and then the whole cause will have to be dealt with
+on a similar principle. But it is a common topic to dwell on the
+wickedness of that man who endeavours to wrest to his own purposes not
+only the effect of things, but also the meaning of words, in order
+both to do as he pleases, and to call what he does by whatever name he
+likes.
+
+Then the first topic to be used by an advocate for the defence, is
+also a brief and plain definition of a name, adopted in accordance
+with the opinion of men. In this way--To diminish the majesty of the
+people is to usurp some of the public powers when you are not invested
+with any office. And then the confirmation of this definition is
+derived from similar instances and similar principles. Afterwards
+comes the separation of one's own action from that definition. Then
+comes the common topic by which the expediency or honesty of the
+action is increased.
+
+Then comes the reprehension of the definition of the opposite party,
+which is also derived from all the same topics as those which we have
+prescribed to the accuser. And afterwards other arguments will be
+adduced besides the common topic. But that will be a common topic
+for the advocate of the defence to use, by which he will express
+indignation that the accuser not only alters facts in order to bring
+him into danger, but that he attempts also to alter words. For
+those common topics which are assumed either for the purpose of
+demonstrating the falsehood of the accusations of the prosecutor, or
+for exciting pity, or for expressing indignation at an action, or for
+the purpose of deterring people from showing pity, are derived from
+the magnitude of the danger, not from the nature of the cause.
+Wherefore they are incidental not to every cause, but to every
+description of cause. We have made mention of them in speaking of the
+conjectural statement of a case, but we shall use induction when the
+cause requires.
+
+XIX But when the pleading appears to require some translation, or to
+need any alteration, either because he is not pleading who ought to
+do so, or he is not pleading with the man he ought, or before the men
+whom he ought to have for hearers, or in accordance with the proper
+law, or under liability to the proper punishment, or in reference to
+the proper accusation, or at the proper time, it is then called a
+transferable statement of the case. We should require many examples of
+this if we were to inquire into every sort of translation, but because
+the principle on which the rules proceed is similar, we have no need
+of a superfluity of instances. And in our usual practice it happens
+from many causes that such translations occur but seldom. For many
+actions are prevented by the exceptions allowed by the praetors, and
+we have the civil law established in such a way that that man is sure
+to lose his cause who does not conduct it as he ought. So that
+those actions greatly depend on the state of the law. For there the
+exceptions are demanded, and an opportunity is allowed of conducting
+the cause in some manner, and every formula of private actions is
+arranged. But in actual trials they occur less frequently, and yet, if
+they ever do occur at all, they are such that by themselves they have
+less strength, but they are confirmed by the assumption of some other
+statement in addition to them. As in a certain trial which took place
+"When a certain person had been prosecuted for poisoning, and, because
+he was also accused of parricide, the trial was ordered to proceed
+out of its regular order, when in the accusation some charges were
+corroborated by witnesses and arguments, but the parricide was barely
+mentioned, it was proper for the advocate for the defence to dwell
+much and long on this circumstance, as, nothing whatever was proved
+respecting the death of the accused person's parent, and therefore
+that it was a scandalous thing to inflict that punishment on him which
+is inflicted on parricides, but that that must inevitably be the case
+if he were convicted, since that it is added as one of the counts of
+the indictment, and since it is on that account that the trial has
+been ordered to be taken out of its regular order. Therefore if it is
+not right that that punishment should be inflicted on the criminal, it
+is also not right that he should be convicted, since that punishment
+must inevitably follow a conviction." Here the advocate for the
+defence, by bringing the commutation of the punishment into his
+speech, according to the transferable class of topics, will invalidate
+the whole accusation. But he will also confirm the alteration by a
+conjectural statement of the case when employed in defending his
+client on the other charges.
+
+XX But we may give an example of translation in a cause, in this
+way--When certain armed men had come for the purpose of committing
+violence, and armed men were also prepared on the other side, and when
+one of the armed men with his sword cut off the hand of a certain
+Roman knight who resisted his violence, the man whose hand had been
+cut off brings an action for the injury. The man against whom the
+action is brought pleads a demurrer before the praetor, without there
+being any prejudice to a man on trial for his life. The man who brings
+the action demands a trial on the simple fact, the man against whom
+the action is brought says that a demurrer ought to be added. The
+question is--"Shall the demurrer be allowed or not?" The reason
+is--"No, for it is not desirable in an action for damages that there
+should be any prejudged decision of a crime, such as is the subject of
+inquiry when assassins are on their trial." The arguments intended to
+invalidate this reason are--"The injuries are such that it is a shame
+that a decision should not be come to as early as possible." The
+thing to be decided is--"Whether the atrocity of the injuries is a
+sufficient reason why, while that point is before the tribunal, a
+previous decision should be given concerning some greater crime,
+concerning which a tribunal is prepared." And this is the example. But
+in every cause the question ought to be put to both parties, by whom,
+and by whose agency, and how, and when it is desirable that the action
+should be brought, or the decision given; or what ought to be decided
+concerning that matter.
+
+That ought to be assumed from the divisions of the law, concerning
+which we must speak hereafter; and we then ought to argue as to what
+is usually done in similar cases, and to consider whether, in this
+instance, out of wickedness, one course is really adopted and another
+pretended; or whether the tribunal has been appointed and the action
+allowed to proceed through folly or necessity, because it could not be
+done in any other manner, or owing to an opportunity which offered for
+acting in such a manner; or whether it has been done rightly without
+any interruption of any sort. But it is a common topic to urge against
+the man who seeks to avail himself of a demurrer to an action, that
+he is fleeing from a decision and from punishment, because he has
+no confidence in the justice of his cause. And that, owing to the
+demurrer, everything will be in confusion, if matters are not
+conducted and brought into court as they ought to be; that is to
+say, if it is either pleaded against a man it ought not, or with an
+improper penalty, or with an improper charge, or at an improper time;
+and this principle applies to any confusion of every sort of tribunal.
+Those three statements of cases then, which are not susceptible of any
+decisions, must be treated in this manner. At present let us consider
+the question and its divisions on general principles.
+
+XXI. When the fact and the name of the action in question is agreed
+upon, and when there is no dispute as to the character of the action
+to be commenced; then the effect, and the nature, and the character of
+the business is inquired into. We have already said, that there appear
+to be two divisions of this; one which relates to facts and one which
+relates to law. It is like this: "A certain person made a minor his
+heir, but the minor died before he had come into the property which
+was under the care of guardians. A dispute has arisen concerning
+the inheritance which came to the minor, between those who are the
+reversionary heirs of the father of the minor,--the possession belongs
+to the reversionary heirs." The first statement is that of the next of
+kin--"That money, concerning which he, whose next of kin we are, said
+nothing in his will, belongs to us." The reply is--"No, it belongs
+to us who are the reversionary heirs according to the will of his
+father." The thing to be inquired into is--To whom does it rightfully
+belong? The argument is--"For the father made a will for himself and
+for his son as long as the latter was a minor, wherefore it is
+quite clear that the things which belonged to the son are now ours,
+according to the will of the father." The argument to upset this
+is--"Aye, the father made his own will, and appointed you as
+reversionary heir, not to his son, but himself. Wherefore, nothing
+except what belonged to him himself can be yours by his will." The
+point to be determined is, whether any one can make a will to affect
+the property of his son who is a minor, or, whether the reversionary
+heirs of the father of the family himself, are not the heirs of his
+son also as long as he is a minor. And it is not foreign to the
+subject, (in order that I may not, on the one hand, omit to mention
+it, or, on the other, keep continually repeating it,) to mention a
+thing here which has a bearing on many questions. There are causes
+which have many reasons, though the grounds of the cause are simple,
+and that is the case when what has been done, or what is being
+defended, may appear right or natural on many different accounts, as
+in this very cause. For this further reason may be suggested by the
+heirs--"For there cannot be more heirs than one of one property, for
+causes quite dissimilar, nor has it ever happened, that one man was
+heir by will, and another by law, of the same property." This, again,
+is what will be replied, in order to invalidate this--"It is not one
+property only; because one part of it was the adventitious property of
+the minor, whose heir no one had been appointed by will at that time,
+in the case of anything happening to the minor, and with respect to
+the other portion of the property, the inclination of the father, even
+after he was dead, had the greatest weight, and that, now that the
+minor is dead, gives the property to his own heirs."
+
+The question to be decided is, "Whether it was one property?" And
+then, if they employ this argument by way of invalidating the other,
+"That there can be many heirs of one property for quite dissimilar
+causes," the question to be decided arises out of that argument,
+namely "Whether there can be more heirs than one, of different classes
+and character, to one property?"
+
+XXII Therefore, in one statement of the case, it has been understood
+how there are more reasons than one, more topics than one to
+invalidate such reasons, and besides that, more questions than one for
+the decision of the judge. Now let us look to the rules for this class
+of question. We must consider in what the rights of each party, or of
+all the parties (if there are many parties to the suit), consist. The
+beginning, then, appears derived from nature; but some things seem to
+have become adopted in practice for some consideration of expediency
+which is either more or less evident to us. But afterwards things
+which were approved of, or which seemed useful, either through habit,
+or because of their truth, appeared to have been confirmed by laws,
+and some things seem to be a law of nature, which it is not any
+vague opinion, but a sort of innate instinct that implants in us,
+as religion, piety, revenge for injuries, gratitude, attention to
+superiors, and truth. They call religion, that which is conversant
+with the fear of, and ceremonious observance paid to the gods; they
+call that piety, which warns us to fulfil our duties towards our
+country, our parents, or others connected with us by ties of blood,
+gratitude is that which retains a recollection of honours and benefits
+conferred on one, and acts of friendship done to one, and which shows
+itself by a requital of good offices, revenge for injuries is that by
+which we repel violence and insult from ourselves and from those who
+ought to be dear to us, by defending or avenging ourselves, and by
+means of which we punish offences, attention to superiors, they call
+the feeling under the influence of which we feel reverence for and pay
+respect to those who excel us in wisdom or honour or in any dignity,
+truth, they style that habit by which we take care that nothing has
+been or shall be done in any other manner than what we state. And the
+laws of nature themselves are less inquired into in a controversy of
+this sort, because they have no particular connexion with the civil
+law of which we are speaking and also, because they are somewhat
+remote from ordinary understandings. Still it is often desirable to
+introduce them for the purpose of some comparison, or with a view to
+add dignity to the discussion.
+
+But the laws of habit are considered to be those which without any
+written law, antiquity has sanctioned by the common consent of all
+men. And with reference to this habit there are some laws which are
+now quite fixed by their antiquity. Of which sort there are many other
+laws also, and among them far the greatest part of those laws which
+the praetors are in the habit of including in their edicts. But some
+kinds of law have already been established by certain custom, such as
+those relating to covenants, equity, formal decisions. A covenant
+is that which is agreed upon between two parties, because it is
+considered to be so just that it is said to be enforced by justice,
+equity is that which is equal to all men, a formal decision is that by
+which something has been established by the declared opinion of some
+person or persons authorized to pronounce one. As for regular laws,
+they can only be ascertained from the laws. It is desirable, then, by
+trying over every part of the law, to take notice of and to extract
+from these portions of the law whatever shall appear to arise out of
+the case itself, or out of a similar one, or out of one of greater or
+less importance. But since, as has been already said, there are two
+kinds of common topics, one of which contains the amplification of a
+doubtful matter, and the other of a certain one, we must consider what
+the case itself suggests, and what can be and ought to be amplified by
+a common topic. For certain topics to suit every possible case cannot
+be laid down, and perhaps in most of them it will be necessary at
+times to rely on the authority of the lawyers, and at times to speak
+against it. But we must consider, in this case and in all cases,
+whether the case itself suggests any common topics besides those which
+we have mentioned.
+
+Now let us consider the juridical kind of inquiry and its different
+divisions. XXIII The juridical inquiry is that in which the nature of
+justice and injustice, and the principle of reward or punishment, is
+examined. Its divisions are two, one of which we call the absolute
+inquiry, and the other the one which is accessory. That is the
+absolute inquiry which itself contains in itself the question of right
+and not right, not as the inquiry about facts does, in an overhand and
+obscure manner, but openly and intelligibly. It is of this sort.--When
+the Thebans had defeated the Lacedaemonians in war, as it was nearly
+universal custom among the Greeks, when they were waging war against
+one another, for those who were victorious to erect some trophy
+on their borders, for the sake only of declaring their victory at
+present, not that it might remain for ever as a memorial of the war,
+they erected a brazen trophy. They are accused before the Amphictyons,
+that is, before the common council of Greece. The charge is, "They
+ought not to have done so." The denial is, "We ought." The question
+is, "Whether they ought." The reason is, "For we gained such glory
+by our valour in that war, that we wished to leave an everlasting
+memorial of it to posterity." The argument adduced to invalidate this
+is, "But still it is not right for Greeks to erect an eternal memorial
+of then enmity to Greeks." The question to be decided is, "As for the
+sake of celebrating their own excessive valour Greeks have erected an
+imperishable monument of their enmity to Greeks, whether they have
+done well or ill?" We, therefore, have now put this reason in the
+mouth of the Thebans, in order that this class of cause which we
+are now considering might be thoroughly understood. For if we had
+furnished them with that argument which is perhaps the one which
+they actually used, "We did so because our enemies warred against us
+without any considerations of justice and piety," we should then be
+digressing to the subject of retorting an accusation, of which we will
+speak hereafter. But it is manifest that both kinds of question are
+incidental to this controversy. And arguments must be derived for
+it from the same topics as those which are applicable to the cause
+depending on matters of fact, which has been all ready treated of.
+But to take many weighty common topics both from the cause itself, if
+there is any opportunity for employing the language of indignation or
+complaint, and also from the advantage and general character of the
+law, will be not only allowable, but proper, if the dignity of the
+cause appears to require such expedients.
+
+XXIV. At present let us consider the assumptive portion of the
+juridical inquiry. But it is then called assumptive, when the fact
+cannot be proved by its own intrinsic evidence, but is defended by
+some argument brought from extraneous circumstances. Its divisions
+are four in number: comparison, the retort of the accusation, the
+refutation of it as far as regards oneself, and concession.
+
+Comparison is when any action which intrinsically cannot be approved,
+is defended by reference to that for the sake of which it was done. It
+is something of this sort:--"A certain general, when he was blockaded
+by the enemy and could not escape by any possible means, made a
+covenant with them to leave behind his arms and his baggage, on
+condition of being allowed to lead away his soldiers in safety. And he
+did so. Having lost his arms and his baggage, he saved his men, beyond
+the hopes of any one. He is prosecuted for treason." Then comes the
+definition of treason. But let us consider the topic which we are at
+present discussing.
+
+The charge is, "He had no business to leave behind the arms and
+baggage." The denial is, "Yes, he had." The question is, "Whether he
+had any right to do so?" The reason for doing so is, "For else he
+would have lost all his soldiers." The argument brought to invalidate
+this is either the conjectural one, "They would not have been lost,"
+or the other conjectural one, "That was not your reason for doing so."
+And from this arise the questions for decision: "Whether they would
+have been lost?" and, "Whether that was the reason why he did so?" Or
+else, this comparative reason which we want at this minute: "But it
+was better to lose his soldiers than to surrender the arms and baggage
+to the enemy." And from this arises the question for the decision of
+the judges: "As all the soldiers must have been lost unless they had
+come into this covenant, whether it was better to lose the soldiers,
+or to agree to these conditions?"
+
+It will be proper to deal with this kind of cause by reference to
+these topics, and to employ the principles of, and rules for the other
+statements of cases also. And especially to employ conjectures for the
+purpose of invalidating that which those who are accused will compare
+with the act which is alleged against them as a crime. And that will
+be done if either that result which the advocates for the defence say
+would have happened unless that action had been performed which is now
+brought before the court, be denied to have been likely to ensue; or
+if it can be proved that it was done with a different object and in a
+different manner from that stated by the man who is on his trial. The
+confirmation of that statement, and also the argument used by the
+opposite party to invalidate it, must both be derived from the
+conjectural statement of the case. But if the accused person is
+brought before the court, because of his action coming under the name
+of some particular crime, (as is the case in this instance, for the
+man is prosecuted for treason), it will be desirable to employ a
+definition and the rules for a definition.
+
+XXV. And this usually takes place in this kind of examination, so that
+it is desirable to employ both conjecture and definition. But if
+any other kind of inquiry arises, it will be allowable on similar
+principles to transfer to it the rules for that kind of inquiry. For
+the accuser must of all things take pains to invalidate, by as many
+reasons as possible, the very fact on account of which the person on
+his trial thinks that it is granted to him that he was right. And it
+is easy to do so, if he attempts to overturn that argument by as many
+statements of the case as he can employ.
+
+But comparison itself, when separated from the other kinds of
+discussion, will be considered according to its own intrinsic power,
+if that which is mentioned in the comparison is shown, either not to
+have been honourable, or not to have been useful, or not to have been
+necessary, or not so greatly useful, or not so very honourable, or not
+so exceedingly necessary.
+
+In the next place it is desirable for the accuser to separate the
+action which he himself is accusing, from that which the advocate for
+the defence compares with it. And he will do that if he shows that it
+is not usually done in such a manner, and that it ought not to be done
+so, and that there is no reason why this thing should be done on this
+account; for instance, that those things which have been provided for
+the sake of safety, should be surrendered to the enemy for the sake of
+safety. Afterwards it will be desirable to compare the injury with the
+benefit, and altogether to compare the action which is impeached with
+that which is praised by the advocate for the defence or which is
+attempted to be proved as what must inevitably have ensued, and then,
+by disparaging the one at the same time to exaggerate the importance
+of the mischief caused by the other. That will be effected if it
+be shown that that which the person on his trial avoided was more
+honourable, more advantageous, and more necessary than that which
+he did. But the influence and character of what is honourable, and
+useful, and necessary, will be ascertained in the rules given for
+deliberation.
+
+In the next place, it will be desirable to explain that comparative
+kind of judicial decision as if it were a deliberative cause and
+then afterwards to discuss it by the light thrown on it by rules for
+deliberation. For let this be the question for judicial decision which
+we have already mentioned--"As all the soldiers would have been lost
+if they had not come to this agreement, was it better for the soldiers
+to be lost, or to come to this agreement?" It will be desirable that
+this should be dealt with with reference to the topics concerning
+deliberation, as if the matter were to come to some consultation.
+
+XXVI. But the advocate for the defence will take the topics in
+accordance with which other statements of the case are made by the
+accuser, and will prepare his own defence from those topics with
+reference to the same statements. But all other topics which belong to
+the comparison, he will deal with in the contrary manner.
+
+The common topics will be these,--the accuser will press his charges
+against the man who confesses some discreditable or pernicious action,
+or both, but still seeks to make some defence, and will allege
+the mischievous or discreditable nature of his conduct with great
+indignation. The advocate for the defence will insist upon it, that no
+action ought to be considered pernicious or discreditable, or, on the
+other hand, advantageous or creditable, unless it is ascertained with
+what intention, at what time, and on what account it was done. And
+this topic is so common, that if it is well handled in this cause it
+is likely to be of great weight in convincing the hearers. And there
+is another topic, by means of which the magnitude of the service done
+is demonstrated with very great amplification, by reference to the
+usefulness, or honourableness, or necessity of the action. And there
+is a third topic, by means of which the matter which is expressed in
+words is placed before the eyes of those men who are the hearers, so
+that they think that they themselves also would have done the same
+things, if the same circumstances and the same cause for doing so had
+happened to them at the same time.
+
+The retorting of a charge takes place, when the accused person,
+having confessed that of which he is accused, says that he did it
+justifiably, being induced by the sin committed against him by the
+other party. As in this case--"Horatius, when he had slain the three
+Curiatii and lost his two brothers, returned home victorious. He saw
+his sister not troubled about the death of her brothers, but at the
+same time calling on the name of Curiatius, who had been betrothed to
+her, with groans and lamentation. Being indignant, he slew the maid".
+He is prosecuted.
+
+The charge is, "You slew your sister wrongfully". The refutation is "I
+slew her lawfully". The question is, "Whether he slew her lawfully".
+The reason is, "Yes, for she was lamenting the death of enemies, and
+was indifferent to that of her brothers, she was grieved that I and
+the Roman people were victorious". The argument to invalidate this
+reason is, "Still she ought not to have been put to death by her
+brother without being convicted". On this the question for the
+decision of the judges is, "Whether when Horatia was showing her
+indifference to the death of her brothers, and lamenting that of the
+enemy, and not rejoicing at the victory of her brother and of the
+Roman people, she deserved to be put to death by her brother without
+being condemned".
+
+XXVII For this kind of cause, in the first place, whatever is given
+out of the other statements of cases ought to be taken, as has been
+already enjoined when speaking of comparison. After that, if there is
+any opportunity of doing so, some statement of the case ought to be
+employed by which he to whom the crime is imputed may be defended. In
+the next place, we ought to argue that the fault which the accused
+person is imputing to another, is a lighter one than that which he
+himself committed; in the next place, we ought to employ some portion
+of a demurrer, and to show by whom, and through whose agency, and
+how, and when that matter ought to have been tried, or adjudged, or
+decided. And at the same time, we ought to show that it was not proper
+that punishment should have been inflicted before any judgment was
+pronounced. Then we must also point out the laws and the course of
+judicial proceeding by which that offence which the accused person
+punished of his own accord, might have been chastised according to
+precedent, and by the regular course of justice. In the next place, it
+will be right to deny that it is proper to listen to the charge which
+is brought by the accused person against his victim, when he who
+brings it did not choose to submit it to the decision of the judges,
+and it may be urged that one ought to consider that on which no
+decision has been pronounced, as if it had not been done, and after
+that to point out the impudence of those men who are now before
+the judges accusing the man whom they themselves condemned without
+consulting the judges, and are now bringing him to trial on whom they
+have already inflicted punishment. After this we may say that it is
+bringing irregularity into the courts of justice, and that the judges
+will be advancing further than their power authorizes them, if they
+pronounce judgment at the same time in the case of the accused person,
+and of him whom the accused person impeaches. And in the next place,
+we may point out if this rule is established, and if men avenge one
+offence by another offence, and one injury by another injury, what
+vast inconvenience will ensue from such conduct, and that if the
+person who is now the prosecutor had chosen to do so too, there would
+have been no need of this trial at all, and that if every one else
+were to do so, there would be an end of all courts of justice.
+
+After that it may be pointed out, that even if the maiden who is now
+accused by him of this crime had been convicted, he would not himself
+have had any right to inflict punishment on her, so that it is a
+shameful thing that the man who would have had no right to punish her,
+even if she had been convicted, should have punished her without her
+being even brought to trial at all. And then the accused person may
+be called upon to produce the law which he says justifies his having
+acted in such a manner.
+
+After that, as we have enjoined when speaking of comparison, that that
+which is mentioned in comparison should be disparaged by the accuser
+as much as possible, so, too, in this kind of argument, it will be
+advantageous to compare the fault of the party on whom the accusation
+is retorted with the crime of the accused person who justified his
+action as having been lawfully done. And after that it is necessary to
+point out that that is not an action of such a sort, that on account
+of it this other crime ought to have been committed. The last point,
+as in the case of comparison, is the assumption of a judicial
+decision, and the dilating upon it in the way of amplification, in
+accordance with the rules given respecting deliberation.
+
+XXVIII But the advocate for the defence will invalidate what is urged
+by means of other statements from those topics which have already been
+given. But the demurrer itself he will prove first of all, by dwelling
+on the guilt and audacity of the man to whom he imputes the crime, and
+by bringing it before the eyes of the judges with as much indignation
+as possible if the case admits of it, and also with vehement
+complaint, and afterwards by proving that the accused person chastised
+the offence more lightly than the offender deserved, by comparing the
+punishment inflicted with the injury done. In the next place, it will
+be desirable to invalidate by opposite arguments those topics which
+are handled by the prosecutor in such a way that they are capable of
+being refuted and retorted, of which kind are the three last topics
+which I have mentioned. But that most vehement attack of the
+prosecutors, by which they attempt to prove that irregularity will be
+introduced into all the courts of justice if power is given to any man
+of inflicting punishment on a person who has not been convicted, will
+have its force much weakened, first of all, if the injury be shown to
+be such as appears intolerable not only to a good man but absolutely
+to any freeman, and in the next place to be so manifest that it could
+not have been denied even by the person who had done it, and moreover,
+of such a kind that the person who did chastise it was the person
+who above all others was bound to chastise it. So that it was not so
+proper nor so honourable for that matter to be brought before a court
+of justice as for it to be chastised in that manner in which, and by
+that person by whom it was chastised, and lastly, that the case was
+so notorious that there was no occasion whatever for a judicial
+investigation into it. And here it will be proper to show, by
+arguments and by other similar means, that there are very many things
+so atrocious and so notorious, that it is not only not necessary, but
+that it is not even desirable to wait for the slow proceedings of a
+judicial trial.
+
+There is a common topic for an accuser to employ against a person,
+who, when he cannot deny the fact of which he is accused, still
+derives some hope from his attempt to show that irregularity will be
+introduced into all courts of justice by such proceedings. And here
+there will come in the demonstration of the usefulness of judicial
+proceedings, and the complaint of the misfortune of that person who
+has been punished without being condemned; and the indignation to
+be expressed against the audacity and cruelty of the man who has
+inflicted the punishment. There is also a topic for the advocate for
+the defence to employ, in complaining of the audacity of the person
+whom he chastised; and in urging that the case ought to be judged
+of, not by the name of the action itself, but with reference to the
+intention of the person who committed it, and the cause for which, and
+the time at which it was committed. And in pointing out what great
+mischief will ensue either from the injurious conduct, or the
+wickedness of some one, unless such excessive and undisguised audacity
+were chastised by him whose reputation, or parents, or children, or
+something else which either necessarily is, or at least ought to be
+dear to every one, is affected, by such conduct.
+
+XXIX. The transference of an accusation takes place when the
+accusation of that crime which is imputed to one by the opposite party
+is transferred to some other person or circumstance. And that is done
+in two ways. For sometimes the motive itself is transferred,
+and sometimes the act. We may employ this as an instance of the
+transference of the motive:--"The Rhodians sent some men as
+ambassadors to Athens. The quaestors did not give the ambassadors the
+money for their expenses which they ought to have given them. The
+ambassadors consequently did not go. They are impeached." The charge
+brought against them is, "They ought to have gone." The denial is,
+"They ought not." The question is, "Whether they ought." The reason
+alleged is, "Because the money for their expenses, which is usually
+given to ambassadors from the public treasury, was not given to them
+by the quaestor." The argument brought to invalidate that reason is,
+"Still you ought to have discharged the duty which was entrusted to
+you by the public authority." The question for the decision of the
+judges is, "Whether, as the money which ought to have been supplied
+from the public treasury was not furnished to those men who were
+appointed ambassadors, they were nevertheless bound to discharge the
+duties of their embassy." In this class of inquiry, as in all the
+other kinds, it will be desirable to see if anything can be assumed,
+either from a conjectural statement of the case, or from any other
+kind of statement. And after that, many arguments can be brought to
+bear on this question, both from comparison, and from the transference
+of the guilt to other parties.
+
+But the prosecutor will, in the first place, if he can, defend the man
+through whose fault the accused person says that that action was done;
+and if he cannot, he will declare that the fault of the other party
+has nothing to do with this trial, but only the fault of this man whom
+he himself is accusing. Afterwards he will say that it is proper for
+every one to consider only what is his own duty; and that if the one
+party did wrong, that was no reason for the other doing wrong too. And
+in the next place, that if the other man has committed a fault, he
+ought to be accused separately as this man is, and that the accusation
+of the one is not to be mixed up with the defence of the other.
+
+But when the advocate for the defence has dealt with the other
+arguments, if any arise out of other statements of the case, he will
+argue in this way with reference to the transference of the charge to
+other parties. In the first place, he will point out to whose fault
+it was owing that the thing happened; and in the next place, as it
+happened in consequence of the fault of some one else, he will point
+out that he either could not or ought not to have done what the
+prosecutor says he ought: that he could not, will be considered with
+reference to the particulars of expediency, in which the force of
+necessity is involved; that he ought not, with reference to the
+honourableness of the proceeding. We will consider each part more
+minutely when talking of the deliberative kind of argument. Then
+he will say, that everything was done by the accused person which
+depended on his own power; that less was done than ought to have been,
+was the consequence of the fault of another person. After that,
+in pointing out the criminality of that other person, it will be
+requisite to show how great the good will and zeal of the accused
+person himself was. And that must be established by proofs of this
+sort--by his diligence in all the rest of the affair, by his previous
+actions, or by his previous expressions. And it may be well to show
+that it would have been advantageous to the man himself to have done
+this, and disadvantageous not to have done it, and that to have done
+it would have been more in accordance with the rest of his life, than
+the not having done it, which, was owing to the fault of the other
+party.
+
+XXX But if the criminality is not to be transferred to some particular
+person, but to some circumstance, as in this very case--"If the
+quaestor had been dead, and on that account the money had not been
+given to the ambassadors," then, as the accusation of the other party,
+and the denial of the fault is removed, it will be desirable to employ
+the other topics in a similar manner, and to assume whatever is
+suitable to one's purpose from the divisions of admitted facts. But
+common topics are usually nearly the same to both parties, and then,
+after the previous topics are taken for granted, will suit either to
+the greatest certainty. The accuser will use the topic of indignation
+at the fact, the defender, when the guilt belongs to another and does
+not attach to himself, will urge that he does not deserve to have any
+punishment inflicted on him.
+
+But the removal of the criminality from oneself is effected when the
+accused person declares, that what is attributed to him as a crime
+did not affect him or his duty, and asserts that if there was any
+criminality in it, it ought not to be attributed to him. That kind of
+dispute is of this sort--"In the treaty which was formerly made with
+the Samnites, a certain young man of noble birth held the pig which
+was to be sacrificed, by the command of the general. But when the
+treaty was disavowed by the senate, and the general surrendered to the
+Samnites, one of the senators asserted that the man who held the pig
+ought also to be given up." The charge is, "He ought to be given up."
+The denial is, "He ought not." The question is, "Whether he ought or
+not." The reason is, "For it was no particular duty of mine, nor did
+it depend on my power, being as young as I was, and only a private
+individual, and while the general was present with the supreme
+authority and command, to take care that the treaty was solemnised
+with all the regular formalities." The argument to invalidate this
+reason is, "But since you became an accomplice in a most infamous
+treaty, sanctioned with the most formal solemnities of religion, you
+ought to be surrendered." The question for the judges to decide is
+"Whether, since a man who had no official authority was present, by
+the command of the general, aiding and abetting in the adopting of
+the treaty, and in that important religious ceremony, he ought to be
+surrendered to the enemy or not." This kind of question is so far
+different from the previous one, because in that the accused person
+admits that he ought to have done what the prosecutor says ought
+to have been done, but he attributes the cause to some particular
+circumstance or person, which was a hindrance to his own intention,
+without having recourse to any admission. For that has greater force,
+which will be understood presently. But in this case a man ought
+not to accuse the opposite party, nor to attempt to transfer the
+criminality to another, but he ought to show that that has not and
+never has had any reference whatever to himself, either in respect
+of power or duty. And in this kind of cause there is this new
+circumstance, that the prosecutor often works up a fresh accusation
+out of the topics employed, to remove the guilt from the accused
+person. As for instance,--"If any one accuses a man who, while he was
+praetor, summoned the people to take up arms for an expedition, at
+a time when the consuls were in the city." For as in the previous
+instance the accused person showed that the matter in question had
+no connexion with his duty or his power, so in this case also, the
+prosecutor himself, by removing the action done from the duty and
+power of the person who is put on his trial, confirms the accusation
+by this very argument. And in this case it will be proper for each
+party to examine, by means of all the divisions of honour and
+expediency, by examples, and tokens, and by arguing what is the duty,
+or right, or power of each individual, and whether he had that right,
+and duty, and power which is the subject of the present discussion, or
+not. But it will be desirable for common topics to be assumed from the
+case itself, if there is any room in it for expressions of indignation
+or complaint.
+
+XXI. The admission of the fact takes place, when the accused person
+does not justify the fact itself, but demands to be pardoned for it.
+And the parts of this division of the case are two: purgation and
+deprecation. Purgation is that by which (not the action, but) the
+intention of the person who is accused, is defended. That has three
+subdivisions,--ignorance, accident, necessity.
+
+Ignorance is when the person who is accused declares that he did not
+know something or other. As, "There was a law in a certain nation
+that no one should sacrifice a calf to Diana. Some sailors, when in a
+terrible tempest they were being tossed about in the open sea, made a
+vow that if they reached the harbour which they were in sight of, they
+would sacrifice a calf to the god who presided over that place. Being
+ignorant of the law, when they landed, they sacrificed a calf." They
+are prosecuted. The accusation is, "You sacrificed a calf to a god to
+whom it was unlawful to sacrifice a calf." The denial consists in the
+admission which has been already stated. The reason is, "I was not
+aware that it was unlawful." The argument brought to invalidate that
+reason is, "Nevertheless, since you have done what was not lawful, you
+are according to the law deserving of punishment." The question for
+the decision of the judge is, "Whether, as he did what he ought not to
+have done, and was not aware that he ought not to have done so, he is
+worthy of punishment or not."
+
+But accident is introduced into the admission when it is proved that
+some power of fortune interfered with his intention; as in this
+case:--"There was a law among the Lacedaemonians, that if the
+contractor failed to supply victims for a certain sacrifice, he should
+be accounted guilty of a capital offence; and accordingly, the man who
+had contracted to supply them, when the day of the sacrifice was at
+hand, began to drive in cattle from the country into the city. It
+happened on a sudden that the river Eurotus, which flows by Lacedaemon,
+was raised by some violent storms, and became so great and furious
+that the victims could not by any possibility be conveyed across. The
+contractor, for the sake of showing his own willingness, placed all
+the victims on the bank of the river, in order that every one on
+the other side of the river might be able to see them. But though,
+everyone was aware that it was the unexpected rise of the river
+which hindered him from giving effect to his zeal, still some people
+prosecuted him on the capital charge." The charge was, "The victims
+which you were bound to furnish for the sacrifice were not furnished."
+The reply was an admission of the fact. The reason alleged was, "For
+the river rose on a sudden, and on that account it was impossible to
+convey them across." The argument used to invalidate that reason
+was, "Nevertheless, since what the law enjoins was not done, you are
+deserving of punishment." The question for the decision of the judges
+was, "Whether, as in that respect the contractor did not comply with
+the law, being prevented by the unexpected rise of the river
+which hindered his giving effect to his zeal, he is deserving of
+punishment."
+
+XXXII. But the plea of necessity is introduced when the accused person
+is defended as having done what he is accused of having done under
+the influence of compulsion. In this way:--"There is a law among the
+Rhodians, that if any vessel with a beak is caught in their harbour,
+it shall be confiscated. There was a violent storm at sea; the
+violence of the winds compelled a vessel, against the will of her
+crew, to take refuge in the harbour of the Rhodians. On this the
+quaestor claims the vessel for the people. The captain of the ship
+declared that it was not just that it should be confiscated." The
+charge is, "A ship with a beak was caught in the harbour." The reply
+is an admission of the fact. The reason given is, "We were driven
+into the harbour by violence and necessity." The argument brought to
+invalidate that reason is, "Nevertheless, according to the law that
+ship ought to become the property of the people." The question for the
+decision of the judge is, "Whether, as the law confiscates every ship
+with a beak which is found in the harbour, and as this ship, in spite
+of the endeavours of her crew, was driven into the harbour by the
+violence of the tempest, it ought to be confiscated."
+
+We have collected these examples of these three kinds of cases into
+one place, because a similar rule for the arguments required for these
+prevails in all of them. For in all of them, in the first place, it
+is desirable, if the case itself affords any opportunity of doing so,
+that a conjecture should be introduced by the accuser, in order that
+that which it will be stated was not done intentionally, may be
+demonstrated by some suspicious circumstances, to have been done
+intentionally. In the next place, it will be well to introduce a
+definition of necessity, or of accident, or of ignorance, and to add
+instances to that definition, in which ignorance, or accident, or
+necessity appear to have operated, and to distinguish between such
+instances and the allegations put forward by the accused person, (that
+is to say, to show that there is no resemblance between them,) because
+this was a lighter or an easier matter, or one which did not admit of
+any one's being ignorant respecting it, or one which gave no room for
+accident or necessity. After that it must be shown that it might have
+been avoided, and, that the accused person might have prevented it if
+he had done this thing, or that thing, or that he might have guarded
+against being forced to act in such a manner. And it is desirable to
+prove by definitions that this conduct of his ought not to be called
+imprudence, or accident, or necessity, but indolence, indifference, or
+fatuity.
+
+And if any necessity alleged appears to have in it anything
+discreditable, it will be desirable for the opponent, by a chain of
+common topics, to prove that it would have been better to suffer
+anything, or even to die, rather than to submit to a necessity of the
+sort. And then, from these topics, which have been already discussed
+when we spoke of the question of fact, it will be desirable to inquire
+into the nature of law and equity, and, as if we were dealing with
+an absolute juridical question, to consider this point by itself
+separately from all other points. And in this place, if there should
+be an opportunity, it will be desirable to employ instances in which
+there can be no room for any similar excuse, and also to institute a
+comparison, showing that there would have been more reason to allow it
+in them, and by reference to the divisions of deliberation, it may be
+shown that it is admitted that that action which was committed by the
+adversary is confessed to have been discreditable and useless, that
+it is a matter of great importance, and one likely to cause great
+mischief, if such conduct is overlooked by those who have authority to
+punish it.
+
+XXXIII. But the advocate for the defence will be able to convert all
+these arguments, and then to use them for his own purposes. And
+he will especially dwell on the defence of his intentions, and in
+exaggerating the importance of that which was an obstacle to his
+intentions, and he will show that he could not have done more than he
+did do, and he will urge that in all things the will of the doer ought
+to be regarded, and that it is quite impossible that he should be
+justly convicted of not being free from guilt, and that under his name
+the common powerlessness of mankind is sought to be convicted. Then,
+too, he will say that nothing can be more scandalous than for a man
+who is free from guilt, not also to be free from punishment. But the
+common topics for the prosecutor to employ are these, one resting on
+the confession of the accused person, and the other pointing out what
+great licence for the violation of the law will follow, if it is once
+laid down that the thing to be inquired into is not the action but
+the cause of the action. The common topics for the advocate for the
+defence to employ are, a complaint of that calamity which has taken
+place by no fault of his, but in consequence of some overruling power,
+and a complaint also of the power of fortune and the powerless
+state of men, and an entreaty that the judges should consider his
+intentions, and not the result. And in the employment of all these
+topics it will be desirable that there should be inserted a complaint
+of his own unhappy condition, and indignation at the cruelty of his
+adversaries.
+
+And no one ought to marvel, if in these or other instances he sees
+a dispute concerning the letter of the law added to the rest of the
+discussion. And we shall have hereafter to speak of this subject
+separately, because some kinds of causes will have to be considered by
+themselves, and with reference to their own independent merits,
+and some connect with themselves some other kind of question also.
+Wherefore, when everything is cleared up, it will not be difficult to
+transfer to each cause whatever is suitable to that particular kind of
+inquiry, as in all these instances of admission of the fact, there is
+involved that dispute as to the law, which is called the question as
+to the letter and spirit of the law. But as we were speaking of the
+admission of the fact we gave rules for it. But in another place we
+will discuss the letter and the spirit of the law. At present we will
+limit our consideration to the other division of the admission of the
+fact.
+
+XXXIV. Deprecation is when it is not attempted to defend the action
+in question, but entreaties to be pardoned are employed. This kind of
+topic can hardly be approved of in a court of justice, because, when
+the offence is admitted, it is difficult to prevail on the man who
+is bound to be the chastiser of offences to pardon it. So that it is
+allowable to employ that kind of address only when you do not rest the
+whole cause on it. As for instance, if you were speaking in behalf of
+some illustrious or gallant man, who has done great services to
+the republic, you might, without appearing to have recourse to
+deprecation, still employ it in this manner:--"But if, O judges, this
+man, in return for the services which he has done you, and the zeal
+which he has displayed in your cause at all times, were now, when he
+himself is in such peril, to entreat you, in consideration of his many
+good actions, to pardon this one error, it would only be what is due
+both to your own character for clemency, and to his virtue, O judges,
+for you to grant him this indulgence at his request." Then it will be
+allowable to dwell upon the services which he has done, and by the
+use of some common topic to lead the judges to feel an inclination to
+pardon him.
+
+Wherefore, although this kind of address has no proper place in
+judicial proceedings, except to a certain limited extent; still,
+because both the portion which is allowable must be employed at times,
+and because it is often to be employed in all its force in the senate
+or in the council, we will give rules for it also. For there was a
+long deliberation in the senate and in the council about Syphax; and
+there was a long discussion before Lucius Opimius and his bench of
+assessors respecting Quintus Numitorius Pullus; and in this case the
+entreaty for pardon had more influence than the strict inquiry into
+the case. For he did not find it so easy to prove that he had always
+been well affected towards the Roman people, by employing the
+statement of the case founded on conjecture, as to show that it was
+reasonable to pardon him on account of his subsequent services, when
+he added the topics of deprecation to the rest of his defence.
+
+XXXV. It will be desirable, therefore, for the man who entreats to be
+pardoned for what he admits that he has done, to enumerate whatever
+services of his he is able to, and, if possible, to show that they are
+greater than those offences which he has committed, so that it may
+appear that more good than evil has proceeded from him; and then to
+put forward also the services done by his ancestors, if there are any
+such; and also to show that he did what he did, not out of hatred, or
+out of cruelty, but either through folly, or owing to the instigation
+of some one, or for some other honourable or probable cause; and after
+that to promise and undertake that he has been taught by this error of
+his, and confirmed in his resolution also by the kindness of those who
+pardon him, to avoid all such conduct in future. And besides this, he
+may hold out a hope that he will hereafter be able, in some respect or
+other, to be of great use to those who pardon him now; he will find it
+serviceable to point out that he is either related to the judges,
+or that he has been as far back as possible an hereditary friend
+of theirs; and to express to them the earnestness of his good-will
+towards them, and the nobility of the blood and dignity of those
+men who are anxious for his safety. And all other qualities and
+circumstances which, when attributable to persons, confer honour and
+dignity on them, he, using no complaint, and avoiding all arrogance,
+will point out as existing in himself, so that he may appear to
+deserve some honour rather than any kind of punishment; and after that
+it will be wise of him to mention other men who have been pardoned for
+greater offences.
+
+And he will do himself a great deal of good if he shows that he
+himself, when in power, was merciful and inclined to pardon others.
+And the offence of which he is now accused must be extenuated and
+made to appear as trifling as possible; and it must be shown to be
+discreditable, or at all events inexpedient, to punish such a man as
+he is. After that it will be advisable to seek to move pity by use of
+common topics, according to those rules which have been laid down in
+the first book.
+
+XXXVI. But the adversary will exaggerate the offences; he will say
+that nothing was done ignorantly, but that everything was the result
+of deliberate wickedness and cruelty. He will show that the accused
+person has been pitiless, arrogant, and (if he possibly can) at all
+times disaffected, and that he cannot by any possibility be rendered
+friendly. If he mentions any services done by him, he will prove that
+they were done for some private object, and not out of any good will;
+or else he will prove that he has conceived hatred since or else that
+all those services have been effaced by his frequent offences, or else
+that his services are of less importance than his injuries, or that,
+as he has already received adequate honours for his services, he ought
+also to have punishment inflicted on him for the injuries which he has
+committed. In the next place, he will urge that it is discreditable or
+pernicious that he should be pardoned. And besides that, it will be
+the very extremity of folly not to avail oneself of one's power over
+a man, over whom one has often wished to have power, and that it is
+proper to consider what feelings, or rather what hatred they ought to
+entertain towards him. But one common topic to be employed will be
+indignation at his offence, and another will be the argument, that it
+is right to pity those who are in distress, owing to misfortune, and
+not those who are in such a plight through their own wickedness.
+
+Since, then, we have been dwelling so long on the general statement of
+the case, on account of the great number of its divisions, in order
+to prevent any one's mind from being so distracted by the variety
+and dissimilarity of circumstances, and so led into some errors,
+it appears right also to remind the reader of what remains to be
+mentioned of that division of the subject, and why it remains. We have
+said, that that was the juridical sort of examination in which
+the nature of right and wrong, and the principles of reward and
+punishment, were investigated. We have explained the causes in which
+inquiry into right and wrong is proceeded with. It remains now to
+explain the principles which regulate the distribution of rewards and
+punishments.
+
+XXXVII. For there are many causes which consist of a demand of some
+reward. For there is often question before the judges of the rewards
+to be conferred on prosecutors, and very often some reward is claimed
+for them from the senate, or from the bench of judges. And it is not
+advisable that any one should think that, when we are adducing some
+instance which is under discussion in the senate, we by so doing are
+abandoning the class of judicial examples. For whatever is said
+with reference to approving or disapproving of a person, when the
+consideration of the opinions of the judges is adapted to that form of
+expression, that, even although it is treated with reference to the
+language in which the opinion is couched, is a deliberative argument,
+still, because it has especial reference to some person, it is to be
+accounted also judicial. And altogether, a man who has diligently
+investigated the meaning and nature of all causes will perceive that
+they differ both in character and in form; but in the other divisions
+he will see them all consistent with each other, and every one
+connected with the other. At present, let us consider the question of
+rewards. Lucius Licinius Crassus, the consul, pursued and destroyed a
+band of people in the province of the Nearer Gaul, who were collected
+together under no known or regular leader, and who had no name or
+number of sufficient importance to be entitled enemies of the Roman
+people; but still they made the province unsafe by their constant
+sallies and piratical outbreaks. He returns to Rome. He demands a
+triumph. Here, as also in the case of the employment of deprecation,
+it does not at all concern us to supply reasons to establish and to
+invalidate such a claim, and so to come before the judges; because,
+unless some other statement of the case is also put forth, or some
+portion of such statement, the matter for the decision of the judges
+will be a simple one, and will be contained in the question itself. In
+the case of the employment of deprecation, in this manner: "Whether
+so and so ought to be punished." In this instance, in such a manner:
+"Whether he ought to be rewarded."
+
+Now we will furnish some topics suitable for the investigation into
+the principles of rewards.
+
+XXXVIII. The principle, then, on which rewards are conferred is
+distributable into four divisions: as to the services done; the person
+who has done them; the kind of reward which is to be conferred; and
+the means of conferring it. The services done will be considered with
+reference to their own intrinsic merits, and to the time, and to
+the disposition of the man who did them, and to their attendant
+circumstances. They will be examined with reference to their own
+intrinsic merits, in this manner:--Whether they are important or
+unimportant; whether they were difficult or easy; whether they are
+of a common or extraordinary nature; whether they are considered
+honourable on true or false principles. And with reference to the time
+at which they were done:--If they were done at a time when we had need
+of them; when other men could or would not help them; if they were
+done when all other hope had failed. With reference to the disposition
+of the man who did them:--If he did not do them with a view to any
+advantage of his own, but if he did everything else for the express
+purpose of being able to do this afterwards. And with reference to the
+attendant circumstances:--If what was done appears not to have been
+done by chance, but in consequence of some deliberate design, or if
+chance appears to have hindered the design.
+
+But, with respect to the man who did the service in question, it will
+be requisite to consider in what manner he has lived, and what expense
+or labour he has devoted to that object; whether he has at any time
+done any other similar action; whether he is claiming a reward
+for himself for what is in reality the result of another person's
+exertions, or of the kindness of the gods. Whether he has ever, in the
+case of any one else, pronounced that he ought not to be rewarded for
+such a reason; or, whether he has already had sufficient honour paid
+to him for what he has done; or, whether what has been done is an
+action of such a sort that, if he had not done it, he would have been
+deserving of punishment; but that he does not deserve reward for
+having done it; or, whether he is premature in his demand for a
+reward, and is proposing to sell an uncertain hope for a certain
+reward; or, whether he claims the reward in order to avoid some
+punishment, by its appearing as if the case had already been decided
+in his favour.
+
+XXXIX. But as to the question of the reward, it will be necessary to
+consider what reward, how great a reward is claimed, and why it is
+claimed; and also, to what reward, and to how great a reward, the
+conduct in question is entitled. And in the next place, it will be
+requisite to inquire what men had such honours paid them in the time
+of our ancestors, and for what causes those honours were paid. And, in
+the next place, it will be urged that they ought not to be made too
+common. And this will be one common topic for any one who speaks in
+opposition to a person who claims a reward;--that rewards for virtue
+and eminent services ought to be considered serious and holy things,
+and that they ought not to be conferred on worthless men, or to be
+made common by being bestowed on men of no particular eminence. And
+another will be, to urge that men will become less eager to practise
+virtue when the reward of virtue has been made common; for those
+things which are scarce and difficult of attainment appear honourable
+and acceptable to men. And a third topic is, to put the question,
+whether, if there are any instances of men who, in the times of our
+ancestors, were thought worthy of such honours on account of their
+eminent virtue, they will not be likely to think it some diminution
+of their own glory, when they see that such men as these have such
+rewards conferred on them. And then comes the enumeration of those
+men, and the comparison of them with those against whom the orator is
+speaking. But the topics to be used by the man who is claiming the
+reward are, first of all, the exaggeration of his own action; and
+next, the comparison of the actions of those men who have had rewards
+conferred on them with his own; and lastly, he will urge that other
+men will be repelled from the pursuit of virtue if he himself is
+denied the reward to which he is entitled.
+
+But the means of conferring the rewards are taken into consideration
+when any pecuniary reward is asked for; for then it is necessary to
+consider whether there is an abundance of land, and revenue, and
+money, or a dearth of them. The common topics are,--that it is
+desirable to increase the resources of the state, not to diminish
+them; and that he is a shameless man who is not content with gratitude
+in requital of his services, but who demands also solid rewards. But,
+on the other hand, it may be urged, that it is a sordid thing to
+argue about money, when the question is about showing gratitude to a
+benefactor; and that the claimant is not asking wages for a piece of
+work, but honour such as is due for an important service.
