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29.
[71]
Though you yourself took no personal share in it, partly through timidity, partly
through profligacy, you had tasted, or rather had sucked in, the blood of
fellow-citizens: you had been in the battle of Pharsalia as a leader; you had
slain Lucius Domitius, a most illustrious and high-born man; you had pursued and
put to death in the most barbarous manner many men who had escaped from the
battle, and whom Caesar would perhaps have saved, as he did some others.
And after having performed these exploits, what was the reason why you did not
follow Caesar into Africa; especially
when so large a portion of the war was still remaining? And accordingly, what
place did you obtain about Caesar's person after his return from Africa? What was your rank? He whose quaestor
you had been when general, whose master of the horse when he was dictator, to
whom you had been the chief cause of war, the chief instigator of cruelty, the
sharer of his plunder, his son, as you yourself said, by inheritance, proceeded
against you for the money which you owed for the house and gardens, and for the
other property which you had bought at that sale.
[72]
At first you answered fiercely enough; and that I may not
appear prejudiced against you in every particular, you used a tolerably just and
reasonable argument. “What does Caius Caesar demand money of me? why
should he do so, any more than I should claim it of him? Was he victorious
without my assistance? No; and he never could have been. It was I who supplied
him with a pretext for civil war; it was I who proposed mischievous laws; it was
I who took up arms against the consuls and generals of the Roman people, against
the senate and people of Rome, against
the gods of the country, against its altars and hearths, against the country
itself. Has he conquered for himself alone? Why should not those men whose
common work the achievement is, have the booty also in common?” You
were only claiming your right, but what had that to do with it? He was the more
powerful of the two.
[73]
Therefore, stopping all your expostulations, he sent his soldiers to you, and to
your sureties; when all on a sudden out came that splendid catalogue of yours.
How men did laugh! That there should be so vast a catalogue, that there should
be such a numerous and various list of possessions, of all of which, with the
exception of a portion of Misenum,
there was nothing which the man who was putting them up to sale could call his
own. And what a miserable sight was the auction. A little apparel of Pompeius's,
and that stained; a few silver vessels belonging to the same man, all battered,
some slaves in wretched condition; so that we grieved that there was any thing
remaining to be seen of these miserable relies.
[74]
This auction, however, the heirs of Lucius Rubrius prevented from proceeding,
being armed with a decree of Caesar to that effect. The spendthrift was
embarrassed. He did not know which way to turn. It was at this very time that an
assassin sent by him was said to have been detected with a dagger in the house
of Caesar. And of this Caesar himself complained in the senate, inveighing
openly against you. Caesar departs to Spain, having granted you a few days delay for making the
payment, on account of your poverty. Even then you do not follow him. Had so
good a gladiator as you retired from business so early? Can any one then fear a
man who was as timid as this man in upholding his party, that is, in upholding
his own fortunes?
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