<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="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 type="textpart" subtype="section" n="24" resp="perseus"><p> But we see that in the nature of things he must have
    adopted one of these three lines of conduct: he must either have been with Saturninus, or with
    the good men, or he must have been lying in bed—to lie hid was a state equal to the most
    infamous death; to be with Saturninus was the act of insanity and wickedness. Virtue, and
    honour, and shame, compelled him to range himself on the side of the consuls. Do you, therefore,
    accuse Caius Rabirius on this account, that he was with those men whom he would have been
    utterly mad to have opposed, utterly infamous if he had deserted them? <milestone n="9" unit="chapter"/>
   <milestone unit="para"/>But Caius Decianus, whom you often mention, was condemned, because, when he was accusing, with
    the earnest approval of all good men, a man notorious for every description of infamy, Publius
    Furius, he dared to complain in the assembly of the death of Saturninus. And Sextus Titius was
    condemned for having an image of Lucius Saturninus in his house. The Roman knights laid it down
    by that decision that that man was a worthless citizen, and one who ought not to be allowed to
    remain in the state, who either by keeping his image sought, to do credit to the death of a man
    who was seditious to such a degree as to become an enemy to the republic, or who sought by pity
    to excite the regrets of ignorant men, or who showed his own inclination to imitate such
    villainy. </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>