21.
[60]
But now, as to what he adds, that the inhabitants of Pompeii were excited by Sulla to join
that conspiracy and that abominable wickedness, what sort of statement that I am quite unable
to understand. Do the people of Pompeii appear to have joined the conspiracy? Who has ever
said so? or when was there the slightest suspicion of this fact? “He separated
then,” says he, “from the settlers, in order that when he had excited
dissensions and divisions within, he might be able to have the town and nation of Pompeii in
his power.” In the first place, every circumstance of the dissension between the
natives of Pompeii and the settlers was referred to the patrons of the town, being a matter of
long standing, and having been going on many years. In the second place, the matter was
investigated by the patrons in such a way, that Sulla did not in any particular disagree with
the opinions of the others. And lastly, the settlers themselves understand that the natives of
Pompeii were not more denuded by Sulla than they themselves were.
[61]
And this, O judges, you may ascertain from the number of settlers, most
honourable men, here present; who are here now, and are anxious and above all things desirous
that the man, the patron, the defender, the guardian of that colony, (if they have not been
able to see him in the safe enjoyment of every sort of good fortune and every honour,) may at
all events, in the present misfortune by which he is attacked, be defended and preserved by
your means. The natives of Pompeii are here also with equal eagerness, who are accused as well
as he is by the prosecutors; men whose differences with the settlers about walks and about
votes have not gone to such lengths as to make them differ also about their common safety.
[62]
And even this virtue of Publius Sulla appears to me to be
one which ought not to be passed over in silence;—that though that colony was
originally settled by him, and though the fortune of the Roman people has separated the
interests of the settlers from the fortunes of the native citizens of Pompeii, he is still so
popular among, and so much beloved by both parties, that he seems not so much to have
dispossessed the one party of their lands as to have settled both of them in that country.
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