6.
For what is there, O Catiline, that can now afford you any pleasure in this city? for there
is no one in it, except that band of profligate conspirators of yours, who does not fear
you,—no one who does not hate you. What brand of domestic baseness is not stamped
upon your life? What disgraceful circumstance is wanting to your infamy in your private
affairs? From what licentiousness have your eyes, from what atrocity have your hands, from
what iniquity has your whole body ever abstained? Is there one youth, when you have once
entangled him in the temptations of your corruption, to whom you have not held out a sword
for audacious crime, or a torch for licentious wickedness?
[14]
What? when lately by the death of your former wife you had made your house empty and ready
for a new bridal, did you not even add another incredible wickedness to this wickedness? But
I pass that over, and willingly allow it to be buried in silence, that so horrible a crime
may not be seen to have existed in this city, and not to have been chastised. I pass over the
ruin of your fortune, which you know is hanging over you against the ides of the very next
month; I come to those things which relate not to the infamy of your private vices, not to
your domestic difficulties and baseness, but to the welfare of the republic and to the lives
and safety of us all.
[15]
Can the limit of this life, O Catiline, can the breath
of this atmosphere be pleasant to you, when you know that there is not one man of those here
present who is ignorant that you, on the last day of the year, when Lepidus and Tullus were
consuls, stood in the assembly armed; that you had prepared your hand for the slaughter of
the consuls and chief men of the state, and that no reason or fear of yours hindered your
crime and madness, but the fortune of the republic? And I say no more of these things, for
they are not unknown to every one. How often have you endeavoured to slay me, both as consul
elect and as actual consul? how many shots of yours, so aimed that they seemed impossible to
be escaped, have I avoided by some slight stooping aside, and some dodging, as it were, of my
body? You attempt nothing, you execute nothing, you devise nothing that call be kept hid from
me at the proper time; and yet you do not cease to attempt and to contrive.
[16]
How often already has that dagger of yours been wrested from your hands?
how often has it slipped through them by some chance, and dropped down? and yet you cannot
any longer do without it; and to what sacred mysteries it is consecrated and devoted by you I
know not, that you think it necessary to plunge it in the body of the consul.
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