+
+And we have now said enough about the statements of cases; now it
+seems necessary to speak of those controversies which turn upon the
+letter of the law.
+
+XL. The controversy turns upon the letter of the law when some doubt
+arises from the consideration of the exact terms in which it is drawn
+up. That arises from ambiguity, from the letter of the law, from its
+intention, from contrary laws, from ratiocination, and definition. But
+a controversy arises from ambiguity, when it is an obscure point what
+was the intention of the writer, because the written words mean two or
+even more different things. In this manner:--"The father of a family,
+when he was making his son his heir, left a hundredweight of silver
+plate to his wife, in these terms:
+
+"Let my heir give my wife a hundredweight of silver plate, consisting
+of such vessels as may be chosen. After he was dead, the mother
+demands of her son some very magnificent vessels of very valuable
+carving. He says that he is only bound to give her those vessels which
+he himself chooses." Here, in the first place, it is necessary to show
+if possible that the will has not been drawn up in ambiguous terms,
+because all men in ordinary conversation are accustomed to employ that
+expression, whether consisting of one word or more, in that meaning in
+which the speaker hopes to show that this is to be understood. Then
+it is desirable to prove that from both the preceding and subsequent
+language of the will, the real meaning which is being sought may
+be made evident. So that if all the words, or most of them, were
+considered separately by themselves, they would appear of doubtful
+meaning. But as for those which can be made intelligible by a
+consideration of the whole document, these have no business to be
+thought obscure.
+
+In the next place, it will be proper to draw one's conclusion as to
+the intentions which were entertained by the writer from all his other
+writings, and actions, and sayings, and his general disposition, and
+from the usual tenor of his life; and to scrutinise that very document
+in which this ambiguous phrase is contained which is the subject of
+the present inquiry, all over, in all its parts, so as to see whether
+there is anything opposite to that interpretation which we contend
+for, or contrary to that which the adversary insists on adopting. For
+it will be easy to consider what it is probable that the man who drew
+up the document intended, from its whole tenor, and from the
+character of the writer, and from those other circumstances which are
+characteristic of the persons concerned. In the next place, it will
+be desirable to show, if the facts of the case itself afford any
+opportunity for doing so, that that meaning which the opposite party
+contends for, is a much more inconvenient one to adopt than that which
+we have assumed to be the proper one, because there is no possible
+means of carrying out or complying with that other meaning; but what
+we contend for can be accomplished with great ease and convenience.
+
+As in this law (for there is no objection to citing an imaginary
+one for the sake of giving an instance, in order to the more easy
+comprehension of the matter):--"Let not a prostitute have a golden
+crown. If such a case exists, it must be confiscated." Now, in
+opposition to a man who contended that that was to become public
+property in accordance with this law, it might be argued, "that there
+could be no way of making a prostitute public property, and there is
+no intelligible meaning for the law if that is what is to be adopted
+as its proper construction; but as to the confiscation of anything
+made of gold, the management and the result is easy, and there is no
+difficulty in it."
+
+XLI. And it will be desirable also to pay diligent attention to this
+point, whether if that sense is sanctioned which the opposite party
+contends for, any more advantageous, or honourable, or necessary
+object appears to have been omitted by the framer of the document in
+question. That will be done if we can prove that the object which
+we are attempting to prove is either honourable, or expedient, or
+necessary; and if we can also assert that the interpretation which our
+adversaries insist upon, is not at all entitled to such a character.
+In the next place, if there is in the law itself any controversy
+arising from any ambiguity, it will be requisite to take great care to
+show that the meaning which our adversaries adopt is provided for in
+some other law. But it will be very serviceable indeed to point out
+how the testator would have expressed himself, if he had wished the
+interpretation which the adversary puts upon his words to be carried
+into execution or understood. As for instance, in this cause, the one,
+I mean, in which the question is about the silver plate, the woman
+might argue, "That there was no use in adding the words 'as may be
+chosen,' if the matter was left to the selection of the heir; for if
+no such words had been inserted, there could have been no doubt at all
+that the heir might have given whatever he himself chose. So that it
+was downright madness, if he wished to take precautions in favour of
+his heir, to add words which might have been wholly left out without
+such omission prejudicing his heir's welfare."
+
+Wherefore, it will be exceedingly advisable to employ this species of
+argument in such causes:--"If he had written with this intention he
+would not have employed that word; he would not have placed that word
+in that place;" for it is from such particulars as these that it is
+easiest to collect the intention of the writer. In the next place, it
+is necessary to inquire when the document was drawn up, in order that
+it may be understood what it was likely that he should have wished
+at such a time. Afterwards it will be advisable to point out, by
+reference to the topics furnished by the deliberative argument, what
+is more useful and what more honourable to the testator to write, and
+to the adversary to prove; and it will be well for both parties to
+employ common topics, if there is any room for extending either
+argument.
+
+XLII. A controversy arises with respect to the letter of the document
+and to its meaning, when one party employs the very words which are
+set down in the paper; and the other applies all his arguments to that
+which he affirms that the framer of the document intended. But the
+intention of the framer of the document must be proved by the man who
+defends himself, by reference to that intention, to have always the
+same object in view and the same meaning; and it must also, either
+by reference to the action or to some result, be adapted to the time
+which the inquiry concerns. It must be proved always to have the same
+object in view, in this way:--"The head of a house, at a time when he
+had no children, but had a wife, inserted this clause in his will: 'If
+I have a son or sons born to me, he or they is or are to be my heir
+or heirs.' Then follow the ordinary provisions. After that comes the
+following clause: 'If my son dies before he comes into the property,
+which is held in trust for him, then,' says the clause, 'you shall be
+my reversionary heir.' He never has a son. His next of kin raise a
+dispute with the man who is named as the heir, in the case of the
+testator's son dying before he comes into the property which his
+guardians are holding for him." In this case it cannot be said that
+the meaning of the testator ought to be made to suit the time or some
+particular result, because that intention alone is proved on which the
+man who is arguing against the language of the will relies, in order
+to defend his own right to the inheritance.
+
+There is another class of topics which introduce the question as to
+the meaning of expressions, in which the mere simple intention of the
+framer is not endeavoured to be proved, for that has the same weight
+with reference to every period and every action; but it is argued that
+it ought to be interpreted with reference to some particular action,
+or to some event happening at that particular time. And that is
+especially supported by the divisions of the juridical assumptive mode
+of investigation. For then the comparison is instituted; as in the
+case of "a man who, though the law forbad the gates to be opened
+by night, did open them in a certain war, and admitted some
+reinforcements into the town, in order to prevent their being
+overwhelmed by the enemy if they remained outside the gates; because
+the enemy were encamped close to the walls." Then comes the retorting
+of the charge; as in the case of "that soldier who, when the common
+law of all men forbad any one to kill a man, slew his own military
+tribune who was attempting to offer violence to him." Then comes
+the exculpation; as in the case of "that man who, when the law had
+appointed some particular days within which he was to proceed on his
+embassy, did not set out because the quaestor did not furnish him with
+money for his expenses." Then comes the admission of the fact by way
+of purgation, and also by the excuse of ignorance; as "in the case of
+the sacrificing a calf;" and with reference to compulsion, as "in the
+case of the beaked ship;" and with reference to accident, as "in the
+case of the sudden rise of the river Eurotas." Wherefore, it is best
+that the meaning should be introduced in such a way, as that the
+framer of the law should be proved to have intended some one definite
+thing; else in such a way that he should be proved to have meant this
+particular thing, under these circumstances, and at this time.
+
+XLIII. He, therefore, who is defending the exact language of the law,
+will generally be able to use all these topics; and will always be
+able to use the greater part of them. First of all, he will employ a
+panegyric of the framer of it, and the common topic that those who
+are the judges have no business to consider anything except what
+is expressly stated in the law; and so much the more if any legal
+document be brought forward, that is to say, either the law itself,
+or some portion of the law. Afterwards--and this is a point of the
+greatest importance--he will employ a comparison of the action or of
+the charge brought by the opposite party with the actual words of the
+law; he will show what is contained in the law, what has been done,
+what the judge has sworn. And it will be well to vary this topic in
+many ways, sometimes professing to wonder in his own mind what can be
+said against this argument; sometimes recurring to the duty of the
+judge, and asking of him what more he can think it requisite to
+hear, or what further he expects; sometimes by bringing forward
+the adversary himself, as if in the position of a person making an
+accusation; that is to say, by asking him whether he denies that the
+law is drawn up in that manner, or whether he denies that he himself
+has contravened it, or disputed it. If he denies either of these
+points, then one must avow that one will say no more; if he denies
+neither of them, and yet continues to urge his arguments in opposition
+to one, then one must say that it is impossible for any one ever to
+expect to see a more impudent man. And it will be well to dwell on
+this point as if nothing besides were to be said, as if nothing could
+be said in contradiction, by reciting several times over what is
+written; by often contrasting the conduct of the adversary with what
+is written; and sometimes by recurring vehemently to the topic of the
+judge himself; in which one will remind the judge of what oath he has
+taken, of what his conduct is bound to be; and urge that there are two
+causes on account of which a judge is bound to hesitate, one if the
+law be obscurely worded, the other if the adversary denies anything.
+But as in this instance the wording of the law is plain, and the
+adversary admits every fact that is alleged, the judge has now nothing
+to do but to fulfil the law, and not to interpret it.
+
+XLIV. When this point has been sufficiently insisted on, then it will
+be advisable to do away with the effect of those things which the
+adversary has been able to urge by way of objection. But such
+objections will be made if the framer of the law can be absolutely
+proved to have meant one thing, and written another; as in that
+dispute concerning the will which we mentioned just now: or some
+adventitious cause may be alleged why it was not possible or not
+desirable to obey the written law minutely. If it is stated that the
+framer of the law meant one thing, and wrote another, then he who
+appeals to the letter of the law will say that it is our business not
+to discuss the intention of a man who has left us a plain proof of
+that intention, to prevent our having any doubt about it; and that
+many inconveniences must ensue if the principle is laid down that we
+may depart from the letter of the law. For that then those who frame
+laws will not think that the laws which they are making will remain
+firm; and those who are judges will have no certain principle to
+follow if once they get into the habit of departing from the letter of
+the law. But if the intention of the framer of the law is what is to
+be looked at, then it is he, and not his adversaries, who relies on
+the meaning of the lawgiver. For that that person comes much nearer to
+the intention of the framer of a law who interprets it from his own
+writings, than he who does not look at the meaning of the framer of
+the law by that writing of his own which he has left to be as it were
+an image of his meaning, but who investigates it under the guidance of
+some private suspicions of his own.
+
+If the party who stands on the meaning of the lawgiver brings forward
+any reasons, then, in the first place, it will be necessary to reply
+to those reasons; to urge how absurd it is for a man not to deny that
+he has acted contrary to the law, but at the same time to give some
+reason for having acted so. Then one will say too that all things are
+turned upside down; that formerly prosecutors were in the habit of
+trying to persuade the judges that the person who was being prosecuted
+before them was implicated in some fault, and of alleging some reasons
+which had instigated him to commit this fault; but that now the
+accused person himself is giving the reasons why he has offended
+against the laws. Then it will be proper to introduce this division,
+each portion of which will have many lines of argument suitable to it:
+in the first place, that there is no law with reference to which it
+is allowable to allege any reasons contrary to the law; in the next
+place, that if such a course is admissible in any law, this is such a
+law that it is not admissible with respect to it; and lastly, that,
+even if such reasons ever might be alleged, at all events this is not
+such a reason.
+
+XLV. The first part of the argument is confirmed by pretty nearly the
+same topics as these: that the framer of the law was not deficient in
+either ability, or pains, or any faculty requisite to enable him to
+express plainly what his intention was; that it would not have been
+either displeasing or difficult to him to insert such an exception as
+that which the opposite party contends for in his law, if he thought
+any exception requisite; and in fact, that those people who frame
+laws often do insert clauses of exceptions. After that it is well to
+enumerate some of the laws which have exceptional clauses attached to
+them, and to take especial care to see whether in the law itself which
+is under discussion there is any exception made in any chapter, or
+whether the same man who framed this law has made exceptions in other
+laws, so that it may be more naturally inferred that he would have
+made exceptions in this one, if he had thought exceptions requisite;
+and it will be well also to show that to admit of a reason for
+violating the law is the same thing as abrogating the law, because
+when once such a reason is taken into consideration it is no use to
+consider it with reference to the law, inasmuch as it is not stated in
+the law. And if such a principle is once laid down, then a reason for
+violating the law, and a licence to do so, is given to every one, as
+soon as they perceive that you as judges decide the matter in a way
+which depends on the ability of the man who has violated the law, and
+not with reference to the law which you have sworn to administer.
+Then, too, one must point out that all principles on which judges are
+to judge, and citizens are to live, will be thrown into confusion if
+the laws are once departed from; for the judges will not have any
+rules to follow, if they depart from what is set down in the law, and
+no principles on which they can reprove others for having acted in
+defiance of the law. And that all the rest of the citizens will be
+ignorant what they are to do, if each of them regulates all his
+actions according to his own ideas, and to whatever whim or fancy
+comes into his head, and not according to the common statute law of
+the state.
+
+After that it will be suitable to ask the judges why they occupy
+themselves at all with the business of other people;--why they allow
+themselves to be harassed in discharging the offices of the republic,
+when they might often spend the time in promoting their own ends and
+private interests;--why they take an oath in a certain form;--why they
+assemble at a regular time and go away at a regular time;--why no
+one of them ever alleges any reason for being less frequent in his
+discharge of his duty to the republic, except such as is set down in
+some formal law as an exception. And one may ask, whether they think
+it right that they should be bound down and exposed to so much
+inconvenience by the laws, and at the same time allow our adversaries
+to disregard the laws. After that it will be natural to put the
+question to the judges whether, when the party accused himself
+endeavours to set down in the law, as an exception, that particular
+case in which he admits that he has violated the law, they will
+consent to it. And to ask also, whether what he has actually done is
+more scandalous and more shameless than the exception which he wishes
+to insert in the law;--what indeed can be more shameless? Even if the
+judges were inclined to make such an addition to the law, would the
+people permit it? One might also press upon them that this is even a
+more scandalous measure, when they are unable to make an alteration in
+the language and letter of the law, to alter it in the actual facts,
+and to give a decision contrary to it; and besides, that it is a
+scandalous thing that anything should be taken from the law, or that
+the law should be abrogated or changed in any part whatever, without
+the people having any opportunity of knowing, or approving, or
+disapproving of what is done; that such conduct is calculated to bring
+the judges themselves into great odium; that it is not the proper time
+nor opportunity for amending the laws; that this ought only to be
+brought forward in an assembly of the people, and only to be done by
+the people; that if they now do so, the speaker would like to know
+who is the maker of the new law, and who are to obey it; that he
+sees actions impending, and wishes to prevent them; that as all
+such proceedings as these are exceedingly useless and abundantly
+discreditable, the law, whatever it is like, ought, while it exists,
+to be maintained by the judges, and hereafter, if it is disapproved
+of, to be amended by the people. Besides this, if there were no
+written law, we should take great trouble to find one; and we should
+not place any confidence in that man, not even if he were in no
+personal danger himself; but now, when there is a written law, it is
+downright insanity to attend to what that man says who has violated
+the law, rather than to the language of the law itself. By these and
+similar arguments it is proved that it is not right to admit any
+excuse which is contrary to the letter of the law.
+
+XLVI. The second part is that in which it is desirable to prove that
+if such a proceeding is right with respect to other laws, it is not
+advisable with respect to this one. This will be shown if the
+law appears to refer to matters of the greatest importance, and
+usefulness, and honourableness, and sanctity; so that it is
+disadvantageous, or discreditable, or impious not to obey the law as
+carefully as possible in such a matter. Or the law may be proved to
+have been drawn up so carefully, and such great diligence may be shown
+to have been exercised in framing each separate provision of it, and
+in making every exception that was allowable, that it is not at all
+probable that anything proper to be inserted has been omitted in so
+carefully considered a document.
+
+The third topic is one exceedingly necessary for a man who is arguing
+in defence of the letter of the law; by which it may be urged, that
+even if it is decent for an excuse to be admitted contrary to
+the letter of the law, still that excuse which is alleged by his
+adversaries is of all others the least proper to be so alleged. And
+this topic is necessary for him on this account,--because the man who
+is arguing against the letter of the law ought always to have some
+point of equity to allege on his side. For it is the greatest possible
+impudence for a man who wishes to establish some point in opposition
+to the exact letter of the law, not to attempt to fortify himself in
+so doing, with the assistance of the law. If therefore the accuser in
+any respect weakens the defence by this topic, he will appear in
+every respect to have more justice and probability in favour of
+his accusation. For all the former part of his speech has had this
+object,--that the judges should feel it impossible, even if they
+wished it, to avoid condemning the accused person; but this part has
+for its object the making them wish to give such a decision, even if
+it were not inevitable.
+
+And that result will be obtained, if we use those topics by which
+guilt may be proved not to be in the man who defends himself, by using
+the topic of comparison, or by getting rid of the accusation, or by
+recrimination, or by some species of confession, (concerning all which
+topics we have already written with all the precision of which we were
+capable,) and if we take those which the case will admit of for the
+purpose of throwing discredit on the argument of our adversary;--or
+if reasons and arguments are adduced to show why or with what design
+those expressions were inserted in the law or will in question, so
+that our side of the question may appear established by the meaning
+and intention of the writer, and not only by the language which he has
+employed. Or the fact may be proved by other statements and arguments.
+
+XLVII. But any one who speaks against the letter of the law will first
+of all introduce that topic by which the equity of the excuse is
+proved; or he will point out with what feelings, with what design, and
+on what account he did the action in question. And whatever excuse he
+alleges he will defend according to some of the rules which I have
+already given with respect to assumptions. And when he has dwelt on
+this topic for some time, and set forth the principles of his conduct
+and the equity of his cause in the most specious manner he can, he
+will also add, in opposition to the arguments of his adversaries,
+that it is from these topics for the most part that excuses which are
+admissible ought to be drawn. He will urge that there is no law which
+sanctions the doing of any disadvantageous or unjust action; that all
+punishments which are enacted by the laws have been enacted for the
+sake of chastising guilt and wickedness; that the very framer of the
+laws, if he were alive, would approve of this conduct, and would
+have done the very same thing himself if he had been in similar
+circumstances. And that it is on this account that the framer of the
+law appointed judges of a certain rank and age, in order that there
+might be men, not capable merely of reading out what he had written,
+which any boy might do, but able also to understand his thoughts and
+to interpret his intentions. He will add, that that framer of the law,
+if he had been intrusting the laws which he was drawing up to foolish
+men and illiterate judges, would have set down everything with the
+most scrupulous diligence; but, as it is, because he was aware what
+sort of men were to be the judges, he did not put down many things
+which appeared to him to be evident; and he expected that you would be
+not mere readers of his writings, but interpreters of his intentions.
+Afterwards he will proceed to ask his adversaries--"What would you
+say if I had done so and so?" "What would you think if so and so had
+happened?" "Suppose any one of those things had happened which would
+have had a most unfailing excuse, or a most undeniable necessity,
+would you then have prosecuted me?" But the law has nowhere made any
+such exception. It follows, therefore, that it is not every possible
+circumstance which is mentioned in the written law but that some
+things which are self-evident are guarded against by unexpressed
+exceptions. Then he will urge, that nothing could be carried on
+properly either by the laws or by any written document whatever, or
+even in daily conversation, or in the commands given in a private
+household, if every one chose to keep his eyes on the exact language
+of the order, and not to take into consideration the intentions of him
+who uttered the order.
+
+XLVIII. After that he will be able, by reference to the divisions
+of usefulness and honour, to point out how inexpedient or how
+dishonourable that would have been which the opposite party say ought
+to have been done, or to be done now. And on the other hand, how
+expedient and how honourable that is which we have done, or demand
+should be done. In the next place, he will urge that we set a value on
+our laws not on account of their wording, which is a slight and
+often obscure indication of their intention, but on account of the
+usefulness of those things concerning which they are written, and the
+wisdom and diligence of those men who wrote them. Afterwards he will
+proceed to describe what the law is, so that it shall appear to
+consist of meanings, not of words; and that the judge may appear to be
+obedient to the law, who follows its meaning and not its strict words.
+After that he will urge how scandalous it is that he should have the
+same punishment inflicted on him who has violated the law out of some
+mere wickedness and audacity, as on the man who, on account of some
+honourable or unavoidable reason, has departed not from the spirit of
+the law, but from its letter. And by these and similar arguments
+he will endeavour to prove that the excuse is admissible, and is
+admissible in this law, and that the excuse which he himself is
+alleging ought to be admitted.
+
+And, as we said that this would be exceedingly useful to the man who
+was relying on the letter of the law, to detract in some degree from
+that equity which appeared to be on the side of the adversary; so also
+it will be of the greatest advantage to the man who is speaking in
+opposition to the letter of the law, to convert something of the exact
+letter of the law to his own side of the argument, or else to show
+that something has been expressed ambiguously. And afterwards, to
+take that portion of the doubtful expression which may serve his own
+purpose, and defend it; or else to introduce some definition of
+a word, and to bring over the meaning of that word which seems
+unfavourable to him to the advantage of his own cause, or else, from
+what is set down in the law to introduce something which is not set
+down by means of ratiocination, which we will speak of presently. But
+in whatever matter, however little probable it may be, he defends
+himself by an appeal to the exact letter of the law, even when his
+case is full of equity, he will unavoidably gain a great advantage,
+because if he can withdraw from the cause of the opposite party that
+point on which it principally relies, he will mitigate and take off
+the effect of all its violence and energy. But all the rest of the
+common topics taken from the divisions of assumptive argument will
+suit each side of the question. It will also be suitable for him whose
+argument takes its stand on the letter of the law, to urge that laws
+ought to be looked at, not with reference to the advantage of that man
+who has violated them, but according to their own intrinsic value, and
+that nothing ought to be considered more precious than the laws. On
+the other side, the speaker will urge, that laws depend upon the
+intention of the framer of them, and upon the general advantage,
+not upon words, and also, how scandalous it is for equity to be
+overwhelmed by a heap of letters, and defended in vain by the
+intention of the man who drew up the law.
+
+XLIX. But from contrary laws a controversy arises, when two or more
+laws appear to be at variance with one another In this manner--There
+is a law, "That he who has slain a tyrant shall receive the regard of
+men who conquer at Olympia, and shall also ask whatever he pleases of
+the magistrate, and the magistrate shall grant it to him." There is
+also another law--"When a tyrant is slain, the magistrate shall also
+put to death his five nearest relations." Alexander, who was the tyrant
+of Pherse, a city in Thessaly, was slain by his own wife, whose name
+was Thebe, at night, when he was in bed with her, she, as a reward,
+demands the liberty of her son whom she had by the tyrant. Some say
+that according to this law that son ought to be put to death. The
+matter is referred to a court of justice. Now in a case of this
+kind the same topics and the same rules will suit each side of the
+question, because each party is bound to establish his own law, and
+to invalidate the one contrary to it. First of all, therefore, it is
+requisite to show the nature of the laws, by considering which law has
+reference to more important, that is to say, to more honourable and
+more necessary matters. From which it results, that if two or more,
+or ever so many laws cannot all be maintained, because they are at
+variance with one another, that one ought to be considered the most
+desirable to be maintained, which appears to have reference to the
+most important matters. Then comes the question also, which law was
+passed last; for the newest law is the most important. And also, which
+law enjoins anything, and which merely allows it; for that which is
+enjoined is necessary, that which is allowed is optional. Also one
+must consider by which law a penalty is appointed for the violation
+of it; or which has the heaviest penalty attached to it; for that law
+must be the most carefully maintained which is sanctioned by the most
+severe penalties. Again, one must inquire which law enjoins, and which
+forbids anything; for it often happens that the law which forbids
+something appears by some exception as it were to amend the law which
+commands something. Then, too, it is right to consider which law
+comprehends the entire class of subjects to which it refers, and which
+embraces only a part of the question; which may be applied generally
+to many classes of questions, and which appears to have been framed to
+apply to some special subject. For that which has been drawn up with
+reference to some particular division of a subject, or for some
+special purpose, appears to come nearer to the subject under
+discussion, and to have more immediate connexion with the present
+action. Then arises the question, which is the thing which according
+to the law must be done immediately; which will admit of some delay or
+slackness in the execution. For it is right that that should be done
+first which must be done immediately. In the next place, it is well to
+take pains that the law one is advocating shall appear to depend on
+its own precise language; and that the law with a contrary sense
+should appear to be introduced with a doubtful interpretation, or by
+some ratiocination or definition, in order that that law which is
+expressed in plain language may appear to be the more solemn and
+efficient. After that it will be well to add the meaning of the law
+which is on one's own side according to the strict letter of it; and
+also to explain the opposite law so as to make it appear to have
+another meaning, in order that, if possible, they may not seem to be
+inconsistent with one another. And, last of all, it will be a good
+thing, if the cause shall afford any opportunity for so doing, to take
+care that on our principles both the laws may seem to be upheld, but
+that on the principle contended for by our adversaries one of them
+must be put aside. It will be well also to consider all the common
+topics and those which the cause itself furnishes, and to take them
+from the most highly esteemed divisions of the subjects of expediency
+and honour, showing by means of amplification which law it is most
+desirable to adhere to.
+
+L. From ratiocination there arises a controversy when, from what
+is written somewhere or other, one arrives at what is not written
+anywhere; in this way:--"If a man is mad, let those of his family and
+his next of kin have the regulation of himself and of his property."
+And there is another law--"In whatever manner a head of a family has
+made his will respecting his family and his property, so let it be."
+And another law--"If a head of a family dies intestate, his family
+and property shall belong to his relations and to his next of kin." A
+certain man was convicted of having murdered his father. Immediately,
+because he was not able to escape, wooden shoes were put upon his
+feet, and his mouth was covered with a leathern bag, and bound fast,
+then he was led away to prison, that he might remain there while a bag
+was got ready for him to be put into and thrown into a river. In
+the meantime some of his friends bring tablets to the prison, and
+introduce witnesses also; they put down those men as his heirs whom he
+himself desires; the will is sealed; the man is afterwards executed.
+There is a dispute between those who are set down as his heirs in the
+will, and his next of kin, about his inheritance. In this instance
+there is no positive law alleged which takes away the power of making
+a will from people who are in such a situation. But from other laws,
+both those which inflict a punishment of this character on a man
+guilty of such a crime, and those, too, which relate to a man's power
+of making a will, it is possible to come by means of ratiocination to
+a conclusion of this sort, that it is proper to inquire whether he had
+the power of making a will.
+
+But we think that these and such as these are the common topics
+suitable to an argument of this description. In the first place, a
+panegyric upon, and a confirmation of that writing which you are
+producing. Then a comparison of the matter which is the subject of
+discussion, with that which is a settled case, in such a manner that
+the case which is under investigation may appear to resemble that
+about which there are settled and notorious rules. After that, one
+will express admiration, (by way of comparison), how it can happen
+that a man who admits that this is fair, can deny that other thing,
+which is either more equitable still, or which rests on exactly
+similar principles; then, too, one will contend that the reason why
+there is no precise law drawn up for such a case, is because, as there
+was one in existence applicable to the other case, the framer of that
+law thought that no one could possibly entertain a doubt in this case;
+and afterwards it will be well to urge that there are many cases not
+provided for in many laws, which beyond all question were passed over
+merely because the rule as to them could be so easily collected out
+of the other cases which were provided for; and last of all, it is
+necessary to point out what the equity of the case requires, as is
+done in a plain judicial case.
+
+But the speaker who is arguing on the other side is bound to try and
+invalidate the comparison instituted, which he will do if he can show
+that that which is compared is different from that with which it is
+compared in kind, in nature, in effect, in importance, in time, in
+situation, in character, in the opinion entertained of it; if it is
+shown also in what class that which is adduced by way of comparison
+ought to stand, and in what rank that also ought to be considered, for
+the sake of which the other thing is mentioned. After that, it will be
+well to point out how one case differs from the other, so that it does
+not seem that any one ought to have the same opinion of both of them.
+And if he himself also is able to have recourse to ratiocination, he
+must use the same ratiocination which has been already spoken of. If
+he cannot, then he will declare that it is not proper to consider
+anything except what is written; that all laws are put in danger if
+comparisons are once allowed to be instituted; that there is hardly
+anything which does not seem somewhat like something else; that when
+there are many circumstances wholly dissimilar, still there are
+separate laws for each individual case; and that all things can be
+proved to be like or unlike to each other. The common topics derived
+from ratiocination ought to arrive by conjecture from that which is
+written to that which is not written; and one may urge that no one can
+embrace every imaginable case in a written law, but that he frames a
+law best who takes care to make one thing understood from another. One
+may urge, too, that in opposition to a ratiocination of this sort,
+conjecture is no better than a divination, and that it would be a
+sign of a very stupid framer of laws not to be able to provide for
+everything which he wished to.
+
+LI. Definition is when a word is set down in a written document, whose
+exact meaning is inquired into, in this manner:--There is a law,
+"Whoever in a severe tempest desert their ship shall be deprived of
+all their property; the ship and the cargo shall belong to those men
+who remain by the ship." Two men, when they were sailing on the open
+sea, and when the ship belonged to one of them and the cargo to
+another, noticed a shipwrecked man swimming and holding out his hands
+to them. Being moved with pity they directed the ship towards him, and
+took the man into their vessel. A little afterwards the storm began to
+toss them also about very violently, to such a degree that the owner
+of the ship, who was also the pilot, got into a little boat, and from
+that he guided the ship as well as he could by the rope by which the
+boat was fastened to the ship, and so towed along; but the man to whom
+the cargo belonged threw himself on his sword in despair. On this
+the shipwrecked man took the helm and assisted the ship as far as he
+could. But after the waves went down and the tempest abated, the ship
+arrived in harbour. But the man who had fallen on his sword turned out
+to be but slightly wounded, and easily recovered of his wound. And
+then every one of these three men claimed the ship and cargo for his
+own. Every one of them relies on the letter of the law to support
+their claim, and a dispute arises as to the meaning of the words.
+For they seek to ascertain by definitions what is the meaning of the
+expressions "to abandon the ship," "to stand by the ship," and even
+what "the ship" itself is. And the question must be dealt with with
+reference to all the same topics as are employed in a statement of the
+case which turns upon a definition.
+
+Now, having explained all those argumentations which are adapted to
+the judicial class of causes, we will proceed in regular order to
+give topics and rules for the deliberative and demonstrative class
+of arguments; not that there is any cause which is not at all times
+conversant with some statement of the case or other; but because there
+are nevertheless some topics peculiar to these causes, not separated
+from the statement of the case, but adapted to the objects which are
+more especially kept in view by these kinds of argumentation.
+
+For it seems desirable that in the judicial kind the proper end
+is equity; that is to say, some division of honesty. But in the
+deliberative kind Aristotle thinks that the proper object is
+expediency; we ourselves, that it is expediency and honesty combined.
+In the demonstrative kind it is honesty only. Wherefore, in this kind
+of cause also, some kinds of argumentation will be handled in a common
+manner, and in similar ways to one another. Some will be discussed
+more separately with reference to their object, which is what we must
+always keep in view in every kind of speech. And we should have no
+objection to give an example of each kind of statement of the case, if
+we did not see that, as obscure things are made more plain by speaking
+of them, so also things which are plain are sometimes made more
+obscure by a speech. At present let us go on to precepts of
+deliberation.
+
+LII. Of matters to be aimed at there are three classes; and on the
+other hand there is a corresponding number of things to be avoided.
+For there is something which of its own intrinsic force draws us to
+itself, not catching us by any idea of emolument, but alluring us by
+its own dignity. Of this class are virtue, science, truth. And there
+is something else which seems desirable, not on account of its own
+excellence or nature, but on account of its advantage and of the
+utility to be derived from it--such as money. There are also some
+things formed of parts of these others in combination, which allure us
+and draw us after them by their own intrinsic character and dignity,
+and which also hold out some prospect of advantage to us, to induce
+us to seek it more eagerly, as friendship, and a fair reputation;
+and from these their opposites will easily be perceived, without our
+saying anything about them.
+
+But in order that the principle may be explained in the more simple
+way, the rules which we have laid down shall be enumerated briefly.
+For those which belong to the first kind of discussion are called
+honourable things; those which belong to the second, are called useful
+things; but this third thing, because it contains some portion of what
+is honourable, and because the power of what is honourable is the more
+important part, is perceived to be altogether a compound kind, made up
+of a twofold division; still it derives its name from its better part,
+and is called honourable. From this it follows, that there are these
+parts in things which are desirable,--what is honourable, and what is
+useful. And these parts in things which are to be avoided,--what is
+dishonourable, and what is useless. Now to these two things there
+are two other important circumstances to be added,--necessity and
+affection: the one of which is considered with reference to force, the
+other with reference to circumstances and persons. Hereafter we will
+write more explicitly about each separately. At present we will
+explain first the principles of what is honourable.
+
+LIII. That which either wholly or in some considerable portion of it
+is sought for its own sake, we call honourable: and as there are two
+divisions of it, one of which is simple and the other twofold, let us
+consider the simple one first. In that kind, then, virtue has embraced
+all things under one meaning and one name; for virtue is a habit
+of the mind, consistent with nature, and moderation, and reason.
+Wherefore, when we have become acquainted with all its divisions, it
+will be proper to consider the whole force of simple honesty.
+
+It has then four divisions--prudence, justice, fortitude, and
+temperance. Prudence is the knowledge of things which are good, or
+bad, or neither good nor bad. Its parts are memory, intelligence,
+and foresight. Memory is that faculty by which the mind recovers the
+knowledge of things which have been. Intelligence is that by which it
+perceives what exists at present. Foresight is that by which anything
+is seen to be about to happen, before it does happen. Justice is a
+habit of the mind which attributes its proper dignity to everything,
+preserving a due regard to the general welfare. Its first principles
+proceed from nature. Subsequently some practices became established by
+universal custom, from a consideration of their utility; afterwards
+the fear of the laws and religion sanctioned proceedings which
+originated in nature, and had been approved of by custom.
+
+Natural law is that which has not had its origin in the opinions of
+men, but has been implanted by some innate instinct, like religion,
+affection, gratitude, revenge, attention to one's superiors, truth.
+Religion is that which causes men to pay attention to, and to respect
+with fixed ceremonies, a certain superior nature which men call
+divine nature. Affection is that feeling under the influence of which
+kindness and careful attention is paid to those who are united to us
+by ties of blood, or who are devoted to the service of their country.
+Gratitude is that feeling in which the recollection of friendship,
+and of the services which we have received from another, and the
+inclination to requite those services, is contained. Revenge is that
+disposition by which violence and injury, and altogether everything
+which can be any injury to us, is repelled by defending oneself from
+it, or by avenging it. Attention is that feeling by which men obey
+when they think those who are eminent for worth or dignity, worthy of
+some special respect and honour. Truth is that by which those things
+which are, or which have been previously, or which are about to
+happen, are spoken of without any alteration.
+
+LIV. Conventional law is a principle which has either derived its
+origin in a slight degree from nature, and then has been strengthened
+by habit, like religion; or, if we see any one of those things which
+we have already mentioned as proceeding from nature strengthened by
+habit; or, if there is anything to which antiquity has given the
+force of custom with the approbation of everybody: such as covenants,
+equity, cases already decided. A covenant is that which is agreed upon
+between two parties; equity is that which is equally just for every
+one; a case previously decided is one which has been settled by the
+authoritative decision of some person or persons entitled to pronounce
+it.
+
+Legal right is that which is contained in that written form which is
+delivered to the people to be observed by them.
+
+Fortitude is a deliberate encountering of danger and enduring of
+labour. Its parts are magnificence, confidence, patience, and
+perseverance. Magnificence is the consideration and management of
+important and sublime matters with a certain wide-seeing and splendid
+determination of mind. Confidence is that feeling by which the mind
+embarks in great and honourable courses with a sure hope and trust in
+itself. Patience is a voluntary and sustained endurance, for the
+sake of what is honourable or advantageous, of difficult and painful
+labours. Perseverance is a steady and lasting persistence in a
+well-considered principle.
+
+Temperance is the form and well-regulated dominion of reason over lust
+and other improper affections of the mind. Its parts are continence,
+clemency, and modesty. Continence is that by which cupidity is kept
+down under the superior influence of wisdom. Clemency is that by which
+the violence of the mind, when causelessly excited to entertain hatred
+against some one else, is restrained by courtesy. Modesty is that
+feeling by which honourable shame acquires a valuable and lasting
+authority. And all these things are to be sought for themselves, even
+if no advantage is to be acquired by them. And it neither concerns our
+present purpose to prove this, nor is it agreeable to our object of
+being concise in laying down our rules.
+
+But the things which are to be avoided for their own sake, are not
+those only which are the opposites to these; as indolence is to
+courage, and injustice to justice; but those also which appear to
+be near to and related to them, but which, in reality, are very far
+removed from them. As, for instance, diffidence is the opposite to
+confidence, and is therefore a vice; audacity is not the opposite of
+confidence, but is near it and akin to it, and, nevertheless, is also
+a vice. And in this manner there will be found a vice akin to every
+virtue, and either already known by some particular name--as audacity,
+which is akin to confidence; pertinacity, which is bordering on
+perseverance; superstition, which is very near religion,--or in
+some cases it has no fixed name. And all these things, as being the
+opposites of what is good, we class among things to be avoided. And
+enough has now been said respecting that class of honourable things
+which is sought in every part of it for itself alone.
+
+LV. At present it appears desirable to speak of that in which
+advantage is combined with honour, and which still we style simply
+honourable. There are many things, then, which allure us both by their
+dignity and also by the advantage which may be derived from them:
+such as glory, dignity, influence, friendship. Glory is the fact of
+a person's being repeatedly spoken of to his praise; dignity is the
+honourable authority of a person, combined with attention and honour
+and worthy respect paid to him. Influence is a great abundance of
+power or majesty, or of any sort of resource. Friendship is a desire
+to do service to any one for the sake of the person himself to whom
+one is attached, combined with a corresponding inclination on his part
+towards oneself. At present, because we are speaking of civil causes,
+we add the consideration of advantage to friendship, so that it
+appears a thing to be sought for the sake of the advantage also:
+wishing to prevent those men from blaming us who think that we are
+including every kind of friendship in our definition.
+
+But although there are some people who think that friendship is only
+to be desired on account of the advantage to be derived from it; some
+think it is to be desired for itself alone; and some, that it is to be
+desired both for its own sake and for the sake of the advantage to be
+derived from it. And which of these statements is the most true, there
+will be another time for considering. At present it may be laid down,
+as far as the orator is concerned, that friendship is a thing to be
+desired on both accounts. But the consideration of the different
+kinds of friendship, (since they are partly formed on religious
+considerations, and partly not; and because some friendships are old,
+and some new; and because some originated in kindness shown by our
+friends to us, and some in kindness shown by ourselves to them; and
+because some are more advantageous, and others less,) must have
+reference partly to the dignity of the causes in which it originates,
+partly to the occasion when it arises, and also to the services done,
+the religious motives entertained, and its antiquity.
+
+LVI. But the advantages consist either in the thing itself, or in
+extraneous circumstances; of which, however, by far the greater
+portion is referable to personal advantage; as there are some
+things in the republic which, so to say, refer to the person of the
+state,--as lands, harbours, money, fleets, sailors, soldiery, allies;
+by all which things states preserve their safety and their liberty.
+There are other things also which make a thing more noble looking,
+and which still are less necessary; as the splendid decorating and
+enlarging of a city, or an extraordinary amount of wealth, or a great
+number of friendships and alliances. And the effect of all these
+things is not merely to make states safe and free from injury, but
+also noble and powerful. So that there appears to be two divisions of
+usefulness,--safety and power. Safety is the secure and unimpaired
+preservation of a sound state. Power is a possession of things
+suitable to preserving what is one's own, and to acquiring what
+belongs to another. And in all those things which have been already
+mentioned, it is proper to consider what is difficult to be done, and
+what can be done with ease. We call that a thing easy to be done,
+which can be done without great labour, or expense, or annoyance, or
+perhaps without any labour, expense, or annoyance at all, and in the
+shortest possible time. But that we call difficult to be done which,
+although it requires labour, expense, trouble and time, and has every
+possible characteristic of difficulty about it, or, at all events, the
+most numerous and most important ones, still, when these difficulties
+are encountered, can be completed and brought to an end.
+
+Since, then, we have now discussed what is honourable and what is
+useful, it remains for us to say a little of those things which we
+have said are attached to these other things; namely, affection and
+necessity.
+
+LVII. I think, then, that necessity means that which cannot be
+resisted by any power; that which cannot be softened nor altered. And
+that this may be made more plain, let us examine into the meaning of
+it by the light of examples, so as to see what its character and how
+great its power is. "It is necessary that anything made of wood must
+be capable of being burnt with fire. It is necessary that a mortal
+body should at some time or other die." And it is so necessary, that
+that power of necessity which we were just now describing requires it;
+which cannot by any force whatever be either resisted, or weakened,
+or altered. Necessities of this kind, when they occur in oratory, are
+properly called necessities; but if any difficult circumstances arise,
+then we shall consider in the previous examination whether it, the
+thing in question, be possible to be done. And it seems to me, that
+I perceive that there are some kinds of necessity which admit of
+additions, and some which are simple and perfect in themselves. For
+we say in very different senses:--"It is necessary for the people of
+Casilinum to surrender themselves to Hannibal;" and, "It is necessary
+that Casilinum should come into the power of Hannibal." In the one
+case, that is, in the first case, there is this addition to the
+proposition:--"Unless they prefer perishing by hunger." For if they
+prefer that, then it is not necessary for them to surrender. But in
+the latter proposition such an addition has no place; because whether
+the people of Casilinum choose to surrender, or prefer enduring hunger
+and perishing in that manner, still it is necessary that Casilinum
+must come into the power of Hannibal. What then can be effected by
+this division of necessity? I might almost say, a great deal, when the
+topic of necessity appears such as may be easily introduced. For when
+the necessity is a simple one, there will be no reason for our making
+long speeches, as we shall not be able by any means to weaken it; but
+when a thing is only necessary provided we wish to avoid or to obtain
+something, then it will be necessary to state what advantage or what
+honour is contained in that addition. For if you will take notice,
+while inquiring what this contributes to the advantage of the state,
+you will find that there is nothing which it is necessary to do,
+except for the sake of some cause which we call the adjunct. And,
+in like manner, you will find that there are many circumstances of
+necessity to which a similar addition cannot be made; of such sort
+are these:--"It is necessary that mortal men should die;" without
+any addition:--"It is not necessary for men to take food;" with this
+exception,--"Unless they have an objection to dying of hunger."
+
+Therefore, as I said before, it will be always proper to take into
+consideration the character of that exception which is added to the
+original proposition. For it will at all times have this influence,
+that either the necessity must be explained with reference to what is
+honourable, in this manner:--"It is necessary, if we wish to live
+with honour;" or with reference to safety, in this manner:--"It is
+necessary, if we wish to be safe;" or with reference to convenience,
+in this manner:--"It is necessary, if we are desirous to live without
+annoyance."
+
+LVIII. And the greatest necessity of all appears to be that which
+arises from what is honourable; the next to it is that which arises
+from considerations of safety; the third and least important is that
+which has ideas of convenience involved in it. But this last can
+never be put in comparison with the two former. But it is often
+indispensable to compare these together; so that although honour is
+more precious than safety, there is still room to deliberate which one
+is to consult in the greatest degree. And as to this point, it appears
+possible to give a settled rule which may be of lasting application.
+For in whatever circumstances it can happen by any possibility that
+while we are consulting our safety, that slight diminution of honesty
+which is caused by our conduct may be hereafter repaired by virtue and
+industry, then it seems proper to have a regard for our safety. But
+when that does not appear possible, then we must think of nothing but
+what is honourable. And so in a case of that sort when we appear to be
+consulting our safety, we shall be able to say with truth that we
+are also keeping our eyes fixed on what is honourable, since without
+safety we can never attain to that end. And in these circumstances it
+will be desirable to yield to another, or to put oneself in another's
+place, or to keep quiet at present and wait for another opportunity.
+But when we are considering convenience, it is necessary to consider
+this point also,--whether the cause, as far as it has reference to
+usefulness, appears of sufficient importance to justify us in taking
+anything from splendour or honour. And while speaking on this topic,
+that appears to me to be the main thing, that we should inquire what
+that is which, whether we are desirous of obtaining or avoiding it,
+is something necessary; that is to say, what is the character of the
+addition; in order that, according as the matter is found to be, so we
+may exert ourselves, and consider the most important circumstances as
+being also the most necessary.
+
+Affection is a certain way of looking at circumstances either with
+reference to the time, or to the result, or management of affairs, or
+to the desires of men, so that they no longer appear to be such as
+they were considered previously, or as they are generally in the habit
+of being considered. "It appears a base thing to go over to the enemy;
+but not with the view which Ulysses had when he went over. And it is a
+useless act to throw money into the sea; but not with the design
+which Aristippus had when he did so." There are, therefore, some
+circumstances which may be estimated with reference to the time at
+which and the intention with which they are done; and not according to
+their own intrinsic nature. In all which cases we must consider what
+the times require, or what is worthy of the persons concerned; and we
+must not think merely what is done, but with what intention, with what
+companions, and at what time, it is done. And from these divisions of
+the subject, we think that topics ought to be taken for delivering
+one's opinion.
+
+LIX. But praise and blame must be derived from those topics which
+can be employed with respect to persons, and which we have already
+discussed. But if any one wishes to consider them in a more separate
+manner, he may divide them into the intention, and the person of the
+doer, and extraneous circumstances. The virtue of the mind is that
+concerning the parts of which we have lately spoken; the virtues
+of the body are health, dignity, strength, swiftness. Extraneous
+circumstances are honour, money, relationship, family, friends,
+country, power, and other things which are understood to be of a
+similar kind. And in all these, that which is of universal validity
+ought to prevail here; and the opposites will be easily understood as
+to their description and character.
+
+But in praising and blaming, it will be desirable to consider not
+so much the personal character of, or the extraneous circumstances
+affecting the person of whom one is speaking, as how he has availed
+himself of his advantages. For to praise his good fortune is folly,
+and to blame it is arrogance; but the praise of a man's natural
+disposition is honourable, and the blame of it is a serious thing.
+
+Now, since the principles of argumentation in every kind of cause have
+been set forth, it appears that enough has been said about invention,
+which is the first and most important part of rhetoric. Wherefore,
+since one portion of my work has been brought down to its end from the
+former book; and since this book has already run to a great length,
+what remains shall be discussed in subsequent books.
+
+[_The two remaining books are lost_.]
+
+
+
+
+THE ORATOR OF M.T. CICERO. ADDRESSED TO MARCUS BRUTUS.
+
+
+This work was composed by Cicero soon after the battle of Pharsalia,
+and it was intended by him to contain the plan of what he himself
+considered to be the most perfect style of eloquence. In his Epistles
+to his Friends (vi. 18.) he tells Lepta that he firmly believed that
+he had condensed all his knowledge of the art of oratory in what he
+had set forth in this book.
+
+I. I have, O Brutus, hesitated a long time and often as to whether
+it was a more difficult and arduous business to refuse you, when
+constantly requesting the same favour, or to do what you desired me to
+do. For to refuse a man to whom I was attached above all men, and whom
+I knew also to be most entirely devoted to me, especially when he was
+only asking what was reasonable, and desiring what was honourable to
+me, appeared to me to be very harsh conduct; and to undertake a matter
+of such importance as was not only difficult for any man to have the
+ability to execute in an adequate manner, but hard even to think of
+in a way suited to its importance, appeared to me to be scarcely
+consistent with the character of a man who stood in awe of the reproof
+of wise and learned men. For what is there more important than, when
+the dissimilarity between good orators is so great, to decide which is
+the best sort and as it were the best form of eloquence?
+
+However, since you repeat your entreaties, I will attempt the task,
+not so much from any hope that I entertain of accomplishing it, as
+from my willingness to attempt it. For I had rather that you should
+find fault with my prudence in thus complying with your eager desire,
+than with my friendship in refusing to attempt it.
+
+You ask me then, and indeed you are constantly asking me, what kind
+of eloquence I approve of in the highest degree, and which sort of
+oratory I consider that to which nothing can be added, and which I
+therefore think the highest and most perfect kind. And in answering
+this question I am afraid lest, if I do what you wish, and give you an
+idea of the orator whom you are asking for, I may check the zeal of
+many, who, being discouraged by despair, will not make an attempt at
+what they have no hope of succeeding in. But it is good for all men to
+try everything, who have ever desired to attain any objects which are
+of importance and greatly to be desired. But if there be any one who
+feels that he is deficient either in natural power, or in any eminent
+force of natural genius, or that he is but inadequately instructed in
+the knowledge of important sciences, still let him hold on his course
+as far as he can. For if a man aims at the highest place, it is very
+honourable to arrive at the second or even the third rank. For in
+the poets there is room not only for Homer (to confine myself to the
+Greeks), or for Archilochus, or Sophocles, or Pindar, but there is
+room also for those who are second to them, or even below the second.
+Nor, indeed, did the nobleness of Plato in philosophical studies deter
+Aristotle from writing; nor did Aristotle himself, by his admirable
+knowledge and eloquence, extinguish the zeal in those pursuits of all
+other men.
+
+II. And it is not only the case that eminent men have not been
+deterred by such circumstances from the highest class of studies, but
+even those artists have not renounced their art who have been unable
+to equal the beauty of the Talysus[58] which we have seen at Rhodes,
+or of the Coan Venus. Nor have subsequent sculptors been so far
+alarmed at the statue of the Olympian Jove, or of the Shield-bearer,
+as to give up trying what they could accomplish, or how far they could
+advance; and, indeed, there has been so vast a multitude of those men,
+and each of them has obtained so much credit in his own particular
+walk, that, while we admire the most perfect models, we have also
+approbation to spare for those who come short of them.
