<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.phi012.perseus-eng3" subtype="translation"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="20" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>A resolution of the senate is passed, that Caius Marius and Lucius Valerius, the consuls,
    shall employ the tribunes of the people and the praetors as they think fit; and shall take care
    that the empire and majesty of the Roman people be preserved. They do employ all the tribunes of
    the people except Saturninus, and all the praetors except Glaucia; they bid every one who
    desires the safety of the republic to take arms and to follow them. Every one obeys. Arms are
    distributed from the sacred buildings and from the public armouries to the Roman people, Caius
    Marius the consul distributing them. Here now, to say nothing of other points, I ask you
    yourself; O Labienus, when Saturninus in arms was in possession of the Capitol; when Glaucia,
    and Caius Saufeius, and even that Gracchus <note anchored="true"> This was a man of the name of
     Equitius Tismo, whom Saturninus gave out to be a son of Tiberius Gracchus. When Marius shut up
     the prisoners who had surrendered in the Curia Hostilia, and the people stripped off the roof;
     and threw the tiles down on them, this pseudo Gracchus was slain among the others.</note> just
    escaped from chains and the jail, were with him; I will add, too, since you wish me to do so,
    Quintus Labienus, your own uncle; but in the forum were Caius Marius and Lucius Valerius Flaccus
    the consuls, behind them all the senate, and that senate, too, whom even you yourselves (who try
    to render the conscript fathers of the present day unpopular, in order the more easily to
    diminish the power of the senate) are accustomed to extol; when the equestrian order-—what men
    the Roman knights, O ye immortal gods, then were!—when they supported, as they did in the time
    of our fathers, a great portion of the republic, and the whole dignity of the courts of justice;
    when all men, of all ranks, who thought their own safety involved in the safety of the republic,
    had taken arms;—what, then, was Caius Rabirius to do? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="21" resp="perseus"><p> I ask
    you yourself; I say, O Labienus,—when the consuls, in pursuance of the resolution of the senate,
    had summoned the citizens to arms; when Marcus Aemilius, the chief of the senate, stood in arms
    in the assembly; who, though he could scarcely walk, thought the lameness of his feet not an
    impediment to his pursuit of enemies, but only to his flight from them; when, lastly, Quintus
    Scaevola, worn out as he was with old age, enfeebled by disease, lame, and crippled, and
    powerless in all his limbs, leaning on his spear, displayed at the same time the vigour of his
    mind and the weakness of his body; when Lucius Metellus, Sergius Galba, Caius Serranus, Publius
    Rutilius, Caius Fimbria, Quintus Catulus, and all the men of consular rank who were then in
    existence, had taken arms in defence of the common safety; when all the praetors, all the nobles
    and youth of the city, united together, Cnaeus and Lucius Domitius, Lucius Crassus, Quintus
    Mucius, Caius Claudius, Marcus Drusus; when all the Octavii, Metelli, Julii, Cassii, Catos and
     <placeName key="perseus,Pompeii">Pompeii</placeName>; when Lucius Philippus, Lucius Scipio,
    when Marcus Lepidus, when Decimus Brutus, when this very man himself; Servilius, under whom you,
    O Labienus, have served as your general; when this Quintus Catulus, whom we see here, then a
    very young man; when this Caius Curio; when, in short, every illustrious man in the city was
    with the consuls;—what then did it become Caius Rabirius to do? Was he to lie hid, shut up, and
    concealed in some dark place, and to hide his cowardice under the protection of darkness and
    walls? Or was he to go into the Capitol, and there join himself to your uncle, and with the rest
    of those who were fleeing to death, on account of the infamy of their lives? Or was he to unite
    with Marius, Scarius, Catulus, Metellus, Scaevola,—in short, with all virtuous men, in a
    community not only of safety, but also of danger? </p></div><milestone n="8" unit="chapter"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="22" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>Even you yourself; O Labienus, what would you do in such a crisis? When your general system of
    indolence was compelling you to flight and lurking-places, while the villainy and frenzy of
    Lucius Saturninus was inviting you to the Capitol, while the consuls were summoning you to
    uphold the safety and liberty of your country; which authority, which invitation, which party
    would you prefer to follow, whose command would you select to obey? My uncle says he was with
    Saturninus. What if he was? Whom was your father with?—What if he was? Where were your
    relations, Roman knights?—What if he was? What was the conduct of all your prefecture, and
    district, and neighbourhood?—What if he was? What was the conduct of the whole Picene district;
    did they follow the frenzy of the tribune, or the authority of the consul? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="23" resp="perseus"><p> In truth, I affirm this; that that which you confess of your uncle, no man has
    ever yet confessed with respect to himself. No one, I say, has been found so profligate, so
    abandoned, so entirely destitute, not only of all honesty, but of every resemblance of and
    pretence to honesty, as to confess that he was in the Capitol with Saturninus. But your uncle
    was. Let him have been; and let him have been, though not compelled by the desperate condition
    of his own affairs, or by airy domestic distresses and embarrassments. Suppose it was his
    intimacy with Lucius Saturninus that induced him to prefer his friendship to his country,—was
    that a reason for Caius Rabirius also deserting the republic? for his not appearing in that
    armed multitude of good men? for his refusing obedience to the invitation and command of the
    consul? </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>