What I entreated of the immortal gods, O judges, according to the manners and institutions
of our ancestors, on that day when, after taking the auspices in the comitia centuriata, 1 I declared Lucius Murena to have been elected
consul,—namely, that that fact might turn out gloriously and happily for me and for
my office, and for the Roman nation and people,—that same thing do I now pray for
from the same immortal gods, that the consulship may be obtained by that same man with safety,
and that your inclinations and opinions may agree with the wishes and suffrages of the Roman
people, and that that fact may bring to you and to the Roman people peace, tranquillity, ease,
and unanimity. And if that solemn prayer of the comitia,
consecrated under the auspices of the consul, has as much power and holy influence as the
dignity of the republic requires, I pray also that the matter may turn out happily,
fortunately, and prosperously to those men to whom the consulship was given when I presided
over the election.
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1 The comitia centuriata, or as they were sometimes called majora, were the assembly in which the people gave their votes according to the classification instituted by Servius Tullius; they were held in the Campus Martius without the city, and in reference to their military organization they were summoned by the sound of the horn, not by the voice of the lictor. All magistrates were elected in these comitia.
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