+
+But in the case of orators--I mean Greek orators--it is a marvellous
+thing how far one is superior to all the rest. And yet when
+Demosthenes flourished there were many illustrious orators, and so
+there were before his time, and the supply has not failed since. So
+that there is no reason why the hopes of those men, who have devoted
+themselves to the study of eloquence, should be broken, or why
+their industry should languish. For even the very highest pitch of
+excellency ought not to be despaired of; and in perfect things those
+things are very good which are next to the most perfect.
+
+And I, in depicting a consummate orator, will draw a picture of such
+an one as perhaps never existed. For I am not asking who he was, but
+what that is than which nothing can be more excellent. And perhaps the
+perfection which I am looking for does not often shine forth, (indeed
+I do not know whether it ever has been seen,) but still in some degree
+it may at times be discoverable, among some nations more frequently,
+and among others more sparingly. But I lay down this position, that
+there is nothing of any kind so beautiful which has not something more
+beautiful still from which it is copied,--as a portrait is from a
+person's face,--though it can neither be perceived by the eyes or
+ears, or by any other of the senses; it is in the mind only, and by
+our thoughts, that we embrace it. Therefore, though we have never seen
+anything of any kind more beautiful than the statues of Phidias and
+than those pictures which I have named, still we can imagine something
+more beautiful. Nor did that great artist, when he was making the
+statue of Jupiter or of Minerva, keep in his mind any particular
+person of whom he was making a likeness; but there dwelt in his mind
+a certain perfect idea of beauty, which he looked upon, and fixed
+his eyes upon, and guided his art and his hand with reference to the
+likeness of that model.
+
+III. As therefore there is in forms and figures something perfect and
+superexcellent, the appearance of which is stamped in our minds so
+that we imitate it, and refer to it everything which falls under our
+eyes; so we keep in our mind an idea of perfect eloquence, and seek
+for its resemblance with our ears.
+
+Now Plato, that greatest of all authors and teachers, not only of
+understanding, but also of speaking, calls those forms of things
+ideas; and he affirms that they are not created, but that they
+exist from everlasting, and are kept in their places by reason and
+intelligence: that all other things have their rising and setting,
+their ebb and flow, and cannot continue long in the same condition.
+Whatever there is, therefore, which can become a subject of discussion
+as to its principle and method, is to be reduced to the ultimate form
+and species of its class.
+
+And I see that this first beginning of mine is derived not from the
+discussions of orators, but from the very heart of philosophy, and
+that it is old-fashioned and somewhat obscure, and likely to incur
+some blame, or at all events to provoke some surprise. For men will
+either wonder what all this has to do with that which is the subject
+of our inquiry, and they will be satisfied with understanding the
+nature of the facts, so that it may not seem to be without reason that
+we have traced their origin so far back; or else they will blame
+us for hunting out for unaccustomed paths, and abandoning those in
+ordinary use.
+
+But I am aware that I often appear to say things which are novel, when
+I am in reality saying what is very old, only not generally known.
+And I confess that I have been made an orator, (if indeed I am one at
+all,) or such as I am, not by the workshops of the rhetoricians, but
+by the walks of the Academy. For that is the school of manifold and
+various discourses, in which first of all there are imprinted the
+footsteps of Plato. But the orator is to a great extent trained and
+assisted by his discussions and those of other philosophers. For all
+that copiousness, and forest, as it were, of eloquence, is derived
+from those men, and yet is not sufficient for forensic business;
+which, as these men themselves used to say, they left to more rustic
+muses. Accordingly this forensic eloquence, being despised and
+repudiated by philosophy, has lost many great and substantial helps;
+but still, as it is embellished with flowery language and well-turned
+periods, it has had some popularity among the people, and has had no
+reason to fear the judgment or prejudice of a few. And so popular
+eloquence has been lost to learned men, and elegant learning to
+eloquent ones.
+
+IV. Let this then be laid down among the first principles, (and it
+will be better understood presently,)--that the eloquent man whom we
+are looking for cannot be rendered such without philosophy. Not indeed
+that there is everything necessary in philosophy, but that it is of
+assistance to an orator as the wrestling-school is to an actor; for
+small things are often compared with great ones. For no one can
+express wide views, or speak fluently on many and various subjects,
+without philosophy. Since also, in the Phaedrus of Plato, Socrates says
+that this is what Pericles was superior to all other orators in, that
+he had been a pupil of Anaxagoras the natural philosopher. And it was
+owing to him, in his opinion, (though he had learnt also many other
+splendid and admirable accomplishments,) that he was so copious and
+imaginative, and so thoroughly aware--which is the main thing in
+eloquence--by what kinds of speeches the different parts of men's
+minds are moved.
+
+And we may draw the same conclusion from the case of Demosthenes; from
+whose letters it may be gathered what a constant pupil of Plato's
+he was. Nor, indeed, without having studied in the schools of
+philosophers, can we discern the genus and species of everything; nor
+explain them by proper definitions; nor distribute them into their
+proper divisions; nor decide what is true and what is false; nor
+discern consequences, perceive inconsistencies, and distinguish what
+is doubtful. Why should I speak of the nature of things, the knowledge
+of which supplies such abundance of topics to oratory? or of life, and
+duty, and virtue, and manners? for what of all these things can be
+either spoken of or understood without a long study of those matters?
+
+V. To these numerous and important things there are to be added
+innumerable ornaments, which at that time were only to be derived from
+those men who were accounted teachers of oratory. The consequence is,
+that no one applies himself to that genuine and perfect eloquence,
+because the study requisite for understanding those matters is
+different from that which enables me to speak of them; and because it
+is necessary to go to one class of teachers to understand the things,
+and to another to learn the proper language for them. Therefore Marcus
+Antonius, who in the time of our fathers was considered to be the most
+eminent of all men alive for eloquence, a manly nature very acute and
+eloquent, in that one treatise which he has left behind him, says that
+he has seen many fluent speakers, but not one eloquent orator, in
+truth, he had in his mind a model of eloquence which in his mind he
+saw, though he could not behold it with his eyes. But he, being a man
+of the most acute genius, (as indeed he was,) and feeling the want of
+many things both in himself and other men, saw absolutely no one who
+had fairly a right to be called eloquent. But if he did not think
+either himself or Lucius Crassus eloquent, then he certainly must
+have had in his mind some perfect model of eloquence; and as that
+had nothing wanting, he felt himself unable to include those who had
+anything or many things wanting in that class.
+
+Let us then, O Brutus, if we can, investigate the nature of this man
+whom Antonius never beheld, or who perhaps has never even existed; and
+if we cannot imitate and copy him exactly, (which indeed Antonius said
+was scarcely possible for a god to do,) still we may perhaps be able
+to explain what he ought to be like.
+
+VI. There are altogether three different kinds of speaking, in each of
+which there have been some eminent men; but very few (though that is
+what we are now looking for) who have been equally eminent in all. For
+some have been grandiloquent men, (if I may use such an expression,)
+with an abundant dignity of sentiments and majesty of language,
+--vehement, various, copious, authoritative; well adapted and prepared
+to make an impression on and effect a change in men's feelings: an
+effect which some have endeavoured to produce by a rough, morose,
+uncivilized sort of speaking, not elaborated or wrought up with any
+care; and others employ a smooth, carefully prepared, and well rounded
+off style.
+
+On the other hand, there are men neat, acute, explaining everything,
+and making matters clearer, not nobler, polished up with a certain
+subtle and compressed style of oratory; and in the same class there
+are others, shrewd, but unpolished, and designedly resembling rough
+and unskilful speakers; and some who, with the same barrenness and
+simplicity, are still more elegant, that is to say, are facetious,
+flowery, and even slightly embellished.
+
+But there is another class, half-way between these two, and as it were
+compounded of both of them, endowed neither with the acuteness of the
+last-mentioned orators, nor with the thunder of the former; as a sort
+of mixture of both, excelling in neither style; partaking of both, or
+rather indeed (if we would adhere to the exact truth) destitute of all
+the qualifications of either. Those men go on, as they say, in one
+uniform tenor of speaking, bringing nothing except their facility and
+equalness of language; or else they add something, like reliefs on a
+pedestal, and so they embellish their whole oration, with trifling
+ornaments of words and ideas.
+
+VII. Now, whoever have by themselves arrived at any power in each of
+these styles of oratory, have gained a great name among orators; but
+we must inquire whether they have sufficiently effected what we want.
+For we see that there have been some men who have been ornate and
+dignified speakers, being at the same time shrewd and subtle arguers.
+And I wish that we were able to find a model of such an orator among
+the Latins. It would be a fine thing not to be forced to have recourse
+to foreign instances, but to be content with those of our own country.
+But though in that discourse of mine which I have published in the
+Brutus, I have attributed much credit to the Latins,--partly
+to encourage others, and partly out of affection for my own
+countrymen,--I still recollect that I by far prefer Demosthenes to all
+other men, inasmuch as he adapted his energy to that eloquence which
+I myself feel to be such, and not to that which I have ever had any
+experience of in any actual instance. He was an orator than whom
+there has never existed one more dignified, nor more wise, nor more
+temperate. And therefore it is well that we should warn those men
+whose ignorant conversation is getting to have some notoriety and
+weight, who wish either to be called Attic speakers, or who really
+wish to speak in the Attic style, to fix their admiration on this man
+above all others, than whom I do not think Athens itself more Attic.
+For by so doing they may learn what Attic means, and may measure
+eloquence by his power and not by their own weakness; for at present
+every one praises just that which he thinks that he himself is able
+to imitate. But still I think it not foreign to my present subject to
+remind those who are endowed with but a weak judgment, what is the
+peculiar merit of the Attic writers.
+
+VIII. The prudence of the hearers has always been the regulator of
+the eloquence of the orators. For all men who wish to be approved of,
+regard the inclination of those men who are their hearers, and form
+and adapt themselves entirely which of the Greek rhetoricians
+ever drew any of his rules from Thucydides? Oh, but he is praised
+universally. I admit that, but it is on the ground that he is a wise,
+conscientious, dignified relater of facts, not that he was pleading
+causes before tribunals, but that he was relating wars in a history.
+Therefore, he was never accounted an orator; nor, indeed, should we
+have ever heard of his name if he had not written a history, though he
+was a man of eminently high character and of noble birth. But no one
+ever imitates the dignity of his language or of his sentiments, but
+when they have used some disjointed and unconnected expressions, which
+they might have done without any teacher at all, then they think that
+they are akin to Thucydides. I have met men too who were anxious to
+resemble Xenophon, whose style is, indeed, sweeter than honey, but as
+unlike as possible to the noisy style of the forum.
+
+X Let us then return to the subject of laying a foundation for
+the orator whom we desire to see, and of furnishing him with that
+eloquence which Antonius had never found in any one. We are, O Brutus,
+undertaking a great and arduous task, but I think nothing difficult to
+a man who is in love. But I am and always have been in love with your
+genius, and your pursuits, and your habits. Moreover, I am every day
+more and more inflamed not only with regret,--though I am worn away
+with that while I am wishing to enjoy again our meetings and our daily
+association, and your learned discourse,--but also with the admirable
+reputation of your incredible virtues, which, though different in
+their kind, are united by your prudence. For what is so different or
+remote from severity as courtesy? And yet who has ever been considered
+either more conscientious or more agreeable than you? And what is
+so difficult as, while deciding disputes between many people, to be
+beloved by all of them? Yet you attain this end, of dismissing in a
+contented and pacified frame of mind the very parties against whom you
+decide. Therefore, while doing nothing from motives of interest
+you still contrive that all that you do should be acceptable. And
+therefore, of all the countries on earth, Gaul[59] is now the only one
+which is not affected by the general conflagration, while you yourself
+enjoy your own virtues in peace, knowing that your conduct is
+appreciated in this bright Italy, and surrounded as you are by the
+flower and strength of the citizens.
+
+And what an exploit is that, never, amid all your important
+occupations, to interrupt your study of philosophy! You are always
+either writing something yourself or inviting me to write something.
+Therefore, I began this work as soon as I had finished my Cato, which
+I should never have meddled with, being alarmed at the aspect of the
+times, so hostile to virtue, if I had not thought it wicked not to
+comply with your wishes, when you were exhorting me and awaking in me
+the recollection of that man who was so dear to me, and I call you to
+witness that I have only ventured to undertake this subject after many
+entreaties on your part, and many refusals on mine. For I wish that
+you should appear implicated in this fault, so that if I myself should
+appear unable to support the weight of such a subject, you may bear
+the blame of having imposed such a burden on me, and I only that
+of having undertaken it. And then the credit of having had such a
+commission given me by you, will make amends for the blame which the
+deficiency of my judgment will bring upon me.
+
+XI. But in everything it is very difficult to explain the form (that
+which is called in Greek [Greek: charaktaer]) of perfection, because
+different things appear perfection to different people. I am delighted
+with Ennius, says one person, because he never departs from the
+ordinary use of words. I love Pacuvius, says another, all his verses
+are so ornamented and elaborate while Ennius is often so careless.
+Another is all for Attius. For there are many different opinions, as
+among the Greeks, nor is it easy to explain which form is the most
+excellent. In pictures one man is delighted with what is rough harsh
+looking, obscure, and dark, others care only for what is neat cheerful
+and brilliant. Why should you, then give any precise command or
+formula, when each is best in its own kind, and when there are many
+kinds? However, these difficulties have not repelled me from this
+attempt, and I have thought that in everything there is some point of
+absolute perfection even though it is not easily seen, and, that it
+can be decided on by a man who understands the matter.
+
+But since there are many kinds of speeches, and those different, and
+as they do not all fall under one form, the form of panegyric, and of
+declamation, and of narration, and of such discourses as Isocrates has
+left us in his panegyric, and many other writers also who are called
+sophists; and the form also of other kinds which have no connexion
+with forensic discussion, and of the whole of that class which is
+called in Greek [Greek: epideiktikon], and which is made up as it were
+for the purpose of being looked at--for the sake of amusement, I
+shall omit at the present time. Not that they deserve to be entirely
+neglected; for they are as it were the nursery of the orator whom we
+wish to draw; and concerning whom we are endeavouring to say something
+worth hearing.
+
+XII. From this form is derived fluency of words; from it also the
+combination and rhythm of sentences derives a freer licence. For
+great indulgence is shown to neatly turned sentences; and rhythmical,
+steady, compact periods are always admissible. And pains are taken
+purposely, not disguisedly, but openly and avowedly, to make one word
+answer to another, as if they had been measured together and were
+equal to each other. So that words opposed to one another may be
+frequently contrasted, and contrary words compared together, and that
+sentences may be terminated in the same manner, and may give the same
+sound at their conclusion; which, when we are dealing with actual
+causes, we do much more seldom, and certainly with more disguise. But,
+in his Panathenaic oration, Isocrates avows that he diligently kept
+that object in view; for he composed it not for a contest in a court
+of justice, but to delight the ears of his hearers.
+
+They say that Thrasymachus of Chalcedon, and Gorgias of Leontini,
+were the first men who taught this science; after him Theodorus of
+Byzantium, and many others whom Socrates in the Phaedrus calls [Greek:
+logodaidaloi]; who have said many things very tolerably clever, but
+which seem as if they had arisen at the moment, trifling, and like
+animals which change their colour, and too minutely painted. And this
+is what makes Herodotus and Thucydides the more admirable; for though
+they lived at the same time with those men whom I have named, still
+they kept aloof as far as possible from such amusements, or I should
+rather say from such follies. For one of them flows on like a tranquil
+river, without any attempts at facetiousness; the other is borne on
+in a more impetuous course, and relates warlike deeds in a warlike
+spirit; and they are the first men by whom, as Theophrastus says,
+history was stirred up to dare to speak in a more fluent and adorned
+style than their predecessors had ventured on.
+
+XIII. Isocrates lived in the age next to theirs; who is at all times
+praised by us above all other orators of his class, even though you,
+O Brutus, sometimes object in a jesting though not in an unlearned
+spirit. But you will very likely agree with me when you know why I
+praise him. For as Thrasymachus appeared to him to be too concise with
+his closely measured rhythm, and Gorgias also, though they are the
+first who are said to have laid down any rules at all for the harmony
+of sentences; and as Thucydides was somewhat too abrupt and not
+sufficiently round, if I may use such an expression; he was the first
+who adopted a system of dilating his ideas with words, and filling
+them up with better sounding sentences; and as by his own practice he
+formed those men who were afterwards accounted the most eminent men in
+speaking and writing, his house got to be reckoned a perfect school
+of eloquence. Therefore, as I, when I was praised by our friend Cato,
+could easily bear to be blamed by the rest; so Isocrates appears to
+have a right to despise the judgment of other men, while he has the
+testimony of Plato to pride himself on. For, as you know, Socrates is
+introduced in almost the last page of the Phaedrus speaking in these
+words:--"At present, O Phaedrus, Isocrates is quite a young man; but
+still I delight in telling the expectations which I have of him."
+"What are they?" says he. "He appears to me to be a man of too lofty
+a genius to be compared to Lysias and his orations: besides, he has a
+greater natural disposition for virtue; so that it will not be at all
+strange if, when he has advanced in age, he will either surpass all
+his contemporaries who turn their attention to eloquence, and in this
+kind of oratory, to the study of which he is at present devoted, as if
+they were only boys; or, if he is not content with such a victory, he
+will then feel some sort of divine inspiration prompting him to desire
+greater things. For there is a deep philosophy implanted by nature
+in this man's mind." This was the augury which Socrates forms of him
+while a young man. But Plato writes it of him when he has become an
+old man, and when he is his contemporary, and a sort of attacker of
+all the rhetoricians. And Isocrates is the only one whom he admires.
+And let those men who are not fond of Isocrates allow me to remain in
+error in the company of Socrates and Plato.
+
+That then is a delightful kind of oratory, free, fluent, shrewd in
+its sentiments, sweet sounding in its periods, which is found in that
+demonstrative kind of speaking which we have mentioned. It is the
+peculiar style of sophists; more suitable for display than for actual
+contest; appropriate to schools and exhibitions; but despised in and
+driven from the forum. But because eloquence is first of all trained
+by this sort of food, and afterwards gives itself a proper colour and
+strength, it appeared not foreign to our subject to speak of what is
+as it were the cradle of an orator. However, all this belongs to the
+schools, and to display: let us now descend into the battle-field and
+to the actual struggle.
+
+XIV. As there are three things which the orator has to consider; what
+he is saying; and in what place, and in what manner he is saying each
+separate thing; it seems on all accounts desirable to explain what is
+best as to each separate subject, though in rather a different
+manner from that in which it is usually explained in laying down the
+principles of the science. We will give no regular rules, (for that
+task we have not undertaken,) but we will present an outline and
+sketch of perfect eloquence; nor will we occupy ourselves in
+explaining by what means it is acquired, but only what sort of thing
+it appears to us to be.
+
+And let us discuss the two first divisions very briefly. For it is
+not so much that they have not an important reference to the highest
+perfection, as that they are indispensable, and almost common to
+other studies also. For to plan and decide on what you will say are
+important points, and are as it were the mind in the body; still they
+are parts of prudence rather than of eloquence; and yet what matter is
+there in which prudence is not necessary? This orator, then, whom we
+wish to describe as a perfect one, must know all the topics suited to
+arguments and reasons of this class. For since whatever can possibly
+be the subject of any contest or controversy, gives rise to the
+inquiry whether it exists, and what it is, and what sort of thing it
+is; while we endeavour to ascertain whether it exists, by tokens; what
+it is, by definitions; what sort of thing it is, by divisions of right
+and wrong; and in order to be able to avail himself of these topics
+the orator,--I do not mean any ordinary one, but the excellent one
+whom I am endeavouring to depict,--always, if he can, diverts the
+controversy from any individual person or occasion. For it is in his
+power to argue on wider grounds concerning a genus than concerning
+a part; as, whatever is proved in the universal, must inevitably be
+proved with respect to a part. This inquiry, then, when diverted from
+individual persons and occasions to a discussion of a universal genus,
+is called a thesis. This is what Aristotle trained young men in, not
+after the fashion of ordinary philosophers, by subtle dissertations,
+but in the way of rhetoricians, making them argue on each side,
+in order that it might be discussed with more elegance and more
+copiousness; and he also gave them topics (for that is what he called
+them) as heads of arguments, from which every sort of oration might be
+applied to either side of the question.
+
+XV. This orator of ours then (for what we are looking for is not some
+declaimer out of a school, or some pettifogger from the forum, but a
+most accomplished and perfect orator), since certain topics are given
+to him, will run through all of them; he will use those which are
+suitable to his purpose according to their class; he will learn also
+from what source those topics proceed which are called common. Nor
+will he make an imprudent use of his resources, but he will weigh
+everything, and make a selection. For the same arguments have not
+equal weight at all times, or in all causes. He will, therefore,
+exercise his judgment, and he will not only devise what he is to say,
+but he will also weigh its force. For there is nothing more fertile
+than genius, especially of the sort which has been cultivated by
+study. But as fertile and productive corn-fields bear not only corn,
+but weeds which are most unfriendly to corn, so sometimes from those
+topics there are produced arguments which are either trifling, or
+foreign to the subject, or useless; and the judgment of the orator has
+great room to exert itself in making a selection from them. Otherwise
+how will he be able to stop and make his stand on those arguments
+which are good and suited to his purpose? or how to soften what is
+harsh, and to conceal what cannot be denied, and, if it be possible,
+entirely to get rid of all such topics? or how will he be able to
+lead men's minds away from the objects on which they are fixed, or
+to adduce any other argument which, when opposed to that of his
+adversaries, may be more probable than that which is brought against
+him?
+
+And with what diligence will he marshal the arguments with which he
+has provided himself? since that is the second of his three objects.
+He will make all the vestibule, if I may so say, and the approach to
+his cause brilliant; and when he has got possession of the minds of
+his hearers by his first onset, he will then invalidate and exclude
+all contrary arguments; and of his own strongest arguments some he
+will place in the van, some he will employ to bring up the rear, and
+the weaker ones he will place in the centre.
+
+And thus we have described in a brief and summary manner what this
+perfect orator should be like in the two first parts of speaking. But,
+as has been said before, in these parts, (although they are weighty
+and important,) there is less skill and labour than in the others.
+
+XVI. But when he has found out what to say, and in what place he is to
+say it, then comes that which is by far the most important division of
+the three, the consideration of the manner in which he is to say it.
+For that is a well-known saying which our friend Carneades used to
+repeat:--"That Clitomachus said the same things, but that Charmadas
+said the same things in the same manner." But if it is of so much
+consequence in philosophy even, how you say a thing, when it is the
+matter which is looked at there rather than the language, what can we
+think must be the case in causes in which the elocution is all in all?
+And I, O Brutus, knew from your letters that you do not ask what sort
+of artist I think a consummate orator ought to be, as far as devising
+and arranging his arguments; but you appeared to me to be asking
+rather what kind of eloquence I considered the best. A very difficult
+matter, and, indeed, by the immortal gods! the most difficult of all
+matters. For as language is a thing soft and tender, and so flexible
+that it follows wherever you turn it, so also the various natures
+and inclinations of men have given rise to very different kinds of
+speaking.
+
+Some men love a stream of words and great volubility, placing all
+eloquence in rapidity of speech. Others are fond of distinct and
+broadly marked intervals, and delays, and taking of breath. What can
+be more different? Yet in each kind there is something excellent.
+Some labour to attain a gentle and equable style, and a pure and
+transparent kind of eloquence; others aim at a certain harshness and
+severity in their language, a sort of melancholy in their speech:
+and as we have just before divided men, so that some wish to appear
+weighty, some light, some moderate, so there are as many different
+kinds of orators as we have already said that there are styles of
+oratory.
+
+XVII. And since I have now begun to perform this duty in a more ample
+manner than you did require it of me, (for though the question which
+you put to me has reference only to the kind of oration, I have
+also in my answer given you a brief account of the invention and
+arrangement of arguments,) even now I will not speak solely of the
+manner of making a speech, but I will touch also on the manner of
+conducting an action. And so no part whatever will be omitted: since
+nothing need be said in this place of memory, for that is common to
+many arts.
+
+But the way in which it is said depends on two things,--on action
+and on elocution. For action is a sort of eloquence of the body,
+consisting as it does of voice and motion. Now there are as many
+changes of voice as there are of minds, which are above all things
+influenced by the voice. Therefore, that perfect orator which our
+oration has just been describing, will employ a certain tone of voice
+regulated by the way in which he wishes to appear affected himself,
+and by the manner also in which he desires the mind of his hearer to
+be influenced. And concerning this I would say more if this was the
+proper time for laying down rules concerning it, or if this was what
+you were inquiring about. I would speak also of gesture, with which
+expression of countenance is combined. And it is hardly possible to
+express of what importance these things are, and what use the orator
+makes of them. For even people without speaking, by the mere dignity
+of their action, have often produced all the effect of eloquence; and
+many really eloquent men, by their ungainly delivery have been thought
+ineloquent. So that it was not without reason that Demosthenes
+attributed the first, and second, and third rank to action. For if
+eloquence without action is nothing, but action without eloquence is
+of such great power, then certainly it is the most important part of
+speaking.
+
+XVIII. He, then, who aims at the highest rank in eloquence, will
+endeavour with his voice on the stretch to speak energetically; with
+a low voice, gently, with a sustained voice, gravely, and with a
+modulated voice, in a manner calculated to excite compassion.
+
+For the nature of the voice is something marvellous, for all its great
+power is derived from three sounds only, the grave sound, the sharp
+sound, and the moderate sound, and from these comes all that sweet
+variety which is brought to perfection in songs. But there is also
+in speaking a sort of concealed singing, not like the peroration of
+rhetoricians from Phrygia or Caria, which is nearly a chant, but that
+sort which Demosthenes and Aeschines mean when the one reproaches the
+other with the affected modulation of his voice. Demosthenes says even
+more, and often declares that Aeschines had a very sweet and clear
+voice. And in this that point appears to me worth noting, with
+reference to the study of aiming at sweetness in the voice. For nature
+of herself, as if she were modulating the voices of men, has placed
+in every one one acute tone, and not more than one, and that not more
+than two syllables back from the last, so that industry may be guided
+by nature when pursuing the object of delighting the ears. A good
+voice also is a thing to be desired, for it is not naturally implanted
+in us, but practice and use give it to us. Therefore, the consummate
+orator will vary and change his voice, and sometimes straining it,
+sometimes lowering it, he will go through every degree of tone.
+
+And he will use action in such a way that there shall be nothing
+superfluous in his gestures. His attitude will be erect and lofty, the
+motion of the feet rare, and very moderate, he will only move across
+the tribune in a very moderate manner, and even then rarely, there
+will be no bending of the neck, no clenching of the fingers, no rise
+or fall of the fingers in regular time, he will rather sway his whole
+body gently, and employ a manly inclination of his side, throwing out
+his arm in the energetic parts of his speech, and drawing it back in
+the moderate ones. As to his countenance, which is of the greatest
+influence possible next to the voice, what dignity and what beauty
+will be derived from its expression! And when you have accomplished
+this, then the eyes too must be kept under strict command, that there
+may not appear to be anything unsuitable, or like grimace. For as the
+countenance is the image of the mind, so are the eyes the informers as
+to what is going on within it. And their hilarity or sadness will be
+regulated by the circumstances which are under discussion.
+
+XIX. But now we must give the likeness of this perfect orator and of
+this consummate eloquence, and his very name points out that he excels
+in this one particular, that is to say, in oratory and that other
+eminent qualities are kept out of sight in him. For it is not by his
+invention, or by his power of arrangement, or by his action, that
+he has embraced all these points, but in Greek he is called [Greek:
+raetor], and in Latin "eloquent," from speaking. For every one claims
+for himself some share in the other accomplishments which belong to an
+orator, but the greatest power in speaking is allowed to be his alone.
+For although some philosophers have spoken with elegance, (since
+Theophrastus[60] derived his name from his divine skill in speaking,
+and Aristotle attacked Isocrates himself, and they say that the Muses
+as it were spoke by the mouth of Xenophon; and far above all men who
+have ever written or spoken, Plato is preeminent both for sweetness
+and dignity,) still their language has neither the vigour nor the
+sting of an orator or a forensic speaker. They are conversing with
+learned men whose minds they wish to tranquillize rather than to
+excite, and so they speak on peaceful subjects which have no connexion
+with any violence, and for the sake of teaching, not of charming, so
+that even in the fact of their aiming at giving some pleasure by their
+diction, they appear to some people to be doing more than is necessary
+for them to do.
+
+It is not difficult, therefore, to distinguish between this kind of
+speaking and the eloquence which we are now treating of. For the
+address of philosophers is gentle, and fond of retirement, and not
+furnished with popular ideas or popular expressions, not fettered by
+any particular rhythm, but allowed a good deal of liberty. It has
+in it nothing angry, nothing envious, nothing energetic, nothing
+marvellous, nothing cunning, it is as it were a chaste, modest,
+uncontaminated virgin. Therefore it is called a discourse rather than
+an oration. For although every kind of speaking is an oration, still
+the language of the orator alone is distinguished by this name as its
+own property.
+
+It appears more necessary to distinguish between it and the copy of
+it by the sophists, who wish to gather all the same flowers which the
+orator employs in his causes. But they differ from him in this that,
+as their object is not to disturb men's minds, but rather to appease
+them, and not so much to persuade as to delight, and as they do it
+more openly than we do and more frequently, they seek ideas which are
+neat rather than probable, they often wander from the subject, they
+weave fables into their speeches, they openly borrow terms from other
+subjects, and arrange them as painters do a variety of colours, they
+put like things by the side of like, opposite things by the side of
+their contraries, and very often they terminate period after period in
+similar manners.
+
+XX. Now history is akin to this side of writing, in which the authors
+relate with elegance, and often describe a legion, or a battle,
+and also addresses and exhortations are intermingled, but in them
+something connected and fluent is required, and not this compressed
+and vehement sort of speaking. And the eloquence which we are looking
+for must be distinguished from theirs nearly as much as it must from
+that of the poets.
+
+For even the poets have given room for the question, what the point
+is in which they differ from the orators, formerly it appeared to be
+chiefly rhythm and versification, but of late rhythm has got a great
+footing among the orators. For whatever it is which offers the ears
+any regular measure, even if it be ever so far removed from verse,
+(for that is a fault in an oration,) is called "number" by us,
+being the same thing that in Greek is called [Greek: ruthmos]. And,
+accordingly, I see that some men have thought that the language of
+Plato and Democritus, although it is not verse, still, because it
+is borne along with some impetuosity and employs the most brilliant
+illustration that words can give, ought to be considered as poetry
+rather than the works of the comic poets, in which, except that they
+are written in verse, there is nothing else which is different from
+ordinary conversation. Nor is that the principal characteristic of
+a poet, although he is the more to be praised for aiming at the
+excellences of an orator, when he is more fettered by verse. But,
+although the language of some poets is grand and ornamented, still
+I think that they have greater licence than we have in making
+and combining words, and I think too that they often, in their
+expressions, pay more attention to the object of giving pleasure to
+their leaders than to their subject. Nor, indeed, does the fact of
+there being one point of resemblance between them, (I mean judgment
+and the selection of words,) make it difficult to perceive their
+dissimilarity on other points. But that is not doubtful, and if there
+be any question in the matter, still this is certainly not necessary
+for the object which is proposed to be kept in view.
+
+The orator, therefore, now that he has been separated from the
+eloquence of philosophers, and sophists, and historians, and poets,
+requires an explanation from us to show what sort of person he is to
+be
+
+XXI. The eloquent orator, then, (for that is what, according to
+Antonius, we are looking for) is a man who speaks in the forum and
+in civil causes in such a manner as to prove, to delight, and to
+persuade. To prove, is necessary for him; to delight, is a proof of
+his sweetness, to persuade, is a token of victory. For that alone of
+all results is of the greatest weight towards gaining causes. But
+there are as many kinds of speaking as there are separate duties of an
+orator. The orator, therefore, ought to be a man of great judgment and
+of great ability, and he ought to be a regulator, as it were, of this
+threefold variety of duty. For he will judge what is necessary for
+every one, and he will be able to speak in whatever manner the cause
+requires. But the foundation of eloquence, as of all other things, is
+wisdom. For as in life, so in a speech, nothing is more difficult than
+to see what is becoming. The Greeks call this [Greek: prepon], we call
+it "decorum." But concerning this point many admirable rules are laid
+down, and the matter is well worth being understood. And it is owing
+to ignorance respecting it that men make blunders not only in life,
+but very often in poems, and in speeches.
+
+But the orator must consider what is becoming not only in his
+sentences, but also in his words. For it is not every fortune, nor
+every honour, nor every authority, nor every age, or place, or time,
+nor every hearer who is to be dealt with by the same character of
+expressions or sentiments. And at all times, in every part of a speech
+or of life, we must consider what is becoming, and that depends partly
+on the facts which are the subject under discussion, and also on the
+characters of those who are the speakers and of those who are the
+hearers. Therefore this topic, which is of very wide extent and
+application, is often employed by philosophers in discussions on duty,
+not when they are discussing abstract right, for that is but one thing
+and the grammarians also too often employ it when criticising the
+poets, to show their eloquence in every division and description of
+cause. For how unseemly is it, when you are pleading before a single
+judge about a gutter, to use high sounding expressions and general
+topics, but to speak with a low voice and with subtle arguments in a
+cause affecting the majesty of the Roman people.
+
+XXII. This applies to the whole genus. But some persons err as to
+the character either of themselves, or of the judges, or of their
+adversaries and not only in actual fact, but often in word. Although
+there is no force in a word without a fact, still the same fact is
+often either approved of, or rejected, according as this or that
+expression is employed respecting it. And in every case it is
+necessary to take care how far it may be right to go, for although
+everything has its proper limit, still excess offends more than
+falling short. And that is the point in which Apelles said that those
+painters made a blunder, who did not know what was enough.
+
+There is here, O Brutus, an important topic, which does not escape
+your notice, and which requires another large volume. But for the
+present question this is enough, when we say that this is becoming,
+(an expression which we always employ in all words and actions, both
+great and small)--when, I say, we say that this is becoming and
+that that is not becoming, and when it appears to what extent each
+assertion is meant to be applicable, and when it depends on something
+else, and is quite another matter whether you say that a thing is
+becoming or proper, (for to say a thing is proper, declares the
+perfection of duty, which we and all men are at all times to regard
+to say a thing is becoming, as to say that it is fit as it were, and
+suitable to the time and person: which is often very important both
+in actions and words, and in a person's countenance and gestures
+and gait;)--and, on the other hand, when we say that a thing is
+unbecoming, (and if a poet avoids this as the greatest of faults, [and
+he also errs if he puts an honest sentiment in the mouth of a wicked
+man, or a wise one in the mouth of a fool,] or if that painter saw
+that, when Calchas was sad at the sacrifice of Iphigenia, and Ulysses
+still more so, and Menelaus in mourning, that Agamemnon's head
+required to be veiled altogether, since it was quite impossible to
+represent such grief as his with a paint brush; if even the actor
+inquires what is becoming, what must we think that the orator ought to
+do?) But as this is a matter of so much importance, the orator must
+take care what he does in his causes, and in the different parts of
+them; that is plain, that not only the different parts of an oration,
+but that even whole causes are to be dealt with in different styles of
+oratory.
+
+XXIII. It follows that the characteristics and forms of each class
+must be sought for. It is a great and difficult task, as we have often
+said before; but it was necessary for us to consider at the beginning
+what we would discuss; and now we must set our sails in whatever
+course we are borne on. But first of all we must give a sketch of the
+man whom some consider the only orator of the Attic style.
+
+He is a gentle, moderate man, imitating the usual customs, differing
+from those who are not eloquent in fact rather than in any of his
+opinions. Therefore those who are his hearers, even though they
+themselves have no skill in speaking, still feel confident that they
+could speak in that manner. For the subtlety of his address appears
+easy of imitation to a person who ventures on an opinion, but nothing
+is less easy when he comes to try it; for although it is not a style
+of any extraordinary vigour, still it has some juice, so that even
+though it is not endowed with the most extreme power, it is still, if
+I may use such an expression, in perfect health. First of all, then,
+let us release it from the fetters of rhythm. For there is, as you
+know, a certain rhythm to be observed by an orator, (and of that we
+will speak presently,) proceeding on a regular system; but though it
+must be attended to in another kind of oratory, it must be entirely
+abandoned in this. This must be a sort of easy style, and yet not
+utterly without rules, so that it may seem to range at freedom, not to
+wander about licentiously. He should also guard against appearing to
+cement his words together; for the hiatus formed by a concourse
+of open vowels has something soft about it, and indicates a not
+unpleasing negligence, as if the speaker were anxious more about the
+matter than the manner of his speech. But as to other points, he must
+take care, especially as he is allowed more licence in these two,--I
+mean the rounding of his periods, and the combination of his words;
+for those narrow and minute details are not to be dealt with
+carelessly. But there is such a thing as a careful negligence; for as
+some women are said to be unadorned to whom that very want of ornament
+is becoming, so this refined sort of oratory is delightful even when
+unadorned. For in each case a result is produced that the thing
+appears more beautiful, though the cause is not apparent. Then every
+conspicuous ornament will be removed, even pearls; even curling-irons
+will be put away; and all medicaments of paint and chalk, all
+artificial red and white, will be discarded; only elegance and
+neatness will remain. The language will be pure and Latin; it will be
+arranged plainly and clearly, and great care will be taken to see what
+is becoming.
+
+XXIV. One quality will be present, which Theophrastus calls the fourth
+in his praises of oratory;--full of ornament, sweetness, and fluency.
+Clever sentiments, extracted from I know not what secret store, will
+be brought out, and will exert their power in the speeches of this
+perfect orator. There will be a moderate use of what I may call
+oratorical furniture; for there is to a certain degree what I may call
+our furniture, consisting of ornaments partly of things and partly of
+words. But the ornaments consisting of words are twofold: one kind
+consisting of words by themselves, the other consisting of them in
+combination. The simple embellishment is approved of in the case of
+proper and commonly employed words, which either sound very well,
+or else are very explanatory of the subject; in words which do not
+naturally belong to the subject,--it is either metaphorical, or
+borrowed from some other quarter; or else it is derived from the
+subject, whether it is a new term, or an old one grown obsolete; but
+even old and almost obsolete terms may be proper ones, only that we
+seldom employ them. But words when well arranged have great ornament
+if they give any neatness, which does not remain if the words are
+altered while the sense remains. For the embellishments of sentiments
+which remain, even if you alter the language in which they are
+expressed, are many, but still there are but few of them which are
+worth remarking.
+
+Therefore a simple orator, provided he is elegant and not bold in the
+matter of making words, and modest in his metaphors, and sparing in
+his use of obsolete terms, and humble in the rest of his ornaments of
+words and sentences, will perhaps indulge in a tolerably frequent use
+of that kind of metaphor which is common in the ordinary conversation,
+not only of city people, but even of rustics; since they too are in
+the habit of saying, "that the vines sparkle with jewels," "that the
+fields are thirsty," "that the corn-fields are rejoicing," "that the
+crops are luxuriant." Now there is not one of these expressions which
+is not somewhat bold; but the thing is either like that which you use
+metaphorically; or else, if it has no name of its own, the expression
+which you use appears to have been borrowed for the sake of teaching,
+not of jesting. And this quiet sort of orator will use this ornament
+with rather more freedom than the rest; and yet he will not do it with
+as much licence as if he were practising the loftiest kind of oratory.
+
+XXV. Therefore that unbecomingness (and what that is may be understood
+from the definition we have given of what is becoming) is visible here
+also, when some sublime expression is used metaphorically, and is used
+in a lowly style of oration, though it might have been becoming in
+a different one. But the neatness which I have spoken of, which
+illuminates the arrangement of language by these lights which the
+Greeks, as if they were some gestures of the speech, call [Greek:
+schaemata], (and the same word is applied by them also to the
+embellishments of sentences,) is employed by the refined orator (whom
+some men call the Attic orator, and rightly too, if they did not mean
+that he was the only one) but sparingly. For, as in the preparation of
+a feast, a man while on his guard against magnificence, is desirous to
+be thought not only economical but also elegant, he will choose what
+is best for him to use. For there are many kinds of economy suited to
+this very orator of whom I am speaking; for the ornaments which I have
+previously been mentioning are to be avoided by this acute orator,--I
+mean the comparing like with like, and the similarly sounding and
+equally measured ends of sentences, and graces hunted out as it were
+by the alteration of a letter; so that it may not be visible that
+neatness has been especially aimed at, and so that the orator may not
+be detected in having been hunting for means of pleasing the ears of
+his audience.
+
+Again, if repetitions of the same expressions require a sort of
+vehemence and loudness of voice, they will then be unsuited to the
+simple style of oratory. The orator may use other embellishments
+promiscuously; only let him relax and separate the connexion of the
+words, and use as ordinary expressions as possible, and as gentle
+metaphors. Let him even avail himself of those lights of sentiments,
+as long as they are not too brilliant. He will not make the republic
+speak; nor will he raise the dead from the shades below; nor will he
+collect together a number of particulars in one heap, and so fold them
+in one embrace. Such deeds belong to more vigorous beings, nor are
+they to be expected or required from this man of whom we are giving a
+sketch; for he will be too moderate not only in his voice, but also
+in his style. But there are many embellishments which will suit his
+simple style, although he will use even them in a strict manner; for
+that is his character.
+
+He will have besides this, action, not tragic, nor suited to the
+stage, but he will move his body in a moderate degree, trusting a
+great deal to his countenance; not in such a way as people call making
+faces but in a manner sufficient to show in a gentlemanlike manner in
+what sense he means what he is saying to be understood.
+
+XXVI. Now in this kind of speech sallies of wit are admissible, and
+they carry perhaps only too much weight in an oration. Of them there
+are two kinds,--facetiousness and raillery,--and the orator will
+employ both; but he will use the one in relating anything neatly, and
+the other in darting ridicule on his adversaries. And of this latter
+kind there are more descriptions than one; however, it is a different
+thing that we are discussing now. Nevertheless we may give this
+warning,--that the orator ought to use ridicule in such a way as
+neither to indulge in it too often, that it may not seem like
+buffoonery; nor in a covertly obscure manner, that it may not seem
+like the wit of a comedian; nor in a petulant manner, lest it should
+seem spiteful; nor should he ridicule calamity, lest that should seem
+inhuman; nor crime, lest laughter should usurp the place which hatred
+ought to occupy; nor should he employ this weapon when unsuitable to
+his own character, or to that of the judges, or to the time; for all
+such conduct would come under the head of unbecoming.
+
+The orator must also avoid using jests ready prepared, such as do not
+arise out of the occasion, but are brought from home; for they are
+usually frigid. And he must spare friendships and dignities. He will
+avoid such insults as are not to be healed; he will only aim at his
+adversaries, and not even always at them, nor at all of them, nor in
+every manner. And with these exceptions, he will employ his sallies of
+wit and his facetiousness in such a manner as I have never found any
+one of those men do who consider themselves Attic speakers, though
+there is nothing more Attic than that practice.
+
+This is the sketch which I conceive to be that of a plain orator, but
+still of a great one, and one of a genius very kindred to the Attic;
+since whatever is witty or pleasant in a speech is peculiar to the
+Attics. Not, however, that all of them are facetious: Lysias is said
+to be tolerably so, and Hyperides; Demades is so above all others.
+Demosthenes is considered less so, though nothing appears to me to be
+more well-bred than he is; but he was not so much given to raillery as
+to facetiousness. And the former is the quality of a more impetuous
+disposition; the latter betokens a more refined art.
+
+XXVII. There is another style more fertile, and somewhat more
+forcible than this simple style of which we have been speaking; but
+nevertheless tamer than the highest class of oratory, of which I shall
+speak immediately. In this kind there is but little vigour, but there
+is the greatest possible quantity of sweetness; for it is fuller
+than the plain style, but more plain than that other which is highly
+ornamented and copious.
+
+Every kind of ornament in speaking is suitable to this style; and in
+this kind of oratory there is a great deal of sweetness. It is a style
+in which many men among the Greeks have been eminent; but Demetrius
+Phalereus, in my opinion, has surpassed all the rest; and while his
+oratory proceeds in calm and tranquil flow, it receives brilliancy
+from numerous metaphors and borrowed expressions, like stars.
+
+I call them metaphors, as I often do, which, on account of their
+similarity to some other idea, are introduced into a speech for
+the sake of sweetness, or to supply a deficiency in a language. By
+borrowed expressions I mean those in which, for the proper word,
+another is substituted which has the same sense, and which is derived
+from some subsequent fact. And though this too is a metaphorical
+usage; still Ennius employed it in one manner when he said, "You are
+orphaning the citadel and the city;" and he would have used it in a
+different manner if he had used the word "citadel," meaning "country."
+Again, when he says that "horrid Africa trembles with a terrible
+tumult," he uses "Africa" for "Africans." The rhetoricians call this
+"hypallage," because one word as it were is substituted for another.
+The grammarians call it "metonymia," because names are transferred.
+But Aristotle classes them all under metaphor, and so he does the
+misuse of terms which they call [Greek: katachraesis]. As when we call
+a mind "minute" instead of "little," and misuse words which are near
+to others in sense; if there is any necessity for so doing, or any
+pleasure, or any particular becomingness in doing so. When many
+metaphors succeed one another uninterruptedly the sort of oration
+becomes entirely changed. Therefore the Greeks call it [Greek:
+allaegoria], rightly as to name; but as to its class he speaks
+more accurately who calls all such usages metaphors. Phalereus is
+particularly fond of these usages, and they are very agreeable; and
+although there is a great deal of metaphor in his speaking, yet there
+is no one who makes a more frequent use of the metonymia.
+
+The same kind of oratory, (I am speaking of the moderate and temperate
+kind), admits of all sorts of figures of expressions, and of many also
+of ideas. Discussions of wide application and extensive learning
+are explained in it, and common topics are treated without any
+impetuosity. In a word, orators of this class usually come from the
+schools of philosophers, and unless the more vigorous orator, whom I
+am going to speak of presently, is at hand to be compared with them,
+the one whom I am now describing will be approved of. For there is
+a remarkable and flowery and highly-coloured and polished style of
+oratory, in which every possible elegance of expression and idea is
+connected together. And it is from the fountain of the sophist that
+all this has flowed into the forum; but still, being despised by the
+subtle arguers, and rejected by dignified speakers, it has taken its
+place in the moderate kind of oratory of which I am speaking.
+
+XXVIII. The third kind of orator is the sublime, copious, dignified,
+ornate speaker, in whom there is the greatest amount of grace. For he
+it is, out of admiration for whose ornamented style and copiousness of
+language nations have allowed eloquence to obtain so much influence
+in states; but it was only this eloquence, which is borne along in an
+impetuous course, and with a mighty noise, which all men looked up
+to, and admired, and had no idea that they themselves could possibly
+attain to. It belongs to this eloquence to deal with men's minds, and
+to influence them in every imaginable way. This is the style which
+sometimes forces its way into and sometimes steals into the senses;
+which implants new opinions in men, and eradicates others which have
+been long established. But there is a vast difference between this
+kind of orator and the preceding ones. A man who has laboured at the
+subtle and acute style, in order to be able to speak cunningly and
+cleverly, and who has had no higher aim, if he has entirely attained
+his object, is a great orator, if not a very great one; he is far from
+standing on slippery ground, and if he once gets a firm footing, is
+in no danger of falling. But the middle kind of orator, whom I have
+called moderate and temperate, if he has only arranged all his own
+forces to his satisfaction, will have no fear of any doubtful or
+uncertain chances of oratory; and even if at any time he should not be
+completely successful, which may often be the case, still he will be
+in no great danger, for he cannot fall far. But this orator of ours,
+whom we consider the first of orators, dignified, vehement, and
+earnest, if this is the only thing for which he appears born, or if
+this is the only kind of oratory to which he applies himself, and if
+he does not combine his copiousness of diction with those other two
+kinds of oratory, is very much to be despised. For the one who speaks
+simply, inasmuch as he speaks with shrewdness and sense, is a wise
+man; the one who employs the middle style is agreeable; but this
+most copious speaker, if he is nothing else, appears scarcely in his
+senses. For a man who can say nothing with calmness, nothing with
+gentleness; who seems ignorant of all arrangement and definition and
+distinctness, and regardless of wit, especially when some of his
+causes require to be treated in that matter entirely, and others in a
+great degree; if he does not prepare the ears of his hearers before he
+begins to work up the case in an inflammatory style, he seems like a
+madman among people in their senses, or like a drunken man among sober
+men.
+
+XXIX. We have then now, O Brutus, the orator whom we are looking for;
+but only in our mind's eye. For if I had had hold of him in my hand,
+even he himself, with all his eloquence, should never have persuaded
+me to let him go. But, in truth, that eloquent man whom Antonius never
+saw is now discovered. Who then is he? I will define him in a few
+words, and then describe him at length. For he is an eloquent man who
+can speak of low things acutely, and of great things with dignity, and
+of moderate things with temper.
+
+Such a man you will say there never was. Perhaps there never was; for
+I am only discussing what I wish to see, and not what I have seen.
+And I come back to that sketch and idea of Plato's which I mentioned
+before; and although we do not see it, yet we can comprehend it in
+our mind. For I am not looking for an eloquent man, or for any other
+mortal or transitory thing; but for that particular quality which
+whoever is master of is an eloquent man; and that is nothing but
+abstract eloquence, which we are not able to discern with any eyes
+except those of the mind. He then will be an eloquent man, (to repeat
+my former definition,) who can speak of small things in a lowly
+manner, of moderate things in a temperate manner, and of great things
+with dignity. The whole of the cause in which I spoke for Caecina
+related to the language or an interdict: we explained some very
+involved matters by definitions; we praised the civil law; we
+distinguished between words of doubtful meaning. In a discussion on
+the Manilian law it was requisite to praise Pompey; and accordingly,
+in a temperate speech, we arrived at a copiousness of ornament. The
+whole question, of the rights of the people was contained in the
+cause of Rabinius; and accordingly we indulged in every conceivable
+amplification. But these styles require at times to be regulated and
+restrained. What kind of argument is there which is not found in my
+five books of impeachment of Verres? or in my speech for Avitus? or in
+that for Cornelius? or in the other numerous speeches in defence of
+different men? I would give instances, if I did not believe them to
+be well known, and that those who wanted them could select them for
+themselves; for there is no effort of an orator of any kind, of which
+there is not in our speeches, if not a perfect example, at least some
+attempt at and sketch of. If we cannot arrive at perfection, at all
+events we see what is becoming.
