<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="26" resp="perseus"><p>
  If, after having done so many services to the republic, I were to ask for myself no other
    reward from the senate and people of Rome beyond honourable ease, who is there who would not
    grant it to me? If I were to ask, that they would keep all honours, and commands, and provinces,
    and triumphs, and all the other insignia of eminent renown to themselves, and that they would
    allow me to enjoy the sight of the city which I had saved, and a tranquil and quiet mind?—What,
    however, if I do not ask this? what, if my former industry, my anxiety, my assistance, my
    labour, my vigilance is still at the service of my friends, and ready at the call of every one?
    If my friends never seek in vain for my zeal on their behalf in the forum, nor the republic in
    the senate house; if neither the holiday earned by my previous achievements, nor the
    excuse—which my past honours or my present age might supply me with, is employed to save me from
    trouble; if my good-will—my industry, my house, my attention, and my ears are always open to all
    men; if I have not even any time left to recollect and think over those things which I have done
    for the safety of the whole body of citizens; shall this still be called kingly power, when no
    one can possibly be found who would act as my substitute in it? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="27" resp="perseus"><p> All suspicion of aiming at kingly power is very far removed from me. If you ask who they are
    who have endeavoured to assume kingly power in Rome, without unfolding the records of the public
    annals, you may find them among the images in your own house. I suppose it is my achievements
    which have unduly elated me, and have inspired me with I know not how much pride. Concerning
    which deeds of mine, illustrious and immortal as they are, O judges, I can say thus much—that I,
    who have saved this city, and <pb n="385"/> the lives of all the citizens, from the most extreme
    dangers, shall have gained quite reward enough, if no danger arises to myself out of the great
    service which I have done to all men. </p></div><milestone unit="para"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="28" resp="perseus"><p>
   In truth, I recollect in what state it is that I have done such great exploits, and in what
    city I am living. The forum is full of those men whom I, O judges, have taken off from your
    necks, but have not removed from my own. Unless you think that they were only a few men, who
    were able to attempt or to hope that they might be able to destroy so vast an empire. I was able
    to take away their firebrands, to wrest their torches from their hands, as I did; but their
    wicked and impious inclinations I could neither cure nor eradicate. Therefore I am not ignorant
    in what danger I am living among such a multitude of wicked men, since I see that I have
    undertaken single-handed an eternal war against all wicked men. </p></div><milestone unit="para"/><milestone n="10" unit="chapter"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="29" resp="perseus"><p>
   But if perchance, you envy that means of protection which I have, and if it seems to you to be
    of a kingly sort,—namely, the fact that all good men of all ranks and classes consider their
    safety as bound up with mine,—comfort yourself with the reflection that the dispositions of all
    wicked men are especially hostile to and furious against me alone; and they hate me, not only
    because I repressed their profligate attempts and impious madness, but still more because they
    think, that, as long as I am alive, they can attempt nothing more of the same sort. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="30" resp="perseus"><p> But why do I wonder if any wicked thing is said of me by wicked men,
    where Lucius Torquatus himself, after having in the first place laid such a foundation of virtue
    as he did in his youth, after having proposed to himself the hope of the most honourable dignity
    in the state, and, in the second place, being the son of Lucius Torquatus, a most intrepid
    consul a most virtuous senator, and at all times a most admirable citizen, is sometimes run away
    with by impetuosity of language? For when he had spoken in a low voice of the wickedness of
    Publius Lentulus, and of the audacity of all the conspirators, so that only you, who approve of
    those things, could hear what he said, he spoke with a loud querulous voice of the execution of
    Publius Lentulus and of the prison; </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>