<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi0474.phi011.perseus-eng2" subtype="translation"><div type="textpart" n="2" subtype="Speech"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="12" resp="perseus"><p> When I wished to join them familiarly in conversation, I was shut out;
     their projects were concealed from me: and when I assured them that, if the law appeared to me
     to be advantageous to the Roman people, I would assist them in it and promote it, still they
     rejected this liberality of mine with scorn, and said that I could not possibly be induced to
     approve of any liberal measures. I ceased to offer myself to them, lest perchance my
     importunity should seem to them treacherous or impudent. In the meantime they did not cease to
     have secret meetings among themselves, to invite some private individuals to them, and to
     choose night and darkness for their clandestine deliberations. And what great alarm this
     conduct of theirs caused us, you may easily divine by your own conjectures founded on the
     anxiety which you yourselves experienced at that time. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="13" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>At last the tribunes of the people enter on their office. The assembly to be convened by
     Publius Rullus was anxiously looked for, both because he was the chief mover of the agrarian
     law, and because he behaved with more violence than his colleagues. From the moment that he was
     elected tribune, he put on another expression of countenance, another tone of voice, a
     different gait; he went about in an old-fashioned dress, without any regard to neatness in his
     person, with longer hair and a more abundant beard than before; so that he seemed by his eyes
     and by his whole aspect to be threatening every one with the power of the tribunes, and to be
     meditating evil to the republic. I was waiting in expectation of his law and of the assembly.
     At first no law at all is proposed. He orders an assembly to be summoned as his first measure.
     Men flock to it with the most eager expectation. He makes a long enough speech, expressed in
     very good language. There was one thing which seemed to me bad, and that was, that out of all
     the crowd there present, not one man could be found who was able to understand what he meant.
     Whether he did this with any insidious design, or whether that is the sort of eloquence in
     which he takes pleasure, I do not know. Still, if there was any one in the assembly cleverer
     than another, he suspected that he was intending to say something or other about an agrarian
     law. At last, after I had been elected consul, the law is proposed publicly. By my order
     several clerks meet at one time, and bring me an accurate copy of the law.</p></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>