+
+Nor are we at present speaking of ourselves, but of eloquence, in
+which we are so far from having a high opinion of our own proficiency,
+that we are so hard to please and exacting, that even Demosthenes
+himself does not satisfy us. For he, although he is eminent above all
+men in every description of oratory, still he does not always satisfy
+my ears; so greedy and capacious are they, and so unceasingly desiring
+something vast and infinite.
+
+XXX. But still, since you became thoroughly well acquainted with this
+orator, in company with his devoted admirer Pammenes, when you were
+at Athens, and as you never put him down out of your hands, though,
+nevertheless, you are often reading my works, you see forsooth that he
+accomplishes many things, and that we attempt many things;--that he
+has the power, we the will to speak in whatever manner the cause
+requires. But he was a great man, for he came after great men, and he
+had consummate orators for his contemporaries. We should have done a
+great deal if we had been able to arrive at the goal which we proposed
+to ourselves in a city in which, as Antonius says, no eloquent man had
+been ever heard before. But, if Crassus did not appear to Antonius to
+be eloquent, or if he did not think he was so himself, certainly Cotta
+would never have seemed so to him, nor Sulpicius, nor Hortensius.
+For Cotta never said anything sublime, Sulpicius never said anything
+gently, Hortensius seldom spoke with dignity. Those former men were
+much more suited to every style; I mean Crassus and Antonius. We feel,
+therefore, that the ears of the city were not much accustomed to this
+varied kind of eloquence, and to an oratory so equally divided
+among all sorts of styles. And we, such as we were, and however
+insignificant were our attempts, were the first people to turn the
+exceeding fondness of the people for listening to this kind of
+eloquence.
+
+What an outcry was there when, as quite a young man I uttered that
+sentence about the punishment of parricides! and even a long time
+afterwards we found that it had scarcely entirely worn off. "For what
+is so common, as breath to living people, the earth to the dead, the
+sea to people tossed about by the waves, or the shore to shipwrecked
+mariners?--they live while they are let live, in such a way as to be
+unable to breathe the air of heaven; they die so that their bones do
+not touch the earth; they are tossed about by the waves without ever
+being washed by them; and at last they are cast up by them in such a
+manner, that when dead they are not allowed a resting-place even on
+the rocks." And so on. For all this is the language of a young man,
+extolled not on account of any real merit or maturity of judgment, as
+for the hopes and expectations which he gave grounds for. From the
+same turn of mind came that more polished invective,--"the wife of
+her son-in-law; the mother-in-law of her son, the invader of her
+daughter's bed." Not, however, that this ardour was always visible
+in us, so as to make us say everything in this manner. For that very
+juvenile exuberance of speech in defence of Roscius has many weak
+passages in it, and some merry ones, such as also occur in the speech
+for Avitus, for Cornelius, and many others. For no orator has ever,
+even in the Greek language, written as many speeches as I have. And my
+speeches have the variety which I so much approve of.
+
+XXXI. Should I permit Homer, and Ennius, and the rest of the poets,
+and especially the tragic poets, to forbear displaying the same
+vehemence on every occasion, and constantly to change their language,
+and sometimes even to come near to the ordinary language of daily
+conversation; and never myself descend from that fierce style of
+vehement expression? But why do I cite poets of godlike genius? We
+have seen actors, than whom nothing could be more admirable of their
+kind, who have not only given great satisfaction in the representation
+of the most different characters, and also in their own, but we have
+seen even a comedian gain great applause in tragedies, and a tragedian
+in comedies;--and shall not I attempt the same thing? When I say I, O
+Brutus, I mean you also; for, as for myself, all that can be done has
+been done. But will you plead every cause in the same manner, or are
+there some kind of causes which you will reject? or will you employ
+the same uninterrupted vehemence in the same causes without any
+alteration?
+
+Demosthenes, indeed, whose bust of brass I lately saw between the
+images of yourself and your ancestors, (a proof, I suppose, of your
+fondness for him,) when I was with you at your Tusculan villa, does
+not yield at all to Lysias in acuteness, nor in shrewdness and
+cleverness to Hyperides, nor in gentleness or brilliancy of language
+to Aeschines. Many of his orations are very closely argued, as
+that against Leptines; many are wholly dignified, as some of the
+Philippics; many are of varied style, as those against Aeschines,
+the one about the false embassy, and the one also, against the same
+Aeschines in the cause of Ctesiphon. As often as he pleases he adopts
+the middle style, and, departing from his dignified tone, he indulges
+in that lower one. But when he raises the greatest outcry on the part
+of his hearers, and makes the greatest impression by his speech, is
+when he employs the topics of dignity.
+
+However, let us leave Demosthenes for awhile, since it is a class that
+we are inquiring about, and not an individual. Let us rather explain
+the effect and nature of the thing; that is, of Eloquence. And let
+us recollect what we have just said, that we are not going to say
+anything for the sake of giving rules; but that we are going to speak
+so as to be thought people expressing an opinion rather than teaching.
+Though we often do advance further, because we see that you are not
+the only person who will read this; you who, in fact, know all this
+much better than we ourselves who appear to be teaching you; but it is
+quite certain that this book will be extensively known, if not from
+the recommendation which its being my work will give it, at all
+events, because of its appearing under the sanction of your name, by
+being dedicated to you.
+
+
+XXXII. I think, then, that it belongs to a perfectly eloquent man, not
+only to have the ability, which is his peculiar province, of speaking
+copiously and with the assertion of large principles, but also to
+possess its neighbouring and contiguous science of dialectics:
+although an oration appears one thing and a discussion another; nor is
+talking the same thing as speaking; though each belongs to discussing.
+Let then the system of discussing and talking belong to the logicians;
+but let the province of the orators be to speak and to embellish their
+speeches. Zeno, that great man, who founded the school of the Stoics,
+was in the habit of showing with his hand what was the difference
+between these arts; for when he had compressed his fingers and made a
+fist, he said that dialectics were like that; but when he had opened
+his fingers and expanded his hand, he said that eloquence was like
+his open palm. And even before him Aristotle, in the beginning of
+his Rhetoric, said, that the art of eloquence in one portion of it
+corresponded to dialectics; so that they differ from one another in
+this, that the system of speaking is more wide, that of talking more
+contracted. I wish, then, that this consummate orator should be
+acquainted with the entire system of talking, as far as it can be
+applied to speaking; and that (as indeed you, who have a thorough
+acquaintance with these arts, are well aware) has a twofold method of
+teaching. For Aristotle himself has given many rules for arguing:
+and those who followed him, and who are called dialecticians, have
+delivered many very difficult rules. Therefore I think, that the man
+who is tempted by the glory of eloquence, is not utterly ignorant
+of those things; but that he has been brought up either in that old
+school, or in the school of Chrysippus. Let him first acquaint himself
+with the meaning and nature and classes of words, both single and
+combined; then let him learn in how many ways each word is used; then
+how it is decided, whether a thing is false or true; then what
+results from each proposition; then to what argument each result is
+a consequence, and to what it is contrary; and, as many things are
+stated in an ambiguous manner, he must also learn how each of them
+ought to be distinguished and explained. This is what must be acquired
+by an orator; for those things are constantly occurring; but, because
+they are in their own nature less attractive, it is desirable to
+employ some brilliancy of eloquence in explaining them.
+
+XXXIII. And since in all things which are taught in any regular method
+and system, it is first of all necessary to settle what each thing is,
+(unless it is agreed by those who are discussing the point, what the
+thing really is which is being discussed; nor otherwise is it possible
+to discuss anything properly, or ever to get to the end of the
+discussion,) we must often have recourse to words to explain our
+meaning about each thing; and we must facilitate the understanding of
+an involved and obscure matter by definition; since definition is a
+kind of speech which points out in the most concise possible manner
+what that is which is the subject of discussion. Then, as you know,
+when the genus of each thing has been explained, we must consider what
+are the figures or divisions of that genus, so that our whole speech
+may be arranged with reference to them.
+
+This faculty, then, will exist in the eloquent man whom we are
+endeavouring to describe, so that he shall be able to define a thing;
+and shall do it in the same close and narrow terms which are commonly
+employed in those very learned discussions; but he shall be more
+explanatory and more copious, and he shall adopt his definition more
+to the ordinary judgment and usual intelligence of mankind. And again,
+when circumstances require it, he shall divide and arrange the whole
+genus into certain species, so that none shall be omitted and none
+be superfluous. But when he shall do this, or how, is nothing to
+the present question; since, as I have said before, I am here only
+expressing an opinion, not giving a lesson.
+
+Nor, indeed, must he be learned only in dialectics, but he must have
+all the topics of philosophy familiar to him and at his fingers' ends.
+For nothing respecting religion, or death, or affection, or love for
+one's country, or good fortune, or bad fortune, or virtues, or vices,
+or duty, or pain, or pleasure, or the different motions of the mind,
+or mistakes, all which topics frequently occur in causes, but are
+treated usually in a very meagre manner, can be discussed and
+explained in a dignified and lofty and copious manner without that
+knowledge which I have mentioned.
+
+XXXIV. I am speaking at present concerning the subject matter of a
+speech, not about the kind of speaking requisite. For I would rather
+that an orator should first have a subject to speak of worthy of
+learned ears, before he considers in what words or in what manner he
+is to speak of everything; and, in order to make him grander, and in
+some sense loftier (as I have said above about Pericles,) I should
+wish him not to be utterly ignorant of physical science; and then,
+when he descends again from heavenly matters to human affairs, he will
+have all his words and sentiments of a more sublime and magnificent
+character: and while he is acquainted with those divine laws, I do not
+wish him to be ignorant of those of men. He must be a master of civil
+law, which forensic debates are in daily need of. For what is more
+shameful than for a man to undertake the conduct of legal and civil
+disputes, while ignorant of the statutes and of civil law? He must be
+acquainted also with the history of past ages and the chronology of
+old time, especially, indeed, as far as our own state is concerned;
+but also he must know the history of despotic governments and of
+illustrious monarchs; and that toil is made easier for us by the
+labours of our friend Atticus, who has preserved and made known the
+history of former times in such a way as to pass over nothing worth
+knowing, and yet to comprise the annals of seven hundred years in one
+book. For not to know what happened before one was born, is to be
+a boy all one's life. For what is the life of a man unless by a
+recollection of bygone transactions it is united to the times of
+his predecessors? But the mention of antiquity and the citation of
+examples give authority and credit to a speech, combined with the
+greatest pleasure to the hearers.
+
+XXXV. Let him, therefore, come to his causes prepared in this kind of
+way; and he will in the first place be acquainted with the different
+kinds of causes. For he will be thoroughly aware that nothing can be
+doubted except when either the fact or the language gives rise
+to controversy. But the fact is doubted as to its truth, or its
+propriety, or its name. Words give rise to dispute if they are
+ambiguous or inconsistent. For it ever appears to be the case, that
+one thing is meant and another expressed; then that is one kind of
+ambiguity which arises from the words which are employed; and in this
+we see that two things are meant, which is a property of all ambiguous
+sentences.
+
+As there are not many different kinds of causes, so also the rules for
+arguments to be used in them are few. Two kinds of topics are given
+from which they may be derived; one from the circumstances themselves,
+the others assumed. The handling, then, of the matters themselves
+makes the speech better; for the matters themselves are usually easy
+to be acquainted with. For what remains afterwards, which at least
+belongs to art, except to begin the speech in such a manner that the
+hearer may be conciliated, or have his attention roused, or may be
+made eager to learn? then after that to explain with brevity, and
+probability, and clearness, so that it may be understood what is the
+question under discussion; to establish his own arguments; to overturn
+those of the opposite party; and to do all that, not in an irregular
+and confused manner, but with separate arguments, concluded in such
+a manner, that everything may be established which is a natural
+consequence of those principles which are assumed for the confirmation
+of each point: and after everything else is done, then to wind up with
+a peroration which shall inflame or cool the hearers, as the case may
+require.
+
+Now, how the consummate orator handles each separate division of his
+subject, it is hard to explain in this place; nor, indeed, are they
+handled at all times in the same manner. But since I am not seeking a
+pupil to teach, but a model to approve of, I will begin by praising
+the man who sees what is becoming. For this is above all others the
+wisdom which the eloquent man wants, namely--to be the regulator of
+times and persons. For I do not think that a man ought to speak in the
+same manner at all times, or before all people, or against every one,
+or in defence of every one, or to every one.
+
+XXXVI. He, then, will be an eloquent man who can adapt his speech to
+whatever is becoming. And when he has settled that point, then he
+will say everything as it ought to be said; nor will he speak of rich
+subjects in a meagre manner, nor of great subjects in a petty manner,
+and vice versa; but his oration will be equal to, and corresponding
+to, his subject; his exordium will be moderate, not inflamed with
+exaggerated expressions, but acute in its sentiments, either in the
+way of exciting his hearers against his adversary, or in recommending
+himself to them. His relations of facts will be credible, explained
+clearly, not in historical language, but nearly in the tone of every
+day conversation. Then if his cause is but a slight one, so also
+will the thread of his argument be slight, both in asserting and in
+refuting. And it will be maintained in such a way, that there will be
+just as much force added to the speech as is added to the subject.
+But when a cause offers in which all the force of eloquence can be
+displayed, then the orator will give himself a wider scope, then he
+will influence and sway men's minds, and will move them just as he
+pleases, that is to say, just as the nature of the cause and the
+occasion requires.
+
+But all that admirable embellishment of his will be of a twofold
+character; on account of which it is that eloquence gains such great
+honour. For as every part of a speech ought to be admirable, so that
+no word should be let drop by accident which is not either grave or
+dignified; so also there are two parts of it which are especially
+brilliant and lively: one of which I place in the question of the
+universal genus, which (as I have said before) the Greeks call [Greek
+Thesis]; the other is shown in amplifying and exaggerating matters,
+and is called by the same people [Greek auxaesis]. And although that
+ought to be spread equally over the whole body of the oration, still
+it is most efficacious in dealing with common topics; which are called
+common, because they appear to belong to many causes, but still ought
+to be considered as peculiar to some individual ones.
+
+But that division of a speech which refers to the universal genus
+often contains whole causes; for whatever that is on which there is,
+as it were, a contest and dispute, which in Greek is called [Greek
+krinomenon], that ought to be expressed in such a manner that it may
+be transferred to the general inquiry and be spoken of the whole
+genus; except when a doubt is raised about the truth; which is
+often endeavoured to be ascertained by conjecture. But it shall be
+discussed, not in the fashion of the Peripatetics (for it is a very
+elegant exercise of theirs, to which they are habituated ever since
+the time of Aristotle), but with rather more vigour; and common topics
+will be applied to the subject in such a manner, that many things will
+be said gently in behalf of accused persons, and harshly against the
+adversaries.
+
+But in amplifying matters, and, on the other hand, in discarding them,
+there is nothing which oratory cannot effect. And that must be done
+amid the arguments, as often as any opportunity is afforded one,
+of either amplifying or diminishing: and may be done to an almost
+infinite extent in summing up.
+
+XXXVII. There are two things, which, when well handled by an orator,
+make eloquence admirable. One of which is, that which the Greeks call
+[Greek: haethikon], adapted to men's natures, and manners, and to
+all their habits of life; the other is, that which they call [Greek:
+pathaetikon], by which men's minds are agitated and excited, which
+is the especial province of oratory. The former one is courteous,
+agreeable, suited to conciliate good-will; the latter is violent,
+energetic, impetuous, by which causes are snatched out of the fire,
+and when it is hurried on rapidly it cannot by any means be withstood.
+And by the use of this kind of oratory we, who are but moderate
+orators, or even less than that, but who have at all times displayed
+great energy, have often driven our adversaries from every part of
+their case. That most consummate orator, Hortensius, was unable to
+reply to me, on behalf of one of his intimate friends; that most
+audacious of men, Catiline, was dumb when impeached in the senate by
+me. When Curio, the father, attempted in a private cause of grave
+importance to reply to me, he suddenly sat down, and said, that he was
+deprived of his memory by poison. Why need I speak of the topics used
+to excite pity? which I have employed to the greater extent, because,
+even if there were many of us employed in one cause, still all men at
+all times yielded me the task of summing up; and it was owing not so
+much to my ability as to my sensibility, that I appeared to excel so
+much in that part. And those qualities of mine, of whatever sort they
+are, and I am ashamed that they are not of a higher class, appear in
+my speeches: although my books are without that energy, on account
+of which those same speeches appear more excellent when they are
+delivered than when they are read.
+
+XXXVIII. Nor is it by pity alone that it is desirable to move the
+minds of the judges, (though we have been in the habit of using that
+topic ourselves in so piteous a manner that we have even held an
+infant child by the hand while summing up; and in another cause, when
+a man of noble birth was on his trial, we lifted up his little son,
+and filled the forum with wailing and lamentations;) but we must also
+endeavour to cause the judge to be angry, to appease him to make him
+feel ill-will, and favour, to move him to contempt or admiration, to
+hatred or love, to inspire him with desire or disgust, with hope
+or fear, with joy or pain; in all which variety the speeches of
+prosecutors will supply instances of the sterner kinds, and my
+speeches in defence will furnish examples of the softer ones. For
+there is no means by which the mind of the hearer can be either
+excited or softened, which has not been tried by me; I would say,
+brought to perfection, if I thought it was the case; nor should I fear
+the imputation of arrogance while speaking the truth. But, as I
+have said before, it is not any particular force of genius, but an
+exceeding energy of disposition which inflames me to such a degree
+that I cannot restrain myself; nor would any one who listens to a
+speech ever be inflamed, if the speech which reached his ears was not
+itself a fiery one.
+
+I would use examples from my own works if you had not read them; I
+would use them from the works of others, if I could find any; or
+Greek examples, if it were becoming to do so. But there are very few
+speeches of Crassus extant, and those are not forensic speeches.
+There is nothing extant of Antonius's, nothing of Cotta's, nothing of
+Sulpicius's. Hortensius spoke better than he wrote. But we must form
+our own opinions as to the value of this energy which we are looking
+for, since we have no instance to produce; or if we are still on the
+look out for examples, we must take them from Demosthenes, and we must
+cite them from that passage in the speech on the trial of Ctesiphon,
+where he ventures to speak of his own actions and counsels and
+services to the republic. That oration in truth corresponds so much
+to that idea which is implanted in our minds that no higher eloquence
+need be looked for.
+
+XXXIX. But now there remains to be considered the form and character
+of the eloquence which we are searching for; and what it ought to be
+like may be understood from what has been said above. For we have
+touched upon the lights of words both single and combined, in which
+the orator will abound so much that no expression which is not either
+dignified or elegant will ever fall from his mouth. And there will be
+frequent metaphors of every sort; because they, on account of their
+resemblance to something else, move the minds of the hearers, and turn
+them this way and that way; and the very agitation of thought when
+operating in quick succession is a pleasure of itself.
+
+And those other lights, if I may so call them, which are derived from
+the arrangement of words, are a great ornament to a speech. For they
+are like those things which are called decorations in the splendid
+ornamenting of a theatre or a forum; not because they are the only
+ornaments, but because they are the most excellent ones. The principle
+is the same in the case of these things which are the lights, and as
+one may say, the decorations of oratory: when words are repeated and
+reiterated, or are put down with slight alterations; or when the
+sentences are often commenced with the same word, or end with the same
+word; or both begin and end alike; or when the same word occurs in the
+same place in consecutive sentences; or when one word is repeated in
+different senses; or when sentences end with similar sounds; or when
+contrary circumstances are related in many contrary manners; or when
+the speech proceeds by gradations; or when the conjunctions are taken
+away and each member of the sentence is uttered unconnectedly; or when
+we pass over some points and explain why we do so; or when we of our
+own accord correct ourselves, as if we blamed ourselves; or if we use
+any exclamation of admiration, or complaint; or when the same noun is
+often repeated in different cases.
+
+But the ornaments of sentiments are more important; and because
+Demosthenes employs them very frequently, some people think that that
+is the principal thing which makes his eloquence so admirable. And
+indeed there is hardly any topic treated by him without a careful
+arrangement of his sentences; nor indeed is speaking anything else
+except illuminating all, or at least nearly all, one's sentences with
+a kind of brilliancy: and as you are thoroughly aware of all this,
+O Brutus, why need I quote names or instances. I only let the place
+where they occur be noted.
+
+XL. If then that consummate orator whom we are looking for, should say
+that he often treats one and the same thing in many different manners;
+and dwells a long time on the same idea; and that he often extenuates
+some point, and often turns something into ridicule; that he
+occasionally appears to change his intention and vary his sentiments;
+that he proposes beforehand the points which he wishes to prove; that
+when he has completed his argument on any subject he terminates it;
+that he often recals himself back, and repeats what he has already
+said; that he winds up his arguments with fresh reasons; that he beats
+down the adversary with questions; again, that he himself answers
+questions which as it were he himself has put; that he sometimes
+wishes to be understood as meaning something different from what he
+says; that he often doubts what he had best say, or how he had best
+say it; that he arranges what he has to say under different heads;
+that he leaves out or neglects some points; while there are some
+which he fortifies beforehand; that he often throws the blame on his
+adversary for the very thing for which he himself is found fault with;
+that he often appears to enter into deliberation with his hearers, and
+sometimes even with his adversary; that he describes the conversation
+and actions of men; that he introduces some dumb things, as speaking;
+that he diverts men's minds from the subject under discussion; that he
+often turns the discussion into mirth and laughter; that he sometimes
+preoccupies ground which he sees is attached; that he adduces
+comparisons; that he cites precedents; that he attributes one thing
+to one person and another to another; that he checks any one who
+interrupts him; that he says that he is keeping back something; that
+he adds threatening warnings of what his hearers must beware of; that
+he often takes a bolder licence; that he is sometimes even angry; that
+he sometimes utters reproaches, deprecates calamity, uses the language
+of supplication, and does away with unfavourable impressions; that he
+sometimes departs a very little from his subject, to express wishes or
+to utter execrations, or to make himself a friend of those men before
+whom he is speaking.
+
+He ought also to aim at other virtues, if I may so call them, in
+speaking; at brevity, if the subject requires it. He will often, also,
+by his speech, bring the matter before people's eyes; and often extol
+it beyond what appears possible; his meaning will be often more
+comprehensive than his speech; he will often assume a cheerful
+language, and often give an imitation of life and nature.
+
+XLI. In this kind of speaking, for you may look upon oratory as a vast
+wood, all the importance of eloquence ought to shine forth. But these
+qualities, unless they are well arranged and as it were built up
+together and connected by suitable language, can never attain that
+praise which we wish that it should.
+
+And as I was aware that it would be necessary for me to speak on this
+point next, although I was influenced by the considerations which
+I had mentioned before, still I was more disturbed by those which
+follow. For it occurred to me, that it was possible that men should be
+found, I do not mean envious men, with whom all places are full, but
+even favourers of my glory, who did not think that it became a man
+with reference to whose services the senate had passed such favourable
+votes with the approbation of the whole Roman people, as they never
+did in the case of any one else, to write so many books about the
+method of speaking. And if I were to give them no other answer than
+that I was unwilling to refuse the request of Marcus Brutus, it would
+be a reasonable excuse, as T might well wish to satisfy a man who was
+my greatest friend and a most excellent man, and who only asked what
+was right and honourable. But if I were to profess (what I wish that I
+could) that I was about to give rules, and paths, as it were, to lead
+to eloquence those who are inclined to study oratory, what man who set
+a proper value on things would find fault with me? For who has ever
+doubted that eloquence has at all times been of the very highest
+estimation in our republic, among all the accomplishments of peace,
+and of our domestic life in the city; and that next to it is the
+knowledge of the law? and that the one had in it the greatest amount
+of influence, and credit, and protection; and the other contains rules
+for prosecutions and defence; and this latter would often of its own
+accord beg for assistance from eloquence; but if it were refused,
+would scarcely be able to maintain its own rights and territories.
+
+Why then has it been at all times an honourable thing to teach civil
+law, and why have the houses of the most eminent professors of this
+science been at all times crowded with pupils? And yet if any one
+attempts to excite people to the study of oratory, or to assist the
+youth of the city in that pursuit, should he be blamed? For, if it be
+a vicious thing to speak in an elegant manner, then let eloquence be
+expelled altogether from the state. But if it not only is an ornament
+to those who possess it, but the whole republic also, then why is it
+discreditable to learn what it is honourable to know; of, why should
+it be anything but glorious to teach what it is most excellent to be
+acquainted with?
+
+XLII. But the one is a, common study, and the other a novel one. I
+admit that; but there is a reason for both these facts. For it was
+sufficient to listen to the lawyers giving their answers, so that
+they who acted as instructors set aside no particular time for that
+purpose, but were at one and the same time satisfying the wants both
+of their pupils and their clients. But the other men, as they devoted
+all their time, when at home, to acquiring a correct understanding of
+the causes entrusted to them, and arranging the arguments which they
+were to employ; all their time when in the forum to pleading the
+cause, and all the rest of their time in recruiting their own
+strength; what time had they for giving rules or lessons? and I do not
+know whether most of our orators have not excelled more in genius than
+in learning; therefore, they have been able to speak better than they
+could teach, while our ability is perhaps just the contrary.
+
+But there is no dignity in teaching.--Certainly not, if it is done as
+if one kept a school; but if a man teaches by warning, by exhorting,
+by asking questions, by giving information, sometimes by reading with
+his pupils and hearing them read, then I do not know, if by teaching
+anything you can sometimes make men better, why you should be
+unwilling to do it. Is it honourable to teach a man what are the
+proper words to alienate consecrated property with, and not honourable
+to teach him those by which consecrated property may be maintained and
+defended?
+
+"But," men say, "many people profess law who know nothing about it;
+but even the very men who have acquired eloquence conceal their
+attainment of it, because wisdom is a thing agreeable to men, but
+eloquence is suspected by them." Is it possible then for eloquence to
+escape notice, or does that which a man conceals cease to exist? Or is
+there any danger of any one thinking with respect to an important and
+glorious art that it is a discreditable thing to teach others that
+which it was very honourable to himself to learn? But perhaps others
+may be better hands at concealment; I have always openly avowed that I
+have learnt the art. For what could I have done, having left my home
+when very young, and crossed the sea for the sake of those studies;
+and having had my house full of the most learned men, and when there
+were perhaps some indications of learning in my conversation; and when
+my writings were a good deal read; could I then have concealed the
+fact of my having learnt it? How could I justify myself except by
+showing that I had made some progress in those studies?
+
+XLIII. And as this is the case still, the things which have been
+already mentioned, have had more dignity in the discussion of them
+than those which have got to be discussed. For we are now to speak
+about the arrangement of words, and almost about the counting and
+measuring of syllables. And, although these things are, as it appears
+to me, necessary, yet there is more show in the execution than in
+the teaching of them. Now that is true of everything, but it has a
+peculiar force with respect to this pursuit. For in the case of all
+great arts, as in that of trees, it is the height which delights us,
+but we take no pleasure in the roots or trunks; though the one cannot
+exist without the other. But as for me, whether it is that that
+well-known verse which forbids a man
+
+"To fear to own the art he practises,"
+
+does not allow me to conceal that I take delight in it; or whether it
+is your eagerness which has extorted this volume from me; still it was
+worth while to make a reply to those whom I suspected of being likely
+to find fault with me.
+
+But if the circumstances which I have mentioned had no existence,
+still who would be so harsh and uncivilised as not to grant me this
+indulgence, so that, when my forensic labours and my public exertions
+were interrupted, I might devote my time to literature rather than to
+inactivity of which I am incapable, or to melancholy which I resist?
+For it was a love of letters which formerly led me into the courts of
+justice and the senate-house, and which now delights me when I am at
+home. Nor am I occupied only with such subjects as are contained in
+this book, but with much more weighty and important, ones; and if
+they are brought to perfection, then my private literary labours will
+correspond to my forensic exertions. However, at present let us return
+to the discussion we had commenced.
+
+XLIV. Our words then must be arranged either so that the last may as
+correctly as possible be consistent with the first, and also so that
+our first expressions may be as agreeable as possible; or so that the
+very form of our sentences and their neatness may be well rounded off;
+or so that the whole period may end in a musical and suitable manner.
+And, in the first place, let us consider what kind of thing that is
+which above all things requires our diligence, so that a regular
+structure as it were may be raised, and yet that this may be effected
+without any labour. For the labour would be not only infinite, but
+childish. As in Lucilius, Scaevola is represented as attacking Albucius
+very sensibly:
+
+
+ "How neatly all your phrases are arranged;
+ Like tesselated pavement, or a box
+ Inlaid with deftly wrought mosaic."
+
+
+The care taken in the construction must not be too visible. But still
+a practised pen will easily perfect this manner of arranging its
+phrases. For as the eye does in reading, so in speaking, the eye will
+see beforehand what follows, so that the combination of the last words
+of a sentence with the first may not leave the whole sentence either
+gaping or harsh. For sentiments ever so agreeable or dignified offend
+the ears if they are set down in ill-arranged sentences; for the
+judgment of the ears is very fastidious. And the Latin language is so
+particular on this point, that no one can be so ignorant as to leave
+quantities of open vowels. Though this is a point on which men blame
+Theopompus, because he was so ostentatious in his avoidance of such
+letters, although his master Isocrates did the same; but Thucydides
+did not; nor did that other far superior writer, Plato. And he did
+this not only in those conversations which are called Dialogues, when
+it ought to have been done designedly; but even in that oration[61]
+addressed to the people, in which it is customary at Athens for those
+men to be extolled who have been slain in fighting for their country.
+And that oration was so greatly approved of that it was, as you know,
+appointed to be recited every year; and in that there is a constant
+succession of open vowels, which Demosthenes avoided in a great degree
+as vicious.
+
+XLV. However, the Greeks must judge of that matter for themselves. We
+are not allowed to use our words in that manner, not even if we wish
+to; and this is shown even by those unpolished speeches of Cato. It is
+shown by all the poets except those who sometimes had recourse to a
+hiatus in order to finish their verse; as Naevius--
+
+"Vos, qui accolitis Istrum fluvium, atque Algidam."
+
+And again--
+
+"Quam nunquam vobis Graii atque Barbari."
+
+But Ennius does so only once--
+
+"Scipio invicte."
+
+And we too have written,--
+
+"Hinc motu radiantis Etesiae in vada ponti."
+
+For our countrymen would not have endured the frequent use of such a
+liberty, though the Greeks even praise it. But why should I talk about
+vowels? even without counting vowels, they often used contractions for
+the sake of brevity, so as to say--
+
+
+ Multi' modis for imdtis modis.
+ Vas' argenteis for vasis argenteis.
+ Palmi et crinibus for palmis et crinibus.
+ Tecti' fractis for tectis fractis.
+
+
+And what would be a greater liberty than to contract even men's names,
+so as to make them more suitable to verse? For as they contracted
+_duellum_ into _bellum_, and _duis_ into _bis_, so they called
+_Duellius_ (the man I mean who defeated the Carthaginians in a naval
+action) _Bellius_, though his ancestors were always called _Duellii_.
+Moreover, they often contract words, not in obedience to any
+particular usage, but only to please the ear. For how was it that
+Axilla was made Ala, except by the flight of the larger letter? and so
+the elegant usage of Latin conversation takes this letter _x_ out of
+_maxilla_, and _taxilla_, and _vexillum_, and _paxillum_.
+
+They also joined words by uniting them at their pleasure; so as to
+say--_sodes_ for _si audes_, _sis_ for _si vis_. And in this word
+_capsis_ there are no less than three[62] words. So _ain_ for _aisne,
+nequire_ for _non quire, malle_ for _magis velle, nolle_ for _son
+velle_. And again, we often say _dein_ for _deinde_, and _exin_ for
+_exinde_. Well, need I give any more instances? Cannot we see easily
+from whence it arises that we say _cum illis_, but we do not say _cum
+nobis_, but _nobiscum_? because if it were said in the other way, the
+letters would clash in a discordant manner; as they would have clashed
+a minute ago if I had not put _autem_ between them. This is the origin
+of our saying _mecum_ and _tecum_, not _cum me_, and _cum te_, so that
+they too might be like _nobiscum_ and _vobiscum_.
+
+XLVI. And some men find fault with all this; men who are rather late
+in mending antiquity; for they wish us, instead of saying _Deum atque
+hominum fidem_, to say _Deorum_. Very likely it may be right, but were
+our ancestors ignorant of all this, or was it usage that gave them
+this liberty? Therefore the same poet who had used these uncommon
+contractions--
+
+"Patris mei mecum factum pudet," for meorum factorum,
+
+and,
+
+"Texitur: exitium examen rapit," for exitiorum,
+
+does not say "_liberum_" as many of us do say in such an expression as
+_cupidos liberum_, or in _liberum loco_, but, as these men approve,
+
+"Neque tuum unquam in gremium extollas liberorum ex te genus."
+
+And again he says,--
+
+"Namque aesculapi liberorum...."
+
+And another of these poets says in his Chryses, not only
+
+"Cives, antiqui amici majorum meum,"
+
+which was common enough; but he says, with a much more unmusical
+sound,--
+
+"Consilium, augurium, atque extum interpretes."
+
+And again he goes on--
+
+"Postquam prodigium horriferum, putentfum pavos,"
+
+which are not at all usual contractions in a string of words which are
+all neuter. Nor should I much like to say _armum judicium_, though the
+expression occurs in that same poet,--
+
+"Nihilne ad te de judicio armum accidit?"
+
+instead of _armorum_. But I do venture (following the language of the
+censor's returns) to say _jabrum_ and _procum_, instead of _fabrorum_
+and _procorum_. And I actually never by any chance say _duorum virorum
+judicium_, or _triumvirorum capitalium_, or _decemvirorum litibus
+judicandis_.
+
+And Attius said--
+
+"Video sepulchra dua duorum corporam."
+
+And at another time he has said,--
+
+"Mulier una duum virum."
+
+I know which is proper; but sometimes I speak according to the licence
+of the present fashion, so far as to say _Proh Deum_, or _Proh
+Deorum_; and at other times I speak as I am forced to, when I say
+_trium virum_, not _virorum_, and _sestertium nummum_, not _nummorum_;
+because with respect to these words there is no variety of usage.
+
+XLVII. What am I to say is the reason why they forbid us to say
+_nosse, judicasse_, and enjoin us to use _novisse_ and _judicavisse_?
+as if we did not know that in words of this kind it is quite correct
+to use the word at full length, and quite in accordance with usage to
+use it in its contracted form. And so Terence does use both forms, and
+says,--
+
+"Eho, tu cognatum tuum non noras?"
+
+And afterwards he has,--
+
+"Stilphonem, inquam, noveras?"
+
+_Siet_ is the word at full length; _sit_ is the contracted form. One
+may use either; and so we find in the same passage,--
+
+
+ "Quam cara sint, quae post carendo intelligunt,
+ Quamque attinendi magni dominatus sient."
+
+
+Nor should I find fault with
+
+"Scripsere alii rem."
+
+I am aware that _scripserunt_ is the more correct form; but I
+willingly comply with a fashion which is agreeable to the ears.
+
+"Idem campus habet,"
+
+says Eunius; and in another place he has given us,--
+
+"In templis isdem;"
+
+but _eisdem_ would be more regular; but yet it would not have been
+so musical: and _iisdem_ would have sounded ill. But custom has
+sanctioned our departing from strict rules for the sake of
+euphony; and I should prefer saying _pomeridianas quadrigas_ to
+_postmeridianas_, and _mehercule_ to _mehercules. Non scire_ already
+appears a barbarism; _nescire_ is sweeter. The word _meridiem_ itself,
+why is it not _medidiem_?
+
+I suppose because it sounded worse. There is one preposition, _abs_,
+which has now only an existence in account books; but in all other
+conversation of every sort is changed: for we say _amovit_, and
+_abegit_, and _abstulit_, so that you cannot now tell whether _ab_ is
+the correct form or _abs_. What shall we say if even _abfugit_ has
+seemed inadmissible, and if men have discarded _abfer_ and preferred
+_aufer_? and that preposition is found in no word whatever except
+these two verbs. There were the words _noti_, and _navi_, and _nari_,
+and when _in_ was forced to be prefixed to them, it seemed more
+musical to say _ignoti, ignavi, ignari_, than to adhere to the strict
+rules. Men say _ex usu_ and _republica_, because in the one phrase a
+vowel followed the preposition, and in the other there would have been
+great harshness if you had not removed the consonant, as in _exegit,
+edixit, effecit, extulit, edidit_. And sometimes the preposition has
+sustained an alteration, regulated by the first letter of the verb to
+which it is added, as _suffugit, summutavit, sustulit_.
+
+XLVIII. What are we to say of compound words? How neat is it to
+say _insipientem_, not _insapientem_; _iniquum_, not _incequum_;
+_tricipitem_, not _tricapitem_; _concisum_, not concoesum! and,
+because of this last instance, some people wish also to say
+_pertisum_; but the same fashion which regulates the other changes,
+has not sanctioned this one. But what can be more elegant than this,
+which is not caused by nature, but by some regular usage?--we say
+_inclytus_, with the first letter short; _insanus_, with the first
+letter long; _inkumanus_, with a short letter; _infelix_, with a long
+one: and, not to detain you with many examples, in those words in
+which the first letters are those which occur in _sapiente_ and
+_felice_, it is used long; in all others it is short. And so, too, we
+have _composuit, consuevit, concrvpuit, confecit_. Consult the truth,
+it will reprove you; refer the matter to your ears, they will sanction
+the usage. Why so? Because they will say that that sound is the most
+agreeable one to them; and an oration ought to consult that which
+gives pleasure to the ears. Moreover, I myself, as I knew that our
+ancestors spoke so as never to use an aspirate except before a vowel,
+used to speak in this way: _pulcros, Cetegos, triumpos, Cartaginem_;
+when at last, and after a long time, the truth was forced upon me by
+the admonition of my own ears, I yielded to the people the right of
+settling the rule of speaking; and was contented to reserve to myself
+the knowledge of the proper rules and reasons for them. Still we say
+_Orcivii_, and _Matones_ and _Otones, Coepiones, sepulchra, coronas,
+lacrymas_, because that pronunciation is always sanctioned by the
+judgment of our ears.
+
+Ennius always used _Burrum_, never _Pyrrhum_: he says,--
+
+"Vi patefecerunt Bruges;"
+
+not _Phryges_; and so the old copies of his poems prove, for they had
+no Greek letters in them. But now those words have two; and though
+when they wanted to say _Phrygum_ and _Phrygibus_, it was absurd
+either to use a Greek character in the barbarous cases only, or else
+in the nominative case alone to speak Greek, still we say _Phrygum_
+and _Phrygibus_ for the sake of harmonizing our ears. Moreover (at
+present it would seem like the language of a ploughman, though
+formerly it was a mark of politeness) our ancestors took away the last
+letter of those words in which the two last letters were the same, as
+they are in _optumus_, unless the next word began with a vowel. And
+so they avoided offending the ear in their verse; as the modern poets
+avoid it now in a different manner. For we used to say,--
+
+"Qui est omnibu' princeps," not "omnibus princeps;"
+
+and--
+
+"Vita illa, dignu' locoquc," not "dignus."
+
+But if unlettered custom is such an artist of euphony, what must we
+think is required by scientific art and systematic learning?
+
+I have put all this more briefly than if I were discussing this matter
+by itself; (for this topic is a very extensive one, concerning the use
+and nature of words;) but still I have been more prolix than the plan
+I originally proposed to myself required.
+
+XLIX. But because the choice of subjects and words is in the
+department of prudence, but of sounds and rhythm it is the ears that
+are the judges; because the one is referable to one's understanding,
+the other only to one's pleasure; therefore in the one case it is
+reason and in the other sensation that has been the inventor of the
+system. For it was necessary for us either to disregard the pleasure
+of those men by whom we wished to be approved of; or else it was
+necessary to discover a system by which to gain their good-will.
+
+There are then two things which soothe the ears; _sound_ and _rhythm_.
+Concerning rhythm we will speak presently; at this moment we are
+inquiring into sound. As I said before, words must be selected which
+as much as possible shall sound well; but they must not be, like the
+words of a poet, sought purely for sound, but taken from ordinary
+language.
+
+"Qua ponto a Helles"
+
+is an extravagant expression; but
+
+"Auratua aries Colehorum"
+
+is a verse illuminated with splendid names. But the next verse is
+polluted by ending with a most inharmonious letter;
+
+"Frugifera et ferta arva Asiae tenet."
+
+Let us therefore use the propriety of words of our own language,
+rather than the brilliancy of the Greeks; unless perchance we are
+ashamed of speaking in such a way as this--
+
+"Qua tempestate Paris Helenam,"
+
+and the rest of that sentence. Let us, I say, pursue that plan and
+avoid harshness of sound.
+
+
+ "Habeo istam ego perterricrepam....
+ Versutiloquas malitias."
+
+
+Nor is it enough to have one's words arranged in a regular system, but
+the terminations of the sentences must be carefully studied, since we
+have said that that is a second sort of judgment of the ears. But the
+harmonious end of a sentence depends on the arrangement itself, which
+is so of its own accord, if I may so express myself, or on some
+particular class of words in which there is a certain neatness; and
+whether such words have cases the terminations of which are similar,
+or whether one word is matched with another which resembles it, or
+whether contrary words are opposed to one another, they are harmonious
+of their own nature, even if nothing has been done on purpose. In the
+pursuit of this sort of neatness Gorgias is reported to have been the
+leader; and of this style there is an example in our speech in defence
+of Milo: "For this law, O judges, is not a written one, but a natural
+one, one which we have not learnt, or received from others, or
+gathered from books; but which we have extracted, and pressed out,
+and imbibed from nature itself; it is one in which we have not been
+educated, but born; we have not been brought up in it, but imbued with
+it. For these sentences are such that, because they are referred to
+the principles to which they ought to be referred, we see plainly that
+harmony was not the thing that was sought in them, but that which
+followed of its own accord. And this is also the case when contraries
+are opposed to one another; as those phrases are by which not only a
+harmonious sentence, but even a verse is made.
+
+"Eam, quam nihil accusas, damnas."
+
+A man would say _condemnas_ if he wished to avoid making a verse.
+
+
+ "Bene quam meritam esse autumas, dicis male mereri.
+ Id, quod scis, prodest nihil; id, quod nescis, obest."
+
+
+The very relation of the contrary effects makes a verse that would be
+harmonious in a narration.
+
+"Quod scis, nihil prodest; quod nescis, multum obest."
+
+These things, which the Greeks call [Greek: antitheta], as in them
+contraries are opposed to contraries, of sheer necessity produce
+oratorical rhythm; and that too without any intention on the part of
+the orator that they should do so.
+
+This was a kind of speaking in which the ancients used to take
+delight, even before the time of Isocrates; and especially Gorgias;
+in whose orations his very neatness generally produces an harmonious
+rhythm. We too frequently employ this style; as in the fourth book of
+our impeachment of Verres:--"Compare this peace with that war; the
+arrival of this praetor with the victory of that general; the debauched
+retinue of this man, with the unconquerable army of the other; the
+lust of this man with the continence of that one; and you will say
+that Syracuse was founded by the man who in reality took it; and was
+stormed by this one, who in reality received it in an admirable and
+settled condition."
+
+This sort of rhythm then must be well understood.
+
+L. We must now explain that third kind of an harmonious and
+well-arranged speech, and say of what character it is; and what sort
+of ears those people have who do not understand its character, or
+indeed what there is in them that is like men at all, I do not know.
+My ears delight in a well-turned and properly finished period of
+words, and they like conciseness, and disapprove of redundancy. Why
+do I say my ears? I have often seen a whole assembly raise a shout of
+approval at hearing a musical sentence. For men's ears expect that
+sentences shall be strung together of well-arranged words. This was
+not the case in the time of the ancients. And indeed it was nearly the
+only thing in which they were deficient: for they selected their words
+carefully, and they gave utterance to dignified and sweet sounding
+ideas; but they paid little attention to arranging them or filling
+them up. "This is what delights me," one of them would say. What are
+we to say if an old primitive picture of few colours delights some men
+more than this highly finished one? Why, I suppose, the style which
+succeeds must be studied again; and this latter style repudiated.
+
+People boast of the names of the ancients. But antiquity carries
+authority with it in precedents, as old age does in the lives of
+individuals; and it has indeed very great weight with me myself. Nor
+am I more inclined to demand from antiquity that which it has not,
+than to praise that which it has; especially as I consider what it has
+as of more importance than what it has not. For there is more good in
+well chosen words and ideas in which they excel, than in the rounding
+off of phrases in which they fail. It is after their time that the
+working up of the termination of a sentence has been introduced; which
+I think that those ancients would have employed, if it had been known
+and employed in their day; as since it has been introduced we see that
+all great orators have employed it.
+
+LI. But it looks like envy when what we call "number," and the Greeks
+[Greek: ruthmos] is said to be employed in judicial and forensic
+oratory. For it appears like laying too many plots for the charming
+of people's ears if rhythm is also aimed at by the orator in his
+speeches. And relying on this argument those critics themselves utter
+broken and abrupt sentences, and blame those men who deliver well
+rounded and neatly turned discourses. If they blame them because their
+words are ill adapted and their sentiments are trifling, they are
+right; but if their arguments are sound, their language well chosen,
+then why should they prefer a lame and halting oration to one which
+keeps pace with the sentiments contained in it? For this rhythm which
+they attack so has no other effect except to cause the speaker to
+clothe his ideas in appropriate language; and that was done by the
+ancients also, not unusually by accident, and often by nature; and
+those speeches of theirs which are exceedingly praised, are so
+generally because they are concisely expressed. And it is now near
+four hundred years since this doctrine has been established among the
+Greeks; we have only lately recognised it. Therefore was it allowable
+for Ennius, despising the ancient examples, to say:--
+
+
+ "In verses such as once the Fauns
+ And ancient poets sang:"
+
+
+and shall it not be allowed me to speak of the ancients in the same
+manner? especially as I am not going to say, "Before this man ..." as
+he did; nor to proceed as he did, "We have ventured to open ..." For I
+have read and heard of some speakers whose orations were rounded off
+in an almost perfect manner. And those who cannot do this are not
+content with not being despised; they wish even to be praised for
+their inability. But I do praise those men, and deservedly too, whose
+imitators they profess to be; although I see something is wanting in
+them. But these men I do not praise at all, who imitate nothing of the
+others except their defects, and are as far removed as possible from
+their good qualities.
+
+But if their own ears are so uncivilised and barbarous, will not the
+authority of even the most learned men influence them? I say nothing
+of Isocrates, and his pupils Ephorus and Naucrates; although those men
+who are themselves consummate orators ought also to be the highest
+authorities on making and ornamenting a speech. But who of all men
+was ever more learned, or more acute, or a more accurate judge of
+the discovery of, or decision respecting all things than Aristotle?
+Moreover, who ever took more pains to oppose Isocrates? Aristotle
+then, while he warns us against letting verses occur in our speeches,
+enjoins us to attend to rhythm. His pupil Theodectes, one of the most
+polished of writers, (as Aristotle often intimates,) and a great
+artist, both felt and enjoined the same thing. And Theophrastus is
+more distinct still in laying down the same rule.
+
+Who then can endure those men who do not agree with such authorities
+as these? Unless indeed they are ignorant that they ever gave any such
+rules. And if that is the case, (and I really believe it is,) what
+then? Have they no senses of their own to be guided by? Have they no
+natural idea of what is useless? None of what is harsh, cramped, lame,
+or superfluous? When verses are being repeated, the whole theatre
+raises an outcry if there is one syllable too few or too many.
+Not that the mob knows anything about feet or metre; nor do they
+understand what it is that offends them, or know why or in what it
+offends them. But nevertheless nature herself has placed in our ears a
+power of judging of all superfluous length and all undue shortness in
+sounds, as much as of grave and acute syllables.
+
+LII. Do you wish then, O Brutus, that we should give a more accurate
+explanation of this whole topic, than those men themselves have done
+who have delivered these and other rules to us? Or may we be content
+with those which have been delivered by them? But why do I ask whether
+you wish this? when I know from your letters, written in a most
+scholar-like spirit, that you wish for it above all things. First of
+all, then, the origin of a well-adapted and rhythmical oration shall
+be explained, then the cause of it, then its nature, and last of all
+its use.
+
+For they who admire Isocrates above all things, place this among his
+very highest panegyrics, that he was the first person who added rhythm
+to prose writing. For they say that, as he perceived that orators were
+listened to with seriousness, but poets with pleasure, he then aimed
+at rhythm so as to use it in his orations both for the sake of giving
+pleasure, and also that variety of sound might prevent weariness. And
+this is said by them in some degree correctly, but not wholly so. For
+we must confess that no one was ever more thoroughly skilled in that
+sort of learning than Isocrates; but still the original inventor of
+rhythm was Thrasymachus; all whose writings are even too carefully
+rhythmical. For, as I said a little while ago, the principle of things
+like one another being placed side by side, sentence after sentence
+being ended in a similar manner, and contraries being compared
+with contraries, so that, even if one took no pains about it, most
+sentences would end musically, was first discovered by Gorgias; but he
+used it without any moderation. And that is, as I have said before
+one of the three divisions of arrangement. Both of these men were
+predecessors of Isocrates; so that it was in his moderation, not in
+his invention, that he is superior to them. For he is more moderate in
+the way in which he inverts or alters the sense of words; and also in
+his attention to rhythm. But Gorgias is a more insatiable follower of
+this system, and (even according to his own admission) abuses these
+elegances in an unprecedented way; but Isocrates (who while a young
+man had heard Gorgias when he was an old man in Thessaly) put all
+these things under more restraint. Moreover he himself, as he advanced
+in age, (and he lived nearly a hundred years,) relaxed in his ideas of
+the exceeding necessity for rhythm; as he declares in that book which
+he wrote to Philip of Macedon, when he was a very old man, in which he
+says that he is less attentive to rhythm than he had formerly been.
