[82]
I reclaim from you, O Verres, the monument of Publius Africanus; I abandon the
cause of the Sicilians, which I undertook; let there be no trial of you for
extortion at present; never mind the injuries of the Segestans; let the pedestal of
Publius Africanus be restored; let the name of that invincible commander be engraved
on it anew; let that most beautiful statue, which was recovered when Carthage was taken, be replaced. It is not I,
the defender of the Sicilians,—it is not I, your
prosecutor,—they are not the Segestans who demand this of you; but he who
has taken on himself the defence and the preservation of the renown and glory of
Publius Africanus. I am not afraid of not being able to give a good account of my
performance of this duty to Publius Servilius the judge; who, as he has performed
great exploits, and raised very many monuments of his good deeds, and has a natural
anxiety about them, will be glad, forsooth, to leave them an object of care and
protection not only to his own posterity, but to all brave men and good citizens;
and not as a mark for the plunder of rogues. I am not afraid of its displeasing you,
O Quintus Catulus, to whom the most superb and splendid monument in the whole world
belongs, that there should be as many guardians of such monuments as possible, or
that all good men should think it was a part of their duty to defend the glory of
another.
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