<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.phi017.perseus-eng2" subtype="translation"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="65" resp="perseus"><p> Wherefore I
    beseech you, O you Asiatic witnesses, that, when you wish to recollect with accuracy what amount
    of authority you bring into a court of justice, you would yourselves describe Asia, and
    remember, not what foreigners are accustomed to say of you, but what you yourselves affirm of
    your own races. For, as I think, the Asia that you talk of consists of Phrygia, Mysia, Caria,
    and Lydia. Is it then a proverb of ours or of yours that a Phrygian is usually made better by
    beating? What more? Is not this a common saying of you all with respect to the whole of Caria,
    if you wish to make any experiment accompanied with danger, that you had better try it on a
    Carian? Moreover what saying is there in Greek conversation more ordinary and well known, than,
    when any one is spoken of contemptuously, to say that he is the very lowest of the Mysians? For
    why should I speak of Lydia? What Greek ever wrote a comedy in which the principal slave was not
    a Lydian? What injury, then, is done to you, if we decide that we are to adhere to the judgment
    which you have formed of yourselves? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="66" resp="perseus"><p> In truth, I think that I
    have said enough and more than enough of the whole race of witnesses from Asia. But still it is
    your duty, O judges, to weigh in your minds and thoughts everything which can be said against
    the insignificance, the inconstancy, and the covetousness of the men, even if these points are
    not sufficiently enlarged upon by me. <milestone n="28" unit="chapter"/>
   <milestone unit="para"/>The next thing is that charge about the Jewish gold. And this, forsooth, is the reason why
    this cause is pleaded near the steps of Aurelius. It is on account of this charge, O Laelius,
    that this place and that mob has been selected by you. You know how numerous that crowd is, how
    great is its unanimity, and of what weight it is in the popular assemblies. I will speak in a
    low voice, just so as to let the judges hear me. For men are not wanting who would be glad to
    excite that people against me and against every eminent man; and I will not assist them and
    enable them to do so more easily. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="67" resp="perseus"><p> As gold, under pretence of
    being given to the Jews, was accustomed every year to be exported out of Italy and all the
    provinces to Jerusalem, Flaccus issued an edict establishing a law that it should not be lawful
    for gold to be exported out of Asia. And who is there, O judges, who cannot honestly praise this
    measure? The senate had often decided, and when I was consul it came to a most solemn resolution
    that gold ought not to be exported. But to resist this barbarous superstition were an act of
    dignity, to despise the multitude of Jews, which at times was most unruly in the assemblies in
    defence of the interests of the republic, was an act of the greatest wisdom. “But Cnaeus
    Pompeius, after he had taken Jerusalem, though he was a conqueror, touched nothing which was in
    that temple.” </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="68" resp="perseus"><p> In the first place, he acted wisely, as he did
    in many other instances, in leaving no room for his detractors to say anything against him, in a
    city so prone to suspicion and to evil speaking. For I do not suppose that the religion of the
    Jews, our enemies, was any obstacle to that most illustrious general, but that he was hindered
    by his own modesty. Where then is the guilt? Since you nowhere impute any theft to us, since you
    approve of the edict, and confess that it was passed in due form, and did not deny that the gold
    was openly sought for and produced the facts of the case themselves show that the business was
    executed by the instrumentality of men of the highest character. There was a hundredweight of
    gold, more or less openly seized at Apamea, and weighed out in the forum at the feet of the
    praetor, by Sextus Caesius, a Roman knight, a most excellent and upright man; twenty pounds
    weight or a little more were seized at Laodicea, by Lucius Peducaeus, who is here in court, one
    of our judges; some was seized also at Adramyttium, by Cnaeus Domitius, the lieutenant, and a
    small quantity at Pergamus. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="69" resp="perseus"><p> The amount of the gold is known;
    the gold is in the treasury; no theft is imputed to him; but it is attempted to render him
    unpopular. The speaker turns away from the judges, and addresses himself to the surrounding
    multitude. Each city, O Laelius, has its own peculiar religion we have ours. While Jerusalem was
    flourishing, and while the Jews were in a peaceful state, still the religious ceremonies and
    observances of that people were very much at variance with the splendour of this empire and the
    dignity of our name and the institutions of our ancestors. And they are the more odious to us
    now because that nation has shown by arms what were its feelings towards our supremacy. How dear
    it was to the immortal gods is proved by its having been defeated, by its revenues having been
    farmed out to our contractors, by its being reduced to a state of subjection. </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>