+And so he had corrected not only his predecessors, but himself also.
+
+LIII. Since, then, we have those men whom we have mentioned as the
+authors and originators of a well-adapted oration, and since its
+origin has been thus explained, we must now seek for the cause.
+And that is so evident, that I marvel that the ancients were not
+influenced by it; especially when, as is often the case, they often by
+chance made use of well-rounded and well-arranged periods. And when
+they had produced their impression on the minds and ears of men, so as
+to make it very plain that what chance had effected had been received
+with pleasure, certainly they ought to have taken note of what had
+been done, and have imitated themselves; for the ears, or the mind by
+the report of the ears, contains in itself a natural measurement
+of all sounds. That is how it distinguishes between long and short
+sounds; and always watches for well-wrought and moderate periods. It
+feels that some are mutilated and curtailed, as it were, and with
+those it is offended, as if it were defrauded of its due; others it
+feels to be too long, and running out to an immoderate length, and
+those the ears reject even more than the first; for as in most cases,
+so especially in this kind of thing, it happens that what is in excess
+is much more offensive than that which errs on the side of deficiency.
+
+As, therefore, poetry and verse was invented by the nicety of the ear,
+and the careful observation of clever men; so it has been noticed in
+oratory, much later, indeed, but still in deference to the promptings
+of the same nature, that there are some certain rules and bounds,
+within which words and paragraphs ought to be confined.
+
+Since, therefore, we have thus shown the cause, we will now, if you
+please, explain the nature of it; for that was the third division; and
+that involves a discussion which has no reference to the original plan
+of this treatise, but which belongs rather to the arcana of the art.
+For the question may be asked, what is the rhythm of a speech; and
+where it is placed; and in what it originates; and whether it is one
+thing, or two, or more; and on what principles it is arranged; and for
+what purpose; and how and in what part it is situated, and in what way
+it is employed so as to give any pleasure.
+
+But as in most cases, so also in this one, there are two ways of
+looking at the question; one of which is longer, the other shorter,
+and at the same time plainer.
+
+LIV. But in the longer way the first question is, whether there
+actually is any such thing as a rhythmical oration at all; (for some
+persons do not think that there is, because there is not in oratory
+any positive rule, as there is in verses, and because the people who
+assert that there is that rhythm cannot give any reason why there is.)
+In the next place, if there is rhythm in an oration, what sort of
+rhythm it is; and whether it is of more than one kind; and whether it
+consists of poetical rhythm, or of some other kind; and if it consists
+of poetical rhythm, of which poetical rhythm, (for some think that
+there is but one sort of poetical rhythm, while others think there are
+many kinds.) In the next place, the question arises, whatever sorts of
+rhythm there may be, whether one or more, whether they are common to
+every kind of oratory, (since there is one kind used in narrating,
+another kind in persuading, and another in teaching,) or whether the
+different kinds are all adapted equally to every sort of oratory. If
+the different kinds are common to each kind of oratory, what are they?
+If there is a difference, then what is the difference, and why is the
+rhythm less visible in a speech than in a verse? Besides, there is a
+question whether what is rhythmical in a speech is made so solely by
+rhythm, or also by some especial arrangement of words, or by the kind
+of words employed; or whether each division has its component parts,
+so that rhythm consists of intervals, arrangement of words, while the
+character of the words themselves is visible being a sort of shape
+and light of the speech; and whether arrangement is not the principal
+thing of all, and whether it is not by that that rhythm is produced,
+and those things which I have called the forms and light of a speech,
+and which, as I have said, the Greeks call [Greek: schaemata]. But
+that which is pleasant when uttered by the voice, and that which is
+made perfect by careful regulation, and brilliant by the nature of the
+words employed, are not one and the same thing, although they are both
+akin to rhythm, because each is perfect of itself; but an arrangement
+differs from both, and is wholly dependent on the dignity or sweetness
+of the language employed.
+
+These are the main questions which arise out of an inquiry into the
+nature of oratory.
+
+LV. It is, then, not hard to know that there is a certain rhythm in a
+speech: for the senses decide that. And it is absurd not to admit an
+evident fact, merely because we cannot find out why it happens. And
+verse itself was not invented by _a priori_ reasoning, but by nature
+and the senses, and these last were taught by carefully digested
+reason what was the fact; and accordingly it was the careful noticing
+and observation of nature which produced art.
+
+But in verses the matter is more evident. For although there are some
+kinds of verse which, if they be not chanted, appear but little to
+differ from prose; and this is especially the case in all the very
+best of those poets who are called [Greek: lyriloi] by the Greeks;
+for when you have stripped them of the singing, the language remains
+almost naked. And some of our countrymen are like them. Like that line
+in Thyestes:--
+
+"Quemnam te esse dicam, qui tarda in senectute" ...
+
+And so on; for except when the flute-player is at hand to accompany
+them, those verses are very like prose. But the iambics of the common
+poets are, on account of their likeness to ordinary conversation, very
+often in such a very low style, that sometimes it is hardly possible
+to discover any metre, or even rhythm in them. And it may easily be
+understood that there is more difficulty in discovering the rhythm in
+an oration than in verses.
+
+Altogether there are two things which season oratory--the sweetness of
+the language, and the sweetness of the rhythm. In the language is the
+material, and in the rhythm the polish. But, as in other things,
+the older inventions are the children of necessity rather than of
+pleasure; so also has it happened in this, that oratory was for many
+ages naked and unpolished, aiming only at expressing the meaning
+conceived in the mind of the speaker, before any system of rhythm for
+the sake of tickling the ears was invented.
+
+LVI. Therefore Herodotus also, and his age, and the age preceding him,
+had no idea of rhythm, except at times by chance, as it seems. And the
+very ancient writers have left us no rules at all about rhythm, though
+they have given us many precepts about oratory. For that which is the
+more easy and the more necessary will always be the first thing
+known. Therefore, words used in a metaphorical sense, or inverted, or
+combined, were easily invented because they were derived from ordinary
+use, and from daily conversation. But rhythm was not drawn from a
+man's own house, nor had it any connexion of relationship to oratory.
+And therefore it was later in being noticed and observed, bringing as
+it did the last touch and lineaments to oratory. But if there is
+one style of oratory narrow and concise, and another more vague and
+diffuse, that must clearly be owing, not to the nature of letters,
+but to the difference between long and short paragraphs; because an
+oration made up and compounded of these two kinds is sometimes
+steady, sometimes fluent, and so each character must be kept up by
+corresponding rhythm. For that circuitous way of speaking, which we
+have often mentioned already, goes on more impetuously, and hurries
+along, until it can arrive at its end, and come to a stop. It is quite
+plain, therefore, that oratory ought to be confined to rhythm, and
+kept clear of metre.
+
+But the next question is, whether this rhythm is poetical, or whether
+it is of some other kind. There is, then, no rhythm whatever that
+is not poetical; because the different kinds of rhythm are clearly
+defined. For all rhythm is one of three kinds. For the foot which
+is employed in rhythm is divided into three classes; so that it is
+necessary that one part of the foot must be either equal to the other
+part, or as large again, or half as large again. Accordingly, the
+dactyl is of the first class, the paeon of the last, the iambic of the
+second. And how is it possible to avoid such feet in an oration?
+And then when they are arranged with due consideration rhythm is
+unavoidably produced.
+
+But the question arises, what rhythm is to be employed; either
+absolutely, or in preference to others. But that every kind of rhythm
+is at times suitable to oratory, may be seen from this,--that in
+speaking we often make a verse without intending it, (which, however,
+is a great fault, but we do not notice it, nor do we hear what we say
+ourselves;) and as for iambics, whether regular or Hipponactean, those
+we can scarcely avoid, for our common conversation often consists of
+iambics. But still the hearer easily recognises those verses, for they
+are the most usual ones. But at times we unintentionally let fall
+others which are less usual, but which still are verses; and that is a
+faulty style of oratory, and one which requires to be guarded against
+with great care.
+
+Hieronymus, a Peripatetic of the highest character, out of all the
+numerous compositions of Isocrates, picked out about thirty verses,
+chiefly iambics, but some also anapaests. And what can be worse?
+Though in picking them out he acted in an unfair manner, for he took
+away sometimes the first syllable in the first word of a sentence; and
+again, he sometimes added to the last word the first syllable of the
+following sentence. And in this way he made that sort of anapaest which
+is called the Aristophanic anapaest. And such accidents as these
+cannot be guarded against, nor do they signify. But still this critic,
+in the very passage in which he finds this fault with him, (as I
+noticed when I was examining his work very closely,) himself makes
+an iambic without knowing it. This, then, may be considered as an
+established point, that there is rhythm also in prose, and that
+oratorical is the same as the poetical rhythm.
+
+LVII. It remains, therefore, for us to consider what rhythm occurs
+most naturally in a well-arranged oration. For some people think that
+it is the iambic rhythm, because that is the most like a speech,
+on which account it happens that it is most frequently employed in
+fables, because of its resemblance to reality--because the dactylic
+hexameter rhythm is better suited to a lofty and magniloquent subject
+But Ephorus himself, an inconsiderable orator, though coming from an
+excellent school, inclines to the paeon, or dactyl, but avoids the
+spondee and trochee. For because the paeon has three short syllables
+and the dactyl two, he thinks that the words come more trippingly
+off on account of the shortness and rapidity of utterance of the
+syllables; and that a contrary effect is produced by the spondee and
+trochee, because the one consists of long syllables and the other of
+short ones; so that a speech made up of the one is too much hurried,
+it made up of the other is too slow; and neither is well, regulated.
+But those accents are all in the wrong, and Ephorus is wholly in
+fault. For those who pass over the paeon, do not perceive that a most
+delicate, and at the same time most dignified rhythm is passed over by
+them. But Aristotle's opinion is very different, for he considers that
+the heroic rhythm is a grander one than is admissible in prose, and
+that an iambic is too like ordinary conversation. Accordingly, he does
+not approve of a style which is lowly and abject, or of one which is
+too lofty and, as it were, on stilts: but still he wishes for one full
+of dignity, in order to strike those who hear it with the greater
+admiration. But he calls a trochee, which occupies the same time as a
+choreus, [Greek: kordax], because its contracted and brief character
+is devoid of dignity. Accordingly, he approves of the paeon; and says
+that all men employ it, but that all men are not themselves aware when
+they do employ it; and that there is a third or middle way between
+those two, but that those feet are formed in such a way, that in every
+one of them there is either a time, or a time and a half, or two
+times. Therefore, those men of whom I have spoken have considered
+convenience only, and disregarded dignity. For the iambic and the
+dactyl are those which are most usually employed in verse; and,
+therefore, as we avoid verses in making speeches, so also a recurrence
+of these feet must be avoided. For oratory is a different thing from
+poetry, nor are there any two things more contrary to one another than
+that is to verses. But the paeon is that foot which, of all others, is
+least adapted to verse, on which account oratory admits it the more
+willingly. But Ephorus will not even admit that the spondee, which he
+condemns, is equivalent to the dactyl, which he approves of. For he
+thinks that feet ought to be measured by their syllables, not by their
+quantity; and he does the same in regard to the trochee, which in its
+quantity and times is equivalent to an iambic; but which is a fault in
+an oration, if it be placed at the end, because a sentence ends better
+with a long syllable.
+
+And all this, which is also contained in Aristotle, is said by
+Theophrastus and Theodectes about the paeon. But my opinion is, that
+all feet ought to be jumbled together and confused, as it were, in an
+oration; and that we could not escape blame if we were always to use
+the same feet; because an oration ought to be neither metrical, like
+a poem, nor inharmonious, like the conversation of the common people.
+The one is so fettered by rules that it is manifest that it is
+designedly arranged as we see it; the other is so loose as to appear
+ordinary and vulgar; so that you are not pleased with the one, and you
+hate the other.
+
+Let oratory then be, as I have said above, mingled and regulated with
+a regard to rhythm; not prosaic, nor on the other hand sacrificed
+wholly to rhythm; composed chiefly of the paeon, (since that is the
+opinion of the wisest author on the subject,) with many of the other
+feet which he passes over intermingled with it.
+
+LVIII. But what feet ought to be mingled with others, like purple,
+must be now explained; and we must also show to what kind of speech
+each sort of foot and rhythm is the best adapted. For the iambic is
+most frequent in those orations which are composed in a humble and
+lowly style; but the paeon is suited to a more dignified style; and the
+dactyl to both. Therefore, in a varied and long-continued speech these
+feet should be mingled together and combined. And in this way the fact
+of the orator aiming at pleasing the senses, and the careful attempt
+to round off the speech, will be the less visible, and they will at
+all times be less apparent if we employ dignified expressions and
+sentiments. For the hearers observe these two things, and think them
+agreeable: (I mean, expressions and sentiments.) And while they listen
+to them with admiring minds, the rhythm escapes their notice; and even
+if it were wholly wanting they would still be delighted with those
+other things.
+
+Nor indeed is the rhythm, I mean in a speech, (for the case as to
+verse is very different,) so exacting that nothing may ever be
+expressed except according to rule; for then it would be a poem. But
+every oration which does not halt or if I may so say, fluctuate, and
+which proceeds on with an equal and consistent pace, is considered
+rhythmical. And it is considered rhythmical in the delivery; not
+because it consists wholly of some regular rhythm; but because it
+comes as near to a musical rhythm as possible: on which account it is
+more difficult to make a speech than to make verses; because these
+last have certain definite rules which it is necessary to follow; but,
+in speaking, there is nothing settled, except that the speech must
+not be intemperate, or too compressed, or prosaic, or too fluent.
+Therefore there are no regular bars in it as a flute-player has; but
+the whole principle and system of an oration is regulated by general
+rules of universal application; and they are judged of on the
+principle of pleasing the ear.
+
+LIX. But people often ask, whether in every portion of a paragraph it
+is necessary to have a regard to rhythm, or whether it is sufficient
+to do so at the beginning and end of a sentence. For many people think
+that it is sufficient for a sentence to end and be wound up in a
+rhythmical manner. But although that is the main point, it is not the
+only one; for the sounding of the periods is only to be laid aside,
+not to be thrown away. And therefore, as men's ears are always on the
+watch for the end of a sentence, and are greatly influenced by that,
+that certainly ought never to be devoid of rhythm; but harmony ought
+to pervade the whole sentence from beginning to end; and the whole
+ought to proceed from the beginning so naturally that the end shall be
+consistent with every previous part. But that will not be difficult
+to men who have been trained in a good school, who have written many
+things, and who have made also all the speeches which they have
+delivered without written papers like written speeches. For the
+sentence is first composed in the mind; and then words come
+immediately: and then they are immediately sent forth by the mind,
+than which nothing is more rapid in its movements; so that each falls
+into its proper place. And then their regular order is settled by
+different terminations in different sentences; and all the expressions
+at the beginning and in the middle of the sentence ought to be
+composed with reference to the end. For sometimes the torrent of an
+oration is rapid; sometimes its progress is moderate; so that from the
+very beginning one can see how one wishes to come to the end. Nor is
+it in rhythm more than in the other embellishments of a speech that we
+behave exactly as poets do; though still, in an oration, we avoid all
+resemblance to a poem.
+
+LX. For there is in both oratory and poetry, first of all the
+material, then the execution. The material consists in the words,
+the execution in the arrangement of the words. But there are three
+divisions of each,--of words there is the metaphorical, the new, and
+the old-fashioned; for of appropriate words we say nothing at
+present; but of arrangement there are those which we have mentioned,
+composition, neatness, and rhythm. But the poets are the most free
+and frequent in the use of each; for they use words in a metaphorical
+sense not only more frequently, but also more daringly; and they use
+old-fashioned words more willingly, and new ones more freely. And the
+case with respect to rhythm is the same; in which they are obliged
+to comply with a kind of necessity: but still these things must be
+understood as being neither too different, nor yet in any respect
+united. Accordingly we find that rhythm is not the same in an oration
+as in a poem; and that that which is pronounced to be rhythmical in an
+oration is not always effected by a strict attention to the rules of
+rhythm; but sometimes either by neatness, or by the casual arrangement
+of the words.
+
+Accordingly, if the question is raised as to what is the rhythm of an
+oration, it is every sort of rhythm; but one sort is better and more
+suitable than another. If the question is, what is the place of this
+rhythm? it is in every portion of the words. If you ask where it has
+arisen; it has arisen from the pleasure of the ears. If the principle
+is sought on which the words are to be arranged; that will be
+explained in another place, because that relates to practice, which
+was the fourth and last division which we made of the subject. If
+the question is, when; always: if, in what place; it consists in
+the entire connexion of the words. If we are asked, What is the
+circumstance which causes pleasure? we reply, that it is the same
+as in verse; the method of which is determined by art; but the ears
+themselves define it by their own silent sensations, without any
+reference to principles of art.
+
+LXI. We have said enough of the nature of it. The practice follows;
+and that we must discuss with greater accuracy. And in this discussion
+inquiry has been made, whether it is in the whole of that rounding of
+a sentence which the Greeks call [Greek: periodos], and which we call
+"_ambitus_" or "_circuitus_," or "_comprehensio_" or "_continuatio_"
+or "_circumscriptio_," or in the beginning only, or in the end, or
+in both, that rhythm must be maintained? And, in the next place, as
+rhythm appears one thing and a rhythmical sentence another, what is
+the difference between them? and again, whether it is proper for
+the divisions of a sentence to be equal in every sort of rhythm, or
+whether we should make some shorter and some longer; and if so, when,
+and why, and in what parts; whether in many or in one; whether in
+unequal or equal ones; and when we are to use one, and when the other;
+and what words may be most suitably combined together, and how; or
+whether there is absolutely no distinction; and, what is most material
+to the subject of all things, by what system oratory may be made
+rhythmical. We must also explain from whence such a form of words has
+arisen; and we must explain what periods it may be becoming to make,
+and we must also discuss their parts and sections, if I may so call
+them; and inquire whether they have all one appearance and length, or
+more than one; and if many, in what place; or when we may use them,
+and what kinds it is proper to use; and, lastly, the utility of the
+whole kind is to be explained, which indeed is of wider application;
+for it is adapted not to any one particular thing, but to many.
+
+And a man may, without giving replies on each separate point, speak of
+the entire genus in such a way that his answer may appear sufficient
+as to the whole matter. Leaving, therefore, the other kinds out of the
+question, we select this one, which is conversant with actions and the
+forum, concerning which we will speak.
+
+Therefore in other kinds, that is to say, in history and in that kind
+of argument which we call [Greek: epideiktikon], it seems good
+that everything should be said after the example of Isocrates and
+Theopompus, with that sort of period and rounding of a sentence that
+the oration shall run on in a sort of circle, until it stops in
+separate, perfect, and complete sentences. Therefore after this
+_circumscriptio_, or _continuatio_, or _comprehensio_, or _ambitus_,
+if we may so call it, was once introduced, there was no one of any
+consideration who ever wrote an oration of that kind which was
+intended only to give pleasure, and unconnected with judicial
+proceedings or forensic contests, who did not reduce almost all his
+sentences to a certain set form and rhythm. For, as his hearers are
+men who have no fear that their own good faith is being attempted to
+be undermined by the snare of a well-arranged oration, they are even
+grateful to the orator for studying so much to gratify their ears.
+
+LXII. But this kind of oratory is neither to be wholly appropriated
+to forensic causes, nor is it entirely to be repudiated. For if
+you constantly employ it, when it has produced weariness then even
+unskilful people can recognise its character. Besides, it takes away
+the indignation which is intended to be excited by the pleading; it
+takes away the manly sensibility of the pleader; it wholly puts an
+end to all truth and good faith. But since it ought to be employed at
+times, first of all, we should see in what place; secondly, how long
+it is to be maintained; and lastly, in how many ways it may be varied.
+We must, then, employ a rhythmical oratory, if we have occasion either
+to praise anything in an ornate style,--as we ourselves spoke in the
+second book of our impeachment of Verres concerning the praise of
+Sicily; and in the senate, of my own consulship; or a narration must
+be delivered which requires more dignity than indignation,--as in the
+fourth book of that same impeachment we spoke concerning the Ceres of
+Enna, the Diana of Segeste, and the situation of Syracuse. Often
+also when employed in amplifying a case, an oration is poured forth
+harmoniously and volubly with the approbation of all men. That perhaps
+we have never quite accomplished; but we have certainly very often
+attempted it; as our perorations in many places show that we have, and
+indeed that we have been very eager to effect it. But this is most
+effective when the hearer is already blockaded, as it were, and taken
+prisoner by the speaker. For he then no longer thinks of watching and
+guarding against the orator, but he is already on his side; and wishes
+him to proceed, admitting the force of his eloquence, and never
+thinking of looking for anything with which to find fault.
+
+But this style is not to be maintained long; I do not mean in the
+peroration which it concludes, but in the other divisions of the
+speech. For when the orator has employed those topics which I have
+shown to be admissible, then the whole of his efforts must be
+transferred to what the Greeks call, I know not why, [Greek: kommata]
+and [Greek: kola], and which we may translate, though not very
+correctly, "incisa" and "membra." For there cannot be well-known
+names given to things which are not known; but when we use words in a
+metaphorical sense, either for the sake of sweetness or because of the
+poverty of the language, this result takes place in every art, that
+when we have got to speak of that which, on account of our ignorance
+of its existence, had no name at all previously, necessity compels
+us either to coin a new word, or to borrow a name from something
+resembling it.
+
+LXIII. But we will consider hereafter in what way sentences ought to
+be expressed in short clauses or members. At present we must explain
+in how many ways those different conclusions and terminations may be
+changed. Rhythm flows in from the beginning, at first more rapidly,
+from the shortness of the feet employed, and afterwards more slowly as
+they increase in length. Disputes require rapidity; slowness is better
+suited to explanations. But a period is terminated in many ways; one
+of which has gained especial favour in Asia, which is called the
+_dichoreus_, when the two last feet are _chorei_, consisting each of
+one long and one short syllable; for we must explain that the same
+feet have different names given them by different people. Now that
+dichoreus is not inherently defective as part of a clause, but in the
+rhythm of an orator there is nothing so vicious as to have the same
+thing constantly recurring. By itself now and then it sounds very
+well, on which account we have the more reason to guard against
+satiety. I was present when Caius Carbo, the son of Caius, a tribune
+of the people, uttered these words in the assembly of the people:
+
+"O Maree Druse, patrem appello."
+
+Here are two clauses, each of two feet. Then he gave us some more
+periods:
+
+"Tu dicere solebas, sacram esse rempublicam."
+
+Here each clause consists of three feet. Then comes the conclusion:
+
+"Quicunque eam violavissent ab omnibus esse ei poenas persolutas."
+
+Here is the dichoreus;--for it does not signify whether the last
+syllable is long or short. Then comes,
+
+"Patris dictum sapiens, temeritas filii comprobavit."
+
+And this last dichoreus excited such an outcry as to be quite
+marvellous. I ask, was it not the rhythm which caused it? Change the
+order of the words; let them stand thus:
+
+"Comprobavit filii temeritas:"
+
+there will be no harm in that, though _temeritas_ consists of three
+short syllables and one long one; which Aristotle considers as the
+best sort of word to end a sentence, in which I do not agree with him.
+But still the words are the same, and the meaning is the same. That is
+enough for the mind, but not enough for the ears. But this ought not
+to be done too often. For at first rhythm is acknowledged; presently
+it wearies; afterwards, when the ease with which it is produced is
+known, it is despised.
+
+LXIV. But there are many little clauses which sound rhythmically and
+agreeably. For there is the cretic, which consists of a long syllable,
+then a short one, then a long; and there is its equivalent the paeon;
+which is equal in time, but longer by one syllable; and which is
+considered a very convenient foot to be used in prose, as it is of two
+kinds. For it consists either of one long syllable and three short
+ones, which rhythm is admirable at the beginning of a sentence, but
+languid at the end; or of three short syllables and then the long one,
+which the ancients consider the most musical foot of the two: I do not
+object to it; though there are other feet which I prefer. Even the
+spondee is not utterly to be repudiated; although, because it consists
+of two long syllables, it appears somewhat dull and slow; still it
+has a certain steady march not devoid of dignity; but much more is it
+valuable in short clauses and periods; for then it makes up for the
+fewness of the feet by its dignified slowness. But when I am speaking
+of these feet as occurring in clauses, I do not speak of the one
+foot which occurs at the end; I add (which however is not of much
+consequence) the preceding foot, and very often even the foot before
+that. Even the iambic, which consists of one short and one long
+syllable; or that foot which is equal to the choreus, having three
+short syllables, being therefore equal in time though not in the
+number of syllables; or the dactyl, which consists of one long and two
+short syllables, if it is next to the last foot, joins that foot very
+trippingly, if it is a choreus or a spondee. For it never makes any
+difference which of these two is the last foot of a sentence. But
+these same three feet end a sentence very badly if one of them is
+placed at the end, unless the dactyl comes at the end instead of a
+cretic; for it does not signify whether the dactyl or the cretic comes
+at the end, because it does not signify even in verse whether the last
+syllable of all is long or short. Wherefore, whoever said that that
+paeon was more suitable in which the last syllable was long, made a
+great mistake; since it has nothing to do with the matter whether the
+last syllable is long or not. And indeed the paeon, as having more
+syllables than three, is considered by some people as a rhythm, and
+not a foot at all. It is, as is agreed upon by all the ancients,
+Aristotle, Theophrastus, Theodectes, and Ephorus, the most suitable
+of all for an oration, either at the beginning or in the middle; they
+think that it is very suitable for it at the end also; in which place
+the cretic appears to me to be better. But a dochmiac consists of
+five syllables, one short, two long, one short, and one long; as
+thus:--_[)A]m[=i]c[=o]s t[)e]n[=e]s_; and is suitable for any part
+of the speech, as long as it is used only once. If repeated or often
+renewed it then makes the rhythm conspicuous and too remarkable. If
+we use these changes, numerous and varied as they are, it will not be
+seen how much of our rhythm is the result of study, and we shall avoid
+wearying our hearers.
+
+LXV. And because it is not only rhythm which makes a speech
+rhythmical, but since that effect is produced also by the arrangement
+of the words, and by a kind of neatness, as has been said before, it
+may be understood by the arrangement when words are so placed that
+rhythm does not appear to have been purposely aimed at, but to have
+resulted naturally, as it is said by Crassus:--
+
+"Nam ubi libido dominatur innocentiae leve praesidium est."
+
+For here the order of the words produces rhythm without any apparent
+design on the part of the orator. Therefore, the suitable and
+rhythmical sentences which occur in the works of the ancients, I mean
+Herodotus, and Thucydides, and all the writers of that age, were
+produced, not by any deliberate pursuit of rhythm, but by the
+arrangement of the words. For there are some forms of oratory in which
+there is so much neatness, that rhythm unavoidably follows. For when
+like is referred to like, or contrary opposed to contrary, or when
+words which sound alike are compared to other words, whatever sentence
+is wound up in that manner must usually sound rhythmically. And of
+this kind of sentence we have already spoken and given instances, so
+that this abundance of kinds enables a man to avoid always ending a
+sentence in the same manner.
+
+Nor are these rules so strict and precise that we are unable to relax
+them when we wish to. It makes a great difference whether an oration
+is rhythmical--that is to say, like rhythm--or whether it consists of
+nothing but rhythm. If it is the latter, that is an intolerable fault;
+if it is not the former, then it is unconnected, and barbarous, and
+languid.
+
+LXVI. But since it is not only not a frequent occurrence, but actually
+even a rare one, that we ought to speak in compressed and rhythmical
+periods, in serious or forensic causes, it appears to follow that we
+ought to consider what these clauses and short members which I have
+spoken of are. For in serious causes they occupy the greater part of
+the speech. For a full and perfect period consists of four divisions,
+which we call members, so as to fill the ears, and not be either
+shorter or longer than is just sufficient. Although each of those
+defects does happen sometimes, or indeed often, so that it is
+necessary either to stop abruptly, or else to proceed further, lest
+our brevity should appear to have cheated the ears of our hearers, or
+our prolixity to have exhausted them. But I prefer a middle course;
+for I am not speaking of verse, and oratory is not so much confined. A
+full period, then, consists of four divisions, like hexameter verses.
+In each of these verses, then, there are visible the links, as it
+were, of the connected series which we unite in the conclusion. But if
+we choose to speak in a succession of short clauses, we stop, and when
+it is necessary, we easily and frequently separate ourselves from that
+sort of march which is apt to excite dislike; but nothing ought to
+be so rhythmical as this, which is the least visible and the most
+efficacious. Of this kind is that sentence which was spoken by
+Crassus:--
+
+"Missos faciant patronos; ipsi prodeant."
+
+If he had not paused before "ipsi prodeant," he would have at once
+seen that an iambic had escaped him,--"prodeant ipsi" would sound in
+every respect better. But at present I am speaking of the whole kind.
+
+
+ "Cur clandestinis consiliis nos oppugnant?
+ Cur de perfugis nostris copias comparant inter nos?"
+
+
+The first two are such sentences as the Greeks call [Greek: kommata],
+and we "incisa." The third is such as they term [Greek: kolon], and we
+"membrum." Then comes a short clause; for a perfect conclusion is made
+up of two verses, that is to say members, and falls into spondees. And
+Crassus was very much in the habit of employing this termination, and
+I myself have a good opinion of this style of speaking.
+
+LXVII. But those sentiments which are delivered in short clauses, or
+members, ought to sound very harmoniously, as in a speech of mine you
+will find:--
+
+"Domus tibi deerat? at habebas. Pecunia superabat? at egebas."
+
+These four clauses are as concise as can be; but then come the two
+following sentences uttered in members:--
+
+"Incurristi amens in columnas: in alienos insanus insanisti."
+
+After these clauses everything is sustained by a longer class of
+sentences, as if they were erected on these as their pedestal:--
+
+"Depressam, caecam, jacentem domum pluris, quam te, et quam fortunas
+tuas, aestimasti."
+
+It is ended with a dichoreus; but the next sentence terminates with a
+double spondee. For in those feet which speakers should use at times
+like little daggers, the very brevity makes the feet more free. For we
+often must use them separately, often two together, and a part of a
+foot may be added to each foot, but not often in combinations of
+more than three. But an oration when delivered in brief clauses and
+members, is very forcible in serious causes, especially when you
+are accusing or refuting an accusation, as in my second Cornelian
+speech:--
+
+"O callidos homines! O rem excogitatam! O ingenia metuenda!"
+
+Hitherto this is spoken in members. After that we spoke in short
+clauses. Then again in members:--
+
+"Testes dare volumus."
+
+At last comes the conclusion, but one made up of two members, than
+which nothing can be more concise:--
+
+"Quem, quaeso, nostrum fefellit, ita vos esse facturos?"
+
+Nor is there any style of speaking more lively or more forcible than
+that which strikes with two or three words, sometimes with single
+words; very seldom with more than two or three, and among these
+various clauses there is occasionally inserted a rhythmical period.
+And Hegesias, who perversely avoided this usage, while seeking to
+imitate Lysias, who is almost a second Demosthenes, dividing his
+sentences into little bits, was more like a dancer than an orator. And
+he, indeed, errs not less in his sentences than in his single words,
+so that a man who knows him has no need to look about for some
+one whom he may call foolish. But I have cited those sentences of
+Crassus's and my own, in order that whoever chose might judge by his
+own ears what was rhythmical even in the most insignificant portions
+of a speech. And since we have said more about rhythmical oratory
+than any one of those who have preceded us, we will now speak of the
+usefulness of that style.
+
+LXVIII. For speaking beautifully and like an orator is, O Brutus,
+nothing else (as you, indeed, know better than any one) except
+speaking with the most excellent sentiments and in the most carefully
+selected language. And there is no sentiment which produces any fruit
+to an orator, unless it is expressed in a suitable and polished
+manner. Nor is there any brilliancy of words visible unless they
+are carefully arranged; and rhythm it is which sets off both these
+excellences. But rhythm (for it is well to repeat this frequently) is
+not only not formed in a poetical manner, but even avoids poetry, and
+is as unlike it as possible. Not but that rhythm is the same thing,
+not only in the writings of orators and poets, but even in the
+conversation of every one who speaks, and in every imaginable sound
+which we can measure with our ears. But it is the order of the feet
+which makes that which is uttered appear like an oration or like
+a poem. And this, whether you choose to call it composition, or
+perfection, or rhythm, must be employed if a man wishes to speak
+elegantly, not only (as Aristotle and Theophrastus say) that the
+discourse may not run on interminably like a river, but that it may
+come to a stop as it ought, not because the speaker wants to take
+breath, or because the copyist puts down a stop, but because it is
+compelled to do so by the restrictions of rhythm, and also because a
+compact style has much greater force than a loose one. For as we see
+athletes, and in a similar manner gladiators, act cautiously, neither
+avoiding nor aiming at anything with too much vehemence, (for
+over-vehement motions can have no rule;) so that whatever they do in
+a manner advantageous for their contest, may also have a graceful and
+pleasing appearance; in like manner oratory does not strike a heavy
+blow, unless the aim was a well-directed one; nor does it avoid the
+attack of the adversary successfully, unless even when turning aside
+the blow it is aware of what is becoming. And therefore the speeches
+of those men who do not end their sentences rhythmically seem to me
+like the motions of those whom the Greeks call [hapalaistrous]. And it
+is so far from being the case, (as those men say who, either from a
+want of proper instructors, or from the slowness of their intellect,
+or from an unwillingness to exert due industry, have not arrived at
+this skill,) that oratory is enervated by too much attention to the
+arrangement of words, that without it there can be no energy and no
+force.
+
+LXIX. But the matter is one which requires much practice, lest we
+should do anything like those men who, though they have aimed at this
+style, have not attained it; so that we must not openly transpose our
+words in order to make our language sound better; a thing which Lucius
+Coelius Antipater, in the opening of his history of the Punic War,
+promises not to do unless it should be absolutely necessary. Oh the
+simple man! to conceal nothing from us; and at the same time wise,
+inasmuch as he is prepared to comply with necessity. But still this is
+being too simple. But in writing or in sober discussion the excuse of
+necessity is not admissible, for there is no such thing as necessity;
+and if there were, it would still be necessary not to admit it. And
+this very man who demands this indulgence of Laelius, to whom he is
+writing, and to whom he is excusing himself, uses this transposition
+of words, and yet does not fill up and conclude his sentences any the
+more skilfully. Among others, and especially among the Asiatics, who
+are perfect slaves to rhythm, you may find many superfluous words
+inserted, as if on purpose to fill up vacancies in rhythm. There
+are men also, who through that fault, which originated chiefly with
+Hegesias, by breaking up abruptly, and cutting short their rhythm,
+have fallen into an abject style of speaking, very much like that of
+the Sicilians. There is a third kind adopted by those brothers, the
+chiefs of the Asiatic rhetoricians, Hierocles and Maecles, men who are
+not at all to be despised, in my opinion at least. For although they
+do not quite keep to the real form of oratory and to the principles
+of the Attic orators, still they make amends for this fault by their
+ability and fluency. Still there was no variety in them, because
+nearly all their sentences were terminated in one manner.
+
+But a man who avoids all these faults, so as neither to transpose
+words in such a manner that every one must see that it is done on
+purpose, nor cramming in unnecessary words, as if to fill up leaks,
+nor aiming at petty rhythm, so as to mutilate and emasculate his
+sentences, and who does not always stick to one kind of rhythm without
+any variation, such a man avoids nearly every fault. For we have said
+a good deal on the subject of perfections, to which these manifest
+defects are contrary.
+
+LXX. But how important a thing it is to speak harmoniously, you may
+know by experience if you dissolve the carefully-contrived arrangement
+of a skilful orator by a transposition of his words; for then the
+whole thing would be spoilt, as in this instance of our language in
+the Cornelian oration, and in all the following sentences:--
+
+"Neque me divitiae movent, quibus omnes Africanos et Laelios milt,
+venalitii mercatoresque superarunt."
+
+Change the order a little, so that the sentence shall stand,
+
+"Multi superarunt mercatores venalitiique,"
+
+and the whole effect is lost. And the subsequent sentences:
+
+"Neque vestis, ant caelatum aurum et argentum, quo nostros veteres
+Marcellos Maximosque multi eunuchi e Syria aegyptoque vicerunt."
+
+Alter the order of the words, so that they shall stand,
+
+"Vicerunt eunuchi e Syria aegyptoque."
+
+Take this third sentence:--
+
+"Neque vero ornamenta ista villarum, quibus Lucium Paullum et Lucium
+Mummium, qui rebus his urbem Italiamque omnem referserunt, ab aliquo
+video perfacile Deliaco aut Syro potuisse superari."
+
+Place the words thus:--
+
+"Potuisse superari ab aliquo Syro aut Deliaco."
+
+Do you not see that by making this slight change in the order of the
+words, the very same words (though the sense remains as it was before)
+lose all their effect the moment they are disjoined from those which
+were best suited to them?
+
+Or if you take any carelessly-constructed sentence of any unpolished
+orator, and reduce it into proper shape, by making a slight alteration
+in the order of his words, then that will be made harmonious which
+was before loose and unmethodical Come now, take a sentence from the
+speech of Gracchus before the censors:--
+
+"Obesse non potest, quin ejusdem hominis sit, probos improbare, qui
+improbos probet."
+
+How much better would it have been if he had said,
+
+"Quin ejusdem hominis sit, qui improbos probet, probos improbare!"
+
+No one ever had any objection to speaking in this manner; and no one
+was ever able to do so who did not do it. But those who have spoken in
+a different manner have not been able to arrive at this excellence.
+And so on a sudden they have set up for orators of the Attic school.
+As if Demosthenes was a man of Tralles; but even his thunderbolts
+would not have shone so if they had not been pointed by rhythm.
+
+LXXI. But if there be any one who prefers a loose style of oratory,
+let him cultivate it; keeping in view this principle,--if any one were
+to take to pieces the shield of Phidias, he would destroy the beauty
+of the collective arrangement, not the exquisite workmanship of each
+fragment: and as in Thucydides I only miss the roundness of his
+periods; all the graces of style are there. But these men, when
+they compose a loose oration, in which there is no matter, and no
+expression which is not a low one, appear to me to be taking to
+pieces, not a shield, but, as the proverb says, (which, though but a
+low one, is still very apt,) only a broom. And in order that there may
+be no mistake as to their contempt of this style which I am praising,
+let them write something either in the style of Isocrates, or in that
+which Aeschines or Demosthenes employs, and then I will believe that
+they have not shrunk from this style out of despair of being able to
+arrive at it, but that they have avoided it deliberately on account of
+their bad opinion of it: or else I will find a man myself who may be
+willing to be bound by this condition,--either to say or write, in
+whichever language you please, in the style which those men prefer.
+For it is easier to disunite what is connected than to connect what is
+disjointedly strung together.
+
+However, the fact is, (to be brief in explaining my real opinion,) to
+speak in a well-arranged and suitable manner without good ideas is to
+act like a madman. But to speak in a sententious manner, without any
+order or method in one's language, is to behave like a child: but
+still it is childishness of that sort, that those who employ it cannot
+be considered stupid men, and indeed may often be accounted wise men.
+And if a man is contented with that sort of character, why let him
+speak in that way. But the eloquent man, who, if his subject will
+allow it, ought to excite not only approbation, but admiration and
+loud applause, ought to excel in everything to such a degree, that
+he should think it discreditable that anything should be beheld or
+listened to more gladly than his speech.
+
+You have here, O Brutus, my opinion respecting an orator. If you
+approve of it, follow it; or else adhere to your own, if you have
+formed any settled opinion on the subject. And I shall not be offended
+with you, nor will I affirm that this opinion of mine which I have
+asserted so positively in this book is more correct than yours; for it
+is possible not only that my opinion should be different from yours,
+but even that my own may be different at different times. And not
+only in this matter, which has reference to gaining the assent of the
+common people and to the pleasure of the ears, which are two of the
+most unimportant points as far as judgment is concerned; but even in
+the most important affairs, I have never found anything firmer to take
+hold of, or to guide my judgment by, than the extremity of probability
+as it appeared to me, when actual truth was hidden or obscure.
+
+But I wish that you, if you do not approve entirely of the things
+which I have urged in this treatise, would believe either that I
+proposed to myself a work of too great difficulty for me to accomplish
+properly, or else that, while wishing to comply with your request, I
+undertook the impudent task of writing this, from being ashamed to
+refuse you.
+
+
+
+
+THE TREATISE OF M. T. CICERO ON TOPICS,
+
+DEDICATED TO CAIUS TREBATIUS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ARGUMENT.
+
+
+This treatise was written a short time before the events which gave
+rise to the first Philippic. Cicero obtained an honorary lieutenancy,
+with the intention of visiting his son at Athens; on his way towards
+Rhegium he spent an evening at Velia with Trebatius, where he began
+this treatise, which he finished at sea, before he arrived in Greece.
+It is little more than an abstract of what had been written by
+Aristotle on the same subject, and which Trebatius had begged him to
+explain to him; and Middleton says, that as he had not Aristotle's
+essay with him, he drew this up from memory, and he appears to have
+finished it in a week, as it was the nineteenth of July that he was
+at Velia, and he sent this work to Trebatius from Rhegium on the
+twenty-seventh. He himself apologizes to Trebatius in the letter which
+accompanied it, (Ep. Fam. vii. 19,) for its obscurity, which however,
+he says, was unavoidably caused by the nature of the subject.
+
+I. We had begun to write, O Caius Trebatius, on subjects more
+important and more worthy of these books, of which we have published a
+sufficient number in a short time, when your request recalled me from
+my course. For when you were with me in my Tusculan villa, and when
+each of us was separately in the library opening such books as were
+suited to our respective tastes and studies, you fell on a treatise of
+Aristotle's called the Topics; which he has explained in many books;
+and, excited by the title, you immediately asked me to explain to you
+the doctrines laid down in those books. And when I had explained them
+to you, and told you that the system for the discovery of arguments
+was contained in them, in order that we might arrive, without making
+any mistake, at the system on which they rested by the way discovered
+by Aristotle, you urged me, modestly indeed, as you do everything,
+but still in a way which let me plainly see your eagerness to be
+gratified, to make you master of the whole of Aristotle's method.
+And when I exhorted you, (not so much for the sake of saving myself
+trouble, as because I really thought it advantageous for you
+yourself,) either to read them yourself, or to get the whole system
+explained to you by some learned rhetorician, you told me that you had
+already tried both methods. But the obscurity of the subject deterred
+you from the books; and that illustrious rhetorician to whom you had
+applied answered you, I suppose, that he knew nothing of these rules
+of Aristotle. And this I was not so much surprised at, namely, that
+that philosopher was not known to the rhetorician, inasmuch as he is
+not much known even to philosophers, except to a very few.
+
+And such ignorance is the less excusable in them, because they
+not only ought to have been allured by those things which he has
+discovered and explained, but also by the incredible richness and
+sweetness of his eloquence. I could not therefore remain any longer in
+your debt, since you often made me this request, and yet appeared to
+fear being troublesome to me, (for I could easily see that,) lest I
+should appear unjust to him who is the very interpreter of the law.
+In truth, as you had often written many things for me and mine, I was
+afraid that if I delayed obliging you in this, it would appear very
+ungrateful or very arrogant conduct on my part. But while we were
+together, you yourself are the best witness of how I was occupied; but
+after I left you, on my way into Greece, when neither the republic
+nor any friends were occupying my attention, and when I could not
+honourably remain amid the armies, (not even if I could have done so
+safely,) as soon as I came to Velia and beheld your house and your
+family, I was reminded of this debt; and would no longer be wanting
+to your silent request. Therefore, as I had no books with me, I have
+written these pages on my voyage, from memory; and I have sent them to
+you while on my journey, in order that by my diligence in obeying your
+commands, I might rouse you to a recollection of my affairs, although
+you do not require a reminder. But, however, it is time to come to the
+object which we have undertaken.
+
+II. As every careful method of arguing has two divisions,--one of
+discovering, one of deciding,--Aristotle was, as it appears to me, the
+chief discoverer of each. But the Stoics also have devoted some pains
+to the latter, for they have diligently considered the methods of
+carrying on a discussion by that science which they call dialectics;
+but the art of discovering arguments, which is called topics, and
+which was more serviceable for practical use, and certainly prior in
+the order of nature, they have wholly disregarded. But we, since both
+parts are of the greatest utility, and since we intend to examine
+each if we have time, will now begin with that which is naturally the
+first.
+
+As therefore the discovery of those things which are hidden is easy,
+if the place where they are hidden is pointed out and clearly marked;
+so, when we wish to examine any argument, we ought to know the
+topics,--for so they are called by Aristotle, being, as it were,
+seats from which arguments are derived. Therefore we may give as a
+definition, that a topic is the seat of an argument, and that an
+argument is a reason which causes men to believe a thing which would
+otherwise be doubtful. But of those topics in which arguments are
+contained, some dwell on that particular point which is the subject of
+discussion; some are derived from external circumstances. When derived
+from the subject itself, they proceed at times from it taken as a
+whole, at times from its parts, at times from some sign, and at others
+from things which are disposed in some manner or other towards the
+subject under discussion; but those topics are derived from external
+circumstances which are at a distance and far removed from the same
+subject.
+
+But a definition is employed with reference to the entire matter under
+discussion which unfolds the matter which is the subject of inquiry as
+if it had been previously enveloped in mystery. The formula of that
+argument is of this sort: "Civil law is equity established among men
+who belong to the same city, for the purpose of insuring each man in
+the possession of his property and rights: and the knowledge of this
+equity is useful: therefore the knowledge of civil law is useful."
+Then comes the enumeration of the parts, which is dealt with in this
+manner: "If a slave has not been declared free either by the censor,
+or by the praetor's rod, or by the will of his master, he is not free:
+but none of those things is the case: therefore he is not free." Then
+comes the sign; when some argument is derived from the meaning of a
+word, in this way:--As the Aelian Sentian law orders an assiduus[63] to
+support an assiduus, it orders a rich man to support a rich man, for a
+rich man is an assiduus, called so, as Aelius says, from _asse dando_.
+
+III. Arguments are also derived from things which bear some kind of
+relation to that which is the object of discussion. But this kind is
+distributed under many heads; for we call some connected with one
+another either by nature, or by their form, or by their resemblance to
+one another, or by their differences, or by their contrariety to
+one another, or by adjuncts, or by their antecedents, or by their
+consequents, or by what is opposed to each of them, or by causes, or
+by effects, or by a comparison with what is greater, or equal, or
+less.
+
+Arguments are said to be connected together which are derived from
+words of the same kind. But words are of the same kind which,
+originating from one word, are altered in various ways; as, "_sapiens,
+sapienter, sapientia_." The connexion of these words is called [Greek:
+suxugia]; from which arises an argument of this kind: "If the land is
+common, every one has a right to feed his cattle on it."
+
+An argument is derived from the kind of word, thus: "Since all the
+money has been bequeathed to the woman, it is impossible that
+that ready money which was left in the house should not have been
+bequeathed. For the species is never separated from the genus as long
+as it retains its name: but ready money retains the name of money:
+therefore it is plain that it was bequeathed."
+
+An argument is derived from the species, which we may sometimes name,
+in order that it may be more clearly understood; in this manner: "If
+the money was bequeathed to Fabia by her husband, on the supposition
+that she was the mother of his family; if she was not his wife, then
+nothing is due to her." For the wife is the genus: there are two kinds
+of wife; one being those mothers of a family which become wives by
+_coemptio_; the other kind are those which are only considered wives:
+and as Fabia was one of those last, it appears that nothing was
+bequeathed to her.
+
+An argument is derived from similarity, in this way: "If those houses
+have fallen down, or got into disrepair, a life-interest in which is
+bequeathed to some one, the heir is not bound to restore or to repair
+them, any more than he is bound to replace a slave, if a slave, a
+life-interest in whom has been bequeathed to some one, has died."
+
+An argument is derived from difference, thus: "It does not follow, if
+a man has bequeathed to his wife all the money which belonged to him,
+that therefore he bequeathed all which was down in his books as due to
+him; for there is a great difference whether the money is laid up in
+his strong box, or set down as due in his accounts."
+
+An argument is derived from contraries, thus: "That woman to whom her
+husband has left a life-interest in all his property, has no right, if
+his cellars of wine and oil are left full, to think that they belong
+to her; for the use of them is what has been bequeathed to her, and
+not the misuse: and they are contrary to one another."
+
+IV. An argument is derived from adjuncts, thus: "If a woman has made
+a will who has never given up her liberty by marriage, it does not
+appear that possession ought to be given by the edict of the praetor
+to the legatee under that will; for it is added, that in that case
+possession would seem proper to be given by that same edict, according
+to the wills of slaves, or exiles, or infants."
+
+Arguments are derived from antecedents, and consequents, and
+contradictories, in this way. From antecedents: "If a divorce has been
+caused by the fault of the husband, although the woman has demanded
+it, still she is not bound to leave any of her dowry for her
+children."
+
+From consequents: "If a woman having married a man with whom she had
+no right of intermarriage, has demanded a divorce, since the children
+who have been born do not follow their father, the father has no right
+to keep back any portion of the woman's dowry."
+
+From contradictories: "If the head of a family has left to his wife in
+reversion after his son the life-interest in the female slaves, and
+has made no mention of any other reversionary heir, if the son dies,
+the woman shall not lose her life-interest. For that which has once
+been given to any one by will, cannot be taken away from the
+legatee to whom it has been given without his consent; for it is a
+contradiction for any one to have a right to receive a thing, and yet
+to be forced to give it up against his will."
