31.
For this is what I say,—if the Campanian land be divided, the common people is
driven out of and banished from the lands, not settled and established in them. For the whole
of the Campanian district is cultivated and occupied by the common people, and by a most
virtuous and moderate common people. And that race of men of most virtuous habits, that race
of excellent farmers and excellent soldiers, is wholly driven out by this tribune who is so
devoted to the people. And these miserable men, born and brought up on those lands, practised
in tilling the ground, will have no place to which, when so suddenly driven out, they can
betake themselves. The entire possession of the Campanian district will be given over to
these robust, vigorous, and audacious satellites of the decemvirs. And, as you now say of
your ancestors, “Our ancestors left us these lands,” so your posterity
will say of you, “Our ancestors received these lands from their ancestors, but lost
them.”
[85]
I think, indeed, that if the Campus Martius were to be divided, and if every one of you had
two feet of standing ground allotted to him in it, still you would prefer to enjoy the whole
of it together, than for each individual to have a small portion for his own private
property. Wherefore, even if some portion of these lands were to come to every individual
among you.—which is now indeed held out to you as a lure, but is in reality
destined for others,—still they would be a more honourable possession to you when
possessed by the whole body, than if distributed in bits to each citizen. But now when you
are not to have any share in them, but when they are being prepared for others and taken from
you, will you not most vigorously resist this law as you would an armed enemy, fighting in
defence of your lands. He adds the Stellate plain to the Campanian district, and in the two
together he allots twelve acres to each settler. As if the difference was slight between the
Stellate and Campanian districts!
[86]
And now a multitude is
sought out, by which those towns are to be peopled. For I have said before that leave is
given by the law for them to occupy with their settlers whatever municipalities and whatever
old colonies they choose. They will fill the municipality of Cales; they will overwhelm Teanum; they will extend a chain of garrisons
through Atella, and Cumae, and Naples,
and Pompeii, and Nuceria; and the whole of
Puteoli, which is at present a free city, in
the full enjoyment of its ancient rights and liberties, they will occupy with a new people,
and with a foreign body of men.
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.