12.
[40]
Let us believe this, that Sextus Naevius spared the ears of the man whose life he is
attacking! If he had owed you money, O Sextus, you would have asked for it at once; if
not at once, at all events soon after; if not soon after, at least after a time; in six
months I should think; beyond all doubt at the close of the year: but for a year and a
half, when you had every day an opportunity of reminding the man of the debt, you say
not one word about it; but now, when nearly two years have passed, you ask for the
money. What profligate and extravagant spendthrift, even before his property is
diminished, but while it is still abundant, would have been so reckless as Sextus
Naevius was? When I name the man, I seem to myself to have said enough.
[41]
Caius Quinctius owed you money; you never asked for it: he
died; his property came to his heir; though you saw him every day, you did not ask for
it for two years; will any one doubt which is the more probable, that Sextus Naevius
would instantly have asked for what was owed to him, or that be would not have asked for
two years? Had he no opportunity of asking? Why, he lived with you more than a year:
could no measures be taken in Gaul? But there
was law administered in the province, and trials were taking place at Rome. The only alternative remaining is, either extreme
carelessness prevented you, or extraordinary liberality. If you call it carelessness, we
shall wonder; if you call it kindness, we shall laugh; and what else you can call it I
know not; it is proof enough that nothing was owing to Naevius, that for such a length
of time he asked for nothing.
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