+
+An argument is derived from efficient causes, in this way: "All men
+have a right to add to a common party wall, a wall extending its whole
+length, either solid or on arches; but if any one in demolishing the
+common wall should promise to pay for any damages which may arise from
+his action, he will not be bound to pay for any damage sustained or
+caused by such arches: for the damage has been done, not by the party
+which demolished the common wall, but in consequence of some fault in
+the work, which was built in such a manner as to be unable to support
+itself."
+
+An argument is derived from what has been done, in this way: "When a
+woman becomes the wife of a man, everything which has belonged to
+the woman now becomes the property of the husband under the name of
+dowry."
+
+But in the way of comparison there are many kinds of valid arguments;
+in this way: "That which is valid in a greater affair, ought to be
+valid in a less: so that, if the law does not regulate the limits in
+the city, still more will it not compel any one to turn off the water
+in the city." Again, on the other hand: "Whatever is valid in a
+smaller matter ought to be valid also in a greater one. One may
+convert the preceding example." Also, "That which is valid in a
+parallel case ought to be valid in this which is a parallel case." As,
+"Since the usurpation of a farm depends on a term of two years, the
+law with respect to houses ought to be the same." But in the law
+houses are not mentioned, and so they are supposed to come under the
+same class as all other things, the property in which is determined by
+one year's use. Equity then must prevail, which requires similar laws
+in similar cases.[64]
+
+But those arguments which are derived from external circumstances
+are deduced chiefly from authority. Therefore the Greeks call
+argumentations of that kind [Greek: atechuoi], that is, devoid of
+art. As if you were to answer in this way:--"In the case of some one
+building a roof for the purpose of covering a common wall, Publius
+Scaevola asserted that there was no right of carrying that roof so
+far that the water which ran off it should run on to any part of any
+building which did not belong to the owner of the roof. This I affirm
+to be law."
+
+V. By these topics then which have been explained, a means of
+discovering and proving every sort of argument is supplied, as if they
+were elements of argument. Have we then said enough up to this point?
+I think we have, as far at least as you, an acute man and one deeply
+skilled in law, are concerned. But since I have to deal with a man who
+is very greedy when the feast in question is one of learning, I will
+prosecute the subject so that I will rather put forth something more
+than is necessary, than allow you to depart unsatisfied. As, then,
+each separate one of those topics which I have mentioned has its own
+proper members, I will follow them out as accurately as I can; and
+first of all I will speak of the definition itself.
+
+Definition is a speech which explains that which is defined. But of
+definitions there are two principal kinds: one, of those things which
+exist; the other, of those which are understood. The things which I
+call existing are those which can be seen or touched; as a farm, a
+house, a wall, a gutter, a slave, an ox, furniture, provisions, and so
+on; of which kind of things some require at times to be defined by us.
+Those things, again, I say have no existence, which are incapable of
+being touched or proved, but which can be perceived by the mind
+and understood; as if you were to define usucaption, guardianship,
+nationality, or relationship; all, things which have no body, but
+which nevertheless have a certain conformation plainly marked out and
+impressed upon the mind, which I call the notion of them. They often
+require to be explained by definition while we are arguing about them.
+
+And again, there are definitions by partition, and others by division:
+by partition, when the matter which is to be defined is separated, as
+it were, into different members; as if any one were to say that civil
+law was that which consists of laws, resolutions of the senate,
+precedents, the authority of lawyers, the edicts of magistrates,
+custom, and equity. But a definition by division embraces every form
+which comes under the entire genus which is defined; in this way:
+"Alienation is the surrender of anything which is a man's private
+property, or a legal cession of it to men who are able by law to avail
+themselves of such cession."
+
+VI. There are also other kinds of definitions, but they have no
+connexion with the subject of this book; we have only got to say what
+is the manner of expressing a definition. This, then, is what the
+ancients prescribe: that when you have taken those things which are
+common to the thing which you wish to define with other things, you
+must pursue them till you make out of them altogether some peculiar
+property which cannot be transferred to anything else. As this: "An
+inheritance is money." Up to this point the definition is common, for
+there are many kinds of money. Add what follows: "which by somebody's
+death comes to some one else." It is not yet a definition, for
+money belonging to the dead can be possessed in many ways without
+inheritance. Add one word, "lawfully." By this time the matter will
+appear distinguished from general terms, so that the definition may
+stand thus:--"An inheritance is money which by somebody's death has
+lawfully come to some one else." It is not enough yet. Add, "without
+being either bequeathed by will, or held as some one else's property."
+The definition is complete. Again, take this:--"Those are _gentiles_
+who are of the same name as one another." That is insufficient. "And
+who are born of noble blood." Even that is not enough. "Who have never
+had any ancestor in the condition of a slave." Something is still
+wanting. "Who have never parted with their franchise." This, perhaps,
+may do. For I am not aware that Scaevola, the pontiff, added anything
+to this definition. And this principle holds good in each kind of
+definition, whether the thing to be defined is something which exists,
+or something which is understood.
+
+VII. But we have shown now what is meant by partition, and by
+division. But it is necessary to explain more clearly wherein
+they differ. In partition, there are as it were members; as of a
+body--head, shoulders, hands, sides, legs, feet, and so on. In
+division there are forms which the Greeks call [Greek: ideae]; our
+countrymen who treat of such subjects call them species. And it is not
+a bad name, though it is an inconvenient one if we want to use it in
+different cases. For even if it were Latin to use such words, I
+should not like to say _specierum_ and _speciebus_. And we have often
+occasion to use these cases. But I have no such objection to saying
+_formarum_ and _formis_; and as the meaning of each word is the same,
+I do not think that convenience of sound is wholly to be neglected.
+
+Men define genus and species or form in this manner:--"Genus is
+a notion relating to many differences. Species is a notion, the
+difference of which can be referred to the head and as it were
+fountain of the genus." I mean by notion that which the Greeks call
+sometimes [Greek: _ennoia_], and sometimes [Greek: _enoprolaepsis_].
+It is knowledge implanted and previously acquired of each separate
+thing, but one which requires development. Species, then, are those
+forms into which genus is divided without any single one being
+omitted; as if any one were to divide justice into law, custom, and
+equity. A person who thinks that species are the same things as parts,
+is confounding the art; and being perplexed by some resemblance,
+he does not distinguish with sufficient acuteness what ought to be
+distinguished. Often, also, both orators and poets define by metaphor,
+relying on some verbal resemblance, and indeed not without giving a
+certain degree of pleasure. But I will not depart from your examples
+unless I am actually compelled to do so.
+
+Aquillius, then, my colleague and intimate friend, was accustomed,
+when there was any discussion about shores, (all of which you lawyers
+insist upon it are public,) to define them to men who asked to whom
+that which was shore belonged, in this way: "Wherever the waves
+dashed;" that is, as if a man were to define youth as the flower of
+a man's age, or old age as the setting of life. Using a metaphor, he
+departs from the words proper to the matter in hand and to his own
+art. This is enough as to definition. Let us now consider the other
+points.
+
+VIII. But we must employ partition in such a manner as to omit no part
+whatever. As if you wish to partition guardianship, you would act
+ignorantly if you were to omit any kind. But if you were partitioning
+off the different formulas of stipulations or judicial decisions, then
+it is not a fault to omit something in a matter which is of boundless
+extent. But in division it is a fault; for there is a settled number
+of species which are subordinate to each genus. The distribution of
+the parts is often more interminable still, like the drawing streams
+from a fountain. Therefore in the art of an orator, when the genus
+of a question is once laid down, the number of its species is added
+absolutely; but when rules are given concerning the embellishments of
+words and sentences, which are called [Greek: _schaemata_], the case
+is different; for the circumstances are more infinite: so that it may
+be understood from this also what the difference is which we assert to
+exist between partition and division. For although the words appear
+nearly equivalent to one another still, because the things are
+different, the expressions are also established as not synonymous to
+one another.
+
+Many arguments are also derived from observation, and that is when
+they are deduced from the meaning of a word, which the Greeks call
+[Greek: _etumologia_]; or as we might translate it, word for word,
+_veriloquium_. But we, while avoiding the novel appearance of a word
+which is not very suitable, call this kind of argument _notatio_,
+because words are the notes by which we distinguish things. And
+therefore Aristotle calls the same source of argument [Greek:
+_sunbolou_], which is equivalent to the Latin _nota_. But when it is
+known what is meant we need not be so particular about the name. In
+a discussion then, many arguments are derived from words by means
+of observation; as when the question is asked, what is a
+_postliminium_--(I do not mean what are the objects to which this word
+applies, for that would be division, which is something of this sort:
+"_Postliminium_ applies to a man, a ship, a mule with panniers, a
+horse, a mare who is accustomed to be bridled")--but when the meaning
+of the word itself, _postliminium_, is asked, and when the word itself
+is observed. And in this our countryman, Servius, as it seems, thinks
+that there is nothing to be observed except _post_, and he insists
+upon it that _liminium_ is a mere extension of the word; as in
+_finitimus, legitimus, ceditimus, timus_ has no more meaning than
+_tullius_ has in _meditullius_.
+
+But Scaevola, the son of Publius Scaeaevola, thinks the word is a
+compound one, so that it is made up of _post_ and _limen_. So that
+those things which have been alienated from us, when they have come
+into the possession of our enemies, and, as it were, departed from
+their own threshold, then when they have returned behind that same
+threshold, appear to have returned _postliminio_. By which definition
+even the cause of Mancinus may be defended by saying that he returned
+_postliminio_,--that he was not surrendered, inasmuch as he was not
+received. For that no surrender and no gift can be understood to have
+taken place if there has been no reception of it.
+
+IX. We next come to that topic which is derived from those things
+which are disposed in some way or other to that thing which is the
+subject of discussion. And I said just now that it was divided into
+many parts. And the first topic is derived from combination, which the
+Greeks call [Greek: sizugia], being a kindred thing to observation,
+which we have just been discussing, as, if we were only to understand
+that to be rain-water which we saw to have been collected from rain,
+Mucius would come, who, because the words _pluna_ and _pluendo_ were
+akin, would say that all water ought to be kept out which had been
+increased by raining. But when an argument is derived from a genus,
+then it will not be necessary to trace it back to its origin, we may
+often stop on this side of that point, provided that which is deduced
+is higher than that for which it is deduced, as, "Rain water in its
+ultimate genus is that which descends from heaven and is increased by
+showers," but in reference to its more proximate sense, under which
+the right of keeping it off is comprised, the genus is, mischievous
+rain water. The subordinate species of that genus are waters which
+injure through a natural defect of the place, or those which are
+injurious on account of the works of man: for one of these kinds may
+be restrained by an arbitrator, but not the other.
+
+Again, this argumentation is handled very advantageously, which is
+derived from a species when you pursue all the separate parts by
+tracing them back to the whole, in this way "If that is _dolus malus_
+when one thing is aimed at, and another pretended," we may enumerate
+the different modes in which that can be done, and then under some one
+of them we may range that which we are trying to prove has been done
+_dolo malo_. And that kind of argument is usually accounted one of the
+most irrefragable of all.
+
+X. The next thing is similarity, which is a very extensive topic, but
+one more useful for orators and for philosophers than for men of
+your profession. For although all topics belong to every kind of
+discussion, so as to supply arguments for each, still they occurs more
+abundantly in discussions on some subjects, and more sparingly in
+others. Therefore the genera are known to you, but when you are to
+employ them the questions themselves will instruct you. For there are
+resemblances which by means of comparisons arrive at the point they
+aim at, in this manner. "If a guardian is bound to behave with good
+faith, and a partner, and any one to whom you have entrusted anything,
+and any one who has undertaken a trust then so ought an agent." This
+argument, arriving at the point at which it aims by a comparison of
+many instances, is called induction, which in Greek is called [Greek:
+_ipago_]. and it is the kind of argument which Socrates employed a
+great deal in his discourses.
+
+Another kind of resemblance is obtained by comparison, when one thing
+is compared to some other single thing, and like to like, in this way
+"As if in any city there is a dispute as to boundaries because the
+boundaries of fields appear more extensive than those of cities, you
+may find it impossible to bring an arbitrator to settle the question
+of boundaries, so if rain water is injurious in a city, since the
+whole matter is one more for country magistrates, you may not be
+able to bring an arbitrator to settle the question of keeping off
+rain-water" Again, from the same topic of resemblance, examples are
+derived, as, "Crassus in Cunus's trial used many examples, speaking of
+the man who by his will had appointed his heir in such a manner, that
+if he had had a son born within ten months of his death, and that son
+had died before coming into possession of the property held in trust
+for him, the revisionary heir would succeed to the inheritance.
+And the enumeration of precedents which Crassus brought forward
+prevailed". And you are accustomed to use this style of argument very
+frequently in replies. Even fictitious examples have all the force of
+real ones, but they belong rather to the orator than to you lawyers,
+although you also do use them sometimes, but in this way. "Suppose a
+man had given a slave a thing which a slave is by law incapable of
+receiving, is it on that account the act of the man who received it?
+or has he, who gave that present to his slave on that account taken
+any obligations on himself?" And in this kind of argument orators and
+philosophers are allowed to make even dumb things talk, so that the
+dead man be raised from the shades below, or that anything which
+intrinsically is absolutely impossible, may, for the sake of adding
+force to the argument, or diminishing, be spoken of as real and that
+figure is called hyperbole. And they may say other marvellous things,
+but theirs is a wider field. Still, out of the same topics, as I have
+said before, arguments are derived for the most important and the most
+trivial inquiries.
+
+XI After similarity there follows difference between things, which is
+as different as possible from the preceding topic, still it is the
+same art which finds out resemblances and dissimilarities. These are
+instances of the same sort--"If you have contracted a debt to a woman,
+you can pay her without having recourse to a trustee, but what you
+owe to a minor, whether male or female; you cannot pay in the same
+manner."
+
+The next topic is one which is derived from contraries. But the genera
+of contraries are several. One is of such things as differ in the same
+kind; as wisdom and jolly. But those things are said to be in the same
+kind, which, when they are proposed, are immediately met by certain
+contraries, as if placed opposite to them: as slowness is contrary to
+rapidity, and not weakness. From which contraries such arguments as
+these are deduced:--"If we avoid folly, let us pursue wisdom; and if
+we avoid wickedness, let us pursue goodness." These things, as they
+are contrary qualities in the same class, are called opposites. For
+there are other contraries, which we may call in Latin, _privantia_,
+and which the Greeks call [Greek: _steraetika_]. For the preposition
+_in_ deprives the word of that force which it would have if _in_ were
+not prefixed; as, "dignity, indignity--humanity, inhumanity," and
+other words of the same kind, the manner of dealing with which is
+the same as that of dealing with other kinds which I have called
+opposites. For there are also other kinds or contraries; as those
+which are compared to something or other; as, "twofold and simple;
+many and few; long and short; greater and less." There are also those
+very contrary things which are called negatives, which the Greeks call
+[Greek: _steraetika_]: as, "If this is the case, that is not." For
+what need is there for an instance? only let it be understood that in
+seeking for an argument it is not every contrary which is suitable to
+be opposed to another.
+
+XII. But I gave a little while ago an instance drawn from adjuncts;
+showing that many things are added as accessories, which ought to
+be admitted, if we decided that possession ought to be given by the
+praetor's edict, in compliance with the will which that person made
+who had no right whatever to make a will. But this topic has more
+influence in conjectural causes, which are frequent in courts, of
+justice, when we are inquiring either what is, or what has been, or
+what is likely to be, or what possibly may happen. And the form of the
+topic itself is as follows. But this topic reminds us to inquire what
+happened before the transaction of which we are speaking, or at the
+same time with the transaction, or after the transaction. "This has
+nothing to do with the law, you had better apply to Cicero," our
+friend Gallus used to say, if any one brought him any cause which
+required an inquiry into matters of fact. But you will prefer that no
+topic of the art which I have begun to treat of should be omitted
+by me, lest if you should think that nothing was to be written here
+except what had reference to yourself, you should seem to be too
+selfish. This then is for the most part an oratorical topic; not only
+not much suited to lawyers, but not even to philosophers. For the
+circumstances which happened before the matter in question are
+inquired into, such as any preparation, any conferences, any place,
+any prearranged convivial meeting. And the circumstances which
+happened at the same time with the matter in question, are the noise
+of footfalls, the noise of men, the shadow of a body, or anything of
+that sort. The circumstances subsequent to the matter in question are,
+blushing, paleness, trepidation, or any other tokens of agitation
+or consciousness; and besides these, any such fact as a fire
+extinguished, a bloody sword, or any circumstance which can excite a
+suspicion of such an act.
+
+XIII. The next topic is one peculiar to dialecticians; derived from
+consequents, and antecedents, and inconsistencies; and this one is
+very different from that drawn from differences. For adjuncts, of
+which we were speaking just now, do not always exist, but consequents
+do invariably. I call those things consequents which follow an
+action of necessity. And the same rule holds as to antecedents and
+inconsistencies; for whatever precedes each thing, that of necessity
+coheres with that theme; and whatever is inconsistent with it is of
+such a nature that it can never cohere with it. As then this topic is
+distributed in three divisions, into consequence, antecession, and
+inconsistency, there is one single topic to help us find the argument,
+but a threefold way of dealing with it. For what difference does it
+make, when you have once assumed that the ready money is due to the
+woman to whom all the money has been bequeathed, whether you conclude
+your argument in this way:--"If coined money is money, it has been
+bequeathed to the woman; but coined money is money; therefore it has
+been bequeathed to her;"--or in this way: "If ready money has not been
+bequeathed to her, then ready money is not money; but ready money is
+money; therefore it has been bequeathed to her;"--or in this way: "The
+cases of money not having been bequeathed, and of ready money not
+having been bequeathed, are identical; but money was bequeathed
+to her; therefore ready money was bequeathed to her?" But the
+dialecticians call that conclusion of the argument in which, when you
+have first made an assumption, that which is connected with it follows
+as a consequence of the assumption, the first mood of the conclusion;
+and when, because you have denied the consequence, it follows that
+that also to which it was a consequence must be denied also, that is
+the second mood. But when you deny some things in combination, (and
+then another negation is added to them,) and from these things you
+assume something, so that what remains is also done away with, that is
+called the third mood of the conclusion. From this are derived those
+results of the rhetoricians drawn from contraries, which they call
+enthymemes. Not that every sentence may not be legitimately called
+an enthymeme; but, as Homer on account of his preeminence has
+appropriated the general name of poet to himself as his own among all
+the Greeks; so, though every sentence is an enthymeme, still, because
+that which is made up of contraries appears the most acute argument of
+the kind, that alone has possessed itself of the general name as its
+own peculiar distinction. Its kinds are these:--"Can you fear this
+man, and not fear that one?"--"You condemn this woman, against whom
+you bring no accusation; and do you say that this other one deserves
+punishment, whom you believe to deserve reward?"--"That which you do
+know is no good; that which you do not know is a great hindrance to
+you."
+
+XIV. This kind of disputing is very closely connected with the mode
+of discussion adopted by you lawyers in reply, and still more closely
+with that adopted by philosophers, as they share with the orators
+in the employment of that general conclusion which is drawn from
+inconsistent sentences, which is called by dialecticians the third
+mood, and by rhetoricians an enthymeme. There are many other
+moods used by the rhetoricians, which consist of disjunctive
+propositions:--"Either this or that is the case; but this is the case;
+then that is not the case." And again:--"Either this or that is the
+case; but this is not the case; then that is the case." And these
+conclusions are valid, because in a disjunctive proposition only one
+alternative can be true. And from those conclusions which I have
+mentioned above, the former is called by the dialecticians the
+fourth mood, and the latter the fifth. Then they add a negation of
+conjunctive propositions; as, "It is not both this and that; but it is
+this; therefore it is not that." This is the sixth mood. The seventh
+is, "It is not both this and that; but it is not this; therefore it is
+that." From these moods innumerable conclusions are derived, in which
+nearly the whole science of dialectics consists. But even those which
+I have now explained are not necessary for this present discussion.
+
+XV. The next topic is drawn from efficient circumstances which are
+called causes; and the next from the results produced by these
+efficient causes. I have already given instances of these, as of the
+other topics, and those too drawn from civil law; but these have a
+wider application.
+
+There are then two kinds of causes; one which of its own force to a
+certainty produces that effect which is subordinate to it; as, "Fire
+burns;" the other is that which has no nature able to produce the
+effect in question, though still that effect cannot be produced
+without it; as, if any one were to say, that "brass was the cause of a
+statue; because a statue cannot be made without it." Now of this kind
+of causes which are indispensable to a thing being done, some are
+quiet some passive, some, as it were, senseless; as, place, time,
+materials, tools, and other things of the same sort. But some exhibit
+a sort of preparatory process towards the production of the effect
+spoken of; and some of themselves do contribute some aid to it;
+although it is not indispensable; as meeting may have supplied
+the cause to love; love to crime. From this description of causes
+depending on one another in infinite series, is derived the doctrine
+of fate insisted on by the Stoics. And as I have thus divided the
+genera of causes, without which nothing can be effected, so also the
+genera of the efficient causes can be divided in the same manner. For
+there are some causes which manifestly produce the effect, without any
+assistance from any quarter; others which require external aid; as for
+instance, wisdom alone by herself makes men wise; but whether she is
+able alone to make men happy is a question.
+
+XVI. Wherefore, when any cause efficient as to some particular end has
+inevitably presented itself in a discussion, it is allowable without
+any hesitation to conclude that what that cause must inevitably effect
+is effected. But when the cause is of such a nature that it does not
+inevitably effect the result, then the conclusion which follows is
+not inevitable And that description of causes which has an inevitable
+effect does not usually engender mistakes; but this description,
+without which a thing cannot take place, does often cause perplexity.
+For it does not follow, because sons cannot exist without parents,
+that there was therefore any unavoidable cause in the parents to have
+children. This, therefore, without which an effect cannot be produced,
+must be carefully separated from that by which it is certainly
+produced. For that is like--
+
+
+ "Would that the lofty pine on Pelion's brow
+ Had never fall'n beneath the woodman's axe!"
+
+
+For if the beam of fir had never fallen to the ground, that Argo
+would not have been built; and yet there was not in the beams any
+unavoidably efficient power. But when
+
+"The fork'd and fiery bolt of Jove"
+
+was hurled at Ajax's vessel, that ship was then inevitably burnt.
+
+And again, there is a difference between causes, because some are such
+that without any particular eagerness of mind, without any expressed
+desire or opinion, they effect what is, as it were, their own work;
+as for instance, "that everything must die which has been born." But
+other results are effected either by some desire or agitation of mind,
+or by habit, or nature, or art, or chance. By desire, as in your case,
+when you read this book; by agitation, as in the case of any one who
+fears the ultimate issue of the present crisis; by habit, as in the
+case of a man who gets easily and rapidly in a passion; by nature, as
+vice increases every day; by art, as in the case of a man who paints
+well; by chance, as in the case of a man who has a prosperous voyage.
+None of these things are without some cause, and yet none of them are
+wholly owing to any single cause. But causes of this kind are not
+necessary ones.
+
+XVII. But in some of these causes there is a uniform operation, and in
+others there is not. In nature and in art there is uniformity; but
+in the others there is none. But still of those causes which are not
+uniform, some are evident, others are concealed. Those are evident
+which touch the desire or judgment of the mind; those are concealed
+which are subject to fortune: for as nothing is done without some
+cause, this very obscure cause, which works in a concealed manner,
+is the issue of fortune. Again, these results which are produced are
+partly unintended, partly intentional. Those are unintended which are
+produced by necessity; those are intentional which are produced by
+design. But those results which are produced by fortune are either
+unintended or intentional. For to shoot an arrow is an act of
+intention; to hit a man whom you did not mean to hit is the result of
+fortune. And this is the topic which you use like a battering-ram in
+your forensic pleadings; if a weapon has flown from the man's hand
+rather than been thrown by him. Also agitation of mind may be divided
+into absence of knowledge and absence of intention. And although they
+are to a certain extent voluntary, (for they are diverted from their
+course by reproof or by admonition,) still they are liable to such
+emotions that even those acts of theirs which are intentional
+sometimes seem either unavoidable, or at all events unintentional.
+
+The whole topic of these causes then being now fully explained, from
+their differences there is derived a great abundance of arguments in
+all the important discussions of orators and philosophers. And in the
+cases which you lawyers argue, if there is not so plentiful a stock,
+what there are, are perhaps more subtle and shrewd. For in private
+actions the decisions in the most important cases appear to me to
+depend a great deal on the acuteness of the lawyers. For they are
+constantly present, and are taken into counsel; and they supply
+weapons to able advocates whenever they have recourse to their
+professional wisdom.
+
+In all those judicial proceedings then, in which the words "according
+to good faith" are added, or even those words, "as ought to be done by
+one good man to another;" and above all, in all cases of arbitration
+respecting matrimonial rights, in which the words "juster and better"
+occur, the lawyers ought to be always ready. For they know what
+"dishonest fraud," or "good faith," or "just," or "good" mean. They
+are acquainted with the law between partners; they know what the man
+who has the management of the affairs of another is bound to do with
+respect to him whose affairs he manages; they have laid down rules to
+show what the man who has committed a charge to another, and what he
+who has had it committed to him, ought to do; what a husband ought to
+confer on his wife, and a wife on her husband. It will, therefore,
+when they have by diligence arrived at a proper understanding of the
+topics from which the necessary arguments are derived, be in the power
+not only of orators and philosophers, but of lawyers also, to discuss
+with abundance of argument all the questions which can arise for their
+consideration.
+
+XVIII. Conjoined to this topic of causes is that topic which is
+supplied by causes. For as cause indicates effect, so what has been
+effected points out what the efficient cause has been. This topic
+ordinarily supplies to orators and poets, and often to philosophers
+also, that is to say, to those who have an elegant and argumentative
+and rich style of eloquence, a wonderful store of arguments, when they
+predict what will result from each circumstance. For the knowledge of
+causes produces a knowledge of effects.
+
+The remaining topic is that of comparison, the genus and instances of
+which have been already explained, as they have in the case of the
+other topics. At present we must explain the manner of dealing with
+this one. Those things then are compared which are greater than one
+another, or less than one another, or equal to one another. In which
+these points are regarded; number, appearance, power, and some
+particular relation to some particular thing.
+
+Things will be compared in number thus: so that more advantages may be
+preferred to fewer; fewer evils to more; more lasting advantages
+to those which are more short-lived; those which have an extensive
+application to those the effect of which is narrowed: those from which
+still further advantages may be derived, and those which many people
+may imitate and reproduce.
+
+Things again will be compared with reference to their appearance, so
+that those things may be preferred which are to be desired for their
+own sake, to those which are only sought for the sake of something
+else: and so that innate and inherent advantages may be preferred to
+acquired and adventitious ones; complete good to mixed good; pleasant
+things to things less pleasant; honourable things to such as are
+merely useful; easy things to difficult ones; necessary to unnecessary
+things; one's own advantage to that of others; rare things to common
+ones; desirable things to those which you can easily do without;
+things complete to things which are only begun; wholes to parts;
+things proceeding on reason to things void of reason; voluntary to
+necessary things; animate to inanimate things; things natural to
+things not natural; things skilfully produced by art to things with
+which art has no connexion.
+
+But power in a comparison is perceived in this way: an efficient cause
+is more important than one which effects nothing; those causes which
+can act by themselves are superior to those which stand in need of the
+aid of others; those which are in our power are preferable to those
+which are in the power of another; lasting causes surpass those which
+are uncertain; things of which no one can deprive us are better than
+things which can be easily taken away.
+
+But the way in which people or things are disposed towards some
+things is of this sort: the interests of the chief citizens are more
+important than those of the rest: and also, those things which are
+more agreeable, which are approved of by more people, or which
+are praised by the most virtuous men, are preferable. And as in a
+comparison these things are the better, so those which are contrary to
+them are the worse.
+
+But the comparison between things like or equal to each other has no
+elation or submission; for it is on equal terms: but there are many
+things which are compared on account of their very equality; which are
+usually concluded in this manner: "If to assist one's fellow-citizens
+with counsel and personal aid deserves equal praise, those men who act
+as counsellors ought to enjoy an equal glory with those who are the
+actual defenders of a state." But the first premiss is certainly the
+case; therefore so must the consequent be.
+
+Every rule necessary for the discovery of arguments is now concluded;
+so that as you have proceeded from definition, from partition, from
+observation, from words connected with one another, from genus, from
+species, from similarity, from difference, from contraries, from
+accessories, from consequents, from antecedents, from things
+inconsistent with one another, from causes, from effects, from a
+comparison with greater, or lesser, or equal things,--there is no
+topic of argument whatever remaining to be discovered.
+
+XIX. But since we originally divided the inquiry in such a way that we
+said that other topics also were contained in the very matter which
+was the subject of inquiry; (but of those we have spoken at sufficient
+length:) that others were derived from external subjects; and of these
+we will say a little; although those things have no relation whatever
+to your discussions. But still we may as well make the thing complete,
+since we have begun it. Nor are you a man who take no delight in
+anything except civil law; and since this treatise is dedicated to
+you, though not so exclusively but that it will also come into the
+hands of other people, we must take pains to be as serviceable as
+possible to those men who are addicted to laudable pursuits.
+
+This sort of argumentation then which is said not to be founded on
+art, depends on testimony. But we call everything testimony which is
+deduced from any external circumstances for the purpose of implanting
+belief. Now it is not every one who is of sufficient weight to give
+valid testimony; for authority is requisite to make us believe things.
+But it is either a man's natural character or his age which invests
+him with authority. The authority derived from a man's natural
+character depends chiefly on his virtue; but on his age there are
+many things which confer authority; genius, power, fortune, skill,
+experience, necessity, and sometimes even a concourse of accidental
+circumstances. For men think able and opulent men, and men who have
+been esteemed during a long period of their lives, worthy of being
+believed Perhaps they are not always right; but still it is not easy
+to change the sentiments of the common people; and both those who form
+judgments and those who adopt vague opinions shape everything with
+reference to them. For those men who are eminent for those qualities
+which I have mentioned, seem to be eminent for virtue itself. But in
+the other circumstances also which I have just enumerated, although
+there is in them no appearance of virtue, still sometimes belief
+is confirmed by them, if either any skill is displayed,--for the
+influence of knowledge in inspiring belief is very great; or any
+experience--for people are apt to believe those who are men of
+experience.
+
+XX. Necessity also engenders belief, which sways both bodies and
+minds. For what men say when worn out with tortures, and stripes, and
+fire, appears to be uttered by truth itself. And those statements
+which proceed from agitation of mind, such as pain, cupidity, passion,
+and fear, because those feelings have the force of necessity, bring
+authority and belief. And of this kind are those circumstances from
+which at times the truth is discovered; childhood, sleep, ignorance,
+drunkenness, insanity. For children have often indicated something,
+though ignorant to what it related; and many things have often been
+discovered by sleep, and wine, and insanity. Many men also have
+without knowing it fallen into great difficulties, as lately happened
+to Stalenus; who said things in the hearing of certain excellent men,
+though a wall was between them, which, when they were revealed and
+brought before a judicial tribunal, were thought so wicked that he was
+rightly convicted of a capital offence. And we have heard something
+similar concerning Pausanias the Lacedaemonian.
+
+But the concourse of fortuitous events is often of this kind; when
+anything has happened by chance to interrupt, when anything was being
+done or said which it was desirable should not have been done or said.
+Of this kind is that multitude of suspicions of treason which were
+heaped upon Palamedes. And circumstances of this kind are sometimes
+scarcely able to be refuted by truth itself. Of this kind too is
+ordinary report among the common people; which is as it were the
+testimony of the multitude.
+
+But those things which create belief on account of the virtue of the
+witness are of a two-fold kind; one of which is valid on account of
+nature, the other by industry. For the virtue of the gods is eminent
+by nature; but that of men, because of their industry.
+
+Testimonies of this kind are nearly divine, first of all, that of
+oration, (for oracles were so called from that very same word, as
+there is in them the oration of the gods;) then that of things in
+which there are, as it were, many divine works; first of all, the word
+itself, and its whole order and ornaments; then the airy flights and
+songs of birds; then the sound and heat of that same air; and the
+numerous prodigies of divers kinds seen on the earth; and also, the
+power of foreseeing the future by means of the entrails of victims:
+many things, too, which are shown to the living by those who are
+asleep: from all which topics the testimonies of the gods are at times
+adduced so as to create belief.
+
+In the case of a man, the opinion of his virtue is of the greatest
+weight. For opinion goes to this extent, that those men have virtue,
+not only who do really possess it, but those also who appear to
+possess it. Therefore, those men whom they see endowed with genius
+and diligence and learning, and whose life they see is consistent and
+approved of, like Cato and Laelius, and Scipio, and many others, they
+consider such men as they themselves would wish to be. And not only
+do they think them such who enjoy honours conferred on them by the
+people, and who busy themselves with affairs of state, but also those
+who are orators, and philosophers, and poets, and historians; from
+whose sayings and writings authority is often sought for to establish
+belief.
+
+XXI. Having thus explained all the topics serviceable for arguing, the
+first thing to be understood is, that there is no discussion whatever
+to which some topic or other is not applicable; and on the other hand,
+that it is not every topic which is applicable to every discussion;
+but that different topics are suited to different subjects.
+
+There are two kinds of inquiry: one, infinite; the other, definite.
+The definite one is that which the Greeks call [Greek: hupothesis],
+and we, a cause; the infinite one, that which they call [Greek:
+thesis], and which we may properly term a proposition.
+
+A cause is determined by certain persons, places, times, actions, and
+things, either all or most of them; but a proposition is declared in
+some one of those things, or in several of them, and those not the
+most important: therefore, a proposition is a part of a cause. But the
+whole inquiry is about some particular one of those things in which
+causes are contained; whether it be one, or many, or sometimes all.
+But of inquiries, concerning whatever thing they are, there two kinds;
+one theoretical, the other practical. Theoretical inquiries are those
+of which the proposed aim is science; as, 'If it is inquired whether
+right proceeds from nature, or from some covenant, as it were, and
+bargain between men. But the following are instances of practical
+inquiry: "Whether it is the part of a wise man to meddle with
+statesmanship." The inquiries into theoretical matters are threefold;
+as what is inquired is, whether a thing exists, or what it is, or
+what its character is. The first of these queries is explained by
+conjecture; the second, by definition; the third, by distinctions of
+right and wrong.
+
+The method of conjecture is distributed into four parts; one of which
+is, when the inquiry is whether something exists; a second, when the
+question is, whence it has originated; a third, when one seeks to know
+what cause produced it; the fourth is that in which the alterations to
+which the subject is liable are examined: "Whether it exists or not;
+whether there is anything honourable, anything intrinsically and
+really just; or whether these things only exist in opinion." But the
+inquiry whence it has originated, is when an inquiry is such as
+this, "Whether virtue is implanted by nature, or whether it can be
+engendered by instruction." But the efficient cause is like this, as
+when an inquiry is, "By what means eloquence is produced." Concerning
+the alterations of anything, in this manner: "Whether eloquence can by
+any alteration be converted into a want of eloquence."
+
+XXII. But when the question is what a thing is; the notion is to be
+explained, and the property, and the division, and the partition. For
+these things are all attributed to definition. Description also is
+added, which the Greeks call [Greek: charaktaer]. A notion is inquired
+into in this way: "Whether that is just which is useful to that person
+who is the more powerful." Property, in this way: "Whether melancholy
+is incidental to man alone, or whether beasts also are liable to it."
+Division, and also partition, in this manner: "Whether there are three
+descriptions of good things." Description, like this: "What sort of
+person a miser is; what sort of person a flatterer;" and other things
+of that sort, by which the nature and life of a man are described.
+
+But when the inquiry is what the character of something is, the
+inquiry is conducted either simply, or by way of comparison.
+Simply, in this way: "Whether glory is to be sought for." By way of
+comparison, in this way: "Whether glory is to be preferred to riches."
+Of simple inquiries there are three kinds; about seeking for or
+avoiding anything, about the right and the wrong; about what is
+honourable and what is discreditable. But of inquiries by way of
+comparison there are two; one of the thing itself and something else;
+one of something greater and something else. Of seeking for and
+avoiding a thing, in this way: "Whether riches are to be sought
+for: whether poverty is to be avoided." Concerning right and wrong:
+"Whether it is right to revenge oneself, whoever the person may be
+from whom one has received an injury." Concerning what is honourable
+and what is discreditable: "Whether it is honourable to die for one's
+country." But of the other kind of inquiry, which has been stated to
+be twofold, one is about the thing in question and something else;
+as if it were asked, "What is the difference between a friend and
+a flatterer, between a king and a tyrant?" The other is between
+something greater and something less; as if it were asked, "Whether
+eloquence is of more consequence than the knowledge of civil law." And
+this is enough about theoretical inquiries.
+
+It remains to speak of practical ones; of which there are two kinds:
+one relating to one's duty, the other to engendering, or calming, or
+utterly removing any affection of the mind. Relating to duty thus: as
+when the question is, "Whether children ought to be bad." Relating to
+influencing the mind, when exhortations are delivered to men to defend
+the republic, or when they are encouraged to seek glory and praise:
+of which kind of addresses are complaints, and encouragements, and
+tearful commiseration; and again, speeches extinguishing anger, or at
+other times removing fear, or repressing the exultation of joy, or
+effacing melancholy. As these different divisions belong to general
+inquiries, they are also transferable to causes.
+
+XXIII. But the next thing to be inquired is, what topics are adapted
+to each kind of inquiry; for all those which we have already mentioned
+are suitable to most kinds; but still, different topics, as I have
+said before, are better suited to different investigations. Those
+arguments are the most suitable to conjectural discussion which can be
+deduced from causes, from effects, or from dependent circumstances.
+But when we have need of definition, then we must have recourse to the
+principles and science of defining. And akin to this is that other
+argument also which we said was employed with respect to the subject
+in question and something else; and that is a species of definition.
+For if the question is, "Whether pertinacity and perseverance are the
+same thing," it must be decided by definitions. And the topics which
+are incidental to a discussion of this kind are those drawn from
+consequents, or antecedents, or inconsistencies, with the addition
+also of those two topics which are deduced from causes and effects.
+For if such and such a thing is a consequence of this, but not a
+consequence of that; or if such and such a thing is a necessary
+antecedent to this, but not to that; or if it is inconsistent with
+this, but not with that; or if one thing is the cause of this, and
+another the cause of that; or if this is effected by one thing,
+and that by another thing; from any one of these topics it may be
+discovered whether the thing which is the subject of discussion is the
+same thing or something else.
+
+With respect to the third kind of inquiry, in which the question is
+what the character of the matter in question is, those things are
+incidental to the comparison which were enumerated just now under the
+topic of comparison. But in that kind of inquiry where the question
+is about what is to be sought for or avoided, those arguments are
+employed which refer to advantages or disadvantages, whether affecting
+the mind or body, or being external. And again, when the inquiry is
+not what is honourable or discreditable, all our argument must be
+addressed to the good or bad qualities of the mind.
+
+But when right and wrong are being discussed, all the topics of equity
+are collected. These are divided in a two-fold manner, as to whether
+they are such by nature or owing to institutions. Nature has two
+parts to perform, to defend itself, and to indicate right. But the
+agreements which establish equity are of a threefold character: one
+part is that which rests on laws; one depends on convenience; the
+third is founded on and established by antiquity of custom. And again,
+equity itself is said to be of a threefold nature: one division of it
+having reference to the gods above; another, to the shades below; a
+third, to mankind. The first is called piety; the second, sanctity;
+the third, justice or equity.
+
+XXIV. I have said enough about propositions. There are now a few
+things which require to be said about causes. For they have many
+things in common with propositions.
+
+There are then three kinds of causes; having for their respective
+objects, judgment, deliberation, and panegyric. And the object of each
+points out what topics we ought to employ in each. For the object of
+judicial judgment is right; from which also it derives its name. And
+the divisions of right were explained when we explained the divisions
+of equity. The object of deliberation is utility; of which the
+divisions have also been already explained when we were treating of
+things to be desired. The object of panegyric is honour; concerning
+which also we have already spoken.
+
+But inquiries which are definite are all of them furnished with
+appropriate topics, as if they belonged to themselves, being divided
+into accusation and defence. And in them there are these kinds of
+argumentation. The accuser accuses a person of an act; the advocate
+for the defence opposes one of these excuses: either that the thing
+imputed has not been done; or that, if it has been done, it deserves
+to be called by a different name; or that it was done lawfully and
+rightly. Therefore, the first is called a defence either by way of
+denial or by way of conjecture; the second is called a defence by
+definition; the third, although it is an unpopular name, is called the
+judicial one.
+
+XXV. The arguments proper to these excuses, being derived from the
+topics which we have already set forth, have been explained in our
+oratorical rules. But the refutation of an accusation, in which there
+is a repelling of a charge, which is called in Greek [Greek: stasis],
+is in Latin called _status_. On which there is founded, in the first
+place, such a defence as may effectually resist the attack. And also,
+in the deliberations and panegyrics the same refutations often have
+place. For it is often denied that those things are likely to happen
+which have been stated by some or other in his speech as sure to take
+place; if it can be shown either that they are actually impossible, or
+that they cannot be brought about without extreme difficulty. And in
+this kind of argumentation the conjectural refutation takes place. But
+when there is any discussion about utility, or honour, or equity, and
+about those things which are contrary to one another, then come in
+denials, either of the law or of the name of the action. And the same
+is the case in panegyrics. For one may either deny that that has been
+done which the person is praised for; or else that it ought to bear
+that name which the praiser has conferred on it, or else one may
+altogether deny that it deserves any praise at all, as not having been
+done rightly or lawfully. And Caesar employed all these different kinds
+of denial with exceeding impudence when speaking against my friend
+Cato. But the contest which arises from a denial is called by the
+Greeks [Greek: krinomenon]; I, while writing to you, prefer calling it
+"the precise point in dispute." But for the parts within which this
+discussion on the point in dispute is contained, they may be called
+the containing parts; being as it were the foundations of the defence;
+and if they are taken away there would be no defence at all. But since
+in arguing controversies there ought to be nothing which has more
+weight than the law itself, we must take pains to have the law as our
+assistant and witness. And in this there are, as it were, other new
+denials, which are called legitimate subjects of discussion. For then
+it is urged in defence, that the law does not say what the adversary
+states it to say, but something else. And that happens when the terms
+of the law are ambiguous, so that they can be understood in two
+different senses. Then the intention of the framer is opposed to the
+letter of the law; so that the question is, whether the words or the
+intention ought to have the greatest validity? Then again, another law
+is adduced contrary to this law. So there are three kinds of doubts
+which can give rise to a dispute with respect to every written
+document; ambiguity of expression, discrepancy between the expression
+and the intention, and also written documents opposed to the one in
+question. For this is evident; that these kinds of disputes are no
+more incidental to laws than to wills, or covenants, or to anything
+else which is contained in writing. And the way to treat these topics
+is explained in other books.
+
+XXVI. Nor is it only entire pleadings which are assisted by these
+topics, but the same are useful in the separate parts of an orator;
+being partly peculiar and partly general. As in the opening of a
+speech, in which the orator must employ peculiar topics in order to
+render his hearers well disposed to him, and docile, and attentive.
+And also he must attend to his relations of facts, so that they may
+have a bearing on his object, that is to say, that they may be plain,
+and brief, and intelligible, and credible, and respectable, and
+dignified: for although these qualities ought to be apparent
+throughout the whole speech, still they are peculiarly necessary in
+any narration. But since the belief which is given to a narration is
+engendered by persuasiveness, we have already, in the treatises which
+we have written on the general subject of oratory, explained what
+topics they are which have the greatest power to persuade the hearers.
+But the peroration has other points to attend to, and especially
+amplification; the effect of which ought to be, that the mind of the
+hearer is agitated or tranquillized by it; and if it has already been
+affected in that way, that the whole speech shall either increase its
+agitation, or calm it more completely.
+
+For this kind of peroration, by which pity, and anger, and hatred,
+and envy, and similar feelings of the mind are excited, rules are
+furnished in those books, which you may read over with me whenever you
+like. But as to the point on which I have known you to be anxious,
+your desires ought now to be abundantly satisfied. For, in order
+not to pass over anything which had reference to the discovery of
+arguments in every sort of discussion, I have embraced more topics
+than were desired by you; and I have done as liberal sellers often do,
+when they have sold a house or a farm, the movables being all excepted
+from the sale, still give some of them to the purchaser, which appear
+to be well placed as ornaments or conveniences. And so we have chosen
+to throw in some ornaments that were not strictly your due, in
+addition to that with which we had bound ourselves to furnish you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+A DIALOGUE CONCERNING ORATORICAL PARTITIONS.
+
+BY MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+The persons introduced in this dialogue are Cicero and his son. It is
+not known when, or under what circumstances it was written.
+
+
+I. _Cicero Fil._ I wish, my father, to hear from you in Latin the
+rules which you have already given me in Greek, concerning the
+principles of speaking, if at least you have leisure and inclination
+to instruct me in them.
+
+_Cicero Pat._ Is there anything, my Cicero, which I can be more
+desirous of than that you should be as learned as possible? And in the
+first place, I have the greatest possible leisure, since I have
+been able to leave Rome for a time; and in the next place, I would
+willingly postpone even my own most important occupations to the
+furthering of your studies.
+
+_C. F._ Will you allow me, then, to ask you questions in my turn, in
+Latin, about the same subjects on which you are accustomed to put
+questions to me in regular order in Greek?
+
+_C. P._ Certainly, if you like; for by that means I shall perceive
+that you recollect what you have been told, and you will hear in
+regular order all that you desire.
+
+_C. F._ Into how many parts is the whole system of speaking divided?
+
+_C. P._ Into three.
+
+_C. F._ What are they?
+
+_C. P._ First of all, the power of the orator; secondly, the speech;
+thirdly, the subject of the speech.
+
+_C. F._ In what does the power of the orator consist?
+
+_C. P._ In ideas and words. But both ideas and words have to be
+discovered and arranged. But properly the expression "to discover"
+applies to the ideas, and the expression "to be eloquent" to the
+language; but the arranging, though that is common to both, still is
+usually referred rather to the discovery. Voice, gesture, expression
+of countenance, and all action, are companions of eloquence; and the
+guardian of all these things is memory.
+
+_C. F._ What? How many parts of an oration are there?
+
+_C. P._ Four: two of them relate to explaining any subject,--namely,
+relation and confirmation; two to exciting the minds of the
+hearers,--the opening and the peroration.
+
+_C. F._ What? Has the manner of inquiry any divisions?
+
+_C. P._ It is divided into the infinite, which I term consultation;
+and the definite, which I call the cause.
+
+II. _C. F._ Since, then, the first business of the orator is
+discovery, what is he to look for?
+
+_C. P._ He is to seek to find out how to inspire those men whom he
+is desirous to persuade, with belief in his words; and how to affect
+their minds with such and such feelings.
+
+_C. F._ By what means is belief produced?
+
+_C. P._ By arguments, which are derived from topics either existing in
+the subject itself, or assumed.
+
+_C. F._ What do you mean by topics?
+
+_C. P._ Things in which arguments are concealed.
+
+_C. F._ What is an argument?
+
+_C. P._ Something discovered which has a probable influence in
+producing belief.
+
+_C. F._ How, then, do you divide these two heads?
+
+_C. P._ Those things which come into the mind without art I call
+remote arguments, such as testimony.
+
+_C. F._ What do you mean by those topics which exist in the thing
+itself?
+
+_C. P._ I cannot give a clearer explanation of them.
+
+_C. F._ What are the different kinds of testimony?
+
+_C. P._ Divine and human. Divine,--such as oracles, auspices,
+prophecies, the answers of priests, soothsayers, and diviners:
+human,--which is derived from authority, from inclination, and from
+speech either voluntary or extorted; and under this head come written
+documents, covenants, promises, oaths, inquiries.
+
+_C. F._ What are the arguments which you say belong to the cause?
+
+_C. P._ Those which are fixed in the things themselves, as definition,
+as a contrary, as those things which are like or unlike, or which
+correspond to or differ from the thing itself or its contrary, as
+those things which have as it were united, or those which are as it
+were inconsistent with one another, or the causes of those things
+which are under discussion, or the results of causes, that is to say,
+those things which are produced by causes, as distributions, and the
+genera of parts, or the parts of genera, as the beginnings and as it
+were outriders of things, in which there is some argument, as the
+comparisons between things, as to which is greater, which is equal,
+which is less, in which either the natures or the qualities of things
+are compared together.
+
+III. _C. F._ Are we then to derive arguments from all these topics?
+
+_C. P._ Certainly we must examine into them all, and seek them from
+all, but we must exercise our judgment in order at all times to reject
+what is trivial, and sometimes pass over even common topics, and those
+which are not necessary.
+
+_C. F._ Since you have now answered me as to belief, I wish to hear
+your account of how one is to raise feelings.
+
+_C. P._ It is a very reasonable question, but what you wish to know
+will be explained more clearly when I come to the system of orations
+and inquiries themselves.
+
+_C. F._ What, then, comes next?
+
+_C. P._ When, you have discovered your arguments, to arrange them
+properly, and in an extensive inquiry the order of the topics is very
+nearly that which I have set forth, but in a definite one, we must use
+those topics also which relate to exciting the required feelings in
+the minds of the hearers.
+
+_C. F._ How, then, do you explain them?
+
+_C. P._ I have general precepts for producing belief and exciting
+feelings. Since belief is a firm opinion, but feelings are an
+excitement of the mind either to pleasure, or to vexation, or to fear,
+or to desire, (for there are all these kinds of feelings, and many
+divisions of each separate genus,) I adapt all my arrangement to the
+object of the inquiry. For the end in a proposition is belief, in a
+cause, both belief and feeling wherefore, when I have spoken of the
+cause, in which proposition is involved, I shall have spoken of both.
+
+_C. F._ What have you then to say about the cause?
