[51]
For the foreign wars waged against us by foreign kings, countries, and
nations, have long been so completely put down, that they are treating them,
to our own great credit, as people whom we can allow to remain at peace.
Moreover it has not been a common thing for unpopularity to attach itself to
any one of the citizens on account of any warlike triumphs. We often have to
resist domestic evils and the counsels of audacious citizens; and it is
indispensable to retain in the republic a remedy for these
dangers; all which, O judges, you would have lost if the power of declaring
its grief at my position had been taken from the senate and people of
Rome by my death. Wherefore, I
warn you, O young men, and I enjoin you by the right which belongs to me to
do so, you who have a regard for propriety, for the republic, and for glory,
not to be slow, if at any time any necessity summons you to defend the
republic against worthless citizens, and not, from any recollection of what
has happened to me, to shun bold counsels.
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