<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.phi019.perseus-eng2" subtype="translation"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="28" resp="perseus"><p> On that day what citizen was there who thought it right, whatever his age or state of
      health might be, to deny himself the opportunity of giving his vote for my safety? When did
      you ever see such a multitude assembled in the Campus, such a splendid show of all Italy and
      of all orders of men? when did you ever see movers, and tellers, and keepers of the votes all
      of such high rank? Therefore, through the active, and admirable, and godlike kindness of
      Publius Lentulus, we were not allowed to return to our country, as some most eminent citizens
      have been, but we were brought back in triumph, borne by white horses in a gilded car. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="29" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>Can I ever appear grateful enough to Cnaeus Pompeius, who said, not
      only among you who all were of the same opinion, but also before the whole Roman people, that
      the safety of the republic had been preserved by me, and was inseparably connected with mine?
      who recommended my cause to the wise, and taught the ignorant, and at the same time checked
      the wicked by his authority, and encouraged the good; who not only exhorted the Roman people
      to espouse my cause, but even entreated them to do so, as if he were speaking for a brother or
      a parent; who, at a time when he was forced to keep within his house from fear of contests and
      bloodshed, begged even of the preceding tribunes to propose and carry a law respecting my
      safety; who in a colony lately erected, where he himself was discharging the duties of a
      magistrate in it, where there was no bribed interrupter, declared that the <foreign xml:lang="lat">privilegium</foreign><note anchored="true">“A <foreign xml:lang="lat">Privilegium</foreign> signified an enactment
       that had for its object a single person, which is indicated by the form of the word <foreign xml:lang="lat">privae res</foreign>, being the same as <foreign xml:lang="lat">singulae
        res</foreign>. It might be beneficial to the party to whom it referred, or not; but it is
       generally used by Cicero in the unfavourable sense.”—Smith, Dict. Ant. p. 500, v. <foreign xml:lang="lat">Lex</foreign>. “In the time of the republic it was not allowed to pass or to
       propose such a law.”—Riddle, v. <foreign xml:lang="lat">Privilegium</foreign>. But I do not
       know his authority for such a statement.</note> passed against me was violent and cruel,
      confirming that declaration by the authority of most <pb n="486"/> honourable men, and by
      public letters, and, being the chief man there, gave his opinion that it was becoming to
      implore the protection of all Italy for my safety; who, when he himself had always been a most
      firm friend to me, laboured also to make all his own friends also to me. </p></div><milestone n="12" unit="chapter"/><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="30" resp="perseus"><p><milestone unit="para"/>And by what services can I requite the kindness of Titus Annius to me?
      all whose actions, the whole of whose conduct and thoughts, the whole of whose tribuneship, in
      short, was nothing else except a consistent, continual, gallant, unwearied advocacy of my
      safety. <milestone unit="para"/>Why need I speak of Publius Sextius? who showed his good-will
      and faithful attachment to me, not only by his grief of mind, but even by the wounds which he
      received on his person. <milestone unit="para"/>But to you, O conscript fathers, and to each
      individual of you, I have both declared, and I will continue to declare my gratitude. I
      declared it at the beginning to your whole body, as well as I could; to declare it with
      sufficient eloquence is what I am totally unable to do. And although I have received special
      favours from many persons, about which it is impossible for me to keep silence, still it is
      impossible at the present time, and with the apprehensions which I feel, to endeavour to
      enumerate the kindnesses which I have received from individuals. For it is difficult to avoid
      passing over some, and yet it would be impious to forget any one. I, O conscript fathers,
      ought to reverence every one of you as I do the immortal gods. But as, even in the case of the
      immortal gods themselves, we are wont not always to pay worship and to offer prayers to the
      same deities, but sometimes we pray to one and sometimes to another; so in the case of the men
      who have behaved to me with such godlike service, my whole life shall be devoted to
      celebrating their kindness towards me, and showing my reverent sense of it. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="31" resp="perseus"><p> But on this day I have thought that it became me to return thanks especially to the
      different magistrates by name, and also to one private individual, who for the sake of my
      safety, had visited all the municipal towns and colonies, had as a suppliant addressed his
      entreaties to the Roman people, and had declared that opinion which you followed when you
      restored me to my dignities. You always distinguished me when I was prosperous; when I was in
      distress you defended me to the extent of your power, by the change of your garments, and your
      general mourning, There have been times within our own recollection when senators did not dare
      to change their robes even in their own personal dangers; but in my danger the whole senate
      changed its garments as far as it was allowed to do without interruption from the edicts of
      those men who wished to deprive me in my peril not only of all protection from them, but of
      even the benefit of your prayers in my behalf. </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>