+
+_C. P._ That it is divided according to the divisions of hearers. For
+they are either listeners, who do nothing more than hear; or judges,
+that is to say, regulators both of the fact and of the decision; so
+as either to be delighted or to determine something. But he decides
+either concerning the past as a judge, or concerning the future as
+a senate. So there are three kinds,--one of judgment, one of
+deliberation, one of embellishment; and this last, because it is
+chiefly employed in panegyric, has its peculiar name from that.
+
+IV. _C. F._ What objects shall the orator propose to himself in these
+three kinds of oratory?
+
+_C. P._ In embellishment, his aim must be to give pleasure; in
+judicial speaking, to excite either the severity or the clemency of
+the judge; but in persuasion, to excite either the hope or the fear of
+the assembly which is deliberating.
+
+_C. F._ Why then do you choose this place to explain the different
+kinds of disputes?
+
+_C. P._ In order to adapt my principles of arrangement to the object
+of each separate kind.
+
+_C. F._ In what manner?
+
+_C. P._ Because in those orations in which pleasure is the object
+aimed at, the orders of arrangement differ. For either the degrees of
+opportunities are preserved, or the divisions of genera; or we ascend
+from the less to the greater, or we glide down from the greater to the
+less; or we distinguish between them with a variety of contrasts, when
+we oppose little things to great ones, simple things to complex ones,
+things obscure to things which are plain, what is joyful to what is
+sad, what is incredible to what is probable; all which topics are
+parts of embellishment.
+
+_C. F._ What? What is your aim in a deliberative speech?
+
+_C. P._ There must either be a short opening, or none at all. For the
+men who are deliberating are ready for their own sake to hear what
+you have to say. And indeed it is not often that there is much to be
+related; for narration refers to things either present or past, but
+persuasion has reference to the future. Wherefore every speech is to
+be calculated to produce belief, and to excite the feelings.
+
+_C. F._ What next? What is the proper arrangement in judicial
+speeches?
+
+_C. P._ The arrangement suitable to the accuser is not the same as
+that which is good for the accused person; because the accuser follows
+the order of circumstances, and puts forward vigorously each separate
+argument, as if he had a spear in his hand; and sums them up
+with vehemence; and confirms them by documents, and decrees, and
+testimonies; and dwells carefully on each separate proof; and avails
+himself of all the rules of peroration which are of any force to
+excite the mind; and in the rest of his oration he departs a little
+from the regular tenor of his argument; and above all, is he earnest
+in summing up, for his object is to make the judge angry.
+
+V. _C. F._ What, on the other hand, is the person accused to do?
+
+_C. P_. He is to act as differently as possible in every respect.
+He must employ an opening calculated to conciliate good-will. Any
+narrations which are disagreeable must be cut short; or if they are
+wholly mischievous, they must be wholly omitted; the corroborative
+proofs calculated to produce belief must be either weakened or
+obscured, or thrown into the shade by digressions. And all the
+perorations must be adapted to excite pity.
+
+_C. F._ Can we, then, always preserve that order of arrangement which
+we desire to adopt?
+
+_C. P._ Surely not; for the ears of the hearers are guides to a wise
+and prudent orator; and whatever is unpleasing to them must be altered
+or modified.
+
+_C. F._ Explain to me then now, what are the rules for the speech
+itself, and for the expressions to be contained in it.
+
+_C. P._ There is, then, one kind of eloquence which seems fluent by
+nature; another which appears to have been changed and modified by
+art. The power of the first consists in simple words; that of the
+second, in words in combination. Simple words require discovery;
+combined expressions stand in need of arrangement.
+
+And simple expressions are partly natural, partly discovered. Those
+are natural which are simply appellative; those are discovered which
+are made of those others, and remodelled either by resemblance, or by
+imitation, or by inflection, or by the addition of other words. And
+again, there is this distinction between words: some are distinguished
+according to their nature; some according to the way in which they are
+handled: some by nature, so that they are more sonorous, more grave,
+or more trivial, and to a certain extent neater: but others by the way
+in which they are handled, when either the peculiar names of things
+are taken, or else others which are added to the proper name, or new,
+or old-fashioned, or in some way or other modified and altered by the
+orator,--such as those which are used in borrowed senses, or changed,
+or those which we as it were misuse; or those which we make obscure;
+which we in some incredible manner remove altogether; and which we
+embellish in a more marvellous manner than the ordinary usage of
+conversation sanctions.
+
+VI. _C. F._ I understand you now as far as simple expressions go; now
+I ask about words in combination.
+
+_C. P_. There is a certain rhythm which must be observed in such
+combination, and a certain order in which words must follow one
+another. Our ears themselves measure the rhythm; and guard against
+your failing to fill up with the requisite words the sentence which
+you have begun, and against your being too exuberant on the other
+hand. But the order in which words follow one another is laid down
+to prevent an oration being a confused medley of genders, numbers,
+tenses, persons, and cases; for, as in simple words, that which is not
+Latin, so in combined expressions, that which is not well arranged,
+deserves to be blamed.
+
+But there are these five lights, as it were, which are common to both
+single words and combined expressions,--they must be clear, concise,
+probable, intelligible, agreeable. Clearness is produced by common
+words, appropriate, well arranged, in a well-rounded period: on the
+other hand, obscurity is caused by either too great length, or a too
+great contraction of the sentence; or by ambiguity; or by any misuse
+or alteration of the ordinary sense of the words. But brevity is
+produced by simple words, by speaking only once of each point, by
+aiming at no one object except speaking clearly. But an oration is
+probable, if it is not too highly decorated and polished; if there is
+authority and thought in its expressions; if its sentiments are either
+dignified, or else consistent with the opinions and customs of men.
+But an oration is brilliant, if expressions are used which are chosen
+with gravity, and used in metaphorical and hyperbolical senses; and if
+it is also full of words suited to the circumstances, and reiterated,
+and having the same sense, and not inconsistent with the subject under
+discussion, and with the imitation of things: for this is one part of
+an oration which almost brings the actual circumstances before our
+eyes, for then the sense is most easily arrived at but still the other
+senses also, and especially the mind itself, can be influenced by it.
+But the things which have been said about a clear speech, all have
+reference also to the brilliant one which we are now speaking of, for
+this is only a kind somewhat more brilliant than that which I have
+called clear. By one kind we are made to understand, but by the other
+one we actually appear to see. But the kind of speaking which is
+agreeable, consists first of all of an elegance and pleasantness of
+sounding and sweet words, secondly, of a combination which has no
+harsh unions of words, nor any disjoined and open vowels, and it must
+also be bounded with limited periods, and in paragraphs easily to be
+pronounced, and full of likeness and equality in the sentences. Then
+again, arguments derived from contrary expressions must be added,
+so that repetitions must answer to repetitions, like to like and
+expressions must be added, repeated, redoubled, and even very
+frequently reiterated, the construction of the sentences must at one
+time be compacted by means of conjunctions, and at another relaxed by
+separation of the clauses. For an oration becomes agreeable when you
+say anything unexpected, or unheard of, or novel, for whatever excites
+wonder gives pleasure. And that oration especially influences the
+hearer which unites several affections of the mind, and which indicate
+the amiable manners of the orator himself, which are represented
+either by signifying his own opinion, and showing it to proceed from a
+humane and liberal disposition, or by a turn in the language, when for
+the sake either of extolling another or of disparaging himself, the
+orator seems to say one thing and mean another, and that too seems to
+be done out of courtesy rather than out of levity. But there are many
+rules for sweetness in speaking, which may make a speech either more
+obscure or less probable, therefore, while on this topic, we must
+decide for ourselves what the cause requires.
+
+VII _C. F._ It remains, then, now for you to speak of the alterations
+and changes in a speech.
+
+_C. P._ The whole of that, then, consists in the alteration of words,
+and that alteration is managed in such a way in the case of single
+words, that the style may either be dilated by words, or contracted.
+It may be dilated, when a word which is either peculiar, or which
+has the same signification, or which has been coined on purpose, is
+extended by paraphrase. Or again, in another way, when a definition
+is held down to a single word, or when expressions borrowed from
+something else are banished, or made use of in a roundabout sense, or
+when one word is made up out of two. But in compound words a threefold
+change can be made, not of words, but only of order, so that when a
+thing has once been said plainly, as nature itself prompts, the order
+may be inverted, and the expression may be repeated, turned upside
+down, as it were, or backwards and forwards. Then again the same
+expression may be reiterated in a mutilated, or re arranged, form. But
+the practice of speaking is very much occupied in all these kinds of
+conversion.
+
+_C. F._ The next point is action, if I do not mistake.
+
+_C. P._ It is so, and that must be constantly varied by the orator,
+in correspondence with the importance of his subjects and of his
+expressions. For the orator makes an oration clear, and brilliant,
+and probable, and agreeable, not only by his words, but also by the
+variety of his tones, by the gestures of his body, by the changes of
+his countenance, which will be of great weight if they harmonize with
+the character of his address, and follow its energy and variety.
+
+_C. F._ Is there nothing remaining to be said about the orator
+himself?
+
+_C. P._ Nothing at all, except as to memory, which is in a certain
+manner the sister of writing, and though in a different class greatly
+resembles it. For as it consists of the characters of letters, and of
+that substance on which those characters are impressed, so a perfect
+memory uses topics, as writing does wax, and on them arranges its
+images as if they were letters.
+
+VIII _C. F._ Since, then, you have thus explained all the power of an
+orator, what have you to tell me about the rules for an oration?
+
+_C. P._ That there are four divisions in an oration, of which the
+first and last are of avail to excite such and such feelings in the
+mind, for they are to be excited by the openings and perorations of
+speeches: the second is narration: and the third, being confirmation,
+adds credibility to a speech. But although amplification has its own
+proper place, being often in the opening of a speech, and almost
+always at the end still it may be employed also in other parts of the
+speech especially when any point has been established, or when the
+orator has been finding fault with something. Therefore, it is of the
+very greatest influence in producing belief. For amplification is a
+sort of vehement argumentation; the one being used for the sake of
+teaching, the other with the object of acting on the feelings.
+
+_C. F._ Proceed, then, to explain to me these four divisions in
+regular order.
+
+_C. P._ I will do so; and I will begin with the opening of a speech,
+which is usually derived either from the persons concerned, or from
+the circumstances of the case. And openings are employed with three
+combined objects, that we may be listened to with friendly feelings,
+intelligently and attentively. And the first topic employed in
+openings has reference to ourselves, to our judges, and to our
+adversaries; from which we aim at laying the foundations of good-will
+towards us, either by our own merits, or by our dignity, or by some
+kind of virtue, and especially by the qualities of liberality, duty,
+justice, and good faith; and also by imputing opposite qualities to
+our adversaries, and by intimating that the judges themselves have
+some interest on our side, either in existence, or in prospect. And if
+any hatred has been excited against, or any offence been given by us,
+we then apply ourselves to remove or diminish that, by denying or
+extenuating the cause, or by atoning for it, or by deprecating
+hostility.
+
+But in order that we may be listened to in an intelligent and
+attentive manner, we must begin with the circumstances of the case
+themselves. But the hearer learns and understands what the real point
+in dispute is most easily if you, from the first beginning of your
+speech, embrace the whole genus and nature of the cause,--if you
+define it, and divide it, and neither perplex his discernment by the
+confusion, nor his memory by the multitude, of the several parts of
+your discourse; and all the things which will presently be said about
+lucid narration may also with propriety be considered as bearing on
+this division too. But that we may be listened to with attention, we
+must do one of these things. For we must advance some propositions
+which are either important, or necessary, or connected with the
+interests of those before whom the discussion is proceeding. This also
+may be laid down as a rule, that, if ever the time itself, or the
+facts of the case, or the place, or the intervention of any one,
+or any interruption, or anything which may have been said by the
+adversary, and especially in his peroration, has given us any
+opportunity of saying anything well suited to the occasion, we must
+on no account omit it. And many of the rules, which we give in their
+proper place, about amplification, may be transferred here to the
+consideration of the opening of a speech.
+
+IX. _C. F._ What next? What rules, then, are to be attended to in
+narration?
+
+_C. P._ Since narration is an explanation of facts, and a sort of base
+and foundation for the establishment of belief, those rules are most
+especially to be observed in it, which apply also, for the most part,
+to the other divisions of speaking; part of which are necessary, and
+part are assumed for the sake of embellishment. For it is necessary
+for us to narrate events in a clear and probable manner; but we must
+also attend to an agreeable style. Therefore, in order to narrating
+with clearness, we must go back to those previous rules for explaining
+and illustrating facts, in which brevity is enjoined and taught. And
+brevity is one of the points most frequently praised in narration, and
+we have already dwelt enough upon it. Again, our narrative will be
+probable, if the things which are related are consistent with the
+character of the persons concerned, with the times and places
+mentioned,--if the cause of every fact and event is stated,--if they
+appear to be proved by witnesses,--if they are in accordance with
+the opinions and authority of men, with law, with custom, and with
+religion,--if the honesty of the narrator is established, his candour,
+his memory, the uniform truth of his conversation, and the integrity
+of his life. Again, a narration is agreeable which contains subjects
+calculated to excite admiration, expectation, unlooked-for results,
+sudden feelings of the mind, conversations between people, grief,
+anger, fear, joy, desires. However, let us proceed to what follows.
+
+_C. F._ What follows is, I suppose, what relates to producing belief.
+
+_C. P._ Just so; and those topics are divided into confirmation
+and reprehension. For in confirmation we seek to establish our own
+assertion; in reprehension, to invalidate those of our adversaries.
+Since, then, everything which is ever the subject of a dispute, is so
+because the question is raised whether it exists or not, or what it
+is, or of what character it is, in the first question conjecture has
+weight, in the second, definition, and in the third, reasoning.
+
+X. _C. F._ I understand this division. At present, I ask, what are the
+topics of conjecture?
+
+_C. P._ They arise from probabilities, and turn wholly on the peculiar
+characteristics of things. But for the sake of instructing you, I will
+call that probable which is generally done in such and such a way as
+it is probable that youth should be rather inclined to lust. But the
+indication of an appropriate characteristic is something which never
+happens in any other way, and which declares something which is
+certain as smoke is a proof of fire. Probabilities are discovered
+from the parts and, as it were, members of a narration. They exist in
+persons, in places, in times, in facts, in events, in the nature of
+the facts and circumstances which may be under discussion.
+
+But in persons, the first things considered are the natural qualities
+of health, figure, strength, age, and whether they are male or female.
+And all these concern the body alone. But the qualities of the mind,
+or how they are affected, depends on virtues, vices, arts, and want of
+art, or in another sense, on desire, fear, pleasure, or annoyance. And
+these are the natural circumstances which are principally considered.
+
+In fortune, we look at a man's race, his friends, his children, his
+relations, his kinsmen, his wealth, his honours, his power, his
+estates, his freedom, and also at all the contraries to these
+circumstances. But in respect of place, some things arise from nature
+as, whether a place is on the coast or at a distance from the sea,
+whether it is level or mountainous, whether it is smooth or rough,
+wholesome or pestilential, shady or sunny, these again are fortuitous
+circumstances,--whether a place is cultivated or uncultivated
+frequented or deserted, full of houses or naked, obscure or ennobled
+by the traces of mighty exploits, consecrated or profane.
+
+XI. But in respect of time, one distinguishes between the present, and
+the past, and the future. And in these divisions there are the further
+subdivisions of ancient, recent, immediate, likely to happen soon,
+or likely to be very remote. In time there are also these other
+divisions, which mark, as it were natural sections of time as winter,
+spring, summer and autumn. Or again, the periods of the year: as
+a month, a day, a night, an hour, a season, all these are natural
+divisions. There are other accidental divisions such as days of
+sacrifice, days of festival, weddings. Again, facts and events are
+either designed or unintentional, and these last arise either from
+pure accident, or from some agitation of mind, by accident when a
+thing has happened in a different way from what was expected,--from
+some agitation, when either forgetfulness, or mistake, or fear, or
+some impulse of desire has been the acting cause. Necessity, too, must
+be classed among the causes of unintentional actions or results.
+
+Again, of good and bad things there are three classes. For they can
+exist either in men's minds or bodies, or they may be external to both
+of these materials, then, as far as they are subordinate to argument,
+all the parts must be carefully turned over in the mind, and
+conjectures bearing on the subject before us must be derived from each
+part.
+
+There is also another class of arguments which is derived from traces
+of a fact, as a weapon, blood, an outcry which has been raised,
+trepidation, changes of complexion, inconsistency of explanation,
+trembling, or any of these circumstances which can be perceived by our
+senses, or if anything appears to have been prepared, or communicated
+to any one, or if anything has been seen or heard, or if any
+information has been given.
+
+But of probabilities some influence us separately by their own weight,
+some, although they appear trifling by themselves, still, when all
+collected together, have great influence. And in such probabilities as
+these there are sometimes some unerring and peculiar distinguishing
+characteristics of things. But what produces the surest belief in a
+probability is, first of all, a similar instance, then the similarity
+of the present case to that instance sometimes even a fable, though it
+is an incredible one, has its influence, nevertheless, on men's minds.
+
+XII. _C. F._ What next? What is the principle of definition, and what
+is the system of it?
+
+_C. P._ There is no doubt but that definition belongs to the genus,
+and is distinguishable by a certain peculiarity of the characteristics
+which it mentions, or else by a number of common circumstances, from
+which we may extract something which looks like a peculiar property.
+But since there is often very great disagreement about what are
+peculiar properties, we must often derive our definitions from
+contraries, often from things dissimilar, often from things parallel.
+Wherefore descriptions also are often suitable in this kind of
+address, and an enumeration of consequences, and above all things, an
+explanation of the names and terms employed, is most effectual.
+
+_C. F._ You have now then explained nearly all the questions which
+arise about a fact, or about the name given to such fact. The next
+thing is, when the fact itself and its proper title are agreed upon,
+that a doubt arises as to what its character is.
+
+_C. P._ You are quite right.
+
+_C. F._ What divisions, then, are there in this part of the argument?
+
+_C. P._ One urges either that what has been done has been lawfully
+done, for the sake either of warding off or of avenging an injury, or
+under pretext of piety, or chastity, or religion, or one's country, or
+else that it has been done through necessity, out of ignorance, or by
+chance. For those things which have been done in consequence of some
+motion or agitation of the mind, without any positive intention, have,
+in legal proceedings, no defence if they are impeached, though they
+may have an excuse if discussed on principles unfettered by strict
+rules of law. In this class of discussion, in which the question is,
+what the character of the act is, one inquires, in the terms of the
+controversy, whether the act has been rightly and lawfully done or
+not; and the discussion on these points turns on a definition of the
+before-mentioned topics.
+
+_C. F._ Since, then, you have divided the topics to give credit to an
+oration into confirmation and reprehension, and since you have fully
+discussed the one, explain to me now the subject of reprehension.
+
+_C. P._ You must either deny the whole of what the adversary has
+assumed in argumentation, if you can show it to be fictitious or
+false, or you must refute what he has assumed as probable. First of
+all, you must urge that he has taken what is doubtful as if it were
+certain; in the next place, that the very same things might be said in
+cases which were evidently false; and lastly, that these things which
+he has assumed do not produce the consequences which he wishes to be
+inferred from them. And you must attack his details, and by that means
+break down his whole argument. Instances also must be brought forward
+which were overruled in a similar discussion; and you must wind up
+with the complaints of the condition of the general danger, if the
+life of innocent men is exposed to the ingenuity of men devoted to
+calumny.
+
+XIII. _C. F._ Since I know now whence arguments can be derived which
+have a tendency to create belief, I am waiting to hear how they are
+severally to be handled in speaking.
+
+_C. P._ You seem to be inquiring about argumentation, and as to how to
+develop arguments.
+
+_C. F._ That is the very thing that I want to know.
+
+_C. P._ The development, then, of an argument is argumentation; and
+that is when you assume things which are either certain or at least
+probable, from which to derive a conclusion, which taken by itself is
+doubtful, or at all events not very probable. But there are two kinds
+of arguing, one of which aims directly at creating belief, the other
+principally looks to exciting such and such feelings. It goes straight
+on when it has proposed to itself something to prove, and assumed
+grounds on which it may depend; and when these have been established,
+it comes back to its original proposition, and concludes. But the
+other kind of argumentation, proceeding as it were backwards and in an
+inverse way, first of all assumes what it chooses, and confirms it;
+and then, having excited the minds of the hearers, it throws on to the
+end that which was its original object. But there is this variety, and
+a distinction which is not disagreeable in arguing, as when we ask
+something ourselves, or put questions, or express some command, or
+some wish, as all these figures are a kind of embellishment to an
+oration. But we shall be able to avoid too much sameness, if we do not
+always begin with the proposition which we desire to establish, and if
+we do not confirm each separate point by dwelling on it separately,
+and if we are at times very brief in our explanation of what is
+sufficiently clear, and if we do not consider it at all times
+necessary to sum up and enumerate what results from these premises
+when it is sufficiently clear.
+
+XIV. _C. F._ What comes next? Is there any way or any respect in which
+those things which are said to be devoid of art, and which you said
+just now were accessories to the main argument, require art?
+
+_C. P._ Indeed they do. Nor are they called devoid of art because
+they really are so, but because it is not the art of the orator which
+produces them, but they are brought to him from abroad, as it were,
+and then he deals with them artistically; and this is especially the
+case as to witnesses. For it is often necessary to speak of the whole
+class of witnesses, and to show how weak it is; and to urge that
+arguments refer to facts, testimony to inclination; and one must have
+recourse to precedents of cases where witnesses were not believed;
+and with respect to individual witnesses, if they are by nature vain,
+trifling, discreditable, or if they have been influenced by hope, by
+fear, by anger, by pity, by bribery, by interest; and they must be
+compared with the authority of the witnesses in the case cited,
+where the witnesses were not believed. Often, also, one must resist
+examinations under torture, because many men, out of a desire to avoid
+pain, have often told lies under torture; and have preferred dying
+while confessing a falsehood to suffering pain while persisting
+in their denial. Many men, also, have been indifferent to the
+preservation of their own life, as long as they could save those who
+were dearer to them than they were to themselves; others, owing to
+the nature of their bodies, or to their being accustomed to pain,
+or because they feared punishment and execution, have endured the
+violence of torture; others, also, have told lies against those whom
+they hated. And all these arguments are to be fortified by instances.
+Nor is it at all uncertain that (since there are instances on both
+sides of a question, and topics also for forming conjectures on both
+sides) contrary arguments must be used in contrary cases. There is,
+also, another method of disparaging witnesses, and examinations under
+torture; for often those answers which have been given may be attacked
+very cleverly, if they have been expressed rather ambiguously or
+inconsistently, or with any incredible circumstances; or in different
+ways by different witnesses.
+
+XV. _C. F._ The end of the oration remains to be spoken of by you; and
+that is included in the peroration, which I wish to hear you explain?
+
+_C. P._ The explanation of the peroration is easy; for it is divided
+into two parts, amplification and enumeration. And the proper place
+for amplification is in the peroration, and also in the course of
+the oration there are opportunities of digressing for the purpose of
+amplification, by corroborating or refuting something which has been
+previously said. Amplification, then, is a kind of graver affirmation,
+which by exciting feelings in the mind conciliates belief to one's
+assertion. It is produced by the kind of words used, and by the
+facts dwelt upon. Expressions are to be used which have a power of
+illustrating the oration; yet such as are not unusual, but weighty,
+full-sounding, sonorous, compound, well-invented, and well-applied,
+not vulgar; borrowed from other subjects, and often metaphorical, not
+consisting of single words, but dissolved into several clauses, which
+are uttered without any conjunction between them, so as to appear more
+numerous. Amplification is also obtained by repetition, by iteration,
+by redoubling words, and by gradually rising from lower to loftier
+language; and it must be altogether a natural and lively sort of
+speech, made up of dignified language, well suited to give a high
+idea of the subject spoken of. This then is amplification as far as
+language goes. To the language there must be adapted expression
+of tone, of countenance, and gesture, all in harmony together and
+calculated to rouse the feelings of the hearers. But the cause must be
+maintained both by language and action, and carried on according to
+circumstances. For, because these appear very absurd when they are
+more vehement than the subject will bear, we must diligently consider
+what is becoming to each separate speaker, and in each separate case.
+
+XVI. The amplification of facts is derived from all the same topics
+as those arguments which are adduced to create belief. And above all
+things, a number of accumulated definitions carries weight with it,
+and a repeated assertion of consequents, and a comparison of contrary
+and dissimilar facts, and of inconsistent circumstances. Causes too,
+and those things which arise from causes, and especially similarities
+and instances, are efficacious; so also are imaginary characters.
+Lastly, mute things may be introduced as speaking, and altogether all
+things are to be employed (if the cause will allow of them) which are
+considered important; and important things are divisible into two
+classes. For there are some things which seem important by nature,
+and some by use. By nature, as heavenly and divine things, and those
+things the causes of which are obscure, as those things which are
+wonderful on the earth and in the world, from which and from things
+resembling which, if you only take care, you will be able to draw
+many arguments for amplifying the dignity of the cause which you
+are advocating. By use; which appear to be of exceeding benefit or
+exceeding injury to men; and of these there are three kinds suitable
+for amplification.
+
+For men are either moved by affection, for instance, by affections for
+the gods, for their country, or for their parents; or by love, as for
+their wives, their brothers, their children, or their friends; or by
+honourableness, as by that of the virtues, and especially of those
+virtues which tend to promote sociability among men, and liberality.
+From them exhortations are derived to maintain them; and hatred is
+excited against, and commiseration awakened for those by whom they are
+violated.
+
+XVII. It is a very proper occasion for having recourse to
+amplification, when these advantages are either lost, or when there
+is danger of losing them. For nothing is so pitiable as a man who has
+become miserable after having been happy. And this is enough to move
+us greatly, if any one falls from good fortune; and if he loses all
+his friends; and if we have it briefly explained to us what great
+happiness he is losing or has lost, and by what evils he is
+overwhelmed, or is about to be overwhelmed. For tears soon dry,
+especially at another's misfortunes. Nor is there anything which it is
+less wise to exhaust than amplification. For all diligence attends to
+minutiae; but this topic requires only what is on a large scale. Here
+again is a matter for a man's judgment, what kind of amplification we
+should employ in each cause. For in those causes which are embellished
+for the sake of pleasing the hearers, those topics must be dealt
+with, which can excite expectation, admiration, or pleasure. But in
+exhortations the enumerations of instances of good and bad fortune,
+and instances and precedents, are arguments of great weight. In trials
+those topics are the most suitable for an accuser which tend to excite
+anger; those are usually the most desirable for a person on his trial
+which relate to raising pity. But some times the accuser ought to seek
+to excite pity, and the advocate for the defence may aim at rousing
+indignation.
+
+Enumeration remains; a topic sometimes necessary to a panegyrist, not
+often to one who is endeavouring to persuade; and more frequently to
+a prosecutor than to a defendant. It has two turns, if you either
+distrust the recollection of those men before whom you are pleading,
+either on account of the length of time that has elapsed since the
+circumstances of which you are speaking, or because of the length of
+your speech; in this case your cause will have the more strength if
+you bring up numberless corroborative arguments to strengthen your
+speech, and explain them with brevity. And the defendant will have
+less frequent occasion to use them, because he has to lay down
+propositions which are contrary to them: and his defence will come out
+best if it is brief, and full of pungent stings. But in enumeration,
+it will be necessary to avoid letting it have the air of a childish
+display of memory; and he will best avoid that fault who does not
+recapitulate every trifle, but who touches on each particular briefly,
+and dwells only on the more weighty and important points.
+
+XVIII. _C. F._ Since you have now discussed the orator himself and his
+oration, explain to me now the topic of questions, which you reserved
+for the last of the three.
+
+_C. P._ There are, as I said at the beginning, two kinds of questions:
+one of which, that which is limited to times and persons, I call the
+cause; the other, which is infinite, and bounded neither by times nor
+by persons, I call the proposition. But consultation is, as it were, a
+part of the cause and controversy. For in the definite there is what
+is infinite, and nevertheless everything is referred to it. Wherefore,
+let us first speak of the proposition; of which there are two kinds:
+one of investigation; the end of this science, as for instance,
+whether the senses are to be depended upon; the other of action, which
+has reference to doing something: as if any one were to inquire by
+what services one ought to cultivate friendship. Again, of the former,
+namely, of investigation, there are three kinds: whether a thing is,
+or is not; what it is; of what sort it is. Whether it is or not, as
+whether right is a thing existing by nature or by custom. But what
+a thing is, as whether that is right which is advantageous to the
+greater number. And again, what sort of a thing anything is, as
+whether to live justly is useful or not.
+
+But of action there are two kinds. One having reference to pursuing
+or avoiding anything; as for instance, by what means you can acquire
+glory, or how envy may be avoided. The other, which is referred to
+some advantage or expediency; as how the republic ought to be managed,
+or how a man ought to live in poverty.
+
+But again in investigation, when the question is whether a thing is,
+or is not, or has been, or is likely to be. One kind of question is,
+whether anything can be effected; as when the question is whether any
+one can be perfectly wise. Another question is, how each thing can
+be effected; as for instance, by what means virtue is engendered, by
+nature, or reason, or use. And of this kind are all those questions
+in which, as in obscure subjects or those which turn on natural
+philosophy, the causes and principles of things are explained.
+
+XIX. But of that kind in which the question is what that is which is
+the subject of discussion, there are two sorts; in the one of which
+one must discuss whether one thing is the same as another, or
+different from it; as whether pertinacity is the same as perseverance.
+But in the other one must give a description and representation as it
+were of some genus; as for instance, what sort of a man a miser is, or
+what pride is.
+
+But in the third kind, in which the question is what sort of thing
+something is, we must speak either of its honesty, or of its utility,
+or of its equity. Of its honesty thus. Whether it is honourable to
+encounter danger or unpopularity for a friend. But of its expediency
+thus. Whether it is expedient to occupy oneself in the conduct of
+state affairs. But of its equity thus. Whether it is just to prefer
+one's friend to one's relations. And in the same kind of discussion,
+in which the question is what sort of thing something is, there arises
+another kind of way of arguing. For the question is not simply what
+is honourable, what is expedient, what is equitable; but also by
+comparison, which is more honourable, which is more expedient, which
+is more equitable; and even which is most honourable, which is
+most expedient, which is most equitable. Of which kind are those
+speculations, which is the most excellent dignity in life. And all
+these questions, as I have said before, are parts of investigation.
+
+There remains the question of action. One kind of which is conversant
+with the giving of rules which relate to principles of duty; as, for
+instance, how one's parents are to be reverenced. And the other to
+tranquillising the minds of men and healing them by one's oration; as
+in consoling affliction, in repressing ill-temper, in removing fear,
+or in allaying covetousness. And this kind is exactly opposed to that
+by means of which the speaker proposes to engender those same feelings
+of the mind, or to excite them, which it is often requisite to do
+in amplifying an oration. And these are nearly all the divisions of
+consultation. XX. _C. F._ I understand you. But I should like to hear
+from you what in these divisions is the proper system for discovering
+and arranging the heads of one's discourse.
+
+_C. P._ What? Do you think it is a different one, and not the same
+which has been explained, so that everything may be deduced from the
+same topics, both to create belief, and to discover arguments? But the
+system of arrangement which has been explained as appropriate to other
+kinds of speeches may be transferred to this also.
+
+Since therefore we have now investigated the entire arrangement of the
+consultations which we proposed to discuss, the kinds of causes are
+now the principal things which remain. And their species is twofold;
+one of which aims at affording gratification to the ears, while the
+whole object of the other is to obtain, and prove, and effect
+the purpose which it has in view. Therefore the former is called
+embellishment, and as that may be a kind of extensive operation, and
+sufficiently various, we have selected one instance of it which we
+adopt for the purpose of praising illustrious men, and of vituperating
+the wicked ones. For there is no kind of oration which can be either
+more fertile in its topics, or more profitable to states, or in which
+the orator is bound to have a more extensive acquaintance with virtues
+and vices. But the other class of causes is conversant either with the
+foresight of the future, or with discussions on the past. One of which
+topics belongs to deliberation and the other to judgment. From which
+division three kinds of causes have arisen; one, which, from the
+best portion of it, is called that of panegyric; another that of
+deliberation; the third that of judicial decisions. Wherefore let us
+first, if you please, discuss the first.
+
+_C. F._ Certainly, I do please.
+
+XXI. _C. P._ And the systems of blaming and praising, which have
+influence not only on speaking well but also on living honourably, I
+will explain briefly; and I will begin from the first principles of
+praise and blame. For everything is to be praised which is united with
+virtue; and everything which is connected with vice is to be blamed.
+Wherefore the end of the one is honour, of the other baseness. But
+this kind of discourse is composed of the narration and explanation of
+facts, without any argumentations, in a way calculated to handle the
+feelings of the mind gently rather than to create belief or to confirm
+it in a suitable manner. For they are not doubtful points which are
+established in this way; but those which being certain, or at least
+admitted as certain, are enlarged upon. Wherefore the rules for
+narrating them and enlarging upon them must be sought for from among
+those which have been already laid down.
+
+And since in these causes the whole system has reference generally to
+the pleasure and entertainment of the hearer, the speakers must employ
+in them all the beauties of those separate expressions which have in
+them the greatest amount of sweetness. That is, he must often use
+newly-coined words, and old-fashioned words, and metaphorical
+language; and in the very construction of his periods he must often
+compare like with like, and parallel cases with parallel. He must
+have recourse to contrasts, to repetitions, to harmoniously-turned
+sentences, formed not like verses, but to gratify the sensations of
+the ears by as it were a suitable moderation of expression. And those
+ornaments are frequently to be employed, which are of a marvellous and
+unexpected character, and also those which are full of monsters, and
+prodigies, and oracles. And also those things must be mentioned which
+appeared to have befallen the man of whom the orator is speaking in
+consequence of some divine interposition, or decree of destiny. For
+all the expectation and admiration of the hearer, and all unexpected
+terminations, contribute to the pleasure which is felt in listening to
+the orator.
+
+XXII. But since advantages or evils are of three classes, external,
+affecting the mind, or affecting the body, the first are external
+which are derived from the genus; and this being praised in brief and
+moderate terms, or, if it is discreditable, being passed over; if it
+is of a lowly nature, being either passed over, or handled in such a
+way as to increase the glory of him whom you are praising. In the next
+place, if the case allows it, we must speak of his fortune and his
+abilities, and after that of his personal qualifications; among which
+it is very natural to praise his beauty, which is one of the greatest
+indications of virtue. After that we must come to his actions. The
+arrangement is threefold. For we must have regard either to the order
+of time, or the most recent actions must be spoken of first, or else
+many and various actions of his must be classified according to the
+different kinds of virtue which they display. But this topic of
+virtues and vices, which is a very extensive one, will now be brought
+into a very brief and narrow compass, instead of the many and various
+volumes in which philosophers have discussed it.
+
+The power of virtue then is twofold, for virtue is distinguished
+either by theory or by practice. For that which is called prudence,
+or shrewdness, or (if we must have the most dignified title for it)
+wisdom, is all theoretical. But that which is praised as regulating
+the passions, and restraining the feelings of the mind, finds its
+exercise in practice. And its name is temperance. And prudence when
+exerted in a man's own business is called domestic, when displayed in
+the affairs of the state is called civil prudence. But temperance in
+like manner is divided according to its sphere of action, whether
+displayed in a man's own affairs, or in those of the state. And it is
+discerned in two ways with respect to advantages, both by not desiring
+what it has not got, and by abstaining from what it is in its power to
+get. Again, in the case of disadvantages it is also twofold; for that
+quality which resists impending evils is called fortitude; that which
+bears and endures the evil that is present is termed patience. And
+that which embraces these two qualities is called magnanimity. And one
+of the forms of this virtue is shown in the use of money. And at
+the same time loftiness of spirit in supporting disadvantages, and
+especially injuries, and everything of the sort, being grave, sedate,
+and never turbulent. But that division of virtue which is exercised
+between one being and another is called justice. And that when
+exercised towards the gods is called religion; towards one's
+relations, affection; towards all the world, goodness; when displayed
+in things entrusted to one, good faith; as exhibited in moderation of
+punishment, lenity; when it develops itself in goodwill towards an
+individual its name is friendship.
+
+XXIII. And all these virtues are visible in practice. But there are
+others, which are as it were the handmaidens and companions of wisdom;
+one of which distinguishes between and decides what arguments in a
+discussion are true or false, and what follows from what premises. And
+this virtue is wholly placed in the system and theory of arguing; but
+the other virtue belongs to the orator. For eloquence is nothing but
+wisdom speaking with great copiousness; and while derived from the
+same source as that which is displayed in disputing, is more rich, and
+of wider application, better suited to excite the minds of men and to
+work on the feelings of the common people. But the guardian of all
+the virtues, which avoids all conspicuousness, and yet attains the
+greatest eminence of praise, is modesty. And these are for the most
+part certain habits of mind, so affected and disposed as to be each of
+them distinguished from one another by some peculiar kind of virtue;
+and according as everything is done by one of them, in the same
+proportion must it be honourable and in the highest degree
+praiseworthy. But there are other habits also of a well-instructed
+mind which has been cultivated beforehand as it were, and prepared for
+virtue by virtuous pursuits and accomplishments: as in a man's private
+affairs, the studies of literature, as of tunes and sounds, of
+measurement, of the stars, of horses, of hunting, of arms. In the
+affairs of the commonwealth his eager pursuit of some particular kind
+of virtue, which he selects as his especial object of devotion, in
+discharging his duty to the gods, or in showing careful and remarkable
+affection to his relations, his friends, or those connected with
+family ties of hospitality. And these then are the different kinds of
+virtue. But those of vice are their exact contraries.
+
+But these also must be examined carefully, so that those vices may not
+deceive us which appear to imitate virtue. For cunning tries to assume
+the character of prudence, and moroseness, in despising pleasures,
+wishes to be taken for temperance; and pride, which puffs a man up,
+and which affects to despise legitimate honours, seeks to vaunt itself
+as magnanimity; prodigality calls itself liberality, audacity imitates
+courage, hardhearted sternness imitates patience, bitterness justice,
+superstition religion, weakness of mind lenity, timidity modesty,
+captiousness and carping at words wishes to pass for acuteness in
+arguing, and an empty fluency of language for this oratorical vigour
+at which we are aiming. And those, too, appear akin to virtuous
+pursuits, which run to excess in the same class.
+
+Wherefore all the force of praise or blame must be derived from these
+divisions of virtues and vices. But in the whole context, as it were,
+of the oration, these points must above all others be made clear,--how
+each person spoken of has been born, how he has been educated, how
+he has been trained, and what are his habits; and if any great or
+surprising thing has happened to any one, especially if anything which
+has happened should appear to have befallen him by the interposition
+of the gods; and also whatever the person in question has thought, or
+said, or done, must be adapted to the different kinds of virtue which
+have been enumerated, and from the same topics we must inquire into
+the causes of things, and the events, and the consequences. Nor ought
+the death of those men, whose life is praised, to be passed over in
+silence; provided only, there be anything noticeable either in the
+manner of their death, or in the consequences which have resulted from
+their death.
+
+XXIV. _C. F._ I have attended to what you say, and I have learnt
+briefly, not only how to praise another, but also how to endeavour to
+deserve to be praised myself. Let us, then, consider in the next
+place what system and what rules we are to observe in delivering our
+sentiments.
+
+_C. P._ In deliberation, then, the end aimed at is utility, to which
+everything is referred in giving counsel, and in delivering our
+sentiments, so that the first thing which requires to be noticed by
+any one who is advising or dissuading from such and such a course of
+action is what is possible to be done, or what is impossible; or what
+is necessary to be done, or what is unnecessary. For if a thing be
+impossible there is no use in deliberating about it, however desirable
+it may be; and if a thing be necessary, (when I say necessary, I mean
+such that without it we cannot be safe or free), then that must
+be preferred to everything else which is either honourable or
+advantageous in public affairs. But when the question is, What can be
+done? we must also consider how easily it can be done: for the things
+which are very difficult are often to be considered in the same
+light as if they were totally impossible. And when we are discussing
+necessity, although there may be something which is not absolutely
+necessary, still we must consider of how much importance it is. For
+that which is of very great importance indeed, is often considered
+necessary. Therefore, as this kind of cause consists of persuasion and
+dissuasion, the speaker who is trying to persuade, has a simple course
+before him; if a thing is both advantageous and possible, let it be
+done. The speaker who is trying to dissuade his hearers from some
+course of action, has a twofold division of his labour. One, if it is
+not useful it must not be done; the other, if it is impossible it must
+not be undertaken. And so, the speaker who is trying to persuade must
+establish both these points; the one whose object it is to dissuade,
+may be content with invalidating either.
+
+Since, then, all deliberation turns on these two points, let us first
+speak of utility, which is conversant about the distinction between
+advantages and disadvantages. But of advantages, some are necessarily
+such; as life, chastity, liberty, or as children, wives, relations,
+parents; and some are not necessarily such; and of these last, some
+are to be sought for their own sakes, as those which are classed among
+the duties or virtues, and others are to be desired because they
+produce some advantage, as riches and influence. But of those
+advantages which are sought for their own sake, some are sought for
+their honourableness, some for their convenience, which is inherent
+in them: those are sought for their honourableness which proceed from
+those virtues which have been mentioned a little while ago, which are
+intrinsically praiseworthy on their own account; but those are sought
+on account of some inherent advantage which are desirable as to goods
+of fortune or of the body: some of which are to a certain extent
+combined with honourableness, as honour, and glory; some have no
+connexion with that, as strength, beauty, health, nobleness, riches,
+troops of dependents. There is also a certain sort of matter, as
+it were, which is subordinate to what is honourable, which is most
+particularly visible in friendship. But friendships are seen in
+affection and in love. For regard for the gods, and for our parents,
+and for our country, and for those men who are eminent for wisdom or
+power, is usually referred to affection; but wives, and children,
+and brothers, and others whom habit and intimacy has united with us,
+although they are bound to us by affection, yet the principal tie
+is love. As, then, you know now what is good in these things, it is
+easily to be understood what are the contrary qualities.
+
+XXV. But if we were able always to preserve what is best, we should
+not have much need of deliberation, since that is usually very
+evident. But because it often happens on account of some peculiarity
+in the times, which has great weight, that expediency is at variance
+with what is honourable, and since the comparison of the two
+principles gives rise to deliberation, lest we should either pass over
+what is seasonable, on account of some considerations of dignity, or
+what is honourable on account of some idea of expediency, we may give
+examples to guide us in explaining this difficulty. And since an
+oration must be adapted not only to truth, but also to the opinions of
+the hearers, let us first consider this, that there are two kinds of
+men: one of them unlettered and rustic, always preferring what is
+expedient to what is honourable; the other, accomplished and polite,
+preferring dignity to everything. Therefore, the one class sets its
+heart upon, praise, honour, glory, good faith, justice, and every
+virtue; but the other regards only gain, emolument, and profit. And
+even pleasure, which is above all things hostile to virtue, and which
+adulterates the nature of what is good by a treacherous imitation of
+it, which all men of grosser ideas eagerly follow, and which prefers
+that spurious copy, not only to what is honourable, but even to what
+is necessary, must often be praised in a speech aiming at persuasion,
+when you are giving counsel to men of that sort.
+
+XXVI. This also must be considered, how much greater eagerness men
+display in fleeing from what is disadvantageous, than in seeking what
+is advantageous; for they are in the same manner not so zealous in
+seeking what is honourable, as in avoiding what is base. For who
+ever seeks for honour, or glory, or praise, or any kind of credit as
+earnestly as he flees from ignominy, infamy, contumely, and disgrace?
+For these things are attended with great pain. There is a class of
+men born for honour, not corrupted by evil training and perverted
+opinions--on which account, when exhorting or persuading, we must keep
+in view the object of teaching them by what means we may be able to
+arrive at what is good, and to avoid what is evil. But before men who
+have been properly brought up we shall dwell chiefly on praise and
+honourableness, and speak chiefly of those kinds of virtues which are
+concerned in maintaining and increasing the general advantage of men.
+But if we are speaking before uneducated and ignorant men, then we
+shall set before them profits, emoluments, pleasures, and the means
+of escaping pain; we shall also introduce the mention of insult and
+ignominy; for no one is such a clown, as not (even though honour
+itself may have no influence on him) to be greatly moved by insult and
+disgrace.
+
+Wherefore we must find out from what has been already said, what has
+reference to utility; but as to what is possible to be done or not,
+with reference to which people usually inquire also how easily a thing
+can be done, and how far it is desirable that it should be done, we
+must consider chiefly with reference to those causes which produce
+each separate result. For there are some causes which of themselves
+produce results, and some which only contribute to the production of a
+result. Therefore, the first are called efficient causes; and the
+last are classed as such, that without them a thing cannot be brought
+about. Again, of efficient causes, some are complete and perfect in
+themselves; some are accessory to, and, as it were, partners in the
+production of the result in question. And of this kind the effect is
+very much diversified, being sometimes greater or less; so that which
+is the most efficacious is often called the only cause, though it is
+in reality but the main one. There are also other causes which, either
+on account of their origin or on account of their result, are called
+efficient causes. But when the question is, what is best to be done,
+then it is either utility or the hope of doing it which urges men's
+minds to agree with the speaker. And since we have now said enough
+about utility, let us speak of the means of effecting it.
+
+XXVII. And on this point of the subject we must consider with whom,
+and against whom, and at what time, and in what place we are to do
+such and such a thing, also what means of arms, money, allies, or
+those other things which relate to the doing of any particular thing
+we have it in our power to employ. Nor must we consider only
+those means which we have, but those circumstances also which
+are unfavourable to us. And if in the comparison the advantages
+preponderate, then we must persuade our hearers, not only that what we
+are advising can be effected, but we must also take care that it shall
+appear easy, manageable, and agreeable. But if we are dissuading from
+any particular course, then we must either disparage the utility of
+it, or we must make the most of the difficulties of doing it, not
+having recourse to other rules, but to the same topics as are
+used when trying to persuade our hearers to anything. And whether
+persuading or dissuading, the speaker must have a store of precedents,
+either modern, which will be the best known, or ancient, which will
+perhaps have the most weight. And in this kind of discourse he must
+consider how he may be able often to make what is useful or necessary
+appear superior to what is honourable, or _vice versa_. But sentiments
+of this kind will have great weight in influencing men's minds, (if it
+is desirable to make an impression on them,) which relate either to
+the gratification of people's desires, or to the glutting of hatred,
+or to the avenging of injury. But if the object is to repress the
+feelings of the hearers, then they must be reminded of the uncertainty
+of fortune, of the doubtfulness of future events, and of the risk
+there may be of retaining their existing fortune, if it is good; and
+on the other hand, of the danger of its lasting if it is bad. And
+these are topics for a peroration. But in expressing one's opinions,
+the opening ought to be short, for the orator does not come forth as a
+suppliant, as if he were speaking before a judge, but as an exhorter
+and adviser. Wherefore, he ought to settle beforehand with what
+intention he is going to speak, what his object is, what the subject
+of his discourse is to be, and he ought to exhort his hearers to
+listen to him while he detains them but a short time. And the whole of
+his oration ought to be simple, and dignified, and embellished rather
+by its sentiments than by its expressions.
+
+XXVIII. _C.F._ I understand the topics of panegyric and persuasion.
+Now I am waiting to hear what is suited to judicial oratory, and I
+think that that is the only subject remaining.
+
+_C.P._ You are quite right. And of that kind of oratory the object is
+equity, which is regarded, not in a single point of view only, but
+very often by a sort of comparison: as when there is a dispute as to
+who is the most appropriate prosecutor; or when the possession of an
+inheritance is sought for without any express law, or without any
+will. In which causes the question is, which alternative is the more
+equitable or which is most equitable. And for these causes a supply of
+arguments is sought for out of those topics of equity which will be
+mentioned presently. And even before the decision is given, there is
+often a dispute about the constitution of the bench of judges, when
+the question is either whether the person who brings the action has a
+right of action, or whether he has it at the present time, or whether
+he has ceased to have it, or whether the action ought to be brought
+under the provisions of this law, or according to that formula. And
+if these points are not discussed, or settled, or decided, before the
+case is brought into court, still they often have very great weight
+even at the trial itself, when the case is stated in this way:--"You
+demanded too much; you demanded it too late; it was not your business
+to make such a demand at all; you ought not to have demanded it of me;
+or you ought not to have done so under this law, or in accordance with
+this formula, or in this court." And this class of cases belongs
+to civil law, which depends on laws respecting public and private
+affairs, or on precedent; and the knowledge of it seems to have been
+neglected by most orators, but to us it appears very necessary for
+speaking. Wherefore, as to arranging the right of action, as to
+accepting or standing a trial, as to demurring to the illegality of
+a proceeding, as to comparisons of justice, all which topics usually
+belong to this class of oration, so that although they often get mixed
+up with the judicial proceedings, still they appear to deserve to be
+discussed separately; and therefore I separate them a little from the
+judicial proceedings, more, however, as to the time at which they are
+to be introduced into the discussion, than from any real diversity of
+character. For all discussions which are introduced about civil law,
+or about what is just and good, belong to that sort of discussion in
+which we doubt what sort of thing such and such a thing which we are
+going to mention is. And this question turns chiefly on equity and
+right.
+
+XXIX. In all causes, then, there are three degrees, of which one at
+least is to be taken for the purposes of defence, if you are limited
+to one. For you must either take your stand in denying that the act
+imputed to you has been done at all, or in denying that that which you
+admit to have been done has the effect which, and is of the character
+which, the adversary asserts. Or if there can be no doubt as to the
+action, or the proper name of the action, then you must deny that what
+you are accused of is such as he states it to be; and you must urge
+in your defence that what you have done must be admitted to be right.
