登陆注册
15428800000026

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

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

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

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

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

同类推荐
  • 中枢龟镜

    中枢龟镜

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说十善业道经

    佛说十善业道经

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

    龙虎精微论

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

    MARY BARTON

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

    Glossary

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 万墓局师

    万墓局师

    自小受过不知来历的师傅严苛训练的曲颜伟和他的勘探队在探矿时,发现了一个唐代废矿。为了救人,他不得不冒险摸进矿洞。他们发现了成堆的宝贝,所有人都拼命地往包里装着。可是不久,他们不再关心这些宝贝。他们面临着看不到,摸不着的,一不小心就会送命的危险。他们想尽办法逃了出去。并且带出了一把青铜宝剑,一本铜皮铁页的古怪书籍,一个黄铜罗盘,还有六片玉符。接着,颜伟不得不为了救人,再一次探险。原来,所有的一切,都是有人安排好的。一切都是一个局。万墓局师敬请期待……
  • 龙心霸世

    龙心霸世

    儿时童年无忧无虑,一家三口在一座小岛上与世无争,但一场大变悄然降临,这个安逸的小家将何去何从
  • 修真狂圣

    修真狂圣

    苍茫大地一剑尽挽破,何处繁华笙歌落。斜倚云端千壶掩寂寞,纵使他人空笑我,任他凡事清浊,为你一笑间轮回甘堕。
  • 解酲语

    解酲语

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 神医毒妃:废材狂小姐

    神医毒妃:废材狂小姐

    她,医药世家的废材小姐,天生丑颜,受尽冷眼;他,黑暗中走出的暗夜邪皇,执掌生死,盖世无双!初见时,她群敌环伺,四面楚歌,那狂傲的眼,璀璨的眸,惊艳了最深沉的昏暗!当浴火重生的她和天神般降临的他相遇时,是劫数,亦或是命数?且看废材毒女如何破开重重荆棘,颠覆山河,玩转天下!这是关于腹黑高冷闷骚男和犀利毒舌无赖女一路逆天的神奇故事!
  • 听教育学家讲故事:成就天才的不朽神话

    听教育学家讲故事:成就天才的不朽神话

    本书避免了那些教育方面的枯燥理论和无味说教,以简短生动的名人故事现身说法,以精辟实用的哲理感悟启迪心灵,以经典深刻的教育名言表达观点,把家庭教育中可能遇到的方方面面摆在读者的面前。从而为天下父母尤其是年轻的父母解答了种种教育困惑,为孩子的成才提供了颇具价值的参考和借鉴。从孩子呱呱坠地那一刻起,先天条件就已经成为定局,唯一可以改变的是对孩子后天的培养。因此,孩子能否成为一个不平凡的人,关键看家长采用什么样的教育思维和教育理念,因为教育思维和教育理念直接决定着孩子是否可以发挥出他们自身的潜能,是否可以把握自己的命运,从而成为某个领域甚至是多个领域的卓越人物。
  • 坠泪天使

    坠泪天使

    每个人都是不小心折断翅膀而坠落凡间的天使,只有找到他折段的另半翅膀才可以飞回天堂。天使没有眼泪,可是当我们有了爱却一定会流泪。这是天神为见证我们是否有爱的证据!所以我遇见你,所以我们成为坠泪的天使。虽然会流泪却依然爱……
  • 征伐天锋

    征伐天锋

    苍暝大陆,百家争鸣,妖魔肆虐。无尽众生,血天枯地,吾当立道。一个属于小人物的有志途。
  • 重生之青出于蓝

    重生之青出于蓝

    车祸让谢思回到高中时代,一切从零开始,纨绔,嚣张,不可一世。。生活的不公,燃起了谢思斗志。前一世平淡,这一世精彩。
  • 重回拼爹时代

    重回拼爹时代

    这真是一个拼爹的时代啊!周武,一个农n代,咬牙努力考上大学,毕业后工资还不如农民工。一次意外,让周武回到1997年,“我不要再矮矬穷!”于是他走上了拼爹的道路。