<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.phi015.perseus-eng2" subtype="translation"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="11" resp="perseus"><p>
   Two conspiracies are spoken of by you, O Torquatus; one, which is said to have been formed in
    the consulship of Lepidus and Volcatius, when your own father was consul elect; the other, that
    which broke out in my consulship. In each of these you say that Sulla was implicated. You know
    that I was not acquainted with the counsels of your father, a most brave man, and a most
    excellent consul. You know, as there was the greatest intimacy between you and me, that I knew
    nothing of what happened, or of what was said in those times; I imagine, because I had not yet
    become a thoroughly public character, because I had not yet arrived at the goal of honour which
    I proposed to myself; and because my ambition and my forensic labours separated me from all
    political deliberations. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="12" resp="perseus"><p> Who, then, was present at your
    counsels? All these men whom you see here, giving Sulla the countenance of their presence; and
    among the first was Quintus Hortensius—who, by reason of his honour and worth, and his admirable
    disposition towards the republic, and because of his exceeding intimacy with and excessive
    attachment to your father, was greatly moved by the thoughts of the common danger, and most
    especially by the personal peril of your father. Therefore, he was defended from the charge of
    being implicated in that conspiracy by that man who was present at and acquainted with all your
    deliberations, who was a partner in all your thoughts and in all your fears; and, elegant and
    argumentative as his speech in repelling this accusation was, it carried with it as much
    authority as it displayed of ability. Of that conspiracy, therefore, which is said to have been
    formed against you, to have been reported to you, and to have been revealed by you, I was unable
    to say anything as a witness. For I not only found out nothing, but scarcely did any report or
    suspicion of that matter reach my ears. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="13" resp="perseus"><p> They who were your
    counselors, who became acquainted with these things in your company,—they who were supposed to
    be themselves menaced with that danger, who gave no countenance to Autronius, who gave most
    important evidence against him,—are now defending Publius Sulla, are countenancing him by their
    presence here; now that he is in danger they declare that they were not deterred by the
    accusation of conspiracy from countenancing the others, but by the guilt of the men. But for the
    time of my consulship, and with respect to the charge of the greatest conspiracy, Sulla shall be
    defended by me. And this partition of the cause between Hortensius and me has not been made by
    chance, or at random, O judges, but as we saw that we were employed as defenders of a man
    against those accusations in which we might have been witnesses, each of us thought that it
    would be best for him to undertake that part of the case, concerning which he himself had been
    able to acquire some knowledge, and to form some opinions with certainty. </p></div><milestone unit="para"/><milestone n="5" unit="chapter"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="14" resp="perseus"><p>
   And since you have listened attentively to Hortensius, while speaking on the charge respecting
    the former conspiracy, now, I beg you, listen to this first statement of mine respecting the
    conspiracy which was formed in my consulship. 
   <milestone unit="para"/>When I was consul I heard many reports, I made many inquiries, I learnt a great many
    circumstances concerning the extreme peril of the republic. No messenger, no information, no
    letters, no suspicion ever reached me at any time in the least affecting Sulla. Perhaps this
    assertion ought to have great weight when coming from a man who as consul had investigated the
    plots laid against the republic with prudence, had revealed them with sincerity had chastised
    them with magnanimity and who says that he himself never heard a word against Publius Sulla and
    never entertained a suspicion of him. But I do not as yet employ this assertion for the purpose
    of defending him I rather use it with a view to clear myself in order that Torquatus may cease
    to wonder that I, who would not appear by the side of Autronius, am now defending Sulla.
     </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="15" resp="perseus"><p> For what was the cause of Autronius? and what is the cause
    of Sulla? The <pb n="380"/> former tried to disturb and get rid of a prosecution for bribery by
    raising in the first instance a sedition among gladiators and runaway slaves, and after that as
    we all saw, by stoning people, and collecting a violent mob. Sulla, if his own modesty and worth
    could not avail him, sought no other assistance. The former, when he had been convicted, behaved
    in such a manner, not only in his secret designs and conversation, but in every look and in his
    whole countenance, as to appear an enemy to the most honourable orders in the state, hostile to
    every virtuous man, and a foe to his country. The latter considered himself so bowed down, so
    broken down by that misfortune, that he thought that none of his former dignity was left to him,
    except what he could retain by his present moderation. </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>