+Accordingly, the first objection,--the first point of conflict with
+the adversary, as I may call it, depends on a kind of conjecture; the
+second, on a kind of definition, or description, or notion of the
+word; but the third plea is to be maintained by a discussion on
+equity, and truth, and right, and on the becomingness to man of a
+disposition inclined to pardon. And since he who defends ought
+not always to resist the accuser by some objection, or denial, or
+definition, or opposite principles of equity, but should also at times
+advance general principles on which he founds his defence, the first
+kind of objection has in it the principle of asserting the charge to
+be unjust, an absolute denial of the fact; the second urges that the
+definition given by the adversary does not apply to the action in
+question the third consists in the advocate defending the action as
+having been rightly done, without raising any dispute as to the name
+of it.
+
+In the next place, the accuser must oppose to every argument that,
+which if it were not in the accusation, would prevent, there being any
+cause at all. Therefore, those arguments which are brought forward in
+that way, are said to be the foundations of causes, although those
+which are brought forward in opposition to the plan of the defence,
+are no more so in reality than the principles of the defence
+themselves; but for the sake of distinction, we call that a reason
+which is urged by the party on his trial in the way of demurrer for
+the sake of repelling an accusation; and unless he had such a refuge
+he would have nothing to allege by way of defence: but the foundation
+of his defence is that which is alleged by way of undermining the
+arguments of the adversary, without which the accusation can have no
+ground to stand upon.
+
+XXX. But from the meeting and conflict, as it were, of the reasons
+and of the corroborative proofs, a question arises, which I call a
+dispute, in which the question is, what is the question before the
+court, and what the dispute is about. For the first point which
+the adversaries contend for implies an inquiry of large extent in
+conjecture: as "Whether Decius has received the money;" in definition,
+as "Whether Norbanus has committed treason against the people;" in
+justice, as "Whether Opimius slew Gracchus lawfully." These questions
+which come into conflict first by arguing and resisting, are, as I
+have said, of wide extent and doubtful meaning. The comparison of the
+arguments and corroborative proofs narrows the question in dispute. In
+conjecture there is no dispute at all. For no one either can, or ought
+to, or is accustomed to, give a reason for an act which he asserts
+never took place. Therefore, in these causes the original question and
+the ultimate dispute are one and the same thing. But in them, when the
+assertion is advanced, "He did not commit treason in proceeding to
+violent measures in respect to Caepio; for it was the first indignation
+of the Roman people that prompted that violent conduct, and not the
+conduct of the tribune: and the majesty, since it is identical
+with the greatness of the Roman people, was rather increased than
+diminished by retaining that man in power and office." And when the
+reply is, "Majesty consists of the dignity of the empire and name of
+the Roman people, which that man impairs, who excites sedition by
+appealing to the violent passions of the multitude;" then comes the
+dispute, Whether his conduct was calculated to impair that majesty,
+who acted upon the inclinations of the roman people, so as to do a
+thing which was both just and acceptable to them by means of violence.
+But in such causes as these, when it is alleged in defence of the
+accused party that something has been rightly done, or when it must be
+admitted that it has been done, while the principle of the act is open
+to discussion: as in the case of Opimius, "I did it lawfully, for the
+sake of preserving the general safety and the republic;" and when
+Decius replies, "You had no power or right to slay even the wickedest
+of the citizens without a trial." Then arises the dispute, "Had
+Opimius lawfully the power, for the sake of the safety of the
+republic, to put to death a citizen who was overturning the republic,
+without his being condemned?" And so those disputes which arise in
+these controversies which are marked out by certain persons and times
+become gradually infinite, and after the times and persons are put out
+of the question, are again reduced to the form and rules under which
+their merits can be discussed.
+
+XXXI. But in corroborative arguments of the most important character,
+those points must also be established which can be opposed to the
+defence, being derived either from the letter of the law, or of
+a will, or from the language of a judicial decision, or of a
+stipulation, or of a covenant. And even this kind has no connexion
+with those causes which depend upon conjecture. For when an action is
+denied altogether, it cannot be impeached by reference to the letter
+of the law. It does not even come under definition, as to the
+character of the letter of the law itself. For although some
+expression or other is to be defined by reference to the letter of the
+law, so as to be sure what meaning it has: as when the question arises
+out of a will, what is meant by provisions, or out of the covenant of
+a lease, what are moveables or fixtures; then it is not the fact of
+there being written documents, but the interpretation of what is
+written, that gives rise to controversy. But when many things may be
+implied by one expression, on account of the ambiguity of some word or
+words, so that he who is speaking on the other side may be allowed to
+draw the meaning of what is written as is advantageous to him, or in
+fact, as he pleases; or, if the document be not drawn up in ambiguous
+language, he may either deduce the wish and intention of the writer
+from the words, or else say that he can defend what has been done by a
+document which is perfectly different relating to the same facts; then
+a dispute arises from a comparison of the two written documents; so
+that the writings being ambiguous, it is a question which is most
+strongly implied; and in a comparison between the letter and the
+spirit of the documents an argument is adduced to show which the
+judge is the most bound to be guided by; or in documents of a wholly
+contradictory nature, which is the most to be approved.
+
+But when the point in dispute is once established, then the orator
+ought to keep in view, what is to be proved by all the arguments
+derived from the different topics for discovering arguments. And
+although it is quite sufficient for him who sees what is concealed in
+each topic, and who has all those topics, as a kind of treasury of
+arguments, at his fingers' ends; still we will touch upon those which
+are peculiar to certain causes.
+
+XXXII. In conjecture, then, when the person on his trial takes refuge
+in denial of the fact, these are the two first things for the accuser
+to consider, (I say accuser, meaning every kind of plaintiff or
+commencer of an action; for even without any accuser, in the strict
+sense of the word, these same kinds of controversies may frequently
+arise;) however, these are his first points for consideration, the
+cause and the event. When I say the cause, I mean the reason for doing
+a thing. When I say the event, I mean that which was done. And this
+same division of cases was made just now, when speaking of the topics
+of persuasion. For the rules which were given in deliberating upon the
+future, and how they ought to have a bearing upon utility, or a power
+of producing effects, a man who is arguing upon a fact is bound to
+collect, so as to show that they must have been useful to the man whom
+he is accusing, and that the act might possibly have been done by him.
+The question of utility, as far as it depends upon conjecture, is
+opened, if the accused person is said to have done the act of which he
+is accused, either out of the hope of advantage or the fear of injury.
+And this argument has the greater weight, the greater the advantages
+or disadvantages anticipated are said to be. With reference to the
+motive for an action we take into consideration also the feelings of
+minds, if any recent anger, or long-standing grudge, or desire for
+revenge, or indignation at an injury; if any eagerness for honour, or
+glory, or command, or riches; if any fear of danger, any debt, any
+difficulties in pecuniary matters, have had influence; if the man is
+bold, or fickle, or cruel, or intemperate, or incautious, or foolish,
+or loving, or excitable, or given to wine; if he had any hope of
+gaining his point, or any expectation of concealing his conduct; or,
+if that were detected, any hope of repelling the charge, or breaking
+through the danger, or even postponing it to a subsequent time; or if
+the penalty to be inflicted by a court of justice is more trifling
+than the prize to be gained by the act; or if the pleasure of the
+crime is greater than the pain of the conviction.
+
+It is generally by such circumstances as these that the suspicion of
+an act is confirmed, when the causes why he should have desired it are
+found to exist in the party accused, together with the means of
+doing it. But in his will we look for the benefit which he may have
+calculated on from the attainment of some advantage, or the avoidance
+of some disadvantage, so that either hope or fear may seem to have
+instigated him, or else some sudden impulse of the mind, which impels
+men more swiftly to evil courses than even considerations of utility.
+So this is enough to have said about the causes.
+
+_C.F._ I understand; and I ask you now what the events are which you
+have said are produced by such causes?
+
+XXXIII. _C.P._ They are certain consequential signs of what is past,
+certain traces of what has been done, deeply imprinted, which have a
+great tendency to engender suspicion, and are, as it were, a silent
+evidence of crimes, and so much the more weighty because all causes
+appear as a general rule to be able to give ground for accusations,
+and to show for whose advantage anything was; and these arguments have
+an especial propriety of reference to those who are accused, such as a
+weapon, a footstep, blood, the detection of anything which appears to
+have been carried off or taken away; or any reply inconsistent with
+the truth, or any hesitation, or trepidation, or the fact of the
+accused person having been seen with any one whose character is such
+as to give rise to suspicion; or of his having been seen himself in
+that very place in which the action was done; or paleness, or tremor,
+or any writing, or anything having been sealed up or deposited
+anywhere. For these are circumstances of such a nature as to make the
+charge full of suspicion, either in connexion with the act itself, or
+with the time previous or subsequent to it. And if they are not so,
+still it will be proper to rely on the causes themselves, and on the
+means which the accused person had of doing the action, with the
+addition of that general argument, that he was not so insane as to be
+unable to avoid or conceal any indications of the action, so as to be
+discovered and to give ground for an accusation. On the other hand,
+there is that common topic, that audacity is joined to rashness, not
+to prudence. Besides, there comes the topic suited to amplification,
+that we are not to wait for his confessing; that offences are proved
+by arguments; and here, too, precedents will be adduced. And thus much
+about arguments.
+
+XXXIV. But if there is also a sufficiency of witnesses, the first
+thing will be to praise the party accused, and to say that he himself
+has taken care not to be convicted by argument; that he could not
+escape from witnesses: then each of the witnesses must be praised,
+(and we have stated already what are the things for which people
+can be praised;) and in the next place, it must be urged that it is
+possible for it to be quite justifiable not to yield to a specious
+argument, (inasmuch as such an one is often false,) but quite
+impossible to refuse belief to a good and trusty man, unless there is
+some fault in the judge. And then, too, if the witnesses are obscure
+or insignificant, we must say that a man's credit is not to be
+estimated by his fortune, but that those are the most trustworthy
+witnesses on every point who have the easiest means of knowing the
+truth of the matter under discussion. If the fact of an examination of
+slaves under torture having taken place, or a demand that such should
+take place, will assist the cause, then in the first place the general
+character of such examinations must be extolled: we must speak of
+the power of bodily pain; of the opinion of our ancestors, who would
+certainly have abolished the whole system if they had not approved of
+it; of the customs of the Athenians and Rhodians, very wise men, among
+whom (and that is a most terrible thing) even freemen and citizens
+are tortured; of the principles also of the most prudent of our own
+countrymen, who though they are unwilling to allow slaves to be
+examined against their masters, still did allow of such examination in
+the case of incest and conspiracy,--and in fact such an examination
+took place in my consulship. That declamation which men are in the
+habit of using to throw discredit on such examinations must be laughed
+out of court, and called studied and childish. Then a belief must be
+inculcated that the examination has been conducted with care, and
+without any partiality; and the answers given in the examination must
+be weighed by arguments and by conjecture. And these are for the most
+part the divisions of an accusation.
+
+XXXV. But the first division of a defence is the invalidating of the
+motives alleged for the action,--either as having no real existence,
+or as not having been so important, or as not having been likely to
+influence any one but the person accused; or we may urge that he could
+have attained the same object more easily; or that he is not a man
+of such habits, or of such a character; or that he was not so much a
+slave to sudden impulses, or at all events not to such trifling ones.
+And the advocate for the defence will disparage the means alleged
+to be in the power of the accused person, if he shows that either
+strength, or courage, or power, or resources were wanting to him; or
+that the time was unfavourable, or the place unsuitable; or that there
+were many witnesses, not one of whom he would have chosen to trust; or
+that he was not such a fool as to undertake a deed which he could not
+conceal; nor so senseless as to despise the penalties of the law and
+the courts of justice. And he will do away with the effect of the
+consequences alleged, by explaining that those things are not certain
+proofs of an act which might have happened even if the act had never
+been done; and he will dwell on the details, and urge that they belong
+as much to what he himself alleges was the fact, as to that which is
+at present the ground of accusation: or if he agrees with the accuser
+on those points, still he will say that ought to be of avail rather as
+a defence to himself against danger, than as an engine for injuring
+his safety; and he will run down the whole body of witnesses and
+examinations under torture, generally, and also in detail as far as
+he can, by the use of the topics of reprehension which have been
+explained already. The openings of these causes which are intended to
+excite suspicion by their bitterness will be thus laid down by the
+accuser; and the general danger of all intrigues will be denounced;
+and men's minds will be excited so as to listen attentively. But the
+person who is being accused will bring forward complaints of charges
+having been trumped up against him, and suspicions ferreted out from
+all quarters; and he will speak of the intrigues of the accuser, and
+also of the common danger of all citizens from such proceedings: and
+so he will try to move the minds of the judges to pity, and to excite
+their good-will in some degree. But the narration of the accuser will
+be a separate count, as it were, which will contain an explanation
+of every sort of transaction liable to suspicion, with every kind
+of argument scattered over it, and all the topics for the defence
+discredited. But the speaker for the defence must pass over or
+discredit all the arguments employed to raise suspicion, and will
+limit himself to a narration of the actual facts and events which have
+taken place. But in the corroboration of our own arguments, and in the
+invalidation of those of our adversaries, it will be often the object
+of the accuser to rouse the feelings of the minds of his hearers, and
+of the advocate for the defence to pacify them. And this will be the
+course of both of them especially in the peroration. The one must
+have recourse to a reiteration of his arguments, and to a general
+accumulation of them together; the other, when he has once clearly
+explained his own cause, refuting the statements of his adversary,
+must have recourse to enumeration; and, when he has effaced every
+unfavourable impression, then at the end he will endeavour to move the
+pity of his judges.
+
+XXXVI. _C.F._ I think I know now how conjecture ought to be dealt
+with. Let me hear you now on the subject of definition.
+
+_C.P._ With respect to that the rules which are given are common to
+the accuser and the defender. For whichever of them by his definition
+and description of a word makes the greatest impression on the
+feelings and opinions of the judges, and whichever keeps nearest to
+the general meaning of the word, and to that preconceived opinion
+which those who are the hearers have adopted in their minds, must
+inevitably get the better in the discussion. For this kind of topic
+is not handled by a regular argumentation, but by shaking out, as it
+were, and unfolding the word; so that, if, for instance, in the case
+of a criminal acquitted through bribery and then impeached a second
+time, the accuser were to define prevarication to be the utter
+corruption of a tribunal by an accused person; and the defender were
+to urge a counter definition, that it is not every sort of corruption
+which is prevarication, but only the bribing of a prosecutor by a
+defendant: then, in the first place, there would be a contest between
+the different alleged meanings of the word; in which case, though
+the definition, if given by the speaker for the defence, approaches
+nearest to general usage and to the sense of common conversation,
+still the accuser relies on the spirit of the law, for he says that it
+ought not to be admitted that those men who framed the laws considered
+a judicial decision as ratified when wholly corrupt, but that if even
+one judge be corrupted, the decision should be annulled. He relies on
+equity; he urges that the law ought to have been framed differently,
+if that was what was meant; but that the truth is, that whatever kinds
+of corruption could possibly exist were all meant to be included under
+the one term prevarication. But the speaker for the defence will bring
+forward on his side the usage of common conversation; and he will seek
+the meaning of the word from its contrary; from a genuine accuser,
+to whom a prevarication is the exact opposite; or from consequents,
+because the tablets are given to the judge by the accuser; and from
+the name itself, which signifies a man who in contrary causes appears
+to be placed, as it were, in various positions. But still he himself
+will be forced to have recourse to topics of equity, to the authority
+of precedents, and to some dangerous result. And this may be a general
+rule, that when each has stated his definition, keeping as accurately
+as he can to the common sense and meaning of the word, he should then
+confirm his own meaning and definition by similar definitions, and by
+the examples of those men who have spoken in the same way.
+
+And in this kind of cause that will be a common topic for the
+accuser,--that it must never be permitted that the man who confesses a
+fact, should defend himself by a new interpretation of the name of it.
+But the defender must rely on those general principles of equity which
+I have mentioned, and he must complain that, while that is on his
+side, he is weighed down not by facts, but by the perverted use of a
+word; and while speaking thus he will be able to introduce many topics
+suited to aid him in discovering arguments. For he will avail himself
+of resemblances, and contrarieties, and consequences; and although
+both parties will do this, still the defendant, unless his cause is
+evidently ridiculous, will do so more frequently. But the things which
+are in the habit of being said, for the sake of amplification, or in
+the way of digression, or when men are summing up, are introduced
+either to excite hatred, or pity, or to work on the feelings of the
+judges by means of those arguments which have been already given;
+provided that the importance of the facts, or the envy of men, or the
+dignity of the parties, will allow of it.
+
+XXXVII. _C.F._ I understand that. Now I wish to hear you speak of that
+part which, when the question is what is the character of such and
+such a transaction, will be suitable both for the accusation and also
+for the defence.
+
+_C.P._ In a cause of that kind those who are accused confess that they
+did the very thing for which they are blamed; but since they allege
+that they did it lawfully, it is necessary for us to explain the
+whole principles of law. And that is divided into two principal
+divisions,--natural law and statute law. And the power of each of
+these is again distributed into human law and divine law; one of which
+refers to equity and the other to religion. But the power of equity
+is two-fold: one part of which is upheld by considerations of what is
+straightforward, and true, and just, and, as it is said, equitable and
+virtuous; the other refers chiefly to requiting things done to one
+suitably,--which in the case of that which is to be requited being a
+kindness, is called gratitude, but when it is an injury, it is called
+revenge. And these principles are common both to natural and statute
+law. But there are also other divisions of law; for there is both the
+written and the unwritten law,--each of which is maintained by the
+rights of nations and the customs of our ancestors. Again, written
+law is divided into public law and private law. Public law is laws,
+resolutions of the senate, treaties; private law is accounts,
+covenants, agreements, stipulations.
+
+But those laws which are unwritten, owe their influence either to
+custom or to some agreement between, and as it were to the common
+consent of men. And indeed it is in some degree prescribed to us by
+the laws of nature, that we are to uphold our customs and laws. And
+since the foundations of equity have been briefly explained in this
+manner, we ought to meditate carefully, with reference to causes of
+this kind, on what is to be said in our speeches about nature, and
+laws, and the customs of our ancestors, and the repelling of injuries,
+and revenge, and every portion of human rights. If a man has done
+anything unintentionally, or through necessity, or by accident, which
+men would not be excused for doing if they did it of their own accord
+and intentionally, by way of deprecating punishment for the action he
+should implore pardon and indulgence, founding his petition on many
+topics of equity. I have now explained as well as I could every kind
+of controversy, unless there is anything besides which you wish to
+know.
+
+XXXVIII. _C.F._ I wish to know that which appears to me to be the
+only point left,--what is to be done when the discussion turns upon
+expressions in written documents.
+
+_C.P._ You are right to ask: for when that is explained I shall have
+discharged the whole of the task which I have undertaken. The rules
+then which relate to ambiguity are common to both parties. For each of
+them will urge that the signification which he himself adopts is the
+one suited to the wisdom of the framer of the document; each of them
+will urge that that sense which his adversary says is to be gathered
+from the ambiguous expression in the writing, is either absurd,
+or inexpedient, or unjust, or discreditable, or again that it is
+inconsistent with other written expressions, either of other men,
+or, if possible, of the same man. And he will urge further that the
+meaning which he himself contends for is the one which would have been
+intended by every sensible and respectable man; and that such an one
+would express himself more plainly if the case were to come over
+again, and that the meaning which he asserts to be the proper one has
+nothing in it to which objection can be made, or with which any fault
+can be found; but that if the contrary meaning is admitted, many
+vices, many foolish, unjust, and inconsistent consequences must
+follow. But when it appears that the writer meant one thing and wrote
+another, then he who relies on the letter of the law must first
+explain the circumstances of the case, and then recite the law; then
+he must press his opponent, repeat the law, reiterate it, and ask
+him whether he denies that that is the expression contained in the
+writing, or whether he denies the facts of the case. After that he
+must invoke the judge to maintain the letter of the law. When he has
+dwelt on this sort of corroborative argument he must amplify his case
+by praising the law, and attack the audacity of the man who, when he
+has openly violated it, and confesses that he has done so, still comes
+forward and defends his conduct. Then he must invalidate the defence
+when his opponent says that the writer meant one thing and wrote
+another, and say that it is intolerable that the meaning of the framer
+of the law should be explained by any one else in preference to the
+law itself. Why did he write down such words if he did not mean them?
+Why does the opponent, while he neglects what is plainly written,
+bring forward what is not written anywhere? Why should he think that
+men who were most careful in what they wrote are to be convicted of
+extreme folly? What could have hindered the framer of this law from
+making this exception which the opponent contends that he intended to
+make, if he really had intended it? He will then bring forward those
+instances where the same writer has made a similar exception, or if
+he cannot do that, at least he will cite cases where others have made
+similar exceptions. For a reason must be sought for, if it is possible
+to find one, why this exception was not made in this case. The law
+must be stated to be likely to be unjust, or useless, or else that
+there is a reason for obeying part of it, and for abrogating part; it
+must be that the argument of the opponent and the law are at variance.
+And then, by way of amplification, it will be proper, both in other
+parts of the speech, and above all in the peroration, to speak with
+great dignity and energy about the desirableness of maintaining the
+laws, and of the danger with which all public and private affairs are
+threatened.
+
+XXXIX. But he who defends himself by appeals to the spirit and
+intention of the law, will urge that the force of the law depends on
+the mind and design of the framer, not on words and letters. And he
+will praise him for having mentioned no exceptions in his law, so
+as to leave no refuge for offences, and so as to bind the judge to
+interpret the intention of the law according to the actions of each
+individual. Then he must cite instances in which all equity will be
+disturbed if the words of the law are attended to and not the meaning.
+Then all cunning and false accusation must be endeavoured to be put
+before the judge in an odious light, and complaints uttered in a
+tone of indignation. If the action in question has been done
+unintentionally, or by accident, or by compulsion, rather than in
+consequence of any premeditation,--and actions of those kinds we have
+already discussed,--then it will be well to use the same topics of
+equity to counteract the effect of the harshness of the language.
+
+But if the written laws contradict one another, then the connexion of
+art is such, and most of its principles are so connected and linked
+together, that the rules which we a little while ago laid down for
+cases of ambiguity, and which have just been given with reference to
+the letter and spirit of the law, may be all transferred to this third
+division also. For the topics by which, in the case of an ambiguous
+expression, we defended that meaning which is favourable to our
+argument must also be used to defend the law which is favourable to us
+when there are inconsistent laws. In the next place, we must contrive
+to defend the spirit of one law, and the letter of the other. And so
+the rules which were just now given relating to the spirit and letter
+of the law may all be transferred to this subject.
+
+XL. I have now explained to you all the divisions of oratory which
+have prevailed, as laid down by the academy to which we are devoted,
+and if it had not been for that academy they could not have been
+discovered, or understood, or discussed. For the mere act of division,
+and of definition, and the distribution of the partitions of a
+doubtful question, and the understanding the topics of arguments, and
+the arranging the argumentation itself properly, and the discerning
+what ought to be assumed in arguing, and what follows from what has
+been assumed, and the distinguishing what is true from what is false,
+and what is probable from what is incredible, and refuting assumptions
+which are not legitimate, or which are inappropriate, and discussing
+all these different points either concisely as those do who are called
+dialecticians, or copiously as an orator should do, are all fruits of
+the practice in disputing with acuteness and speaking with fluency,
+which is instilled into the disciples of that academy. And without a
+knowledge of these most important arts how can an orator have either
+energy or variety in his discourse, so as to speak properly of things
+good or bad, just or unjust, useful or useless, honourable or base?
+
+Let these rules then, my Cicero, which I have now explained to you, be
+to you a sort of guide to those fountains of eloquence, and if under
+my instruction or that of others you arrive at them, you will then
+acquire a clearer understanding of these things and of others which
+are much more important.
+
+_C.F._ I will strive to arrive at them with great eagerness, my
+father; and I do not think that there is any greater advantage which I
+can derive even from your many excellent kindnesses to me.
+
+
+
+
+THE TREATISE OF M. T. CICERO ON THE BEST STYLE OF ORATORS.
+
+
+This little piece was composed by Cicero as a sort of preface to his
+translation of the Orations of Demosthenes and Aeschines de Corona; the
+translations themselves have not come down to us.
+
+I. There are said to be classes of orators as there are of poets. But
+it is not so; for of poets there are a great many divisions; for of
+tragic, comic, epic, lyric, and also of dithyrambic poetry, which has
+been more cultivated by the Latins, each kind is very different from
+the rest. Therefore in tragedy anything comic is a defect, and in
+comedy anything tragic is out of place. And in the other kinds of
+poetry each has its own appropriate note, and a tone well known to
+those who understand the subject. But if any one were to enumerate
+many classes of orators, describing some as grand, and dignified,
+and copious, others as thin, or subtle, or concise, and others as
+something between the two and in the middle as it were, he would be
+saying something of the men, but very little of the matter. For as to
+the matter, we seek to know what is the best; but as to the man, we
+state what is the real case. Therefore if any one likes, he has a
+right to call Ennius a consummate epic poet, and Pacuvius an excellent
+tragic poet, and Caecilius perhaps a perfect comic poet. But I do not
+divide the orator as to class in this way. For I am seeking a perfect
+one. And of perfection there is only one kind; and those who fall
+short of it do not differ in kind, as Attius does from Terentius; but
+they are of the same kind, only of unequal merit. For he is the best
+orator who by speaking both teaches, and delights, and moves the
+minds of his hearers. To teach them is his duty, to delight them is
+creditable to him, to move them is indispensable. It must be granted
+that one person succeeds better in this than another; but that is not
+a difference of kind but of degree. Perfection is one thing; that
+is next to it which is most like it; from which consideration it is
+evident that that which is most unlike perfection is the worst.
+
+II. For, since eloquence consists of words and sentences, we must
+endeavour, by speaking in a pure and correct manner, that is to say in
+good Latin, to attain an elegance of expression with words appropriate
+and metaphorical. As to the appropriate words, selecting those which
+are most suitable; and when indulging in metaphor, studying to
+preserve a proper resemblance, and to be modest in our use of foreign
+terms. But of sentences, there are as many different kinds as I
+have said there are of panegyrics. For if teaching, we want shrewd
+sentences; if aiming at giving pleasure, we want musical ones; if
+at exciting the feelings, dignified ones. But there is a certain
+arrangement of words which produces both harmony and smoothness; and
+different sentiments have different arrangements suitable to them, and
+an order naturally calculated to prove their point; but of all
+those things memory is the foundation, (just as a building has a
+foundation,) and action is the light. The man, then, in whom all
+these qualities are found in the highest perfection, will be the most
+skilful orator; he in whom they exist in a moderate degree will be a
+mediocre orator: he in whom they are found to the slightest extent
+will be the most inferior sort of orator. All these, indeed, will be
+called orators, just as bad painters are still called painters; not
+differing from one another in kind, but in ability. So there is no
+orator who would not like to resemble Demosthenes; but Menander did
+not want to be like Homer, for his style was different.
+
+This difference does not exist in orators; or if there be any such
+difference, that one avoiding gravity aims rather at subtlety; and on
+the other hand, that another desires to show himself acute rather
+than polished: such men, although they may be tolerable orators, are
+certainly not perfect ones; since that is perfection which combines
+every kind of excellence.
+
+III. I have stated these things with greater brevity than the subject
+deserves; but still, with reference to my present object, it was
+not worth while being more prolix. For as there is but one kind of
+eloquence, what we are seeking to ascertain is what kind it is. And it
+is such as flourished at Athens; and in which the genius of the Attic
+orators is hardly comprehended by us, though their glory is known to
+us. For many have perceived this fact, that there is nothing faulty
+in them: few have discerned the other point; namely, how much in them
+there is that is praiseworthy. For it is a fault in a sentence if
+anything is absurd, or foreign to the subject, or stupid, or trivial;
+and it is a fault of language if any thing is gross, or abject, or
+unsuitable, or harsh, or far-fetched. Nearly all those men who are
+either considered Attic orators or who speak in the Attic manner have
+avoided these faults. But if that is all their merit, then they may
+deserve to be regarded as sound and healthy, as if we were regarding
+athletes, to such an extent as to be allowed to exercise in the
+palaestra, but not to be entitled to the crown at the Olympic games.
+For the athletes, who are free from defects, are not content as it
+were with good health, but seek to produce strength and muscles and
+blood, and a certain agreeableness of complexion; let us imitate them,
+if we can; and if we cannot do so wholly, at least let us select as
+our models those who enjoy unimpaired health, (which is peculiar to
+the Attic orators,) rather than those whose abundance is vicious, of
+whom Asia has produced numbers. And in doing this (if at least we can
+manage even this, for it is a mighty undertaking) let us imitate, if
+we can, Lysias, and especially his simplicity of style: for in many
+places he rises to grandeur. But because he wrote speeches for many
+private causes, and those too for others, and on very trifling
+subjects, he appears to be somewhat simple, because he has designedly
+filed himself down to the standard of the inconsiderable causes which
+he was pleading.
+
+IV. And a man who acts in this way, even if he be not able to turn out
+a vigorous speaker as he wishes, may still deserve to be accounted an
+orator, though an inferior one; but even a great orator must often
+also speak in the same manner in causes of that kind. And in this way
+it happens that Demosthenes is at times able to speak with simplicity,
+though perhaps Lysias may not be able to arrive at grandeur. But if
+men think that, when an army was marshalled in the forum and in all
+the temples round the forum, it was possible to speak in defence of
+Milo, as if we had been speaking in a private cause before a single
+judge, they measure the power of eloquence by their own estimate of
+their own ability, and not by the nature of the case. Wherefore, since
+some people have got into a way of repeating that they themselves do
+speak in an Attic manner, and others that none of us do so; the one
+class we may neglect, for the facts themselves are a sufficient answer
+to these men, since they are either not employed in causes, or when
+they are employed they are laughed at; for if the laughter which
+they excite were in approbation of them, that very fact would be a
+characteristic of Attic speakers. But those who will not admit that we
+speak in the Attic manner, but yet profess that they themselves are
+not orators; if they have good ears and an intelligent judgment, may
+still be consulted by us, as one respecting the character of a picture
+would take the opinion of men who were incapable of making a picture,
+though not devoid of acuteness in judging of one. But if they place
+all their intelligence in a certain fastidiousness of ear, and if
+nothing lofty or magnificent ever pleases them, then let them say that
+they want something subtle and highly polished, and that they despise
+what is dignified and ornamented; but let them cease to assert that
+those men alone speak in the Attic manner, that is to say, in a
+sound and correct one. But to speak with dignity and elegance and
+copiousness is a characteristic of Attic orators. Need I say more? Is
+there any doubt whether we wish our oration to be tolerable only, or
+also admirable? For we are not asking now what sort of speaking is
+Attic: but what sort is best. And from this it is understood, since
+those who were Athenians were the best of the Greek orators, and since
+Demosthenes was beyond all comparison the best of them, that if any
+one imitates them he will speak in the Attic manner, and in the
+best manner, so that since the Attic orators are proposed to us for
+imitation, to speak well is to speak Attically.
+
+V. But as there was a great error as to the question, what kind of
+eloquence that was, I have thought that it became me to undertake a
+labour which should be useful to studious men, though superfluous
+as far as I myself was concerned. For I have translated the most
+illustrious orations of the two most eloquent of the Attic orators,
+spoken in opposition to one another: Aeschines and Demosthenes. And I
+have not translated them as a literal interpreter, but as an orator
+giving the same ideas in the same form and mould as it were, in words
+conformable to our manners; in doing which I did not consider it
+necessary to give word for word, but I have preserved the character
+and energy of the language throughout. For I did not consider that
+my duty was to render to the reader the precise number of words, but
+rather to give him all their weight. And this labour of mine will have
+this result, that by it our countrymen may understand what to require
+of those who wish to be accounted Attic speakers, and that they may
+recal them to, as it were, an acknowledged standard of eloquence.
+
+But then Thucydides will rise up; for some people admire his
+eloquence. And they are quite right. But he has no connexion with the
+orator, which is the person of whom we are in search. For it is
+one thing to unfold the actions of men in a narration, and quite a
+different one to accuse and get rid of an accusation by arguing. It is
+one thing to fix a hearer's attention by a narration, and another to
+excite his feelings. "But he uses beautiful language." Is his language
+finer than Plato's? Nevertheless it is necessary for the orator whom
+we are inquiring about, to explain forensic disputes by a style of
+speaking calculated at once to teach, to delight, and to excite.
+
+VI. Wherefore, if there is any one who professes that he intends to
+plead causes in the forum, following the style of Thucydides, no one
+will ever suspect him of being endowed with that kind of eloquence
+which is suited to affairs of state or to the bar. But if he is
+content with praising Thucydides, then he may add my vote to his own.
+Moreover, even Isocrates himself, whom that divine author, Plato, who
+was nearly his contemporary, has represented in the Phaedrus as being
+highly extolled by Socrates, and whom all learned men have called a
+consummate orator, I do not class among the number of those who are to
+be taken for models. For he is not engaged in actual conflict; he is
+not armed for the fray; his speeches are made for display, like foils.
+I will rather, (to compare small things with great,) bring on the
+stage a most noble pair of gladiators. Aeschines shall come on like
+aeserninus, as Lucilius says--
+
+
+ "No ordinary man, but fearless all,
+ And skill'd his arms to wield--his equal match
+ Pacideianus stands, than whom the world
+ Since the first birth of man hath seen no greater."
+
+
+For I do not think that anything can be imagined more divine than that
+orator. Now this labour of mine is found fault with by two kinds of
+critics. One set says, "But the Greek is better." And I ask them
+whether the authors themselves could have clothed their speeches
+in better Latin? The others say, "Why should I rather read the
+translation than the original?" Yet those same men read the Andria and
+the Synephebi; and are not less fond of Terence and Caecilius than of
+Menander. They must then discard the Andromache, and the Antiope, and
+the Epigoni in Latin. But yet, in fact, they read Ennius and Pacuvius
+and Attius more than Euripides and Sophocles. What then is the meaning
+of this contempt of theirs for orations translated from the Greek,
+when they have no objection to translated verses?
+
+VII. However, let us now come to the task which we have undertaken,
+when we have just explained what the cause is which is before the
+court.
+
+As there was a law at Athens, that no one should be the cause of
+carrying a decree of the people that any one should be presented with
+a crown while invested with office till he had given in an account of
+the way in which he had discharged its duties; and another law, that
+those who had crowns given them by the people ought to receive them in
+the assembly of the people, and that they who had them given to them
+by the senate should receive them in the senate; Demosthenes was
+appointed a superintendent of repairs of the walls; and he did it at
+his own expense. Therefore, with reference to him Ctesiphon proposed
+a decree, without his having given in any accounts, that he should be
+presented with a golden crown, and that that presentation should take
+place in the theatre, the people being summoned for the purpose, (that
+is not the legitimate place for an assembly of the people;) and that
+proclamation should be made, "that he received this present on account
+of his virtue and devotion to the state, and to the Athenian people."
+Aeschines then prosecuted this man Ctesiphon because he had proposed
+a decree contrary to the laws, to the effect that a crown should be
+given when no accounts had been delivered, and that it should be
+presented in the theatre, and that he had made false statements in the
+words of his motion concerning Demosthenes's virtue and loyalty; since
+Demosthenes was not a good man, and was not one who had deserved well
+of the state.
+
+That kind of cause is indeed inconsistent with the precedents
+established by our habits; but still it has an imposing look. For it
+has on each side of the question a sufficiently clever interpretation
+of the laws, and a very grave contest as to the respective services
+done by the two rival orators to the republic. Therefore the object of
+Aeschines was, since he himself had been prosecuted on a capital charge
+by Demosthenes, for having given a false account of his embassy, that
+now a trial should take place affecting the conduct and character of
+Demosthenes, that so, under pretence of prosecuting Ctesiphon, he
+might avenge himself on his enemy. For he did not say so much about
+the accounts not having been delivered, as to the point that a very
+bad citizen had been praised as an excellent.
+
+Aeschines instituted this prosecution against Ctesiphon four years
+before the death of Philip of Macedon. But the decision took place a
+few years afterwards; when Alexander had become master of Asia. And it
+is said that all Greece thronged to hear the issue of the trial. For
+what was ever better worth going to see, or better worth hearing,
+than the contest of two consummate orators in a most important cause,
+inflamed and sharpened by private enmity?
+
+If then, as I trust, I have given such a copy of their speeches, using
+all their excellencies, that is to say, their sentiments, and their
+figures, and the order of their facts; adhering to their words only so
+far as they are not inconsistent with our customs, (and though they
+may not be all translated from the Greek, still I have taken pains
+that they should be of the same class,) then there will be a standard
+to which the orations of those men must be directed who wish to speak
+Attically. But I have said enough of myself--let us now hear Aeschines
+speaking in Latin. (_These Orations are not extant_.)
+
+
+
+
+END OF THE TREATISE.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: Dolabella had been married to Cicero's daughter Tullia,
+but was divorced from her.]
+
+[Footnote 2: The name was given them early. Juvenal, who wrote within
+a hundred years of Cicero's time, calls them "divina Philippica."]
+
+[Footnote 3: This meeting took place on the third day after Caesar's
+death.]
+
+[Footnote 4: [Greek: Mae mnaesikakin].]
+
+[Footnote 5: The hook was to drag his carcass along the streets to
+throw it into the Tiber. So Juvenal says--
+
+ "Sejanus ducitur unco
+ Spectandus."--x. 66.]
+
+[Footnote 6: This refers to a pillar that was raised in the forum
+in honour of Caesar, with the inscription, "To the Father of his
+Country."]
+
+[Footnote 7: _See_ Philippic 2.]
+
+[Footnote 8: This was the name of a legion raised by Caesar in Gaul,
+and called so, probably, from the ornament worn on their helmet.]
+
+[Footnote 9: He meant to insinuate that Antonius had been forging
+Caesar's handwriting and signature]
+
+[Footnote 10: Fulvia, who had been the wife of Clodius, and afterwards
+of Curio, was now the wife of Antonius.]
+
+[Footnote 11: These were the names of slaves.]
+
+[Footnote 12: Ityra was a town at the foot of Mount Taurus.]
+
+[Footnote 13: Brutus was the Praetor urbanus this year, and that
+officer's duty confined him to the city; and he was forbidden by law
+to be absent more than ten days at a time during his year of office.]
+
+[Footnote 14: I have translated _jugerum_ "an acre," because it
+is usually so translated, but in point of fact it was not quite
+two-thirds of an English acre. At the same time it was nearly three
+times as large as the Greek [Greek: plethros] such by the fault of
+fortune and not by his own. You assumed the manly gown, which you soon
+made a womanly one: at first a public prostitute, with a regular price
+for your wickedness, and that not a low one. But very soon Curio
+stepped in, who carried you off from your public trade, and, as if he
+had bestowed a matron's robe upon you, settled you in a steady and
+durable wedlock. No boy bought for the gratification of passion was
+ever so wholly in the power of his master as you were in Curio's. How
+often has his father turned you out of his house? How often has he
+placed guards to prevent you from entering? while you, with night
+for your accomplice, lust for your encourager, and wages for your
+compeller, were let down through the roof. That house could no longer
+endure your wickedness. Do you not know that I am speaking of matters
+with which I am thoroughly acquainted? Remember that time when Curio,
+the father, lay weeping in his bed; his son throwing himself at my
+feet with tears recommended to me you; he entreated me to defend you
+against his own father, if he demanded six millions of sesterces of
+you; for that he had been bail for you to that amount. And he himself,
+burning with love, declared positively that because he was unable
+to bear the misery of being separated from you, he should go into
+banishment. And at that time what misery of that most nourishing
+family did I allay, or rather did I remove! I persuaded the father to
+pay the son's debts; to release the young man, endowed as he was with
+great promise of courage and ability, by the sacrifice of part of his
+family estate; and to use his privileges and authority as a father
+to prohibit him not only from all intimacy with, but from every
+opportunity of meeting you. When you recollected that all this was
+done by me, would you have dared to provoke me by abuse if you had not
+been trusting to those swords which we behold?]
+
+[Footnote 15: Sisapo was a town in Spain, celebrated for some mines of
+vermilion, which were farmed by a company.]
+
+[Footnote 16: She was a courtesan who had been enfranchised by her
+master Volumnius. The name of Volumnia was dear to the Romans as that
+of the wife of Coriolanus, to whose entreaties he had yielded when he
+drew off his army from the neighbourhood of Rome.]
+
+[Footnote 17: This is a play on the name Hippia, as derived from
+[Greek: hippos], a horse.]
+
+[Footnote 18: The custom of erecting a spear wherever an auction
+was held is well known, it is said to have arisen from the ancient
+practice of selling under a spear the booty acquired in war.]
+
+[Footnote 19: There seems some corruption here. Orellius apparently
+thinks the case hopeless.]
+
+[Footnote 20: The Latin is, "non solum de die, sed etiam in diem,
+vivere;" which the commentators explain, "_De die_ is to feast every
+day and all day. Banquets _de die_ are those which begin before the
+regular hour." (Like Horace's _Partem solido demere de die_.) "To
+live _in diem_ is to live so as to have no thought for the
+future."--Graevius.]
+
+[Footnote 21: This accidental resemblance to the incident in the
+"Forty Thieves" in the "Arabian Nights" is curious.]
+
+[Footnote 22: The _septemviri,_ at full length _septemviri epulones_
+or _epulonum_, were originally triumviri. They were first created BC.
+198, to attend to the _epulum Jovis_, and the banquets given in
+honour of the other gods, which duty had originally belonged to the
+_pontifices_. Julius Caesar added three more, but that alteration did
+not last. They formed a _collegium_, and were one of the four
+great religious corporations at Rome with the _pontifices_, the
+_augures_, and the _quindecemviri_. Smith, Diet, Ant. v. _Epulones_.]
+
+[Footnote 23: It had been explained before that Fulvia had been the
+widow of Clodius and of Curio, before she married Antonius.]
+
+[Footnote 24: Riddle (Dict. Lat. in voce) says, that this was
+the regular punishment for deserters, and was inflicted by their
+comrades.]
+
+[Footnote 25: Cnaeus Octavius, the real father of Octavius Caesar, had
+been praetor and governor of Macedonia, and was intending to stand for
+the consulship when he died.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Bambalio is derived from the Greek word [Greek: bambala]
+to lisp.]
+
+[Footnote 27: Julia, the mother of Antonius and sister of Lucius
+Caesar, was also a native of Aricia.]
+
+[Footnote 28: He had intended to propose to the senate to declare
+Octavius a public enemy. We must recollect that in these orations
+Cicero, even when he speaks of Caius Caesar, means Octavius.]
+
+[Footnote 29: It is quite impossible to give a proper idea of
+Cicero's meaning here. He is arguing on the word _dignus_, from which
+_dignitas_ is derived. But we have no means of keeping up the play on
+the words in English.]
+
+[Footnote 30: The general proceeding on such occasions being to ask
+each senator's opinion separately, which gave those who chose an
+opportunity for pronouncing some encomium on the person honoured.]
+
+[Footnote 31: Spartacus was the general of the gladiators and slaves
+in the Servile war.]
+
+[Footnote 32: Lepidus had not in reality done any particular service
+to the republic (he was afterwards one of the triumviri), but he was
+at the head of the best army in the empire, and so was able to be of
+the most important service to either party, and, therefore, Cicero
+hoped to attach him to his side by this compliment.]
+
+[Footnote 33: It has been already explained that this was the name of
+one legion.]
+
+[Footnote 34: The mirmillo was the gladiator who fought with the
+retiarius; he wore a Gallic helmet with a fish for a crest.]
+
+[Footnote 35: The English reader must recollect that what is called
+Gaul in these orations, is Cisalpine Gaul containing what we now call
+the North of Italy, coming down as far south as Modena and Ravenna.]
+
+[Footnote 36: After the year B.C. 403 there were two classes of Roman
+knights, one of which received a horse from the state, and were
+included in the eighteen centuries of service, the other class, first
+mentioned by Livy (v. 7) in the account of the siege of Veii, served
+with their own horses, and instead of having a horse found them,
+received a certain pay, (three times that of the infantry) and were
+not included in the eighteen centuries of service. The original
+knights, to distinguish them from these latter, are often called
+_equites equo publico_, sometimes also ficus vanes or _trossuli_
+_Vide_ Smith, Dict. Ant. P. 394-396, v. _Equites_]
+
+[Footnote 37: He had been one of the septemvirs appointed to preside
+over the distribution of the lands.]
+
+[Footnote 38: Janus was the name of a street near the temple of Janus,
+especially frequented by bankers and usurers. It was divided into
+_summus, nedus_ and _imus_ Horace says--
+
+
+ Hase Janus summus ab imo
+ Edocet [lacuna]
+ Postquam omms res mea Janum
+ Ad medium fracta cat.
+
+
+]
+
+[Footnote 39: _I.e. tumultus_, as if it were _tumor multus_]
+
+[Footnote 40: These were the names of officers devoted to Antonius.]
+
+[Footnote 41: The province between the Alps and the Rubicon was called
+Gallia _Citerior_, or _Oisalpina_, from its situation, also _Togata_,
+from the inhabitants wearing the Roman toga. The other was called
+_Ulterior_, and by Cicero often _Ultima_, or _Transalpina_, and also
+_Comata_, from the fashion of the inhabitants wearing long hair]
+
+[Footnote 42: Sulpicius was of about the same age as Cicero, and an
+early friend of his, and he enjoyed the reputation of being the first
+lawyer of his time, or of all who ever had studied law as a profession
+in Rome.]
+
+[Footnote 43: There is some corruption of the text here.]
+
+[Footnote 44: Brutus had been adopted by his maternal uncle Quintus
+Servilius Caepio, so that his legal designation was what is given in
+the text now, as Cicero is proposing a formal vote--though at all
+other times we see that he calls him Marcus Brutus]
+
+[Footnote 45: The Latin is _Samiarius_, or as some read it _Samarius_.
+Orellius says, "perhaps it means some sort of trade, for I doubt
+its having been a Roman proper name." Nizollius says, "Samarius
+exul--_proverbium_." Facciolatti calls him a man whose business it was
+to clean the arms of the guards, &c. with Samian chalk.]
+
+[Footnote 46: Vopiscus is another name of Bestia.]
+
+[Footnote 47: It is impossible to give the force of the original here,
+which plays on the word _tabula_. The Latin is, "vindicem enim novarum
+tabularum novam tabulam vidimus," _novae tabulae_ meaning as is well
+known a law for the abolition of debts, _nova tabula_ in the singular
+an advertisement of (Trebellius's) property being to be sold.]
+
+[Footnote 48: Here too is a succession of puns. Lysidicus is derived
+from the Greek [Greek: lyo] to loosen and [Greek: dikae], justice.
+_Cimber_ is a proper name, and also means one of the nation of the
+Cimbri, _Germanus_ is a German, and _germanus_ a brother, and he means
+here to impute to Caius Cimber that he had murdered his brother.]
+
+[Footnote 49: Compare St Paul,--"For if the trumpet give an uncertain
+sound, who shall prepare himself to the battle?" 1 Cor. xiv 8.]
+
+[Footnote 50: That is, without being crucified like a slave.]
+
+[Footnote 51: The Latin here is "Itaque Caesaris munera
+rosit,"--playing on the name mus, mouse; but Orellius thinks the whole
+passage corrupt, and indeed there is evident corruption in the text
+here in many places.]
+
+[Footnote 52: He means Lucius Aemilius Paullus, and Caius Claudius
+Marcellus, who were consuls the year after Servius Sulpicius and
+Marcus Claudius Marcellus, A.U.C. 704.]
+
+[Footnote 53: These two were tribunes of the people, who had been
+dispossessed of their offices by Julius Caesar.]
+
+[Footnote 54: There is some difficulty here. Many editors propose to
+read "offen lerint" which Orellius thinks would hardly be Latin. He
+says, "Antonius is here speaking of those veterans who had deserted
+him indeed but who, at the time of his writing this letter, had not
+acted against him". Therefore, he says it is open to them to become
+reconciled to him again (wishing to conciliate them, and to alarm his
+enemies). On the other hand, Cicero replies, Nothing is so open to
+them now as to do what their duty to the republic requires. That is to
+say, openly to attack you, whose party they have already abandoned.]
+
+[Footnote 55: There were two wine feasts, Vinalia, at Rome: the
+vinalia urbano, celebrated on the twenty-third of April; and the
+vinalia rustica, on the nineteenth of October. This was the urbana
+vinalia; on which occasion the wine casks which had been filled in the
+autumn were tasted for the first time.]
+
+[Footnote 56: There is much dispute as to who is meant here. Some say
+Cicero refers to Amphion, some to Orpheus, and some to Mercury; the
+Romans certainly did attribute the civilization of men to Mercury, as
+Horace says--
+
+ Qui feros cultus hominum recenti
+ Voce formasti catus I. 9, 2.]
+
+[Footnote 57: This is very frequently quoted by Cicero; the Latin
+lines being the opening of the Medea of Ennius, translated from the
+first lines of the Medea of Euripides.]
+
+[Footnote 58: The Talysus was a hunter at Rhodes, of whom Protogenes
+had made an admirable picture, which was afterwards brought to Rome,
+and placed in the temple of Peace.]
+
+[Footnote 59: Brutus was at present propraetor in Gaul.]
+
+[Footnote 60: Theophrastus's real name was Tyrtamus, but Aristotle,
+whose pupil he was, surnamed him Theophrastus, from the Greek words
+[Greek: Theos], God and [Greek: phrazo], to speak.]
+
+[Footnote 61: He refers to the Menexenus.]
+
+[Footnote 62: Cape si vis.]
+
+[Footnote 63: "Assiduus. Prop, sitting down, seated, and so, well to
+do in the world, rich. The derivation _ab assis duendis_ is therefore
+to be rejected. Servius Tullius divided the Roman people into two
+classes, _assidui, i. e._ the rich, who could sit down and take their
+ease, and _proletarii_, or _capite censi_, the poor."--Riddle, in voc.
+_Assiduus_, quoting this passage. One does not see, however, why aelius
+and Cicero should not understand the meaning and derivation of a
+Latin word. Smith's Dict. Ant. takes no notice of the word at all.]
+
+[Footnote 64: See chap. x.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero,
+Volume 4, by Cicero
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