[41]
The matter was notorious over all Sicily, that men were prosecuted for capital
offences because the praetor coveted their chased silver plate; and that
prosecutions were instituted against them not only when they were present, but even
in their absence. Diodorus goes to Rome,
and putting on mourning, calls on all his patrons and friends; relates the affair to
every one. Earnest letters are written to Verres by his father, and by his friends,
warning him to take care what he did, and what steps he took respecting Diodorus;
that the matter was notorious and very unpopular; that he must be out of his senses;
that this one charge would ruin him if he did not take care. At that time he
considered his father, if not in the light of a parent, at least in that of a man.
He had not yet sufficiently prepared himself for a trial; it was his first year in
the province; he was not, as he was by the time of the affair of Sthenius, loaded
with money. And so his frenzy was checked a little, not by shame, but by fear and
alarm. He does not dare to condemn Diodorus; he takes his name out of the list of
defendants while he is absent. In the meantime Diodorus, for nearly three years, as
long as that man was praetor, was banished from the province and from his home.
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