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12.
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 every thing 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?
[28]
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 every thing 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.
[29]
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,
[30]
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 Marcius Crispus, proconsul, from
Lucius Statius Marcus, 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.
[31]
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 reestablished 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.”
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